K.A. (Kohntarkosz Anteria)

K.A. (Kohntarkosz Anteria)
Studio album by Magma
Released 2004
Genre Progressive rock
Length 48:49
Label Seventh
Magma chronology
Merci
(1984)
K.A. (Kohntarkosz Anteria)
(2004)
Ëmëhntëhtt-Ré
(2009)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic [1]
Pitchfork Media 8.4/10 [2]

K.A. (Kohntarkosz Anteria) is an album released by French progressive rock band Magma in 2004. The album was Magma's first full-length studio release in over 20 years. The material was in large part originally composed by drummer Christian Vander in 1973-1974. K.A is sung almost entirely in Magma's constructed language Kobaïan, apart from a short passage in French ("Les Musiciens du Bord du Monde").

Contents

Track listing

  1. "K.A I" – 11:12
  2. "K.A II" – 15:53
  3. "K.A III" – 21:43

Legacy

This album is part of the Kohntarkosz cycle of albums. It is the prequel to Kohntarkosz (1974). The final installment in the trilogy, released in November, 2009, is Ëmëhntëhtt-Rê.

The Kohntarkosz trilogy describes the spiritual quest of two men to understand the intimate workings of the forces of the universe and achieve immortality. The quest was begun by Emehntehtt-Re, an ancient Egyptian pharaoh who devoted his life to spiritual efforts, but who was murdered shortly before he could reach the final attainment. Kohntarkosz tells the story of a modern archaeologist who discovers the location of Emehntehtt-Re's tomb. He enters, and as he crosses slowly along the dark passages to the burial chamber, hears celestial voice, and has visions of Emehntehtt-Re's life. When he reaches the burial chamber and touches the tomb, the ancient dust seeps into his pores, and he has a momentary and devastating flash of understanding of the complete attainment of the ancient pharaoh. Waking, his flash of understanding lost in his normative consciousness, he then devotes his own life to recovering the achievements of Emehntehtt-Re and carrying them to the final stage. (His efforts and teachings, incidentally, may be the link to the remainder of Magma's mythology, the forming of a group of spiritualists who ultimately flee the decrepit Earth for a higher life on the planet Kobaia.)

The story of Kohntarkosz Anteria isn’t told literally. Using the unofficial Kobaïan-French dictionary, Timothy Hannem wrote his own vision on the story of the album : “Kohntarkosz Anteria, an intermediate work between these narratives, begins with the celestial appraisal of the archaeologist figure. The voices announce that he will be a future prophet (Kohntarkosz) but at the moment is "sleeping," i.e. unaware of his future path and place in the spiritual history of the human race. The final section, a merging of two pieces originally known as Om Zanka and Gamma Anteria, deals with a youthful vision of the future Kohntarkosz, in which he journeys to a strange village where he is greeted with joyous cries of "halleluja!" and taken to the entrance of Ëmëhntëhtt-Rê’s tomb, at which a mysterious male voice bids him welcome and entreats him to enter. At this point, the album Kohntarkosz begins…”

Personnel

External links

References

  1. ^ Couture, François. "Allmusic review". Allmusic. All Media Guide. http://www.allmusic.com/album/r740761. Retrieved 2011-06-15. 
  2. ^ "Album Reviews: Magma: K.A". Pitchfork. 2004-12-09. http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/5623-ka. Retrieved 2011-06-15.