Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Starless and Bible Black Sabbath

 
Album Review: Starless and Bible Black Sabbath

Review

Starless and Bible Black Sabbath is the third album from Acid Mothers Temple to appear on the Canadian Alien8 label, but the first to appear in their new incarnation as Acid Mothers Temple and the Cosmic Inferno. Recorded March through May of 2005 at their home studio in Japan, this one is in keeping with the new band's commitment to "heavy coherency." The title and cover suggests two rock classics: King Crimson's Starless and Bible Black and Black Sabbath's self-titled debut album. The music? There are two cuts totaling a little over 40 minutes here. The title track, over a half-hour in length, begins with a crash, an echo, and a few moments of silence. Then another crash and steps in a hallway, succeeded by a gong ringing and pulsating for a few more moments, raising the tension. Then the steps again, many of them, before the guitar feedback of Makoto Kawabata and the Sabbath bass heavy sludge riff that dominates what comes afterward for the next 20 minutes or so. During this period, Kawabata is at his "most coherently" freaked out in his soloing. He's a guitar madman, bleating, screaming, wailing, and turning the instrument and its sounds inside out, and it never ever gets dull. Perhaps that's because Higashi Hiroshi's synths do such a fine job of laying atmospherics and noise over the backdrop and occasionally daring Kawabata to duel. The rhythm section, playing the same thudding riff incessantly through the entire thing, is hypnotic. There is a brief silence around 22 minutes with just Kawabata wailing, and then the plodding riff returns almost until the end of the track, which finally fades with Hiroshi's whirling synth. "Woman from a Hell," at a little over six minutes, is the Acid Mothers at their garage punk best, playing a hundred miles per hour, sounding like Gong crossed with Slayer. There are vocals by bassist Tabata Mitsuru, but they're indecipherable in the scree. The sound is like mud, overdriven to the breaking point by Okano Futoshi and Shimura Koji's insane drumming. Kawabata's solos are brief but blinding. But it's those drums burning a hole in your skull that make the track so utterly raw and grimy and incessantly intense. At the end, the listener is left exhausted but utterly satisfied. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Starless and Bible Black Sabbath Acid Mothers Temple (34:29)
Woman from a Hell Acid Mothers Temple (6:14)

Credits

Kawabata Makoto (Sound Technician), Shimura Koji (Drums), Kawabata Makoto (Engineer), Shimura Koji (Group Member), Kawabata Makoto (Guitar), Tabata Mitsuru (Group Member), Kawabata Makoto (Producer), Higashi Hiroshi (Group Member), Okano Futoshi (Group Member), Okano Futoshi (Consultant), Tabata Mitsuru (Bass), Tabata Mitsuru (Vocals), Guylaine Bedard (Fonts), Okano Futoshi (Drums), Kawabata Makoto (Group Member), Higashi Hiroshi (Synthesizer)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Starless and Bible Black Sabbath
Top
Starless and Bible Black Sabbath
Studio album by Acid Mothers Temple and The Cosmic Inferno
Released United States February 7, 2006
United Kingdom April 3, 2006
Recorded May, 2005
Genre Experimental rock
Psychedelic rock
Length 40:43
Label Alien8
Producer Kawabata Makoto
Professional reviews

Starless And Bible Black Sabbath is an album and song by the Japanese group The Acid Mothers Temple and the Cosmic Inferno. The albums title refers to the album Starless and Bible Black by King Crimson and a self-titled album by Black Sabbath, the album cover also is very similar to the Black Sabbath album, except featuring group member Kawabata Makoto instead of a woman on the album cover.

Contents

Overview

The song "Starless and Bible Black Sabbath" begins in a similar fashion to Black Sabbath’s eponymous opening track on their debut album, but less dramatic. The song grows slowly until a third of the way through the track vocals. The vocals have a large echo effect and there are two drummers playing virtually the same drum beat during a lot of the track, but with slightly different timing.

The second song, "Woman from a Hell" is a much faster and shorter track. As the song closes there is a Godzilla roar.

Track listing

  1. "Starless and Bible Black Sabbath" (Kawabata/Tabata) – 34:29
  2. "Woman from a Hell" (Kawabata/Tabata) – 6:14

Personnel

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Starless and Bible Black Sabbath" Read more