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A MANUAL DEXTERITY: SOUNDTRACK VOLUME ONEOmar Rodriguez-LopezEclectic Prog3.76 | 35 ratings |
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![]() Around Knuckle White Tile immediately demonstrates a lot of strengths through its long, memorable melodic passages with some wonderfully interplay between the drums and guitar that then gets interspersed by these off kilter, screechy guitar solos. It all has such a distinct sense of flow to it as the instruments ebb and flow, heightening the intensity often before completely cutting it away and paving the way for a moment of spacey, psychedelic jamming. This is definitely one of the better songs on the album and feels as if it almost serves as a blueprint to the long instrumental stretches of tracks like Cygnus Vismund Cygnus and Cassandra Gemini, yet with a much messier sound indicative of Omar just wanting to get out his guitar and play around with some solos over everything else. At the same time, along with having these sorts of more atmospheric instrumental stretches, there's also some much more tightly written, catchy material to give this a bit more grounding. Of these, special mention should go to Deus Ex Machina and The Palpitations Form A Limit for being some truly great songs that manage to have some cool technical moments along with a strong sense of atmosphere and ability to weave some wonderfully evocative imagery that tie in with the idea of this essentially being a soundtrack to a movie that doesn't exist. Deus Ex Machina in particular interests me, since while it's very repetitive, that central melody is so, so great, and just has Omar build upon it in some really satisfying ways, as vocal filters phase in and out to continuously distort this song with these wonderful horns and percussion instruments further adding a lot of flavour to the soundscapes. Palpitations that Form a Limit simply appeals to me since it sounds a lot like a regular Mars Volta song, complete with vocals and some explosive instrumental moments, just being an incredibly solid track that should be heard. While Omar's lack of filter undoubtedly is a contributing force to this being so unique and interesting, I can't deny the fact that it's also the one downfall of it as well, as while you've got some amazing moments that play wonderfully into the concept surrounding the album, such as Sensory Decay Part II, which paints a melancholic and frankly tragic picture of loneliness and degradation, seemingly being one part of a much bigger story as the waves of feedback engulf the track, but then you've got a bunch of useless stuff as well. Dramatic Theme and Dream Sequence feel especially egregious in this regard to me, with hints of greatness being buried under a whole lot of nothing, just dragging out the album by another 13 minutes and contributing to the album as a whole feeling a tad bloated. Omar also seems to have a really hard time starting almost any track on the album as well, with a lot of them having more or less a minute of weird sound effects and aimless guitar noodling before things fall into place, which gets quite tiresome by the end of the album when it's such a constant issue that only further bloats things. Despite the fact that this album runs too long as a result of these aforementioned issues, I still think that this is very solid in general and shows the sort of stuff Omar comes up with and messes around with when he doesn't have to filter any of his creativity in order to come off as marketable in any capacity, and also has a nice balance of more experimental, proggy moments, and atmospheric, borderline ambient moments that give this some nice variety. Definitely recommended to those who are interested in the more experimental elements of The Mars Volta's work, as this feels like those aspects extended into a full album. Best tracks: Around Knuckle White Tile, Deus Ex Machina, Sensory Decay Part II, The Palpitations Form a Limit Weakest tracks: Dramatic Theme, A Dressing Failure, Dream Sequence
Kempokid |
4/5 |
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