Delìrium Còrdia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Delìrium Còrdia
Delìrium Còrdia cover
Studio album by Fantômas
Released January 27, 2004
Recorded Spring 2003
Genre Experimental Rock
Avant-garde metal
Dark Ambient
Length 74:17
Label Ipecac Recordings
(IPC45)
Producer Mike Patton
Professional reviews
Fantômas chronology
Millennium Monsterwork 2000
(2002)
Delìrium Cordìa
(2004)
Suspended Animation
(2005)

Delìrium Còrdia is the third full-length album by Fantômas. It was released on Ipecac Recordings in 2004.

Contents

[edit] Style

[edit] Music

The music could be described as the score to a horror movie and/or concept album centering on the theme of surgery without anesthesia. The album consists of a single track that runs for 74 minutes and 17 seconds.

Several music genres and styles are covered over the course of the album, including easy listening, chanting, Drone, and metal, generally being separated by ambience and sounds and voices in a surgical setting. There are no lyrics or song structures as such as one would traditionally expect; the band instead focuses on atmosphere and the creation of suspense through the use of eerie noises, wordless vocals, and sudden, jarring changes in volume and intensity. Approximately the last 20 minutes of the track consist of the sound of a turntable stylus stuck in the runout groove of a record. The track then ends abruptly, with the sound of someone counting in a fast tempo, followed immediately by the stylus sliding across a record's surface.

[edit] Artwork

The booklet contains graphic photos of actual surgeries in which organs are seen being removed from human bodies. Low-resolution images can be viewed here.

A quote on the label backcard reads: "Like the surgeon, the composer slashes open the body of his fellow man, removes his eyes, empties his abdomen of organs, hangs him up on a hook holding up to the light all of the body's palpitating treasures sending a burst of light into its innermost depths." The quote is attributed to Richard Selzer M.D., who is also credited with "voices." This quote is paraphrased from Selzer's introduction to Max Aguilera's book The Sacred Heart: An Atlas of the Body Seen Through Invasive Surgery, though it replaces the word "photographer" (Aguilera's profession) with "composer."

The font used for all text contained on the album uses V in place of U (with the exception of the U in "Max Aguilera"), presumably a nod to Latin spelling conventions.

[edit] Track listing

  1. "Surgical Sound Specimens from the Museum of Skin" – 74:17

[edit] Credits