Lakuna
Lakuna was an electronic instrumental project begun by drummer David Narcizo after Throwing Muses first split up following their 1996 Limbo album. Lakuna first released a 12-inch called So Happy and then a 1999 full-length album called Castle of Crime. Narcizo provided drums, drum programming, and keyboards on all the tracks. The album's guest musicians included Bernard Georges on bass, Kristin Hersh on guitar loops, Belly's Tom Gorman on bass, Melissa "Misi" Narcizo on piano and keyboards, and Frank Gardner on bass and bass synthesizer. Narcizo employed tape loops and samples from obscure, vintage music to achieve the album's ambient-styled instrumental sounds. Lakuna recorded on the 4AD and Throwing Music labels.
Discography
Castle of Crime (1999)
gollark: This entire argument is ridiculous. Just store ASTs on disk and have your editor convert to your preferred syntax on-demand.
gollark: The great thing about representing functions as an infinite set of ordered pairs is that defining inverse functions is really easy.
gollark: Functions are just monoids in the category of endofunctors.
gollark: Too bad, I don't have any of those things.
gollark: Well, less bad than most.
References
- Ankeny, Jason. Lakuna biography. Allmusic. Retrieved April 15, 2005.
- Castle of Crime musician credits Allmusic. Retrieved April 15, 2005.
- Lakuna biography 4AD Records website. Retrieved April 15, 2005.
- Savlov, Marc (March 17, 2000). Castle of Crime Record Review. The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved April 15, 2005.
- Scanland, Dennis (March 25, 2003). Lakuna — Castle of Crime Review. MusicEmissions.com. Retrieved April 15, 2005.
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