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The Void

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Download links and information about The Void by The Flying Luttenbachers. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal genres. It contains 9 tracks with total duration of 32:53 minutes.

Artist: The Flying Luttenbachers
Release date: 2004
Genre: Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal
Tracks: 9
Duration: 32:53
Buy on iTunes $8.91
Buy on iTunes $8.91

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Void Introduction 0:43
2. The Void Part One 3:32
3. The Void Part Two 2:07
4. The Void Part Three 5:14
5. The Void Part Four 3:47
6. The Void Part Five 7:34
7. The Void Part Six 2:39
8. The Void Part Seven 3:21
9. Sword of Atheism 3:56

Details

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A random generation of extreme music types will do well to describe the Flying Luttenbachers. So death metal-free jazz-noise-punk works just as well as prog rock-black metal-no wave-grind-skronk, leaving Weasel Walter's long-running group as the inevitable heirs to Naked City and Pain Killer without actually sounding like either for more than 20 seconds. The Luttenbachers can also sound like Anthony Braxton, King Crimson, the Contortions, Masayuki Takayanagi, Magma, Napalm Death, and Darkthrone all within one song. How a Luttenbachers record sounds has a lot to do with who Walter is playing with; for The Void his partners are Gorge Trio guitarist Ed Rodriguez and Burmese bassist Mike Green. It's a refreshing return to a full band sound after Systems Emerge from Complete Disorder, which Walter recorded alone and — while still a solid Luttenbachers album — came off a little clinical. The Void is separated into eight parts with a swirling musique concrète introduction followed by seven sections that dovetail from genre to genre, although with a darker edge than some of the earlier Luttenbachers albums. Rodriguez is a savage whip in the Flying Luttenbachers, spiking throughout the disc with psychedelic squeals and precise, pointed attacks. Green brings a suffocating low end to The Void, dominating the central portion of the album and making it the most doom-laden Luttenbachers albums yet. Ending The Void is the only piece not attached by name to the rest of the album, "Sword of Atheism," which hovers in a harsh droning stasis before swooping down and sweeping both the album and listeners into the abyss.