From the
Wonderful Wooden Reasons site
Faust - Collectif Met(z) 1996-2005
(
art-errorist)
3CD & 1DVD box
A new Faust album is always cause for much rejoicing in this house (on my part at least). So, in the spirit of honesty and fair-play I make no attempt to hide my abundant joy at the prospect of new Faust music. And does it disappoint? Well, no, obviously. A live set from 1996, a disc of rehearsals from 2005, a disc of home recordings and a, frankly, inconsequential eight minute dvd which I'm going to ignore because it's a bit of a waste of plastic.
We'll start with the live disc, a recording from the
Musiques Volantes Festival on 8/11/96 that showcases what I assume was, at the time, a new look Faust. Also, a very industrial sounding Faust with a set marrying abstract guitar noise and electronics with pummelling metallic rhythms. Occasionally a melody, or at least the promise of one, breaks through and shifts everything onto a new plateau but on the whole this is pretty uncompromising and intense.
By 2004 the (same) players have mellowed out considerably. Gone(ish) are the punishing rhythms and guitar squalls and in their place is a band that has matured into each other. The arrangements are looser, it's got a real feel for vintage era Faust and the band sound like they're thoroughly enjoying just playing. Raga style drones, string bending and repetition are in ascendence and abundance here.
The third disc features 9 home recordings by Zappi Diermaier and Jean-Herve Peron. More so than you'd imagine, each person's recordings reflect very strongly their place within the group being, in turn, very percussion centred and then very vocal orientated. As songs Zappi's contributions are the most fully realised although the drums are a bit too loud in the mix for my taste. JHP's 'Rund ist Schoen' worked far better in concert than it does here but his 'Melancholy on Three Strings' is beautiful.
Think of this album as the three sides of Faust. The overtly experimental side is here on the 'Personal' disc, The rehearsals disc brings us the hippy, folky, citizen of the world side and the live in 1997 is Faust at it's most industrial. What is present on every disc however is the all-encompassing joie de vivre and good nature that
characterises every note as being uniquely Faustian. While it's not the best thing they've ever done, if you're already a fan then it's definitely worth picking up otherwise try an early album first, 'So Far' or 'IV' would be my recommendation, and come back to this once you're hooked.
(
www.art-errorist.de)
Faust - Coal Exchange, Cardiff 31/10/05
Midway through this gig Jean-Herve Peron, Faust's permanently smiling bassist / singer / trumpeter / horn player / cement-mixerist / etc / etc, relates a story of a friend who 'Buries metal in the ground. He waits 25 years. He is very patient. Then he digs it up and it is art.' (or words to that effect). This could almost be a metaphor for Faust itself only it was 35 years ago (or so) and rather than waiting patiently for their metal to rust they have been busily battering it into whatever shape takes their fancy. As a result, unlike that of the metal burier's, Faust's art is vibrant with the patination of a lover's touch.
In a set that lasted around the two hour mark we were taken on an excursion through both the band's back catalogue and the distant reaches of their collective improvisations. At times the proceedings threatened to disolve into farce (Peron ironing a shirt and yelling 'This is not music!' (he's right, it's definitely ironing) amongst collective banging, clanging, moaning, whooping and angle grinding) only to be brought back from the brink by the sheer good nature of the thing (he
gave the shirt to an audience member). Delicate psychedelic ballads are followed by pummelling one chord industrial assaults and shrieking noise attacks which in turn give way to a drone piece that had the hairs on my arms standing on end as it reverberated around the enormously high (in every sense of the word) room and then the cement mixer kicks in before we're back to ballads again. The encore of my dreams - It's a Rainy Day - was never likely to send me home unhappy but there were at least three points in the set where if they'd stopped I would still have gone home happy. Highlight followed highlight followed highlight in a set that was an absolute joy to behold. Wish you were there.
Faust - In Autumn
(
Dirter)
3CD + 1 DVD box
A beautifully produced box set consisting 3 CDs and 1 DVD all recorded live on the October / November 2005 UK tour of a band I am utterly besotted with. No-one and I mean NO-ONE does it for me quite like Faust. Bear that in mind when reading this.
Upon opening I went straight to the DVD for the simple reason that 5 of the 15 songs featured are from the gig I attended - Cardiff, Coal Exchange. Imagine my joy as these turn out to be the highlights of the disc being both well lit, reasonably well shot and with clear sound.
Surely this gig deserves a DVD of it's own (hint hint). Some of the other tracks suffer somewhat in the production stakes but the sheer joie-de-vivre of the performances carry them through admirably. These same issues apply to the audio discs with the sound quality dipping and rolling throughout. Be aware however that I'm only mentioning this for the sake of completeness because it really doesn't impact on the listening pleasure to any great degree. The 'rough and ready' quality found on many Faust releases is a great part of their charm - here it's just slightly more apparent. The opportunity to hear new versions of many classic Faust tunes (Rainy Day, Chromatic, It's a Bit of a Pain, Talk to the Fish & J'ai Mal Aux Dents amongst many others over the 4 discs) played loud and live (and well) is a joy that's just too good an opportunity to pass on.
The sun is shining, the birds are singing and I'm listening to Faust. Life is good.
(
www.dirter.co.uk)
Faust - In Autumn (Taster CD)
(
Dirter)
CD
The 'In Autumn' taster cd consists of 5 live tracks (Chromatic (from London), Skinhead (from Newcastle), Caruso (also Newcastle), Baby Is Blue (from Bangor) & Slide (also Bangor)) the last two of which are exclusive to this CD. It was originally intended as a promotional item given away at the London screening of the Faust concert film 'Nobody Knows if it Really Happened', the book 'Stretch Out Time' and the box set. Those not at the launch will have to pay inflated prices from greedy shops or be really lucky and rely upon the kindness of strangers (you know who you are and you have my thanks). My advice would be if you're the obsessive completist type (cough) then invest in this little gem. If not just buy the box set as it's worth every penny.
(
www.dirter.co.uk)
Faust with Nurse With Wound - Disconnected (limited edition)
(
Art-Errorist)
CD
Wow! Talk about dream pairings. The two 'bands' that have been at the centre of my musical tastes for the last 10 years and they do not disappoint in the slightest. Disconnected (the limited edition version at least) is a stunning album of two unequal halves. The first half being the actual album wherein the NWW duo mixed, produced, augmented the a set of Faust recordings to create what is possibly the finest work either outfit has produced in recent years (and that's not intended as a slight on either outfits recordings either. It's just that good). The second 'half' comes in the shape of a contentiously included live Faust track.
I had read, on the NWW Myspace, that the NWW twosome were unhappy with the inclusion of the bonus track on the special edition version of this album on the grounds that it "destroys the concept and atmosphere they have tried to create". I don't really want to go into any detail on this issue but I will say that I think the use of the word 'destroys' is a little strong. It's true that the first four tracks have a cohesion and flow to them that excludes utterly the final live track with it's crashing atonalities, but to my mind this has always been a characteristic of Faust, albums full of beautiful and unexpected jarring inconsistencies. From a purely listener based standpoint I really don't think the inclusion of this track detracts from the album in the slightest. The collaborative tracks are a complete article. Taken as a whole they are compelling and compulsive, a fact which nothing can demean. The bonus track is individual from the others in terms of it's sonorities and it's execution and such becomes simply the next (very welcome) piece of music on the playlist.
(
www.art-errorist.de)