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Faust - Bbc Sessions flac album

Faust - Bbc Sessions flac album
  • Performer Faust
  • Title Bbc Sessions
  • Date of release 1996
  • Style Freestyle
  • Other formats MP1 AU DXD MPC MOD TTA DMF
  • Genre Electronic / Rock
  • Size MP3 1293 mb
  • Size FLAC 1706 mb
  • Rating: 4.2
  • Votes: 245

Faust: BBC Sessions + by AAJ Staff, published on October 1, 2001. Yes, indeed, BBC Sessions + is from 1973. The technology then (studio as well as recording) was not what it is today. But in a way that makes this effort even more remarkable. In the era when tape splicing and overdubs (with simple analog effects) were the dominant tools of the trade, music like this took real talent to create. Look for some excellent improvisation scattered amidst all the groove and drone on this disc; and perhaps a bulb will light up in your brain next time you hear Tortoise or your modern-day post-rock band of choice

Faust ‎– BBC Sessions +. Label: ReR Megacorp ‎– ReR F5, Locus Solus ‎– LSI 2048. Format: CD, Album, Remastered. Track 1 first broadcast . 73 (P) BBC 1972 Released by arrangement with BBC Worldwide Ltd. Other tracks are previously unreleased selections, recently unearthed, plus "We Are The Hallo Men", taken from the LP The Last LP, RR 36 (ReR 1988) and "Party 1" from the LP Munic and Elsewhere, RR 25 (1986). Remastered at Studio Midi Pyrenees, France.

BBC Sessions + is a music boxset/compilation recording by FAUST (e Rock) released in 2001 on cd, lp, vinyl and/or cassette.

BBC Sessions + presents archival vintage Faust from various sources. The highlight is the first track, a continuous 20-minute session recorded for John Peel's BBC radio show. It includes "The Lurcher," "Krautrock," and "Do So," the latter a self-mocking pop song making a ludicrous contrast with the previous noise/drone hypnotic anthem. This version of "Krautrock" (12 minutes) tops the one found on Faust IV (if anything, it sounds clearer).

Faust (English: "fist") are a German rock band. Formed in 1971 in Wümme by producer and former music journalist Uwe Nettelbeck, the group was originally composed of Werner "Zappi" Diermaier, Hans Joachim Irmler, Arnulf Meifert, Jean-Hervé Péron, Rudolf Sosna and Gunther Wüsthoff, working with engineer Kurt Graupner.