Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

Kapital

0.0

販売価格

¥
3,190
税込
還元ポイント

廃盤

在庫状況 について

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2009年04月17日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルMute
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 CDSTUMM82
SKU 5016025610822

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
Recorded as communism was collapsing in Eastern Europe and while the tensions of the various Yugoslav regions were about to boil over into a brutal, years-long war, Kapital is Laibach's most extensive, longest individual album, a full CD's worth of sharp, pointed songs. Given the economic recession in place at the time -- likely inspiring the album's lead single, "Wirtschaft Ist Tot," or "Economy Is Dead" -- Laibach understandably regarded the new gods with all the disdain previously built up beforehand for the old ones. With the experiment in covering others' material behind them (at least temporarily), Kapital consists of all originals, crossing the familiar combinations of martial horns, jarring samples, barked singing, and strident orchestrations with a much more fluid use of electronic music (especially in terms of the rhythms, where the rough martial beats often give way to stripped-down breakbeat loops and pulses). Having long been identified with the industrial/electronic body music scene, by default if not always by direct intent, Laibach embraces the connection bodily here, experimenting with then-current techno styles here and there as well. It's a jarring combination in some instances but a strangely beautiful one in others -- if nothing else, the collective seemed to look at the acid house explosion and its aftereffects as merely another tool for both critique and entertainment. Many songs are instrumentals or almost on the verge of that status, but unlike efforts such as Macbeth or Baptism, Kapital is very song-oriented. The flaw of the album is that many songs come across as little different from similarly dark-minded industrial/electronic tracks from Europe and elsewhere -- Kapital is good to listen to but ultimately a bit anonymous. When at its best, though, it shows that Laibach kept the beat going even as an old world was crumbling about its ears. ~ Ned Raggett

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Decade Null

      アーティスト: Laibach

    2. 2.
      Everlasting In Union

      アーティスト: Laibach

    3. 3.
      Illumination

      アーティスト: Laibach

    4. 4.
      Le Privilege Des Morts

      アーティスト: Laibach

    5. 5.
      Codex Durex

      アーティスト: Laibach

    6. 6.
      Hymn To The Black Sun

      アーティスト: Laibach

    7. 7.
      Young Europa

      アーティスト: Laibach

    8. 8.
      Hunter's Funeral Procession

      アーティスト: Laibach

    9. 9.
      White Law

      アーティスト: Laibach

    10. 10.
      Wirtschaft Ist Tot

      アーティスト: Laibach

    11. 11.
      Torso

      アーティスト: Laibach

    12. 12.
      Entartete Welt

      アーティスト: Laibach

    13. 13.
      Kinderreich

      アーティスト: Laibach

    14. 14.
      Sponsered By Mars

      アーティスト: Laibach

    15. 15.
      Regime Of Coincidence State Of Gravity

      アーティスト: Laibach

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Laibach

商品の紹介

Spin - Highly Recommended - "..a most severe mix of politics and pop music...No industrial group could possibly be more intimidating than Laibach...blows all angst-ridden drum-machine combos out of the water.." Option - "..A hint of techno-beat runs throughout most of the album, but is kept subservient to mood and texture. And the textures are excellent at that.." Q - 4 Stars - Excellent - "..moves away from the rock references of their past toward a brave future of global electronic music.."
Rovi

Recorded as communism was collapsing in Eastern Europe and while the tensions of the various Yugoslav regions were about to boil over into a brutal, years-long war, Kapital is Laibach's most extensive, longest individual album, a full CD's worth of sharp, pointed songs. Given the economic recession in place at the time -- likely inspiring the album's lead single, "Wirtschaft Ist Tot," or "Economy Is Dead" -- Laibach understandably regarded the new gods with all the disdain previously built up beforehand for the old ones. With the experiment in covering others' material behind them (at least temporarily), Kapital consists of all originals, crossing the familiar combinations of martial horns, jarring samples, barked singing, and strident orchestrations with a much more fluid use of electronic music (especially in terms of the rhythms, where the rough martial beats often give way to stripped-down breakbeat loops and pulses). Having long been identified with the industrial/electronic body music scene, by default if not always by direct intent, Laibach embraces the connection bodily here, experimenting with then-current techno styles here and there as well. It's a jarring combination in some instances but a strangely beautiful one in others -- if nothing else, the collective seemed to look at the acid house explosion and its aftereffects as merely another tool for both critique and entertainment. Many songs are instrumentals or almost on the verge of that status, but unlike efforts such as Macbeth or Baptism, Kapital is very song-oriented. The flaw of the album is that many songs come across as little different from similarly dark-minded industrial/electronic tracks from Europe and elsewhere -- Kapital is good to listen to but ultimately a bit anonymous. When at its best, though, it shows that Laibach kept the beat going even as an old world was crumbling about its ears. ~ Ned Raggett|
Rovi

Recorded as communism was collapsing in Eastern Europe and while the tensions of the various Yugoslav regions were about to boil over into a brutal, years-long war, Kapital is Laibach's most extensive, longest individual album, a full CD's worth of sharp, pointed songs. Given the economic recession in place at the time -- likely inspiring the album's lead single, "Wirtschaft Ist Tot," or "Economy Is Dead" -- Laibach understandably regarded the new gods with all the disdain previously built up beforehand for the old ones. With the experiment in covering others' material behind them (at least temporarily), Kapital consists of all originals, crossing the familiar combinations of martial horns, jarring samples, barked singing, and strident orchestrations with a much more fluid use of electronic music (especially in terms of the rhythms, where the rough martial beats often give way to stripped-down breakbeat loops and pulses). Having long been identified with the industrial/electronic body music scene, by default if not always by direct intent, Laibach embraces the connection bodily here, experimenting with then-current techno styles here and there as well. It's a jarring combination in some instances but a strangely beautiful one in others -- if nothing else, the collective seemed to look at the acid house explosion and its aftereffects as merely another tool for both critique and entertainment. Many songs are instrumentals or almost on the verge of that status, but unlike efforts such as Macbeth or Baptism, Kapital is very song-oriented. The flaw of the album is that many songs come across as little different from similarly dark-minded industrial/electronic tracks from Europe and elsewhere -- Kapital is good to listen to but ultimately a bit anonymous. When at its best, though, it shows that Laibach kept the beat going even as an old world was crumbling about its ears. ~ Ned Raggett
Rovi

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