Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fungus

Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fungus
Studio album by Omar Rodríguez-López
Released September 19, 2008
Recorded 2001, 2008
Genre Experimental rock
Length 43:41
Label Infrasonic Sound
Producer Omar Rodríguez-López
Omar Rodríguez-López chronology
Omar Rodriguez-Lopez & Jeremy Michael Ward
(2008)
Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fungus
(2008)
Minor Cuts and Scrapes in the Bushes Ahead
(2008)

Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fungus is an instrumental record by Omar Rodríguez-López released by Infrasonic Sound.[1][2] It is one of four solo albums completed in 2001 by Omar Rodríguez-López during the interim period following the demise of At the Drive-In and the formation of The Mars Volta. Absence was tracked at Doug Messenger's North Hollywood studio only a few weeks after Rodriguez-Lopez recorded A Manual Dexterity Soundtrack, Vol. 1 there, and is comparable to that project in both sound and atmosphere. The album features tracks that were "originally intended for use by The Mars Volta." No personnel credits are listed in the insert for either the LP or CD, though it features a photograph of Jeremy Michael Ward never seen prior to this release.

The song "Hands Tied to the Roots of a Hemorrhage" is the foundation of what would become "Eriatarka" on The Mars Volta's first full-length, De-loused in the Comatorium. Also, the song "Teflon" from TMV's 2009 album Octahedron includes parts worked from the song "A Story Teeth Rotted For".

Track listing

  1. "Hands Tied to the Roots of a Hemorrhage" – 4:05
  2. "City Dreams Inside a Truck" – 1:44
  3. "Sex, Consolation for Misery" – 4:25
  4. "Tied Prom Digs on the Docks" – 11:24
  5. "Seeth of Cloudless Hymstone" – 2:45
  6. "Mood Swings" – 6:53
  7. "An Ancient Shrewdness in the Veins" – 4:10
  8. "A Story Teeth Rotted For" – 3:48
  9. "Of Ankles to Stone" – 4:32

Release history

Region Date Label
Germany September 19, 2008 Willie Anderson Recordings
United Kingdom September 22, 2008 Willie Anderson Recordings
United States October 28, 2008 Infrasonic Sound

Personnel

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.