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Berlin

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Download links and information about Berlin by Art Zoyd. This album was released in 1987 and it belongs to Ambient, New Age, Electronica, Avant Garde Jazz, Rock, Avant Garde Metal, Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 7 tracks with total duration of 59:34 minutes.

Artist: Art Zoyd
Release date: 1987
Genre: Ambient, New Age, Electronica, Avant Garde Jazz, Rock, Avant Garde Metal, Theatre/Soundtrack
Tracks: 7
Duration: 59:34
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Epithalam 20:15
2. Baboon's Bood 5:40
3. Petite messe à l'usage des pharmaciens - Offertoire 3:15
4. Petite messe à l'usage des pharmaciens - Kyrie 3:35
5. A Drum a Drum 20:23
6. Petite messe à l'usage des pharmaciens - Introit 3:04
7. Unsex Me Here 3:22

Details

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Le Mariage du Ciel et de l'Enfer (1985) announced a transformation in Art Zoyd's sound, a move away from acoustic instruments, replaced by multi-layered keyboards. Two years later Berlin confirmed the new direction, establishing a sonic framework that would remain unaltered for more than a decade. Exit trumpeter Jean-Pierre Soarez and saxophonist Didier Pietton. André Mergenthaler fills the gap with his cello, alto sax, and percussion, thus bringing the group to the size of a quartet with Patricia Dallio, Gérard Hourbette, and Thierry Zaboïtzeff. Cello, violin, and saxophone still have a place in the picture, but they are constantly dominated by the keyboards, which serve as both the rhythmical and harmonic purveyors — except for a few passages of snare drum and tom-toms, the role of percussion has been reduced considerably. Berlin is not Art Zoyd's best effort — the film trilogy (Nosferatu, Faust, Haxan) would achieve better results with the same ingredients. Yet, even though the music has slightly ossified, it remains genuine Art Zoyd music: doom-laden, disquietingly martial, the chamber music of hell if Satan were a Nazi. The album takes the form of two 20-minute suites and five shorter pieces. "Epithalame," the first suite, moves about slowly but has a few nice shifts that keep it interesting. "A Drum, a Drum" includes lyrics (taken from Shakespeare) sung by Mergenthaler and presents in 20 minutes what the horror film trilogy would rework in three hours. Hourbette's "Petite Messe à l'Usage des Pharmaciens" (Short Mass for Pharmacists, in three parts) introduces a lighter side, but it hardly manages to be more than filler material. A decent album nevertheless, Berlin does not deserve to be overlooked. ~ François Couture, Rovi