The Obelisk Questionnaire: Frederic Couture of Sons of Arrakis

Posted in Questionnaire on February 28th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Frederic Couture of Sons of Arrakis

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: Frederic Couture of Sons of Arrakis

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

It’s always hard to define what I’m doing as a musician, but let’s put really briefly. I’ve always played heavy rock music based around riff ideas and very structured songs. Most of the time, the writing process begins with one riff. Those riffs are often developing when I play my old acoustic guitar at home. Sometimes, I have riffs, beats or melodies in my head that I want to try on the guitar, but I’m not talented enough to nail them. They evolve into something else and after that, it’s like bringing pieces of a puzzle together.

I’ve always been doing this, sit and compose music since I’m 13 years old. My first band was Crazy Head when I was 14 years old. Then, those guys invited me in their band called People Who Care and they were tight for 15 years old guys. They had bases in music and needed a singer and rhythm guitarist in their rank, I immediately accepted the contract. People Who Care morphed in Reckless Ride and this is where we recorded our first decent EP. This band was on the classic rock side with fast and heavy riffs that jumped right in the face. In those bands, I’ve always been the singer and rhythm guitarist. I think I fit well in this role because I’ve done it since my teenage years.

To define what I do and how I came to do it, I also have to talk about my inspirations. I’ve been inspired by so many things and there’s been so many musical epiphanies, but the most significant moment was the first time I listened to Master of Reality by Black Sabbath. Riffs after riffs is the kind of vibe I’m searching for when it comes to music. This is where I come from as a musician. I also like proto-metal music from the late 60’s like Hendrix, Cream, Mountain, Blue Cheer, etc.

Another influence would be more progressive stuff like the album Close to the Edge and The Yes Album by Yes. Hemisphere and 2112 by Rush would be worth mentioning here. I really like concept albums and variations in songs. It makes it more intriguing and fascinating. Lately, the album Innate Passage by Elder really blew my mind!

When I was a kid, I also remember playing guitar over Angus Young on the Live at Donington concert DVD. It’s where I develop my chops and my interest for Gibson SG! Epiphany moment I would say! I also love Metallica’s first three albums because my father introduced me to those when I was just 11 years old. Puppets would be my favorite. Thanks to my old man!

But the ultimate reason why I’m a musician is when I saw Jack Black in School of Rock when I was 11 years old. I was at the beginning of high school and we were a bunch of kids who listened to Metallica, Megadeth, Nirvana, Sex Pistols, etc. We were outcasts in our musical tastes at that time. Dewey Finn was the ”man” (direct reference to the movie) who open the gates and brought the moral caution to rock it!

At the end of Reckless Ride in 2011, there was a musical hiatus for me, but I was just preparing the ground and building my own studio in Montreal that was called Reel Road Studio and then Gamma Recording Studio. From 2011 to 2016, I’ve been in different projects that never took form, but developed ideas and jamming songs and riffs ideas. I was cutting my teeth to say so. Then came Mick Martel from The Hazytones in late 2015. We started this band as a trio and we were motivated enough to start from scratch and put it all together. The first record was out in September 2016, I think. We went on tour in Canada and Europe for a couple of months following the release of this debut LP. This experience changed a lot of things for me and defined a what I do in my actual band Sons of Arrakis.

Ultimately, what’s fun about Sons of Arrakis is that we can’t only fit in one category of genres and styles of music. Everyone has their own point of view and ‘’appellations’’ for the music that we play, starting with the expression Melange Rock. I think that critics and people categorized our music that way because of the universe of Frank Herbert in which we immerge ourselves in. Actually, Melange Rock isn’t one style of music, it’s a vast spectrum of sonorities and genres.

In reality, we play some kind of a stoner-”ish” and desert-”ish” kind of rock. Francis Duchesne, SOA’s lead guitarist, came up with ”Cinematic sci-fi rock” once to differentiate us from ”the vast ocean of stoner rock bands”. It’s also because Francis introduces keyboards and guitar melodies that sound retro-futuristic. For example, on Shai-Hulud, the harmonized slide lead guitar brings this aspect forward. We also have a dual harmonized solo (keys and lead guitar) at the end of Temple of the Desert that is really mysterious and reminds of a laborious walk in the deep desert. In Abomination, in the chorus and the second verse, there’s a wonderful guitar orchestration that almost sounds symphonic.

Furthermore, there are parts in some songs that is more on the classic heavy rock side like the riff in the verses of Omniscient Messiah for example. Sometimes, we like to introduce some heavier parts in hommage to Thrash Metal, like in the bridges of the songs Temple of the Desert and Omniscient Messiah. Another hidden nugget is this doom metal bridge in The Black Mirror that has an overall straight forward desert rock feel. In short, we like to mix many genres and explore different sonorities. That’s why it’s more relevant to call it Melange Rock than stoner or doom I think. These are just few examples.

In short, this is the evolution. The point where I started to play music until now, with my band Sons of Arrakis. It’s hard to develop what we do, but it’s always been about the search for the riff, the sound of rock n’ roll that we all vibe and trip on.

Describe your first musical memory.

I was really young, maybe 5 years old. I remember that father used to play Nirvana Unplugged in NY on our way back from Lake Champlain, upstate New York, to Montreal. He had an old boat in the US, near Plattsburg and he had those cassettes. He also played Neil Young, I think it was a ”Best of” K7. I just remember the vibe and how it made me feel as a kid. The music felt like a haven and I felt safe with my parents and my sister. It almost felt like a fresh breeze from the Northern part of the lake.

In my childhood, I also remember that my mother was a really huge fan of this musical icon in Québec, called Jean Leloup. He was, and still is, the odd yet incredible figure in music and is a true artist. His album ”Les Fourmis” (The Ants in English) was the album that I remember the most, because my mother had the CD and always played it. There were also Daniel Bélanger, who’s also a important figure in the québécoise culture that was defining for me, back in the mid 1990’s.

I would say these are the first musical memories that I have. It was at a very young age, but I remember how it felt and I think my love for music come from childhood.

Describe your best musical memory to date.

I remember listening for the first time to the album “Reflections of a Floating World” from the band Elder. It was back in 2017, I was on the road in the Canadian Rockies and the first riff of the song “Sanctuary” started to play. Images, sounds and emotions merged together and it was a colossal feeling. When I listened to their new album, ”Innate Passage”, I found the same feelings that when I heard ”Sanctuary” for the first time. The song ”Endless Return” is a perfect reflection and a culmination of their work, I think.

There’s a lot a subtlety and refinement in this piece of art. One of the aspect I like the most is the marvelous crisp guitar arpeggios supported by this extremely solid rhythm section that never stops rolling. Elder has a surprisingly sharp melodic sense on this album achieved by the well thought lead guitars and vocals that smoothly float above the mix. Another aspect that I particularly like is the present of this vintage strings sound (Mellotron) that brings this nostalgic 70’s progressive feel to the songs.

Plus, this summer, I had the chance to see them live for the first time and meet them in person on September 6th at the legendary Montreal’s Foufounes Électriques. I think this maybe one of my best musical memory.

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

There’s one big life event that deeply changed my vision of life and tested my ingrained beliefs in the summer of 2017. I was with the band The Hazytones at that time and we were gone on tour for a couple of months for this two legs tour. In March and April 2017, we were in Europe for a whole month, then came back for 10 days to leave for a Canadian tour for 40 days.

I was in an important relationship at that time and the tour was really painful because I felt I was away from home, I missed my wife, and felt that the relationship was slowly degrading. I felt insecure, I was scared and angry the distance would have created a chill between us.

When I got back from tour, my ex-wife left the house at the end of May. I felt powerless, but I knew that it was the end and there were no coming back. I blamed it on me for being far from home, too goal oriented, forgetting to take the time. I was stressed out and anxious, and feel that I was one thousand light years away from her, even when I was at home.

It shook my beliefs because I realized at that time that if you want to be part of the music business, it’s not only a lot of money and work, but it’s also a lot of pressure on your love and family life. It’s a lot of sacrifices and it’s often a long desolate road.

I questioned myself a lot at that time, I dropped The Hazytones in June 2017 and I decided to quit for a while and didn’t want to form a new band anymore. I was on the mend. I took care of my studio with my partner for a while and build something that we could be proud of. After a couple of months, I found the inner force to go back in the studio and record those songs that I had in my head while I was with my ex-band: The Black mirror and High Handed Enemy (that will figure on Volume II).

Also, another thing that I learnt from that experience is that I have to take my time more and breathe deeply, enjoy every moment. If I can’t do that, I agitated and feel anxious, it’s not the right thing for me to do. Every step is an effort, but if you want to persevere, you have to take it soft and slow. I don’t want to feel the anger any more, it gives pretty good lyrics though (lol).

One of the most important thing, people who appreciate and love you will stay in the long run. If they don’t, it’s their choice, but as long as they’re present, take it as a gift and be grateful. I’m grateful that my bandmates are here in my life. I’m grateful for the success that 2022 brought us. I’m grateful that I have a good job and contribute to more justice and equity in our society, etc.

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

After our debut album, Volume I, was finished recording in December 2020, I was really eager to work on new material for Sons of Arrakis. But, it is really hard to start somewhere… During the pandemic, I had a lot of time to sit down, take my old acoustic guitar and search endlessly of some new riffs and ideas. It was really a moment to take a step back on the agitation of our daily life to breathe a little bit more. At least, it’s the way that I say it at first.

With Sons of Arrakis, we took the time to jam every once in a while during the pandemic to stay in touch, but the main idea was to go forward and I booked some studio time in April 2021 to demo some new songs with my friend Luc at Red Tube Studio in St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, near Montreal. I recorded five song ideas that potentially land on Volume II.

A second album is really defining for a band I think. It indicates if the band is creative enough to continue. I feel that there is an artistic progression in the songs I write. I think that SOA has its own identity and I have to find a way to evolve even though we have a strict framework and are stuck with the Frank Herbert’s known universe (haha!).

What I can tell you is that SOA’s new songs will be more straight forward, maybe shorter songs in general. I keep the riffs at the center of the songs, and I try to develop a more progressive side. The riffs are more complex, What I came up first with the recording in April 2021 are evolving in more well thoughts songs because they had the time to mature. There’s a big accent put on vocals and there will be a lot of harmonization and arrangements that will feel larger then life. There will be more harmonized guitar parts and solos, etc.

The last song that I’m working on will be more on the metal side. The song is brutal and there will be many different parts in it. I want this song to be a never-ending progression of riffs. It always takes time to achieve, but it’s worth it. And it’s what keeps it fun!

How do you define success?

Success isn’t something that can be measured, it’s something that you feel and defined by the goals that you set in the first place and their achievement. I think that when you are realistic or pragmatic enough and set objectives that you can reach, it’s always a success. There’s also another element that defines success: hard work. The goals have to be hard to reach in order to feel proud of what you achieved.

With Sons of Arrakis, this year, we have our load of success, especially after the launch of our album in July 15th. We increased our followers, fan base and listeners in a dazzling way. Our debut album has been well received by the critics and stoner rock enthusiasts. It feels like we’re on the map and it’s just another motivation to jump forward into the adventure of a second LP.

But even before that, we introduced a new drummer, Mat Root (Mathieu Racine), to Sons of Arrakis. The first project we did with Mat was the recording of two songs (Omniscient Messiah and Lonesome Preacher) in a live session at Studio Dandurand in Montreal in April 2022. Mat has become the cement of the band and he’s we can rely on him. We feel that we’re on a solid ground with this guys in the equation. In short, we succeeded to introduce this new member in a positive way and create a vibe where we feel that we can go in the right direction and move forward in new projects.

Our album release show was also a success! Even with the gig being canceled on July 15th, we postponed the show on October 14th to play at Turbo Haüs in Montreal for our second show in 30 months. It was sold out! This is what I called a success for us! Even if it’s a small venue of 140 people, it’s the first that we feel that people have a keen interest.

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

It’s the hardest question that I had to answer so far to be honest. I’m lucky enough to live in Montreal, a beautiful and secure city that has a lot of wealth. In Quebec, the social security system is made to regulate the inequity and we are not submitted to the phenomenon of poverty that often.

In the other hand, I work in the public school board system and I witness sometimes the hardship that some kids and teenagers are going through. As a teacher, I have the feeling that I have the role to be a positive figure paternal and a caring figure for those youngsters. Sometimes, I wish I hadn’t witness some cases where I say: “There’s nothing left to do”. It breaks my heart every time.

I wish I had enough energy and inner resources to say the right thing and to give a helping hand. The reality is this: we something is too deeply rooted in darkness; it may be not possible to help. When there is abuse, traumas and emotional exhaustion, parental alienation, etc. it makes you feel powerless.

During the Covid-19, the public system in Quebec, but it’s the same situation all over the Western World, suffers from the lack of initiative, the lack of funding, personal that are overwhelmed by the pressure, etc. I which things were different, but I notice and see that things are slowly falling apart.

Not considering that we’ll have to face may other crisis in the 21st century that we aren’t ready to face because we deny, as a specie, the urgency to act differently and change our old habits. In this era of YOLO attitude, individualism push to the extreme, the cult of image and collective narcissism and the polarization and the public opinion, we lost the sense of community. We want peace, love and understanding to be popular again.

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

Sometimes, I dream that I compose a song or that I’m working on the recording for one song. This song is killer. This song is fresh and new. It has something special and unique. I feel liberating just to hear it. It’s been such a long time since I haven’t heard anything musically that feels this way.

So if I had something I’d like to create would be in that kind of feel. Something that would be some kind of a musical renewal. But it’s completely silly to pretend that it’s possible in a world where the musical offer is beyond anything people would’ve imagine in the 90’s and the 2000’s. A lot of people that I know have the feeling that everything has already been made. We feel like it’s the end of history and evolution and that we can’t move into a new era.

If I had to create something, it’d be something innovative, that would be a synthesis of every record I know, something progressive and an ultimate concept album. Singles that would be intertwined with a long atmospheric transitions and a mysterious feel. It would have really hooky vocal melodies that would feel a little bit ”poppy” but well balanced. It’s would have harmonized guitar parts and a lot of orchestrations. Heavy, heavy riffs, with distorted fuzz, but not pushed over the top. Well thought and fluid rhythms to would feel transcendent.

Briefly, I don’t have something concrete here, just like in my dreams. It’s just a feeling, a special innovative and well thought of songs with crazy turnarounds and cool permutations. I write too much haha!

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

For me, art has always been something that would have a profound philosophical signification. Art has the function of criticizing the society in which we live in and illustrating its contradictions. To be honest, I will never be a fan of music that talks about partying life style and sex, drugs and rock n’ roll.

I think that poetry has an important role to change people minds about issues in the society and hope for the better. I think music has the role to congregate people in a world where we are more and more individualistic and isolated from each other.

In Sons of Arrakis, we base our music and lyrics around one of the most epic series of novels ever written. So, literature has a huge importance in my life. Not only the universe of Frank Herbert, but I also read Camus, Dostoyevsky, Kafka, Lovecraft, Orwell, and so many others. What I like the most about literature is that books are often a window that allows us to see the world on a different light. Fantastic and sci-fi novels often are allegories of the society in which we live in and usually consist in a dystopian depiction.

I also really like visual art, especially conceptual art. I like things that can make you reflect and think. Something that goes beyond just the superficial things in life. I like art for the way it tries to explain the world in an innovative and original way.

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

Lately, I’ve been craving to travel to be honest. The last time I travel was at the end of February 2020 in Morocco. We were with a group of friends and got back to Montreal on March 9th. It was 4 days before the first lock down on March 13th. In Quebec, everything shut down even the school at that point. It had an effect on me as a elementary school teacher, I had to go back home and leave my students.

It was the last time I travelled outside of Canada. I went to explore the province of Quebec and went to Toronto a few times, but I miss discovering new region of the world, meet new people. I think that travelling and see other cultures and speaking other languages widens you mind and opens it. It is the best way to see the other side.

It’s the best way of creating a dialogue between ”US” and ”THEM”. It’s a way to comprehend that human beings are all the same after all. We all need to be understood, accepted and loved. It’s a quest for harmony and universality.

I’m eager to travel the world and there are many destinations that I aiming for : South Amercia, Maghreb, Sub-Saharan Africa, Middle-East, China, South-East Asia, etc. One thing I’d like to do is to learn to play Sitar properly and to meditate in Nepal. If I have enough time and money, that would be a dream to explore those areas for fore.

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Sons of Arrakis, Volume 1 (2022)

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Review & Full Album Premiere: Breath, Primeval Transmissions (Remixed & Remastered)

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on February 28th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Breath Primeval Transmissions Remix

[Click play above to stream Primeval Transmissions (Remixed & Remastered) by Breath. Album is out Friday on Desert Records.]

A do-over? Sort of. Based in Portland, Oregon, bassist/vocalist Steven O’Kelly (also some guitar) and drummer/percussionist Ian Caton released their debut album, Primeval Transmissions (discussed here) in Feb. 2021 through Desert Records, having recorded on March 20, 2020, tracking the five songs that make up the album live at Rob Wrong of Witch Mountain‘s Wrong Way Recording. In trying to think of what might have been the impetus for the two-piece to go back and have Wrong completely remix (and subsequently to have Justin Weis at Trackworx remaster) Primeval Transmissions, the prospect inherently carries some dismissal of the original edition of the record. Like, what was wrong with it the first time around?

Not much, the way I heard it. Basking in a meditative doom style heavily influenced by Al Cisneros and the first and second albums he and Chris Hakius did together as Om, the original Primeval Transmissions was certainly raw, but that was an essential facet of its sound. It’s right there in the title! As Breath‘s first release — not just their first full-length; their first anything — it left space open in the mix as if to allow the listener a place to put themselves within it, and despite its rawness, it still offered headphone-worthy atmospherics and a palpable sense of mood. This, fortunately, is something Primeval Transmissions (Remixed and Remastered) maintains.

At the same time, the changes in the mix are palpable as the sample of waves — could also be cars on a road, but waves are more soothing so that’s the assumption given the surrounding context — at the outset of opener “Evocation” is more forward, and the wah-bass jamBreath Primeval Transmissions that moves into the second half before the crashout at 9:10 into the 14-minute “Dwarka,” which follows, feels more vibrant in much the same way the cover art by Tyler Wintermute has had its coloring enhanced, while remaining very much dedicated to earth-tones, but brighter and more vivid. The ethic would seem to apply across the entire 45-minute span.

Answering the inevitable question, the band has catalogued the changes and, for those who’d do a side-by-side, kept the original Primeval Transmissions — which they should maybe consider calling the “extra primeval version” or “original edition” or some such — available for listeners. Part of the explanation includes new equipment in Wrong‘s studio, which is fair enough. Wrong Way opened in late 2019, so that — as many producers do perpetually — Wrong would be bringing in different and upgraded gear over time makes sense.

This has allowed for digital versions in Dolby Atmos Surround and Apple Spatial Audio, neither of which I’ll pretend to understand beyond the assumption of higher audio resolution and richer frequency depth — they say that “anomalous noise” has been removed from the drum tracks as well, and sure enough they sound cleaner — which suits a piece like the rolling 12-minute “Battle for Harmonic Balance/Halls of Amenti,” the latter part of which also includes a new extra-bluesy guitar solo from Wrong where Caton‘s shaker percussion previously stood alone on a kind of hypnotic march into the closer “Evocation (Reprise).” Wrong also contributes a lead to centerpiece “Observer,” the jangle of his guitar surprising in its first strum at 2:27 into the song’s total 5:14 but (still) not unwelcome in complementing and filling out the trance rhythm carried over by O’Kelly and Caton.

breath

But a new mix and a fancy hi-fi representation, and even the added solo, are just part of it. O’Kelly re-recorded vocals as well on “Evocation” and “Battle for Harmonic Balance/Halls of Amenti,” and that’s a stark change that enhances the listening experience overall, since as one might expect he’s more confident in his approach to the tracks some two-plus years after they were first put to tape. He’s somewhat less coated in echo as well, and his voice stands up to the forward position it’s now given, like he’s leading the meditation practice before his bass swells with distortion shortly before the six-minute mark, Caton‘s drums fluid and almost jazzy in their fills for the lead cut’s still-spacious crescendo.

The feeling of space — open space, particularly; not just the largesse of the bass tone or drum sounds — was crucial to Primeval Transmissions before and is too in the remix and remaster, which comes across as a purposeful decision. As enjoyable as high-volume listening is, part of the affect of Breath‘s material is its far-back sensibility, the feeling that the band are bringing their audience with them for this sojourn away from the mundane into ethereal not-quite-minimalism. And in comparing the redone vocal track on “Battle for Harmonic Balance/Halls of Amenti” to the earlier “Dwarka” — the two longest inclusions at 12 and 14 minutes, respectively — the change in sound isn’t so jarring as to remove one from the overarching flow of the material.

So perhaps not a do-over, but definitely an upgrade, making sure to keep what was working in sound, chemistry and ambience from the original while bolstering clarity and incorporating new ideas. The added guitar on “Battle for Harmonic Balance/Halls of Amenti” is smoother in its entry over the quiet stretch of shaker in the last two minutes of the song, a strummed layer that might be O’Kelly or might be Wrong backing himself on guitar behind the wistful psych-blues notes that emanate, creating a standout moment for side B in a space that was left open previously, making the turn into the back-t0-business bass and drums at the start of “Evocation (Reprise)” very much a re-grounding leading into the final instrumentalist procession outward; the cymbals brighter and more ceremonial in their impression circa 3:30 than they were, the bass that much warmer as the pair move toward the residual doppler noise that caps in mirror to the beginning of “Evocation” proper.

Ultimately, the revisit to (now somewhat less) Primeval Transmissions feels reasonable and rationalized given the changes that have been made, despite any kneejerk “why go back” reaction one might have on initial approach. It’s a fuller, more consuming sound, and one that comes across like a more complete realization of what Breath intended the record to be. To anybody who’d wonder why not move forward and make another record instead, I’ll point out that I have no idea the status of Breath‘s ‘next album’ or new material generally, and for all I know they could have songs in the works and ready to go; it doesn’t actually have to be one or the other, and more likely isn’t.

There are arguments to be made for the original’s barebones, live feel, but to be frank, that they sound better doesn’t hurt these songs, and in the redone vocals, the adjusted balance of the mix, the added guitar and the fine attention to detail throughout, Primeval Transmissions (Remixed and Remastered) still offers a sense of progression on the part of the band, and listeners who didn’t encounter it the first time around are given that much more depth to dig into as they travel along with Caton and O’Kelly (and Wrong) on this peripatetic exploration. Can’t really call it anything but a win.

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Seum Announce Live Dates Including First US Shows

Posted in Whathaveyou on February 28th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Montreal sans-guitar sludge rockers Seum released their second album, Double Double, earlier this month, and on March 31 they’ll bring their sometimes caustic and increasingly complex wares to the venerable Geno’s Rock Bar in Portland, Maine, entering the US for the first time as a band to play a show. This initial incursion is one of just two US dates — which, given how many US tours are billed as “North American” if they include two Canadian shows (and generally nothing in Mexico), seems like fair turnabout — and followed by a gig in Plattsburgh, New York, before they turn back north to do four more shows Ontario, but hell, that counts. International territory! For the first time! I’m not sure why I need these exclamation points!

You can stream Double Double (yeah, I know; it’ll be in the next Quarterly Review unless something comes up before; I’m doing my best, damnit) on the Bandcamp player below, and in oldschool fashion, the band sent the dates over with a hearty list of acts with whom they’ll be sharing stages. If you’ve never read a list of tour dates and come away with at least one band you’ve never heard of to check out, today might be your day. As for me, do I dare check out Shepherd of Rot? Or TV Moms? Think of it as the good kind of homework.

Info and dates from the PR wire. Cheers to Seum on going new places:

seum DOUBLE DOUBLE square

SEUM – DOUBLE DOUBLE Tour – 1st time in the US and Ontario

After the successful release of its second album DOUBLE DOUBLE, SEUM is about to visit the US and Ontario for the first time to defend their album on stage during the DOUBLE DOUBLE tour. Catch them here:

March 31st: Portland, ME (USA) at Geno’s Rock Bar with Necronomichrist, Candy Striper Death Orgy and Bloodborn
April 1st: Plattsburgh, NY (USA) at Monopole with Shepherd of Rot, Grave Sight and Embers
May 3rd: Hamilton, ON at The Doors with Desiccate + Holofernes Head
May 4th: London, ON at The Richmond Tavern with Hunter Gatherer and TV Moms
May 5th: Toronto, ON at Bar Orwell with Sun Below and Lousy Riders
May 6th: Ottawa, ON at Avant-Garde with TBD (Org by Smol Audio)

SEUM is a Montreal Doom’n’Bass band formed by 3 European French Doom veterans expats formerly in Lord Humungus (Gaspard – vocals), Mlah! (Piotr – bass), and Uluun (Fred – drums). SEUM means Venom in Arabic and is French slang for disappointment and frustration.

The band is only using drums, vocals and bass, no guitars.

DOUBLE DOUBLE is SEUM’s sophomore album. Self-produced by the band and mastered by the legendary John Golden (Melvins, Sleep, Weedeater), the album is available on:

Vinyl: https://www.electricsparkrecords.com/products/seum-double-double
Tape: https://riffmerchant.bandcamp.com/album/double-double
Digipak: https://seumtheband.bandcamp.com/album/double-double

Seum is:
Fred – Drums
Gaspard – Vocals
Piotr – Bass

https://www.facebook.com/Seumtheband
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https://www.electricsparkrecords.com/

Seum, Double Double (2023)

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Altar of Oblivion Sign to From the Vaults; Announce Burning Memories EP & Proselytes of the Apocalypse LP

Posted in Whathaveyou on February 28th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Denmark’s Altar of Oblivion have signed with From the Vaults and will release their new EP, Burning Memories, this summer, with the full-length Proselytes of the Apocalypse coming at some point thereafter. The doomly purveyors were last heard from studio-wise with 2019’s The Seven Spirits (review here), which was their third LP overall and first in seven years since 2012’s Grand Gesture of Defiance (review here), though last year they put up the Live at Godset 2017 live record as well. The upcoming short release and long-player have apparently been in the can for a while, as the band informs they were tracked before the viral shitstorm that began in 2020, which if you’ve been keeping up — and bless you if you haven’t; I’m jealous — was three years ago. Therapy for everyone!

Alas, more likely not. At least not in the US. In Denmark I bet telehealth is free.

Still, doom will help as only doom can. The Seven Spirits is streaming below if you’d like a refresher on where Altar of Oblivion are coming from. I’ll hope to have more on the releases as we get closer to, uh, the releases, but here’s this off the PR wire for now:

Altar of Oblivion (Photo by Hvergelmir Photography)

ALTAR OF OBLIVION sign to From The Vaults

From The Vaults is proud to announce the signing of epic doom/heavy metal band ALTAR OF OBLIVION. The Aarhus six-piece, who successfully released three full-length albums and four EPs since their inception in 2006, has been one of the most convincing acts in the traditional doom/heavy metal Danish scene and is now ready for a new chapter in their careers. The first Altar Of Oblivion battle under the From The Vaults banner will be a mini-album to be released this year.

“We just signed a record deal with Danish label From the Vaults, which will put out a five-track EP named “Burning Memories” in the summer of 2023, followed by our fourth full-length album “Proselytes of the Apocalypse””, the band states. “Both sonic endeavors were recorded prior to the pandemic, and we can’t wait to have them unleashed upon old fans as well as new”.

Altar of Oblivion is an epic doom / heavy metal band from Aalborg, Denmark highly in the vein of the 80s style. Since their formation in the year 2006 (from the ashes of Summoning Sickness), they have released three full-length albums and four EPs, all very well regarded in the most traditional epic heavy/doom metal genre.

Now, in 2023, the sextet is preparing a brand new mini-album to be released this year.

Altar Of Oblivion is:
Mik Mentor – vocals
Martin Meyer Sparvath – guitar
Jeppe Campradt – guitar
C. Nørgaard – bass
Danny Woe – drums
Jannick Nielsen – keyboards

https://www.facebook.com/altarofoblivion
https://www.instagram.com/altarofoblivion/
https://open.spotify.com/artist/2YbeTJvoU9a8Hd1slqzQWK
http://altarofoblivion.dk/

https://www.facebook.com/FromTheVaultsRecords
https://www.instagram.com/from.the.vaults/
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/783kHeWGIDXXqlHRvrkvj1?si=8fa87d088d72498c
https://fromthevaults.dk/
https://targetshop.dk/

Altar of Oblivion, The Seven Spirits (2019)

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Wizdoom Set March 24 Release for Trolldoom EP; “Doomed Fleet” Video Posted

Posted in Whathaveyou on February 28th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

wizdoom

Founded by Chris David, who’s played bass with Therion live and for power metallers Majestica and been in tons of other bands in Sweden, among them heavy rock traditionalists Captain Crimson — whose 2016 album, Remind (review here), was released through Small Stone — the goofily-named Wizdoom are gearing up to release their first EP, Trolldoom on March 24. Two singles have been posted from the impending short debut, and a pro-shop video for “Doomed Fleet” — no, not every track on the thing has the word “doom” in it; only two of five — has been posted that bleeds its love for the classic grandiosity of the form. They note a Candlemass influence in the EP info below. I would tend to agree.

At the same time, in the middle of the song, you’ll find a break with soaring falsetto vocals over top, so nothing is quite so simply defined even at this early stage in their run. That, of course, bodes well for both the impending release and future work, but before we get ahead of ourselves, let’s establish two things: First, Wizdoom is not to be confused with Italy’s The Wisdoom, whose Francesco Pucci went on to found Beesus and Fvzz Popvli, and second, that classic doom metal rules. You can definitely hear they’re not starting from a blank slate — that is, it’s not David‘s first band, and they don’t sound like it — but even so, as beginnings go, this one intrigues.

From the PR wire:

Wizdoom Trolldoom

Wizdoom Announce debut EP TROLLDOOM to be released on March 24th, 2023!

Pre-order here: https://bangover.rocks/products/wizdoom-trolldoom-cd-pre-order

Swedish doom blues band WIZDOOM announce the release of their debut EP TROLLDOOM on March 24th, 2023! Today the band releases the second single DOOMED FLEET:

”Doomed Fleet is a journey through the sound of Wizdoom!

“It takes you from heavy & slow traditional epic doom with powerful vocals, into a 70s-style bridge in falsetto, a bluesy guitar solo, and an energetic ending. The thoughts behind the song were to create something very alive and emotional but still had energy. Lyrics are about an endless journey and you are afraid to meet the doomed fleet of the dead that might end it, but then you realize that you are the doomed fleet. This is also a metaphor that can be applied to certain things in life that might be a struggle or hard to achieve.

“I personally love this song and I’m very proud of it!” – Chris. D

Tracklist:
1. Doomed Fleet
2. The Half Living Realm
3. Way Of The Lost
4. Engrave
5. Trolldoom

WIZDOOM is the spark of Chris David (Majestica, Therion live, ex-Captain Crimson) as how Blues/Doom Metal sound in his head. Inspired by fellow wizards Candlemass, Witchcraft, and Joe Bonamassa, WIZDOOM crosses over stoner, sludge, and the traditional in honor of the creators of this Doom Blues that today we call Metal.

https://www.facebook.com/wizdoomofficial
https://www.instagram.com/wizdoomofficial/
https://www.tiktok.com/@wizdoomofficial
https://wizdoom.bandcamp.com/

Wizdoom, “Doomed Fleet” official video

Wizdoom, “Engrave” lyric video

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HIGH LEAF Announce New Lineup; Band to Appear at Maryland Doom Fest 2023

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

Among the crucial bits of information here as regards nascent Philadelphia heavy rockers HIGH LEAF is that they prefer their moniker written in all-caps. Also that they have a new rhythm section, having brought in Brian Schmidt and Dean Welsh on bass and drums, respectively, at some recent temporal juncture. You might recall in Sept. 2022 they entered Retro City Studios in to record their debut offering with producer Joe Boldizar — whose Philly cred wants for nothing with the likes of The Age of TruthRuby the Hatchet and Ecstatic Vision on the CV, among others — and given the hint below toward an actual release for said full-length, I’m assuming it’s done. Introducing the lineup, I guess they kind of had to say something about it, if only to avoid the first and most obvious question they’d otherwise be asked. By me if no one else.

After reading the initial announcement guitarist Patrick Fiore sent over, I was curious to see if Schmidt and Welsh actually feature on the recording, or what the timing was on their arrival in the group, which wasn’t originally mentioned. I hit up Fiore and asked about putting the band together again. Turns out it’s the older lineup on the record, as the change didn’t happen until December. Fair enough. Seems like it was pretty smooth, as far as reformations go.

I didn’t ask, but I wonder too if there’s a label behind it as yet, or if one will be. HIGH LEAF have put a lot into a professional presentation for a band just getting started — even the shirts they sell on Bandcamp are full-color screens — and the feeling I get is they’re looking to catch as many ears and eyes as they can, make an impact. I’ve got my hopes up at this point that the music stands up to that when it arrives.

They’ll be at Maryland Doom Fest in June, which frankly would be enough for me to want to write about them even without any of the other stuff they have going on. JB doesn’t book BS.

Here’s their update:

HIGH LEAF 2023

Philadelphia Stoner Rock Band HIGH LEAF announce 2023 Lineup

After a short winter hibernation, Philadelphia Stoner Rock quartet HIGH LEAF (All Caps) has shaken off the frost to announce their NEW 2023 lineup and first shows of the year. You can also be on the lookout for information regarding the band’s debut album and single coming in the next few weeks!

Patrick Fiore on reforming the band/new members: “Losing half the band in December was kinda a shock to us. We weren’t really anticipating having to replace half of a band. We had just finished recording our debut album, and were in the process of shopping the record and getting positive responses back. Unfortunately, their departure kinda slowed everything down due to the uncertainty around the band. We were lucky that our long time friend Brian Schdmit’s (who we have known for about 10 years) band was breaking up so we asked him to join on bass. Brian then suggested his friend Dean Welsh to try out on drums for us, and Dean was an amazing fit. It really didn’t take long for us to gel. We even played a show with only four weeks of practice! We are really excited to have these guys on board and look forward to the music we will create together.”

As for the debut Album: ” Last September we recorded our debut album at Retro City Studios (Ruby the Hatchet, Age of Truth, Ecstatic Vision) with Joe Boldizar in Philadelphia, PA. We are really proud of the way the album came out, and look forward to sharing it with the world. We are planning a late spring/early summer release for the album, with a detailed announcement coming within the next two weeks.”

You can catch the band live at:
4/30/2023 @ The Union Firehouse- Mt. Holly, NJ with Sleep Signals, Silvertung, Sick Century
06/22/2023 @ The Maryland Doom Fest- Fredrick, Maryland

HIGH LEAF is
Patrick Fiore- Lead Guitar
Corey Presner- Vocals/Guitar
Brian Schmidt- Bass
Dean Welsh- Drums

https://www.facebook.com/HIGHLEAFBAND/
https://www.instagram.com/highleafband/
https://highleaf.bandcamp.com/
http://www.highleafband.com/

High Leaf, Live at the Khyber Pass, May 13, 2022

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L’Ira del Baccano Tour Dates Start This Week

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

This week marks both the album release and the launch of the tour to support it for L’Ira del Baccano‘s new LP, Cosmic Evoked Potentials (review here). No, it’s not the longest string of tour dates you’ll ever see, but that’s the point; it’s a band getting out and doing what they can to spread the word about their new record. Pretty much the ideal of underground heavy in all its forms. The Italian instrumentalists will be out for nine shows in their home country and of course Germany, and whether it’s the only run they do or the beginning of a series of such sojourns, considering the work they’ve done on the album, I think it’s a good time to show up at a gig if you happen to be in their path or adjacent to it.

That’s pretty much the story here. The record is coming out through Subsound, and most of what I have to say about it is in the review linked above — these tour dates were also posted there, but I’m a big believer in supporting independent tours for cool albums — but if this nudge gets a few more ears on it or maybe a body out to a show, that’s enough of an excuse to me to repeat myself. This is the internet. Not like there isn’t room.

The video that was previously premiered for album opener “The Strange Dream of My Old Sun” is below. By all means, dive in:

l'ira del baccano tour

L’IRA DEL BACCANO COSMIC MARCH TOUR 2023 starts this week!

03-03 MANTOVA – Arci Tom (with I BARBARI )
04-03 ROSENHEIM – Asta Rosenheim (with Status Seeker)
05-03 WURZBURG – Immerhin Würzburg for Freakshow.In.Concert
06-03 NUREMBERG – Kunstverein Hintere-Cramergasse e.V. (with @Pyramid )
07-03 WEIMAR – C.Keller & Galerie Markt 21 e. V.
08-03 HILDBURGHAUSEN – Molle HBN
09-03 MANNHEIM – Geschichtswerkstatt Altes Volksbad
10-03 ULM – Hexenhaus Ulm Rockt Hexenhaus Ulm
11-03 KAUFBEUREN – ROUNDHOUSE Kaufbeuren Subdivisions e.V.

L’IRA DEL BACCANO “COSMIC EVOKED POTENTIALS” pre order :

SUBSOUND: https://subsoundrecords.bigcartel.com/artist/l-ira-del-baccano
BANDCAMP: https://liradelbaccanoofficial.bandcamp.com/album/cosmic-evoked-potentials

L’IRA DEL BACCANO : New album on March 3rd

L’Ira del Baccano:
Alessandro Drughito Santori: Guitars, Loops , Production
Roberto Malerba: Lead Guitar, Guitar FX, Synth, Loops
Gianluca Giannasso: Drums
Ivan Contini: Bass

https://www.facebook.com/LiraDelBaccano42/
https://liradelbaccanoofficial.bandcamp.com/
http://www.iradelbaccano.it/

http://subsoundrecords.bigcartel.com/artist/l-ira-del-baccano
https://www.facebook.com/subsoundrecords/

L’Ira del Baccano, Cosmic Evoked Potentials (2023)

L’Ira del Baccano, “The Strange Dream of My Old Sun” official video

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Desert Storm Premiere “Bad Trip” Video From Death Rattle LP

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

desert storm death rattle

Having marked their 15th anniversary two years ago, Oxford semi-aggro heavy rockers Desert Storm will issue their sixth album, Death Rattle, on March 31 through respected purveyor APF Records. The occasion also brought some change, as concurrent to their celebratory tour — also supporting their last album, 2020’s Omens (discussed here) — the veteran outfit swapped bassists, bringing Matthew Dennett (also of Battalions) in to replace Chris Benoist, who’d been with them at least since 2010’s debut album, Forked Tongues (review here), and probably longer, and also stripped down their lineup, moving from two guitarists to one in bidding farewell to Chris White (who also handled keys, backing vocals and some bass).

That leaves vocalist Matthew Ryan, guitarist Ryan Cole and drummer Elliot Cole (the latter two, who, yes, are twins, also of Wall and the recently-hiatus’ed The Grand Mal) as the remaining founders of a band that up till that point had managed to keep its lineup steady all the while. Longtime followers of Desert Storm may note some shift in dynamic in the direct one-to-the-other in comparing the nine-song/47-minute Death Rattle to its predecessor, but anyone concerned about some lack of impact as a result of the missing guitar need not fret — it’s called layering, as heard in the layered lead lines of “Druid’s Heath” — as there’s still heavy to spare in Desert Storm‘s sound, and perhaps a bit more flexibility around that than there’s been previously.

But the truth is even that’s more a continuation of the steady expansion of sound that’s been taking place all the while in Desert Storm rather than some radical shift brought on by a specific event. That’s not to downplay what either Benoist or White brought to the band, just to say that Desert Storm have been about more than boozy Southern-style burl ‘n’ plunder for years now and Death Rattle continues to move forward. “Master of None” provides a reassuringly weighted opening, a big swing in the drums behind the relatively straightforward, stage-ready rocker, catchy and punchy in kind in its hook and hinting in the melody of its bridge at some of the range that fleshes out beginning with second track (and lead single) “Cheyne Stoking,” also the longest inclusion at 7:46.

With no shortage of crash and thud behind in Elliot Cole‘s drumming, building tension that’s carried over from the leadoff and opening wide as it moves into its midsection, the band move fluidly through a progressive-tinged bombast, Ryan audibly pushing himself vocally to add to the melody around the three-minute mark as much as he brings to the headbanger-chugging crunch just half a minute later after the next turn. “Death Rattle” has a hook of its own and is emblematic of many of the moves Desert Storm make throughout Death Rattle, whether it’s the way the later “Insomniac” bravely lets go of its massive, intense and guttural beginning to shift into a long and relatively minimal stretch before coming back not quite at full oomph for a long march and fadeout, or the acoustic-underpinned album centerpiece “Salt of the Earth,” with its trades in volume and intertwining layers of fuzz and melody.

desert storm

As “Melatone” touches on post-rock in its own floating layers of guitar — if you told me White was actually on the record alongside Ryan Cole, I’d believe you, but the point about the more open sound stands — and echoes the patient intro and subdued finish of the earlier “Bad Trip” (video premiering below), the sense that Desert Storm are perhaps letting the songs breathe a bit more becomes all the more an essential facet of Death Rattle. Even set next to, say, “The Path of Most Resistance” from Omens, the band in their maturity seem comfortable in pulling back on the onslaught factor — in places, lest we forget the frustrated mania that launches “Insomniac” or the wash of crash behind the final chorus of “Cheyne Stoking,” let alone the payoff of “Bad Trip” itself — and that also lets the distinguishing fuzz of “Melatone” and the crush/drift duality of the penultimate “Self Deprecation” have a richer context in which to unfold. Death Rattle, then, becomes not a story of what Desert Storm have lost, but the manner in which they’ve been able to stay on the path of their overarching progression despite the changes in their makeup.

Taken as a whole, Death Rattle is their most expansive offering to date, and maintains the strength of songwriting that’s been so consistent throughout their career while stepping with characteristic boldness onto new-feeling stylistic ground. If there’s a hiccup in the material from bringing Dennett in on bass, I haven’t found it, and as the record unfolds from “Master of None” into the more complex fare that follows, the band come across as well in control of both where their material is going, how it’s getting there, and — perhaps most importantly — why.

They close Death Rattle with the 2:42 instrumental “New Dawn,” which sweeps in on atmospheric guitar and percussion that still has some density of stomp behind; a desert-bluesy vibe without being blues or desert rock. Acoustic guitar returns under the electrics and there’s a vague sense of threat in the tension of its more active parts, but the guitars let it go gently at around two and a half minutes in and Desert Storm finish in a way that’s not so much unlike “Rebirth” from the last album (save for not having vocals), but more efficiently establishes its mood.

It becomes an ending representative in affect if not a total summary of how Death Rattle functions, and underscores the point that Desert Storm, at this stage in their tenure, know who they are and what they want to do as a unit, even as that idea evolves with time. One tends to make note of titles that could be interpreted as endings for the band in question, and Death Rattle — recorded and mixed by Steve “Geezer” Watkins at Woodworm Studios in Oxfordshire — certainly fits that bill, but whether or not it’s last rites for Desert Storm personally, the scope and sense of craft they bring forth is a triumph for them as a group and feels like a level of realization they’ve been working toward for years now. If they keep it going, so much the better.

The video premiere for “Bad Trip” is on the player below, followed by some comment from the band, the preorder link, tour dates and whatnot from the PR wire.

Please enjoy:

Desert Storm, “Bad Trip” video premiere

Matthew Ryan on “Bad Trip”:

“What happened quite naturally during the writing process for Bad Trip, was something just clicked. The thoughts and emotions associated just felt so familiar. It was an obvious choice at the time. This is a Eulogy about a great man who the band knew fondly. March 2023 marks the tenth year of his premature passing, and so it felt fitting to pay tribute by releasing Death Rattle this month. He was a thinker, was studying philosophy and was a self-professed psychonaut. He joined us on tour in our formative years and we loved having him on the road. We admired him and cared a lot about him, has been in our thoughts and our liner notes, but it is high time we immortalised him through song. As we get older, we think about our life experiences as well as his own that he is missing out on. Not able to join us in the journey through life, to see us wed, with families, large milestones and celebrations. He is sorely missed. The title itself refers to a particularly hairy moment in his history where we learned that the intensity of blotter acid is far easier to regulate than that of concentrated liquid acid. It was understood that a single droplet would be sufficient for an intense hallucinogenic experience, however, to mark the final trip of the bottle, somebody decided to lick the glass pipette.”

Preorder link: https://linktr.ee/desertstormuk

Desert Storm is a four-piece progressive metal band, which has been wielding crushing riffs and grooves into earholes around the world for the past 15 years. 31st March 2023 will see the release of their new album ‘Death Rattle’ out worldwide on APF Records (Video Nasties, Possessor, Battalions). In 2023 they will tour extensively to support the release of ‘Death Rattle’.

DESERT STORM ‘DEATH RATTLE’ EUROPEAN TOUR
31.03.23 | UK | Oxford | o2 Academy 2
01.04.23 | NL | Arnhem | Willemeen
02.04.23 | BE | Retie | Cafe Bazaar
03.04.23 | DE | Hamburg | Bar 227
04.04.23 | NL | Den Haag | Paard Cafe
05.04.23 | NL | Eindhoven | Effenaar
06.04.23 | DE | Dresden | Chemiefabrik
07.04.23 | CZ | Prague | Modra Vopice
08.04.23 | SK | Kosice | Collosseum
09.04.23 | PL | Katowice | Katofonia
10.04.23 | DE | Furth | Kunstkeller 027
11.04.23 | BE | Antwerp | Kids Rhythm n blues kaffee
12.04.23 | DE | Aachen | Musikbunker
20.05.23 | UK | London | The Dome
08.09.23 | NO | Stavanger | Checkpoint Charlie
09.09.23 | NO | Sandnes | Tribute
10.09.23 | NO | Oslo | Brewgata
30.09.23 | UK | Manchester | Riffolution Festival
17.11.23 | NL | Amsterdam | The Cave
18.11.23 | NL | Coevorden | MFC

Desert Storm is –
Matthew Ryan – Vocals
Ryan Cole – Guitars
Elliot Cole – Drums & Percussion
Matthew Dennett – Bass

Desert Storm, Death Rattle (2023)

Desert Storm on Facebook

Desert Storm on Instagram

Desert Storm on Bandcamp

Desert Storm on YouTube

Desert Storm website

Desert Storm store

APF Records on Facebook

APF Records on Instagram

APF Records on Bandcamp

APF Records website

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