1001° Centigrades

1001° Centigrades is the second album by progressive rock band Magma. It was originally released in 1971 under the title Magma 2. A 1973 reissue changed to title to 1001 Degrees Centigrades and changed the album cover from the Magma logo on a silver background to a color illustration of a twisting road with erupting volcano background. The 1990 CD reissue restores the original cover design and compromises with both titles.

1001° Centigrades
Studio album by
Released1971
GenreZeuhl, jazz fusion
Length41:54
LabelPhilips
ProducerRoland Hilda
Magma chronology
Magma
(1970)
1001° Centigrades
(1971)
Mëkanïk Dëstruktïẁ Kömmandöh
(1973)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

Background

For this album,

Magma underwent several personnel changes: guitarist Claude Engel departed without being replaced, and Alain Charlery and Richard Raux made way for Louis Toesca (trumpet) and Jeff Seffer (sax, bass clarinet). This was the second installment in Magma's Kobaïan saga. With lyrics again performed in the band's invented language, the album chronicles the Kobaïan people's return to Earth to save the planet.

Wilson Neate, review[1] of 1001° Centigrades on AllMusic

Track listing

Side one

  1. Rïah Sahïltaahk (Christian Vander) – 21:45

Side two

  1. "Iss" Lanseï Doïa (Teddy Lasry) – 11:46
  2. Ki Ïahl Ö Lïahk (François Cahen) – 8:23

Legacy

On 1001° Centigrades the "zeuhl" sound that later came to define Magma develops, but it lacks the operatic female vocals and primal driving rhythm of the following album, Mëkanïk Dëstruktïẁ Kömmandöh.

Between the release of this album and MDK, a number of band members left the band due to disagreements on its future sound. Two (saxophonist Yochk'o "Jeff" Seffer and keyboardist François Cahen) left to form Zao, a band which follows in the footsteps of Magma's first two releases.

Musicians

Production

  • Produced by Roland Hilda
  • Engineered by Dominique Blanc-Francard
  • Louis Sarkissian manager
gollark: Also, idea for the binary HTML thing, increase efficiency like this:```rustenum CommonTag { P, H1, // all other common tags in existence}enum CommonAttr { Class, Id, // also all other common HTML attributes}enum Attribute { Common(CommonAttr), Other(String) }enum Tag { Common(CommonTag), Other(String) }struct Html { name: Tag, attributes: Map<Attribute, String>, children: Vec<Html>}```
gollark: Not sure if that corresponds to the URL, which is what you often want, but oh well.
gollark: Hmm, so looking at this you could probably binary-search the titles, at least.
gollark: They seem hard to construct incrementally, not ideal for random access, and FTS is hacked in by having the index stored as "articles" with a weird type code.
gollark: I still don't think they're that great for some of the intended uses.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.