Lunatic Soul II: The White Album

I’m posting up teasers and sketches of each of the Lunatic Soul albums, in anticipation of the new album out this year, and as previews for my upcoming biography of Mariusz Duda. You will find much more discussion when that is published. šŸ™‚Ā  If you have not read the introduction, please do that first.

The Introduction is here.Ā  The sketch of LS I is here.Ā  The arrows at the bottom of each post will let you move from post to post.

Lunatic Soul IIĀ 

  • Released: Oct. 25, 2010Ā 
  • Colour: White
  • My ranking: 6

The second part of the Hero’s story was released two years after the first album, with Lunatic Soul II. The cover was white, the vinyl was white, and the sound was somewhat different from the first album: brighter, sharper, more jagged–although it still retained its trance-oriental feel. The contrast was deliberate because the story of the Hero had changed. He had made his decision (to keep his memories) and had moved into a terrifying place of illusion and hallucination, where he began to question his choices: not only did he keep his good memories, but all the unpleasant ones as well, including how and why he died.

Musically, there is once again a mix of songs and instrumental pieces but it feels as if there is less variety. There is ambience, there is a ballad, and there remains the eclectic mix of instruments, but the overall mood of the album is one of anxious disconnection and foreboding, even in the last track ā€œWanderingsā€, which sounds bright and optimistic until one reads the lyrics.Ā 

Unlike with the first album, Mariusz did not go into the studio prepared with ideas and songs (beyond the overall theme of course)–he had to compose and record while he was there. Perhaps this is why the album does not seem to quite live up to the debut: less variety overall, less ā€œflowā€, somewhat less satisfying. Only Maciej Szelenbaum and Wawrzyniec Dramowicz remain as guests.Ā 

Upside: well, it is Lunatic Soul, and it has a couple of strong, ambient and atmospheric tracks, as well as one solid heavy stomper (ā€œEscape from ParadIceā€).Ā 

Downside: see above–lack of variety in the song styles, especially obvious compared to the first album, and it feels less cohesive. Finally, there is a lack of real resolution for the Hero, who is simply left to wander eternally in limbo. Remember: at the time, this was the last album of the project. We were not supposed to learn any more about our unfortunate protagonist.Ā 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *