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Baïkonour - For The Lonely Hearts Of The Cosmos Download

Baïkonour - For The Lonely Hearts Of The Cosmos Download
Title:
For The Lonely Hearts Of The Cosmos
Performer:
Baïkonour
Style:
Leftfield, Krautrock, Psychedelic Rock
Released:
29 Aug 2005
Catalog:
melo 031cd
Country:
UK
MP3 album size:
2260 mb
FLAC album size:
1885 mb
Genre:
Label:
Melodic

Tracklist


1Statica1:35
2Oben Beg (Mk 2)4:40
3Interquaalude
Edited By [Additional] – Etien RodesGuitar [6-string], Guitar [Electric] – Etien RodesProducer, Written-By – Etien Rodes, Jean-Emmanuel Krieger
1:11
4Hoko To Shin Ken
Drums – Eiji "Fuckin" MorotomiEdited By [Additional] – Etien RodesGuitar [6-string], Guitar [Electric] – Etien RodesProducer, Written-By – Etien Rodes, Jean-Emmanuel Krieger
3:30
560 To 02:34
6Ultra Lazuli8:34
72/3/744:22
8Rusk Plasmique1:15
9Proto-Coeur4:23
10Lick Lokoum3:00
11Coltan Anyone?4:38


Versions


CategoryArtistTitle (Format)LabelCategoryCountryYear
melo 031Baikonour For The Lonely Hearts Of The Cosmos ‎(LP)Melodicmelo 031UK2005
melo031pBaikonour For The Lonely Hearts Of The Cosmos ‎(CD, Album, Promo, Car)Melodicmelo031pUK2005
ZAKCD 063Baïkonour For The Lonely Hearts Of The Cosmos ‎(CD, Album)Soyuz MusicZAKCD 063Russia2006


Credits


  • DrumsLee Adams
  • Guitar [6 String Electric], Guitar [12-string Electric], Bass, Keyboards, MandalJean-Emmanuel Krieger
  • Producer, Written-ByJean-Emmanuel Krieger (tracks: 1 to 4, 6 to 9, 11)


Notes


All tracks written & produced by Jean-Emmanuel Krieger except track 5 & 10 by JE Krieger and Etien Rodes.
Recorded at 13&16, Brighton except drums: Lee's at Groundzero, Brighton, Eiji's at Freedom Studio, Tokyo.
Contains a hidden track starting at 7:24 during the final track.


Video


Reviews:
  • Xtintisha
So even if "Lick Lokoum," the opening track of Baikonour's _For the Lonely Hearts of the Cosmos_, lulls you into thinking that it's going to be another pleasant journey on Melodic a la Minotaur Shock, "Coltan Anyone?" will quickly pull you to your feet in a post-rock stomp. The album has a certain lo-fi rock charm that certainly brings to mind creaky Soviet machinery, from the feedback of "60 to 0" to the Fender Rhodes in the background of "2/3/74." The tracks here are, for the most part, simple and direct, and interspersing them with quasi-ambient interludes gives the album some interesting texture. Perhaps those lonely hearts have finally met their match?