Momus - Krambambuli | RECORD STORE DAY
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Momus - Krambambuli
Krambambuli
Artist: Momus
Format: CD

Details

Label: AMERICAN PATCHWORK
Rel. Date: 10/13/2023
UPC: 708527230459

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DISC: 1

1. Track 1
2. Murder Me
3. Track 3
4. Life After Sixty
5. Track 5
6. Theatre of the Self
7. Track 7
8. Captivate
9. Track 9
10. Hotdesking
11. Track 11
12. Men Are the Problem
13. Track 13
14. Clearer
15. Track 15
16. Fanfare
17. Track 17
18. The Beast
19. 1
20. Heliobore
21. 1
22. Pelikan
23. 1
24. Cosmos
25. 1
26. Dunderheads

More Info:

Returning to Europe after several months in Asia, Momus begins recording Krambambuli with a yen for melodrama. Assuming the persona of an obscure Japanese synth-chanson singer called Megumi Satsu, he records 1980s-style songs about murder, ageing and war using a new vocal technique halfway between Satsu's rambling, guttural cries and the Sprechgesang (speaking-singing) style pioneered a century ago by Arnold Schoenberg. As the lights dim, we find ourselves in - as one song puts it - "the theatre of the self". The chord sequences this time are baroque-inspired and the textures synthetic, so artists like Klaus Nomi swim into view, bringing distant echoes of Handel and Purcell. A more poppy tone emerges in songs like Captivate and Hotdesking, influenced - oddly enough - by South Korean pop-dance sensation New Jeans. Lyrically, these songs make bridges between political themes of military invasion - with the ongoing Ukraine war as a constant backdrop - and the idea of personal charm as a guilty and ambivalent power strategy. A 1980 duet between Kermit the Frog and Debbie Harry inspires Men Are The Problem, a sigh of exasperation about the foolish machismo still rampant in geopolitics. Humour returns in the form of a song recounting the plot of Walerian Borowczyk's 1975 erotic horror film The Beast, and towards the end of the record British comedian Tony Hancock pops up to parody beatnik poetry. Chugging, surreal chords and nonsense lyrics finally tug the record towards the psychedelic soundscapes of Wire's 1979 album 154. And it goes without saying - this being Momus at his most theatrical - that David Bowie's influence is here too, as strong as ever.