Law Speed

Law Speed is the first album by French/Italian post-rock band Permanent Fatal Error, a project by Olivier Manchion, founder member of the band Ulan Bator. The album was recorded in Italy at URS studio (Villa Minozzo, Emilia-Romagna).

Law Speed
Studio album by
ReleasedApril 2004
RecordedFebruary 10–20, 2003
GenreRock, Post-Rock
Length43:35
LabelWallace Records, Ruminance records, Klangbad
ProducerOlivier Manchion

Track listing

  1. "|||" – 0:06
  2. "A Pic" – 3:59
  3. "Nord" – 3:24
  4. "BLU" – 5:18
  5. "B#Side <part1" – 2:23
  6. "B#Side _part2_" – 4:24
  7. "B#Side part3>" – 2:13
  8. "Low.Law.Speed – 9:58
  9. "Sunflowers" – 5:39
  10. "Deaf.Blues" – 0:44
  11. "Treep" – 5:29

Musicians

Olivier Manchion : acoustic-guitar, bass, loops, slide, bass-organ, e, voice
Giulio C. Vetrone : snake-guitar, wave-guitar, bell-guitar, triangle, voice
Nicolas Marmin : bass, electronics, distorgan, voice
Francesco Billét : drums, egg, bell, 123

Guested musicians

Massimo Guidetti: Trumpet (B#Side _part2_)
Bi: Vocals (B#Side _part2_)

About "Law Speed"

AVANT GARDE FESTIVAL 2005/Jean-Hervé Péron: Permanent Fatal Eror is Olivier Manchion's solo project. Manchion is a founding member of Ulan Bator, a long standing member of the current faust line-up, bass player on Damo Suzuki's "Hollyaris" CD and very active as a solo performer. With his solo project he can present the more quiet aspects of his musical work, smoothe backgrounds, lightly dotted guitar sounds, equally inspired by Jazz and Rock elements. He is one of the creators of the new genre "Post-Jazz-Rock" (Arte). Manchion playfully manages the jump from" underground" to main feature. The French/German TV station Arte pays an ununsual hommage to his music: "Music hasn't been as filigree, as harmonic and at the same time as varied and clearly composed as by Permanent Fatal Error

source: http://2006.avantgardefestival.de/

Recommended Records/Chris Cutler: Another CD from Wallace, who seem to have uncovered a hidden Valley full of groups that play instruments and remind one of the attitude (though not necessarily the music) of the best of the early 70s experimentalists. Here Bass, 2 Guitars and Drums evolve a slow, minimal, rhythmically centred - Faust meets the Necks - programme that is both unusual and assured. Interesting

source: http://www.rermegacorp.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Product_Code=Wallace40&Category_Code=&Store_Code=RM

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.