Sandrider to Release Enveletration in March; Opening Track “Alia” Streaming Now

Sandrider Photo by John Malley

You know how it is. Sometimes you hope for a thing while kind of feeling like you don’t dare hope for that thing. That’s me and a fourth Sandrider album. Certainly the Seattle three-piece of guitarist/vocalist Jon Weisnewski, bassist/vocalist Jesse Roberts and drummer Nat Damm don’t owe anyone anything after 2011’s self-titled debut (review here), 2013’s Godhead (review here), 2015’s split with Kinski (review here) and 2018’s Armada (review here), but listening to “Alia,” the opening track of their fourth record, Enveletration, I’m only glad they’re still ripping it up. 10 new tracks from Sandrider is only going to make this year better.

March 3 is the digital release, March 17 for the vinyl. I don’t see a CD, but so it goes. Whatever size platter it’s on when it arrives will barely contain the band’s electrified heavy noise anyway, so take what you can get and get ready for the kind of living room mosh that, if anyone saw you, you wouldn’t even be embarrassed because Sandrider are so fucking righteous. Mosh on, homebody.

From the PR wire:

Sandrider Enveletration

SANDRIDER: Seattle Loud Rock Trio To Release Enveletration Full-Length This March Via Satanik Royalty Records; New Track Streaming + Preorders Available

Seattle-based loud rock trio SANDRIDER will release their long-awaited fourth full-length, Enveletration, this March via Satanik Royalty Records, today unveiling the record’s cover art, track listing, and first single.

“Enveletration” is a word SANDRIDER vocalist/guitarist Jon Weisnewski came up with after pondering a question his friend asked him many years ago at a party: “Why is it always about penetration, and never about envelopment?”

Everything from the power dynamics in sex, how things are built, the way we think about weapons and armor, and advertisements for new technology is described in terms of male-centric power fantasies. But who really holds the power: the one breaking through something, or the one engulfing it? Are you truly overpowering someone or something if the recipient of the action is choosing to absorb you completely?

Enveletration, the forthcoming studio album from Seattle’s wildly fun and hypnotizingly heavy rock unit SANDRIDER (and its title track, for that matter), has absolutely nothing to do with the aforementioned concept. But the word, a portmanteau of “penetration” and “envelopment,” sounds cool as hell, right? And it gives you something to ponder as you spend thirty-six minutes in the ring with one of the heaviest, highest-voltage bands the Pacific Northwest has to offer.

Made-up words aside, SANDRIDER might be the perfect sonic backdrop for analyzing the dynamics of domination. With a primal combination of monstrously exultant riffs, soaring guitar solos, and catchy, triumphant choruses created by Weisnewski (Akimbo, Nuclear Dudes), bassist Jesse Roberts (The Ruby Doe, Kid Congo Powers, Old Iron), and drummer Nat Damm (Akimbo, Head Like A Kite, Automaton, Tight Bros From Way Back When), the band sounds like the soundtrack to victory. But as evidenced by many of the lyrics on Enveletration, SANDRIDER’s brand of victory is a defiant one – wherein fun is an act of cathartic resistance and escape. Under the album’s layers of metaphor and amplifier feedback, you will find themes of political anger and modern malaise: “Tourniquet” unpacks the bleak and overwhelming feeling of helplessness in the face of the unending and seemingly inevitable threat of mass shootings. “Weasel” laments the political success given to those who talk the loudest, despite lies and empty promises. “Circles” condemns the circular logic used by systemic power structures that divide rather than unite people, and asks: Is it possible for humans to evolve into a species that cares about each other and the world?

But despite the world’s madness and constant bad news, there are many ways to relish our own small escapes and victories in life. The band has consistently found inspiration in the dystopian sci-fi world of Dune, to which they pay homage in the song “Alia” and even the band name itself. And, as Weisnewski sings on Enveletration’s closing track “Grouper,” sometimes the most satisfying wins can be found during what SANDRIDER and their pals call “Warlock Hour:” that time of the night when everyone else in the house has gone to bed and you can finally sit down, put tomorrow off a little longer, pour a glass of whiskey, and just be you for a bit. Not all victories are loud; some are quiet and serene.

The sentiment of defiant victory is made even more real when you consider that the band was experiencing it themselves firsthand: Enveletration captures the utter relief the three members felt when returning to the practice space for the first time after a year of early-pandemic isolation and anxiety. The experience of waking their stacks of amplifiers from their dormancy, feeling the drums rattle their chests and the bass vibrate through the floor, and reveling in the indescribably euphoric return to writing music together in person is palpable. The end result is a nod to Seattle heavy-rock forefathers Soundgarden with their “break my rusty cage and run” attitude, mixed with the unrelenting, stage dive-off-the-bar energy of Refused and noisy noodling of Hot Snakes.

Across its ten tracks, Enveletration proves that SANDRIDER’s adrenaline-charged fun and unconquerable spirit is yet again a sonic refuge where you’re temporarily invincible. Whether you listen at home, or you’re lucky enough to experience a rare live show while standing in the beams of their blinding yellow stage lights, it’s hard not to walk away feeling ready to take on any foe – real, imaginary, or within ourselves.

In advance of the release of Enveletration, today SANDRIDER drops the record’s first single, opening track “Alia.” Offers the band, “The song is lyrically inspired by the character from Frank Herbert’s Dune novel [Alia Atreides] that arguably has one of the most interesting arcs of all his characters. Her mom drank worm bile meant for spice orgies when she was pregnant with her, and it ended up making Alia fully aware of herself and her entire heritage of witch mothers while she was still in the womb. So, she starts life as an almost omniscient tortured genius with thousands of personalities in her mind but she’s just a damn baby and, avoiding spoilers, she of course goes on to do insane things in an insane world from that point. Musically we just wanted to write a loud ripper, so that’s what we did.”

Enveletration was recorded at Litho Studios in Seattle by Matt Bayles (Soundgarden, Mastodon, Botch) and will be released on Satanik Royalty Records — who recently reissued SANDRIDER’s first two full-length albums, Sandrider and Godhead — digitally on March 3rd with a limited edition vinyl edition to follow on March 17th.

Find digital preorders at THIS LOCATION: https://sandrider.bandcamp.com/album/enveletration
And physical preorders at THIS LOCATION: https://satanikroyaltyrecords.limitedrun.com/products/737471-sandrider-enveletration-12-gatefold-pre-order

Enveletration Track Listing:
1. Alia
2. Enveletration
3. Circles
4. Tourniquet
5. Weasel
6. Slumber
7. Proteus
8. Priest
9. Ixian
10. Grouper

SANDRIDER has announced a pair of area shows this February and April with more performances to be announced in the weeks to come.

SANDRIDER:
2/11/2023 Bar House – Seattle, WA w/ Helms Alee, Wild Powers
4/08/2023 Sunset Tavern – Seattle, WA *Enveletration Record Release Show

SANDRIDER:
Nat Damm – drums
Jesse Roberts – bass, vocals
Jon Weisnewski – guitar, vocals

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http://sandrider.bandcamp.com/

http://www.satanikroyaltyrecords.com
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Sandrider, Enveletration (2023)

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