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Disaster

 
Album Review: Disaster

  • Artist: Amon Düül
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1971
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Like the first two albums, Disaster comes from the same 1968 jam session, which if nothing else shows that the phrase "burst of creativity" can have a very real equivalent. As with the previous two releases, the emphasis is on open-ended, percussion-heavy, choppy-guitared songs with random, often wordless chanting, with rough sound being the general order of the day. Compared to the other two, Disaster has a slightly more "live" feeling, with less evidence of later studio additions or tweaks. It's a touch calmer as well, though nowhere near as sweet as Para Dieswärts Düül turned out to be. Exactly how planned this release was is up to question -- it appeared after the band had broken up, and its two-LP original format speaks of a serious clearing out of the vaults. Regardless, there are some definite winners here; Disaster could even be considered the logical conclusion of the band's "try anything and see what works" ethic. Opening song "Drum Things (Erschalgzuegtes)" is very much a classic lengthy jam in the style of Psychedelic's "Ein Wunderhubsches," with what sound like fingerbells providing a notable percussion element along with the pounding drums, especially at the end. Numerous other longer tracks like "Somnium (Trauma)" (which ends with some great drum work) and "Chaoticolor (Entsext)" make up the bulk of the album's length, most settling on a key riff and grooving away on it just fine, with slight alterations appearing as each piece progresses. Some of the shorter numbers are as close as the group ever got to catchy pop; one sprightly number, a Beatles semi-revamp barely a minute long before petering out, has the perfect title "Yea Yea Yea (Zerbeatelt)." Unfairly trashed over the years, Disaster is just like the band that made it -- wonderful, weird, and wiggy. ~ Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Drum Things [Erschlagzeugtes] Amon Düül Amon Düül (9:12)
Asynchron [Verjault und Zugeredet] Amon Düül Amon Düül (7:37)
Yea Yea Yea [Zerbeatelt] Ella Bauer, Rainer Bauer, Helge Filanda, Peter Leopold, Ullrich Leopold Amon Düül (1:00)
Broken [Ofensivitääten] Amon Düül Amon Düül (7:26)
Somnium [Trauma Remix] Ella Bauer, Rainer Bauer, Helge Filanda, Peter Leopold, Ullrich Leopold Amon Düül (9:30)
Frequency [Entzwei] Amon Düül Amon Düül (9:53)
Autonomes [Entdrei] Amon Düül Amon Düül (5:37)
Chaoticolour [Ensext] Ella Bauer, Rainer Bauer, Helge Filanda, Peter Leopold, Ullrich Leopold Amon Düül (7:43)
Expressionidiom [Kapuntterbunt] Amon Düül Amon Düül (1:48)
Altitude [Quäär Feld Aus] Amon Düül Amon Düül (1:01)
Impropulsion [Noch'n Lied] Amon Düül Amon Düül (6:13)

Credits

Helge Filanda (Vocals), Helge Filanda (Percussion), Ullrich Leopold (Bass), Angelika Filanda (Percussion), Wolfgang Krischke (Percussion), Ella Bauer (Percussion), Ella Bauer (Vocals), Rainer Bauer (Guitar), Rainer Bauer (Vocals), Peter Leopold (Drums), Wolfgang Krischke (Keyboards), Uschi Obermeier (Percussion), Angelika Filanda (Vocals)
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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more