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FREE DIGITAL AUDIO FILES
This website contains several studio and live sessions recorded by the band LLAMA from 1986 through 1994. All of these analog recording sessions have been processed, cleaned‑up and converted into digital audio format. All audio files on these web pages may be downloaded for free. To date, 225+ hours have been converted from analog to digital. An additional 75+ hours are currently in transit from the original analog tapes into digital format

Download Song Sets By Years

                                                  


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Preview A Few Songs via SoundCloud

PLAY_SOUNDCLOUD_FILE The Geese Are Flying South Again PLAY_SOUNDCLOUD_FILE Dadadada PLAY_SOUNDCLOUD_FILE March of the Shrunken Heads
PLAY_SOUNDCLOUD_FILE The Third Secret Of Fatima PLAY_SOUNDCLOUD_FILE State Of The Union  


BAND INFO

LLAMA was an improvisational electronic band active from 1975 through 1994. Their music style followed closely in the footsteps of the Dada art movement of the 1920's -- art which has no meaning. Likewise, the music of LLAMA has no meaning. No two performances were ever the same. The band never knew what they were going to play......they just played. Each session they played was 45 minutes long, the length of one side of a standard 90‑minute cassette tape. The band usually played two sessions. The selection of instruments was vast. Synthesizers, Drums, Guitars, Horns, Giant Gongs, Homemade Instruments, Anything and Everything. Debi used a unique pitch bending effects processor hooked up to her microphone and was able to change her voice different ways in real‑time. The music of LLAMA has no classification. The closest description would classify it as "Space Rock" or "Ambient". LLAMA toured the Midwest playing live shows at universities, nightclubs and outdoor events. Some of the more impressive live shows were accompanied by live interactive computer graphics on a wide screen projector in the background. The live music was fed into computer graphics processing equipment which produced some very impressive "real‑time" visuals. The band was lucky enough to have some famous musicians sit in on some live sessions including James Woolley (Nine Inch Nails - Keyboards) and Tufty Clough (Toxic Reasons - Bass). One very memorable evening on tour was in 1993 when we played a concert at Marian University. Five minutes into our set, a priest stood up from the crowd, walked over to the mixing board and turned off all the power. He said in a loud voice, "This music is NOT appropriate for OUR students!" and then he started singing "Old Man River". It was a VERY bizarre moment

RECORDING INFO
Original Master Tapes: TDK IEC Type II High Bias CRO2 EQ:70µs + Maxell IEC Type II High Bias CRO2 EQ:70µs

Analog Audio Processing: JVC TD‑W106 Dolby‑B NR System ‑‑› to ‑‑› Technics SA‑160 Quartz Synthesizer

Digital Audio Hardware: EMU10K1 24‑Bit Analog to Digital Converter w/D4700 4‑CPU 3.0GHz Pentium

Digital Audio Processing: Nero Wave Editor w/Spectral Subtraction Hiss Filter @ ‑50dB Gain w/50% Noise Reduction
to ‑‑‑› Raw Digital Audio (HE‑ACC) + Transparent Encoding w/Constant Bit Rate@160kbs
to ‑‑‑› PowerPack Lame MP3 Encoding / Audio Sample Rate @44kHz

INSTRUMENT LIST
Synthesizers: Yamaha (FB‑01, SHS‑10 Keytar), Roland (JX‑10, MKS‑70, MKS‑50, U‑20, GR‑1 Guitar Synth), Casio (SK‑1, 2000, DH‑100 MIDI Saxophone), Korg P3, Kawai K1r, Serge Modular System

Samplers: Ensoniq (Mirage, EPS), Roland S‑50

Effects: Akai ME20A Arpeggiator, Alesis (Quadraverb, MicroVerb III, MidiVerb III), Art (SGE Mach II, Proverb), Boss (HM‑2, BF‑2 Flanger, PS‑2 Digital Pitch Shifter/Delay, DDS‑10 Stereo Digital Delay, RSD‑10 Digital Delay/Sampler), E‑Bow, NeXT Computer, PAiA 6710 Vocoder, Scholz Rockman

Strings: Ibanez Custom Guitar, Fender Stratocaster, Hondo Bass, Viola, B4U Bass Guitar

Woodwinds: Saxophone, Flute, Recorder, Harmonica, Trumpet

Percussion: Bodhran, Talking Drum, Tambourine, Wood Blocks, Bells, Chimes, Pearl Drum Set, Insect‑O‑Plate, Roland TR‑707 Rhythm Composer, Alesis HR‑16 Drum Machine, Giant Steel Photo Developing Tray, Household Appliances


llama @ vogue
"Live At The Vogue" - 1991
L to R: David - Debi - Billy (seated) - Walter



LLAMA_BOX_CDs
8-CD Box Set Released on 10/31/2001
Dadadada - Lopsided Opera - The Third Secret Of Fatima
Stellar I Belong - Live At Depauw University - Quatrain
Tashkabob In Lebanon, OH -
Llandromeda



llama @ tunnel mine
At The Tunnel Mines - 1992
L to R: Keith - Walter - Debi - David


LLAMA_AT_911_GALLERY
At The Tunnel Mines - 1992
L to R: David - Walter - Keith - Debi



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LLAMA is an improvisational electronic band. The music style follows closely in the footsteps of the Dada art movement of the 1920's -- art which has no meaning. Likewise, the music of LLAMA has no meaning. No two performances were ever the same. The band never knew what they were going to play......they just played. Each session they played was 45 minutes long, the length of one side of a standard 90‑minute cassette tape. The band usually played two sessions. The selection of instruments was vast. Synthesizers, Drums, Guitars, Horns, Giant Gongs, Homemade Instruments, Anything and Everything. Debi used a unique pitch bending effects processor hooked up to her microphone and was able to change her voice different ways in real‑time. The music of LLAMA has no classification. The closest description would classify it as "Space Rock" or "Ambient". LLAMA toured the Midwest playing live shows at universities, nightclubs and outdoor events. Some of the more impressive live shows were accompanied by live interactive computer graphics on a wide screen projector in the background. The live music was fed into computer graphics processing equipment which produced some very impressive "real‑time" visuals. One very memorable evening was in 1993 when we played a concert at Marian University. Five minutes into our set, a priest stood up from the crowd, walked over to the mixing board and turned off all the power. He said in a loud voice, "This music is NOT appropriate for our students!" and then he started singing "Old Man River". It was a VERY bizarre moment

This website contains several studio and live sessions recorded by the band LLAMA from 1986 through 1994. A majority of these analog recording sessions have been processed, cleaned‑up and converted into digital mp3 format. All mp3 files on these web pages may be downloaded for free. To date, 225+ hours have been converted from analog to digital. An additional 75+ hours are currently in transit from analog to digital

RECORDING INFO
Original Master Tapes: TDK IEC Type II High Bias CRO2 EQ:70µs + Maxell IEC Type II High Bias CRO2 EQ:70µs

Analog Audio Processing: JVC TD‑W106 Dolby‑B NR System ‑‑› to ‑‑› Technics SA‑160 Quartz Synthesizer

Digital Audio Hardware: EMU10K1 24‑Bit Analog to Digital Converter w/D4700 4‑CPU 3.0GHz Pentium

Digital Audio Processing: Nero Wave Editor w/Spectral Subtraction Hiss Filter @ ‑50dB Gain w/50% Noise Reduction
to ‑‑‑› Raw Digital Audio (HE‑ACC) + Transparent Encoding w/Constant Bit Rate@160kbs
to ‑‑‑› PowerPack Lame MP3 Encoding / Audio Sample Rate @44kHz

INSTRUMENT LIST
Synthesizers: Yamaha (FB‑01, SHS‑10 Keytar), Roland (JX‑10, MKS‑70, MKS‑50, U‑20, GR‑1 Guitar Synth), Casio (SK‑1, 2000, DH‑100 MIDI Saxophone), Korg P3, Kawai K1r, Serge Modular System

Samplers: Ensoniq (Mirage, EPS), Roland S‑50

Effects: Akai ME20A Arpeggiator, Alesis (Quadraverb, MicroVerb III, MidiVerb III), Art (SGE Mach II, Proverb), Boss (HM‑2, BF‑2 Flanger, PS‑2 Digital Pitch Shifter/Delay, DDS‑10 Stereo Digital Delay, RSD‑10 Digital Delay/Sampler), E‑Bow, NeXT Computer, PAiA 6710 Vocoder, Scholz Rockman

Strings: Ibanez Custom Guitar, Fender Stratocaster, Hondo Bass, Viola, B4U Bass Guitar

Woodwinds: Saxophone, Flute, Recorder, Harmonica, Trumpet

Percussion: Bodhran, Talking Drum, Tambourine, Wood Blocks, Bells, Chimes, Pearl Drum Set, Insect‑O‑Plate, Roland TR‑707 Rhythm Composer, Alesis HR‑16 Drum Machine, Giant Steel Photo Developing Tray, Household Appliances