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The Mars Volta - Frances the Mute (CD)

Album Details: Frances the Mute

Release Date:03/01/2005
Label:Umvd Labels
UPC:075021039773

Other Available Formats: Frances the Mute

User Reviews: Frances the Mute

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Just beautiful

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Mar 14, 2005

    Pros: the brilliant music, the beautiful vocals and all the fun of decoding the story

    Cons: The parts where nothing happens

    I love De-Loused. I really do. But this album surpasses it. No, I'm not lying. The first four songs on the album are good, but there are parts where nothing happens except some noise which kinda bothers me, but when the album hits Cassandra Gemi...ni, the 32 minute epic, it's pure heaven. I can't really explain what makes me love this track so much, but it really makes up for those little flaws earlier in the album. Makes me completely forget them. The lyrics are a bit odd, but that's part of the fun. Trying to unlock this mystery is as exciting and entertaining as listening to the album, if not more. It's like watching a David Lynch movie. I really suck at writing reviews, and my english isn't that good so I'll just say: Buy this album, open your mind, listen to it a few times through and enjoy. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    A Genre In Its Own

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Mar 12, 2005

    Pros: Unique and genius

    Cons: none at all

    The Mars Volta cannot even begin to be classified, for it is a genre in its own, the lyrics are ingenius to the highest degree, they are so intense, and twisted in a sense that even the dark lyrics seem light at times. The music is outstanding, this ...band i can't even begin to describe. The Mars Volta is pretty much for anyone who likes listening to music, a band that takes the fundamentals of rock and blends them into something new. I'm sure i'll be listening to this one till' the disk dies of overusage, just so i can go out to buy it again. For further look into the sheer genious of this band pick up de-loused in the comatorium the mars volta's last album, this band will surely go down in history as a genre definement of rock and roll. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Frances the Mute

  • All Music Guide

    The Mars Volta's 2003 debut was a dense, experimental runon sentence of science fiction and musical exploration. But though it ultimately rewarded patience with stretches of unbuckled rock roll genius, DeLoused in the Comatorium was also a mazelike and obtuse migraine dealer that made people frustrated and crazy. For 2005's Frances the Mute Omar Rodriguez Lopez and Cedric Bixler worked principally with their touring band, but "joining the band for selected moments" are strings, horns, electronic programming, pals Flea and John Frusciante, and the coqui frogs of Puerto Rico. There are no song breaks, making the track listing more of an outline. But Mute's printed lyrics are a helpful guide, a map of Mars that's meant to both direct and fascinate. "She was a mink handjob in sarcophagus heels"; "Don't be afraid when all the worms come crawlin out of your head"; "they were scaling through an ice pick of abscess reckoning and when Miranda sang everyone turned away..." perhaps the only mat...ch for the cerebral weirdness and eventual beauty of Mars Volta's lyrics is their music itself. The roar of Rodriguez Lopez and Bixler's posthardcore past is fully locked away, replaced by an equally powerful flair for expressive percussion, intricate vocal harmonies and extended solos for electric guitar (as on the initial part of "Cygnus...Vismund Cygnus"). Sure, there are moments on Mute that reach the grandiose heights of heavy music "L' Via L' Viaquez"'s earsplitting changes will blow back your hair. But the same song is sung half in Spanish, half in English, and its flashes of heaviness fall between stretches of AfroCuban rhythm. Other portions of Frances the Mute are murky and distant, like field recordings from the ocean floor, while still others shift drastically between brittle acoustics and a stuttering, guitarled volatility that threatens to crack open the earth. Its constant shifts mean the record is claustrophobic and even dizzying; it demands perseverance. But it's great when a blast of a trumpet cuts through a gloomy moment, and Bixler's vocals are a thread to reality. For example, while his lyrics for "Miranda That Ghost Just Isn't Holy Anymore" and "Widow" are mysterious poems, he sings them with a fervor that's immediately identifiable. That passion is evident throughout Frances the Mute; it's the organic fever that was buried on Comatorium. - Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

The Mars Volta

Picking up the pieces from At the Drive-In, Cedric Bixler and Omar Rodriguez formed the Mars Volta and wasted little time in branching out into elements of hardcore, psychedelic rock, and free jazz that expanded on the boundaries of their previous work. Although their previous band's demise ultimately arrived before they were able to truly capitalize on their mounting c... Read more