V./A. – DECODER CD
21,00 €
01. Genesis P-Orridge & Dave Ball – Muzak For Frogs (3:23) _x000D_ 02. The The – Three Orange Kisses From Kazan (4:30) _x000D_ 03. Genesis P-Orridge & Dave Ball – Dream (2:30) _x000D_ 04. Genesis P-Orridge & Dave Ball – Main Theme (Showdown) (3:04) _x000D_ 05. Genesis P-Orridge & Dave Ball – Sex And The Married Frog (3:24) _x000D_ 06. Soft Cell – Seedy Films (5:05) _x000D_ 07. FM Einheit – Riots (2:55) _x000D_ 08. Genesis P-Orridge – Information (0:46) _x000D_ 09. FM Einheit/John Caffery/Alexander Von Borsig – Muzak Decoding/Dream Machine/Pirates (8:41) _x000D_ 10. Einstürzende Neubauten – Compressed Metal (2:25) _x000D_ 11. Genesis P-Orridge & Dave Ball – Main Theme (Finale) (3:42)
1 in stock
Description
Released on standalone CD for the first time in 33 years, this now-complete edition of the ground-breaking cult soundtrack is finally here. A cult classic of sci-fi dystopia, Decoder (1984) saw Einstürzende Neubauten’s members working alongside Genesis P-Orridge (Throbbing Gristle/Psychic TV) and William S. Burroughs. It’s one of the strangest (and most prescient) films of the decade. The film was made in Hamburg and Berlin, and directed by Klaus Maeck ‘Muscha’ (who directed several punk films). The lead roles are played by Christiane F and FM Einheit from Neubauten, who also contributed to the film’s score. Genesis P-Orridge, the kingpin of the English industrial scene, also appears as a priest of the Black Noise faith. Author William S. Burroughs portrays an insurrectionist salesman of audio equipment (and contributes spoken word to the soundtrack), and American cult actor Bill Rice plays a detective. Soft Cell contributed their classic “Seedy Films,” while Matt Johnson from The The wrote a frenetic, deformed song for the film that is both fantastic and painful to listen to, and Einstürzende Neubauten’s “Compressed Metal” is sublime. Dave Ball (Soft Cell), Jon Caffery, and Genesis P-Orridge composed the rest of the soundtrack. A futuristic film, and a joyous application of William S. Burroughs’ “The Electronic Revolution,” which proposes a seditious and rather poetic method of subverting the masses and inciting them to rise up against the forces of order. CD in matt-laminate digipak with ten-page foldout booklet.