The Electric Lucifer

The Electric Lucifer
Studio album by Bruce Haack
Released May 1970
Recorded 1968–1969
Genre Electronic,[1] psychedelic rock[1]
Label Columbia
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[2]

The Electric Lucifer is an album by Bruce Haack noted for its originality and innovative use of acid rock and electronic sounds. AllMusic describes it as "a psychedelic, anti-war song cycle about the battle between heaven and hell."[2] Haack used a Moog synthesizer and his own home-built electronics, including an early prototype vocoder. It was originally released on LP in 1970 and has been re-mastered and re-released on CD several times. The 2007 Omni Records CD release included a radio interview from 1970 and an alternate version of "Electric To Me Turn" as a bonus track. "Song of the Death Machine" and "Word Game" both feature vocals by Chris Kachulis. The lyrics mention concepts such as "powerlove" — a force so strong and good that it will not only save mankind but Lucifer himself. It remains Haack's only album to debut on a major label and was featured heavily in the 2004 documentary Haack: The King of Techno.

Track listing

A Side
No.TitleLength
1."Electric to Me Turn"  1:50
2."The Word (Narration)"  0:30
3."Cherubic Hymn"  2:20
4."Program Me"  4:39
5."War"  3:45
6."National Anthem to the Moon"  2:38
7."Chant of the Unborn"  1:22
B Side
No.TitleLength
1."Incantation"  3:15
2."Angel Child"  1:01
3."Word Game"  3:48
4."Song of the Death Machine"  3:00
5."Super Nova"  5:22
6."Requiem"  3:21

References

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