Popol Vuh
Aguirre
Label ©  Barclay
Release Year  2004
Length  43:42
Genre  Electronic
Personal Star Rating [1-5]  
  Ref#  P-0088
Bitrate  ~231 Kbps
  Other  
  Info  
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Aguirre I (L acrime di rei)  
       7:22  
      2.  
      Morgengruss II  
       2:55  
      3.  
      Aguirre II  
       6:15  
      4.  
      Agnus Dei  
       3:03  
      5.  
      Vergegenwartigung  
       16:51  
      6.  
      Aguiire III  
       7:16  
    Additional info: | top
      The title track is the ubiquitous soundtrack for Werner Herzog's classic film Aguirre, the Wrath of God, an excellent movie about a doomed party of conquistadors gradually swallowed up by an uncaring jungle. Fricke created here a transcendent masterpiece of ambience; seriously some of the finest melotron work ever recorded. This re-release features a 7:16 mins bonus track!

      Review by Wilson Neate

      Aguirre gathers recordings made between 1972 and 1974 embodying the distinctive characteristics of Popol Vuh's early-'70s sonic identity: austere analog synth textures that inspired subsequent ambient artists and organically crafted, ethnically nuanced proto-new age music. The most memorable material here derives from the soundtrack to Werner Herzog's film Aguirre, der Zorn Gottes, which chronicles an ill-fated 16th century Spanish quest for El Dorado. The film's central motif blends pulsing Moog and spectral voices conjured from Florian Fricke's Mellotron-related "choir organ" to achieve something sublime, in the truest sense of the word: it's hard not to find the music's awe-inspiring, overwhelming beauty simultaneously unsettling. The power of the legendary opening sequence of Herzog's film (a breathtaking shot of the conquistadors descending a mountain path, dwarfed by the natural beauty that ultimately consumes them) owes as much to Popol Vuh's music as it does to the director's mise-en-scene. This musical motif appears in two slightly different incarnations: "Aguirre I," which closes with Andean pipes, and "Aguirre II," featuring Daniel Fichelscher's soaring guitar melodies. Elsewhere, the cosmic sensibility of those tracks is replaced with an earthbound orientation, but the results are no less mesmerizing. Built around acoustic guitars and percussion (and a fleeting contribution from vocalist Djong Yun), the 15-minute triptych "Vergegenwartigung" blurs the boundaries between East and West while incorporating nuances of early music. The album also includes "Morgengru? II" and "Agnus Dei," versions of which appeared on Einsjager & Siebenjager. Compared with In den Garten Pharaos or Hosianna Mantra, Aguirre doesn't stand up as a consistently great album, but that's not to say that it doesn't contain some great pieces of music. [A 1996 Spalax reissue includes the three-part, meditative piano suite "Spirit of Peace," and SPV's 2004 re-release includes another version of the soundtrack's main theme.]
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