Friday Full-Length: Kyuss, Wretch

Posted in Bootleg Theater on November 14th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

They’re almost there. It’s close. The 1991 debut album, Wretch, from desert rock pioneers Kyuss, isn’t nearly so realized as the three long-players they’d answer it with during their tenure from about 1989-1997, but as with the prior demo, 1990’s Sons of Kyuss (discussed here) — released as a self-titled since that’s what the band called themselves before shortening the moniker to Kyuss — there are hints of who this band was about to become. That would seem to be all the more the case as bassist Nick Oliveri came aboard sometime between Sons of Kyuss and the recording for Wretch, taking the place of Chris Cockrell, who still plays on “Black Widow” and “Deadly Kiss” here as they were held over from the demo’s session.

At least I’m pretty sure they were. It was 35 years ago in the lost annals of desert rock narrative and frankly I’ve never been that good at research, so if I’m wrong, it won’t be the last time. The band themselves — vocalist John Garcia, guitarist Josh HommeBrant Bjork on drums and the aforementioned Oliveri on bass — are credited as producers for Wretch, alongside the returning Catherine Enny and Ron Krown, and recording engineer J.B. LawrenceChris Fuhrman, who mixed, and Carol Hibbs, who mastered, and with a fuller sound resulting from a kitchen that could apparently accommodate many cooks, Kyuss are that much closer to the blossoming their second album would represent for the forward steps that Wretch takes coming off the demo. That is to say, their sound isn’t all the way locked in yet, but it’s close.

In the brawny rush of “(Beginning of What’s About to Happen) Hwy 74” and the hooky “Love Has Passed Me By” and “Son of a Bitch” that follow, Kyuss lay out a template for who they were about to be. It’s not as raw or as aggressive as they were on Sons of Kyuss, but what they get in trade for teenaged-sounding punker thrust is a meatier groove. The turn into the chorus of “Love Has Passed Me By” and they way they align around the chug emerging therefrom is characteristic of what would desert rock would become largely in Kyuss‘ wake, a blink-and-it’s-gone heavy twist that would be flourish if it didn’t do so much to smooth out otherwise stark transitions. Wretch isn’t always so fluid, as even at 2:44, the repurposed “Black Widow” seems to be unsure where it’s heading — a contrast to the subsequent “Katzenjammer,” which is sure of itself to a point of genre-creation.

But if “Black Widow” is a more awkward fit, the same doesn’t necessarily apply to “Deadly Kiss” or “Isolation,” which comes out of “Isolation Desolation” from thekyuss wretch demo. “Deadly Kiss” is rawer, but well placed ahead of “The Law,” which is the longest inclusion at nearly eight minutes and the most complex songwriting at work across Wretch. There’s a lot to hear in “The Law” in terms of atmosphere, despite the fact that it’s still pretty barebones production-wise, and in the character of the guitar and bass tones finding a kind of largesse distinct from the heavy metal and underground rock of the day, Kyuss are coming into their own in this material and defining the course they’d follow over the next half-decade plus.

That in itself makes Wretch a pivotal moment for a pivotal band. It’s a landmark because it exists, in other words. But it’s not the source of their influence, and by and large, when people talk about Kyuss having had an impact on the shape of heavy rock and roll — the songwriting of Bjork and Homme continues to resonate in acts from, let’s say, six out of the seven continents — they’re probably not talking about the 11 songs/48 minutes of Wretch.

But part of what this record tells listeners these decades after the fact is about how Kyuss got to where they got. They were not immediate, out of the gate, innovating heavy for a new generation. Separate in sound and geography from the soon-to-explode grunge, they were similarly deeply rooted in the place they came from and the experiential aspects of growing up in a landscape, the Ronald Reagan neocon hell of the 1980s and all suitable disaffection resulting. As it gets past “The Law” and what feels like a clean-sweep of the palette in “Isolation,” Wretch shifts into a movement of its three final songs, “I’m Not,” “Big Bikes” and “Stage III,” which grow progressively looser one into the next.

I suppose you could include “Isolation” in that movement too, regrounding as it does after “The Law,” but the succession of Wretch‘s last three tracks feels like a narrative unto itself of getting stoned and wandering musically. “Stage III” is as jammy as Kyuss get here, and including it gives key insight into how the rest of the songs were made. “Big Bikes,” grooves sleazier than “I’m Not” and feels like a send-up of biker-type masculinity that’s very early ’90s in its subversion — there was a time when men were allowed to do more than own bigboy trucks and be angry at phantoms; maybe you’re too young to remember — but is somewhat lumbering in its energy as compared to “Katzenjammer” or “Son of a Bitch” earlier on.

Those songs, more hammered-out and refined-feeling, do much to represent where Kyuss were at at this still-early stage in their tenure, but the real gift of the record is to be able to hear them figuring it out in real-time, as they go. They’d clearly learned from Sons of Kyuss and sound intent on pursuing the something they has discovered in that writing/recording process in this material. What they would end up discovering would of course be their own sound, and their next full-length, 1992’s Blues for the Red Sun, in uniting them with producer Chris Goss, helped set them on the path to becoming one of the most essential heavy rock acts of their generation, arguably desert rock’s most important band, and the root of a family tree that continues to grow as new are born out of old ones. Wretch isn’t where that happened, but it remains a crucial step on the way there.

As always, I hope you enjoy. Thanks for reading.

Yeah, don’t tell anybody but I guess I’m doing a series of Kyuss closeouts. I’ve been doing Friday Full-Lengths since like 2013, so it’s probably about time if I’m ever going to do it.

These weeks are a lot. This week was a lot. The days just kind of run together with things into things into things. This week The Pecan had five full school days, so that was something, but I was pretty busy regardless, between Hungarian class, running her back and forth, and whatever other errands etc. for the house. Even today we’re running around. The Patient Mrs. and I are at Wegmans right now. We went to Costco after dropoff. In a little bit, we need to get cash from an ATM for the woman at our house doing a pre-Thanksgiving pro-shop clean, and then I need to take lunch to school, then home, rest a bit, pickup, Girl Scouts, and into the evening whatever that may bring. Weekends these days don’t offer much respite or rest. Nem tud pihenni, you might say in magyarul.

Zelda update? Zelda update: I beat Twilight Princess. Did I tell you that? I really liked it. The graphics mod I used got rid of a lot of the bloom effect on the visuals — the vanilla game looks like it’s been smudged; the one I played is clearer-looking, which I liked — and the gameplay felt similar to Wind Waker without being too repetitive. It was very Ocarina of Time, if you want to keep it to in-franchise comparisons, so after beating it, I started a game of Ocarina of Time 3D on an emulator, also with a graphics mod. I’ve been having a blast with it. I played the original in high school in 1998. I remember being stoned in my mom’s basement on the N64 — if I say “those were the days,” understand I’m half-joking — and it being the first game I ever played (timed) for 100 hours. Final Fantasy VII hadn’t taken me that long, and I think I’m not sure if Final Fantasy VIII had come out yet, so yeah. I loved it then and I’m loving it now on the 3DS version (I have a use-a-traditional-controller mod and can do some of the extra buttons with my trackpad; it’s not perfect but it works). The game is just a masterpiece. And after Tears of the KingdomBreath of the WildTwilight PrincessThe Wind Waker and even a bit of Skyward Sword (speaking of awful controls), that Ocarina of Time is a little smaller in scale is kind of refreshing. I’ve been playing for a week, had to start over once because I softlocked the game accidentally in Dodongo’s Cavern, and just last night pulled the Master Sword and got to be Adult Link for the first time. I made this picture my laptop background.

Next week is a Quarterly Review. Don’t expect much else beyond those five posts with 10 releases each. There’s always one or two news stories I don’t want to let slip, but as of right now I don’t have anything else slated. Just gonna dig in and keep my head down until it’s done.

I hope you have a great and safe weekend. Don’t let the world drag you down, which is easier said than done, I know. I hope you’ve got some comfort and warmth and you can focus on that instead of the persistent horrors. Hydrate and rest up as best you can. Monday we’re back for more kicking against the pricks.

Thanks again for reading. FRM.

FRM.

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Mojave Experience 2026 Adds Howling Giant & Arthur Seay (Unida) to Lineup

Posted in Whathaveyou on November 14th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

mojave experience 2026 banner

Well, having Howling Giant sure makes sense if you’re a heavyfest of any sort taking place anywhere at anytime, anyhow, in 2026, considering they just put out one of 2025’s best records in their third album, Crucible & Ruin (review here). It doesn’t seem unreasonable given their proclivity for touring to think they’ll spend much of the year on the road, but if you’re going to see them — and hopefully you are for your own sake, let alone their merch sales — there’s a lot to be said for Mojave Experience as a context. In addition to adding Howling Giant and Arthur Seay and the Riff Killers, the festival has begun to discuss some of the desert-based visual artists it’s bringing on board to add to the experience — you know, vibes — and thereby giving an even fuller picture of what to expect for March 20-21 next year.

From the word ‘go,’ I haven’t seen anything come down the wire from Mojave Experience that’s made me think it’ll be anything other than rad. Bringing in Arthur Seay and the Riff Killers — which with Collyn McCoy on bass and Mike Cancino on drums is three-quarters of the modern Unida lineup, plus vocalist Michael Keith where Mark Sunshine might otherwise be — is another in the steady line of acts from the Californian desert and representing it stylistically as well as geographically. Should it become an annual thing, I don’t know that that’s something they’ll be able to do every year, or you’d end up with the same bands/players all the time (maybe that’s okay too, to some degree?), but for a first time out, it feels appropriate. One wouldn’t doubt it with Patrick Brink (Volume) handling the curation, but clearly Mojave Experience has an idea of what they’re trying to build.

From social media:

HOWLING GIANT

From the heart of Nashville’s underground, Howling Giant conjures the kind of sound that feels born in the space between galaxies and desert dunes. Their shows are an eruption of heavy psychedelia and cosmic groove — riffs that roll like thunder across alien horizons, harmonies that shimmer like heat over asphalt. It’s music for the seekers and the stargazers, anchored in raw musicianship and lifted by an unmistakable sense of adventure.

Onstage, Howling Giant transforms volume into vision. Each performance is a living storm: swirling dual guitars, layered vocals that drift and collide through the mix, and rhythmic waves that pull the crowd into orbit. The energy feels almost magnetic — a shared current between band and audience, surging higher with every groove. You don’t just hear the band; you enter their world, a heady fusion of precision, power, and pure joy.

In the Mojave, their sound finds a natural home. Like the desert itself, Howling Giant is vast, unpredictable, and alive with contrast — light and shadow, gravity and flight. They channel the same elemental pulse that has always fueled desert art and sound: a search for meaning in the endless expanse, and a refusal to settle for the ordinary.

mojave experience arthur seay and the riffkillers

ARTHUR SEAY & THE RIFF KILLERS

Born straight from the dust and distortion of the desert, Arthur Seay & The Riff Killers hit like a sandstorm — heavy, unfiltered, and impossible to ignore. Led by Arthur Seay, the guitar-slinging architect behind Unida and House of Broken Promises, the band delivers the kind of riff-driven power that defines desert rock at its core. Every note is raw voltage, every groove a reflection of the land that shaped it — fierce, wide-open, and full of fire.

When the Riff Killers take the stage, it’s less a performance than a transmission from the desert itself — molten groove and sonic heat radiating from every chord. Seay’s guitar cuts through like sunlight on steel, Mike Cancino’s drumming lands with canyon-sized impact, and Collyn McCoy’s bass work ties it all together — technically sharp yet endlessly grooving, like machinery built from sand and sweat. At the mic, Michael Keith brings soul and grit in equal measure, grounding the chaos in something human and alive. Together, they turn the stage into a storm front — where heaviness meets clarity, and the desert’s pulse beats through every note.

This is desert rock in its most vital form — not nostalgia, but a living pulse that still burns hotter than ever. Arthur Seay & The Riff Killers carry the spirit of the pioneers who built this scene, but with an urgency that feels completely now. They don’t chase trends. They chase the moment — loud, unapologetic, and alive under the desert sky.

Come ready. Come raw. The Mojave Experience isn’t here to entertain you — it’s here to change you.

See you March 20 & 21.

Next Ticket Bundle, Sun Chaser, goes on sale Friday at 8am. Quantities are limited and they won’t last. mojaveexperience.net

https://www.mojaveexperience.net
https://instagram.com/mojave_experience_festival
https://www.facebook.com/mojave.experience.festival/

Howling Giant, Crucible & Ruin (2025)

House of Broken Promises, “Fear Me”

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Belzebong Sign to Heavy Psych Sounds for New Album

Posted in Whathaveyou on November 14th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

As they make ready to set out on their ‘The Pot and the Pendulum’ tour next week, the Polish worshippers of stone will also be announcing their first new studio LP since 2018, set to release presumably early in 2026 through Heavy Psych Sounds. The Kielce megaweedians and the Italian imprint have a history going back to HPS reissuing the band’s 2011 debut, Sonic Scapes and Weedy Groves (discussed here), in 2022 and following that with their second album, 2015’s Greenferno, just last month.

Belzebong‘s third full-length, 2018’s Light the Dankness (review here) has set the addled crust riffers on a years-long round of touring, and even with a global pandemic break in between, cementing their reputation among the superlatives of sludge. They’ve toured here, there and wheverever to proselytize a dogma that can only properly be measured in milligrams, and if you’re not immediately looking forward to their next record, take an extra couple minutes and really let the news sink into your poor addled brain.

Tour dates (prior posted, so double-check the shows for accuracy before you head out), and the PR wire’s initial announcement follow, to be followed by the first track stream and more details next week:

belzebong (Photo by Lukasz Jaszak)

Heavy Psych Sounds Records to announce Polish bong metal riffers BELZEBONG signing for a brand NEW ALBUM !!

We’re really stoked to announce that the Polish bong metal band BELZEBONG is coming back with a brand new album !!

NEW ALBUM PRESALE + FIRST TRACK PREMIERE: NOVEMBER 19th

BELZEBONG – 💨 THE POT AND THE PENDULUM TOUR 2025 💨
21.11 / GER / Radebeul / barnyard_club
22.11 / GER / Jena / @kuba_jena
23.11 TBA
25.11 / CZ / Brno / @kabinet_muz
26.11 / SK / Bratislava / @zalar666
27.11 / AT / Vienna / @arenawien
28.11 TBA
29.11 / AT / Salzburg / @dome_of_rock_festival_salzburg
30.11 / GER / Munich / @backstagemunich
02.12 / GER / Frankfurt / @ponyhof.club
03.12 / FRA / Paris / @backstagebtm
04.12 / FRA / Nantes / @leferrailleur
05.12 / FRA / Lille / @labullecafe
06.12 / NL / Utrecht / @dbs_utrecht
07.12 / NL / Eindhoven / @effenaar
08.12 / GER / Düsseldorf / @pitcherrocknrollhq
10.12 / GER / Münster / @rare_guitar
11.12 / GER / Hamburg / @hafenklanghamburg
12.12 / GER / Oldenburg / @mts_records
13.12 / GER / Berlin / @wildatheartberlin

BIOGRAPHY

Poland’s loudest riff dealers, Belzebong have been spreading their fuzz-drenched gospel of bong metal since 2008. With no vocals and no compromises, they summon crushing instrumentals soaked in doom, sludge, and psychedelic haze. Their hypnotic live shows and cult-like following have turned them into underground legends, delivering slow, sinister grooves straight from the green abyss.
With acclaimed albums like Sonic Scapes & Weedy Grooves, Greenferno, and Light the Dankness, Belzebong have toured extensively across Europe and the U.S., leaving trails of blown minds and smoke-filled venues in their wake. Belzebong is not just a band—it’s a ritual of riff worship for those who live by the fuzz and die by the bong.

BELZEBONG is:
Sheepy Dude – Bass
Alky Dude – Guitars
Cheesy Dude – Guitars
Hexy Dude – Drums

https://belzebong.bandcamp.com/
https://www.instagram.com/belzebong420/
https://www.facebook.com/belzebong420/

http://www.heavypsychsounds.com/
https://heavypsychsoundsrecords.bandcamp.com/
https://instagram.com/heavypsychsounds_records/
https://www.facebook.com/HEAVYPSYCHSOUNDS/

Belzebong, De Mysteriis Dope Sathanas – Live in Oslo (2019)

Belzebong, Light the Dankness (2018)

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Suncraft Premiere “Charlatan Killer”; Welcome to the Coven Out Nov. 21

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on November 14th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

suncraft welcome to the coven

If a city could have a sound, Suncraft could hardly be more Oslo in my mind. The five-piece next week (Nov. 21) release their second album, Welcome to the Coven, through All Good Clean Records, and it is identifiably Norwegian in its meld of punk, heavy metal, heavy rock, black metal, and so on. There are moments that are a party — plenty of them, actually, between “Love’s Underrated” early and the one-two punch later of “Charlatan Killer” and “High on Silence” — and places where a desert-riffed charge gives over to angrier moods, but the fluidity with which Suncraft are able to inhabit these musical spaces is so prevalent that in listening by the time you get to “Forgotten Goddess,” it’s almost something you take for granted.

In the lyrical framing, pickslides, verse shouts and thrashy thrust, “Ragebait” starts the record with a modern, genre-aware feel and quickly becomes a blast. Of course there are gang vocals. Of course there are blastbeats. But it’s the way Suncraft bring “Ragebait” back down to mid-level intensity afterward that tells you they’re really in control, and as a herald for what’s to follow on the eight songs/39 minutes of the album, “Ragebait” shows them as all the more dangerous front-to-back. Their 2021 debut, Flat Earth Rider (review here), dug into a similar stylistic nuance, finding the places between where one imaginary genre line ends and the next begins, but Welcome to the Coven doesn’t feel coincidental in directly addressing its audience with the title. The message is that Suncraft learned from the first record and are applying those lessons here.

What follows the cymbal-roll intro of “Ragebait” bears that out, whether it’s the friendlier shove of “Love’s Underrated” winking at Queens of the Stone Age — it’s not the last time that happens, with “Charlatan Killer” later and some desert vibes in “Forgotten Goddess” at the finish — or the barking punk of “Greed Battalion” that turns to black metal and back, making the last turn the most satisfying. Suncraft make flexibility a strength, and without pretense — I mean that; the Ruben Willem (Villjuvet) recording sounds brings rare balance of energy and clarity — the band cast their style not as progressive navelgazing, but as a natural outcome of throwing everyone together in a room and seeing how it goes. The songs, in reality, are more complex than this, but it’s the casual air with which Suncraft obliterate genred ideologies that makes Welcome to the Coven so much gosh darn fun.

Suncraft

It would fall flat if the band didn’t have the confidence, performance or sense of craft behind what they do, but the pointedly-metal-as-frick ending of “Welcome to the Coven” — an apex of charge, at least until “High on Silence” a couple songs later — gives over to “Wizards of the Anger Magic,” and I swear I hear Bad Religion in that riff. It’s incongruous, you understand. On paper, that transition shouldn’t work. The reason it does in this instance is that Suncraft at no point set up an expectation of stylistic rigidity. The more they go wherever they want, in other words, the easier it becomes for the listener to follow them as they go. With this in mind, the momentum of Welcome to the Coven becomes all the more prevalent on repeat playthroughs. It’s even better when you know where the twists are going, and worth the effort of an attentive hearing.

As noted, “Charlatan Killer” and “High on Silence” are highlights, and that has both to do with the way their hooks toy with heavy rock, the former elevated by the standout vocal melody — there’s some processing/effects there, used well — and a major-key revelry that dares toward Torche while keeping early-Mastodon heft and the aforementioned QOTSA in the mix as well. They bring the forward drive of “Charlatan Killer” to a roiling culmination and return to the hook to push it over the top, thereby demanding as much volume as you can give, and clearly had keeping the movement going in mind in placing “High on Silence” immediately after. There’s a falsetto-topped rush in the second half, with another divergence into black metal (not out of place) and double-kick meeting a big-rock solo and a last run through of its chorus; Suncraft have a direction, a plan. They seem perfectly happy to make bludgeoning the crap out of you part of it.

They cap with the longest song in “Forgotten Goddess” (6:30), which ignites with a careen that feels notably ‘for the deaf’ while at the same time tonally thicker and more driven in its charge. A short time later, Suncraft will — while sounding like they’re having such a good time it should probably be illegal — be piling on layers until the real last push starts circa 5:40. They drop out and come back loud to bring the closer to a head and drop out, letting a roll on the ride cymbal be the last thing to go, as if in warning that they might crash back in at any second, or perhaps more, to call back to how “Ragebait” started off and give a warning for next time too.

Do not discount their songwriting prowess because they use it to sound like drunken marauders. In fact, that’s part of the plan too.

Enjoy “Charlatan Killer” on the player below, followed by some words from the band and more from the PR wire:

Suncraft on “Charlatan Killer”:

‘Charlatan Killer’ is perhaps the most unusual song on our sophomore album, Welcome to the Coven, featuring falsetto vocals and plenty of unexpected twists and turns. We wrote it as an antidote to imposter syndrome — something our singer, Rasmus, has struggled with in the past. The song playfully imagines a mystical killer of charlatans who’s out to get you and finally expose your deeply fraudulent, true self.

Sonically, ‘Charlatan Killer’ is a fast-paced, eerie, and droning track where we venture further into strange new territory than our usual blend of stoner and Scandi rock. It was recorded, mixed, and mastered by the eminent Ruben Willem, known for his work with Norwegian rock royalty like Kvelertak and The Good the Bad and the Zugly.

Oslo’s loudest troublemakers Suncraft are back with their new album Welcome to the Coven, due out November 21 via All Good Clean Records.

It’s a fast-paced genre party where stoner rock crashes headfirst into garage rock, black metal, and even a bit of pop punk, all wrapped up in fuzz, sarcasm, and serious rock ’n’ roll nonsense.

Produced by Ruben Willem (Kvelertak, The Good The Bad and The Zugly), this one’s heavy, weird, and wildly fun.

Suncraft on Instagram

Suncraft on Facebook

All Good Clean Records website

https://www.instagram.com/allgoodcleanrecords/

All Good Clean Records on Facebook

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Kandodo Announces Two New Albums Solstice: Dusk/Dawn and Solstice: Dub Out Dec. 21

Posted in Whathaveyou on November 13th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

kandodo solstice dub

I don’t think I’m supposed to tell you this kind of thing, but, uh, Kandodo‘s got two new LPs coming out next month — on the solstice, suitably enough since that’s apparently also when they were recorded I think I saw somewhere? — with the titles Solstice: Dusk / Dawn and Solstice: Dub, they’re both streaming below, and you could go ahead and play both at the same time right now. Like, together. I’m pretty sure that’s not how they were meant to be heard, since the one is a minute longer than the other, but it’s all the more a slab of impossible psychedelic twists with both going, and I kind of dig that. I’m like seven minutes in and oops I just melted. No more bones.

No disrespect, of course, to Simon Price, who is the principal behind Kandodo, working in collaboration here with his former The Heads bandmate Hugo Morgan, but I have to imagine somebody who’s spent the last 35-plus years opening up fissures in spacetime with his guitar might be able to get down with a little experiential flexibility. If that’s not the case, I do apologize.

I didn’t know these LPs were coming until I was on Cardinal Fuzz‘s Bandcamp for the Abronia record the other day, and I’m glad as hell I stopped by. All this info and the audio at the bottom comes from there:

kandodo solstice dusk dawn

EUROPE – Cardinal Fuzz / Rooster Rock
USA – Feeding Tube Records

“A sonic solstice, a total double dissolver.” Cardinal Fuzz and Feeding Tube Records, both seasoned navigators of the deep zone, present two new kandodo 12”s – Solstice / Dub and Dusk / Dawn. Two records orbiting one deep pulse, each presented in a unique bespoke deluxe screen printed outer sleeve finish. Includes download for full pelagic bliss.

From the psychedelic shack in Northumberland, Simon Price (kandodo) has spent two years coaxing these sounds into being, eighty minutes, four sides, each a branch reaching out from the same shimmering sonic tree. A slow unfurling of heady drift and cosmic fuzz,the sound bending like light across the equinox, refracted through delays, flanges and fuzz until it folds in on itself. Hugo Morgan (the heads) joins on low-end duties, sending tremors through the deep ether where the basslines anchor the drift, turning the horizon to liquid and the floor to vibration

Four longform trips, each a 20-minute drift through the same solar pulse seen from different angles, all refracted through a sike sonic toolbox. A headphone treat at 20,000 feet or cranked loud on the stereo. They’re glimmering portals, longform meditations, head-expanding drift zones to lose yourself in, built for the hour when everything dissolves, preferably at 2AM, lights low, synapses wide open, the turntable spinning like a slow planet. Each side a transmission that captures the same essence but from a different vantage point. ‘Solstice’ brings the march of fuzz, tremeloes pulling you under. The dub burns with the bright hum of eternal noons and shards of phased harmonics. ‘Dusk’ slinks into the cool breath of the coming dark. ‘Dawn’ lets slip earthly bounds and shimmers into deep space, going beyond beyond.

Dubbed, delayed, distorted, this is kandodo in full expansion mode, an an aural equinox, a sonic solstice, a total double dissolver.

One pulse, four horizons, infinite zones. Drop the needle, watch time blur and dive deep. See yous on the other side.

https://kandodo.bandcamp.com/
https://www.facebook.com/Kandodo-168305819900725/

cardinalfuzz.bigcartel.com/
https://cful.bandcamp.com/
https://www.instagram.com/cardinalfuzz/
https://www.facebook.com/CardinalFuzz/

http://feedingtuberecords.com/
https://feedingtuberecords.bandcamp.com/
https://www.instagram.com/feedingtuberecords_rozztoxart/
https://www.facebook.com/FeedingtubeRecords/

Kandodo, Solstice: Dusk / Dawn (2025)

Kandodo, Solstice / Dub (2025)

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Gran Moreno Premiere “Temple of Fire”; El Sol Out Jan. 17

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on November 13th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

GRAN MORENO

Austin, Texas-based heavy rockers Gran Moreno will make their self-released full-length debut on Jan. 17 with El Sol. The Mexican-rooted brotherly duo and recent Lick of My Spoon Management pickups first casually dropped “Temple of Fire” as a standalone single earlier this year, and perhaps unsurprisingly given the title, it’s a burner. The album version premieres below, built around an immediately inviting riff with breaks infused with Mexican folk guitar.

I haven’t heard the full record yet, but in other singles like the blues-fuzzy “Huracán,” the organ-inclusive stoner rock shuffle of “La Mentira” or the six-minute closer “Hikuri,” the bilingual-lyric two-piece explore a similar range, if not as starkly. They have the energy of a young outfit and the self-awareness of knowing what they’re about in terms of songwriting, and though it seems weird to say more than a year in advance from when it might be relevant, I’m holding a place in my ongoing notes file for the best debut albums of 2026 for El Sol based just on what they’ve already put out.

A bit of hype? Maybe less so if you call it bookkeeping, but what I’m basing that on is that when I listen to “Temple of Fire” or any of Gran Moreno‘s other tracks to this point, what I’m hearing is that the song is paramount, and everything the band does is in service to the song. Take the acoustic guitar worked into “Temple of Fire,” just as an example, or the pedal steel on “Huracán.” It isn’t an indulgence and it isn’t shoehorned in so that nerds like me on the internet could talk about arrangement depth. It’s there because they knew the song needed it to be there.

That not only are Gran Moreno willing to push themselves to think outside their own box before they’ve really finished building it, but that they’re willing to bring in guest players to help them do it, immediately defying the duo construction of the band, is admirable enough. That the results aren’t self-indulgent slop is where I really hear the potential in Gran Moreno. I’m a big fan of bands knowing what they want to do and doing it. When that happens in out-of-the-gate style, so much the more exciting.

The song is below. I would encourage you to take a listen and see if you hear what I hear. There’s a second player at the bottom with all the other tracks.

Gran Moreno, “Temple of Fire” premiere

Preorder link: https://granmoreno.bandcamp.com/album/el-sol

Austin duo Gran Moreno have announced their forthcoming debut studio album El Sol, and are sharing a new single “Temple of Fire.”

Gran Moreno emerges as one of the most captivating voices in the new wave of psychedelic rock. With a sound rooted in analog warmth and expansive textures, the Austin-based band crafts songs that feel like sonic mirages — equal parts groove, grit, and atmosphere. Their music lives at the intersection of distortion and introspection, where hypnotic riffs, heavy rhythms, and emotionally charged melodies build immersive landscapes that demand to be felt as much as heard.

At the core of Gran Moreno is a deep commitment to storytelling through sound. Their upcoming album is a conceptual two-part release: Side A: El Sol and Side B: La Luna. Each side represents a different emotional plane — El Sol radiates urgency, energy, and clarity, while La Luna leans into shadow, mystery, and reflection. The first release, El Sol, captures the band at full intensity, delivering a vivid, unfiltered introduction to their evolving identity.

El Sol will be available on LP and download on January 17th, 2026. Pre-orders are available HERE: https://granmoreno.bandcamp.com/album/el-sol

gran moreno el solArtist: Gran Moreno
Album: El Sol
Label: Self-released
Release Date: January 17, 2026

01. Las Montañas
02. Aztlan
03. Huracan
04. Temple of Fire
05. La Mentira
06. Oaxaca – Please Don’t Cry
07. Hikuri
08. California Blues

Produced by Gran Moreno and Ray García

Drums recorded at Electric Deluxe by Will Grantham
Recording Assistant: Ray García

All other instruments and vocals recorded at Exit Disco Studio by Ray García, performed by Gran Moreno

Except:
• Pedal Steel on “Huracán” by Akin Francis
• Backing Vocals on “Huracán” by Sofía Isabel Flores aka (SoDés)
• Piano on “La Mentira” by Will T. Patterson
• Saxophone on “OAXACA” by Juan Pantoja “El Pollo”
• Trumpet on “OAXACA” by Emmanuel “Chobby”
• Percussion on “OAXACA” by Elias Ramírez

Mixed and mastered by Seiji Rafael Hino at SL Studio

Gran Moreno, El Sol (2026)

Gran Moreno on Bandcamp

Gran Moreno on Instagram

Gran Moreno on Facebook

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Thunderchief Announce Dec. Tour With Telekinetic Yeti

Posted in Whathaveyou on November 13th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

Richmond’s Thunderchief were out in April, out in August, out again for a bit in September, and again for a longer stretch in October. They aren’t done with 2025 yet. After wrapping the Fall run they dubbed ‘DIY or Die Trying’ — I got to see them in Connecticut (review here); it was ripping — the duo have lined up dates for December sharing the stage with fuzzcrushers Telekinetic Yeti. That’s two two-pieces together doing the thing, which is efficient if you’re sharing a vehicle (I don’t know that they are or aren’t, just speaking generally), and if you’re remotely concerned about there being some lack of volume or fullness of tone from either, rest easy. With earplugs.

Thunderchief have a string of releases of various sorts going back a decade, but it’s been a minute since 2023’s covers release Dekk Meg…. Maybe a live record, even just a digital one, might be called for, if not from this tour sometime in 2026, which will surely bring more shows? I know nothing, of course, ever, but I’d take a set thrown up on Bandcamp. The rawer the better.

If they’re coming to where you’re gonna be, go to the show and float the idea, like, low-key style. You know, like “oh hey here’s this thing I just thought of just now you guys should do a live record and that’s definitely not a thing some booger from the internet said.” See how it goes. Don’t worry. They’re way friendlier than they sound.

From the PR wire and social media:

thunderchief telekinetic yeti tour

HIDE YOUR LIGHTERS AND STEAL YOUR ROOMMATE’S EARPLUGS—

We’re excited to hit the road with fellow 2-piece totem rollers TELEKINETIC YETI! @telekinetic_yeti
Get pummeled and psyched at the same show!

3 weeks of earsplitting, rifflaying, skinpounding, spliffbanging, chillumchiefing GOODNESS.

We look forward to seeing everyone out there, don’t miss out on this one!

12.01 Atlanta GA @ Masquerade
12.02 Raleigh NC @ The Pour House
12.03 Richmond VA @ Cobra Cabana
12.04 Wilmington NC @ Reggies
12.05 TBA!
12.06 Baltimore MD @ Metro Gallery
12.07 Dunbar WV @ Live At The Shop
12.08 Rochester NY @ Montage Music Hall
12.09 Youngstown OH @ Westside Bowl
12.10 Detroit MI @ Smalls
12.11 Louisville KY @ Mag Bar
12.12. TBA!
12.13. TBA!
12.16 Cape Coral FL @ Nice Guys
12.17 Tampa FL @ Brass Mug
12.18 Orlando FL @ Conduit
12.19 Charleston SC @ Trolley Bar
12.20 Norfolk VA @ Chichos
12.21 New Hope PA @ John & Peters

Thunderchief are:
Rik Surly – Guitar/vocals
Erik Larson – Drums

www.thethunderchief.com
www.thethunderchief.bandcamp.com
www.instagram.com/thunderchiefofficial
www.facebook.com/thunderchiefrva

Thunderchief, Live at Melody Inn, Indianapolis, 08.30.25

Thunderchief, Dekk Meg… (2023)

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Seedy Jeezus Announce Deluxe Self-Titled Debut Reissue Due Next Year

Posted in Whathaveyou on November 13th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

Melbourne classic-style heavy psych rockers Seedy Jeezus released their self-titled debut in March 2015. Next year, the band will reissue the album in deluxe style, including a lost session from Incubator Studios that hasn’t been out before. That’s enough of a hook for me, honestly. I don’t know how long the self-titled’s actually been out of print, but hell yeah bonus material.

The band earlier in ’25 released their third album, Damned to the Depths (review here), through their own Blown Music as well as Lay Bare Recordings (EU) and Echodelick Records (US), and I’m not sure if the upcoming reissue will be through the same consortium or not, but they’ve got a photo book in the works and such to include as well, and that album and the new one are both streaming below, so if you want to make an afternoon of it with Seedy Jeezus, by all means. You’re not wrong.

Saw this on socials, did the old cutnpasteandturnitblue:

seedy jeezus debut incubator release

We’ve got something special in the pipeline for 2026, but we’re too excited to keep it a secret.

Our Debut album has been out of print for some time, and we’ve decided to reissue it in a big way. We’re currently deep in the works on an expanded 2LP Deluxe Edition.

Here’s what makes this special: Before we recorded the debut with Tony Reed, we laid down a full album at Incubator Studios here in Melbourne with Adrian Akkerman at the helm. For the first time ever, this deluxe set will include those unreleased Incubator sessions. You’ll get to hear the original 18-minute version of ‘How ya Doin” (which we had to cut back for the Debut album) and ‘Blue Day Glo,’ a track that was dropped entirely.

To capture the feel of that era, we’re also including a 30-page (and growing!) book of unseen photos and memorabilia, plus other curiosities from the archives.

It’s all in motion right now, so stay tuned for more details!”

https://www.facebook.com/seedyjeezuspage/
https://www.instagram.com/seedyjeezus/
https://seedyjeezus.bandcamp.com/
http://www.seedyjeezus.com/

https://laybarerecordings.com/
https://www.facebook.com/laybarerecordings/
https://www.instagram.com/laybarerecordings/
https://laybarerecordings.bandcamp.com/

https://www.echodelickrecords.com/
https://echodelickrecords.bandcamp.com/
https://www.instagram.com/echodelickrecords/
https://www.facebook.com/ERECORDSATL

Seedy Jeezus, Damned to the Depths (2025)

Seedy Jeezus, Seedy Jeezus (2015)

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