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Mater Suspiria Vision - Kosmische Musik ARTBOOK + CDR (2021)

Posted: September 13th, 2021, 3:34 pm
by Phantasma Disques
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A journey to the early influences of Mater Suspiria Vision - part soundtrack to "The House That Eats The Rabbit" (A surreal Alice in wonderland arthouse deconstruction), part concept album in tribute to Kosmische Musik. You can find influences of Kosmische Musik in the Inverted Triangle trilogy (2011/2012) especially in Paradise of New H. Kosmische Musik was an early 70s experimental synthesizer based space subgenre of Krautrock with names like Tangerine Dream, Klaus Schulze, Cosmic Jokers etc.

The album is available as limited 33 artbook edition (60 pages, around 8 inch size) + CDR

Comes numbered and signed

https://phantasmadisques.bigcartel.com/ ... n-a-signed

https://phantasmadisques.bigcartel.com/ ... n-b-signed

Digital:

https://phantasmadisques.bandcamp.com/a ... sche-musik

Re: Mater Suspiria Vision - Kosmische Musik ARTBOOK + CDR (2021)

Posted: September 19th, 2021, 9:02 pm
by zin
Got myself the A version (tbh not sure why that variant)

Listening to the album now on Bandcamp, such a chill and trippy journey. I love those more ambient/synth-based albums from MSV.

Re: Mater Suspiria Vision - Kosmische Musik ARTBOOK + CDR (2021)

Posted: September 24th, 2021, 5:35 pm
by Phantasma Disques
Artbooks arrived today and they turned out beautiful. Uploaded some skipthru videos to MSV instagram https://www.instagram.com/matersuspiriavision

Re: Mater Suspiria Vision - Kosmische Musik ARTBOOK + CDR (2021)

Posted: October 29th, 2021, 9:47 pm
by zin
Here's my review of the album:
https://mutantzones.blogspot.com/2021/1 ... musik.html
"Kosmische Musik" is a new soundtrack from Mater Suspiria Vision, scoring Cosmotropia de Xam's latest movie feature "The House That Eats The Rabbit". Released last month, it takes the listener on a trippy journey through vast and bleak sonic wastelands of ghostly synths, selectively scattered with guest vocals and shrouded with droning serenity. The album sits somewhere between Emeralds' analog kosmik sound and more desolate works of Drug Machine on "Amnesia" (the latter being one of many side-projects of Cosmotropia de Xam). With "Kosmische Musik" MSV crafted a captivating and transcendental listening experience, working equally well both on and off screen, that can be recommended to any lovers of dystopian electronic music.