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ROIO
of the Week [Recordings
of Indeterminate Origin]
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JIMMY PAGE
Lucifer
Rising
[no label 1CD]
Considered as avant
garde filmmaker Kenneth Anger's most elaborate film, Lucifer Rising (1970-1980,
28 mins) takes place at various historically "magic" spots in Egypt, England
and Germany. On screen, the odd rock-tinged soundtrack pulls viewers through
a series of obsessively staged and hauntingly realized ceremonies, movements
and rituals.
Originally Led Zeppelin
guitarist and leader Jimmy Page was to compose the score. Page had been
working on the score for three years (since 1973) and delivered 28 minutes
of completed tape. However, Anger fired Page for time-wasting and a lack
of dedication to the project, and claimed that Page's personal problems
had made him impossible to work with. Eventually, musician Bobby Beausoleil,
a member of the Manson family, was commissioned to complete the soundtrack.
Page and Anger first met at Sotheby's, at an auction of boots by the English
Occultist/Magician Aleister Crowley. Both Page and Anger are students
of Crowley's teachings. Anger is a practicing Magus (a priest/magician)
and his films, of which Scorpio Rising is perhaps the best known - are
replete with occult symbolism. Anger himself describes them as "Spells
and Invocations."
Page has often expressed
interest in the teachings of Crowley. He owns the second largest collection
of Crowley's books in the world, and one of his three houses is Crowley's
former residence at Boleskine on the shores of Loch Ness.
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Lucifer Rising deals
with the "fallen angel" of orthodox Christian Mythology, who in Anger's
film is restored to his Gnostic status as "the Bringer of Light," an implicit
part of Crowley's own teachings. Experimental editing techniques, mixed
with more traditional cinematic structures, add to the eerie and compelling
visual quality of this avant-garde masterpiece. Marianne Faithfull, The
Rolling Stones, Satanism, lightning, pyramids and extravagant costumes are
only a few of the contributing elements that bring this film to a fever
pitch of strangeness and cultural abstraction. According to popular internet
movie site, rottentomatoes.com, "like other Anger films, Lucifer Rising
reads like a music video from outer space or Ancient Egypt or wherever the
two may meet."
The Page material
was released on a soundtrack album of uncertain legitimacy on the label
Boleskine House Records on June 19, 1987. The blue vinyl disc contains
23 minutes of soundtrack music Page provided for the movie but was dropped
from the final release. (Page played electric guitar, guitar synthesizer
and the theremin.) The all instrumental soundtrack was originally recorded
by Page between November 1973 and 1974. As far as we can ascertain, this
material has not been officially released and continues to be shared among
Zeppelin connoisseurs.
Here is the MP3 of
the 22-minute version. This track is no longer available for download.
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Track
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