

![Brotzmann, Caspar Massaker: It's A Love Song [VINYL + CD] (Corbett vs. Dempsey) Brotzmann, Caspar Massaker: It's A Love Song [VINYL + CD] (Corbett vs. Dempsey)](https://www.teuthida.com/productImages/misc4/36478.jpg)
The legendary power trio of Caspar Brötzmann on long-scale electric guitar and voice with Saskia von Klitzing on drums and Eduardo Delgado Lopez on bass in two monumental live renditions of All This Violence, recorded in Vienna and Dresden, unleashing waves of searing guitar tone, crushing rhythm, and visceral intensity that move from furious protest to stark, haunted beauty.
In Stock
Quantity in Basket: None
Log In to use our Wish List
Shipping Weight: 24.00 units

Sample The Album:



Caspar Brotzmann-long scale elrctric guitar, vocals
Saskia von Klitzing-drums
Eduardo Delgado Lopez-electric bass
Click an artist name above to see in-stock items for that artist.
UPC: 759624575790
Label: Corbett vs. Dempsey
Catalog ID: EOM 116LP
Squidco Product Code: 36478
Format: LP + CD
Condition: New
Released: 2025
Country: USA
Packaging: LP + CD
Recorded live at Viper Room, in Vienna, Austria, on January 29th, 2025, and Beatpol Dresden, in Dresden, Germany, on January 25th, 2025, by Torben Utecht.
"Archaic, infernal, radical, consistent, courageous...
Following the release of his LP The Lovers And Destroyers with Caspar Brotzmann Bass Totem in autumn, 2024, renowned guitarist Caspar Brotzmann and his band Caspar Brotzmann Massaker offer a new record featuring two different live versions of "All This Violence," recorded in Vienna and Dresden, with Saskia von Klitzing (drums) and Eduardo Delgado Lopez (bass)."-Corbett Vs. Dempsey
"For an album arriving twenty-five years after Mute Massaker, Caspar Brötzmann's last outing with his legendary free noise trio, It's a Love Song sounds and feels unusually pressing, like the heavy ticks of a clock nearing midnight. "After just a few moments, it became clear that the live recordings I was hearing had a message, a power to reflect on current events," says the German guitarist, explaining his decision to postpone an already underway studio album to release this collection of two long, punishing live recordings from earlier this year of a song called 'All This Violence'.
Past the abstract pulses, spectral detonations, and fucking harrowing atmosphere of the brief appetiser 'Bar Open', we find Brötzmann and his new Massaker incarnation with Eduardo Delgado-Lopez (electric bass) and Saskia von Klitzing (drums) playing a thirteen-minute-long version of 'All This Violence' in Vienna on January 29th. When Brötzmann opens the piece, alone with his guitar, it takes a minute or two to fully acclimatise to the sheer heaviness - of sound, of emotion - that greets us.
His unmistakable, no-wave-via-noise-and-improv tone is bent and tapped into a series of industrial waves. The music spasms and recoils, stretches and shivers, making the guitar's vibrato growl - and I mean growl - with fury, like a caged animal trying to break free, until finally reaching some ephemeral balance, with cleaner licks clanking and stumbling over each other. Then, Delgado-Lopez and von Klitzing rush in, kicking up a maelstrom reminiscent of the wild cuts found on early Massaker albums like The Tribe and No Axis, but with a lumbering, weary and confident rather than pissed-off strut. Here, Brötzmann shapes lines into acerbic, ululating imperatives. "We are peaceful people / And we have enough / This is our protest / From all this violence," he roars, a very palpable threat clinging off of each word.
In place of the suffocating darkness that looms over the Vienna recording, the four minutes longer performance from Dresden on January 25th explores a brighter and lighter textural motif. The imposing mass of riffs and feedback is still there, but Brötzmann lets it breathe and expand, sustaining drone grooves and delving into sparse, atmospheric sections that would never fit the mood of the previous take, even if it had the needed space and time.
When the cut once more explodes into a power trio improv workout, Brötzmann's words take on a completely different tone: pleading, desperate, and heartbreakingly beautiful rather than furious. "Where is my hope," he sings, with each repetition embedded in gnarly, all-consuming guitar throbs that inch him closer to Scott Walker and his delivery on Soused with Sunn O))), a band significantly influenced by Massaker.
Sequenced as on the album, in reverse order of recording, the two takes venture from a place of total darkness towards some semblance of hope, which feels like a conscious decision on the part of Brötzmann and his band. They can only move forward, and this is, after all, a love song."-Antonio Poscic, The Quietus
Get additional information at The Quietus

Artist Biographies
• Show Bio for Caspar Brotzmann "Caspar Brötzmann (born 13 December 1962) is an electric guitar player. He was born in Wuppertal, Germany. While Brötzmann typically performs with the power trio lineup of Caspar Brötzmann Massaker (his early band), with guitar, bass guitar and drum set, he only uses rock and roll and heavy metal music as a basis for his music. Brötzmann's technique has been praised: "...his attack on the instrument - explosive, obstreperous, large scale, textural, timbral - asserts the material facts of string-pickup-amplifier more bluntly than anyone else currently involved in rock". Brötzmann's father, Peter Brötzmann, is a free jazz saxophone player. They have recorded a duo album, Last Home." ^ Hide Bio for Caspar Brotzmann • Show Bio for Saskia von Klitzing "Saskia von Klitzing plays drums for the band Fehlfarben, percussion for and with FM Einheit. Drums for Caspar Brötzmann Massaker, is one of the cofounders of the Burka Band and also plays with chicks on speed, Melissa Logan - Voodo Chanel and CETACEA." ^ Hide Bio for Saskia von Klitzing • Show Bio for Eduardo Delgado Lopez "Eduardo Delgado Lopez (El Educador), Bassplayer and DJ, provides unique music sets ranging from Hip Hop, Dub, and Jungle to Punk, Latin, Experimental and Dubstep. He has played with everyone who is anyone, but is especially known for playing bass with the Caspar Brötzmann Massaker. As a DJ he serves a wide range of modern Electronic rhythmical music as you can hear in Dub Intervention events on The Face Radio with his partner Ed 2000. He has been playing in clubs, such as, Toaster or WMF." ^ Hide Bio for Eduardo Delgado Lopez
8/20/2025
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
8/21/2025
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.
8/21/2025
Have a better biography or biography source? Please Contact Us so that we can update this biography.

Track Listing:
SIDE A
1. Bar Open 3:25
2. All This Violence Ð Live In Vienna (January 29th, 2025) 13:41
SIDE B
1. All This Violence Ð Live In Dresden (January 25th, 2025) 17:23

Vinyl Recordings
Improvised Music
Free Improvisation
Electro-Acoustic
European Improvisation, Composition and Experimental Forms
Guitarists, &c.
Unusual Vocal Forms
New in Improvised Music
Recent Releases and Best Sellers
Search for other titles on the label:
Corbett vs. Dempsey.


