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AKSAK MABOUL

RIO/Avant-Prog • Belgium


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Aksak Maboul biography
Another typically Belgian oddity/weirdness in the RIO mould or Canterbury, this group managed two highly experimental albums in the late 70's before becoming the HONEYMOON KILLERS. They were led by keyboard man Marc Hollander and had never a stable line-up. In the second album Fred Firth and Chris Cutler both ex- HENRY COW joined and it terms of strangeness of the music developed, this fits well.

Only for fans of extreme music.

: : : Hugues Chantraine, BELGIUM : : :

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AKSAK MABOUL discography


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AKSAK MABOUL top albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

3.72 | 94 ratings
Onze Danses Pour Combattre La Migraine
1977
3.80 | 117 ratings
Un peu de l'âme des bandits
1980
3.62 | 13 ratings
Véronique Vincent & Aksak Maboul: Ex-Futur Album (w/The Honeymoon Killers)
2014
3.85 | 24 ratings
Figures
2020
4.00 | 8 ratings
Une aventure de VV (Songspiel)
2023

AKSAK MABOUL Live Albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

AKSAK MABOUL Videos (DVD, Blu-ray, VHS etc)

AKSAK MABOUL Boxset & Compilations (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

4.33 | 3 ratings
Before and After Bandits (Documents 1977-1980, 2015)
2018

AKSAK MABOUL Official Singles, EPs, Fan Club & Promo (CD, EP/LP, MC, Digital Media Download)

4.00 | 2 ratings
Onze Danses Remixes
2015

AKSAK MABOUL Reviews


Showing last 10 reviews only
 Un peu de l'âme des bandits by AKSAK MABOUL album cover Studio Album, 1980
3.80 | 117 ratings

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Un peu de l'âme des bandits
Aksak Maboul RIO/Avant-Prog

Review by Mellotron Storm
Prog Reviewer

4 stars 4.5 stars. In my opinion this second album by AKSAK MABOUL is a full star better than their debut. Most have them 1A and 1B but this sophomore release is more of a band effort, more in the RIO realm, and less avant. If it wasn't for those first two tracks I would be giving this 5 stars. And those two tracks are good, just not incredible like the rest of the album. We get six tracks under 44 minutes. My edition has a bonus track with THE HONEYMOON KILLERS helping out. That was band leader Marc Hollander's other band at this time.

The debit from 1977 was more of a Marc Hollander solo album with musical partner Vincent Kenis being his left arm on that one. Here Vincent is is reduced to helping with the arrangements only, but overall there are six members helping out with the arrangements, making this much more of a band effort. And how about adding HENRY COW members Chris Cutler on drums and Fred Frith on guitar, violin and bass. And with them helping out with the compositions along with Michel Berckmans from UNIVERS ZEZRO well, much more RIO sounding. Berckmans by the way guested on the debut, but here he is all over this album with his bassoon and oboe. And of course having Cutler playing drums is huge, and compared to the drum machine on the debut? Come on! Frith by the way might be the biggest addition to this record.

Frith composed that third track "Geistige Nacht(Rondo)" and how about his bass work starting before 4 1/2 minutes. Soprano sax from Hollander gets pretty crazy at times on this one, lots of bassoon as well. The opener "A Modern Lesson(Bo Diddley)" is a Hollander composition but yes that "Bo Diddley" melody is there. Some demented vocals from Catherine here but I like them. This is twisted but melodic. Horns honking at 3 minutes. The second track sub-titled "Tango" is my least favourite. Just too traditional sounding I suppose. Old school. And while that fourth track with the long title is a traditional song it's really good. Ethnic sounds early and some male vocals. I like this. Some goblet drums here which I like and Frith on guitar. Great track.

"Inoculating Rabies" is like a post-punk track with the energy and intensity for under 2 minutes. The closer is divided into 4 parts and is a 23 minute suite. And it's amazing! The highlight of the album for me. Lots of bassoon and organ early then a calm with cello before it gets experimental. Haunting before 4 minutes. It starts to build before 6 minutes then kicks in a minute later. So good. It turns classical sounding when it settles before 8 minutes. Chamber music really and dark. More life around 11 minutes then it turns powerful with some upfront guitar. Nice. Another calm after 13 minutes with piano and atmosphere then it starts to build a minute later into an intense section at 17 minutes. The cello is incredible as well as the drumming that follows.

This goes into my "best of" avant section without question. A slow start but they more than make up for it. One of the best RIO albums out there.

 Onze Danses Pour Combattre La Migraine by AKSAK MABOUL album cover Studio Album, 1977
3.72 | 94 ratings

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Onze Danses Pour Combattre La Migraine
Aksak Maboul RIO/Avant-Prog

Review by Mellotron Storm
Prog Reviewer

3 stars 3.5 stars.This is the debut album of AKSAK MABOUL and you'll notice on the album cover that Marc Hollander's name is at the top and in bigger letters than AKSAK MABOUL. And this record does come across as being a Marc Hollander solo album. He was a busy boy in 1977 with the release of this album, and he was also part of THE HONEYMOON KILLERS who released their debut this same year. And the year before as a member of COS, Marc and that band released "Viva Boma".

This was produced by Marc Moulin from COS/PLACEBO. Big fan. I have to admit that of all the RIO bands out there, this was the one band I did not want to touch. The crazy female singer, the difficult music, that cover art on the second album, all had me squinting and shaking my head. Well I did give in, and got both at once thankfully or I probably wouldn't have got the second one.

And that second one is quite different than this one plus we get a real drummer instead of the drum machine used here. And hey Chris Cutler is the man behind the kit on that one. His fellow HENRY COW member Fred Frith adds bass, guitar and violin on that one. Oh, and UNIVERS ZERO member Michel Berkmans adds bassoon and oboe. So yes please give me the lineup and music of the second record over this difficult debut. Catherine the female singer is also kept to a minimum on the second record. Not here.

So this wasn't as bad as I'm letting on. Sure when it's avant, it's out there, but I actually have a top three songs to share and when it's good, it's great. "Son Of L'idiot" for the guitar, "Cuic Steppe" which like many has horns, farfisa, piano and xylophone with effects after 3 minutes. "Mastoul Alakefak" for the depth of sound early with the farfisa over top. We get an electronic vibe, then sax to the fore after 4 minutes, with a fuller sound arriving to the end.

Better than I thought but not far off to what I was expecting either. That second record is where they increased those RIO sounds and at the same time they decreased the avant leanings along Catherine's voice.

 Figures by AKSAK MABOUL album cover Studio Album, 2020
3.85 | 24 ratings

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Figures
Aksak Maboul RIO/Avant-Prog

Review by kurtrongey

4 stars This album is a goldmine of understated, ultra-arty Frenchness. Add Astrud Gilberto-like vocals to elaborately constructed songs, enigmatic electronic constructions, and a certain portion of pure progressive instrumental whimsy. Super-infectious - if Poulenc had a pop band, it might sound like this. Listen to it on a breezy day with the windows open in your apartment overlooking the Côte d'Azur. Highlights include "Spleenétique," one of the more conventionally proggy tracks, "Retour chez" with some very dramatic harmonies and "Un Caïd," contrasting light-hearted vocal verses with some startling instrumental breaks and an enigmatic ending. It's a double CD/LP and is refreshingly free of skippable dead space.
 Un peu de l'âme des bandits by AKSAK MABOUL album cover Studio Album, 1980
3.80 | 117 ratings

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Un peu de l'âme des bandits
Aksak Maboul RIO/Avant-Prog

Review by DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator

4 stars "Un Peu De L'âme Des Bandits" released in 1980 can be thought as an iconic album by a Belgian RIO legend AKSAK MABOUL. Consider this production can be quite appropriate for opposition either to pop / rock 'on the golden road' or progressive rock. Wondering what we feel if we listen to this material for the first time without any knowledge. We can hear sound variations via the creation - mysterious Latino vibes with continental tango hints, weird electronic movements, Catherine's quirky voices along with heavy, dull, and hollow percussion, complicated drumming not harmonized with saxophone sounds, squeezed atmospheric ambiance - almost all of 'hard to accept' experiments can be felt as Krautrock. Such an eccentric impression should come upon to the audience even only through the first track "A Modern Lesson". Like an expensive wine flooded with luxurious complex aftertaste, this album might be created enthusiastically and cynically enough with strong intention of the creators, I guess. Sounds like authentic avantgarde progressive rock but the fact should make the creation more and more interesting and innovative.
 Onze Danses Pour Combattre La Migraine by AKSAK MABOUL album cover Studio Album, 1977
3.72 | 94 ratings

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Onze Danses Pour Combattre La Migraine
Aksak Maboul RIO/Avant-Prog

Review by siLLy puPPy
Special Collaborator PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic

4 stars AKSAK MABOUL was formed in 1977 Belgium by Marc Hollander (keyboards, reeds, percussion) and Vincent Kenis (guitar, bass, keyboards, percussion). ONZE DANSES POUR COMBATTRE LA MIGRAINE (Eleven Dances For Fighting Migraines) is the debut album and delivers a seriously healthy dose of RIO / Avant Prog and sounds a bit like Zappa collaborating with the Art Bears and Univers Zero. This album also takes a few cues from the 19th Century French avant-garde pianist Erik Satie who was known for his minimalism as well as his screen plays of absurdist fiction called "Theatre Of The Absurd." Originally the first two AKSAK MABOUL albums were released on the independent Belgian label Kamikaze Records, but in 1980 Hollander created his own Crammed Discs label where the albums have since been reissued and remastered. The sound quality and production is outstanding for the time.

ONZE DANSE... is a collection of nicely played avant-prog with, in addition to Hollander and Kenis, has seven other musicians contributing everything from sax, violin and more guitar to lots of vocal contributions. The music is nowhere as out there and alienating as lots of RIO can be. There is enough melody to reel in the casual listener and enough avant-prog to engage the serious addict of the bizarre. This album has been described as a playful mix of musical forms, cultures and genres and i would have to agree with that. While the "typical" RIO / avant-prog sound of the chamber rock sort of such bands as Henry Cow, Univers Zero and The Art Bears can clearly be heard throughout the disc's run, there are also African drum bits, Zappa-esque spastic outbreaks and plenty of attention to electronic effects and classical music. There are also lots of jazz elements sewn into the tapestry. The sound here is quite distinct from any contemporaries.

I find this to be a really intriguing and captivating debut that is the perfect place to dive into the world of AKSAK MABOUL because the band really takes off into the world of the avant-garde with their second release "Un Peu de l'Âme des Bandits" with the addition of Henry Cow veterans Fred Frith and Chris Cutler making it a more dynamic and bizarre experience. ONZE DANSES... contains on the other hand a nice mix of the accessible and bizarre and would sit nicely next to the albums by News From Babel in that regard. Highly recommended for anyone who finds RIO and avant-prog a bit too weird but also for those who don't mind their RIO on the medium spicy side. I personally like it all and find AKSAK MABOUL to be one of the more interesting bands of this movement at this time in the small country that has produced more than its share of strange music.

 Un peu de l'âme des bandits by AKSAK MABOUL album cover Studio Album, 1980
3.80 | 117 ratings

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Un peu de l'âme des bandits
Aksak Maboul RIO/Avant-Prog

Review by Dobermensch
Prog Reviewer

3 stars At least the Prog Archives show the censored cover. Look at 'Rate Your Music' - they trembled in fear of opprobrium and instead show a big 'X' instead! It's political correctness gone mad I tell ya.

If ever the term 'Avant Prog' was suited to a band 'Aksak Maboul' are the culprits. "Un Peu De L'Âme Des Bandits" is a twisted concoction of Jazz Rock. A hugely overblown wacky chamber prog album that is superior in many ways to 'Univers Zero' and 'Art Zoyd', with their unpredictability and wide variety of instruments.

'Maboul' is very fitting as it means 'mental' in French and you won't hear a much more mental 'RIO' recording this side of Uzbekistan. Chaos reigns supreme with a whacked out Fred Frith and Chris Cutler pulling the strings along with ex "Cos" keyboardist Marc Hollander doing what he does best.

Many genres are pounced upon, ravished then left for dead as they work their way through the fields like a 12 man slaughterhouse team: Middle East, Chamber and Punk are all decimated as the 'Maboul' tank rolls on.

'Cinema' is a monster 23 minute track heavy with woodwind instruments. Despite the rather cacophonous opening it definitely gains shape and form the longer it progresses and at points almost gains some semblance of a tune.

'"Un Peu De L'Âme Des Bandits" is one of those annoying albums that sounds great when you're listening to it but where you find yourself unable to remember much about it afterwards. There's nothing 'hummable' which would want to make you go back and listen to it again.

Too erratic and random for five stars, too tuneless for four, An album that has very little wrong with it and probably deserves more than the measly three I've given. It's for a certain time and place - a time and place I don't have much time for...

 Un peu de l'âme des bandits by AKSAK MABOUL album cover Studio Album, 1980
3.80 | 117 ratings

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Un peu de l'âme des bandits
Aksak Maboul RIO/Avant-Prog

Review by snobb
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator

4 stars Second and the last Aksak Mabul album is strongly different from their debut. Three years of intensive concerts under RIO flags have gone, and Aksak Maboul is very different band on this release.

Besides of founding duo of Marc Hollander and Vincent Kenis, all the bunch of RIO leading artists participates on the recordings: drummer Chris Cutler and guitarist Fred Frith from Henry Cow, wind player Michel Berckmans from UZ, vocalist Catherine Jauniaux.

If band's debut was beautiful very acoustic, melancholic European urban folk-avant, pleasant and enjoyable, this album from very first minutes opens with dissonances, dark atmospheres and tension. Not even traces of sunny aerial sound of it's predecessor could be found - air is nervous, very noisy, instruments distorted, compositions broken by rhythms and structures. Even more - being in fact quite characteristic RIO album, with strong chamber rock influences and some free jazz moments, every composition of this album is played in different manner.

From free jazz bulky songs to dark chamber rock to street-wise Argentinian tango to excellent Middle Eastern hypnotising tune to almost Iggy Pop-like punk. Such concept makes this album very eclectic, more close to collection of occasional songs, but from the other hand, every composition is very different and listener has no chance to become bored. 23+ minutes long Cinema is a culmination - complex contemporary avant composition ,minimalist by its nature, but with soloing of different instruments one after another over the basic sound.

It's very difficult to compare two this great band's releases: I really love their debut as excellence of European urban folklore-based avant, but this, their second release, has its nerve, its tension and its own world of real RIO against debut's beauty. Recommended as equally good pair for debut.

 Onze Danses Pour Combattre La Migraine by AKSAK MABOUL album cover Studio Album, 1977
3.72 | 94 ratings

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Onze Danses Pour Combattre La Migraine
Aksak Maboul RIO/Avant-Prog

Review by snobb
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator

4 stars Aksak Maboul's debut is excellent and quirky European elegant urban folklore known as RIO as well. 17 short compositions indicates more punkish album's structure, but you wouldn't find punk influences there.

Crispy, very acoustic music, based on analog keyboards sound, with addition of many other instruments, including accordion, saxes and electric cello between more traditional others. Musically this album contains short sketches from European street life, but reworked by talented artists with non-mainstream vision of the world. French traditional urban songs, Alpine reeds, some contemporary avant music, plenty of well-balanced European jazz-rock , saloon music, theatrical pieces soundtracks - there are mentioned only a part of their influences.

Music in all is very elegant, a bit melancholic, melodic, with some distortions, but very controlled, some occasional vocals and very imaginative atmosphere. Differently from many RIO genre colleagues, this album is more beautiful, harmonic and in some sense - easier accessible one ( speaking about avant garde music though).

Differently from many other similar recordings, this album has quite limited chamber music influence (or better to say - controlled influence), what is a strong side for me. I really am not a big fan of self-closed chamber rock, where musicians are so attracted by what they are playing, that just often forget that listener exists as well, and very soon such releases become boring to death. This one isn't, and it's a big luck!

In all - still release for fans of experimental music, and possibly will shock symphonic rock purist, but one of great listening for open ears fans of good and interesting music.

 Onze Danses Pour Combattre La Migraine by AKSAK MABOUL album cover Studio Album, 1977
3.72 | 94 ratings

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Onze Danses Pour Combattre La Migraine
Aksak Maboul RIO/Avant-Prog

Review by jerryverrier

4 stars I have reviewed each track in order below. My summary is that this is one of the best RIO/Canterbury influenced albums I have heard this year. Several tracks (I have called them standout below) should be in any serious listener's library. Thanks to Ronan Griffin for introducing me to this excellent cd, 1. Mercredi Matin: short folk-dance melody with beautiful ringing tones. 2. (Mit 1) Saure Gurke (Aus 1 Unwald Gelockt) Nice electronic groove with a moving melody 3. Animaux Velpeau Like Dolphy one of the greatest 36 seconds of bass horn playing ever recorded. A standout track! 4. Milano Per caso: lovely acoustic guitar and piano over a central European folk grounding. Magnificent clarinet. A strong contrast with the electronica and even features some elegant vocal work. 5. Fausto Coppi Arrive!: Great Henry Cow/ Picchio Dal Pozzo horn opening. Runs into.. 6. Chanter est sain: now we are in desperate straits territory. Lovely solo vocal piano. Then over-dubbed minimalism. More of the splendid melodic sense which informs the whole. Another standout track as piano dominates beautifully before the return of the lyrics. 7. Son Of L'Idiot: Hand beaten drums provide a platform for great ensemble playing. Keyboards sounding like glockenspiels, a very Canterbury riff and guitar sound. Derivative but brilliant. Would not be out of place on Hatfield album. Great bassoon figure at the end. 8. DBB (Double Bind Baby). Solo piano, introspective but not miserable, lovely chordings, very open and then horn statements. Great composition and like a good abstract painting every second fascinates. 9. Cuic Steppe: time for percussion instruments piano and glocks. Zappa loved glocks and so do I. Bass horns too. This has all the sound textures you need for musical heaven, and they work together in a perfect way as the tune progresses. Standout track. Unfair to say it's like Henry Cow. I hate to say it but it's better than Cow! Best track so far. 10. Tous Les Trucs... a child singing. You can hear the proof that so-called difficult melodic phrasing is innate. The keyboard working from it actually takes away from the point. 11. Ciobane: odd fragment. 12. The Mooche: Ellington gets a treatment. Annoying, but lovely sounds, although the Casio keyboard wrecks it. 13. Vapona Not Glue builds from The Mooche and the improvised keyboard lines are uninspired unlike the soprano sax which is very good. This track drags because of the same pointless Casio ground. Great horn and bass near the end but the keyboard and programmed percussion are killers. To be fair they are eliminated before the finish which is very good. 14. Glympz: hand percussion again with lovely chords on keyboards and horns. Very mellow. 15. Three Epileptic Folk Dances: Great opening riff, more glock, so good. Then we get a splendid staccato phrased melody on bass keyboard and squeaky higher register leading to part three which has lovely bassoon and soprano sax. Another stand out track. 16. Mastoul Alakefak: classic stuff, really like Hatfield. An absolute joy to experience. Great fall apart and make noises ending. Standout again. I regret never seeing them play this live. 17. Comme On A Dit: and indeed as I have said this picks all the best aspects of the acoustic elements of the band for a few seconds to sum up.
 Un peu de l'âme des bandits by AKSAK MABOUL album cover Studio Album, 1980
3.80 | 117 ratings

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Un peu de l'âme des bandits
Aksak Maboul RIO/Avant-Prog

Review by Figglesnout

4 stars Aksak Maboul - Un Peu De L'Âme Des Bandits

If I were asked to define what exactly Rock-In Opposition was and sounded like, I would do two things: I would first think of a clear, concise definition of what the movement represented, and list a few bands that partook in the movement. Alongside of this, I would compile a mix-album of RIO music--or at least that's what I would've done. Things have changed after hearing Aksak Maboul's Un Peu De L'Ame Des Bandits, and the group has actually made my life a bit easier (or would if ever I had to define the RIO movement), for this album alone stands to me as the epitome of what exactly this RIO business is, and on top of that, it's RIO done impressively well from start to finish, which is quite a feat, truthfully, as sometimes (to me at least), the quirks behind RIO tend to dampen the overall effect of the music at play. But not so with this one!

Now the music:

The album kicks off with some almost early Can-esque music and some eclectic vocal work on A Modern Lesson, and later we are treated to some very unique piano work alongside some interesting horn and percussion work. This song alone is enough to make many turn their heads in shame--I can only imagine the reaction if this song were to come on over a loudspeaker in an American high school or on the jukebox at a pool hall (I'll have to try it one day...)

We are then treated to several tracks of eclectic, playful, full-out RIO music full of twists, turns, drops, assaults, and other mishaps. The entire album comes off as one long-winded joke--but at least it's a good one. Some of the better highlights, besides the opening track include the entirety of the ballad-y (and closest to normal) second track Palmiers En Pots, as well as most of the swirling vortex that is I Viaggi Formano La Gioventú (track 4)...then of course there's Cinema, the highlight track of the album, which spans some 23 minutes. We are treated to ten or so minutes of experimental noise from woodwinds until the song picks up around 11 minutes with some extremely out-there guitar, piano, and percussion work--this song sounds like a mind going insane...what's great about it is, after the topsy-turvy first 25 minutes or the album, this song comes in to treat us with an on-edge break, before climaxing in a devilish swirl of oddities. The song continues in an odd manner, pausing for some nice, soft piano work now and then, before swirling to a close and ending in the same manner that it began, but in a much more chaotic manner...

The album ends on an unsettling note with Age Route Brra, which begins with yet more oddly arranged percussion and other odd noises (that's really what the album is: an assortment of organized, odd, fanciful, and immensely entertaining noises), before ending in a way reminiscent to the way it began. It's a fun feast, and we're all invited...

This album is deeply recommended for those who want a rather extreme (at times at least) first look at the RIO movement in a few fun doses, as well as for fans of RIO that have not heard it yet. Other than that, I'd say it would probably be a bit too eclectic for fans of more modern prog to enjoy in much of a great extent. Either way, it comes deeply recommended from me. Something like an 8.8 on my scale, which makes it 4 stars on this one.

Thanks to ProgLucky for the artist addition.

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