Some very peculiar rock music hybrids emerged in the 1970s, but none was any more peculiar than
Univers Zero, a classically influenced group of primarily Belgian musicians. Sometimes compared to the slightly earlier and enormously influential
King Crimson,
Univers Zero was actually much more extreme. While
Crimson used
Robert Fripp's lead guitar and
Ian McDonald's Mellotron to approximate a symphonic rock sound rooted in the 19th century romantic tradition of
Richard Strauss,
Mahler and
Wagner, the earliest versions of
Univers Zero were not only more purely classical in their instrumentation (bassoon, violin, viola, cello, harmonium, spinet piano), but much more contemporary in their musical appropriation of the dissonant, jagged 20th century classical styles of
Stravinsky,
Bartók,
Ligeti, and
Penderecki, among others. The other constant and distinguishing quality of
Univers Zero was the longtime preoccupation of drummer/leader
Daniel Denis with the early 20th century fantasy/horror writer
H.P. Lovecraft -- as indicated by the names of his two predecessor bands,
Arkham (the mythical town where most of
Lovecraft's stories were set) and
Necronomicon (a mythical
Lovecraft book of forbidden secrets). Some critics regard
Univers Zero's music as pretentious and gloomy, but it's never pretentious in the easy, predictable manner of most progressive rock, and as for the gloom, there's actually a kind of jaunty gallows humor in many of the pieces on this debut -- particularly in the two by guitarist
Roger Trigaux, which feature march rhythms somewhat suggestive of
Shostakovich or
Prokofiev. The rhythmic energy and dissonant riffs, the distinctive sound of the bassoon and strings, and the tricky, fragmented time signatures make for a challenging and highly distinctive listening experience.