Mars Volta
Noctourniquet
Noctourniquet And then everything went black, at least for a while, at least for The Mars Volta. In the months and years
following their fifth full-length, Octahedron, Omar kept on at his usual fearsome creative pace. In fact, he ramped up
his output considerably, starting up his own Rodriguez Lopez Productions label and releasing a slew of solo albums. It
was a practice he'd begun shortly after De-Loused's release, with his solo debut A Manual Dexterity: Soundtrack Volume
One, but as the decade reached its close, Omar grew to rely upon his solo recordings as an outlet for his prolific
creativity, these albums often exploring musical pastures far beyond even The Mars Volta's wide-ranging parameters.
Before choosing to release music under his own name, Omar would always play it to Cedric first, to see if the frontman
thought it had potential to become Mars Volta music. Shortly after Octahedron's completion, Cedric flagged one batch of
tracks Omar had cut with Deantoni Parks, a brilliant drummer and composer who'd briefly occupied the Mars Volta
drumstool in-between Jon Theodore and Thomas Pridgen's tenures, and whose volcanic creativity and unique, unpredictable
approach to rhythm and composition had quickly made him one of Omar's favourite artistic foils. As with the music that
made up Octahedron, the new tracks Cedric had optioned for The Mars Volta often veered far from the riotous, Grand
Guignol visions of their earlier releases. It possessed the punchy, song-based focus of Octahedron, though this was a
considerably darker, more menacing strain of pop, with synthesisers figuring heavily in the productions. Cedric took the
tracks in 2009 and set about writing songs to the music. But no more new Mars Volta music would be heard until 2012. The
years that passed in-between were nonetheless momentous, and busy, witnessing an unexpected reunion of the members of At
The Drive-In, and Cedric joining his own side-project, Anywhere. But there wasn't any sign of life within the Mars Volta
until Omar, Cedric and their bandmates took to the road for a series of live shows in the spring of 2011, billed as The
Omar Rodriguez-Lopez Group, debuting the songs that would become Noctourniquet. The album followed the next year, and it
remains one of The Mars Volta's finest, its electronic textures staking out unfamiliar but fertile new ground. An
unsettling, subtly turbulent listen, Noctourniquet found Cedric sketching out a story about "some sort of device that
stops the darkness from bleeding", drawing influence variously from the nursery rhyme Solomon Grundy, the Greek myth of
Hyacinthus and the song Birth, School, Work, Death by British underground rockers The Godfathers. It was an album of
dystopian futurism, signalled by the paranoid cyber-rock of opener The Whip Hand and its unnerving chorus, "That's when
I disconnect from you". But it was also an album of inspired, unexpected moves and uncanny invention, like how
Dyslexicon seemed to eerily evoke Blondie's Rapture, before rushing headlong into its bruising chorus, tempos shifting
restlessly throughout like quaking earth beneath the listener's feet, or how Aegis put a brave new spin on The Mars
Volta's trademark rewiring of salsa's overdriven passions, or how Cedric had never sounded as scary as he did on The
Malkin Jewel's mutant burlesque shuffle. Tracks like Molochwalker were sleek and concise in a way The Mars Volta had
never really attempted before - which was all part of Omar's plan. "It had all been guitar, guitar, guitar, overdubs,
everything fighting for space in the same frequency," he explains. "So for Noctourniquet, it was all about subtracting
elements, of sticking to how I made demos." Deantoni's presence helped revivify the group, playing against cliché and
expectation, and taking each song in unexpected directions. "I'd beatbox a rhythm for him to play, to go with my
Price
Genre
Format
LP - 2 disk
Release
30-01-2026
Label
Item-nr
1318116
EAN
4250795602514
Availability
Not in stock
Tracks
Title
Artist
1
THE WHIP HAND
2
AEGIS
3
DYSLEXICON
4
EMPTY VESSELS MAKE THE LOUDEST SOUND
5
THE MALKIN JEWEL
6
LAPOCHKA
7
IN ABSENTIA
8
IMAGO
9
MOLOCHWATER
10
TRINKETS PALE OF MOON
11
VEDAMALADY
12
NOCTOURNIQUET
13
ZED AND TWO NAUGHTS