Quarterly Review: Slift, Grin, Pontiac, The Polvos, The Cosmic Gospel, Grave Speaker, Surya Kris Peters, GOZD, Sativa Root, Volt Ritual

Posted in Reviews on February 26th, 2024 by JJ Koczan

The-Obelisk-Quarterly-Review

Admittedly, there’s some ambition in my mind calling this the ‘Spring 2024 Quarterly Review.’ I’m done with winter and March starts on Friday, so yeah, it’s kind of a reach as regards the traditional seasonal patterns of Northern New Jersey where I live, but hell, these things actually get decided here by pissing off a rodent. Maybe it doesn’t need to be so rigidly defined after all.

After doing QRs for I guess about nine years now, I finally made myself a template for the back-end layout. It’s not a huge leap, but will mean about five more minutes I can dedicate to listening, and when you’re trying to touch on 50 records in the span of a work week and attempt some semblance of representing what they’re about, five minutes can help. Still, it’s a new thing, and if you see ‘ARTIST’ listed where a band’s name should be or LINK where ‘So and So on Facebook’ goes, a friendly comment letting me know would be helpful.

Thanks in advance and I hope you find something in all of this to come that speaks to you. I’ll try to come up for air at some point.

Quarterly Review #1-10:

Slift, Ilion

Slift Ilion

One of the few non-billionaire groups of people who might be able to say they had a good year in 2020, Toulouse, France, spaceblasters Slift signed to Sub Pop on the strength of that wretched year’s Ummon (review here) and the spectacle-laced live shows with which they present their material. Their ideology is cosmic, their delivery markedly epic, and Ilion pushes the blinding light and the rhythmic force directly at you, creating a sweeping momentum contrasted by ambient stretches like that tucked at the end of 12-minute hypnotic planetmaker “The Words That Have Never Been Heard,” the drone finale “Enter the Loop” or any number of spots between along the record’s repetition-churning, willfully-overblown 79-minute course of builds and surging payoffs. A cynic might tell you it’s not anything Hawkwind didn’t do in 1974 offered with modern effects and beefier tones, but, uh, is that really something to complain about? The hype around Ilion hasn’t been as fervent as was for Ummon — it’s a different moment — but Slift have set themselves on a progressive course and in the years to come, this may indeed become their most influential work. For that alone it’s among 2024’s most essential heavy albums, never mind the actual journey of listening. Bands like this don’t happen every day.

Slift on Facebook

Sub Pop Records website

Grin, Hush

grin hush

The only thing keeping Grin from being punk rock is the fact that they don’t play punk. Otherwise, the self-recording, self-releasing (on The Lasting Dose Records) Berlin metal-sludge slingers tick no shortage of boxes as regards ethic, commitment to an uncompromised vision of their sound, and on Hush, their fourth long-player which features tracks from 2023’s Black Nothingness (review here), they sharpen their attack to a point that reminds of dug-in Swedish death metal on “Pyramid” with a winding lead line threaded across, find post-metallic ambience in “Neon Skies,” steamroll with the groove of the penultimate “The Tempest of Time,” and manage to make even the crushing “Midnight Blue Sorrow” — which arrives after the powerful opening statement of “Hush” “Calice” and “Gatekeeper” — have a sense of creative reach. With Sabine Oberg on bass and Jan Oberg handling drums, guitar, vocals, noise and production, they’ve become flexible enough in their craft to harness raw charge or atmospheric sprawl at will, and through 16 songs and 40 minutes (“Portal” is the longest track at 3:45), their intensity is multifaceted, multi-angular, and downright ripping. Aggression suits this project, but that’s never all that’s happening in Grin, and they’re stronger for that.

Grin on Facebook

The Lasting Dose Records on Bandcamp

Pontiac, Hard Knox

pontiac hard knox

A debut solo-band outing from guitarist, bassist, vocalist and songwriter Dave Cotton, also of Seven Nines and Tens, Pontiac‘s Hard Knox lands on strictly limited tape through Coup Sur Coup Records and is only 16 minutes long, but that’s time enough for its six songs to find connections in harmony to Beach Boys and The Beatles while sometimes dropping to a singular, semi-spoken verse in opener/longest track (immediate points, even though four minutes isn’t that long) “Glory Ragged,” which moves in one direction, stops, reorients, and shifts between genres with pastoralism and purpose. Cotton handles six-string and 12-string, but isn’t alone in Pontiac, as his Seven Nines and Tens bandmate Drew Thomas Christie handles drums, Adam Vee adds guitar, drums, a Coke bottle and a Brita filter, and CJ Wallis contributes piano to the drifty textures of “Road High” before “Exotic Tattoos of the Millennias” answers the pre-christofascism country influence shown on “Counterculture Millionaire” with an oldies swing ramble-rolling to a catchy finish. For fun I’ll dare a wild guess that Cotton‘s dad played that stuff when he was a kid, as it feels learned through osmosis, but I have no confirmation of that. It is its own kind of interpretation of progressive music, and as the beginning of a new exploration, Cotton opens doors to a swath of styles that cross genres in ways few are able to do and remain so coherent. Quick listen, and it dares you to keep up with its changes and patterns, but among its principal accomplishments is to make itself organic in scope, with Cotton cast as the weirdo mastermind in the center. They’ll reportedly play live, so heads up.

Pontiac on Bandcamp

Coup Sur Coup Records on Bandcamp

The Polvos!, Floating

the polvos floating

Already fluid as they open with the rocker “Into the Space,” exclamatory Chilean five-piece The Polvos! delve into more psychedelic reaches in “Fire Dance” and the jammy and (appropriately) floaty midsection of “Going Down,” the centerpiece of their 35-minute sophomore LP, Floating. That song bursts to life a short time later and isn’t quite as immediate as the charge of “Into the Space,” but serves as a landmark just the same as “Acid Waterfall” and “The Anubis Death” hold their tension in the drums and let the guitars go adventuring as they will. There’s maybe some aspect of Earthless influence happening, but The Polvos! meld that make-it-bigger mentality with traditional verse/chorus structures and are more grounded for it even as the spaces created in the songs give listeners an opportunity for immersion. It may not be a revolution in terms of style, but there is a conversation happening here with modern heavy psych from Europe as well that adds intrigue, and the band never go so far into their own ether so as to actually disappear. Even after the shreddy finish of “The Anubis Death,” it kind of feels like they might come back out for an encore, and you know, that’d be just fine.

The Polvos! on Facebook

Surpop Records website

Smolder Brains Records on Bandcamp

Clostridium Records store

The Cosmic Gospel, Cosmic Songs for Reptiles in Love

The Cosmic Gospel Cosmic Songs for Reptiles in Love

With a current of buzz-fuzz drawn across its eight component tracks that allow seemingly disparate moves like the Blondie disco keys in “Hot Car Song” to emerge from the acoustic “Core Memory Unlocked” before giving over to the weirdo Casio-beat bounce of “Psychrolutes Marcidus Man,” a kind of ’60s character reimagined as heavy bedroom indie, The Cosmic Gospel‘s Cosmic Songs for Reptiles in Love isn’t without its resentments, but the almost-entirely-solo-project of Mercata, Italy-based multi-instrumentalist Gabriel Medina is more defined by its sweetness of melody and gentle delivery on the whole. An experiment like the penultimate “Wrath and Gods” carries some “Revolution 9” feel, but Medina does well earlier to set a broad context amid the hook of opener “It’s Forever Midnight” and the subsequent, lightly dub beat and keyboard focus on “The Richest Guy on the Planet is My Best Friend,” such that when closer “I Sew Your Eyes So You Don’t See How I Eat Your Heart” pairs the malevolent intent of its title with light fuzzy soloing atop an easy flowing, summery flow, the album has come to make its own kind of sense and define its path. This is exactly what one would most hope for it, and as reptiles are cold-blooded, they should be used to shifts in temperature like those presented throughout. Most humans won’t get it, but you’ve never been ‘most humans,’ have you?

The Cosmic Gospel on Facebook

Bloody Sound website

Grave Speaker, Grave Speaker

grave speaker grave speaker

Massachusetts garage doomers Grave Speaker‘s self-titled debut was issued digitally by the band this past Fall and was snagged by Electric Valley Records for a vinyl release. The Mellotron melancholia that pervades the midsection of the eponymous “Grave Speaker” justifies the wax, but the cult-leaning-in-sound-if-not-theme outfit that marks a new beginning for ex-High n’ Heavy guitarist John Steele unfurl a righteously dirty fuzz over the march of “Blood of Old” at the outset and then immediately up themselves in the riffy stoner delve of “Earth and Mud.” The blown-out vocals on the latter, as well as the far-off-mic rawness of “The Bard’s Theme” that surrounds its Hendrixian solo, remind of a time when Ice Dragon roamed New England’s troubled woods, and if Grave Speaker will look to take on a similar trajectory of scope, they do more than drop hints of psychedelia here, in “Grave Speaker” and elsewhere, but they’re no more beholden to that than the Sabbathism of capper “Make Me Crawl” or the cavernous echo of “Earthbound.” It’s an initial collection, so one expects they’ll range some either way with time, but the way the production becomes part of the character of the songs speaks to a strong idea of aesthetic coming through, and the songwriting holds up to that.

Grave Speaker on Instagram

Electric Valley Records website

Surya Kris Peters, There’s Light in the Distance

Surya Kris Peters There's Light in the Distance

While at the same time proffering his most expansive vision yet of a progressive psychedelia weighted in tone, emotionally expressive and able to move its focus fluidly between its layers of keyboard, synth and guitar such that the mix feels all the more dynamic and the material all the more alive (there’s an entire sub-plot here about the growth in self-production; a discussion for another time), Surya Kris Peters‘ 10-song/46-minute There’s Light in the Distance also brings the former Samsara Blues Experiment guitarist/vocalist closer to uniting his current projects than he’s yet been, the distant light here blurring the line where Surya Kris Peters ends and the emergently-rocking Fuzz Sagrado begins. This process has been going on for the last few years following the end of his former outfit and a relocation from Germany to Brazil, but in its spacious second half as well as the push of its first, a song like “Mode Azul” feels like there’s nothing stopping it from being played on stage beyond personnel. Coinciding with that are arrangement details like the piano at the start of “Life is Just a Dream” or the synth that gives so much movement under the echoing lead in “Let’s Wait Out the Storm,” as Peters seems to find new avenues even as he works his way home to his own vision of what heavy rock can be.

Fuzz Sagrado on Facebook

Electric Magic Records on Bandcamp

Gozd, Unilateralis

gozd unilateralis

Unilateralis is the four-song follow-up EP to Polish heavydelvers Gozd‘s late-2023 debut album, This is Not the End, and its 20-plus minutes find a place for themselves in a doom that feels both traditional and forward thinking across eight-minute opener and longest track (immediate points, even for an EP) “Somewhere in Between” before the charge of “Rotten Humanity” answers with brasher thrust and aggressive-undercurrent stoner rock with an airy post-metallic break in the middle and rolling ending. From there, “Thanatophobia” picks up the energy from its ambient intro and explodes into its for-the-converted nod, setting up a linear build after its initial verses and seeing it through with due diligence in noise, and closer “Tentative Minds” purposefully hypnotizes with its vague-speech in the intro and casual bassline and drum swing before the riff kicks in for the finale. The largesse of its loudest moments bolster the overarching atmosphere no less than the softest standalone guitar parts, and Gozd seem wholly comfortable in the spaces between microgenres. A niche among niches, but that’s also how individuality happens, and it’s happening here.

Gozd on Facebook

BSFD Records on Facebook

Sativa Root, Kings of the Weed Age

Sativa Root Kings of the Weed Age

You wouldn’t accuse Austria’s Sativa Root of thematic subtlety on their third album, Kings of the Weed Age, which broadcasts a stoner worship in offerings like “Megalobong” and “Weedotaur” and probably whatever “F.A.T.” stands for, but that’s not what they’re going for anyway. With its titular intro starting off, spoken voices vague in the ambience, “Weedotaur”‘s 11 minutes lumber with all due bong-metallian slog, and the crush becomes central to the proceedings if not necessarily unipolar in terms of the band’s approach. That is to say, amid the onslaught of volume and tonal density in “Green Smegma” and the spin-your-head soloing in “Assassins Weed” (think Assassins Creed), the instrumentalist course undertaken may be willfully monolithic, but they’re not playing the same song five times on six tracks and calling it new. “F.A.T.” begins on a quiet stretch of guitar that recalls some of YOB‘s epics, complementing both the intro and “Weedotaur,” before bringing its full weight down on the listener again as if to underscore the message of its stoned instrumental catharsis on its way out the door. They sound like they could do this all day. It can be overwhelming at times, but that’s not really a complaint.

Sativa Root on Facebook

Sativa Root on Bandcamp

Volt Ritual, Return to Jupiter

volt ritual return to jupiter

Comprised of guitarist/vocalist Mateusz, bassist Michał and drummer Tomek, Polish riffcrafters Volt Ritual are appealingly light on pretense as they offer Return to Jupiter‘s four tracks, and though as a Star Trek fan I can’t get behind their lyrical impugning of Starfleet as they imagine what Earth colonialism would look like to a somehow-populated Jupiter, they’re not short on reasons to be cynical, if in fact that’s what’s happening in the song. “Ghostpolis” follows the sample-laced instrumental opener “Heavy Metal is Good for You” and rolls loose but accessible even in its later shouts before the more uptempo “Gwiazdolot” swaps English lyrics for Polish (casting off another cultural colonialization, arguably) and providing a break ahead of the closing title-track, which is longer at 7:37 and a clear focal point for more than just bearing the name of the EP, summarizing as it does the course of the cuts before it and even bringing a last scream as if to say “Ghostpolis” wasn’t a fluke. Their 2022 debut album began with “Approaching Jupiter,” and this Return feels organically built off that while trying some new ideas in its effects and general structure. One hopes the plot continues in some way next time along this course.

Volt Ritual on Facebook

Volt Ritual on Bandcamp

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The Obelisk Questionnaire: Maxime Cayer of Coup Sur Coup Records & The Adits

Posted in Questionnaire on February 14th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Maxime Cayer

 

The Obelisk Questionnaire is a series of open questions intended to give the answerer an opportunity to explore these ideas and stories from their life as deeply as they choose. Answers can be short or long, and that reveals something in itself, but the most important factor is honesty.

Based on the Proust Questionnaire, the goal over time is to show a diverse range of perspectives as those who take part bring their own points of view to answering the same questions. To see all The Obelisk Questionnaire posts, click here.

Thank you for reading and thanks to all who participate.

The Obelisk Questionnaire: Maxime Cayer of Coup Sur Coup Records & The Adits

How do you define what you do and how did you come to do it?

I run a cassette and digital record label, Coup Sur Coup, out of my garage and storage room in my house. I am basically the sole operator. Meaning I wear all the hats, and it’s a pretty demanding dance.

I’ve been in bands most of my life, I had to deal with shitty record deals myself & after a while I started doing it on my own. That was around 2006-07. Coup sur Coup started in 2017 in Montréal. Seven months later, I moved out West in British Columbia, and been there ever since. I’ve done 27 physical releases so far, all on cassettes. I’ve been extremely lucky in working with fantastic artists from the get go, that have helped me establish the label.

Describe your first musical memory.

My parents talking about seeing Alice Cooper, back when they were kids in the ’70s. At that point I had never heard Alice’s music, I was just going by my parents’ ’70s stoner memories, describing a wild man, guillotines, snakes, blood, black magic and shit, a wild band, and a wild show. I was sold. Haha.

Relating to the label side of things,
I remember being mesmerized by the Uzi Suicide Logo on those early Guns cassettes. I didn’t know what it was, what it meant.

A band? A gang? I had no idea what a vanity label was back then, but I was just hypnotized by that logo. I guess the label’s story started there in a way.

Lastly, this might not be my first musical memory, but seeing the live broadcast of Freddie Mercury Tribute Concert back in 1991, with Metallica, Guns, and all the others, was a watershed moment. Like, “I WANNA DO THIS.”

Describe your best musical memory to date.

There’s a few. Playing a show earlier this year with my son joining me on stage to play with us, has to be up there. Definitely. Just having my kids with me when I play shows nowadays is fantastic.

Seeing a release that I’ve just announced sold out in less than four hours (200 copies!) was also quite a trip.

Leaving on that first tour was also a pretty cool feeling.

When was a time when a firmly held belief was tested?

That first tour. Canada, late February/mid March, only source of heat we had in the back cab was a dryer duct taped to a heater vent out on the front dashboard. Three weeks like that. That vehicle, a VW van, also had a tape deck & a tape stuck in it, with Bon Jovi on side A and Toto on side B. So that’s all we listened to. I was really wondering what I had gotten my
self into.

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

Finding yourself.

How do you define success?

Being able to do what the hell I want, include my friends and community, and be able to do the thing I like the most after making music, talking about music.

What is something you have seen that you wish you hadn’t?

I caught my mom and dad having sex when I was a kid. I’m still terrorized by that memory.

Describe something you haven’t created yet that you’d like to create.

I’ve yet to come up with that one.

What do you believe is the most essential function of art?

Art is a means to express something we can’t really find the words for. Art is capable of molding civilizations.

Something non-musical that you’re looking forward to?

– ‘Oppenheimer’ by Chris Nolan.
– Being done with winter and shovelling.
– Finishing paying off my car.

https://www.facebook.com/TheAditsWestKootenay
https://theadits.bandcamp.com/

https://www.facebook.com/coupsurcouprecords
http://www.instagram.com/coup_sur_coup_records
https://coupsurcoup.bandcamp.com/
https://coupsurcoup.bigcartel.com/

The Adits, “Kids These Days”

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Tumbleweed Dealer Catalog to Be Reissued; TDIII: Tokes, Hatred & Caffeine Preorder Available

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 24th, 2019 by JJ Koczan

tumbleweed dealer

I’ll admit that Tumbleweed Dealer‘s TDIII: Tokes, Hatred and Caffeine got by me when it was first released in 2016. No excuse; I keep telling you I suck at this. Fortunately, British Columbia-based Coup Sur Coup Records is stepping up to help those such as myself by reissuing the Montreal instrumental trio’s third long-player, and indeed their entire back catalog, one at a time, in limited numbers. It marks the first physical edition of the 12-track, mellow-but-still-awake strong>TDIII: Tokes, Hatred and Caffeine, and 40 tapes are being pressed. 40. Four zero. As in, preorders are up and if you want one, you might consider it time to make that happen before it’s actually out and gone.

There’s a teaser up, and you can stream all of Tumbleweed Dealer‘s multi-genre-informed fare at their Bandcamp page.

Coup Sur Coup label head Max Cayer sent the following over about the reissue program:

tumbleweed dealer tdiii tokes hatred caffeine

Tumbleweed Dealer – TDIII: Tokes, Hatred and Caffeine

Coup Sur Coup Records is proud to announce the re-issue of Tumbleweed Dealer back catalog on cassette tapes, starting with the latest release, 2016’s TDIII: Tokes, Hatred And Caffeine.

Seb and I, we go way back. Although we never played in bands together, we shared jam spaces, and funnily enough, have replaced each other in many bands. In some instances, I replaced him on bass, other times he replaced me on bass.
Same thing with Jean-Francois, we go way back. As we met in high school, and my first real “metal” band was with him, again a long, long time ago.

It was only natural that at some point we ended up working together. I’ve always enjoyed what he was doing with Tumbleweed, and always intended to invite him to release something. It took a bit of convincing, Seb not being one to do things just for the sake of it, but I’m glad he came around. I was planning on bugging him relentlessly until he would have allowed me to re-release Tumbleweed Dealer’s back catalog anyways, as it deserves to be out there in other formats than just digital. This is some pretty unique sounding music, and it deserve to be put to tape.

So, for the first time in physical format, and limited to 40 copies, that are sure to sell out. Act quick.

Assembled, dubbed, printed in Castlegar, British Columbia.

Here’s the link to the pre-order https://coupsurcoup.bandcamp.com/album/tdiii-tokes-hatred-caffeine

Tumbleweed Dealer is:
Seb Painchaud – Guitars
Miguel Valade – Bass
Jean-Francois Richard – Drums

http://www.facebook.com/TumbleweedDealer
https://tumbleweeddealer420.bandcamp.com/
https://www.facebook.com/coupsurcouprecords
http://www.instagram.com/coup_sur_coup_records
https://coupsurcoup.bandcamp.com/

Tumbleweed Dealer, TDIII: Tokes, Hatred and Caffeine reissue teaser

Tumbleweed Dealer, TDIII: Tokes, Hatred and Caffeine (2016)

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Heron and Seven Nines and Tens Split Tape Available Now

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 4th, 2019 by JJ Koczan

Tonight in Vancouver, Seven Nines and Tens and Heron will play the release show for a new split tape on Coup Sur Coup Records that’s been given the title, Passages of the Pacific Northwest. The label’s Bandcamp page has 10 handmade copies available, at least one of which was gone before this morning. The bands will each also have 10 copies for sale at the show, which is to be held at Astoria Hastings, and that seems to be it for the pressing. Well, you know I’m a sucker for a ultra-limited tape, so here we are. 30 copies definitely hits that standard.

Fortunately, even if you’re not the Walkman type, the label — which also released a varied noise/ambient comp called Feedback Through a Magnifying Glass Volume I that boasted a few familiar names — is streaming the release in full, and you can make your own passage at the bottom of this post.

The show is put on by The Collective Agency. Info follows:

heron seven nines and tens split

Vancouver Avantgarde-Jazz-Stoner Metal Masters Seven Nines and Tens return to Astoria Hastings on January 4th with HERON, Lucia, and The Ship Of.

Doors @ 8pm
Bands @ 9pm
$10 in ADV at Red Cat Records or from the bands
$13 at the Door

Split is: High-bias cassette tape, of random colours, dubbed one by one in Castlegar, BC. Includes unreleased material and songs never released on physical format. Only 10 copies available here, and both bands will have 10 copies at their joint show January 4th 2019!

1. Heron – Tears of the Sun 05:57
2. Heron – Parallels of a Knife 07:03
3. Heron – Uncomfortable Silences 07:38
4. Seven Nines And Tens – Castles on St-Clair’s Beach ( Unreleased song ) 05:06
5. Seven Nines And Tens – Rave Up (Live) 06:11
6. Seven Nines And Tens – Kemptville (Live) 02:55

Coup Sur Coup also recently issued the compilation “Feedback Through A Magnifying Glass Volume I” featuring Kevin Hugnagel, J.D. Pinkus, Vision Eternel and others. Available here.

http://www.sevenninesandtens.com/
sevenninesandtens.bandcamp.com

https://www.facebook.com/herondoom
https://heronvan.bandcamp.com/

https://www.facebook.com/coupsurcouprecords
http://www.instagram.com/coup_sur_coup_records
https://coupsurcoup.bandcamp.com

Heron & Seven Nines and Tens, Passages of the Pacific Northwest

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Seven Nines and Tens to Release Satisfy the Faction 2008-2018 Cassette Box Set

Posted in Whathaveyou on August 10th, 2018 by JJ Koczan

seven nines and tens

I don’t have the stats on the average lifespan of the average band, so I don’t can’t give you facts and figures — and something in writing about Seven Nines and Tens makes me want to quote statistics; can’t explain it — but I know that if you’ve lasted a decade without pummeling each other or, more simply, breaking up, you’re probably doing something right, and that’s worth celebrating. In the case of the aforementioned Vancouver four-piece, they’re marking the occasion with a tape box set through Coup Sur Coup Records titled Satisfy the Faction 2008-2018, which brings together the four albums the band has produced in that time under the guidance of founding guitarist Dave Cotton onto two cassettes in limited, hand-dubbed edition. The colors are random — I guess whichever blanks are picked up out of the pile — and the tracks sound huge and will come with a download for even more short-release-type stuff, singles and all that. Kind of a cool niche thing to note the passing of an important milestone for the band.

And pretty noteworthy as well that it’s the first release Coup Sur Coup is doing for them. You know your label means it when they not only pick up your band, but decide to do a career-spanning compilation as the first outing and hand-press the tapes. That’s love, pure and simple.

Coup Sur Coup has the release out Oct. 10 with preorders up as of today. Label honcho Max Cayer posted the following at their Bandcamp, where the orders can be placed:

seven nines and tens satisfy the faction 2008-2018

Seven Nines & Tens “Satisfy the Faction 2008-2018”

Here are the first 10 years of recorded output from seminal Vancouver band Seven Nines and Tens all under one umbrella, in digital and a very well assembled double cassette box set, dubbed, packaged, designed and hand numbered with heart and passion directly at Coup Sur Coup’s HQ, in Castlegar, British Columbia, Canada.

The band, started out life as a wholly instrumental act which combined elements of post-rock, post-metal and math rock into a complex sonic chimera.

Their evolution, over time and with line up changes, showed a band scaling back the guitar acrobatics in favor of huge shoegaze-inspired, post-rock walls of sound.

“We started off really progressive,” Dave Cotton, the only constant member of the band, founder, and songwriter, says. “I got really into Post-Metal for a while, and now it’s like psych-shoegaze post-metal, post-hardcore, and a little bit of classic rock; a little bit of Pink Floyd in there.”

It’s a heavier-than-heaven groove that balances a daydream shimmer with a mammoth rhythm section, a gorgeous collision between cascading atmospheres and alternative rock riffage.

This is a huge release for Coup Sur Coup, with a lot of special meanings.

It’s CSC first release to be made from the new office location in the Selkirk mountains of British Columbia, and fittingly so, with a band from the Province. It’s also our first attempt at documenting the entire career of one band up to this moment in time, and are extremely honored that said band is 7,9’s & 10’s.

A perennial favorite of mine and arguably one of the best and interesting band in Canada right now. Let alone the world. I intend on trying my best to shine a light on a vital group of musician making one hell of an interesting racket, for anyone willing to think outside the box, or look in odd places for something new.

This is, I hope, the beginning of a long and fruitful collaboration, this collection of the first 10 years of recorded input being the first pillar in that relationship.

This very special deluxe double cassette box set will include:

-All four albums on two randomly selected coloured cassettes, totalling 120 minutes of music. (Singles releases are not included on the box set, but will be included in the massive download link provided with the box set)

-Dubbed 2 at a time, with great patience and care, at our HQ in B.C.

releases October 10, 2018

http://www.facebook.com/sevenninesandtens
http://www.sevenninesandtens.com/
https://sevenninesandtens.bandcamp.com/
https://sevenninesandtens.com/
https://www.facebook.com/coupsurcouprecords
http://www.instagram.com/coup_sur_coup_records
https://twitter.com/coup_sur
https://coupsurcoup.bandcamp.com/album/satisfy-the-faction

Seven Nines & Tens, Satisfy the Faction teaser

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