Welcome to Hippyland
Click to Chat
Search Hippy.com

Search the Web
Main Menu
· Home
· Login
· Register
· Chat
· Event Calendar
· Reviews
· Photo Galleries
· Hip Journals/Blogs
· Check Your Email
· HipMarket.com
· HipForums.com
· HipPlanet.com
· Hip Travel Guides
· Web Links
· Privacy Policy
Sections
· A Trip Thru the '60s
· Archives
· Ask The Old Hippy
· Columns
· Famous Hippy Quotes
· Hip Profiles
· Hippie Glossary
· Hippie Havens
· Hippies From A to Z
· Hippyland Tour
· Interviews
· Letters to Hippyland
· Links
· News
· Reviews
· Skip's Corner
Topics
· Activism
· Drugs
· Freedom
· Health
· Hippiedom
· Love
· Mind Expansion
· Mother Earth
· Music
· Peace
· Politics
· Spirituality
· The Arts
· The Sixties
· Vegetarianism
New Articles
· A Real Solution to the Economic Crisis
· Creating a new culture based on tribal values
· Weather Underground Fifth Communication (1970)
· Weather Underground Frees Timothy Leary! (1970)
· Marxism and Nonviolence (1966)
· The Weathermen (1969)
· Bill Ayers: Domestic Terrorist or American Hero?
· Free John Sinclair! (1970)
· Bill Ayers and the Children's Community (1968)
· Rediscovering the Past

Acid Mothers Temple & the Cosmic Inferno: Iao Chant from the Cosmic Inferno (2005)  
Reviewer: Ben Miler | See all reviews by Ben Miler
Section: Reviews | Category: Music | Area: Japan | Topic: Music  
Printer Friendly Page Print this review  Send this Story to a Friend Email this review

This Japanese band, Acid Mothers Temple has got to be one of the most prolific of modern psychedelic bands out there, going through many different styles and even names. The original incarnation (formed in 1996) was called Acid Mothers Tempel & The Melting Paraiso UFO. The band also had a habit of spoofing album covers and titles, covers that spoofed King Crimson's Earthbound, Steeleye Span's Ten Man Mop, Gong's Camembert Electrique, etc., and titles like Absolutely Freak Out, which you know right away came from Frank Zappa & the Mothers of Invention (Absolutely Free, Freak Out!), Starless and Bible Black Sabbath (coming from King Crimson, and Black Sabbath, of course), and Have You Seen the Other Side of the Sky (reference to Gong's "Other Side of the Sky" which appeared on their 1973 album Angel's Egg). This group also recently collaborated with Gong on their album Acid Motherhood (2004). There's also a version of the band called Acid Mother Gong.

Now comes the most recent version of Acid Mothers Temple, called Acid Mothers Temple & the Cosmic Inferno. Thanks to the band's collaboration with Gong, and the unfortunate death of Gong drummer Pierre Moerlen in 2005, the band decided to make a recording in dedication to him, and that is a 51 minute rendition of Gong's "Master Builder" (the original, of course, appeared on Gong's 1974 album, You), which is on this 2005 CD, Iao Chant from the Cosmic Inferno (in which the cover spoofs Gong's Camembert Electrique). Others have covered this song before: Steve Hillage did on his 1978 album Green (no surprise, as Hillage appeared on You), and Ozric Tentacles performed this piece too in their early days and you can hear their version off their early cassette Live Ethereal Cereal (1986), so Acid Mothers Temple & the Cosmic Inferno decided to do their stab at it. The results: unsurprisingly not unlike Gong, with the wildness of Ozric Tentacles! The group at this point consisted of Tabata Mitsuru on bass, Higashi Hiroshi on electronics (mainly Tim Blake-like synth bubbles), Shimura Koji on drums, Okano Futoshi on additional drums, and Kawabata Makoto on guitars and hurdy gurdy. I tell you Kawabata Makoto is one wild guitar player and he certainly gives Ozric Tentacles' Ed Wynne a run for his money!

The music starts off with some rather trippy Buddhist chanting, and then the music starts kicking in with the familiar "Iao" chant (familiar if you heard the original "Master Builder"), with some really intense moments that's certain to rival the Ozrics! You obviously hear some familiar themes, but then they also give their own twists too. I really like how the music mellows out in one section and Makoto gives us some really trippy glissando guitar, before the band gets picking up again. There's a section where Makoto lays it thick with lots of feedback and distortion, which is alien on a Gong or Ozric album. There is no singing, unlike the Gong original, just the occasional chanting.

Since I hadn't heard the other stuff from Acid Mothers Temple, I have to tell you I'm not able to compare this to their other stuff, although I realize a lot of their albums are quite different from one another, but apparently all have that spacy psychedelic feel. But Iao Chant from the Cosmic Inferno is that one album from them I highly recommended to all Gong and Ozric fans since the music is very much in the same vein!

More Info

- Tabata Mitsuru: bass, chant, maratab
- Higashi Hiroshi: electronics
- Shimura Koji: drums
- Okano Futoshi: drums
- Kawabata Makoto: guitars, chant, hurdy gurdy

Related Link: Official Acid Mothers Temple website
   [ Back to Reviews Index | Post Comment ]

Visitor Comments about Acid Mothers Temple & the Cosmic Inferno: Iao Chant from the Cosmic Inferno (2005)
400+ Free Speech Forums!
Related Links
 · Our Music Store!
 · Our Poster Store
 · Our Music Forum
 · Events & Festivals
 · Music with a Message
More Music Reviews by Ben Miler
· Warm Dust: And It Came to Pass (1970)
· Chicago: Chicago III (1971)
· Pulsar, French progressive rock band
· Manfred Mann's Earth Band: Solar Fire (1973)
· Organisation: Tone Float (1970)
· Jean Michel Jarre: Oxygene (1976)
· Harmonium: Si On Avait Besoin D'une Cinquième Saison (1975)
· FM: Head Room - Direct to Disc (1978)
· Brainticket: Celestial Ocean (1973)
· Quarteto 1111: Cantamos Pessoas Vivas (1975)
· Julian Jay Savarin: Waiters on the Dance (1971)
· Mad Curry: Mad Curry (1970)
· Klaus Schulze: Irrlicht (1972)
· Peter Hammill: In Camera (1974)
· Czeslaw Niemen: Niemen Vol. 2 (1972)
· Strawbs: Just a Collection of Antiques and Curios (1970)
· Peter Hammill: The Silent Corner and the Empty Stage (1974)
· Jerry Goodman & Jan Hammer: Like Children (1974)
· Canarios: Ciclos (1975)
· Machiavel: Jester (1977)
· The Pentangle: Sweet Child (1968)
· Samurai: Samurai (1971)
· Radio Massacre International: Emissaries (2005)
· Skin Alley: Skin Alley (1969)
· Nik Turner's Sphynx: Xitintoday (1978)
See all reviews
by Ben Miler
New Reviews
· Pearls Before Swine -Tom Rapp
· The Gothic Bram Stoker
· Leonard Cohen at the Master’s feet
· Tudor Lodge
· Elias Hulk
· Merrell Fankhauser & the H.M.S. Bounty
· Sharon Tandy - Five Day Rain
· T2 - England's foremost powerpack from the seventies

All content & images © 1997-2008 by Hip Inc. May not be reproduced or published in any form without permission.