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Einstürzende Neubauten - Lament download mp3 flac


Performer: Einstürzende Neubauten
Genre: Electronic / Rock
Album: Lament
Released: 2014
Style: Avantgarde, Experimental
MP3 version ZIP size: 1761 mb
FLAC version RAR size: 1911 mb
WMA version ZIP size: 1692 mb
Rating: 4.1
Votes: 566
Other Formats: AC3 DXD MOD RA ADX APE MPC

Free Download Einstürzende Neubauten - Lament

Einstürzende Neubauten - Lament
MP3 version .RAR archive

1761 downloads at 17 mb/s
Einstürzende Neubauten - Lament
FLAC version .RAR archive

1911 downloads at 13 mb/s
Einstürzende Neubauten - Lament
WMA version .RAR archive

1692 downloads at 14 mb/s

Tracklist

A01 Kriegsmaschinerie 5:29
A02 Hymnen 2:50
A03 The Willy-Nicky Telegrams 6:23
A04 In De Loopgraaf 4:14
B05 Der 1. Weltkrieg (Percussion Version) 13:16
B06 On Patrol In No Man's Land 3:08
B07 Achterland 3:14
Lament (14:27)
C08 1. Lament 6:26
C09 2. Abwärtsspirale 2:27
C10 3. Pater Peccavi 5:34
C11 How Did I Die 7:31
D12 Sag Mir Wo Die Blumen Sind 3:39
D13 Der Beginn Des Weltkriegs 1914 (Dargestellt Unter Zuhilfenahme Eines Tierstimmenimitators) 5:45
D14 All Of No Man's Land Is Ours 2:51

Companies, etc.

  • Phonographic Copyright (p) – Mute Records Ltd.
  • Copyright (c) – Mute Records Ltd.
  • Published By – Freibank Musikverlage
  • Licensed From – Einstürzende Neubauten
  • Pressed By – Optimal Media GmbH – BE66405
  • Recorded At – andereBaustelle
  • Mixed At – andereBaustelle

Credits

  • Arranged By [All Strings Arranged By] – Jan Tillman Schade*
  • Arranged By [All Strings Arranged In Cooperation With] – Blixa Bargeld
  • Design – Langesommer
  • Design [Logo Lament Conceived And Designed By] – Blixa Bargeld
  • Lyrics By – Blixa Bargeld
  • Mastered By – HL , Michael Schwabe
  • Music By – Alexander Hacke, Blixa Bargeld, Einstürzende Neubauten, Jochen Arbeit, N. U. Unruh, Rudolf Moser*
  • Photography By – Mote Sinabel
  • Producer [Produced By] – Boris Wilsdorf, Einstürzende Neubauten
  • Recorded By, Mixed By – Boris Wilsdorf

Notes

All titles published by Freibank Musikverlage Hamburg.
All songs recorded and mixed [...] at andereBaustelle Tonstudio, Berlin in between December 2013 and September 2014.
℗ © 2014 Mute Records Limited, a BMG Company
under exclusive license from Einstürzende Neubauten

Gatefold sleeve with double-folded lyric insert sized 12" x 36"
Track C09 duration mistakenly mentioned on the C side label and back of the sleeve as 7:27.
Side C 'Endlosrille', ends in a locked groove
Sequential track positions

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 4 050538 013764
  • Label Code: LC 19813
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A runout): BE66405-01 A1 HL 538013761 V=
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B runout): BE66405-01 B1 HL VV 538013761
  • Matrix / Runout (Side C runout): BE66405-01 C
  • Matrix / Runout (Side D runout): BE66405-01 D1 HL 538013761 V+

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
538013752 Einstürzende Neubauten Lament ‎(CD, Album) BMG 538013752 Europe 2014
LOVECD404 Einstürzende Neubauten Lament ‎(CD, Album) Love Da Records LOVECD404 Hong Kong 2014

Vetalol
There is much research done to achieve this great patchwork, what Lament is. There are 2 songs in dutch: In de Loopgraaf and Achterland. They are written by the mysterious flemish Paul Van Den Broeck. Bargeld has indeed taken Dutch lessons... but who's Paul Van Den Broeck ? A non conformist who has a secret ? Another name for Paul Van Ostayen or... Paul Van Den Broeck = Blixa Bargeld ? Recommended album for fans of dada expressionism and mysticism.

Ygglune
Friends! This release is not with defect! The 3rd side C was made endless, Tack C11 specially never endsI was wrong in me earlier feedback

Landaron
I could be wrong but it may have been intentional. Locked grooves are not new and are sometimes pressed intentionally for the purpose of creating a loop.

Thorgahuginn
I have to buy this release two times new and sealed. But every time needle jumped in same place - the end of Side C.I bought it from different sellers which was from different countries. What is it? Defective product? Both?i don't know, be carefull in your choice

Iaran
Upon my first listen all I had to say is "fucking auto-tune". It was really bad on one track but luckily that was the only song. Sides two and three were pretty good mellow, minimalist Neubauten and I'll probably only listen to those sides from now on. This is easily the weakest thing they have ever done. Still not "bad" but the first EN album I don't need.

Topmen
When this band are given a commission , they take it to it's logical extreme and then push well beyond. We're currently in the midst of World War I's centenary which was the impetus for 'Lament'; an album which Neubauten prefer not to have viewed as a new album despite it being well over an hour long with all five members participating in. You've always been eccentric, Bargeld, so sure, this is whatever you'd like it to be. Perhaps it is the strong narrative backbone of 'Lament' that precludes it being an official work, I've definitely never heard them operating in such a precise manner.Nothing is left out by them, from the industrial beginnings of this conflict to the clever auto-tuned interplay between the competing factions of nobility who hid behind their governments manipulating the levers of ego and hubris to produce the first great war. Blixa's words shift from urgent, veiled pleas for support between monarchs to an over-arching appeal directed at the citizens who would turn the wheels of their desires with their blood. The language is key here, which if you think about it is quite the paradox as war's the ultimate example of all communication breaking down and yet... war speaks a dialect all it's own, one which is only understood by the worst tendencies of the human mind.The madness of the trenches is given plenty of stage time, with the band doing a rousing version of "On Patrol in No-Man's Land". I have not heard this kind of glee out of EN since they cackled by the graveside with "Der Tod Ist Ein Dandy"; I finally understand just what the Bad Seeds lost when Blixa Bargeld left and why they're such a chore to listen to now, an unintended consequence of this rather serious release but a remarkable one nevertheless. Even this is not enough for them, however, because the central pillars to 'Lament' appear not long after via the masterful "Achterland" and then the "Lament" trilogy.There are no more clever allusions to strife being avoided at this point, a chronology of events is laid out with armies marching against one another while the architects stay safely behind in their palaces and opulent temples of "diplomacy". While the allies dither over what course to take when Russia departs, a series of interconnecting veins and arteries are carved across Europe which respect neither sovereignty or sanity. They soon become frothing troughs choked with blood as the axis have no compunction about re-deploying on the Western front in a massive array of firepower and men. 'All Quiet on the Western Front' is still some years off as the guns roar over the land and towns become bombed out craters; the soldiers of both sides do nothing but dig in their heels as the promised victory slips further and further away.Neubauten give us pause to consider how quickly things spiraled out of control, with a mixture of names being spoken in time to the mechanized procession of slaughter solemnly. The only route to peace, it seems, is through mountains of corpses and in a macabre, frenetic dance of men and machines numerous innovations are born during this era. The tank. Aerial combat and bombardment. The machine gun. Mines. Terrifying accurate shells which now can hit targets with pinpoint accuracy from miles away. Against this backdrop of sheer futility, those on foot and in their emplacements march on endlessly. Day after day. The same pointless charges over the top usually with the same nihilistic results.As we move through the title tracks, a sense of abandonment and insanity grows exponentially. Out here in the smoke and fire there is no chain of command left. Only blind rage, panic and fear remain. The only reason the allies won was their resource base, exhaustion on both sides at the end must have been stunning. Einsturzende's trademark usage of tension drives this point home with one protagonist towards the end half-awake wondering at his condition on "How Did I Die". How indeed. Despite all the marvels of technology and the vaunted armor of a valiant cause... how did your blood wind up pumping out of you into the mud.The minimal arrangements of the concluding tracks allow us to understand how starkly the specter defeat drove the axis beyond the point of human endurance. It is here we see the myth of a superman beginning to coalesce, one which after the punitive treaty of Versailles would emerge full formed.All of No Man's Land is ours, truly. Quite the noble achievement.World War I had many elements of loss for those who fought it: the last great "romantic" war (whatever the hell that means, how is it romantic) and the death of colonial empires beginning in earnest during this time would be a couple. Perhaps the greatest tragedy is that despite millions of shells and men being expended in it's pursuance, one Gefreiter from the 16th Bavarian reserve regiment managed to survive. It is ironic he would later call so many others rats when he was the prime example of one.