Saturday, June 2, 2007

Acid Mothers Temple & The Melting Paraiso U.F.O., Crystal Rainbow Pyramid Under the Stars cd


Acid Mothers Temple & The Melting Paraiso U.F.O., Crytal Rainbow Pyramid Under the Stars
Important Records, 2007.

Japanese guitar-god Makoto Kawabata and his merry band of freaked-out astral virtuosos have been busy melting faces on a near bi-monthly basis for the past few years, releasing more slabs of vinyl per year than anyone should be able to feasibly afford purchasing, on a plethora of labels both domestic and international. To the casual collector, which I admit is a category which includes myself, not every rare piece of coloured plastic these savants of psychedelic rock release is absolutely necessary, but this band inspires a brand of fantaticism which threatens to usurp the once legendary consumer addiction that marked those tie-died freaky Deadheads.

And why not? Friends, let's face the facts: Frank Zappa has been dead and buried for over a decade now, the once-great prog-guitarists have all become bloated with their own self-important, New Agey spiritual adult shitemporary muzak, and the majority of today's so-called Progressive Rock musicians spend so much time "perfecting their craft" (what are they doing, gluing macaronni noodles and pieces of string to their soulless, technically obsessed rock?) that they forget to release an album!

The point is, that AMT have the chops, riffs, talent, whatever you want to call the indescribable holy "It", that makes your heart stop beating and sends your mind reeling completely over the edge until the thought projector catches fire and all you're left with is the pure sound of the Universe beating in your cosmic chest cavity and your brain ascends to Buddhahood. Acid Mothers Temple release an album that makes you feel this incredible at least three times a year, and it becomes addictive. You start checking the band's website looking for information, labels they've released albums on before, your calendar, "when is it going to fucking arrive already!?"

Alright, even if you aren't a fanatic, as I apparently am, Crystal Rainbow Pyramid Under the Stars has a lot to offer the casual curiousity seeker. For starters, the nicely polished production values on this release make it among one of AMT's most accessible albums, with a clean sound and crisp levels shine, excelling even beyond recent quality releases like "Have You Seen The Other Side of the Sky?" (released 2006 on Ace Fu). Older AMT releases like Electric Heavyland, Mantra of Love, and Univers Zen Ou De Zero have a lot to offer the intrepid lover of crazed rock and roll, and are among a few of the classics of AMT's back catalouge, but their rougher productions values make the task of enjoying them all the more daunting for the casual listener.

Crystal Rainbow Pyramid Under the Stars starts off with a bang with the relatively short (at seven minutes) free-form psych-rock song, "Pussy Head Man From Outer Space." This opening song is pretty standard fare from AMT, reminding me of "The Man From Giacobinid Meteor Comet" from the heavenly Myth of the Love Electrique released last year. The album's second track however, is an engrossing jam that'll leave you wet and weak in the knees.

Opening with some atmospheric synth work courtesy of Hiroshi Higashi that reminds me of moments from Tim Hecker's Harmony in Ultraviolet, "Crystal Rainbow Pyramid" finds Kawabata quickly shifting gears from a steady blues standard, straight into Space-Rock Heaven a la Hawkwind, transforming this titular track into one of the best single songs that the Melting Paraiso U.F.O. have ever produced ("Pink Lady Lemonade (May I Drink You Again?)" notwithstanding). And you know what? By the time "Crystal Rainbow Pyramid" is over, the album is only half-finished. That's right, "Electric Psilocybin Flashback" is forty minutes long! How epic is that? Not even Yes had a forty minute song!

So what are you doing Space Cowboy (or Cowgirl)? Quit reading this review and blow your mind with this interstellar beauty right now!

Meet you at the top of the Pyramid.

Please note: the contents of this cd are different than those of the lp, also released by Important Records, under the same name.

1 comment:

lezais said...

Well if this doesn't make me want to rush out and hear the album nothing will. I'll be meeting you at the top of that pyramid for sure.