I've listened to almost all of it since and have liked it all. I really like that massive L album by Autechre. If there's not enough twisted electronics in that monster to satisfy anybody then they're way beyond my help. Amber was great too. Yes it's ambient but not flaccid ambient like so damn much of it is.
@@i_want_my_shuggah certain RUclipsrs like wyatt, killbot and gorgor attack, classylonniemetal and countblagorath I've found many amazing artists and albums and even songs from
@@i_want_my_shuggah There’s that but he usually plays what he’s talking about in the background. I can tell really quick if I’ll love ignore or hate something.
Thanks for talking about Confield! It can be an extremely difficult album to penetrate, but very rewarding. I encourage you to continue down the Autechre rabbit hole. Their discography is vast and ever changing. Btw, love the channel. Discovered a lot of excellent music here. Keep up the great work!
I'm surprised he didn't know Autechre! They're a household name in the genre since the mid 90s. Confield clicked with me immediately when I heard it the first time, so otherworldly yet beautiful in its austerity at the same time. He's 100% right when he says it still sounds like the future, total masterpiece.
If you like autechre ! Check out team doyobi !! They released music on Skam records the same label autechre released there early stuff before they moved to warp records! Hope u enjoy it ?
I just found out about this channel through the RUclips algorithm and I really enjoy the breadth of music that’s being discussed. I think the strangest album I’ve ever heard of is The Residents - Ultimate Box Set. It’s a compilation of all their music from the late 60s to 2012 packaged in a refrigerator and it comes with a price tag of $100,000.
I still believe nothing can get weirder than "Meet the Residents" by The Residents. Today is the Day is also a weird metal band that doesn't get talked about too much
I love Disco Volante. Mr Bungle were my favourite band for years. I still randomly hum the 'dirty dancing' riff towards the end of Carry Stress in the Jaw all the time.
Misanthropic albums pls. I can't find any good recommendations on RUclips for that. Love the old school vibes your channel has. It's nice just hearing you talk
Thank you for making these videos, they really help me find music that I find interesting, and I enjoy listening to your insights. One weird noise rock band that I know is Boredoms, and their strangest album that comes to mind is Pop Tatari, so if you’re looking for more strange stuff to make another video, maybe give them a listen.
Nice choices! I found out about This Heat looking into the samples on Danny Brown’s Atrocity Exhibition. Looking into a lot of samples on that album leads to some cool music
Pattons work with Moonchild trio is fuckin pyschotic and it’s a shame it’s so hard to find online. I highly recommend anyone into weird shit to buy those records.
Love that album and the follow up to it astronome is just as good ! Also check out John zorns magic series ! One is called magik one is called ritual one is called mysterium !!! Enjoy !!!
Psychocephalic Spawning- Effluence. From what I've gathered listeing to this over and over again, it's experimental brutal death jazz and hell it's something else. A quick description I can give that I've heard from other people is (John Zorn meets Cryptopsy.)
Great collection! Hardly anything strikes me as "Strange" anymore , but I love it when I hear of an album that was not expected and making a few listeners scratch their heads. Mort Garson's BLACK MASS LUCIFER was possibly his most extreme Moog workout work of the one-time MOR elevator music producer turned electronic creator (via a group of Astrology-themed albums at first I think). Following up on someone's mentioning of Pierre Henry, a mention of his collaboration with Spooky Tooth CEREMONY also might be something to check out with it's clash of Musique concrete (I hope I have the right term) with the band's music - I'm still wondering if Scott Walker, who's SCOTT 4 was released around this time took notice given his albums from TILT onward. With Scott in mind, The Walker Brothers' NITE FLIGHTS was the introduction to Scott's turn to the darker music he was to create that possibly made some long time listeners to the 60's trio wonder if they had the right album in the jacket given that Gary Leeds and John Maus were encouraged by Scott Engel to think outside of the Pop Box and more to the way he was headed although not quite achieving the greatness his four songs had (to those wondering, it's the album with "The Electrician"). Walker's own TILT shocked many who wished a return to the for SCOTT albums of The 60's only to hear brilliant nightmares that showed some interest in the experimental underground of the time. Some of tracks on 101 Strings' ASTRO SOUNDS FROM BEYOND THE YEAR 2000 was in reality a bunch of flanged strings over the music of The Animated Egg, but it was enough to alienate those who wanted more of the Supermarket Mood Music to see it hardly get promoted outside of California (last time I researched). "Flameout" is a cult classic. When it comes to just one song from someone, "Rock and Roll Station" by Jac Berracol features the voice of Vince "Brand New Cadillac" Taylor sounding like he's writing a postcard from the edge. Being covered by Nurse With Wound adds points to it's legend. A ramble, but I hope an interesting one for you.
Glad to hear you gave Faust a listen! Krautrock is one of my favorite genres and I hope to hear more of your takes on other Faust albums or other Krautrock albums in future videos!
Hey Wyatt I highly recommend the documentary kraut rock: rebirth of Germany, genuinely great and gives great insight of the range of what kraut rock can be
This Heat is such a phenomenal band. Their second album "Deceit" is the fan favourite and one of my favourite progressive rock albums ever. If you're are looking for the missing link between the most "progressive" side of prog (stuff like krautrock, Canterbury and my sweeties Henry Cow) and the most intellectual and experimental bank of post punk (Pop Group, Public Image Ltd, groups that do not sound like This Heat, but you got the idea), go no further.
I am not surprised that Sleepytime Gorilla Museum sorta made it in via background music. But I'm VERY surprised that Cardiacs - Sing to God or Cardiacs in general didn't make it in, they are a bit of a cult followed band. I think Cardiacs need a lot more attention in a lot of aspects, they really take songwriting in a whole other level.
Try out Comus - First Utterance. If you check out the lyrics, you can find many sections taken by Mikael Åkerfeldt in Opeth. This includes the album "My Arms Your Hearse." You'll find lots of direct references in Opeth's music.
Pure Guava is my favorite Ween album and I think its the weirdest thing they ever released other than The Pod. One of the most talented and versatile bands ever.
I like swans, naked city, foetus, autechre, merzbow, hanatarash, klaus nomi, zappa and beefheart, sleepytime gorrila museum, terveet kadet, sigh, lightning bolt, converge, buckethead, jute gyte, hasil adkins, shaggs, Quintron & pussycat, plenty of stuff but none of it is really *weird* to me. It's all basically music more or less, sounds recorded to be listened to with perceptible forms and patterns. Is abruptum really all that different from the beach boys, like, if you were an alien and just saw them both recording? You'd be like "oh, ok, so the hands play the guitars, sound comes from the mouths, the sticks hit the drums, it all goes through microphones and is mixed, edited and released on physical media". They're rock bands. Even something like Gamelan music is at least different in fundamental form and purpose. Especially nothing is weird in the internet era, when accessing stuff is incredibly easy, no sketchy venues, mailing stuff with a return address on it to people who might be legitimately crazy and violent, no digging through stacks and ads in the back of magazines.
There’s a lot I disagree with this. Music and art is about conveying emotions, thoughts, experiences and ideas. At some point things become norms for individuals who view/hear art. To compare aliens experiencing art to a human comparing art is an odd strawman argument. I’m going off of what’s strange from what I know and the follow up video (being this video) is the viewers experiences with weird music. It’s really all about musical experiences from what I know of and stating that the albums I’m discussing aren’t factual strange shouldn’t diminish the emotional attachment people share with them.
@@wyattxhim do you mean "strange" is personal and subjective? I can't disagree with that. Plenty of people freaked out over little Richard and the Beatles. I'm just saying I don't see it. I haven't found any strange music yet.
Agreed. And I don't mean to be jaded, it's simply a fact. I don't get a high off of discovering the strange/controversial/obscure like I used to pre internet.
Here's a few suggestions: Le Voyage by Pierre Henry comes to mind. He did that record with Spooky Tooth & all of his records are strange, but this one might be the weirdest which is saying something. While not quite krautrock, Output by Wolfgang Dauner is German jazzbos approximating the more out there stuff by early Can. One of my strangest records is by Bob Vido (Robert Vidoloff). I have the single sided edition. He attempts jazz, rock & classical music, playing all of the instruments himself in the true meaning of the word outsider. I spoke on the phone once to arrange meeting him & buying a bunch of records. He wanted to meet me at a bowling alley he frequented. Sadly, I procrastinated & he died. Neither copy has ever sold on Discogs. While not exactly strange, I would say the first space rock record is Countdown by Jimmie Haskell which came out in 1959. It combines early rock with a moog or moog-like keyboard in a catchy, entertainingly cheesy way.
Man, "Le Voyage" is great but not that weird for Pierre Henry, listen to "Variation pour une porte et un soupir" or the amazing "Fragments pour Artaud", now that is some weirdo stuff! Love him, I was lucky to see him live and visit his house in Paris.
@@g-man4744Apples & oranges. I have Variation Pour etc. which as you state may well be more out there. I picked Le Voyage as it is very strange, but also a (I think) better starting point. Thanks for putting Fragments on my radar which I do not have. Am of course envious that you got to see him live!
Ever listen to any The Sperm or other music by Pekka Airaksinen? Kaukana väijyy ystäviä by M.A. Nummisen sähkökvartetti is also a good early synth song. Taisteluni by M.A. Numminen as whole is weird album but a for full effect you need to understand Finnish. Nearest English speaker can get is Da-Ga Da-Ga covered by Jorma Kaukonen.
damn my mentions didn't make it so i'll repost them for next time. the flying luttenbachers-incarceration by abstraction (super underrated band) phantomsmasher- self titled (the most underrated band ever in my opinion) bekor qilish- throes of death from the dreamed nihilism old lady drivers- the musical dimensions of sleeztak jute gyte-birefringence whourkr- concrete encenathrakh- self titled
@@asafoetidajones8181 i guess the complexity of the themes stem from a big philosophy salad wich is personal to his interests, like many philosophy nerds he's not hard set on a single metanarrative or school of thought. he seems interested in modernist philosophy like hegel and nietzsche but ties it to more postmodern stuff like butler but that's the point of it, experimenting
I'm an expert on Scandinavian music, and the strangest albums I know are probably from the Swedish ambient scene in the 70's. Albums like Jola Rota (1971) by Joakim Skogsberg and Horrorscope (1979) by Ralph Lundsten. Also an obligatory shoutout to Tussilago Fanfara (1977) by Anna Själv Tredje, which isn't just a fascinating album from a historical perspective, but also my favorite ambient album of all time (on top of that it has the most black metal album cover ever).
I recommended the first Faust album because of its absurdity. However, for the genre of Krautrock as a whole, some albums that would be better introductions include Faust IV, Can - Tago Mago, and NEU! - self-titled.
Kayo Dot's least accessible albums are some their greatest triumphs. On one hand there's Gamma Knife with one of the most texturally-interesting and cacophonic takes on extreme metal I've heard, on the other there's Plastic House on Base of Sky with its grandiose electronic goth future-gazing. Of course there's the astrally-derived esoteric metal of its predecessor, maudlin of the Well, and the secret message encoded in their double album masterpiece Bath & Leaving Your Body Map. Kaatayra's Inpariquipê is a sort of Amazonian tribal acoustic black metal. As cool as it sounds. OLD's Lo Flux Tube and The Musical Dimensions of Sleastak as impressive as they are bombastically absurd. Also serves as a precursor to... Fredrik Thordendal's Special Defects' Sol Niger Within (Version 3.33), a crowning schizo metal achievement. Unbelievable, featuring world-class musicians. Fredrik's been working on a sequel for decades.
If you want to go down the Gong rabbit hole, I recommend the trilogy of Flying Teapot, Angel's Egg and You. If you'd like to find out about the Pothead Pixies, the Octave Doctors, fly around space in a Flying Teapot, tune into Radio Gnome Invisible, have a flute salad whilst travelling down the oily way to the Isle of Everywhere. Then these albums may be right up your street.
Tribes if Neurots adaptation and survival , the music is insects sound played on loop to loop for a year straight then they took those sounds and made other sounds out of it, very weird and very interesting..imo
hearing you talk about Confield reminded me of another one of my favourite electronic(???) albums of all time, Ryoji Ikeda's Dataplex it's composed of computer data turned into audio which as expected sounds alien and inhuman and unmusical, it's extremely unique in it's use of barely audible frequencies and "microsounds" that to the uninitiated are very challenging and disorienting, the music is less something you listen to like a traditional song and more like a textural auditory experience that showcases the physical qualities and possibilities of audio, how sounds you won't hear in nature and exist solely in the digital world affect our bodies and biology in antithesis to music's typical goal of affecting us on an emotional level, listening with headphones is a must, lifechanging personally
One great example of something that sounds totally like not from this time period is the album Rubycon (1975) from Tangerine Dream, that's really their best too.
Cacophony was a bit unexpected at the time it came out, after Death Church I don't think anyone expected how Cacophony would sound. I really liked it, even though it was a completely different tangent from their previous work. I particularly liked the song Nightgaunts for some reason, still listen to that album regularly now.
Death Church is one my favorite records ever in any genre!. Cacophony is cool too, albeit a little disjointed. You can tell that's when Nick's schizophrenia start to come in to play. His art tho is fucking amazing. The fact he did that with all pencil/pen is insane. What a genius. What do you think of the newest RP record? I listen to Death Church like twice a month such a unique record even for punk.
I was obsessed with early Peni, the 2 EPs and Death Church. Had no idea they'd got back together (wasn't it after Grant's cancer?) Then Cacophony appeared, no idea what to make of it, but it was one of those you just have to go with it. Absolute barrage of ideas.
How about Winter Songs by the Art Bears ? I really couldn't describe it if my life depended on it. Ok I'll try - if Comus had a schizophrenic witch cousin who lived even deeper in the woods. One of my all-time favorites is 'Gravity' by Fred Frith - famous guitarist of weird music. It's like Naked City (who he plays with) where it keeps crashing from weird song to weird song and different style to different style but a lot friendlier sounding. I've listened to it a half a million times since it came out in 78 and odd as it may be it's now as encoded in my DNA as Sgt Pepper or Dark Side. Then of course there's the krautrock magnum opus Tago Mago by Can. Can't forget that one. Listen to 'Augmn' if you doubt or 'Halleluwah' for the most monster thunder drums I ever heard. Imo their drummer Jaki Leibzeit is the best and most versatile drummer I've ever heard period. And their crazed Japanese lead vocalist Damo Suzuki who kinda tries to sing in English - I think - but always lands way far off the mark. A real classic of Germanic weirdness. 22:0923:2223:28
Then there's 'Are We There Yet ?' by the Television Personalities. They recorded a bunch of albums filled with catchy simple-sounding pop songs with a lot of naiveteé in it but as time went on their singer and main songwriter Dan Tracey (I think that's his name) evidently hit a vortex of homelessness and drug addiction and mental illness and he or 'the band' released 'Are We There Yet ?' which sounds like it's been made by a precocious demented 10 year old with a Farfisa and some tin cans and an extremely bad attitude. Btw 'Krautrock' is called that because it's German experimental music largely from the late 60s to the mid 70s. I love that Faust album too but nearly everyone agrees 'The Faust Tapes' and 'Faust IV' seem to be the most well-liked of their albums. I'd say the definitive and most influential Krautrock band were Can. Every album they recorded from 68-75 is unique and as weird as you could want. If you want to feel intensely uncomfortable about the subject of race check out 'Racially Yours' by the Frogs. If you want to both laugh AND be intensely uncomfortable check out anything else by them. That album by This Heat was well worth mentioning but their album 'Deceit' is a damn near perfect masterpiece and I've read loads of record reviews that seem to agree with that impression. It's great you discovered Gong but if you want to hear the weird heart of Gong listen to virtually any solo album by their bandleader Daevid (that's how he spells it) Allen - especially anything from what I call his 'Black Album' series which are 7-8 demented brilliant home demo albums. Great stuff. Try and find the song 'My Penis Is Aging' and spread your wings from there !
I know you mentioned it in another video, but I'd say Warning's (GER) self titled album definitely fits here. Nothing came close to what it sounded like back when it was released in 1982, and it's still incredibly unique today.
Not to mention that the song "Darkness" got covered by Morgoth on their debut "Cursed" and Pungent Stench covered "Why Can The Bodies Fly" on the "Dirty Rhymes And Psyhotronic Beats"-EP. Warning might be the first Industrial/Electro-Rock band ever.
Soundtracks For The Blind by Swans and Buyer's Market by Peter Soto both fit the bill for incredibly depressing and incredibly strange albums. The former is one of Swans' best works, with loads of sampled textures, washes of noise, and audio collages of recordings of drug addicts. Soto's album is a much darker and harder to listen to work, with the entire album being an audio collage of interviews with law enforcement, parents, and children who were survivors, investigators, etc of sex crimes. It's heartbreaking and nauseating and maybe one of the few albums I've ever had to just turn off.
@@wyattxhim Ahh. I managed to skip over that vid. I went straight from most disturbing we know to strangest we know. My bad! I also remembered another album you might wanna check out. An Evening With Wild Man Fischer. Fischer was a bipolar schizophrenic who was loosely associated with Frank Zappa. His music is... something.
I don't trust Sotos even a little, I don't buy the "oh but the media and society are also kinda predators because they talk about it". I feel like he's just a straight up regular pedo peddling his JO fantasy as art or commentary. That makes that stuff more disturbing to me than someone who's using CSAM-adjacent material in art with different intentions.
For weirdness - Sd Laika - That's Harakiri Mike Patton (solo)- Adult Themes for Voice Pan Daijing - Lack The Rita - Ballet Feet Positions Boredoms - Super AE
Drugs Are Nice by Suckdog is one of the weirdest albums ive ever heard for sure. ranging between punk rock, literally just some girls talking and fucking around with a tape recorder, experimental noise and so much more
I'm surprised Mr. Bungle was recommended, but not Fantômas. Imo, Fantômas is an even weirder/stranger Mike Patton project. Mike Patton doesn't really sing lyrics as much as he just uses his voice to great effect on so much material they've made. The debut is absolutely addictive with its use of old-school movie sound montages playing over jarring and sometimes groovy and thrashing sludgy riffs courtesy of Buzz Osbourne from the Melvins and Trevor Dunn from, well, Mr. Bungle! If the debut album isn't weird enough, go listen to Suspended Animation, their latest/last album. Mixes in circus music and Looney Tunes clips amongst more batshit insane heavy, sludgy, and sometimes groovy as hell riffs. Oh yeah and Dave Lombardo from Slayer is the drummer for Fantômas. Fantômas is such a fantastic successor to John Zorn's material, especially with Naked City, but if you want something heavily influenced by John Zorn without too much jazz influence and that bit heavier, can't recommend Fantômas highly enough. Edit: Great to see Gong mentioned! Absolutely positive they played a huge influence on King Gizzard. Especially listening to songs like I Never Glid Before.
Not to mention Patton's solo-albums like "Adult Themes For Voice" or the John Zorn-collaboration "Moonchild", where Patton does vocal-duels with Zorn's saxophone.
@@stevekramerf242 Yet to hear either of those! I remember him being a fan of John Zorn, but didn't realise he'd done a project with him. That'll be a great listen! Cheers!
@@apathyisdeath2977 He's not just a fan of John Zorn, he regularly does projects with him together (all the way back to the 90s). The first Mr. Bungle-album was even produced by John Zorn and Patton's first two solo-albums were released by Zorn's Tzadik-label.
Might be a normie pick but Colors by Between the Buried and Me has a lot of strange moments blended within it. Some of these include a bluegrass section at the end of Ants of the Sky, as well as a section of Sun of Nothing that sounds straight out of a Saturday morning cartoon. Compared to these albums it's probably nothing in terms of strangeness, but I figured it was worth a mention. Also Gong is really bizarre, but wonderful.
Blood Axis- The Gospel of Inhumanity, anything by Deadbolt, NON - In the Shadow of the Sword, Choirs of the Void, Burzum - Det Som Engang Var, Neptune Towers, Isengard - Vinterskugge, QotSA - Era Vulgaris, ... Necromantia - Crossing the Firey Path..
Anything by Sachiko M comes to mind when I think "weird". Very high frequency sound art. Zubi Zuva is an avant garde Japanese Acapella group produced by John Zorn. Definitely some odd stuff. I think the live performance by Tania Caroline Chen has to be the strangest "music" I've ever heard
Yooo! I fucking love you so much Wyatt!!! I found your channel a while ago when I was first discovering black metal and I have enjoyed your content ever since!!!
also if you think confields futuristic, try out qebrus' album "⊶⊑∷⌊∴⊹∵⌉∷⊒⊷" the only way i can describe it is like if a biomechanical alien from the other side of the universe came to earth and tried to give out a message to humans or something like that
ima keep commenting it, everytime you mention Mr.bungles first album you say its inspired by john zorn, when in fact JOHN ZORN PRODUCED AND PLAYED ON IT. you're driving me crazy. love yah but its killing me haha. i actually found John Zorns music by researching Mr.Bungle so its always funny to me to hear you coming from the opposite direction.
Seconding this. It's weird, strange, heavy, and one of the best avantgarde metal albums I've ever heard. He really lets his vocals rip loose on that record and it is ADDICTIVE.
The Autopsy Report Of A Drowned Shrimp... Sleeplytime Gorilla Museum, Single Unit... There's a hell of a lot of fun out there. Try Justice Yeldam and The Magic Ribbon Device (Lucas Abela) if you really want a stange day. You're welcone 😅
I would have gone OV by Orthrelm and Acid in the Style of David Tudor by Florian Hecker. I mean, Roaratorio is probably one of the strangest albums I know, but I also don't really like it. Disco Volante was a super formative album for me, but I think the first Fantomas album is weirder. I cannot stand Mike Patton's voice anymore but, I would imagine that album still stands up. I guess it depends what you mean. In a way I think Cruise by Whitehouse is a really odd album, but then you've already done so much about disturbing albums. Cosmic Pulses by Stockhausen is something I listen to when I want to feel weird which never disappoints. The Drift maybe? One really weird thing I heard recently that I enjoyed was Kenneth Goldsmith sings Ludwig Wittgenstein. Loads of good weird arty stuff like that on the channel Celestial Railroad. Electroretard maybe? Colosus of Destiny? Prick? Honky? The Bootlicker? Feels wrong not to have any Melvins in there.
Swastikas for Goddy is pretty weird. Echo Sound World. So much stuff released on Tzadik - to be fair to the guy, Adult Themes for Voice and Pranzo Oltranzista are really weird albums, also Spike by Agata, The Hidachi Royal Chorus. Loads of Mick Barr's is super weird. Mbuti Pygmie music is weird. Anthony Pateras's piano improvisations should appeal to metallers. Henning Christiansen is a very exentric composer. Requiem for Art and Symphony Natura are pretty weird, and also AMAZAWILD.
Soundtracks for the Blind by Swans could fit here, even though To Be Kind and The Seer are much more popular, I think that SFTB is still their best work.
if you think confield is strange, check out their 4 hour elseq album, especially the track elyc6 0nset. it's somehow even more impenetrable than confield
I don't really listen to a lot of bands that could be considered "strangest" but there are some bands that stand out on my playlsits. PSUDOKU is one of them, they have 2 albums at the moment but the second one "deep space psudokument" is stranger. It sounds like some sort of cybergrind and grindcore mix and as if the musicians are hitting absolutely random notes but it still somehow manages to sound cohesive and musical at the end. Another strange band would be The Sound That Ends Creation, they are some sort of mathcore derivative and deffinately go for some funny song names.
Do others who've ended up with stupidly eclectic music collections, with loads of really fucking weird bands, feel the same as I do, looking back on it? I've never cared about "weird" or "normal", but just needed to keep looking for more and more music, which inevitably leads you to those insanely obscure corners of the musical world full of sounds that really don't fit into previously known paradigms? I'm sure I've cared as much about weird as i have about normality, just not interested, but give me something I've not heard before and I'm a happy old geezer. And that search was a lot more fun pre-internet/streaming, having to befriend other oddballs, especially if they worked in record shops, sending off international reply coupons to obscure distros in other countries not knowing if you'd get a reply.
Super late and i dunno if it would really be that weird, but Shark Fighter by the Aquabats is pretty fucking odd...also just a song not a full album but it always strikes me as just being strange
Most of the Terra Tenebrosa albums are pretty out there. There was this band called Spazztic Blurr with some of the guys from those nutty beer drinker thrashers Wehrmacht, they released only one album is pretty strange but in a goofy and ridiculous way not sure if they are before or after Mr Bungle. Macabre have a couple of pretty strange albums as well. Pretty hard to pick a single album, there is a lot of strange ones out there, I been listening to music all my life but this particular album/project (which is made for a good cause in mind) is definitely the strangest I have found in music: m.ruclips.net/video/wJWksPWDKOc/видео.html
ive heard that to be true but its very difficult to say EXACTLY where its origins steam from. I believe to from Throbbing Gristle it was originally suppose to be perform art.
Face plant !!! I forgot the whole point of my posting ! 'The Temple' or 'Tantric Noise' by Finnish psychedelic cyclone warlock Haare or anything by his sideproject Cannibal Sauna. This sh-t is truly mindwarping.
And I know I said this already but if you want to hear cybernetic ghosts of Christmas past from the future and dyspeptic and dyslexic psychedelic robots you have to hear Half Machine Lip Moves and Alien Soundtracks by Chrome. Like Tago Mago once most people heard those albums life was never the same again. Their guitarist Helios Creed in addition to a great solo career goes out on tour with bands like Gong and Hawkwind to this day. 1 member of This Heat was also a member of Gong for a couple albums.
All fans of mr bungle should love secret chiefs 3 !!!! It’s basically mr bungle - mike patton ! It has a bit more of a drum n bass style mixed with that disco violante sound !!!!
@g-man4744 That might be true but they're one of the more profilic names in the whole IDM/ambient techno space. Confield is a weird record for sure but their output is kinda predictable at this point so idk
You somehow make me want to listen to everything you talk about.
I've listened to almost all of it since and have liked it all.
I really like that massive L album by Autechre. If there's not enough twisted electronics in that monster to satisfy anybody then they're way beyond my help. Amber was great too. Yes it's ambient but not flaccid ambient like so damn much of it is.
Yeah! He has some kind of magic that hypnotizes people.
Soon he will be ruling the world.
@@i_want_my_shuggah certain RUclipsrs like wyatt, killbot and gorgor attack, classylonniemetal and countblagorath I've found many amazing artists and albums and even songs from
@@i_want_my_shuggah There’s that but he usually plays what he’s talking about in the background. I can tell really quick if I’ll love ignore or hate something.
Ik right
Thanks for talking about Confield! It can be an extremely difficult album to penetrate, but very rewarding. I encourage you to continue down the Autechre rabbit hole. Their discography is vast and ever changing.
Btw, love the channel. Discovered a lot of excellent music here. Keep up the great work!
I'm surprised he didn't know Autechre! They're a household name in the genre since the mid 90s. Confield clicked with me immediately when I heard it the first time, so otherworldly yet beautiful in its austerity at the same time. He's 100% right when he says it still sounds like the future, total masterpiece.
If you like autechre ! Check out team doyobi !! They released music on Skam records the same label autechre released there early stuff before they moved to warp records! Hope u enjoy it ?
all it took was a minute of VI Scose Poise and I was sold, what a mystifying and fascinating sound palate
how about "the most brutal albums"? not necessarily metal, but something that makes you go "damn, this is fucking BRUTAL"
I just found out about this channel through the RUclips algorithm and I really enjoy the breadth of music that’s being discussed.
I think the strangest album I’ve ever heard of is The Residents - Ultimate Box Set. It’s a compilation of all their music from the late 60s to 2012 packaged in a refrigerator and it comes with a price tag of $100,000.
I still believe nothing can get weirder than "Meet the Residents" by The Residents. Today is the Day is also a weird metal band that doesn't get talked about too much
The Residents are a great band fr
Both are great picks, TITD don't get nearly enough recognition as they deserve. Sadness Will Prevail is one of my all time favorite metal albums rn
Today is the day is genuinely phenomenal I love them with my whole heart
@GIMMEWUTIWANT same here, Willpower and their self titled are the biggest oars in my continuous row forward
I love Disco Volante. Mr Bungle were my favourite band for years. I still randomly hum the 'dirty dancing' riff towards the end of Carry Stress in the Jaw all the time.
Those videos ( and this serie ) are the best thing that happen on youtube since a long time, you have to keep em' coming 🔥
Misanthropic albums pls. I can't find any good recommendations on RUclips for that. Love the old school vibes your channel has. It's nice just hearing you talk
Thank you for making these videos, they really help me find music that I find interesting, and I enjoy listening to your insights.
One weird noise rock band that I know is Boredoms, and their strangest album that comes to mind is Pop Tatari, so if you’re looking for more strange stuff to make another video, maybe give them a listen.
Nice choices! I found out about This Heat looking into the samples on Danny Brown’s Atrocity Exhibition. Looking into a lot of samples on that album leads to some cool music
Autechre is one of my fav bands. if it's hard to get into, start your way up with some of their earlier releases like ep7 or tri repaete
Tangerine Dream and Klaus Schulze early albums were some bizarre tracks as well
i think a segment like "the heaviest albums i/you know" would be interesting
Once you mentioned Mike Patton, Delìrium Còrdia is probably the strangest album concept that I have on my collection.
Pattons work with Moonchild trio is fuckin pyschotic and it’s a shame it’s so hard to find online. I highly recommend anyone into weird shit to buy those records.
Love that album and the follow up to it astronome is just as good ! Also check out John zorns magic series ! One is called magik one is called ritual one is called mysterium !!! Enjoy !!!
Krautrock is a massive genre, it encompasses a huge variety of styles of music. A massive can of worms to open but some really good music too.
Krautrock wise I'd strongly recommend Cluster and their 1971 (I think) self titled lp. Kinda hard to explain what you're in for but I'd try that
Great pick
@g-man4744 even the first minute is some of the most out there shit I've ever heard. Thought my speakers were haunted. The way it creeps in
My dude’s shirt here is making me wanna go on a Gaspar Noé marathon.
His first film "Seul contre tous" is still my favourite!
Psychocephalic Spawning- Effluence. From what I've gathered listeing to this over and over again, it's experimental brutal death jazz and hell it's something else. A quick description I can give that I've heard from other people is (John Zorn meets Cryptopsy.)
Love Effluence
Great collection! Hardly anything strikes me as "Strange" anymore , but I love it when I hear of an album that was not expected and making a few listeners scratch their heads.
Mort Garson's BLACK MASS LUCIFER was possibly his most extreme Moog workout work of the one-time MOR elevator music producer turned electronic creator (via a group of Astrology-themed albums at first I think).
Following up on someone's mentioning of Pierre Henry, a mention of his collaboration with Spooky Tooth CEREMONY also might be something to check out with it's clash of Musique concrete (I hope I have the right term) with the band's music - I'm still wondering if Scott Walker, who's SCOTT 4 was released around this time took notice given his albums from TILT onward.
With Scott in mind, The Walker Brothers' NITE FLIGHTS was the introduction to Scott's turn to the darker music he was to create that possibly made some long time listeners to the 60's trio wonder if they had the right album in the jacket given that Gary Leeds and John Maus were encouraged by Scott Engel to think outside of the Pop Box and more to the way he was headed although not quite achieving the greatness his four songs had (to those wondering, it's the album with "The Electrician"). Walker's own TILT shocked many who wished a return to the for SCOTT albums of The 60's only to hear brilliant nightmares that showed some interest in the experimental underground of the time.
Some of tracks on 101 Strings' ASTRO SOUNDS FROM BEYOND THE YEAR 2000 was in reality a bunch of flanged strings over the music of The Animated Egg, but it was enough to alienate those who wanted more of the Supermarket Mood Music to see it hardly get promoted outside of California (last time I researched). "Flameout" is a cult classic.
When it comes to just one song from someone, "Rock and Roll Station" by Jac Berracol features the voice of Vince "Brand New Cadillac" Taylor sounding like he's writing a postcard from the edge. Being covered by Nurse With Wound adds points to it's legend.
A ramble, but I hope an interesting one for you.
Glad to hear you gave Faust a listen! Krautrock is one of my favorite genres and I hope to hear more of your takes on other Faust albums or other Krautrock albums in future videos!
Yes!!!
Next time how about "The funniest albums I (you) know"
The most atmospheric albums list would be great
Hey Wyatt I highly recommend the documentary kraut rock: rebirth of Germany, genuinely great and gives great insight of the range of what kraut rock can be
This Heat is such a phenomenal band. Their second album "Deceit" is the fan favourite and one of my favourite progressive rock albums ever. If you're are looking for the missing link between the most "progressive" side of prog (stuff like krautrock, Canterbury and my sweeties Henry Cow) and the most intellectual and experimental bank of post punk (Pop Group, Public Image Ltd, groups that do not sound like This Heat, but you got the idea), go no further.
Van is great. The video and music is a quality combination. The drummer has some mega skills too.
I am not surprised that Sleepytime Gorilla Museum sorta made it in via background music.
But I'm VERY surprised that Cardiacs - Sing to God or Cardiacs in general didn't make it in, they are a bit of a cult followed band.
I think Cardiacs need a lot more attention in a lot of aspects, they really take songwriting in a whole other level.
Both great bands ! Do you like faxed head ? Think they were on the same label sleepytime gorilla museum!!!
Effluence should be explored. They’re an experimental brutal death metal band.
Try out Comus - First Utterance. If you check out the lyrics, you can find many sections taken by Mikael Åkerfeldt in Opeth. This includes the album "My Arms Your Hearse." You'll find lots of direct references in Opeth's music.
He describes that album as a masterpiece
Albums I mentioned in the last vid:
Old (Old Lady Drivers) - Formula
Ween - Pure Guava
Coil - Stolen and Contaminated Songs
The Sidewinder - Colonized
Pure Guava is my favorite Ween album and I think its the weirdest thing they ever released other than The Pod. One of the most talented and versatile bands ever.
I like swans, naked city, foetus, autechre, merzbow, hanatarash, klaus nomi, zappa and beefheart, sleepytime gorrila museum, terveet kadet, sigh, lightning bolt, converge, buckethead, jute gyte, hasil adkins, shaggs, Quintron & pussycat, plenty of stuff but none of it is really *weird* to me. It's all basically music more or less, sounds recorded to be listened to with perceptible forms and patterns.
Is abruptum really all that different from the beach boys, like, if you were an alien and just saw them both recording? You'd be like "oh, ok, so the hands play the guitars, sound comes from the mouths, the sticks hit the drums, it all goes through microphones and is mixed, edited and released on physical media". They're rock bands. Even something like Gamelan music is at least different in fundamental form and purpose.
Especially nothing is weird in the internet era, when accessing stuff is incredibly easy, no sketchy venues, mailing stuff with a return address on it to people who might be legitimately crazy and violent, no digging through stacks and ads in the back of magazines.
There’s a lot I disagree with this.
Music and art is about conveying emotions, thoughts, experiences and ideas. At some point things become norms for individuals who view/hear art. To compare aliens experiencing art to a human comparing art is an odd strawman argument. I’m going off of what’s strange from what I know and the follow up video (being this video) is the viewers experiences with weird music.
It’s really all about musical experiences from what I know of and stating that the albums I’m discussing aren’t factual strange shouldn’t diminish the emotional attachment people share with them.
@@wyattxhim do you mean "strange" is personal and subjective? I can't disagree with that. Plenty of people freaked out over little Richard and the Beatles. I'm just saying I don't see it. I haven't found any strange music yet.
Agreed. And I don't mean to be jaded, it's simply a fact. I don't get a high off of discovering the strange/controversial/obscure like I used to pre internet.
Here's a few suggestions: Le Voyage by Pierre Henry comes to mind. He did that record with Spooky Tooth & all of his records are strange, but this one might be the weirdest which is saying something. While not quite krautrock, Output by Wolfgang Dauner is German jazzbos approximating the more out there stuff by early Can. One of my strangest records is by Bob Vido (Robert Vidoloff). I have the single sided edition. He attempts jazz, rock & classical music, playing all of the instruments himself in the true meaning of the word outsider. I spoke on the phone once to arrange meeting him & buying a bunch of records. He wanted to meet me at a bowling alley he frequented. Sadly, I procrastinated & he died. Neither copy has ever sold on Discogs. While not exactly strange, I would say the first space rock record is Countdown by Jimmie Haskell which came out in 1959. It combines early rock with a moog or moog-like keyboard in a catchy, entertainingly cheesy way.
Man, "Le Voyage" is great but not that weird for Pierre Henry, listen to "Variation pour une porte et un soupir" or the amazing "Fragments pour Artaud", now that is some weirdo stuff! Love him, I was lucky to see him live and visit his house in Paris.
@@g-man4744Apples & oranges. I have Variation Pour etc. which as you state may well be more out there. I picked Le Voyage as it is very strange, but also a (I think) better starting point. Thanks for putting Fragments on my radar which I do not have. Am of course envious that you got to see him live!
John Zorn - Moonchild
Ever listen to any The Sperm or other music by Pekka Airaksinen? Kaukana väijyy ystäviä by M.A. Nummisen sähkökvartetti is also a good early synth song. Taisteluni by
M.A. Numminen as whole is weird album but a for full effect you need to understand Finnish. Nearest English speaker can get is Da-Ga Da-Ga covered by Jorma Kaukonen.
damn my mentions didn't make it so i'll repost them for next time.
the flying luttenbachers-incarceration by abstraction (super underrated band)
phantomsmasher- self titled (the most underrated band ever in my opinion)
bekor qilish- throes of death from the dreamed nihilism
old lady drivers- the musical dimensions of sleeztak
jute gyte-birefringence
whourkr- concrete
encenathrakh- self titled
Jute Gyte is cool, but I read an interview with him and it made me feel like I need a masters degree to get it
@@asafoetidajones8181 as a musician i tell you it's not that complicated, just nerdy sh1t
@@augustopenaspalmeira471 i meant thematically, not musically.
@@asafoetidajones8181 i guess the complexity of the themes stem from a big philosophy salad wich is personal to his interests, like many philosophy nerds he's not hard set on a single metanarrative or school of thought. he seems interested in modernist philosophy like hegel and nietzsche but ties it to more postmodern stuff like butler but that's the point of it, experimenting
I'm an expert on Scandinavian music, and the strangest albums I know are probably from the Swedish ambient scene in the 70's. Albums like Jola Rota (1971) by Joakim Skogsberg and Horrorscope (1979) by Ralph Lundsten. Also an obligatory shoutout to Tussilago Fanfara (1977) by Anna Själv Tredje, which isn't just a fascinating album from a historical perspective, but also my favorite ambient album of all time (on top of that it has the most black metal album cover ever).
I recommended the first Faust album because of its absurdity. However, for the genre of Krautrock as a whole, some albums that would be better introductions include Faust IV, Can - Tago Mago, and NEU! - self-titled.
Boredom's Pop Tatari is really a strange and insane album to check out
On of their best.
Bucketheadland 2 is a pretty weird album, i think its worth listening to though i love it
Kayo Dot's least accessible albums are some their greatest triumphs. On one hand there's Gamma Knife with one of the most texturally-interesting and cacophonic takes on extreme metal I've heard, on the other there's Plastic House on Base of Sky with its grandiose electronic goth future-gazing.
Of course there's the astrally-derived esoteric metal of its predecessor, maudlin of the Well, and the secret message encoded in their double album masterpiece Bath & Leaving Your Body Map.
Kaatayra's Inpariquipê is a sort of Amazonian tribal acoustic black metal. As cool as it sounds.
OLD's Lo Flux Tube and The Musical Dimensions of Sleastak as impressive as they are bombastically absurd. Also serves as a precursor to...
Fredrik Thordendal's Special Defects' Sol Niger Within (Version 3.33), a crowning schizo metal achievement. Unbelievable, featuring world-class musicians. Fredrik's been working on a sequel for decades.
Neptunian Maximalism - Eons
Magma - MDK
Kryzstof Penderecki - Utrenja
If you want to go down the Gong rabbit hole, I recommend the trilogy of Flying Teapot, Angel's Egg and You. If you'd like to find out about the Pothead Pixies, the Octave Doctors, fly around space in a Flying Teapot, tune into Radio Gnome Invisible, have a flute salad whilst travelling down the oily way to the Isle of Everywhere. Then these albums may be right up your street.
I’m one of those weirdos who think ‘You’ is the best album.
Tribes if Neurots adaptation and survival , the music is insects sound played on loop to loop for a year straight then they took those sounds and made other sounds out of it, very weird and very interesting..imo
hearing you talk about Confield reminded me of another one of my favourite electronic(???) albums of all time, Ryoji Ikeda's Dataplex
it's composed of computer data turned into audio which as expected sounds alien and inhuman and unmusical, it's extremely unique in it's use of barely audible frequencies and "microsounds" that to the uninitiated are very challenging and disorienting, the music is less something you listen to like a traditional song and more like a textural auditory experience that showcases the physical qualities and possibilities of audio, how sounds you won't hear in nature and exist solely in the digital world affect our bodies and biology in antithesis to music's typical goal of affecting us on an emotional level, listening with headphones is a must, lifechanging personally
One great example of something that sounds totally like not from this time period is the album Rubycon (1975) from Tangerine Dream, that's really their best too.
Agreed!
Cacophony was a bit unexpected at the time it came out, after Death Church I don't think anyone expected how Cacophony would sound. I really liked it, even though it was a completely different tangent from their previous work. I particularly liked the song Nightgaunts for some reason, still listen to that album regularly now.
Death Church is one my favorite records ever in any genre!. Cacophony is cool too, albeit a little disjointed. You can tell that's when Nick's schizophrenia start to come in to play. His art tho is fucking amazing. The fact he did that with all pencil/pen is insane. What a genius. What do you think of the newest RP record? I listen to Death Church like twice a month such a unique record even for punk.
I was obsessed with early Peni, the 2 EPs and Death Church. Had no idea they'd got back together (wasn't it after Grant's cancer?) Then Cacophony appeared, no idea what to make of it, but it was one of those you just have to go with it. Absolute barrage of ideas.
@@brianV1991 I seem to remember that they had to put the release on hold until he'd finished the artwork. Top album.
Death Church is a fantastic record. But obsession with Lovecraft found me obsessing over Cacophony as well
How about Winter Songs by the Art Bears ? I really couldn't describe it if my life depended on it. Ok I'll try - if Comus had a schizophrenic witch cousin who lived even deeper in the woods. One of my all-time favorites is 'Gravity' by Fred Frith - famous guitarist of weird music. It's like Naked City (who he plays with) where it keeps crashing from weird song to weird song and different style to different style but a lot friendlier sounding. I've listened to it a half a million times since it came out in 78 and odd as it may be it's now as encoded in my DNA as Sgt Pepper or Dark Side. Then of course there's the krautrock magnum opus Tago Mago by Can. Can't forget that one. Listen to 'Augmn' if you doubt or 'Halleluwah' for the most monster thunder drums I ever heard. Imo their drummer Jaki Leibzeit is the best and most versatile drummer I've ever heard period. And their crazed Japanese lead vocalist Damo Suzuki who kinda tries to sing in English - I think - but always lands way far off the mark. A real classic of Germanic weirdness. 22:09 23:22 23:28
Then there's 'Are We There Yet ?' by the Television Personalities. They recorded a bunch of albums filled with catchy simple-sounding pop songs with a lot of naiveteé in it but as time went on their singer and main songwriter Dan Tracey (I think that's his name) evidently hit a vortex of homelessness and drug addiction and mental illness and he or 'the band' released 'Are We There Yet ?' which sounds like it's been made by a precocious demented 10 year old with a Farfisa and some tin cans and an extremely bad attitude. Btw 'Krautrock' is called that because it's German experimental music largely from the late 60s to the mid 70s. I love that Faust album too but nearly everyone agrees 'The Faust Tapes' and 'Faust IV' seem to be the most well-liked of their albums. I'd say the definitive and most influential Krautrock band were Can. Every album they recorded from 68-75 is unique and as weird as you could want.
If you want to feel intensely uncomfortable about the subject of race check out 'Racially Yours' by the Frogs. If you want to both laugh AND be intensely uncomfortable check out anything else by them. That album by This Heat was well worth mentioning but their album 'Deceit' is a damn near perfect masterpiece and I've read loads of record reviews that seem to agree with that impression. It's great you discovered Gong but if you want to hear the weird heart of Gong listen to virtually any solo album by their bandleader Daevid (that's how he spells it) Allen - especially anything from what I call his 'Black Album' series which are 7-8 demented brilliant home demo albums. Great stuff. Try and find the song 'My Penis Is Aging' and spread your wings from there !
NunSexMonkRock by Nina Hagen is damn strange, yet sooooo talented and awesome at the same time. Whaddup Wyatt !
Love these a lot. Been watching your old stuff, too. Keep it up bro!
I know you mentioned it in another video, but I'd say Warning's (GER) self titled album definitely fits here. Nothing came close to what it sounded like back when it was released in 1982, and it's still incredibly unique today.
Hi, nekrouk! I'm interested in that band. Could you put a link to the album?
Is this it? ruclips.net/video/kn0rqWI1iXo/видео.html&feature=share8
Not to mention that the song "Darkness" got covered by Morgoth on their debut "Cursed" and Pungent Stench covered "Why Can The Bodies Fly" on the "Dirty Rhymes And Psyhotronic Beats"-EP. Warning might be the first Industrial/Electro-Rock band ever.
btw you posted a remix of Confield in the description, was that just a mistake posting the video or did you listen to the wrong thing lol
Soundtracks For The Blind by Swans and Buyer's Market by Peter Soto both fit the bill for incredibly depressing and incredibly strange albums. The former is one of Swans' best works, with loads of sampled textures, washes of noise, and audio collages of recordings of drug addicts. Soto's album is a much darker and harder to listen to work, with the entire album being an audio collage of interviews with law enforcement, parents, and children who were survivors, investigators, etc of sex crimes. It's heartbreaking and nauseating and maybe one of the few albums I've ever had to just turn off.
Buyers market was included in “The Most Disturbing Albums that I Know” and it’ll forever be one of the most messed things I’ve heard
@@wyattxhim Ahh. I managed to skip over that vid. I went straight from most disturbing we know to strangest we know. My bad! I also remembered another album you might wanna check out. An Evening With Wild Man Fischer. Fischer was a bipolar schizophrenic who was loosely associated with Frank Zappa. His music is... something.
I don't trust Sotos even a little, I don't buy the "oh but the media and society are also kinda predators because they talk about it". I feel like he's just a straight up regular pedo peddling his JO fantasy as art or commentary. That makes that stuff more disturbing to me than someone who's using CSAM-adjacent material in art with different intentions.
Do a noise music iceberg
For weirdness -
Sd Laika - That's Harakiri
Mike Patton (solo)- Adult Themes for Voice
Pan Daijing - Lack
The Rita - Ballet Feet Positions
Boredoms - Super AE
do you know Acid Bath? when the kite string pops easily the best sludge album of all time
Thank you! one of the best videos yet. how about some early MAGMA records?
Drugs Are Nice by Suckdog is one of the weirdest albums ive ever heard for sure. ranging between punk rock, literally just some girls talking and fucking around with a tape recorder, experimental noise and so much more
Hey, Wyatt! Great video! You think you could cover Emo Violence or stuff like Combat Wounded Veteran?
for the "strangest albums we know" video i suggest you talk about Don Salsa's Koolaid Moustache In Jonestown, it's basically Mr. Bungle x1000
I'm surprised Mr. Bungle was recommended, but not Fantômas. Imo, Fantômas is an even weirder/stranger Mike Patton project. Mike Patton doesn't really sing lyrics as much as he just uses his voice to great effect on so much material they've made. The debut is absolutely addictive with its use of old-school movie sound montages playing over jarring and sometimes groovy and thrashing sludgy riffs courtesy of Buzz Osbourne from the Melvins and Trevor Dunn from, well, Mr. Bungle! If the debut album isn't weird enough, go listen to Suspended Animation, their latest/last album. Mixes in circus music and Looney Tunes clips amongst more batshit insane heavy, sludgy, and sometimes groovy as hell riffs. Oh yeah and Dave Lombardo from Slayer is the drummer for Fantômas.
Fantômas is such a fantastic successor to John Zorn's material, especially with Naked City, but if you want something heavily influenced by John Zorn without too much jazz influence and that bit heavier, can't recommend Fantômas highly enough.
Edit: Great to see Gong mentioned! Absolutely positive they played a huge influence on King Gizzard. Especially listening to songs like I Never Glid Before.
Not to mention Patton's solo-albums like "Adult Themes For Voice" or the John Zorn-collaboration "Moonchild", where Patton does vocal-duels with Zorn's saxophone.
@@stevekramerf242 Yet to hear either of those! I remember him being a fan of John Zorn, but didn't realise he'd done a project with him. That'll be a great listen! Cheers!
@@apathyisdeath2977 He's not just a fan of John Zorn, he regularly does projects with him together (all the way back to the 90s). The first Mr. Bungle-album was even produced by John Zorn and Patton's first two solo-albums were released by Zorn's Tzadik-label.
@@stevekramerf242 Oh holy crap! That's sick!
Might be a normie pick but Colors by Between the Buried and Me has a lot of strange moments blended within it. Some of these include a bluegrass section at the end of Ants of the Sky, as well as a section of Sun of Nothing that sounds straight out of a Saturday morning cartoon. Compared to these albums it's probably nothing in terms of strangeness, but I figured it was worth a mention.
Also Gong is really bizarre, but wonderful.
Colors is the greatest album ever created.
Irreversible shirt goes hard.
yeah that Gong album isn't the best they have to offer, I'd recommend ''Radio Gnome Invisible Part II - Angel's Egg'' and ''You''.
I spy Tears For Fears. Was that the cover used on the American release of 'The Hurting'? It's different from the UK version.
Thanks for reminding me of autechre, they have a few classics
Blood Axis- The Gospel of Inhumanity, anything by Deadbolt, NON - In the Shadow of the Sword, Choirs of the Void, Burzum - Det Som Engang Var, Neptune Towers, Isengard - Vinterskugge, QotSA - Era Vulgaris, ... Necromantia - Crossing the Firey Path..
Not really strange for their genres just a bit more out there.
It’s finally here
Anything by Sachiko M comes to mind when I think "weird". Very high frequency sound art.
Zubi Zuva is an avant garde Japanese Acapella group produced by John Zorn. Definitely some odd stuff.
I think the live performance by Tania Caroline Chen has to be the strangest "music" I've ever heard
Same.
Sachiko M is literally Frequency Music.
@@SlyHikari03 sachiko m is awesome
Clowncore's music makes my brain go
"Phweeeeeeee!!!"
Awesome Irreversible shirt!
Cannot stress this one enough........"Twin Infinitives" by Royal Trux.
Yup
Yooo! I fucking love you so much Wyatt!!! I found your channel a while ago when I was first discovering black metal and I have enjoyed your content ever since!!!
autechre mentioned, life is complete
also if you think confields futuristic, try out qebrus' album "⊶⊑∷⌊∴⊹∵⌉∷⊒⊷" the only way i can describe it is like if a biomechanical alien from the other side of the universe came to earth and tried to give out a message to humans or something like that
ima keep commenting it, everytime you mention Mr.bungles first album you say its inspired by john zorn, when in fact JOHN ZORN PRODUCED AND PLAYED ON IT. you're driving me crazy. love yah but its killing me haha.
i actually found John Zorns music by researching Mr.Bungle so its always funny to me to hear you coming from the opposite direction.
I got a strange one for you. Rainer Landfermann -Mein Wort in Deiner Dunkleheit. It's also an excellent one.
Seconding this. It's weird, strange, heavy, and one of the best avantgarde metal albums I've ever heard. He really lets his vocals rip loose on that record and it is ADDICTIVE.
@@apathyisdeath2977 Agreed. What a vocal monster, the bass playing is unbelievable too.
love that album
the moment I saw that he did his own solo project I jumped on it immediately
The Autopsy Report Of A Drowned Shrimp... Sleeplytime Gorilla Museum, Single Unit... There's a hell of a lot of fun out there. Try Justice Yeldam and The Magic Ribbon Device (Lucas Abela) if you really want a stange day. You're welcone 😅
Do you like faxed head ? They pug stuff out on tzadik ! Crazy stuff !!!
*put
Damn, no love for Bernard Parmegiani.
Some of the best sound design I've ever heard! I love "La création du monde".
I would have gone OV by Orthrelm and Acid in the Style of David Tudor by Florian Hecker. I mean, Roaratorio is probably one of the strangest albums I know, but I also don't really like it. Disco Volante was a super formative album for me, but I think the first Fantomas album is weirder. I cannot stand Mike Patton's voice anymore but, I would imagine that album still stands up. I guess it depends what you mean. In a way I think Cruise by Whitehouse is a really odd album, but then you've already done so much about disturbing albums. Cosmic Pulses by Stockhausen is something I listen to when I want to feel weird which never disappoints. The Drift maybe? One really weird thing I heard recently that I enjoyed was Kenneth Goldsmith sings Ludwig Wittgenstein. Loads of good weird arty stuff like that on the channel Celestial Railroad. Electroretard maybe? Colosus of Destiny? Prick? Honky? The Bootlicker? Feels wrong not to have any Melvins in there.
Swastikas for Goddy is pretty weird. Echo Sound World. So much stuff released on Tzadik - to be fair to the guy, Adult Themes for Voice and Pranzo Oltranzista are really weird albums, also Spike by Agata, The Hidachi Royal Chorus. Loads of Mick Barr's is super weird. Mbuti Pygmie music is weird. Anthony Pateras's piano improvisations should appeal to metallers. Henning Christiansen is a very exentric composer. Requiem for Art and Symphony Natura are pretty weird, and also AMAZAWILD.
Soundtracks for the Blind by Swans could fit here, even though To Be Kind and The Seer are much more popular, I think that SFTB is still their best work.
I have that same Irréversible shirt!!
Trout Mask Replica by Captain Beefheart is also strange as f...
if you think confield is strange, check out their 4 hour elseq album, especially the track elyc6 0nset. it's somehow even more impenetrable than confield
I don't really listen to a lot of bands that could be considered "strangest" but there are some bands that stand out on my playlsits. PSUDOKU is one of them, they have 2 albums at the moment but the second one "deep space psudokument" is stranger. It sounds like some sort of cybergrind and grindcore mix and as if the musicians are hitting absolutely random notes but it still somehow manages to sound cohesive and musical at the end. Another strange band would be The Sound That Ends Creation, they are some sort of mathcore derivative and deffinately go for some funny song names.
Psudoku is a blast to listen to
Got one of their albums on LP
Do others who've ended up with stupidly eclectic music collections, with loads of really fucking weird bands, feel the same as I do, looking back on it? I've never cared about "weird" or "normal", but just needed to keep looking for more and more music, which inevitably leads you to those insanely obscure corners of the musical world full of sounds that really don't fit into previously known paradigms? I'm sure I've cared as much about weird as i have about normality, just not interested, but give me something I've not heard before and I'm a happy old geezer. And that search was a lot more fun pre-internet/streaming, having to befriend other oddballs, especially if they worked in record shops, sending off international reply coupons to obscure distros in other countries not knowing if you'd get a reply.
Well said. I couldn't agree more.
Super late and i dunno if it would really be that weird, but Shark Fighter by the Aquabats is pretty fucking odd...also just a song not a full album but it always strikes me as just being strange
The locust - plague soundscapes
That Sun City Girl's album fucking ruuuuuuuuules
Clowncore is not weird its pretty standard for breakcore, there drummer is called Louis Cole
They’re not breakcore, they’re jazzcore
Will you do a video on DSBM
I recommend listening to civilization killed our noble god by la toture des ténèbres that album is weird
Most of the Terra Tenebrosa albums are pretty out there. There was this band called Spazztic Blurr with some of the guys from those nutty beer drinker thrashers Wehrmacht, they released only one album is pretty strange but in a goofy and ridiculous way not sure if they are before or after Mr Bungle. Macabre have a couple of pretty strange albums as well. Pretty hard to pick a single album, there is a lot of strange ones out there, I been listening to music all my life but this particular album/project (which is made for a good cause in mind) is definitely the strangest I have found in music:
m.ruclips.net/video/wJWksPWDKOc/видео.html
Always happy when people bring up Terra Tenebrosa . Psychological horror brought to metal music and it’s so slept on by too many people.
Only discovered them recently I’m pretty impressed.
Ween - Pure Guava
John Zorn and Yoko Ono
IceJJFish - On the Floor
Ruins (from Japan) - Ruins I
The Gerogerigegege - Showa
Faust first Album: Fantastic!
Wait this was a year ago already
I hope all of you know Fredrik Thordendal's Special Defects haha!
If i'm not mistaken, kraut rock is basically where industrial came from. Along with post-punk i guess.
ive heard that to be true but its very difficult to say EXACTLY where its origins steam from. I believe to from Throbbing Gristle it was originally suppose to be perform art.
Face plant !!! I forgot the whole point of my posting ! 'The Temple' or 'Tantric Noise' by Finnish psychedelic cyclone warlock Haare or anything by his sideproject Cannibal Sauna. This sh-t is truly mindwarping.
And I know I said this already but if you want to hear cybernetic ghosts of Christmas past from the future and dyspeptic and dyslexic psychedelic robots you have to hear Half Machine Lip Moves and Alien Soundtracks by Chrome. Like Tago Mago once most people heard those albums life was never the same again. Their guitarist Helios Creed in addition to a great solo career goes out on tour with bands like Gong and Hawkwind to this day. 1 member of This Heat was also a member of Gong for a couple albums.
Don Salsa witht their album "Koolaid Moustache" is a great example
All fans of mr bungle should love secret chiefs 3 !!!! It’s basically mr bungle - mike patton ! It has a bit more of a drum n bass style mixed with that disco violante sound !!!!
Autechre isn't that strange but glad they're on here regardless!
They are though, I'd say you've probably been listening to them for a long time and don't realise it anymore!
@g-man4744 That might be true but they're one of the more profilic names in the whole IDM/ambient techno space. Confield is a weird record for sure but their output is kinda predictable at this point so idk