Rose Garden of Mystery - Secret Chiefs 3, Burman, R.D.
Book T: Waves of Blood - Secret Chiefs 3, Demmon, Bob Ghost
Book T: Broken Glass Hearse - Secret Chiefs 3, Hazlewood, Lee Ghos
Renunciation - Secret Chiefs 3, Da Shankar, Anan
Jãbalqã - Secret Chiefs 3, Heifetz, Danny
Book T: Orbital Ballroom in the Hall of Resurrection - Secret Chiefs 3, Heifetz, Danny
Mera Pyar Shalimar - Secret Chiefs 3, Allen, Laura [2]
Zulfikar II [*] - Secret Chiefs 3, Heifetz, Danny
Jãbarsã - Secret Chiefs 3, Heifetz, Danny
Beyond the Mountain Qaf - Secret Chiefs 3, Spruance, Trey
Hurqalya - Secret Chiefs 3, Heifetz, Danny
A bizzare, semi-secret side project of Mr. Bungle and Faith No More featuring Trey Spruance (guitarist for Mr. Bungle & Faith No More), plus Danny Heifitz and Trevor Dunn of Mr. Bungle. Experimental rock that's entert... more »aining, with elements of Indian and Middle Eastern soundtracks, left field drum 'n' bass, atonal future surf music & more. Remasterd and reissued with a previously unreleased bonus track 'Zulficar II'. 2000 release.« less
A bizzare, semi-secret side project of Mr. Bungle and Faith No More featuring Trey Spruance (guitarist for Mr. Bungle & Faith No More), plus Danny Heifitz and Trevor Dunn of Mr. Bungle. Experimental rock that's entertaining, with elements of Indian and Middle Eastern soundtracks, left field drum 'n' bass, atonal future surf music & more. Remasterd and reissued with a previously unreleased bonus track 'Zulficar II'. 2000 release.
CD Reviews
Ennio Morricone if he were hindu mutant rockabilly surf-God!
Campbell Roark | from under the floorboards and through the woods.. | 09/29/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This is sheer brilliance. If you love Bungle's "Desert Search for Techno Allah," then you'll blag your pants over this! It's far more compressed and tight than other Secret Chiefs releases. Thematically, each track builds and refines and improvises upon each other, reinforcing the intensity.
Tr 1 is a straightforward, Middle eastern/Spanish sounding melody of lament. So Morricone that it hurts. Also calls to mind (the horn and cello?) the melody line from the 2nd move of the concierto de aranjuez- at least to these ears. lasts about 2.5 minutes. Great intro to what folllows!
Tr 2 is a thrashed out charging attack on the same melodic idea, with a throbbing surf-backbeat. Nuts!!!!
Tr 3 twitters and squeaks and then a twangy reverbed surf guitar and drum beat pick up where 2 left off. MORE NUTS!!!!
Tr 4 begins with more twang and also soft middle eastern type instrumentation in some kind of odd (harmonic minor???) key, then slips into a rather poppy rock beat with a skankin rhythm. neato! It scrambles about for awhile before the distortion and thrash comes back in towards the end. The longest track thus far...
Tr 5 is where things get kinda weird, sounds like a video game at first, or an arabian version of the william tell overture. dense electronica with more mid-east instruments and thick breakbeats colliding! Crunch bang boom! This one also lasts awhile building up to a frenetic propulsive conclusion!
Tr 6 starts out, again, ominously surfy- creepy Bungle-esque organs come in and out. This could have easily been on Disco Volante. hell's yes.
Tr 7: begins with (harpsichord?) and guitar, screechy cartoonish female vox soon slip in, (different language or possibly gibberish) followed by strings and harp- this one is soft and sounds so much like Ennio morricone's Spaghetti Western work that I thought maybe it was stolen. very pretty. Very spare. nice flute. Builds solidly. This one is around 4.5 minutes, not counting the random bubbly sounds at the end.
Tr 8 (maybe my fave) picks up the themes and motifs used earlier, and gets a bit funky, sounds like a Prince instrumental cover of either "Ars Moriendi" (the art of dying) or "Golem II: The Bionic Vapour Boy," from Mr. Bungle's 'California,' CD. The breakbeats kinda hit the jam!
Tr 9 Starts out with thick bass boom and odd jittery guitar. some background vox weave in and out. it gets very fast-paced and menacing. tautly constructed. The beats explode and teh song keeps building! more n more! It revisits its beginning and goes through again- ends with droning vox and same progression you've come to love.
Tr 10 starts out with wind howling. Instruments come in then go straight to noise rock hell. For a long time! Sounds like bees devouring someone up to the 3.5 minute mark where the clattering drums and squealing strings take over. this turns into a rain storm. More mid east stuff comes in the back door. About 6 minues of oddness.
Tr 11 tries to bring it all together. Easily the longest track here. the rain from 10 segues into wind and a tango-esque keyboard symphony that is quite brooding. Marching drums come in and visions start percolating in the mind of the listener. ruins. A vast procession of armies? A lone tent in a sea of dunes? A voluptuous waif dancing in a veil? Strings arise. everything builds wonderfully, thick guitar barely audible in the back. organ flourishes. more building- the guitar takes a lead approach blending with the other surging instruments. The wind comes back in and over the course of a LOOOOONG time (I won't tell how but it's well over 7 minutes) you get naught but near-silence. Then it picks up the same motif as Tr 9 and builds on it furiously.
I'll not reveal the ending!"
Second gets better
Ramiro | Valencia, Venezuela | 12/14/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"As I said for the First Grand Constitution, this album is simply great, all of the songs are well constructed. If you like SC3 this one will make you love them to death, this is a fantastic album that has it all without losing the essence of the Secret Chiefs: Waves of Blood, this one is a killer; Rose Garden, a very beautiful song; Jabalqa/Jabarsa, you'll be amazed by the percussion work; Mera Pyar Shalimar, simply great; Beyond the Mountain Qaf, gotta have patience with this one;Hurqalya, it takes you to higher states of mind; Zulfikar II, maybe the best one, Excellent.Don't doubt about getting this one, it is the best. (Until the Third Constitution). Also check them live."
If you needed the perfect cd, look no further.......
Gregory Womble | Newport News, Virginia United States | 07/29/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Every song! EVERY SONG! Every song is my favorite song! This cd is tighter than "chilled monkey brains"! More twists and turns than the Autobahn! Goes best with a bed of rice."
Quite possibly one of the greatest albums ever recorded
dude duderson | Walla Walla, Wa | 07/28/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"It is maddeningly difficult to pidgeonhole or lump the Secret Chiefs 3 into any kind of musical genre or mere human description. 'Second Grand Constitution and Bylaws' is just as wild, unpredictable, challenging, and utterly satisfying as the first SC3 album. SC3's unique blend of Arabian folk, 60's surf, techno and death metal is in full effect on the record as well as a heavier dose of songwriting, with most of the songs lasting over three or four minutes, as opposed to the short, mystifying bursts of insanity found on the first record. Every song on this album must be heard to be believed. This record holds its own right next to the Beatle's White Album, Radiohead's OK Computer, Slayer's Reign In Blood, (insert favorite landmark album here)."
Mr Bungle's "side project" minus M Patton w/other new artist
dude duderson | 07/27/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Don't expect to hear bungle influenced music on this album; this is a whole new thing. These guys have many ideas of their own. There may be no vocals on this (except for #8), but that makes it somehow more atmospheric. Think Middle eastern music plus a little bit of trance and surf; that is what mostly makes up this album, and it's awesome. Any fan of Mr. Bungle should get this checked out (along with First Grand as well)."