The band worked with Tim Simenon aka Bomb The Bass resulting in the release of the Clear Cut-EP on Morr Music. Lali Puna did some remix work with Two Lone Swordsmen and Lowfish as well. Being the great live act they are, Lali Puna played in places as distant as Bratislava, San Francisco, Moscow, St. Petersburg and Barcelona’s Sonar festival. Most of 2001 was spent working on their second album, which finally appeared as Scary World Theory in September of that same year. Artistically as well as commercially, this album was even more successful than its predecessor. They also released a remix-7-inch for Morr Music’s „a number of small things“-label and they have been touring Germany and Europe extensively at the end of 2001. In the fall of 2002 Lali Puna went on their first US-tour and shared a van with Morr Music label mates and friends Styrofoam and Opiate.
A few months later Florian Zimmer left Lali Puna in order to focus on his main project Iso68. The new keyboarder is named Christian Heiß. In the summer of 2003, Lali Puna released their Left Handed-EP on Morr Music, which displayed a significant musical progression as Lali Puna started using electric, distorted guitars which could not be heard on earlier releases. This helped shaping a yet more diverse and dynamic sound without neglecting Lali Puna’s past regarding their fragile and beautiful electronic compositions. All the way through 2003 Valerie Trebeljahr and Markus Acher have been busy writing new material for their third full-length album, which was recorded at the Uphon Studios and eventually has been mastered at famous Abbey Road Studios in London in December 2003. Faking The Books, as it is called, will be released in April 2004 on Morr Music, followed by an extensive European tour. Plans for the future include a remix 12-inch featuring some of Lali Puna’s most favourite artists as well as their second North America tour in fall 2004.
The story of Lali Puna is inextricably linked to that of the Morr Music label itself. The band's classic Tridecoder album was the second ever release on the imprint back in 1999 and set a new template for electronic rock music that's remained in place ever since. In parallel, Morr and Lali Puna have evolved from humble, experimental beginnings before eventually coming to represent the vanguard of modern pop.
Fronted by singer and keyboard player Valerie Trebeljahr, Lali Puna's line-up is completed by drummer Christoph Brandner (also of Tied & Tickled Trio), keyboard player Christian Heiß and Markus Acher - an artist already highly regarded for his work as part of The Notwist. Over a decade of recording together this band have continued to grow in strength, confidence and studio expertise, cuing up a triumphant return to full operational capability on Our Inventions. The album's title was in place early on, helping inspire the sonic template for what's surely Lali Puna's most sophisticated and emphatically electronic collection of work to date. More than ever these songs place the group at the cutting edge of their art, facing up to the onset of an abstract, digitised future whilst retaining a timeless sense of musical ingenuity and endeavour.
It took fellow Weilheim luminaries The Notwist until their sixth album to finally reach worldwide recognition, breaking through with 2002's Neon Golden. Now, with Our Inventions, Lali Puna seem poised to crossover in a similarly incendiary fashion. In an age when the very notion of an album seems like an outmoded conceit, Lali Puna are a band that both demand and amply reward the investment of their audience over a full-length narrative. Our Inventions is a defiantly complete listening experience - one that exudes craftsmanship and captures the band at the peak of their powers as songwriters.
December 2009
Call 1-800-FEAR
Lali Puna Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
It shuts your mouth
When you should talk
You lock the door
Of your panic room
When you should talk
But while you're away
Exploiting fear
Misleading you
They spend your money
On mini-nukes
So you should talk
But orange alert
Lets you nod your head
When you should talk
'Cause while you're away
Someone's taking over
Exploiting fear
Misleading you
Someone's taking over
The song "Call 1-800-FEAR" by Lali Puna is a powerful commentary on how fear can be used as a tool of manipulation and control. The opening lines set the tone for the song, as the singer notes that fear "keeps you quiet" and "shuts your mouth" when you should be speaking out against injustice or unfairness. The metaphor of the "panic room" underscores this idea, as it suggests that fear can be so paralyzing that it causes us to retreat into a space of isolation and silence.
As the song progresses, the singer points out the ways in which fear can be exploited by those in power. She notes that "someone's taking over" while we're too afraid to speak up, and that this can lead to dangerous consequences such as the spending of money on "mini-nukes." The reference to "orange alert" is a nod to the post-9/11 climate of fear that permeated much of American society, suggesting that even when there is no real threat, fear can still be used to control people.
Ultimately, the song is a call to action, urging listeners to speak up and resist the forces that seek to control us through fear. By using fear as a tool of manipulation, those in power can maintain their control over the masses, but if enough people refuse to be silenced, there is hope for positive change.
Line by Line Meaning
Fear keeps you quiet
Fear makes you stay silent and not express yourself
It shuts your mouth
It closes your lips so you can't speak up
When you should talk
At times when you need to voice your opinion
You lock the door
You close yourself off from the world
Of your panic room
In a safe space where you feel secure
When you should talk
There are times when you need to break out of your comfort zone and speak up
But while you're away
When you're not paying attention
Someone's taking over
Someone else is gaining control
Exploiting fear
Using your fear to manipulate you
Misleading you
Leading you astray on purpose
They spend your money
Those in control use your funds
On mini-nukes
On dangerous weaponry
So you should talk
You should speak out and have a say in where your money goes
But orange alert
A warning level that keeps you on edge
Lets you nod your head
You passively agree with the situation
When you should talk
When you should stand up and not just accept what's happening
'Cause while you're away
While you're not paying attention
Someone's taking over
The ones in control are gaining more power
Exploiting fear
Using your fear to control you
Misleading you
Deliberately giving you false information
Someone's taking over
Those who seek to control others are gaining more power
Lyrics © Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
Written by: MARKUS ACHER, VALERIE TREBELJAHR
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind