Volk | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 26 October 2006 | |||
Recorded | Daily Girl, NSK Studio and Studio Metro (Ljubljana), The Instrument and Metropolis studios (London), Master & Servant (Hamburg) | |||
Genre | Industrial, neoclassical dark wave | |||
Length | 58:31 | |||
Label | Mute | |||
Producer | Laibach and Silence | |||
Laibach chronology | ||||
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Silence chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Pitchfork Media | (4.8/10)[2] |
PopMatters | [3] |
Release Magazine | [4] |
Volk is the seventh studio album by Slovenian industrial group Laibach, released in 2006. The word "volk" means "people" or "nation" in German and "wolf" in Slovene. The album is a collection of thirteen songs inspired by national or pan-national anthems, plus the anthem of the Neue Slowenische Kunst (NSK) State, a fictional state invented by the band. The album is a collaboration with another Slovenian band, Silence.[5]
The anthem of the NSK state is essentially the same arrangement as "The Great Seal", a song on their 1987 album Opus Dei. Like "The Great Seal", the words are based on Winston Churchill's "We shall fight on the beaches" speech.
Track listing
- "Germania" – based on "Das Lied der Deutschen" (Germany)
- "America" – based on "The Star-Spangled Banner" (United States)
- "Anglia" – based on "God Save the Queen" (United Kingdom)
- "Rossiya" – based on the State Anthem of the Soviet Union, post-2000 "National Anthem of Russia" (Russia), and "The Internationale"
- "Francia" – based on "La Marseillaise" (France)
- "Italia" – based on "Il Canto degli Italiani" (Italy)
- "España" – based on "Marcha Real" (music) and "El Himno de Riego" (lyrics) (Spain)
- "Yisra’el" – based on "Hatikvah" (Israel) and "Fida'i" (Palestine)
- "Türkiye" – based on "İstiklâl Marşı" (Turkey)
- "Zhonghuá" – based on "March of the Volunteers" (People's Republic of China)
- "Nippon" – based on "Kimi ga Yo" (Japan)
- "Slovania" – based on "Hey, Slavs" (anthem of the former Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and unofficial anthem of Pan-Slavism)
- "Vaticanae" – based on "Inno e Marcia Pontificale" (Vatican City)
- "NSK" – the anthem of Neue Slowenische Kunst, also known as "The Great Seal"
Personnel
Album written and produced by Laibach and Silence, 2005–2006.
- Laibach are:
- Eber
- Saliger
- Dachauer
- Keller
- Silence are:
- Boris Benko
- Primož Hladnik
- Additional musicians:
- Boris Benko (Silence): vocals on all tracks except 08, 09, 10 and 14
- Yolanda Grant-Thompson: vocals on tracks 02 and 13
- Mina Špiler (Melodrom): vocals on tracks 05 and 07
- Maria Awa: vocals on track 07
- Artie Fishel: vocals on track 08
- Zed Mehmet: vocals on track 09
- Elvira Hasanagić: vocals on track 09
- Seaming To: vocals on track 10
- Nagisa Moritoki: vocals on track 11
- Brina Vogelnik Saje: vocals on track 12
- Luka Jamnik: analogue synthesizer sounds on tracks 02, 04 and 05
- Miha Dovžan: zither on track 06
- Peter Dekleva: acoustic guitar on track 04
- Anne Carruthers: cello on tracks 04 and 11
- Alojz Zupan: conductor of brass orchestra on track 14:
- Delavska Godba Trbovlje
- Vitalij Osmačko: conductor of children's choir on track 04:
- Janja Cerar
- Dasha Khotuleva
- Anna Vidovich
- Nastja Yatsko
- Technical support:
- Gregor Zemljič
- Iztok Turk
- Uroš Umek
- Mixing and mastering:
- Paul PDub Walton
- James Aparcio
- Tom Meyer
- Project manager (Mute Records):
- Robert Schilling
- Cover painting:
- Laibach
- Design and layout:
- Phant & Puntza
- Text editing:
- Schrankmeister
- Special thanks to:
- Daniel Miller
- Robert Schilling
- Label: Mute Records
References
- ↑ "Volk - Laibach". Allmusic.
- ↑ "Laibach: Volk". Pitchfork.
- ↑ "Laibach: Volk". PopMatters.
- ↑ "Laibach: Volk". Release Magazine.
- ↑ silence-zone.com. "Silence discography: Volk". silence-zone.com. Retrieved 27 March 2007.
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