The Mars Volta
Biography
Picking up the pieces from At the Drive-In, Cedric Bixler-Zavala and Omar Rodriguez-Lopez formed the Mars Volta and wasted little time branching out into elements of hardcore, psychedelic rock, and free jazz that expanded on the boundaries of their previous work. Although their previous band's demise ultimately arrived before they were able to truly capitalize on their mounting commercial triumphs, the Mars Volta immediately impressed with their willingness to eschew conventional logic and push themselves into new artistic directions instead of opting for the more marketable sounds. (Interestingly, their progressive yet streamlined approach gave them the early lead among critics against their former bandmates in Sparta, the more emo-leaning of the bands resulting from the split.) Bixler-Zavala and Rodriguez-Lopez enlisted friends Ikie Owens (also of the Long Beach Dub Allstars) and Jeremy Michael Ward, and the Mars Volta debuted with the EP Tremulant in 2002. Still, as much of their reputation was built on the strength of their live show, their highly energetic performances resulted in a wave of word-of-mouth hype that elevated the band to near-mythic proportions because so little of their recorded material was available to the public.
Sadly, Ward passed away May 25, 2003, from an apparent drug overdose at the age of 27. The Mars Volta had recently returned from an European tour supporting the Red Hot Chili Peppers, where they introduced brand-new tracks from the full-length De-Loused in the Comatorium, which was released via Universal the following June.
The band returned in early 2005 with their second full-length, the ambitious song cycle Frances the Mute. (They also issued the live set Scab Dates later that year.) Leading up to the release of third album Amputechture in September 2006, drummer Jon Theodore quit and was replaced by Blake Fleming (who had played on early Mars Volta demos). The album also featured an expanded role for the Red Hot Chili Peppers' John Frusciante. Less than a year later, in late 2007, the new single "Wax Simulacra" paved the way for the fourth Mars Volta album, The Bedlam in Goliath, which debuted at number three on the American albums chart. Less than two years later, the band had prepared their follow-up, a slightly quieter outing titled Octahedron that became their debut for Warner Bros. Rodriguez-Lopez has also recorded multiple times, producing more than a half-dozen albums within the span of as many years. ~ Matt Fink, All Music Guide
Selected Discography

De-Loused In The Comatorium
2003

Tremulant
2002
i think it coud have still been just as good to better when they were ATDI.......
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TMV's songwriting skills are supernatural . The lyrics are awesome and fun to try and figure out. Great band!
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Love the show they did this past Sunday @ Red Rocks! We got to meet Cedric and take pics w/him!!! I LOVE THE MARS VOLTA. Unlike NO other!!
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Are you deaf? The complexity is what makes it so good! That, and the fact that the guitarist is God.
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Thumbs down. Go back to At the Drive In. Just because it's complex doesn't make it good
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Time signatures, progressions , scales, hooks and lyrics...nev e r a dull track...
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I agree with Kelly concerning Bedlam. I didn't like that album either during the first five listens or so. But so many epic albums in a row were enough to convince me to keep on listening. Few bands have ever inspired that kind of faith in me. Sure enough, "The Bedlam in Goliath" finally hit home and now it belongs on the shelf with the rest of their great albums. I love every song on the album intensely ...
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Those of you who think Bedlam sucks needs to clean out your ears and listen to it again!!..... a n d again....... a n d again....... . . . I ' m sure you'll feel stupid you even made the comment! BUT! If you were commenting on Thomas' overuse of cymbals..... . . . . . . . . . .
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The Mars Volta are a rare group that captures deep feels with fast tempos. Vocals are awesome. I love the content!!
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I hate how Pandora keeps giving me death metal in my The Mars Volta radio...
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One of my favorite bands, unstoppable force of pure awsome, octahedron is going to be sick
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I love these guys. De-Loused in The comatorium is my fav. album so far. I can listen to these guys all day.
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I really love the drumbreak on day of the bamphonets and the intro drums to wax simulcra. Love listening to it in my car, love watching the mirrors bump. haha
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Although Eriatarka is one of my favorite songs, certainly one of the most "joy division tinged" because of the groove, frances the mute is one of the best albums ever! Strange for me to say, since I really love Pearl Jam's Ten and Tool's Undertow
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Nobody seems to appreciate experimental rock these days. It's nice to read some comments that prove I'm not the only one that loves these guys. Although I do like At- the-drive-in better. But I'm glad these guys took their music in a similar direction as opposed to Sparta...
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De-Loused In The Comatorium is by far their best album. If one simply sits down and listens to it straight through and listens to the harmonies and different modal progressions they employ, it makes for one of the most interesting albums in the history of music.
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The concerts are like the albums, they come out and jam non-stop. When they are done, they are done. No encores either time I saw them. The crowd kind of just flows with the music.
If I were to compare them to any other bands I would say Led Zeppelin or Tool, and not because they sound like them, but because they carry the same caliber of musicianship . These guys are masters at what they do. |
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awesome sound that varies all over the place... and their songs r always uber long! they kinda go off and do their own thing during a song.... i wonder how they'd be in concert.... is the audience just standing there most of the time while the band just kinda does it's own thing until they get back to the song?.... anyhoo, awesome band. amputechture is a very good album. didnt one of their drummers drum for One day as a Lion? that's what i hear....
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I think it speaks to an inability to communicate with the commercial-p o p inundated that this is both one of the worst-review e d bands ever - and my personal favorite. While their music isn't always flawless, they continue to do things that simply haven't been done before. There's so much that they've done, even in their early days, that I've always longed to hear. And I'm glad they never let go of the latin rock thing. They beat the piss out of Los Lobos any day.
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By far my favorite band, I love everything that they have released, and have been an avid Listener of their music for sometime. It makes you absoulutley hate commercial radio, and gives you hope that there is still good music out there that is worth listening to. Every album is amazing in its own way, and Frances The Mute is Amazing to listen to whille trippin' on shrooms! It will open your mind to a whole new world and your way of thinking about conventional music, they break the mold of writin
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hm i think im the only one out there who rates Frances of the mute as my least favorite album by the mars volta, honestly i enjoy the first one way more then frances, and i rate bedlam at the same level, because it was the first album to ever make me dream in music ever(it happened during bio lol)
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You can also get a feel for Thomas Pridgens drumming on the track "Las LaGrimas De Arakuine" on Omar Rodriguez Lopez Album Calibration ;-)
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djohnso33: the new drummer's name is Thomas Pridgen. He's played for a number of other artists with a smaller kit and a less aggressive style of drumming. (Although he's always friggin' AMAZING.) If his play is too much for you, it's only because that's what Cedric and Omar were asking from him this time around. Undoubtedly they'll seek out a different profile is an album or two, and you'll get to see Pridgen play with greater subtlety, oon some of those trippy number that you like so much. :
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Although the drumming on Bedlam is technically awe-inspirin g , I don't believe that the new drummer, however talented he may be, is the right fit for TMV (who at one time was my favorite band). He's just too balls-to-the - w a l l all the time, and although the Volta excel at that, their most profound masterpieces are in the slower, latin-driven trippy jams. Still an awesome group, though!
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frances the mute has to be one of the greatest albums of the new generation. the techniques used, melodies, n harmony between band memebers makes the mars volta a melting pot of amazing technicians formed to make unbelievable music
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i agree with folfer2000, being a drummer myself, the drumming on Beldam just makes it all that more amazing. Amputechture has some very strong songs on it but I think The Bedlam just took them to the next level.
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jadkni
they sound more like tool than either radiohead,mu s e or at the drive-in.so glad they got past that. |
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I love Deloused. Didn't like Frances the Mute though, and haven't really listened to their other stuff yet.
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I don't find Tool at all similar or comparable to TMV. Tool doesn't even come close to this.
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Just listing to Bedlam in Goliath, you may not realize how awesome the new drummer is but when you see them live the new drummer adds new edge to the mars Volta
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Absolutely epic... makes you hate mainstream music. Freaking amazing... I love this band. After this you can hardly listen to anything else.
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