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Hosianna Mantra
Popol Vuh
Hosianna Mantra
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Alternative Rock, International Music, New Age, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

Hosianna Mantra has finally been remastered with sparkeling and sharp sound quality. The bonus track Maria (Ave Maria) was recorded at the same time as Hosianna Mantra (1973) and is considered to be Popol Vuh?s poetic albu...  more »

     

CD Details

All Artists: Popol Vuh
Title: Hosianna Mantra
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Zyx/Ohr Pilz
Release Date: 5/25/1999
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Alternative Rock, International Music, New Age, Rock
Styles: Ambient, Electronica, Progressive, Progressive Rock, Electronic
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 090204746026

Synopsis

Album Description
Hosianna Mantra has finally been remastered with sparkeling and sharp sound quality. The bonus track Maria (Ave Maria) was recorded at the same time as Hosianna Mantra (1973) and is considered to be Popol Vuh?s poetic album. A beautiful album and a beautiful bonus track.

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CD Reviews

The tangerine dream of spiritual soundpainting
Oliver | Morelia, MICH MEX | 11/03/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Among the many German musicians who in the 1970s "traveled" (in person or just spiritually) to India and the Far East and absorbed Eastern spirituality in the format of western music, Florian Fricke is likely to be the greatest. His work has been a constant exploration of the same theme: how to express the most personal, profound, austere spirituality by the means of western classical music, western sacred music and profane rock music. It was a marriage of East and West, and a marriage of past and present, made on Earth. In fact, it was made in Germany, and it bears the stigmata of German history. Almost inevitably, Fricke ended up denying the fundamental tenet of German music of his age: electronics. The humble, peaceful tones of acoustic instruments served his purpose better than the majestic complexity of synthesizers and sequencers.

In 1972 Fricke converted to both Christianity and Hinduism, and decided to move even further away from electronic instruments, preferring the most humble acoustic instruments over high-tech devices. A new line-up, centered around the angelic wails of Korean soprano Djong Yun, recorded Hosianna Mantra (Pilz, january 1973) in a Buddhist meditative tone, showing a solemn and elegant way to bridge the Western mass and Eastern meditation. Fricke on keyboards, Amon Duul II's guitarist Conny Veit, Between's Robert Eliscu on oboe, Fritz Sonnleitner on violino, Klaus Wiese on tambouras build up ascetic atmospheres that catapult the listener into Tibetan or Gregorian monasteries. Most of the interplay is between the piano (tenderly caressed by Fricke) and the guitar (whose phrasing simulates the Indian mantras). The other instruments add evocative power to the music, rarely altering the flow, in a manner similar to renaissance music. The key difference between this music and classical or rock music is the repudiation of rhythm: Tangerine Dream was removing rhythm (i.e., Time) from its cosmic soundpainting, and Popol Vuh removed rhythm (i.e., Time) from its spiritual soundpainting."
Hosianna Mantra could be the most beautiful album ever
Jim Keil | Albany, NY | 11/18/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"If you already know Popol Vuh, but not this album, rest assured that this will be your favorite Popol Vuh album. If you're not familiar with the band (Florian Fricke, really), know that this is the most beautiful album you'll ever own. Simply, Hosianna Mantra is the most beautiful album ever recorded. Guitars, violin, piano, oboe, and Korean singer Djong Yun combine to out-pretty all that came before. But it's not schmaltzy. It's just beautiful. Jazzy just enough not to be annoying, psychadelic just enough not to be exasperating, it's just the sweetest sound you've ever heard. Now, if you're a Popol Vuh fan who never heard this, just know it is better than everything else. It is Popol Vuh at its best. Buy this thing. Nothing is "better"."