The Mars Volta. New Album.


This came out of nowhere for me.  New self-titled album from The Mars Volta.  What a great thing when a broken-up okayish-band regroups after 10 years, crosses genres while maintaining some sonic continuity, and creates a timeless and inspired opus.  What an accomplishment. Confrontationally creative. Hits musically first, then you realize you are also listening to an abundance of audiophile goodness as well.  Wasn’t really a fan of The Mars Volta before this album, but this is a blast.

nyev

Showing 5 responses by nyev

If you are using Roon with Tidal it shows the wrong date for the album. The date reads as November 23, 2004.  And last night it was in the EP’s section instead of main albums, but that part has been corrected now.  Everything shows up correctly when looking it up in the Tidal app though.

Glad to hear it! I causally had listened to this band over a decade ago but wouldn’t say I was a fan. I had totally forgotten that they ever existed. About 20 years ago I saw them open for the Red Hot Chilli Peppers, but at the time hadn’t heard of them. All I remember was they were by far the single loudest band I’d heard play live. And this is from someone who has been to many NIN and some Tool shows…. The Mars Volta opining for the Chillis was so loud it physically hurt. Lead guitar felt like I was undergoing brain surgery without anesthetic. I also recall the singer performing acrobatics with the microphone for the entire set. So that’s my experience with this band.

Fast forward 20 years and their new album is an awesome example of a highly evolved and different band from what they were, and creatively fearless.

I get that. There’s a lot of spontaneous changes in direction and a constant feeling that the music is continually evolving in a way.  Overwhelmed with varied ideas.

Maybe try following along with lyrics as you go.  Apparently there is quite a journey starting with terrifying theme of abuse and trauma before moving on to intense optimism.  I read that in a magazine interview with the singer.  Might help with the cohesion.  I’ll be trying following the lyrics soon.

No, not really.  It's more like Arctic Monkeys doing the Chipmunks Biggest Hits.  But it's great...  I noticed in the rare instances he sings in his low register, his voice is sublime, but also sounds a lot like Arctic Monkey's singer.  Gets distinctive in the upper range.

Hardest album for me to get was Radiohead’s Kid A.  But you have to understand that the world was waiting for them to save rock and roll from the likes of N’Sync and Brittney Spears at the time, and then Radiohead turned around and released….that.  But I eventually came to realize that this was the most rock and rollish move they could have made, in spirit if not sonically, and I came to appreciate that album in time.