Faust

Title

Faust

Subject

Electronic, Krautrock, Experimental

Description

In 1971 there was no Rock 'n' Roll as out-there as this. During the sixties Frank Zappa, Beefheart, Red Krayola and others were transporting Rock into wierder territory; Faust took inspiration from these artists, but were far more radical. "Why Don't You Eat Carrots" takes clear influence from Zappa's "Lumpy Gravy"; the noise collages, the surreal, echo-drenched dialogue, the warped sense of wit, yet Faust achieve a level of sheer mindfuckery that "Lumpy Gravy" never did. "Meadow Meal" is equally amazing, an ethereal Psych Folk jam featuring searing guitar workouts and mournful church organ, opening with a dense soundscape of rattling percussion and electronic effects.

Unfortunately, after a truly astonishing first half, Faust fumble the ball on side two. "Miss Fortune" doesn't really seem to go anywhere- the first five minutes or so consist of tiresome wah-wah wankery, and the piece fails to improve until it is nearing the end, when ghoulish goblin voices leap out at the listener, and we are treated with something that resembles a noise-rock rendition of "Louie Louie". Though not without it's moments, it's hard to deny that "Miss Fortune" lets the whole album down. Still, the fantastic first side makes this essential Krautrock!

PĂ©ron said that Faust "had the urge of saying something completely different", and if you want to hear something completely different, I urge you to give this album a whirl!

/blurb from horsemouth on diskcogs\
Recorded live at Wumme, September 21st 1971
Side A:
Why Don't You Eat Carrots
Meadow Meal

Side B:
Miss Fortune

Creator

Faust

Source

This is a repress of the 1971 Faust Album

Publisher

Lilith Recordings

Date

2007

Contributor

Werner Diermaier, Joachim Irmler, Arnulf Meifert, Jean-Herve Peron, Rudolf Sosna, Gunther Wusthoff, Kurt Graupner, Andy Hertel, Uwe Nettelbeck

Language

Russia / English

Type

Krautrock, music, um drums, 1970s, experimental rock

Identifier

WCLP0006

Coverage

Russia

Collection

Citation

Faust, “Faust,” WPB, accessed April 25, 2024, https://tpb.worm.org/items/show/12765.

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