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Orchestre Tout Puissant Marcel Duchamp - We're Okay But We're Lost Anyway

Details

Format: CD
Rel. Date: 12/31/2021
UPC: 7640159732730

We're Okay But We're Lost Anyway
Artist: Orchestre Tout Puissant Marcel Duchamp
Format: CD
New: In Stock and available for pick up $22.98
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Formats and Editions

DISC: 1

1. Be Patient
2. Empty Skies
3. So Many Things (To Feel Guilty About)
4. Blabber
5. We Can Can We
6. Flux
7. Connected
8. Beginning
9. Silent

More Info:

Founded in 2006 by Vincent Bertholet (Hyperculte), the Orchestre Tout Puissant Marcel Duchamp is a large-scale project. Designed as a real orchestra, the size of the ensemble has varied over time. Now with 12 members, 14 in the past or 6 at the beginning, the ensemble has scoured the stages of Europe todemonstrate that the formula 'the more the merrier' has never been more true than on stage. Whether in prestigious festivals (Pale'o Festival de Nyon, Fusion Festival, Incubate, Womad, Bad Bonn Kilbi, Jazz a` la Vilette) or on the four albums released since it's launch, the group shows an incredible fluidity. The Orchestre Tout Puissant Marcel Duchamp (a mischievous title in homage to traditional African groups -Orchestre Tout Puissant Konono n°1, Orchestre Tout Puissant Polyrytmo etc... -and to one of the greatest dynamizers of 20th century art) embraces the forms of it's musicians while pushing them to their limits. The result is a powerful, experimental, unstable and terribly alive, organic sound. These characteristics can be found on We're OK. But We're Lost Anyway, fifth opus of the band. Built around twelve musicians, extirpated from their respective biotope, it develops a repetitive musicality which, deployed in successive waves, creates a feeling of trance. Mixing free jazz, post punk, high life, brass band, symphonic mixtures and kraut rock, their sound only goes beyond the limits of genre. Transcendental, almost ritualistic, the music is coupled with powerful lyrics, declaimed in rage against a world that is falling apart. Adorcist, hypnotic and post-syncratic, the Orchestre Tout Puissant Marcel Duchamp, far from Tzara's manifesto, is somewhere between Hugo Ball's phonetic psalms, a Sufi procession that turns into a brawl and a voodoo ritual, but always with a precision proper to the monomania of an asperger.
        
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