Jar_of_Kingdom

<i>Jar of Kingdom</i>

Jar of Kingdom

1993 studio album by Alchemist


Jar of Kingdom is the debut album by Australian progressive metal band, Alchemist. The band recorded the album after receiving a record contract in the mail from Austrian label Lethal Records and was released by that company in October 1993. During the recording of the first track "Abstraction", vocalist Adam Agius damaged his voice, thus resulting in the raw vocal sound on the rest of the album. The name "Jar of Kingdom" was inspired by a comment by television personality and entertainer Graham Kennedy during a comedy skit, in which he described a vial of pig semen as a "jar of kingdom".[2] Jar of Kingdom featured early experiments with synthesisers, acoustic guitars and samples: "Whale" includes the sample of a humpback whale song. All tracks from this album except "Wandering and Wondering" and "Whale" later appeared on the Embryonics compilation.

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The album was dedicated to the memory of John Munns and David Carter.

In 1999, Jar of Kingdom was remastered and re-released by Thrust and distributed by Shock Records in Australia. The album was offered to the label by the band in order for them to be released from their contract to enable them to seek international distribution with other companies. This re-released version was a compilation of the original album together with Alchemist's demo of 1991.

Track listing

All tracks by Alchemist

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Re-release bonus tracks from 1991 demo

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Credits

Band members

Guest musicians

  • Michelle Klemke − female vocals on tracks 2, 6, and 10

Production

  • Mixed at Rich Music Studios, Sydney, Australia in February 1993
  • Engineered by Brett Stanton
  • Produced by Alchemist and Brett Stanton
  • Band photos by Eddie
  • Cover artwork and computer graphics by Christian Ruff
  • Booklet design by Michael Piesch

References

  1. Rivadavia, Eduardo. "AllMusic review". AllMusic.com. Retrieved 11 August 2012.
  2. "Unreleased Alchemist DVD on YouTube". Youtube.com. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 11 August 2012.

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