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The Mars Volta Octahedron Vinyl LP 2024

The Mars Volta Octahedron Vinyl LP 2024

Tracklist:

LP 1

1. Since We've Been Wrong
2. Teflon
3. With Twilight As My Guide
4. Halo Of Nembutals

LP 2

1. Cotopaxi
2. Desperate Graves
3. Copernicus
4. Luciforms

Each of the Mars Volta albums that preceded Octahedron had pushed the envelope further, their music growing larger, more intense, more complex. Each had delivered an implied, unspoken challenge to its makers within milliseconds of its final notes: ā€œtop thisā€. And with each subsequent album, Omar and Cedric had turned their creative dials up one more notch, a further step past ā€œelevenā€. With the addition of new drummer Thomas Pridgen, and their ranks swollen by extra guitarists, more percussion and a sax-player, the intensity of The Mars Volta’s sound had increased. Octahedron, however, would follow The Bedlam In Goliath’s brilliant excesses with a sideways step few were expecting, even though the group had telegraphed their intentions to take this new direction for years. ā€œThis one didn’t have multi-layered sub-texts or any sinister spirits,ā€ says Omar, referencing predecessor Goliath’s traumatic birth. ā€œOctahedron was like an expression of will into reality. Like, ā€˜This one will be easy, this one will be fun’. Everything had a different process.ā€ ā€œOctahedron was a rebellion,ā€ adds Cedric. ā€œUs saying, ā€˜This isn’t like anything we’ve done before. This is our ā€œpopā€ album.’ We’d always promised we’d do a ā€˜pop’ album.’ This was it.ā€

$13.16

Original: $37.59

-65%
The Mars Volta Octahedron Vinyl LP 2024—

$37.59

$13.16

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Tracklist:

LP 1

1. Since We've Been Wrong
2. Teflon
3. With Twilight As My Guide
4. Halo Of Nembutals

LP 2

1. Cotopaxi
2. Desperate Graves
3. Copernicus
4. Luciforms

Each of the Mars Volta albums that preceded Octahedron had pushed the envelope further, their music growing larger, more intense, more complex. Each had delivered an implied, unspoken challenge to its makers within milliseconds of its final notes: ā€œtop thisā€. And with each subsequent album, Omar and Cedric had turned their creative dials up one more notch, a further step past ā€œelevenā€. With the addition of new drummer Thomas Pridgen, and their ranks swollen by extra guitarists, more percussion and a sax-player, the intensity of The Mars Volta’s sound had increased. Octahedron, however, would follow The Bedlam In Goliath’s brilliant excesses with a sideways step few were expecting, even though the group had telegraphed their intentions to take this new direction for years. ā€œThis one didn’t have multi-layered sub-texts or any sinister spirits,ā€ says Omar, referencing predecessor Goliath’s traumatic birth. ā€œOctahedron was like an expression of will into reality. Like, ā€˜This one will be easy, this one will be fun’. Everything had a different process.ā€ ā€œOctahedron was a rebellion,ā€ adds Cedric. ā€œUs saying, ā€˜This isn’t like anything we’ve done before. This is our ā€œpopā€ album.’ We’d always promised we’d do a ā€˜pop’ album.’ This was it.ā€