When The Mars Volta started to break into the music scene, it was their live performances that generated the most excitement, because uncompromising energy and experimentation like theirs is incredibly rare. Following up their critically acclaimed Frances the Mute, The Mars Volta provides a seamless collection of live music that plunges the listener full force into their incredibly psychedelic world.
There is no indication where this album was recorded, only that it was recorded from May 2004 to May 2005. The few indications that this is indeed a live album include brief clapping, the sound quality of some of the instruments, and the goodbye that Cedric Bexler provides at the end. It is the incredible guitar solos, bizarre sound byte incorporations, and Bexler’s uncanny and volatile voice that create a surreal experience unmatched in live albums. Unlike most live albums that clearly distinguish each track, this album is one seamless performance that includes tracks from their various albums without taking the time to point out their origin.
Those familiar with Frances the Mute will find the same tension-building moments that act as passageways to the next track, but this time the instrumentation is heightened both soulfully and by experimenting with furious playing rather than jarring interruptions of silence. Few bands can duplicate the impact that they have while performing live, but the Mars Volta encapsulates their one-of-a-kind show in an album that is a new experience each and every time you listen to it. - Jason Kordich
Scab Dates
11/08/2005 | Umvd Labels
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CD
$12.99SCAB DATES: LIVE ALBUM
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CD
$34.99SCABDATES
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LP
$28.99SCABDATES
Review
All Music Guide Review
Scab Dates' accompanying photography is a frenetic blur of instruments and sweaty hair. Singers stand on amplifiers, and keyboardists stare intently at the veins popping in their hands; drummers reach over snares to tweak guitar strings, and saxophones appear out of the ether. It's an accurate portrayal of the Mars Volta's collagist sound, their subtitled and bullet-pointed avant metal that increasingly seems like the soundtrack to a film only Omar Rodriguez-Lopez can see. Still, even at their most insular (some would say self-indulgent), the Mars Volta seethe with intensity. Scab Dates proves this. Most of the more wandering elements of De-Loused and Frances the Mute disappear for this live document, replaced by hails of screaming organ, increased thump to the rhythm section, and Cedric Bixler-Zavala showing off the insane volatility in his voice. They still get jammy in places, but the extended guitar solos and softer textures lead to inevitable explosions. As nothing's ever been traditional with the Mars Volta, it's no surprise that their live albums aren't, either. The songs flow seamlessly and take subtitled digressions just like the studio records. In the liners, Rodriguez-Lopez describes how field recordings he made while on tour found their way into the mix, and there are no "How ya doin', Phoenix?!" or "Let me see you jump, San Diego!" from Bixler-Zavala to discern where the songs were recorded. All you get are dates -- "recorded between May 2004 and May 2005" -- and the occasional bit of crowd chatter to tell you this is live. (Well, the sound quality is a little off, too -- sometimes the drums sound terribly flat.) This means that Scab Dates is yet another intriguing window into the Mars Volta's world, instead of just a live album holdover. Highlights include "Take the Veil Cerpin Taxt" and the Comatorium highlight "Cicatriz," which becomes Scab Dates' epic closing suite. ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide
Track Listing
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Credits
- Keith Mitchell
- Group Member
- Amery AWOL Smith
- Group Member
- Howie Weinberg
- Mastering
- Roger Lian
- Assistant
- Jon Theodore
- Group Member
- Steve "Steev" Taylor
- Group Member
- Omar Rodriguez-Lopez
- Director, Art Direction, Assembly, Group Member, Mixing, Producer
- Kristen Walsh
- Coordination
- Daniëlle VanArk
- Photography
- Sonny Kay
- Design, Layout Design
- Cedric Bixler-Zavala
- Art Direction, Group Member
- Marcel Rodriguez Lopez
- Group Member
- Jonathan Debaun
- Engineer, Group Member
- Adrián Terrazas-González
- Group Member
- Pablo Hinojos Gonzalez
- Group Member
- Jesse Isaacs
- Group Member
- Lalo Medina
- Group Member
- Jerry Riccardi
- Group Member
- Shaun Sebastian
- Group Member
- Joe Paul Slaby
- Group Member
- Henry Trejo
- Group Member
- Greg Nelson
- Group Member
- Paul Drake
- Group Member











