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Transmalinnia
 
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Transmalinnia

Lumerians Audio CD
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
Price: £14.06 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Audio CD (1 Mar 2011)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Knitting Factory Records/Red
  • ASIN: B004GMYGWG
  • Other Editions: Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 81,060 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Let The Outsiders In 15 April 2011
By Gannon TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
Even though it's taken three years since their debut EP, California-based stoners Lumerians have timed its long-playing follow-up Transmalinnia just right.

The stock of psychonaut pioneers Wooden Shjips has never been higher - their equally beguiling spin-off Moon Duo now also rightly find themselves caught in the flow too. And, with Zeroes QC, Suuns, albeit only in places, have recently reignited interest in the sort of rattling, oddball motorik that Clinic once put to such good use (if, that is, it indeed every faded from certain segments of the public conscious).

Lumerians finds their niche between these themes, very much making the space their own however thanks to industrial overtones, vintage organ abuse and downright danceable grooves. A case in point, the strong opener "Burning Mirror" runs with kraut-rock repeats, spinning them out with organ drone and androgynous vocals. Urgent, funky, and always capable and willing to ramp it all up a gear, it should come as surprise to no one that a band that takes its album name and artwork from the notorious outsider artist Eugene Von Bruenchenhein also peddle in psych-disco.

The same, fuzzy beat and organ then prop up "Black Tusk" introducing them during its course to tribal percussion, as well as frayed keyboard and synth lines. Latterly, between the vocals, it all descends into eerie, carnival-esque swirls that segue nicely into the instrumental "XuluX". With a more industrial, yet clean bent, it's comprised in turn of unpredictable, echoing keys that decay into moribund electronics, slow-pace, low-volume psyche bedding and a hypnotic, high-pitch synth-line.

Gently drifting like a timeworn Silver Apples cut, "Atlanta Brook" partners the calm lapping of "Melting Space" well. With something of the interlude to it, it's essentially lounge/elevator, mood muzak for those, as its title suggests, with melted minds. The subsequent "Calalini Rises" is borne of a similar idea, differentiating itself with buzzing echoes, distant shrieking and a more pronounced drum rig that all contribute to a building in concept and atmosphere that eventually envelop the listener with uncomfortable density and menace.

Acting as a shadow to Transmalinnia's more straightforward openers, "Hashshashin" isn't just about killer weed and speech impediments. Deliciously dark, it becomes almost joyous out of nowhere as a wildcard synth-line breaks free, running amok towards its climax. With an industrial footprint, "Longwave" plods through fuzzy low-notes for its first two minutes as the feel goes a little Spaceman 3. Prevented from flying away on total fantasy by rocks in its pockets, the tracks sinks into some blackened, river-bottom ooze as it then devolves into a shuffling seven-minute outro filled with rattling chains, wind-chimes and straight-up drone.

Like surfacing out of hypnosis, "Gaussian Castles" finally lifts Transmalinnia from its deep meditation, closing the album with a more linear exercise in vocal-led dreamscaping.

It's been a long-time coming, but Transmalinnia never feels rushed as a result. It's patient psyche that runs the genre's entire gamut with ease. Sometimes beautiful, sometimes bleak, it has poise and intrigue, depth and breadth. It's time, it would appear, to welcome these outsiders in.

*Advised downloads:* "Burning Mirror" and "Black Tusk".
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  5 reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Dig These Guys 6 Jun 2011
By over and under - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Audio CD
Being a Spacemen 3 fan, it was hard not to like the Lumerians from the get go. I haven't really consumed their lyrical gifts, but the sound ropes you in. In addition to their alternative space-funk originals, one detects an obvious Bauhaus/Tones on Tails influence in some of the later tracks. I thought I heard some Joy Division creeping in on one of the last songs too, very reminiscent of "Dead Souls." Anyway, check them out. Oh, and everything that guy said in the other review is true, too.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
hypnotic, post-industrial tribal Krautrock soundscapes on a sacred journey 5 April 2011
By Charlie Quaker - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
Debut from Oakland, California band of powerful, post-industrial tribal Krautrock soundscapes
with side trips to psychedelic island melodic ritualism, where electronic DJs pound out percussive
rhythms in tome to hypnotic death-dance party lines.....while somewhere the sound of acid-laced
peanut butter sandwich crunching sparkles the brain synapse like undulating chant/dirge ghosts
on a sacred journey. An invitingly trippy interplanetary exploration. Similarities to Skull Defekts,
Prince Rama, Savage Republic, Legendary Pink Dots, Maserati, Spacemen 3, Bollock Brothers,
Silver Apples.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Amazingly visual as well 28 Nov 2011
By findthatsong - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Audio CD
So much for the myth that the wave of music from California has ended! these Bay Area blasters assault your eardrums with hypnotic percussion which a thrash metal band would envy, thanks to their two percussionists- but they don't stop there. The bass hits you like a ten-foot wave, your fillings melt, your eyes dillate, and from there it's an instant eargasm. The vocals are alternatively exciting or relaxing/entrancing, depending on which singer is involved... but I think they do even better without vocals. The biggest surprize was how visually involved they are. From the album art, to the website, to the live shows, to the merch, they are consistent and EXTREMELY inspired. You are extremely unfortunate if you die without having seen them live, at least a few times.
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