Gila - Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee 1973 ,germany ,psych, Krautrock, Folk Rock, Prog Rock
Whereas the first record was psychedelic space rock acid jams, on their second album, Gila, now consisting of mostly Popol Vuh members, offered something far more sedate. Though Conny Veit was always the leader of Gila, this one comes off much more like a solo effort. The record is a concept album inspired by the book of the same name by Dee Alexander Brown that brought the plight of the North American Indians to international attention. Complex multi-tracked acoustic guitar melodies create a shimmering, even haunting beauty in a lushly Baroque setting, while some of the lyrics are taken from various Native American texts. "The Buffalo Are Coming," with its long instrumental section as well as Native American styled rhythms and chanting, is the high point. Otherwise the vocals distract somewhat from the music, and the whole thing comes off as too much with a smooth new age vibe, especially when compared to the acid-damage blastoff of the earlier Gila album.
Tracklist
A1 This Morning 0:00 A2 In A Sacred Manner 5:48 A3 Sundance Chant 10:27 A4 Young Coyote 14:37
B1 Black Kettle's Ballad 17:54 B2 Little Smoke 25:06 B3 The Buffalo Are Coming 29:32
Credits
Adapted By [Lyrics] – Conny Veit (tracks: A2, A3, B3) Drums, Percussion, Bass – Daniel Secundus Fiechelscher* (tracks: A1 to A3, B1 to B3) Lyrics By – Conny Veit (tracks: A1, B1), Dee Brown (3) (tracks: A2, A3, B3) Mellotron, Grand Piano – Florian Fricke (tracks: A1 to A3, B1 to B3) Music By, Producer, Vocals, Rhythm Guitar, Lead Guitar, Twelve-String Guitar, Electric Guitar, Flute, Synthesizer [Moog] – Conny Veit