Absinthe | |
Type: | album |
Artist: | Naked City |
Cover: | Absinthe (Naked City album).jpg |
Released: | December 10, 1993 |
Recorded: | December 1992 |
Studio: | Electric Lady Studio, New York City |
Length: | 46:17 |
Label: | Avant Avan 004 |
Producer: | John Zorn |
Prev Title: | Radio |
Prev Year: | 1993 |
Next Year: | 2002 |
Absinthe is the fifth and final studio album by the band Naked City. Unlike the band's other genre-mixing releases, the music on Absinthe is consistently in an ambient and noise style.
The titles of many of its tracks refer to the works of Paul Verlaine, Charles Baudelaire and other figures in the fin de siècle Decadent movement, and to the drink after which the album is named. The album's cover and liner notes feature photographs by the German Surrealist Hans Bellmer.
From the official description on the now defunct Avant website:
"Joey Baron plays bags of dry leaves, fishing reels and buckshot. Bill Frisell solos on a microtonal guitar. Wayne Horvitz samples everything from crickets to Giacinto Scelsi. Fred Frith does what he does best. Zorn doesn't even touch the saxophone."
The final track, "...Rend Fou", is a six-minute recording of Frisell and Frith running their guitar jacks over the inputs of their guitars.
The album was also released as part of on Tzadik Records.
The Allmusic review by Caleb Deupree states "Naked City's final album is by far its most puzzling and enigmatic... Nothing in Naked City's previous oeuvre prepares the listener for this collection, a complete reversal from the hardcore and thrash metal, but looking forward to Zorn's interest in minimalist pieces like Redbird and Duras."[1]
All compositions by John Zorn