ok, this is a long one, but this is the press release containing info about the album's concept, I found it pretty interesting
The genesis of The Mars Volta’s new album The Bedlam in Goliath is one
of the weirdest stories in the history of modern music, a tale of
long-buried murder victims and their otherworldly influence, of strife
and near collapse, of the long hard fight to push “the record that did
not want to be born” out into the world. And I swear we’ll get to all
of that in a second.
But right now, before we drag any new passengers on the Volta Express
into the lunacy of The Bedlam in Goliath, we’ve got to bring them up to
speed. And so I present “A Very Brief History of The Mars Volta”:
Back at the turn of the century guitarist/producer Omar Rodriguez-Lopez
and lyricist/vocalist Cedric Bixler-Zavala decided to form a musical
partnership called The Mars Volta. They grabbed a few other intrepid
musicians and recorded The Tremulant EP, which was incredible and weird
and proved these guys were trailblazing far from the paths tread by
their prior band, At the Drive-In. Then they released De-Loused
In The Comatorium, an astonishing album that served as both an elegy
for and celebration of their friend Julio Venegas (as told through the
fictional character Cerpin Taxt whose life-and-death travails are
chronicled via the songs). The album was huge in terms of exposure,
influence, and raw momentum. Next came Frances the Mute, an album
with a central plot, based, sadly, on the loss of another friend (this
time fellow musician and bandmate Jeremy Ward). An equally bizarre and
powerful album. For this record and the remainder since, Omar has
produced solo, dropping some of the pop sheen that Rick Rubin brought
to the first album in favor of more experimental textures and
structures. If De-Loused… was a dark album, this thing is obsidian. And
also inspiring. And majestic. Most recently they released
Amputechture, their first album with no central concept (aside from
stretching the boundaries of their prior musical achievements). Omar
worked as a director/conductor/visionary, writing all the music and
providing motivation, while Cedric stretched his vocals and lyrics
around multi-tiered songs about things like modern witch-burnings,
cultural oppression, and madness. The soaring intensity of the single
Viscera Eyes alone is worth the admission. The tours supporting
each of these albums have proven that The Mars Volta is an endlessly
ambitious group intent on turning a standard concert into something
transformative that can best be described as an aural blitzkrieg. Saul
Williams, no slouch when it comes to rocking a stage, once joked that
he rushed through his opening sets just so he could watch the Volta
sooner. Point Being: If you don’t have these albums, you need them.
If you do have them then you know exactly what I’m talking about and
you’re anticipating The Bedlam in Goliath more than any other record
this year. And you know, as I do, that if the Volta comes to your town
for a show that you have to be there or a little bit of your soul dies.
That’s a science fact. Which brings us to the now, on the eve of
the release of The Mars Volta’s stunning new recording. Which brings us
to The Story. Perhaps it’s best to insert a prologue for this
tale stating that some (cynics, pragmatists, people who would like
their life to be more boring) may instantly respond with rolled-eyes
and disbelief. And that’s okay. But others are willing to acknowledge
that most metaphysics may just be the elements of physics our brains
can’t quite comprehend yet, and that there is a great power in words,
and in belief. Quotes from two Volta compatriots offer a relevant lead-in: “The things you speak to can shape your world. Look at Biggie. ‘Ready to Die.’ Dead. Word.” — Saul Williams (again)
“This is the sound of what you don’t know killing you. This is the
sound of what you don’t believe, still true. This is the sound of what
you don’t want, still in you.” —El-P And so, all that being
said, here is The Story (and various annotations): Omar was in a curio
shop in Jerusalem when he found the Soothsayer. It seemed to him an
ideal gift for Cedric, this archaic Ouija-style “talking board.” So it
was then and there, in a city where the air swims with religious
fervor, in a shop that might as well have carried monkey’s paws and
Mogwais, that Omar changed the fate of The Mars Volta forever. Had
he known at that moment that the board’s history stretched far beyond
its novelty appearance, that its very fibers were soaked through with
something terribly other, that the choral death and desire of a
multi-headed Goliath was waiting behind its gates… well, he might have
left it at rest there on the dusty shelves. The Upside of That
Choice: No bad mojo unleashed. Erase the madness that followed. Erase
the bizarre connection to a love/lust/murder triangle that threatened
to spill out into the present every time the band let its fingers drift
over the board. The Downside: No Soothsayer means The Bedlam in
Goliath never would have existed. And it turns out that this demented
spiritual black hole of a muse has driven The Mars Volta to produce a
crowning moment in their already stellar career. So if Omar
hadn’t given in to his curiosity and brought the Soothsayer home to
Cedric then the band would probably have been happier, healthier, less
haunted. But you and I, Lucky Listener, we would have been robbed of one f**king amazing album. More on that in a moment.
Back up to the last big tour. The Volta and the Red Hot Chili Peppers
are tearing venues in half, retreating to their busses, rolling through
the night. But instead of the normal Rock God routines the guys are
sitting around Cedric’s new Ouija board, which they’ve dubbed the
Soothsayer. And they love it— it’s the new post-show addiction. The Soothsayer offers them names: Goliath, Mr. Mugs, Patience Worth, Tourniquet Man.
The Soothsayer offers them a story: It’s always about a man, a woman,
and her mother. About the lust floating between them. About seduction
and infidelity. And pain. And eventually, murder. Entrails and absence
and curses and oblivion. Exactly the kind of spooky sh*t you’d want
from your Ouija. Now here comes the rub. The Soothsayer starts
asking the band what they have to offer. This connection that’s set up
runs both ways, and the invisible voices begin to speak of their
appetites. They threaten oblivion and dissolution, or offer it as
seduction. The voices merge as Goliath, a metaphysical quagmire and
unfed saint whose hunger to return to the real world grows more urgent
with each connection. There are proper ways to close this union,
but The Mars Volta have never been anything if not adventurous. They
stay in contact— even taking phrases from the board and inserting them
as song lyrics— but never offer themselves as surrogates. And so the
starving Goliath extends its influence. Inexplicable equipment issues abound while on tour.
Conflict with the existing drummer escalates and results in a change of
guard. Ritual gives way to injury and Cedric is laid low by a randomly
(and severely) gimped foot. A completely reliable engineer’s
mental composure cracks, pushing him from the project. The tracks he
leaves behind are desperately tangled. Omar’s music studio floods, threatening to send him right over the same precipice as the engineer. Long-term album delays hit and people aren’t sleeping well.
Nonsensical words and phrases the board had previously spoken begin to
pop up in things like documentaries about mass suicide. The Soothsayer keeps telling the same story but the details are becoming more brutal. One day the label on the board peels back revealing pre-Aramaic lingo written across weird cone shapes. It’s bad mojo writ large, and things are crumbling quickly. Worst of all, the board has shifted from pleas to demands. To threats. So they buried the f**king thing.
There are many ways to close a spiritual connection. Wear white for a
whole year. Surround yourself with salt. Close a board and ask someone
else to open it, thus transferring the ownership. Break the board into
seven pieces and sprinkle it with holy water. Or bury it. Omar
wrapped the Soothsayer in cloth and found a proper place for it in the
soil. Cedric asked that he never be made aware of its location. And then their album found a new, more urgent purpose.
The Bedlam in Goliath is here to consecrate the grounds where the
Soothsayer lies in wait. It’s metaphor vs. metaphysics. Its story will
be told to you and I, Lucky Listener, and we’re the ones re-opening the
board. Taking on the ownership. Perhaps if Goliath is spread between us all its hunger will dissipate. Or, as it threatened, it could become our epidemic.
So there’s the story, up to today, but it’s not over. Because this
thing is about to enter the hearts and minds of countless listeners. My
hope is that the album will do exactly as The Mars Volta have
engineered it to do, and lift the unseen burden that hangs over them.
When they first sent me The Bedlam in Goliath and asked me to write
this, I was nervous. What if the music itself was somehow cursed, a
sort of audio Macbeth? But after over one hundred listens I can tell you with confidence that I’d risk a little spiritual vengeance for this album.
From the opening surge of Aberinkula to the Brobdingnagian blast of
Goliath to the frenzy and near escape of Conjugal Burns, The Bedlam in
Goliath is the sound of a band transformed. The Volta have never been
what any sane person would call restrained, but in the heat of this
bedlam, in their teeth-baring cornered animal response to an invisible
entropy, they’ve created a truly relentless musical juggernaut.
The returning roster (Omar Rodriguez-Lopez on guitar and production,
Cedric Bixler-Zavala on vocals and lyrics, Isaiah Ikey Owens on keys,
Juan Alderete de la Pena on bass, Adrian Terrazas-Gonzalez on horns,
Marcel Rodriguez-Lopez on percussion, Paul Hinojos on guitar and
soundboard, Thomas “Holy f**king sh*t This New Guy is Incredible”
Pridgen on drums, and Red Hot Chili
Pepper/regular-Volta-album-contributor John Frusciante rounding out the
guitar armada) have crafted a record that manages to contain the echoes
of their considerable prior work and merge them with their
uncompromising desire to carve out new territory in the musical
landscape. Wax Simulacra carries with it the energy of
De-Loused’s This Apparatus Must Be Unearthed and elevates the tone with
frantic looped vocals and a swirling mix of horns and drum rolls. The
mind-melting freak-out crescendos of tracks like Frances the Mute’s
Cassandra Geminni or Amputechture’s Viscera Eyes have always given the
Volta’s albums and shows an air of transcendence, and there are moments
on new tracks like Goliath and Cavelettas and Ouroboros that guarantee
escalating listener paroxysms, if not Scanners-style exploding heads.
The more relaxed new tracks, like Ilyena or Tourniquet Man, manage to
encapsulate the strange lamentation of other Volta slow-burners while
adding an eerie sense of menace. The entire Volta crew is pushing
themselves further than ever before. And to anyone concerned about the
arrival of a new drummer, rest at ease. The Bedlam in Goliath unveils
Mr. Pridgen as a drum-pummeling berserker mainlining cheetah blood and
snorting dusted mastodon bones, proving masterful with the elaborate
and the explosive (and often melding both at the same time). It’s
worth noting, amidst all of this rhapsodic praise, how Omar and a crew
of dedicated musicians have managed to breathe thrumming life into what
was almost a stillborn album. The audio that the first engineer (who,
on an up note, is now on the mend and feeling much better) had left
behind was close to unworkably snarled. In his absence it became a
scramble to rebuild what the band knew they had been creating in the
studio. Robert Carranza kicked in heavy on the engineering, sinking
himself into the whole project with an added focus on the drum sonics.
Lars Stalfors and Isaiah Abolin were also called in, and along with
Omar they dodged daylight for too-long stretches and slaved to rework
each track. Shawn Michael Sullivan and Claudius Mittendorfer did their
best as editors to keep the band from having to start all over again.
The ever-reliable Volta-mixer Rich Costey tried to keep things positive
and helped Omar battle what he called Goliath’s “quantum entanglement”
(which even Rich saw evidenced by things like randomly disappearing
drum tracks). The depth of that entanglement becomes apparent when
you realize that Omar, always at the center of these struggles, almost
gave up on this record. The same Omar Rodriguez-Lopez that moved to
Amsterdam and cut four solo albums while also working on Amputechture
and a soundtrack for the Jorge Hernandez film El Bufalo de la Noche.
The same guy that’s probably working on a DVD, his own film, and 10 new
albums right now. But at certain points during work on Bedlam his
nearly incandescent creative force was on the verge of being snuffed
out. And he was sure Goliath was behind the chaos. After his studio
flooded, Omar even banned all mention of the Ouija board for fear that
simply acknowledging its existence might bring down some fatal blow.
Despite the disallowance, he remained haunted. He’d wake to fits of
late night inspiration only to find that there was a power blackout
(but only in his loft), or that the parts he’d crafted in the midnight
hour would later vaporize. Production work became so nightmarish and
Sisyphean that he’d occasionally check on the Soothsayer’s burial site,
to see if it had been exhumed and “reactivated.” Knowing about the
immense challenges faced in the creation of The Bedlam in Goliath only
elevates my appreciation for Omar’s production. With this record he has
laid out a blueprint for anyone else seeking to combine the complex
with the primeval and make it all hit you where it counts. This is an
album that’s electric for both the 3:00 AM headphone listener and the
guy doing 90 on the interstate with the windows down. This is an album
with an immense level of control and experimentation on display; for
every section with intricately panning gut-punching drums and
shimmering horn sounds and scorching guitars there’s another where you
can sense a mischievous musical mind at play (e.g. the fuzzed out bass
tones at the end of Ilyena or the real inserted recordings from
Jerusalem or the sound of a live jack switching between demo and final
versions on Askepios). As a filmic analog, picture Kubrick or Fincher
working in tandem with Bunuel or Jodorowsky. Actually, similar
analogs could be extended to the whole of the album itself. The Volta
have acknowledged the immense influence of surrealism and film on their
work. In relation just to Jodorowsky, The Bedlam in Goliath manages to
evoke the languid madness of Fando y Lis, the infidelity and murder and
worship of Santa Sangre, the broad-spectrum religious imagery of Holy
Mountain, the sheer guts-on-the-table awe of El Topo. Throw in the
identity confusion head-f**kery of Lynch’s strangest films, Werner
Herzog’s sense of obsession, a few dollops of Jonestown: The Life and
Death of Peoples Temple, and pinches of The Exorcist and Don’t Look Now
and you’re starting to get the right idea. On the lyrical front,
you should be warned: This is an unsettling piece of work. You’re
welcome to take Cedric’s vocals at surface level— he sounds incredible,
his range broader than ever, his energy and emotion undeniable.
Or you can begin to translate. Cedric Bixler-Zavala, like fellow
musical mavericks Bjork and Ghostface Killah, uses primarily English
words but speaks his own lyrical language. If you examine the meaning
behind his shrapnel-burst imagery, his obsessions with the grotesque
and the profoundly sacred, you begin to realize he’s created a complex
associative tapestry that’s designed with spider-web precision. And
before you know it you’re trapped. The more you read the story he’s
laid out (an intricate meta-fictional narrative reminiscent of
Danielewski’s House Of Leaves, involving both the transgressions of the
past and the desire of the Goliath parasite to infest the Ouija-using
host), the more you research his allusions and the history of the
spirit board, the more uncanny connections you are bound to make. You
start to recognize a tie between certain vocal effects and messages
from the board. You wonder if focusing on this story too much might
invite Goliath into your world. Soon you’re jumping at shadows,
shopping for salt and all-white outfits, surrounding yourself with
graphs and counting words and letters and looking for codes, creating
your own primordial cymatics using the album, feeling phantom tendrils
in your bones. You begin to hope that all the positive elements Cedric
covertly slid into the songs (a legion of religious references
including snippets of Santeria-derived prayers, classic fables, the
hidden name of a regal actress he holds in high regard, an underlying
reverence for creation/menstruation, vague hints of redemption) really
are helping to balance out and maybe even negate the darkness that has
infested the album. You’re bound to have questions. What exactly
transpired in the tragic triangle? Who was really in control and who
were the victims? Was anyone innocent? How did they die and what
happened to the bodies? How did they come to rest within the
Soothsayer? If they return to our world, what will they do? Those
answers (and more) are in there, fused at every level to songs of equal
complexity and gravity. And the closer you listen, the further you
voyage into The Bedlam in Goliath, the more disquieting and compelling
the Volta’s brilliant audiocelluloid epic becomes. This album is
the sound of a band playing— magnificently— for its life. And it is a
recording of such strange power that I believe the Goliath that haunts
them will be forever struck down. Word.
— Jeremy Robert Johnson, October 27th, 2007, Portland, Oregon
The Zayin Division— A Second Stage Burial
I. I am the simian martyr’s bullet-borne deliverance. II. Ideomotor effect. Forced cryptomnesia. Your shroud returns stale whispers. Ropes tighten at each limb. III.
He half-woke to a wild leopard, to blood-pregnant air, the smell of his
courted collapse. Laurel twigs crossed her hidden tools. IV. The
holy glyph floats close, its gray light angles suffuse the bones now
dust, flesh now jelly. Every cell shakes loose its viral code. Supernus
pacta sunt servanda. V. Its hands swept through in the crooked
mandible, the chemical lobotomy swung blind, the monoxide possessions.
All of it annelid territory. VI. Sandover light shone symbiotic until you saw it swallow-shift. Your retractions granted final grace. VII. I will not follow your collapsing oblivion.
—JRJ, October 28th, 2007, Portland, Oregon (First print copy interment)
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