Phallus Dei

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (69 ratings)
Phallus Dei album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 7   Total Length: 62:31

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classic

thatway57

Really great record from a group that should be legends. Yeti is probably better but only just. This first outing set the blueprint for a series of earth shuddering albums.

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Krautrock's Best

flipperfingers

Well, when it comes to milestones in German rock, Phallus Dei is a must-have. This Lp is the reason why I got into this music in the first place. The wit, the reckless abandon, the great use of sound, and the total abandonment from the bland and sterile confines of commercial music. All of the latter reasons and more. You'd have to be braindead to pass this album up.

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4.5 stars, really

In_Praise_of_Folly

Amon Duul II were, in their prime, one of the greatest bands to walk the planet, and this album is a large reason why. It is their debut album, and it's one of the greatest debuts I know. Alongside CAN's official debut Monster Movie, this album started Krautrock (my favorite musical genre). It is composed of five improvisational tracks, ending with the twenty minute title track (emusic's track order is wrong). The lyrics are mostly in German, though there is one incredibly funny (if somewhat cheesy) moment in the title track where Chris Karrer butchers some English vocals, but they are sung fantastically, so this should not be a turn off. I wish I could say more, but the character limit looms. Highly recommended.

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They Say All Music Guide

“Kanaan” starts Phallus Dei wonderfully, a melange of rumbling rock power, strings and sitars, Lothar Meid’s almost Bowie-ish vocals with Renate Knaup-Kroetenschwanz’s wordless chanting in the background, that’s just as intoxicating many years after its first appearance as it was upon release. The slightly jazzy concluding minute avoids sounding forced, blending in beautifully with the song’s general flow. “Dem Guten, Schönen, Wahren” takes a truly wacked-out turn, with Meid’s bizarre falsetto coming to the fore, swooping around the main melodies without regard for them in yelps and chants, while the music chugs along in what almost sounds like a beer-hall singalong at points, taking a more haunting, beautiful turn at others (the heavily produced violins are an especially spooky touch). “Luzifers Ghilom” brings out the psych-folk origins of the band a bit more with Shrat’s bongos, while the rest of the band pulls off a nicely heroic rock piece that never sounds too inflated or stupid, with appropriately nutty vocal breaks and interjections along the way — the sublime and the ridiculous never sounded so good together. “Henriette Krötenschwanz” ends the first side with a brief choral military march (if you will). The title track takes up the remainder of the album, a complex piece which never loses a sense of fun while always staying musically compelling. After a quiet start, the opening minutes consist of a variety of drones and noises constantly brought up and down in the mix, leading to a full band performance that builds and skips along with restrained fuzz power. Everything builds to a sudden climax halfway through, where all the members play a series of melodies in unison, while drums pound in the background. After a quick violin solo, everything settles into a fine percussion jam, with the full band kicking in shortly thereafter. With Chris Karrer’s crazed vocals showing where Mark E. Smith got some good ideas from, Phallus gets the Amon Düül II career off to a flying start. [The 2005 Deluxe Edition includes two bonus tracks, "Touchmaphal" and "I Want the Sun to Shine."] – Ned Raggett

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