Review & Track Premiere: Stöner, Boogie to Baja EP

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on January 30th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Stoner boogie to baja

[Click play above to stream the premiere of Stöner’s ‘Night Tripper vs. No Brainer.’ Their Boogie to Baja EP is out Feb. 24 on Heavy Psych Sounds.]

Stöner make the most of their opportunity to efficiently hammer the point home. Jam. Punk. Jam. Punk. Jam. Their Boogie to Baja EP, comprised of songs recorded during the sessions for their second album, 2022’s Totally… (review here) — and like that full-length, produced by Yosef Sanborn — runs five tracks/26 minutes and follows precisely that pattern, taking the mellow roll of its beginning with “Stöner Theme (Baja Version)” and using its sub-three minutes as a setup for the back and forth to come, a short, flowing, easy nod that calls to mind some of the earlier solo work of guitarist/vocalist Brant Bjork but boasts a guest guitar solo from Fatso Jetson‘s Mario Lalli — who was also on some of that earlier work, come to think of it; it’s nice to have friends — and an almost immediate hypnotic effect that, if you’re not careful, can carry right into the subsequent kick of “City Kids.”

They hold out that last note, there’s a weirdo twang strum to end like there was at the start, and then soon the push of “City Kids” starts, with Greg Hetson of Circle Jerks sitting in with Bjork, bassist/vocalist Nick Oliveri and drummer Ryan Güt, whose collective pedigree as a three-piece has been a big part of the story to-date of Stöner, but is only actually part of it in reality as the band has come to summarize so much about what particularly Oliveri and Bjork have done in bands like KyussFu ManchuQueens of the Stone Age, the various band incarnations of Brant BjorkMondo Generator, and so on; forming a kind of encompassing desert rock that, for being what it is made by who made it, remains grippingly unpretentious, holding to a dudes-in-a-room sensibility rather than trying to make some grand statement of genre or style. That is to say, as much as these guys have contributed to what desert rock has become over the last three decades, Stöner‘s mission isn’t so much to celebrate past accomplishments as find a way around them to still enjoy writing and playing music together without that baggage.

Does it work? Most of the time, yeah. BjorkOliveri and Güt have worked quickly over the last couple years to give the band a personality of its own, from the remember-when-we-was-punks sans-frills fuzz of their 2021 debut, Stoners Rule (review here), to the takeoff solo in “Night Tripper vs. No Brainer” here. The band’s persona, defined by the presences of Oliveri and Bjork — though I’ve said before and I’ll say again that Güt is essential personnel on drums, and he proves that again on Boogie to Baja — has begun to draw the two sides together at times, creating a more dynamic sound rather than one split along the lines of who came up with each individual part, song, etc.

“Stöner Theme (Baja Version)” is short compared to the other two jam-minded pieces here, but it serves an important function in making it a less drastic turn when “Night Tripper vs. No Brainer” picks up from “City Kids” — a cover of Pink Fairies‘ more than the 1979 Motörhead version, which pluralized the lyrics with “us” instead of “me”; the original came out in 1973 but you can hear its roots in ’60s garage rock and Stöner play into that well — with its sliding groove and plenty of space for solos to be peppered in with the bluesy call and response verses from Bjork and Oliveri, which sound spontaneous but have an underlying plot just the same, however wide around it they’re willing to work. In that way, “Stöner Theme (Baja Version)” is the key to the whole release, setting the vibe where and when vibe most matters. Without it, Boogie to Baja would feel disjointed and in competition with itself. It is the Ryan Güt of EP intros, if that helps as a way to think about it. Draws it all together, makes it groove, helps it make sense, doesn’t do too much to or too little but is in just the right spot when it needs to be. Fair enough.

Stöner

Side B’s “It Ain’t Free” and “Boogie to Baja” function with a similar punch to “City Kids” and “Night Tripper vs. No Brainer,” but ups the stakes. Stripped to its distorted core, “It Ain’t Free” — which resolves in a declaration that, “Grass, gas or ass, no one rides for free” in the band — sprints in ’80s skate-punk fashion, Bjork and Oliveri barking out the verses, living to ride and riding to live, and keeping their forward momentum even as they shift into the solo-topped bridge before turning back to the verse. Maybe there’s some nostalgia there as well, but that’s well suited to the scope and purpose of the band, true to meaner sounds than some of the Ramones-y punk they’ve wrought to this point but still ultimately a fit. And at 10 minutes, “Boogie to Baja” completes the pattern with howling leads over dug-in bass and drums, locking tight at around nine seconds in and not losing its course for the duration, an exciting and improvised-sounding stretch that might not have worked on Stoners Rule but makes an almost perfect — particularly for how un-perfect it is — destination for the EP that shares its name.

Culminating with a wash of noise, fuzzy solo cutting through, the drums ever-steady within that fray, it emphasizes the human aspect of its creation, the conversation happening between players within the song, and whether one is familiar with these players’ respective backgrounds or not, the chemistry they’ve honed in this band over just the last two-plus years between touring and studio recordings is readily on display. They each seem to know where the other is and is headed, and even when “Boogie to Baja” falls apart at the finish as it inevitably must, it does so in a way that makes sense considering that at some point while the jam was being tracked they probably realized they were getting something usable out of it.

Not everybody is going to get Boogie to Baja or Stöner more generally, and if you approach it with the perspective of looking for another Kyuss or some other grand expectation based on their respective discographies, you’re missing the point. Stöner aren’t trying to reinvent desert rock. They’re trying to hang out and play, not exactly like when they were teenagers but maybe with the same kind of sense of adventure in terms of trying out ideas, taking sounds that excite them and transposing them onto their own material. I’d argue they’ve been mostly successful in this up to and through this point, but rather than the roots of each player, the most exciting part of Stöner is the whole band’s own emerging dynamic, the personality they’re defining for themselves as a group. Even in what might be called an assemblage of leftovers, they’re telling that story as it happens, and it’s a thrill to hear, even if the overarching message of the songs is “chill the fuck out and listen.” No argument.

Stöner, Boogie to Baja (2023)

Stöner on Facebook

Stöner on Instagram

Stöner website

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Høstsabbat 2023: Bongripper Added as Headliner

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 30th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Høstsabbat 2023 follows its first announcement of the year, which brought Green Lung, Alastor, Cult Member and Witch Club Satan to the bill, with Bongripper. And as Bongripper will, the news lands with a rather significant thud when one imagines the long-running Chicago crush-minded instrumentalists stepping on the altar of the Kulturkirken Jakob and laying waste with tonality to shake the floor and the kind of volume you feel in your chest. Clearly for the festival’s 10th anniversary they’re going all out.

That’s gonna be good and I’ll tell you outright I hope I’m there to see it, though I acknowledge that as the festival grows, expands in sound, adds venues, etc., and becomes part of the cultural fabric of its host city — which it will continue to do as it enters its second decade, no doubt — my small-fry ass is at best tagging along. There are videographers filming sets with meaningful slow motion headbanging and actual photographers to take pictures, so having me hobble around between stages feels superfluous. For me, that’s all the more reason to appreciate being there. For them, it’s less of a reason to have me. Those two lines invariably intersect at some point.

Nonetheless, whether I end up going or not, this is a great fest put on by wonderful people — Ole, Jens, Vesper, and their crew — and I’m happy to support as best I’m able. This news landed Friday and I didn’t see it until the week was already closed out, but if you missed it or just want to listen to some Bongripper — reasonable — here it is, as per social media:

hostsabbat 2023 bongripper

When we first got hold of the church as our venue in 2018, there was a few bands that instantly came to mind. The acoustics, the setting, the space. Everything about it. It almost felt like the church was longing to be crushed by certain bands itself. One of those bands is Bongripper.

For our 10-year anniversary the stars aligned, and BONGRIPPER is flying out from Chicago to give Høstsabbat a masterclass in pure, distinct and emotional heaviness. Chicago seems to be our go-to city in the US these days, and it feels great to follow up the performances with REZN and Indian from last year, with the purveyors of instrumental, thundering, monstrous doom.

Bongripper hits you like a steamroller, and will leave no ear drums unmarked.

We couldn’t be more stoked.

Please welcome Bongripper as one of our headliners!

Hail Satan, Worship Doom!

SPOTIFY PLAYLIST
https://spoti.fi/3tkuMZl

NEWSLETTER
https://bit.ly/HostsabbatNews

https://www.facebook.com/hostsabbat/
https://www.instagram.com/hostsabbat/
http://hostsabbat.no/

Høstsabbat Spotify Playlist

Bongripper, Miserable Live at Roadburn 2015 (2019)

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The Obelisk Questionnaire: Ståle “The Captain” Rodvelt of Kal-El

Posted in Questionnaire on January 30th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Ståle "The Captain" Rodvelt of Kal-El

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: Ståle “The Captain” Rodvelt of Kal-El

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

Creating music start with riffs I enjoy and putting them together with the guys to become songs, and as it start to shape, I’m already having the theme for the lyrics in mind. When it’s good and ready to be presented to the world, I’m of course hoping people will enjoy the art. The phrase, “I make music for myself” is true to an extent – of course you hope people will like it and get something out of it. Anything else is utter bullshit, if you picked up an instrument with getting on stage in mind, of course you want attention. Only thing you can hope for, is the fact that its good enough, and that people catch on and like it. That was the idea when I picked up a tennis racket, and played Elvis songs in front of the mirror. You give it a good go as you’ve seen the real stars do on TV and picturing yourself in front of a crowd going wild, and if you say otherwise, you lie :P

Then the mirror gigs became friends playing together, and as the skills grew, we started making attempts on originals. So, after several years (literally several with capital S) with different bands and different musical styles, I ended up putting together KAL-EL to try out some riffs I had. Riffs that got rejected as campfire-Danzig riffs (no lie :D) by the bands I played in. As faith would have it, the drummer of KAL-EL, Bjudas, had the same damn experience with his riffs getting rejected in his band. But he gave me a few, reluctantly I might add, and I was blown away by his writing skills. I guess seeing my reaction encouraged him to get busy, and now he farts out cool riffs faster then people can digest the one he just came up with. We are now proud to say with the help of the other guys in KAL-EL, together with their riffs and their influences, these riffs have given us a Spellemanns nomination, so I guess they wasn’t too shitty after all. :D

Describe your first musical memory.

That must be my mother tuning in to Radio Luxembourg, listening to whatever was the hot shit of the week in the 70s or playing her Elvis’ 7” s – She was (and still is) a huge Elvis fan, so that has kind of rubbed off on me. Elvis is still the King to me, but of course I drifted along to harder stuff as the ’80s came along and I got into my teens. Getting the WASP debut album in my teenage hands changed everything.

Describe your best musical memory to date.

That would have to be when I was lucky enough to see Metallica at the Fillmore in San Francisco in April 2003. I had two tickets to the Wednesday show, and with a pregnant wife, we set off to the USA for the first time to witness Robert Trujillo’s first live performance with the band. Together with 300(!) other fans. They played all the hits from the first 3 records, and it was pretty surreal. They performed so close to the crowd that we could touch them, and they fist bumped everyone there, had people up on stage, and really had a good time. Never had an experience like that since.

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

Every kid is born pure, without knowledge of hate or religious mumbo jumbo in their heads, so it should be doable to get along. Why isn’t it so? I really don’t have a good answer to that, but the state of the world now a days truly tests my belief in happiness, every day. Why can’t humans just get the fuck along? If it was a time for aliens to reveal themselves, now is as good as any. Perhaps we could find some common ground then. :P

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

If you learn your craft to play or sing that tone you couldn’t last time, then you have a good progression which leads to, I guess happiness and a sense of accomplishment. And if what you do is getting better, more refined, and the response to it is thumbs up, you’re on the right track.

How do you define success?
To wake up every day, alive and able to feed my wonderful kids and family.

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

I think I’ll keep that to myself.

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

A cool festival to give people in my hometown a taste of the music, and all the great bands I’ve met on the road. I had one starting back in 2019, Darkspace Stoner Fest, but as the pandemic came along, and its been pretty busy with KAL-EL lately, and I haven’t found the time to look into it for real. It’s been that one time, but I really want to create something to be held once a year.

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

To provoke and make people think. Some art is eye or ear candy and sooths the brain, and some art is plain ugly or totally out of whack and make the brain go; what?? But all forms of art have the right to exist, and all art has both haters and lovers. Either way, it gets me engaged, so I guess the artist got the reaction he/she wanted.

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

I do write some novels (mostly for myself) from time to time to give me inspiration to write lyrics for KAL-EL. Looking forward to the day I get the guts to put it together to something readable and show people. I guess it would have been sci fi stories for kids about this badass bounty hunter girl named Mica. My lack of writing skills is overshadowed by coming up with never ending stories about this girl’s adventures, and I’m always spinning on some new story. I just suck at getting it down in a readable shape.

http://kal-el.no
http://kal-el.bandcamp.com
http://facebook.com/kalelproject
http://instagram.com/kalelband

http://majesticmountainrecords.bigcartel.com
http://facebook.com/majesticmountainrecords
http://instagram.com/majesticmountainrecords

Kal-El, Dark Majesty (2021)

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Friday Full-Length: Tortuga, Deities

Posted in Bootleg Theater on January 27th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Poznań, Poland’s Tortuga released their second album, Deities, early in 2020 on vinyl through Greece’s Made of Stone Recordings. The follow-up to their 2017 self-titled debut, it runs seven songs and 53 minutes — one assumes the vinyl is edited, or otherwise that the grooves are packed very, very tightly together — and is a pure example of what I mean when I employ the oft-used phrase ‘dug in.’ With production, guitars and vocals from Bablo (who softened his first consonant; it was previously Pablo), guitar, synth and vocals from Kłosu (who also mixed and recorded, with Achim), bass from Heszu and the steady rolling drums of Marmur, Tortuga languidly lumber through the culmination of “Esoteric Order” like they just invented wah, and it’s precisely that sense of the band being right there with the listener at the moment of righteousness, that kind of feeling that one might share in-person at a show, when they know it’s going good and you know it’s going good and that feeling of electricity and communion circles through the crowd. They’re into it as much as you are. You can feel them in the rehearsal space thinking, ‘Yeah, this is gonna be great,’ when they were writing, imagine the same conversation in the studio and then hear it in how they actually play the song.

That kind of feeling is writ large across Deities. It is a major unifying factor of the songs, which take a loosely Lovecraftian lyrical thematic and basically just play with it. The source of so much ultra-serious heavy metal, things dark, grim and tentacled, is on Deities boiled down to a kind of stoned brain-meander in which Yig, H.P. Lovecraft’s the lord of the Lizards, a god, is jealous of all the attention Godzilla gets in movies and so on. “Black Pharaoh II” is also Lovecraft-based and in complement to “Esoteric Order,” which puts the audience in this land of monsters following the instrumental intro “Shining Sphere” — which makes plenty of declarations of its own as regards the tonality with which Tortuga will convey their plod — the penultimate “Trip” is a lyrical moment of clarity in which the character making their way through this hellscape realizes that it’s all the result of having dropped too much acid. The lyrics, by Bablo and Anakolut — last names need not apply; they keep it casual — are a particular point of charm, but it’s really that ‘dug in’ sensibility that most comes through the listening experience. The distinct feeling that they’re having a good time too, that they know their music taps into a very specific kind of fun — a very specific kind of humor, though I wouldn’t call their material a joke on any level, even on “For Elizard” where the chorus is, “Yig hates Godzilla/Fuck you Godzilla” — and that not everybody is going to understand. They’re dug in. They’re riding the grooves of their own making. They’ve worked to craft their tones, their riffs, their songs, into either these hugely weighted slumps or the kind of rocking pushes one finds in the early going of the instrumental “Defective Mind Transfer” or the more atmospheric beginning of “Shining Sphere” from whence the full breadth of their distortion emerges like a tentacled god-beast from the more ethereal waters. It’s at 1:12 in the intro. You can’t miss it.

Tortuga DeitiesAnd if you’re listening at all, you won’t miss it, which is even more important. Because part of the communication that’s coming through Deities, and part of its being so dug in, stems from the fact that Tortuga clearly know who their audience is, because they’re it. Even as closer “Galeón de Manila” swaps out English lyrics for Spanish and moves with deceptive smoothness between elden doom and bell-of-ride, heads-down, forward-surge black metal before dissolving to nearly eight minutes of feedback, residual coming-apart and drone — this is in the digital version, not necessarily the LP — finishing the record with an unexpected twist, that change isn’t out of line for the kind of heavy that Tortuga play, and so it doesn’t feel out of place. If they started singing in Polish, I don’t think it would hurt the experience either. By the time they get there, you’ve already been up, down and around the mountains of madness, past the fields of wah in “Esoteric Order,” into the explosive, revelry-plod of “For Elizard,” through the semi-psych sample-topped musings of “Defective Mind Transfer,” the slam-that-fuzz-home midsection of “Black Pharaoh II” — you want to hear ‘dug in’ made manifest; cue up “Black Pharaoh II” at 2:30 into its total 6:10 and let it ride until the vocals come back at the very end, which is exactly what they do — the jaunty bounce that starts “Trip,” and far back at the start, the little flourish of synth that maybe marked the transfer from one world to another, so that they decide to turn all that dense fuzz to more ripper purposes for a stretch, well, you’ve already been steamrolled so why not?

No, Deities isn’t revolutionary. It’s not shaping genre in its own image either in the stoned or other heavy styles. It has a presence and a personality of its own, to be sure, but that comes well within the borders of genre, and the sense one gets from Tortuga is that they know it, they celebrate it, they want to celebrate it with their audience, as if to say, ‘Come check out this very, very large sound we have made.’ Or perhaps alternately, ‘Come dig in with us.’ Thus Deities, like religious dogma, offers an inherent feeling of community for those who listen and ‘get it.’ It’s not going to be everybody, but if you can hear the fun in “Esoteric Order” and “For Elizard,” then that invite to dig in should be a simple enough RSVP. Tortuga are the converted, holding a mass for the converted, and as much as their theme on Deities is hyper-specific, that ethic is mirrored in their instrumental bent. They know what they want to sound like because they know what they like. They are well and truly dug in, and unto its last drone, Deities is that much stronger an offering because of it. I don’t know if the Great Old Ones dig riffs or not, but if not, they’re missing out here.

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

Already this morning, the kid’s up. 5:06AM he came downstairs the first time. I was about two and a half paragraphs into the above. I put him back to bed — because, well, that’s too fucking early for him to be up — told him I’d set a timer for an hour and to go back to sleep. It’s 5:35AM right now and he’s come out of his room twice since, so really I’m just delaying the inevitable trying to get him some more rest which he’ll need so that at 2PM he doesn’t collapse into being a complete bastard because he’s too tired, and allow myself some time to work. I expect and know this effort will fail.

He just opened the bedroom door and said he has to pee; his ultimate not-going-back-to-bed weapon. Like a limit break in Final Fantasy VIII. I am defeated. It would really be something to be able to finish one of these posts on my laptop instead of my phone for a change one of these weeks. Feels like it’s been a very long time. I also wouldn’t mind going a day without having to mop up piss from all over the bathroom floor because, while gender is a complex issue in our house — I actually had another aside here explaining that but it was too long; bottom line is maybe trans? which presents all kinds of dangers in this hateful-ass country — he still wants to pee standing up and also holds it in for too long and then sprays the bathroom like he’s fucking powerwashing it. But these are apparently pretty big asks of life right now. And I work to remind myself that things will not always be as they are right now. Daily. Also I get high. Mostly in the afternoons and evenings. It is a wellness thing for me. I’ve been swimming every other morning at the gym near the house. The Patient Mrs. and I have been doing yoga videos. All of these things connect in my mind.

This weekend is family time. My oldest nephew turns 15 on Monday, so we’re having that whole crew over for dinner tomorrow, then brunch with Slevin and his fiancée on Sunday. Somewhere in there I’m supposed to do a sticker-quote for a Blood Lightning album and liner notes for PostWax. It’ll be a fucking miracle if I can get to the one-or-two-sentence thing there, let alone dig into the REZN/Vinnum Sabbathi collaboration and give it its descriptive due for a sheet that will be included with the release. I feel stupid and useless, even sitting here giving a shit about that stuff while my kid counts the seconds on the timer I set until we can turn on Sesame Street. He got a little music player this week that plays the theme. He sings along to it. It’s the kind of future-memory I should treasure for the rest of my life an example of what a sweet, wonderful person he is. But because I’m a narcissistic ogre, all I can think about is getting ‘work’ done for which I’m neither compensated nor ever truly able to finish.

So there you have it. Next week is a premiere from the new Stöner EP, a review of Strider, a premiere for Blackwülf, a full stream for Soothsayer Orchestra, and a review for Mathew’s Hidden Museum. That’s where the week is at now. Looking at it, it seems kind of ambitious. If I still have it in me by next Thursday to review that Mathew’s Hidden Museum and give it its due, I will. Otherwise I’ll push it back. I doubt Mr. Bethancourt is holding his breath for that, in any case. Really, I’m just ready to check out now and maybe spend the rest of the day just listening to music instead of thinking about it. Probably not going to happen.

A little discouraged, maybe, but persistent. Put it on my tombstone.

Have a great and safe weekend. Have fun, watch your head, hydrate. I’m punching out to go do domestic whathaveyou, which probably means dishes, laundry or both.

FRM.

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Swarm Release New Single Sun is the One / Weight

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 27th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

I can’t imagine being a heavy-minded label, hearing these two songs from Helsinki doom rockers Swarm, and not immediately wanting to sign the band. Between the dense, lumbering heft of their riffs, readily familiar but distinguished with an undertone of metal that is more fully realized in the guitar solos, and the dynamic vocal arrangements led by Hilja Vedenpää, Swarm call to mind the somehow floating largesse of Elephant Tree and a perhaps more of-genre take on the emotive doom of Pallbearer.

The nine-minute “Sun is the One” is resonant and patient even through its post-midpoint tempo kick, and it turns reliably back toward its slower hook with marked fluidity. At about a third of the runtime, the softly-delivered “Weight” plays claim to folk balladeering, more internationally informed than Finnish in style, but richly melodic and spacious in a way that reminds just how much room they have to fill and how they do so when they choose.

Swarm‘s self-titled EP (review here) was well received in 2022. This two-songer says to me that’s no fluke and that the potential here is even greater than the EP hinted. Debut album, please.

Tracks are streaming on the player at the bottom of this post. Release info follows with the Bandcamp update. Enjoy.

Swarm Sun is the One Weight

“Hey guys!

Here´s our new single which contains two songs, Sun Is The One and Weight.

We are very excited and happy of this moment at hand, it was a long wait. So, here you go, kick back and have a listen.

Thank you for the support that you´ve shown us, it really means the world to our band. Much love.

Have a good one! – Swarm”

Tracklisting:
1. Sun Is The One 09:11
2. Weight 03:21

Swarm:
Hilja Vedenpää : Vox
Panu Willman : Guitar & vox
Dani Paajanen : Drums
Einari Toiviainen : Guitar & vox
Leo Lehtonen : Bass & synth

http://www.facebook.com/swarmgaze
http://www.instagram.com/swarmgaze
https://swarmgaze.bandcamp.com/album/

Swarm, Sun is the One / Weight

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The Obelisk Questionnaire & Video Premiere: Nathan Bidwell of Twin Void

Posted in Questionnaire on January 27th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

nathan bidwell of twin void

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: Nathan Bidwell of Twin Void

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

I am a musician in a touring band on a record label that’s trying to make it in the music industry, I feel like I’ve always known that I wanted to be a musician and to play on stage.

Describe your first musical memory.

Some of my first musical memories is hearing my parents play music like sublime, beastie boys and slayer in the house and that to me was always inspiring and cool of them to play music that’s not just on the radio.

Describe your best musical memory to date.

Still to this date the coolest memory was when we were playing in Orlando at the Warlando fest with Judas Priest and not only did we open the main stage for priest but soulfly was also on the bill and before we went on Max Cavalera (from of course soulfly but one of my all-time favorite bands sepultura) fist bumped me before our set and that to me still to this day rocks me.

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

I feel like back in the day when I was a straight edge vegetarian my beliefs were always tested but back then I was against animal farms and all that, but nowadays I’m not straight edge or vegetarian haha

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

Artistic progression should always lead to ultimate happiness and bliss, and I think also just working with cool artists and whatnot, being able to create awesome things and being able to have a creative space.

How do you define success?

I think success is when you can fully do what you love and not have to have a secondary job to do it.

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

Back when my parents had chickens one morning I went to go let them out and I think someone didn’t put them away and I guess maybe a cat or raccoon got to them and lemme tell ya it was not a pretty sight.

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

I would really love to create a new country project one day; I feel like I have so many roots and desire for country music I think that would be so fun and especially working with banjos and fiddles and stuff would be so rad.

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

Being able to have good solid platforms for artistic people to show their stuff, I think a lot of the times bands will go unlistened or someone’s art may be buried because they don’t have proper platforms for people to check out, so anyone reading this keep supporting Bandcamp and all those solid platforms cause that’s what’s helping us function as a band.

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

I’m currently a cook as well and I would love to get my sous chef position, culinary arts is something I’ve always really loved and I think food and music go hand in hand.

https://www.facebook.com/twinvoidband/
https://www.instagram.com/twin_void/
https://twinvoid.bandcamp.com/

Twin Void, “HELLCAT” video premiere

Twin Void, Free From Hardtimes (2022)

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Ruination Festival Announces Lineup with Sergeant Thunderhoof, Fatso Jetson, Slomatics and More

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 27th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Solid bill. More than solid, actually. I don’t think I need to argue in favor of Ruination Festival 2023’s headliners in Slomatics and Fatso Jetson, but check out the US/UK blend at the pre-show as well with Thunder Horse and Great Electric Quest with Old Horn Tooth and Oakenthrone and Gandalf the Green. That’s a good time even before you get to Sergeant Thunderhoof and Mastiff and Trevor’s Head and Ritual King and Goblinsmoker et al welcoming High Desert Queen and the aforementioned Fatso Jetson to England’s green and pleasant land.

Of course, the elephant in the room here, fest-wise, is Desertfest London, but there are arguments to be made here for the concise all-dayer/pre-show format, and if you want a curated sample of some of the best up and coming UK acts with some more established names on top, it’s a good way to go and a situation without the rampant timing conflicts that inherently happen at larger festivals. Even with two stages going, this seems doable to me and like a good way to pack in seeing a bunch of bands and not having to miss out on something you want to see.

The fest is a collaboration between Iron Boar Bookings and Riffolution Promotions, and you can see the full lineup and

Ruination Festival 2023 square

RUINATION FESTIVAL

Ruination Festival is a joint event from Iron Boar Bookings and Riffolution Promotions. Taking place on the 13th of May across 2 stages, The Underground and Als Juke Bar!

Tickets are £15.

Make sure to RVSP to stay up to date with announcements. With some of the best stoner, doom & psych on the scene, from both UK and US.

(#127482#)(#127480#)
Fatso Jetson
Great Electric Quest
High Desert Queen
Thunder Horse

(#127468#)(#127463#)
Slomatics, Sergeant Thunderhoof, Mastiff, Grave Lines, Trevors Head, Ritual King, Son of Boar, Everest Queen, Goblinsmoker, Boach, Swamp Coffin, Ironrat, Old Horn Tooth, Gandalf the Green, Oakenthrone

Tickets: https://skiddle.com/e/36191054

Event: https://fb.me/e/28SVc4C19

https://www.facebook.com/RiffolutionPromotions
https://www.facebook.com/ironboarbookings

Slomatics, Live at Doomcember Festival, Reykjavik, 2022

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Ruff Majik Post New Single “Elektrik Ram”

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 27th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Ruff Majik

I don’t see a release date for Ruff Majik‘s impending fourth album, Elektrik Ram, in the PR wire info below, and I’m not sure what to make of that if anything, but when the South African band put out “She’s Still a Goth” (posted here), it was reportedly April 2023. That’s still my best estimate, and if “She’s Still a Goth” was an early teaser, then “Elektrik Ram,” the title-track, builds on that with more cheeky goth and a purposely rough, almost garage-style sound to its strummed riff. You’ll note the use of the word “triumph” and considerations of it as a “battle song” in the quote, and you can hear that in some of the turns of lead guitar, but as ever for Ruff Majik, there’s a lot happening in relatively little time, and it’s still very much recognizably their own.

I’m really looking forward to this album. Expecting something different from 2020’s The Devil’s Cattle (review here) considering the years in between and the two songs they’ve made public thus far, but if they’re growing weirder I think that’s only an asset in their favor and the further out they reach from their desert-style heavy rock roots, the stronger a band I think they’re becoming. One assumes tour announcements are forthcoming as well, so with that in mind, I’ll turn you over to the info in blue and the track streaming at the bottom of this post.

Also, if you’re on TikTok, they’ve been doing some skits and posting practice footage on there. Might be worth giving them a follow.

Here you go:

ruff majik elektrik ram

RUFF MAJIK UNLEASH EXPLOSIVE NEW SINGLE ‘ELEKTRIK RAM’

DOWNLOAD / STREAM ‘ELEKTRIK RAM’
https://orcd.co/elektrikram
https://mongrelrecords1.bandcamp.com/track/elektrik-ram

Elektrik Ram is the new single and title track from South African stoner rock reprobates Ruff Majik’s upcoming album.

Vocalist and guitarist Johni Holiday’s quick stint in a mental wellness facility brought on the lyrics and structure of Elektrik Ram. “What started as a fun ditty, emulating the sound of Siamese Dream era Smashing Pumpkins, became a triumphant battle song chronicling the power of picking up where you left off and trying again.” Explains Johni.

He delves deeper into the message behind the song, “Conquering dependency on medication and machines (as a replacement for human contact) to step out victorious. It’s a song about not letting go of rage but using it instead to break through the barriers of modern living.”

The first gasps of air this song took was a three-part harmony that Johni wrote using only his acoustic guitar and a tape recorder to lay down the ideas. From there it was presented to the other members of the band, with the idea of making a relentless juggernaut of a song. “It should sound like a swarm of bees, but with an uplifting crescendo” Johni said.

Lyrically, Holiday referenced the feeling of being incapacitated on a hospital bed and combined it with an allegory for oppressive and dogmatic religious views, to drive the point home that “fate will not grant you any favours, you must take them.”

Current lineup:
Johni Holiday
Jimmy Glass
Cowboy Bez
Steven Bosman

http://www.ruffmajik.com
http://www.facebook.com/ruffmajik
http://www.instagram.com/ruffmajik
https://www.tiktok.com/@ruffmajik

http://mongrelrecords.com
http://www.facebook.com/mongrelrecords
http://www.instagram.com/mongrel_records

Ruff Majik, “Elektrik Ram”

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