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VRIL

About Me

MySpace Editor Icons Collage Banner Generator Contact Table Generator MySpace CommentsVril is a 'new' project, instigated by Drake, who goaded guitarist and sometimes collaborator Lukas Simonis to come up with catchy fragments and unfinished bits for the 21st C. equivalent of the surf record. Simonis' guitars sometimes wiggle with a nervous twangy tremolo, but they're often just drop-dead gorgeous as they flesh out little compact rock puzzles with odd cadences and unexplored melodic quirks. At moments it could be the post-Zeppelin guitar album that Jimmy Page has never managed to make, for all it's texture. ' Effigies in Cork ' with it's brief song-like pieces, seems simple on the surface, but it's an illusion -it's got depth equal to 'Spoors', plus a charming quality that makes it the more immediately hospitable. (James Beaudreau) In the summer of 2007 the band recorded new material with an axtra guitarist, PIerre Omer (a former dead-brother) which is still being 'processed' at this moment (november 2007). Vril hopes to release the new album somewhere in 2008 and will even be looking for some concerts then.

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Member Since: 15/12/2006
Band Website: http://www.xs4all.nl/~lukas/english/vril.html
Band Members: Bob Drake, Chris Cutler, Lukas Simonis, Pierre Omer
Sounds Like: more about 'Effiegies in Cork'; The description is simple: an album of instrumental guitar tunes circa 1965, something like The Shadows, or some form of psychedelic surf music. But nothing is ever really simple when Chris Cutler, Bob Drake and Lukas Simonis are involved. Simonis is the instigator of the group, developing a series of melodic fragments over which the group worked. His involvement with the excellent and twisted pop group A.A. Kismet may give an indication of what to expect, and to prepare the way for the listener who may be familiar with Drake's involvement with that band. The long standing connection between Drake and Cutler via Recommended Records completes the triangle, and makes this an effortless and powerful group with a built-in history, a great starting point for an instrumental song of short "poppy" tunes.Of course "poppy" doesn't quite cut it. The 16 pieces are all brief and to the point, the longest clocking in just under four minutes. They tend to the joyous and upbeat, despite titles like "Gruesome Pillow" or "Bloated Janitor," though each manages to wander into unusual territory along the way. Some of that is due to unusual studio effect from Drake's experienced hand, and most of the songs have overdubs from the original studio recordings, done in ways that hide that fact from the listener. Generally though it's just the nature of the musicians involved that makes these compositions catchy yet quirky. Simonis in the melodic lead is the most obvious player of the lot, as one would expect from a guitar instrumental record, and his playing bridges the modern and the familiar through riffs and pop references. Cutler is in excellent form propelling the group with a wealth of ideas that show why he's one of rock's more skilled and inventive drummers. Drake churns out great ideas and provides a rock solid basis for the pieces, his work as a bass player as strong as his more typical guitar work. The songs have a spontaneity and lightness that belies the amount of work and experience that went into making these tracks sound as such, but attentive listening brings a diversity of instrumental detail and unusual melodic direction Much can also be said of the CD package as a whole. The cover looks very much like a release from Deutsche Gramophone, while the booklet and liner notes are a twisted adventure unto themselves, involving a canoe trip in the rapids, sackbuts, ectoplasm, theremins and cormorants. As much as the song titles look like the work of Bob Drake's weird imagination (reference The Skull Mailbox) they and the booklet, liner notes and even the band title are the work of Frank Key. He develops a pop mythos for a band consisting of "Bim, Badger and Fishken Terror" playing tunes developed by Lothar Preen "who somehow managed to compose this 16 part work between the 7 hour 'surgical opera' Stalin Cured My Palsy..." Just to set the record straight, VRIL is not named after the Nazi occult society, but rather from a word coined by the Victorian author Edward Bulwer-Lytton to describe "a mysterious life force" used by his characters. Or perhaps it really was, as the liner notes assert, "the nickname given to Lothar Preen by his tough matelot pals in the violent taverns of the Marseilles dockyards.. (sorry, don't know who wrote this one)
Record Label: ReR Megacorp

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NEW VRIL ALBUM EXPECTED IN EARLY 2009

Yep that says it all, there's a new Vril album gonna be released on ReR in 2009. The recordings were done last year, and the mixes were finished this year... It was all done in Caudeval again, and Bob...
Posted by on Sun, 26 Oct 2008 15:35:00 GMT