Cover of Amon Düül II Phallus Dei
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For fans of amon düül ii, lovers of psychedelic and experimental rock, and those interested in krautrock and avant-garde music.
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THE REVIEW

“Phallus Dei” or the Dick of God. This album is an endless acid trip that seems played by Jefferson Airplane on a bad LSD trip. The Amon Düül II had the intuition to merge American psychedelia with Stockhausen, and the result is epic, dark, pagan, and completely insane yet, at the same time, original and musical, unlike the senseless sessions of their little brothers, Amon Düül. In fact, Amon Düül, with "Psychedelic Underground" and other similar subsequent albums (except "Paradieswärts Düül") like "Collapsing Singvögel Rückwärts & C", "Disaster (Lüüd Noma)", and "Experiment", seemed like hippies gone bad. Unfortunately, there has always been someone within record companies who wanted to profit and this is now documented history. It was material deemed unusable that was published only thanks to the success of “Phallus Dei”.

The beginning of “Phallus Dei” is entrusted to the Middle Eastern and occult sounds of "Kanaan". In "Dem Guten, Schönen, Wahren," Renate Knaup's voice emerges from immeasurable depths of pure madness. The macabre dance of "Luzifers Ghilom" takes us instead to visit a remote monastery in Tibet populated by monks devoted to forgotten cults. "Henriette Krotenschwanz" is a crazy and iconoclastic para-operatic march. Finally, there is the expansive and acidic suite of "Phallus Dei": it sounds like an invocation to Cthulhu and the mad deities created by H.P. Lovecraft. Music that should be listened to under the influence of psychotropic substances. Improvisation reigns supreme but, in reality, the Amon Düül II knew well how to keep their creativity under control. It feels like a pagan mass officiated in the middle of the Black Forest, where percussion, effected guitars, and keyboards create a sound beyond time and space. At the end of this "Journey to the End of the Night," one feels stunned and exhilarated as if they had drunk the nectar of the Gods.

At the time, there was something different in the air, a feeling that Amon Düül II fully captured. “Phallus Dei” is a timeless classic that continues to resonate, as Julian Cope would say, in the minds of all the Enlightened.



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Summary by Bot

Amon Düül II’s album Phallus Dei is described as an epic fusion of American psychedelia and avant-garde elements reminiscent of Stockhausen. The review highlights the album’s dark, pagan, and original sound that stands out from its contemporaries. Tracks like 'Kanaan' and 'Phallus Dei' offer immersive, psychotropic experiences that evoke ritualistic and otherworldly imagery. This timeless work remains a classic in the psychedelic and experimental rock scene.

Tracklist Videos

01   Kanaan (04:03)

02   Dem Guten, Schönen, Wahren (06:11)

03   Luzifers Ghilom (08:34)

04   Henriette Krötenschwanz (02:03)

05   Phallus Dei (20:45)

06   Freak Out Requiem I (07:53)

07   Freak Out Requiem II (00:44)

08   Freak Out Requiem III (07:49)

09   Cymbals in the End (00:33)

Amon Düül II

Amon Düül II are a German rock band associated with the krautrock scene, formed after a split from the Munich political/music commune Amon Düül. Reviews emphasize their early, dark, pagan-psychedelic and improvisational peak on Phallus Dei, Yeti, and Tanz der Lemminge, followed by more structured, song-oriented albums like Carnival In Babylon, Wolf City, and Vive La Trance.
20 Reviews

Other reviews

By Klee

 A volcano of infinite sound resources, it results in an elaborate fine work, guiding the listener into the imaginary circle of the damned...it is the exaltation of the murky human spirit.

 The pagan ritualism haunts every track of their works, which manifest the development of complex sounds, in an oscillating supremacy of avant-garde and naïve primitivism.


By caesar666

 Phallus Dei remains a dark gem of Luciferian power that resonated at the time in the minds of every enlightened listener.

 The group unleashes all its creativity, alternating moments of hypnotic psychedelia with more experimental others but never failing to captivate.