Grand Guignol (album) explained

Grand Guignol
Type:Album
Artist:Naked City
Cover:Grand Guignol (album).jpg
Released:1992
Recorded:1989−1992
Length:62:00
Label:Avant
Producer:John Zorn
Prev Title:Torture Garden
Prev Year:1990
Next Title:Heretic
Next Year:1992

Grand Guignol is the second full-length studio album released by John Zorn's band Naked City in 1992 on the Japanese Avant label. The album followed Torture Garden, which was a compilation of "hardcore miniatures" from Naked City and Grand Guignol. The album is notable for the inclusion of cover versions of pieces written by classical composers, the guest vocal of Bob Dorough, and also, like Torture Garden, a selection of "hardcore miniatures" (tracks 9–41) which are intense, fast-tempo, brief compositions, which feature the wailing of Zorn's alto sax, and the screams of Yamatsuka Eye. The album is titled after the infamous Grand Guignol theater in Paris, which was open from 1897 to 1962, where performances centered around extreme violence.

Grand Guignol was remastered and re-released in 2005 as part of the Tzadik box set , with the bonus track "Grand Guignol (Version Vocale)" featuring Mike Patton, and an altered track sequencing.

Reception

The Allmusic review by Ted Mills awarded the album 4 stars stating "Naked City's follow up to their self-titled album is a departure from the New York noir that they had perfected... A rewarding album."[1]

In popular culture

Two of the tracks ("Bonehead" and "Hellraiser") were featured in the soundtrack to Michael Haneke's 1997 film Funny Games, and in Haneke's 2008 remake.

Track listing

All compositions and arrangements by John Zorn, except where noted.

Personnel

Notes

  1. Mills, T. Allmusic Review accessed July 22, 2011