Systems Emerge from Complete Disorder
Download links and information about Systems Emerge from Complete Disorder by The Flying Luttenbachers. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, Rock genres. It contains 7 tracks with total duration of 45:16 minutes.
Artist: | The Flying Luttenbachers |
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Release date: | 2003 |
Genre: | Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz, Rock |
Tracks: | 7 |
Duration: | 45:16 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | entropic Field/total Disorder/cellular Chaos | 1:06 |
2. | kkringg Beyond Nggggg | 4:12 |
3. | kkringg Number One | 4:30 |
4. | kkringg Number Two | 2:34 |
5. | thrumm'd HTE (for M) | 5:02 |
6. | thorned lattice | 7:38 |
7. | Rise of the Iridescent Behemoth | 20:14 |
Details
[Edit]There are few album titles more on-the-nose than the Flying Luttenbachers' Systems Emerge from Complete Disorder. Opening with the unreconstructed feedback-and-skronk guitar noise of "Entropic Field/Total Disorder/Cellular Chaos," the album builds organically, with each song building off of one or more elements from the song immediately preceding, culminating in the wild-eyed frenzy of the side-long "Rise of the Iridescent Behemoth." Recorded as a one-man-band solo project by leader Weasel Walter, Systems Emerge from Complete Disorder sounds like some kind of unholy marriage between Magma's aggressive, spiky '70s prog, the untrammeled anarchy of a European free improv set from the late '60s, and the pummeling aggression of modern-day Scandinavian death metal, a comparison particularly warranted by the three-part "Kkringg." As always, there's a concept explained in the liner notes of this entirely instrumental album, something to do with the Flying Luttenbachers' ongoing post-apocalyptic mythology, but even on its own, the music has an unearthly, disturbing strangeness.