Instrumental, Swedish vocals
International relevance: ***
This sounds like a band lost, and they
pretty much were exactly that in 1978. Having lost Coste Apetrea
after Samla Mammas Manna collaborative album with Greg FitzPatrick in
1976, ”Snorungarnas symfoni”, the band reformed as Zamla Mammaz
Manna with Eino Haapala in Apetrea's place. The first outing from
this 'new' band was this double set, actually combining two separate
albums.
I've always thought that the slapstick
side of Samla Mammas Manna's music is incredibly annoying, even a bit
embarassing. The first disc here, entitled ”Schlagerns mystik”,
takes all that silliness and inflates it to the size of a weather
balloon. Parts of the overlong ”Ödet” (17 minutes, bad idea) are
OK, but the rest of the album has a seriously high suckitude level.
”För äldre nybegynnare” is the
title of the second disc and is a collection of jams recorded live at
various locations in Sweden. It's even worse than ”Schlagerns
mystik”. There's no direction, no plan, no substance, no idea, no
clue, no point, no nothing. It's like a kindergarten on
steroids while the teachers are zonked out on prescription drugs. This is
exactly the kind of (un)musical bunkum that gives avantgarde music a
bad name.
Bring those two idiocies together and
you get the worst ever release under the Samla/Zamla banner.
Well, that's not quite true because in 1979, they released a reggae parody 45 called "Lejonet av Ljuga" and that stinks so bad you have to breathe menthol for eighteen days straight after listening to it.
Well, that's not quite true because in 1979, they released a reggae parody 45 called "Lejonet av Ljuga" and that stinks so bad you have to breathe menthol for eighteen days straight after listening to it.
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