Thinking Plague

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Dead Silence 04:02 Tools
Behold the Man 04:26 Tools
This Weird Wind 08:03 Tools
Lycanthrope 08:29 Tools
The Aesthete 04:38 Tools
Possessed 08:19 Tools
Maelstrom 04:42 Tools
Run Amok 03:11 Tools
Les Etudes D'Organism 14:01 Tools
Kingdom Come 13:44 Tools
Malaise 04:40 Tools
Warheads 08:17 Tools
Love 06:59 Tools
Fountain of all Tears 07:39 Tools
Moonsongs 15:10 Tools
Blown Apart 08:35 Tools
The Guardian 05:30 Tools
Organism (version II) 11:47 Tools
Consolamentum 04:02 Tools
Rapture of the Deep 05:59 Tools
Etude for Combo 07:01 Tools
Marching, No. 2 00:41 Tools
Inside Out 04:13 Tools
Our "Way of Life" and "War on Terra" 05:23 Tools
Lux Lucet 09:36 Tools
Least Aether for Saxophone & Le Gouffre 08:52 Tools
The Underground Stream 06:02 Tools
Collarless Fog That One Day Soon 03:25 Tools
Gúdamy Le Máyagot (An Phocainn Theard Deig) 02:54 Tools
I Do Not Live 05:04 Tools
Marching, No. 3 00:47 Tools
Malthusian Dances 06:42 Tools
How to Clean Squid 05:02 Tools
Marching, No. 4 - Reverie for the Children 01:00 Tools
Sleeper Cell Anthem 06:14 Tools
I Cannot Fly 08:37 Tools
The Taste That Lingers On 02:12 Tools
Four Men in the Rain 02:33 Tools
A Light Is On and Name the World 01:32 Tools
The Gyre 04:47 Tools
Thorns of Blue and Red / the War 15:28 Tools
Climbing the Mountain 08:38 Tools
Marching as to War, No. 1 01:22 Tools
A Virtuous Man 11:53 Tools
The Echoes of Their Cries 15:32 Tools
Moonsongs (original '86 mix) 15:32 Tools
Thus Have We Made the World 00:00 Tools
Commuting to Murder 04:43 Tools
Hoping Against Hope 04:43 Tools
The Great Leap Backwards 03:52 Tools
A Dirge for the Unwitting 03:52 Tools
Marching As To War, No. 1 (Featuring The Ladies Senior Piano Crusade) 00:00 Tools
Moonsongs [Original 1986 Mix] 24:56 Tools
Hamster Dance 04:23 Tools
Piano Solo 04:43 Tools
Excerpt From Moonsongs 03:52 Tools
Marching as to War, No. 1 performed by Thinking Plague / Ladies Senior Piano Crusade 01:22 Tools
Gъdamy Le Mбyagot (An Phocainn Theard Deig) 02:54 Tools
Organism 00:00 Tools
Marching as to War 01:22 Tools
Maelstrom (US9359811305) 03:34 Tools
Gúdamy Le Máyagot (an Phocainn 02:54 Tools
Marching, No 4 00:00 Tools
Orgnism (version II) 02:53 Tools
Gъdamy Le Mбyagot (An Phocainn 02:53 Tools
This Wierd World 14:01 Tools
Lycanthrope [from 'In This Life'] 04:18 Tools
Thinking Plague-04-In extremis 04 - Les Etudes d'Organism 14:01 Tools
Étude for Combo 04:18 Tools
Go Away 04:18 Tools
Gúdamy le Máyagot 04:18 Tools
gudamy le mayagot (an phocainn theard delg) 04:18 Tools
01 Malthusian Dances_[plixid.com] 06:42 Tools
This Werid Wind 06:42 Tools
Gudamy Le Mayagot (An Phocainn Thread Deig) 06:42 Tools
Rapture Of The Deep (For Leslie)(Excerpt) 06:42 Tools
03 sleeper cell anthem_[plixid.com] 06:14 Tools
The Echoes of Their Cries [from 'Hoping Against Hope'] 15:10 Tools
Underground Stream 06:02 Tools
Moonsongs (Excerpt) 03:25 Tools
Les études d'organism 06:14 Tools
04 A Virtuous Man_[plixid.com] 11:53 Tools
Moon Songs 15:10 Tools
Marching, №3 03:25 Tools
Marching, №2 04:47 Tools
Colorless Fog, That One Day Soon 03:25 Tools
Marching, №4 - Reverie for the children 04:47 Tools
05 The Gyre_[plixid.com] 04:47 Tools
02 i cannot fly_[plixid.com] 04:47 Tools
Marching as to war, №1 (featuring The ladies senior piano crusade) 04:47 Tools
Our "way Of Life" and "war on 04:47 Tools
Marching No.4 (Reverie For The Children) 04:47 Tools
Marching No.3 04:47 Tools
This Weird Wind (Excerpt) 04:47 Tools
Marching No.2 04:47 Tools
Our "Way Of Life" & "War On Terra" 04:47 Tools
Marching As To War No.1 04:47 Tools
4 men in the rain 04:47 Tools
06 Climbing the Mountain_[plixid.com] 04:47 Tools
5 Maelstrom 04:47 Tools
Dead Silence (Live) 04:44 Tools
Marching, No. 4- Reverie for the Children 04:44 Tools
Thorns Of Blue And Red + The War 04:44 Tools
02 04:44 Tools
Organism (vesion II) 11:46 Tools
Marching, No. 4 11:46 Tools
6 The Aesthete 11:46 Tools
Thorns Of Blue And Red , The War 11:46 Tools
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Thinking Plague are a United States avant-garde rock group founded in 1982 by guitarist/composer, Mike Johnson, and bass guitarist/drummer Bob Drake. Based in Denver, Colorado, the band was active on and off since 1982, taking on a number of musicians over the years. They made six studio albums since 1984 with the latest being released in 2012, and released one live album recorded at NEARfest in 2000. Their music is a mix of rock, folk, jazz and 20th Century Classical music. Music.com remarked that "...Thinking Plague stand out as a shining example of avant-garde music blended with just enough rock for it to be called progressive rock..." Music.com apparently has a system for measuring such things. While never directly related to Rock in Opposition (RIO), Thinking Plague was strongly influenced by this late-1970s movement, particularly Henry Cow and Art Bears. In spite of Johnson's dislike of the term, the band has often been categorized as a "RIO" band. Mike Johnson and Bob Drake first met in 1978 and played in several cover bands. They began experimenting with basement recordings in 1980 and by 1982 they had enough song material to attempt a few live performances. For these shows they enlisted the services of classically trained vocalist Sharon Bradford, luthier Harry Fleishman on keyboards, and Rick Arsenault on drums. This ensemble became the first incarnation of Thinking Plague. They played at a few venues around Denver in 1983 but their complicated music was not well received and Johnson and Drake decided to make an album of their material instead. With Bradford, Fleishman and Mark Fuller on drums the band worked on and off for almost a year recording their songs at a crude 8-track recording facility in the basement of an old slaughterhouse called the Packing House Studios. Having limited funds they did all the tracking and mixing themselves, and released the album, ...A Thinking Plague in 1984 on their own Endemic label. Only 500 LPs were pressed with each cover hand painted by Drake with spray-paint and a stencil. In spite of the small scale, low-tech quality of the release, a number of distributors, including Recommended Records and Wayside Music (Cuneiform Records) agreed to sell the album and it was well received by some critics. In 1985 Johnson and Drake began to record material for a new Thinking Plague album. The Packing House Studios had closed but they had access to a few "low budget" recording facilities in Denver. Having disbanded the "Packing House" group after their first album, Johnson and Drake recruited a new band: singer-song writer Susanne Lewis, drummer Mark Fuller and keyboardist Eric Moon. Disregarding, or ignorant of the proper "industry" way of doing things, Thinking Plague recorded their second album, Moonsongs. The title track was a fifteen-and-a-half minute "tribal-pagan-environmental-anti-materialistic avant-rock ritual" composed by Johnson. Initially Moonsongs was released in 1986 on cassette by Endemic, but the following year the band signed with Dead Man’s Curve Records in London and Moonsongs was released on LP. As with their first album, Moonsongs was praised in "progressive" circles and Thinking Plague enhanced their stature as an "avant-rock" band. Riding on the success of their two albums, Thinking Plague performed a series of live shows in 1987 in Denver, opening for Sonic Youth at one of them. Pianist/clarinetist Lawrence Haugseth joined the band for the live performances, but left in early 1988. Haugseth's brief stay did, however, establish the need for a woodwind/reed section in the band. Fuller and Moon had also left the band in late 1987, which prompted the acquisition of three new musicians: classical pianist, Shane Hotle, bassist Maria Moran, and Mark Harris on clarinet, saxophones and flutes. Drake switched from bass guitar to drums. Recording for a new album began in early 1988 in various studios, including a large rehearsal room in an old yogurt factory (referred to as 'the Yog Factory'). Johnson and Lewis had collaborated on a collection of songs for the album, which featured several "new" instruments, including sampler, tabla, various African and Balinese percussion instruments, and a fiddle (courtesy Bob Drake). Ex-Henry Cow guitarist Fred Frith guested on one track, "Organism (version II)", the original version (also with Frith) having been released on Recommended Records' RēR Records Quarterly Vol.2 No.4. Drake did all the production work and the album, In This Life was finished in mid-1988. At the time ex-Henry Cow drummer and Recommended Records founder, Chris Cutler was on tour with Pere Ubu in Denver and Johnson gave Cutler a cassette tape of the new album. Cutler offered to release it on the Recommended label, and in September 1989, In This Life became the first US-made CD on the British label. In This Life was widely distributed and began "gaining kudos from aficionados of avant-rock from all around the world." But Thinking Plague's euphoria was short lived when Lewis moved to New York City. Attempts to replace her with a local singer were unsuccessful and working "long distance" with her proved impractical at the time. Disillusioned, Drake relocated to Los Angeles to work as an engineer and producer, and Moran left the band, leaving Thinking Plague at the point of disintegrating. In Los Angeles, Drake met drummer Dave Kerman of an avant-rock band, the 5uu's and began working with Kerman's band. Kerman's interest in Thinking Plague led to him joining the Denver band. Drake and Lewis also agreed to "rejoin" (despite the distances) and with the other remaining members, Johnson, Harris and Hotle, Thinking Plague "reformed" in 1990. For the next few years the band worked intermittently at some long-distance rehearsals, performed in a few concerts and made some new recordings, after which all work was put on hold. During this period of dormancy Johnson toured across Europe in 1995 with Drake, Kerman and the 5uu's, but upon returning to the United States the three agreed that reviving Thinking Plague again was not a practical option. Johnson joined another local avant-rock band, Hamster Theatre in 1996, and suggested to its leader, accordionist and bassist Dave Willey that he join a new incarnation of Thinking Plague. Willey agreed and recommended Deborah Perry as a singer. At much the same time, Kerman moved to Denver and rejoined the band. With existing members Harris and Hotle the new Thinking Plague began recording new material that Johnson had written. In early 1998 the finished tracks were sent to Drake (now living in France) for mixing and production, and the result was Thinking Plague's fourth album, In Extremis, released in 1998 by Cuneiform Records. In Extremis was rated the top album in 1998 by Gnosis, and its success resulted in new concert appearances for the band. A new member, Matt Mitchell on keyboards was recruited to replace Hotle who had left after the making of In Extremis, and Thinking Plague performed at the 1999 ProgDay Festival, followed by a tour of the eastern and mid-western United States. In June 2000 the band played at NEARfest, a recording of which was mixed three years later by Drake and released as Upon Both Your Houses in 2004 by NEARfest Records. In July 2000 the band toured France and Italy. After the concerts in Europe, Kerman left the band and was replaced by ex-Sleepytime Gorilla Museum drummer David Shamrock. Work began on a new album, A History of Madness, which was released in September 2003 by Cuneiform Records. It was recorded over a period of two years, with half the band members flying into Denver from across the United States to add their contributions. A History of Madness was the first Thinking Plague album that Bob Drake did not produce; Johnson and Mark McCoin, of the Brave New Audio studio where the album was recorded, did all the mixing. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.