Search - Acid Mothers Temple & Melting Paraiso UFO :: Crystal Rainbow Pyramid Under the Stars

Crystal Rainbow Pyramid Under the Stars
Acid Mothers Temple & Melting Paraiso UFO
Crystal Rainbow Pyramid Under the Stars
Genres: Alternative Rock, International Music, Pop, Rock, Classic Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (3) - Disc #1

"God bless you AMT." -- Pitchfork Brand new full-length album from Acid Mothers Temple & The Melting Paraiso UFO features the recent addition of female vocalist Kitagawa Hao. Recorded over a period of four months a...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Acid Mothers Temple & Melting Paraiso UFO
Title: Crystal Rainbow Pyramid Under the Stars
Members Wishing: 4
Total Copies: 0
Label: Important Records
Original Release Date: 1/1/2007
Re-Release Date: 5/29/2007
Genres: Alternative Rock, International Music, Pop, Rock, Classic Rock
Styles: Far East & Asia, Progressive, Progressive Rock, Psychedelic Rock
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 793447514628, 793447514727

Synopsis

Album Description
"God bless you AMT." -- Pitchfork Brand new full-length album from Acid Mothers Temple & The Melting Paraiso UFO features the recent addition of female vocalist Kitagawa Hao. Recorded over a period of four months at The Acid Mothers Temple, this is a very clean-sounding and polished AMT. Frontman Kawabata Makoto admitted, only half joking, that this has the "cleanest sound in AMT history!" More controlled than many of their speaker-destroying, fuzz-blasted speed-guru jams, Crystal Rainbow Pyramid is focused on mystic ambient passages leading into Makoto's head-heavy echo-riffs. Crystal Rainbow Pyramid is clearly one of the new classic AMT recordings. Prepare to have your mind blown slowly with evolving heavyweight jams and climactic peaks of exquisite ecstasy. Artwork by Seldon Hunt.

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CD Reviews

AMT continue their winning streak with another highlight
D. Hamilton-Smith | Merrye Olde Engelond | 10/15/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)

"`Crystal Rainbow Pyramid Under The Stars' is the newest release from the always prolific Japanese semi-commune known as Acid Mothers Temple. It professes to be the "cleanest sounding" album yet and, as far as I've heard, that's correct. `Crystal Rainbow...' has the most balanced production I've heard on any AMT record. For a start, the drums are easily picked out, which makes a huge difference. So often in the past they have been reduced to faint thumps and distant hi-hats, which lessened the hypnotic power of the band just a little. The instrumentation herein is just as multi-layered and rich as before, only this time everything is more clearly audible. Everything sounds big, nothing sounds cluttered. And though existing fans will already be used to the freewheeling confusion inherent in any AMT listening session, the stronger production can only be a plus.



And onto the songs themselves. The opener `[...] Head Man...' is a thoroughly wild, slightly atonal jam that lasts a little over seven minutes and sees the new vocalist Kitigawa marking her place inside the Acid Mothers whirlwind. It's a solid track, and the relatively short length works in its favour. The remaining hour of `Crystal Rainbow...' is a mellower affair. The (almost) title track is a lush, triplet-time groove that hits all the bases with aplomb. It's not only one of the best Acid Mothers songs around, it's also the one I would use as an introduction to the band. Its opening old-school riff is rooted in conventional stoner fayre, although it's liberally sprinkled with spacey madness for the entire duration. Already the album is shaping up to be a pretty damn good Acid Mothers record, but what follows propels `Crystal Rainbow Pyramid Under The Stars' into the higher echelons of the band's achievements. `Electric Psilocybin Flashback' is in their space-folk vein, but it's a 40 minute multi-part monster. A half-Eastern, half-Mediterranean guitar riff drones through the opening few minutes, leading into some sublime saxophone lead lines and beyond. Only in the last ten minutes does this track drag slightly, but that's only a minor quibble. It's easily one of the most expansive and interesting pieces they've put their collective name to, and rounds off an excellent record. Acid Mothers Temple show no sign of slowing down, and when their output is reliably this good, there's no need for them to."
Are You Kidding Me?
Kevin Mclain | 08/08/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This has to be the best AMT album in recent memory. What a psych-rock masterpiece. Highly recommended."