Album Review: Bang, Another Me

Posted in Reviews on July 28th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Another Me is the seventh full-length from Philly-region heavy rockers Bang, who got their start in 1969 and in 1971 released their self-titled debut through Capitol Records. Like many, their history as a group is long and tumultuous, vocalist/bassist Frank Ferrara, guitarist/vocalist Frankie Gilcken and drummer/lyricist Tony Diorio releasing two more records — 1972’s Mother/Bow to the King and 1973’s Music — in their original era, eventually calling it quits and reuniting in time to put out 1999’s RTZ – Return to Zero before the century turned, then following with 2004’s 2LP The Maze. A handful or two of drummers coming and going in the meantime, Bang‘s reputation as a classic band grew to new generational appreciation with the 2010 release of the 4CD box set Bullets through Rise Above Relics, concurrent to a reissue of the self-titled. As Bang returned once again in 2014 and took to touring life in the modern, post-social media underground, the self-titled was also pressed in 2016 through Svart and has an edition arriving alongside the eight-song, 38-minute Another Me, through the trio’s current label, Cleopatra Records.

All of which is to say that even as Bang‘s legend is set in stone and chasing them down, the direction they’re moving is forward. Another Me is led off by its hooky title-track, transposing personal struggle onto clarion riffing that’s as much classic metal as rock, sharper in tone than one might expect having seen them live, but setting an easy groove through its intro, open verse and volume-surge chorus that would, should and does preface in its structure some of what’s to come throughout the subsequent tracks, as in the layered vocal melodies in “Two Angels” in the mirror position at the start of side B, or the finale “This Night,” which works to vary persona and mood while remaining structurally verse/chorus in the tradition of Bang‘s influences, whether some Beatles poking through in the piano and bouncing rhythm of side A’s “Man of God” and the aforementioned closer, which brings tambourine to the mix — Diorio and the band’s new/live drummer Danny Piselli both feature on the album, but I’ve no clue on the actual division of percussive labor — or the late highlight “Tin Man,” which with its harmonies sounds like the skull from whence Uncle Acid sprang, its chorus complemented by a return of the keys from “Man of God,” the band’s arrangements fluid and unforced, like the tempo and the delivery of the material itself.

I’ll admit I may forever have a soft spot in my heart for Bang after seeing them live however many times, and Another Me accounts for their status as a classic underground band — three LPs on Capitol, which you’ll recall also put out The Beatles, is nothing to sneeze at — without trying to pretend the intervening half-century hasn’t happened. The production sound is modern — I’ve never heard an original-era-heavy act put out a new release with vintage-style recording; would be an interesting experiment — and, again, has a bit more edge to Gilcken‘s guitar tone than was anticipated, which only ends up bolstering the overall vitality. Ferrara‘s vocals are clear amid the proto-metal chug of “Drone Pilot,” and whether it’s “Clouds” turning the riff from “Looks That Kill” into catchy biker rock or the clear-eyed psychedelic lean of “Tin Man,” or the way “Broken Toys” builds into its relatively noisy, solo-topped ending, Bang deliver an accessible and welcoming encapsulation of their sound. They’ve never been as outwardly heavy, and they’ve pushed the scale of their melodicism likewise to a level that would seem to have been reached thanks to their time spent on stages around the US and beyond in the better part of the last decade.

bang 1 (Photo by JJ Koczan)

How many bands do you know who can trace their tenure back more than 50 years — even if they broke up for part of that, as most do — and are still trying ideas in new material? Three? Maybe five? Having grown up as part of the first generation of rock and roll fans in America, Bang are no less a part of the genre’s legacy for their craft than for the obvious passion that continues to drive them. And they may have been tagged as the US’ answer to Black Sabbath or Led Zeppelin in their early going, and one could throw Judas Priest on the pile there for some of the riffs Bang follow here, but Another Me is much more about who Bang are as themselves. Gilcken‘s lead guitar pulling notes in the riff cycles of “Man of God” and soloing in layers around the bass and drums to complement Ferrara‘s vocals, the mid-paced flow of even the the more aggressive “Another Me” and “Broken Toys,” hints of doom abounding there and in the swing of “Tin Man” and the burlier digging-in that takes place across “This Night.” In their atomic-level makeup, Bang are more rock than metal, whatever impact their style may have had on the development of the latter, and Another Me manifests those two sides fascinatingly, with turns of atmosphere and mood that are no challenge to make because of the strength of their songwriting and performances.

That’s not a new formula and I don’t think Bang are hoping to convince anyone otherwise, but as a group whose reputation will precede them for many who take them on, they successfully walk a difficult path in offering Another Me not as the work of Bang circa ’71-’73, but of Bang now. If you’re old enough to answer, are you the same person you were half a century ago? What about 20 years? 10? Another Me isn’t positioning itself as being of any moment other than this one, and maybe that suits FerraraGilcken and Diorio (and Piselli) most of all. Is it their last record? Hell if I know. But 19 years after their ‘most recent’ long-player, Bang are back with a collection that adds to their story rather than pulling away from past accomplishments, and for right now, that’s plenty, more than was expected, and certainly, certainly much more than they owed anyone. Call it a win and be happy it exists.

Bang, “Another Me”

Bang on Facebook

Bang on Instagram

Bang website

Cleopatra Records on Facebook

Cleopatra Records on Instagram

Cleopatra Records on Bandcamp

Cleopatra Records website

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Desertfest Belgium 2023 Completes Lineup (Almost)

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

Man this looks like a wild time. Desertfest Belgium 2023 has just about finalized its lineup, bringing Enslaved, Quicksand, Black Mirrors, Khan, Iron Jinn, Bushfire and a host of others to the bill and teasing that there’s still one more to add. Belgian native. A surprise. You’ll note below that it says “artist” instead of “band.” Could it be a solo act? Curious.

Whoever it is, they’ll join a packed bill that stands out even among the crowded European Fall festival circuit. You can see the list of names below and I sincerely doubt you need me to tell you how badass an assemblage it is, so I won’t. I will point out that it’s a great mix of European and American acts with representatives from Australia in Khan and South Africa in Ruff Majik. If you’re keeping score at home, that’s four continents accounted for across the three days of the fest. Not too shabby.

The latest from the fest is below, as per social media:

Desertfest Belgium 2023 final-ish poster

We are excited to announce the following final bands. Some are big, some badass, some barbaric, some boisterous, and some all of the above! (#129304#) We are talking about:

Enslaved – Quicksand – Kid Congo and The Pink Monkey Birds – Khan – Black Mirrors – LA MUERTE – Fire Down Below – BUSHFIRE – Red Sun Atacama – Iron Jinn – Astodan – Witch Piss

Unfortunately REZN’s European tour was cancelled, so they won’t make it to this year’s Desertfest. We sure hope to welcome them back somewhere in the near future.

On the bright side, we have one final, very talented Belgian surprise artist tugged away in our sleeve! The project is so secret that we can’t say much more just yet, but we will be lifting a corner of the veil pretty soon…

So, why wait?

Satisfy your thirst for the desert and get your Reduced Three Days Combi Ticket or your Day Ticket at our Ticket Page!
https://www.desertfest.be/antwerp/information/ticketing/

Event page: https://www.facebook.com/events/1634817843606240/

Rock out as you rock on! (#129304#)

http://www.desertfest.be/
https://www.facebook.com/desertfestbelgium/
https://www.instagram.com/desertfest_belgium/

Enslaved, Heimdal (2023)

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The Obelisk Questionnaire: Wayne & Joey Rudell of Fuzz Evil

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

fuzz evil

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: Wayne & Joey Rudell of Fuzz Evil

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

Wayne: Well, we’re two brothers that make some of the dirtiest fuzz rock this side of the San Pedro River.

Joey: Wayne and I have been playing music together since we were little kids. Our parents were ungodly religious, so we ended up starting out playing in Church. At one point we were playing 7 days a week if you include the practices for church and our own band including all the shows/services.

Wayne: Of course, that ended when they found out we listened to Marilyn Manson and Tool.

Joey: Yeah, we’ll the church started turning to a Cult anyway.

Wayne: Hell, but at least we got to learn how to play gospel out of it.

Joey: Right lol. So, our first band was called 12tone. It’s cool to have a recording from when you were just a kid. Some of those songs are a Jam. We were totally a Prog Rock band. Probably because we were so into Tool at the time.

Wayne: We have a bandcamp for 12tone still out there. https://12tone.bandcamp.com/album/vertigo

Joey: Man, the song Vertigo is still a jam. We played a bunch of local shows as 12tone and then we just kind of morphed into Powered Wig Machine. All the same band members. Really nothing changed except the style of music.

Wayne: The song Seven Four kinda got us into the whole stoner rock movement. It’s wild because our mom was an acute paranoid schizophrenic and the bridge section of Seven Four has a recording of a phone call I got from her.

Joey: I’d say that our very first Powered Wig Machine album still had some 12tone feel to it. Like the song Death by Suplex. That still was very progressive. We played a ton of shows as Powered Wig Machine and really went on some great Journeys. I guess Fuzz Evil happened because Daniel (Drums) and Dusty (Guitar) were both having kids and couldn’t commit as much time to playing anymore.

Wayne: Joey and I wanted to do something different, and it quickly became our main project.

Joey: I really like Fuzz Evil, it’s something that is more akin to Wayne and I playing when we were kids. Just the two of us writing riffs. We play off each other well.

Describe your first musical memory.

Joey: We’ve been playing music together for as long as we can remember.

Wayne: I have distinct memory of Joey and I jamming. We were probably 16 and 12, maybe younger. We were recording on one of those old tape recorders where you had to press down the play and record button at the same time. We had our little amps cranked up to 10 rocking out something fierce.

Joey: Right in the middle of the recording our Mom burst into the room and screams at us “Turn it down” “Turn ..it..DOWN” “THINGS ARE FALLING”.

Wayne: hahaha. The moment she walked away we started jamming again.

Joey: I remember listening to that recording like a 1000 times. It was hilarious to hear the few second pause after the door closes and then us starting to play again.

Describe your best musical memory to date.

Wayne: Probably playing with Eagles of Death Metal at the Rialto Theatre in Tucson.

Joey: That was a rad show. That show was pretty much sold out.

Wayne: After the show we were hanging out with Jesse, Danger Ehren (from Jackass) who was working as their camera man, and the guys from Black Magic Flower Power showed up for a real rager in the Rialto green room. What a fun night.

Joey: I know this is not like a single memory, but honestly, I’d say that the first time we went on tour up the coast with Orgo will always hold a special place in my heart. We had a blast. Shenanigans every night.

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

Wayne: I’d say, my views on how to put out music and the music scene in general. I guess I had this old guard view of how things had to be done. Because that was the way they were always done. Truth is, there is no right or wrong way to do it. Nowadays it’s even easier for us with platforms like TikTok, Wix, Bandcamp, etc.. You can build a whole career, with a huge demand, without even leaving your house. Within the last year I’ve seen so many people in the entertainment industry gain notoriety on Tiktok without ever touring. Then the moment they do tour they are playing major venues. It’s changing the whole way I’m looking at what we are doing with Fuzz Evil.

Joey: So was this question supposed to be about music or are you trying to take us down the rabbit hole. Honestly, I can’t really think of any belief I firmly hold. Beliefs are perspectives based on assumptions. Most things in life are gray, not black and white. If you go down any path long enough you’ll realize that believing anything too much is probably steeped in logical fallacies. Haha, this perspective probably stems from the emotional trauma of having a schizophrenic mother, and being punished for illogical things as a child.

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

Wayne: I think artistic progression is a double-edged sword. It can lead you to some real genre inspiring music, similar to what King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard do on every record, or it can lead you down a path where it’s almost like an inside joke, musically. I love Mars Volta, but their last couple albums were so progressive that they lost us. Still an amazing band, but it’s a double-edged sword.

Joey: I’m with you on that. I’d also say that artistic progression has a lot to do with why you want to progress artistically. Some people write music for themselves, and some people write music for others. Which one takes precedence will drive the progression. I think there should be a balance between the two. I love playing music because I like to make something I can look back on with pride and for others to appreciate. For us, even though it was the same members between 12tone and Powered Wig Machine we changed band names and genres. Now we are on to Fuzz Evil, still Wayne and I. I don’t think there is any right or wrong way to go about it.

How do you define success?

Joey: I believe that our lives are our legacy. To me creating something that others appreciate, whether it be art, music, or just memories is success to me. I always joke that you can spend your entire life staying at home doing what you always do and years will go by and you’ll have no distinct memories, or you can go out and do something wild and have a great story to tell.

Wayne: I’d define success as when people look back on your whole body of work and it holds some weight to it. Maybe, we’ll never be arena famous, but I love making music and that’s the true inspiration. When people look back at Fuzz Evil or Powered Wig Machine, it might not hold as much weight as Led Zepplin or Black Sabbath, but it may hold its own like Rare Earth. I’m ok with being the Rare Earth of stoner rock.

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

Wayne: Uh, Two Girls one Cup?

Joey: That’s a good one. I still wish I never say that Youtube video of those two dogs humping and then the one dies mid banging. In all honesty, I’ve been pretty lucky in life, and haven’t had to experience anything extremely traumatic that keeps me up at night.

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

Wayne: We are currently making shorts of an animated series called “Fuzz Off”. It’s an animated series that personifies guitar pedals. Kinda like South Park meets Beavis and Butthead. I’m really hoping we can get a deal with someone like adult Swim to make these full-time.

Joey: I agree. We’ve come up with about 50 scripts already. These are hilarious. Here is the first episode: https://www.tiktok.com/@fuzzevil/video/7247169567292804398

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

Wayne: I believe it’s the tangible expression of who you are as a person. When a song is heavy or beautiful you are experiencing that artist’s interpretations of those emotions through their life experiences.

Joey: To get laid or help others get laid. Haha, I mean think about it. What IS the purpose of art. At a fundamental level it’s peacocking. Seriously though, as an artist I’d say the most essential function of art is to express myself and communicate my emotions. As an appreciator I’d say the most essential function is escapism. Something that helps you forget about everything for just a moment.

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

Wayne: Season 18 of APEX. I’m a huge gamer. They really messed up the ranking in Season 17. Everyone hit the highest rank you can hit. Something like 20% of the player base. I hit Masters, haha. Looking forward to something a little more challenging in Season 18. Hit me up, I’m Wolf_Blitzinator on PS5 if you want to get down.

Joey: Uh, I don’t know. Retirement? Actually, I’m a huge gamer too, but I haven’t touch Diablo 4 or the Zelda yet because I’ve been too busy working on music/art stuff. Looking forward to playing these. I mean, if we are dropping gamertags I’m Shakalo on everything.

https://www.facebook.com/FuzzEvil/
https://www.instagram.com/fuzzevilaz/
https://fuzzevil.bandcamp.com/
https://linktr.ee/fuzzevil
https://www.fuzzevil.com/

Fuzz Evil, New Blood (2023)

‘Fuzz Off’ ep. 1

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La Chinga Stream “Light it Up”; Primal Forces Out Oct. 6

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

la chinga

The shenanigans of La Chinga‘s forthcoming LP, Primal Forces — the Vancouver trio’s first LP since 2018’s Beyond the Sky (review here) — are immediate and multifaceted. There’s some getting it together noise, classic heavy rock modernized from ’70s influences, and a Van Halen-style break in the second half. The message is clear: La Chinga are rock and rollers. They work from an ideology of what that represents in their raucous grooves and brash, Mötley Crüe/KISS-ish chorus plastering, and as the opening cut from the album, yeah, “Light it Up” serves this purpose remarkably well, dropping hints of Fu Manchu along the way for good (and fuzzy) measure.

And before I turn you over to the PR wire info, you should absolutely know that my tone in talking about the song, the band, the record to come, is all wrong. That paragraph above? It’s fine. I don’t see any typos or blatant misinformation. I certainly stand by what I said. But if I was actually to paint you a picture of what’s going on in “Light it Up” or with La Chinga generally, there’s just about no way I’d not be throwing around images of beer flying through the air, muscle cars, the odd bit o’ smoke and a louder party than phrases like “work from an ideology” can ever hope to capture. Still, one does one’s best and we move forward. Maybe by the time the album comes out I’ll be more fun.

Not holding out tons of hope there, but however you say it the song is a blast. It’s streaming at the bottom of this post, of course. Info came from the PR wire:

la chinga primal forces

LA CHINGA share new single “Light It Up”; new album “Primal Forces” due out October 6th on Ripple Music

Vancouver-based hard rock power trio LA CHINGA have inked a worldwide deal with Ripple Music for the release of their fourth album “Primal Forces”, due out on October 6th. Stream their boisterous new single “Light It Up” on all streaming services now!

LA CHINGA is a hard rock power trio with psychedelic powers sitting on the world’s edge in Vancouver, Canada. Drawing from Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, MC5, and their own superbad habits, the band has established a beachhead with two albums on Detroit’s cult label Small Stone Records and a penetrating buzz across Canada.

Their upcoming fourth album “Primal Forces” was written and recorded during the tumultuous times of riots, lockdowns and pandemic: a perfect ground for dystopian vibes to permeate the lyrics and album storyline. “The themes of love, sex, death, and hell in a handbasket, so why not go for it and go out with a bang are what drive this album to new territory for us,” says the band. The rock’n’roll is heavy, the riffs are flying and so is LA CHINGA. Madness, frustration, joy, terror and ecstasy all mingle in a rip-roaring fusion of electric hooks, hip-swaying grooves and choruses to be sung along til the world collapses!

New album “Primal Forces” Out October 6th on Ripple Music
US preorder: https://ripplemusic.bigcartel.com/products?utf8=%E2%9C%93&search=chinga
Bandcamp preorder: https://ripplemusic.bandcamp.com/album/primal-forces

TRACKLIST:
1. Light It Up
2. Ride The Dragon
3. Bolt Of Lightning
4. Backs To The Wall
5. Witch’s Heart
6. The Call
7. Stars Fall From The Sky
8. Electric Eliminator
9. Rings Of Power
10. Motor Boogie

La Chinga was born in Vancouver, BC in 2012, although in reality it was conceived about a year earlier when bassist/vocalist Carl Spackler was surfing in SoCal and his Chicano beach buddies kept hailing each other with the mysterious phrase: “La chingaaaaa!”

Drummer/vocalist Jay Solyom and guitarist/vocalist Ben Yardley—also a noted professor of theremin—were conscripted shortly after, both veterans of Vancouver’s notoriously dead-end music scene, both beautifully obscene in their own right. La Chinga’s self-titled debut record was rushed out of a makeshift studio in 2013 on nothing but fumes and the liberating force of not giving a shit, landing like a hairball crossed with a stink bomb inside a world of yoga pant commerce, condo developments, and Macbook “musicians.” This was a revolutionary act—or maybe a devolutionary one, at least.

Meanwhile, Spackler was busy pouring all of his demented ’70s obsessions into wild three-minute homemade music videos, finding the visual language of fuzz itself inside shitty horror films as he furnished the great infernal drive-in of his mind. Somehow, miraculously, this charming brew conspired to make La Chinga the hottest bunch of stoned ape groovers to hot wheel out of the Pacific Northwest since forever.

“Freewheelin'” followed in 2016 on Detroit’s Small Stone Records, and so did unhinged tours of Europe, more year-end accolades, festival slots (420 Fest, Sasquatch), and Spackler’s continuing evolution as the Orson Welles of retard-o-tronic found footage scuzz. And then things got serious: in late 2017, La Chinga entered Vancouver’s fabled Warehouse studio with no-less-fabled producer Jamey Koch (DOA, Copyright, Tragically Hip). The result? “Beyond the Sky”, 45 minutes of sublimely confident freedom rock, sometimes meaty and beaty, sometimes glam-handed, and occasionally even dirtbag pretty, where the listener gets rolled, boogied, and otherwise supernaturally conveyed well beyond the sky, maybe even beyond ridiculous. This is how it feels to get chinga’d, amigos. Now the fiery trio is gearing up to release their new offering “Primal Forces”, to be unleashed in the fall of 2023 via Ripple Music.

LA CHINGA is
Carl Spackler – Vocals & Bass
Ben Yardley – Guitars, Vocals & Moog Synth
Jay Solyom – Drums Percussion & Bg vocals

http://www.facebook.com/La-Chinga
https://www.instagram.com/lachingaband/
https://lachinga.bandcamp.com/
https://www.youtube.com/user/LaChingaVideo/

https://www.facebook.com/theripplemusic/
https://www.instagram.com/ripplemusic/
https://ripplemusic.bandcamp.com/
http://www.ripple-music.com/

La Chinga, Primal Forces (2023)

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Morag Tong Releasing Grieve Oct. 6; Preorders Open Tomorrow

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

If I’ve got my days right — and I might not — then tomorrow, Friday, July 28, marks the launch of preorders for the second Morag Tong full-length, called simply Grieve as we all inevitably must at some point or other, and set to arrive Oct. 6 through Majestic Mountain Records. The London-based heavy psych four-piece released a video last week for the first single from the record, “At First Light,” which is a slow nidding journey through seven minutes of vibes meditative and lush, some lead guitar seeming to work under an influence perhaps from King Buffalo‘s “Orion” as the band make ready to dig into a rougher-edged midsection, still expansive as it is.

Those who got on board with Morag Tong‘s 2018 debut, Last Knell of Om (review here) should be well enough at home in “At First Light,” the title of which also recalls Ancestors for me, and find the new song strongly built on lessons from that five-years-ago-now release. No clue as to what the rest of the four-song release holds, but the fact that they’ve dedicated the entirety of the vinyl’s side B to “No Sun, No Moon” should probably be a clue as to the level at which they’re digging in. ‘Deep’ is the likely answer.

The following came from Majestic Mountain‘s newsletter:

Morag Tong Grieve

MORAG TONG – GRIEVE

Album releases October 6th; Vinyl ships at the same time

London based Progressive Psych Doomsters Morag Tong have a video out for the first single to be released from upcoming sophomore album “Grieve” due out on October 06, 2023 via Majestic Mountain Records.

“Grieve” is the band’s long-awaited follow-up to 2018’s acclaimed full-length debut “Last Knell of Om” and marks their first release on Majestic Mountain Records. Regarding the album Vocalist/Drummer Adam Asquith states “We wanted to create something huge and heavy, but also gorgeous, textured and atmospheric. Incorporating both massive, aggressive wall of sound sections and more pensive, stripped back ambient instrumentals I think we have hit that sweet spot – something anguished and anxious, crumbling and dangerous, yet eerily beautiful and oozing with a love for life itself.“

GRIEVE comes in
180-gram heavyweight vinyl
Color-in-color: Yellow and black marbled with red center
Single sleeve with 3mm spine
Full color insert
Black poly-lined inner sleeve
Protective plastic sleeve
33 rpm heaviness
STRICTLY LIMITED TO ONLY 200 COPIES
NO WHOLESALE, EXCLUSIVE TO MAJESTIC MAILORDER

Tracklisting
Side A
At First Light
Passages
A Stem’s Embrace
Side B
No Sun, No Moon

Recorded and mixed by Mike Bew at Foel Studio
Mastered by Brad Boatright at Audiosiege
Artwork by Kuba Sokólski

MORAG TONG:
Adam Asquith – Vocals / Drums
Alex Clarke – Guitar
Lewis Crane – Guitar
James Atha – Bass

moragtong.bandcamp.com
facebook.com/moragtongband
instagram.com/morag.tong

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

Morag Tong, “At First Light” official video

Morag Tong, Grieve (2023)

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Sidus Premiere “Stage III: Seismos” Video From New EP Seismos

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

sidus

Textural heavy post-rock/metal instrumentalists Sidus released their three-song Seismos EP on June 18 through Argonauta Records. For the Berlin-by-way-of-Athens four-piece, it is their second EP behind 2020’s Seasons Reversed and a slew of singles and remixes tossed about their Bandcamp page, the very address of which speaks to their Greek roots while their actual sound is more varied as presented on the new offering. Delivered in three parts, “Stage I: Rupture” (3:09) leads off, followed by “Stage II: Seismic Wave” (6:17), and “Stage III: Seismos” (8:46) closes, each piece shifting fluidly from one to the next if not directly bleeding. Silence has a presence here as well, and the band seem no less at home in minimal spaces than in the precision crush they loose in the second two of these three songs, which, in following the EP’s stated theme based around earthquakes or an earthquake, is when the shaking happens.

Founded at the dawn of this troubled decade by Spyros Olivotos (also bassist for Argonauta-denizen post-metallers Unverkalt), the band land at their first effort with their current lineup with a corresponding sense of departure. Also issued in 2020 as their first single, “Envy” from the debut EP hinted at Eurodoom mournfulness, and even the underlying rush that the title-track of Seasons Reversed seemed to be in has more or less dissipated for Seismos, which executes even its heaviest assault methodically. To mix and master, Sidus worked with Steve Lado at SL Studios, and the drums/percussion were done by Kostas Milonas at Bree Studios in Athens, and that would seem to imply that the guitar, bass, keys, various and were self-recorded.

If that’s true — and it’s entirely possible I’m wrong; I’m human and that shit happens — it would be the first time or at very least one of the few sidus seismosthe band hasn’t worked with producer Panagiotis Katsaounis at P.K. Productions in Greece, but the timing on their relocating to Berlin might also be a factor there. But in comparison to what they’ve done in the last couple years, Sidus‘ sound has taken on new dimension with this EP, and one has to allow that a shift in the recording process might be part of why.

One way or the other, Seismos — its theme further applied as a metaphor for panic attacks — is rich in its depth. Quiet at the start of “Stage I: Rupture,” growing metallic in tone for “Stage II: Seismic Wave,” a last chug and guitar howl there signaling the end of chaos inner or outer, and bringing a more atmospheric approach to “Stage III: Seismos” that has aspects of Neurosis circa 2001-’04 — there’s some “Stones From the Sky” in the thickened-riff sweep of the crescendo, and the initial guitar reach reminds of the end of “Burn” — they are very clearly working on a broader trajectory than any one piece of the three might encapsulate, but each cut stands on its own well.

The first is synthy post-rock, evocative and more than a soundscape but also that, with strums of threatening distortion creeping in near the finish. Of course, that’s a preface for the post-metalcore riffing of “Stage II: Seismic Wave,” which it’s easy to imagine both emo and death growl vocals accompanying, maybe together, and which veers into blastbeats with slower keyboard on top for a pre-midsection shove that is as tumultuous as Sidus get, followed by a brief break and rebuild in the second half of the song, its aforementioned chugging resolution coming through as firmly declarative.

And while “Stage III: Seismos” is intended to capture the inward brain-on-fire, chest-tightening tremor that panic becomes when physically manifest, it’s more than aural anxiety, and unfurls itself with complexity drawn from the two songs preceding, whether that’s the ambience of the opener or the more aggressive punch of the centerpiece. “Stage III: Seismos” becomes a fitting culmination for the release in finding a figurative middle between the first and second tracks, and the use of theme throughout demonstrates another way in which Sidus are growing — you know, to go with the lineup, the move from Greece to Germany, the production — as they continue their pursuit of the intangible toward their inevitable debut full-length, when and however they may get there.

Video for “Stage III: Seismos” premieres below. Heads up on suicidal imagery and implications if that’s a trigger for you. Words from the band and more follow from the PR wire.

Please enjoy:

Sidus, “Stage III: Seismos” video premiere

Sidus on “Stage III: Seismos”:

“The calm before the storm. Loss of control. Finally the explosion hits. Experiencing a complete mental and physical breakdown. Everything feels unstable, unsure, impermanent. Time stops and you need to face your worst fears. Panic attack is finally realized. Carrying the scars of this life changing experience as faultlines. However, even if an earthquake has the power to destroy its surroundings, we still find the strength to adapt and evolve, optimizing our survival mechanism.”

Credits:
Created by Sidus.
Mixed and mastered by Steve Lado at SL Studios, Athens, Greece.
Drums and percussion recorded by Kostas Milonas at Bree Studios, Athens, Greece.
Album cover designed by Vagelis Petikas (Revolver Design), Athens, Greece.
Released via Argonauta Records.
Video production by Giuseppe D’Addurno.
Acting by Matteo Forni.

Listen on all major platforms: https://ingrv.es/seismos-md1-y

‘Seismos’ is a three song concept album about earthquakes. The theme of the songs correlates this explosive phenomenon to the individual fear and shock of a panic attack. The album explores the breathtaking beauty of this natural disaster, while raising awareness about mental health issues. Intense earthquakes create the unsettling feeling of insecurity due to their disastrous characteristics. The three songs are describing the genesis (‘Rupture’), path (‘Seismic Wave’) and expression (‘Seismos’) of the event. In the same way, panic attacks are often described in three stages.

The early stage starts with a mental fog/blur. Shortly after, several body parts are acting out of control while the person feels kind of paralyzed, leading to the final expression, which is the collapse of the entire body (the shivering). Even though an earthquake (or the experience of a panic attack) is an intense event, there is always a calming period of realization afterwards. The last calming moments of the EP is resembling the hopeful sense of security when the control is restored and the event has passed.

Hailing from Athens (based in Berlin), Sidus have carved a reputation for crafting cinematic, instrumental compositions in the same vein as bands like God Is An Astronaut, Russian Circles and The Ocean Collective. The band started out as a one-man project by Spyros Olivotos, which has seen the release of one EP and two singles (‘Seasons Reversed’ November 2020, ‘Pale Dot’ June 2021, and ‘Dark Flames’ December 2021). Their latest single ‘Dark Flames’ has been their most impactful release to date, gaining solid recognition among the genre-seeking audience. The band is currently working on their first debut album and are planning their first live shows.

Sidus, Seismos (2023)

Sidus on Facebook

Sidus on Instagram

Sidus on Bandcamp

Sidus links

Argonauta Records website

Argonauta Records on Facebook

Argonauta Records on Instagram

Argonauta Records on Bandcamp

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Splinter Set Aug. 25 Release for Role Models

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

Splinter

Amsterdam glam-informed classic-heavy semi-punk other-hyphenated-words rockers Splinter have signed to Noisolution and announced that their second full-length, Role Models, will be out next month. You might recall their debut, Filthy Pleasures (review here), came out in 2021 through Robotor Records, the label run by members of Kadavar. That endorsement was a boon to the uptempo purveyors of hook fronted by Douwe Truijens, best known for his time in Death Alley.

The band issued the single “Velvet Scam” in a new video a couple months back, and if you didn’t catch it, that’s below along with an unboxing video — those are strangely entertaining; it’s amazing what humans will watch; ‘here’s a person opening a thing’ — for the record itself. A release show has been lined up for Sept. 1 in Leiden, the Netherlands, at Studio Klaplong, and of course more info on that is below, culled from the band’s socials and included amid the promo text for the record, which came through the PR wire.

Dig that cover:

Splinter Role Models

Splinter – “Role Models” Out 25th August via Noisolution

Cheeky and snotty, the Dutch fourpiece dances between the styles. And sort themselves between punk, rock, pop and they give the guitars back to the dancefloor. A contemporary and fresh retro rock album that is danceable and catchy through and through – but most of all fun!

BIRTH OF JOY and DEATH ALLEY, two of the best Dutch live bands, played one last tour together and fell apart. How close “birth” and “death” are sometimes, is also shown here. After the tour, parts of both bands found each other again in the rehearsal room and formed SPLINTER. The debut album was released via Robotor Record, the label of Kadavar, who then found too little time besides their own band activities and thankfully recommended the band to Noisolution. We did not have to think long…

The album will be released on August 25th via NOISOLUTION!

RELEASE SHOW: Friday 1 September in a very special venue in Leiden with special guests The sha-la-lee’s and Skallebieter. Tickets are strictly limited: only 120 available. Order yours right away via https://lastnightonearth.stager.nl/web/tickets

SPLINTER question everything musically and throw their preferences and influences together. Danceable, sleazy, full of pop and yet a feisty heavy rock album. Much reminds of the late 80s, when rock flew apart disoriented but full of ideas in all directions. Punk was over, wave was over, metal was coming up, alternative rock was knocking on the door… SPLINTER have a bit of everything. “Heavy rock ‘n’ roll” is pretty accurate. Sometimes I also refer to the punk foundations of the band, because it’s cheeky, defiant and unorthodox” says singer Douwe Truijens.

The biggest difference to the debut album is that they were able to get Mario Goossens (drummer of Triggerfinger) as producer for the new record and that they took a lot of time to write and record. “Unique is the punk sound with Hammond organ and the energy and dance moves of the singer,” Douwe says with a smile, “for me it’s very important that the songs are catchy and danceable. I always like bands that have that. It doesn’t have to be mellow music to be poppy, it can still rock hard and make your hips swing.”

Songs like “Velvet Scam” or “Bottom” let the disco ball rotate, whereas “Every Circus needs A Clown” rather leaves room for duels between guitar and organ. Cheeky, defiant and unorthodox they dance between the styles. And sorts itself between Blondie and Iggy, Viagra Boys and The Who, Hanoi Rocks and Killing Joke. A contemporary and fresh retro rock album that is danceable, that grooves, rocks but above all is fun and announces a fantastic live band!

And the artwork is also a clear nod to Pop, reminiscent of Warhol or Lichtenstein, who liked to pick up trivial motifs from everyday culture. The Banana Man shows what today’s role models of the world are: “just fruits in suits.” Political leaders and so-called influencers are “role models,” smartly dressed but empty and disposable. Everything plastic, everything fake, image instead of message and appearance instead of content. Superficially colorful, but still with depth and message.

https://www.facebook.com/splintergeneration
https://www.instagram.com/splinter.generation/
https://www.youtube.com/@splintergeneration2166
https://open.spotify.com/artist/5R9WJjT2i9zmBWMNWD2rLp
https://splinter-music.com/

http://www.noisolution.de/
https://www.facebook.com/noisolution
https://www.instagram.com/noisolution/

Splinter, “Velvet Scam” official video

Splinter, Role Models unboxing teaser

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Ealdor Bealu Working on New Album

Posted in Whathaveyou on July 26th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

After supporting Earth last month and gigging with the touring Cortége in their native Boise, Idaho, melodic progressive heavy rockers Ealdor Bealu entered The Chop Shop to begin recording their fourth long-player, presumably for release sometime next year. The band comprised of guitarist/vocalists Carson Russell (also Ghorot) and Travis Abbott (also Sawtooth Monk), bassist/vocalist Rylie Collingwood and new drummer Cameron Elgart (also guitar in Crush the Monster) are now finished at least with some part of that process, having spent four days working with Andy Agenbroad on the follow-up to 2022’s Psychic Forms (review here), which came out through Metal Assault Records and whose echoing strains I don’t even have to put on to hear in my head. Not a complaint.

Questions abound. What does the new album hold and what’s next and is there more to do — overdubs? on to mixing/mastering? timeline on the release? — and what’s the big show they’re about to announce later this week, perhaps even seven or so minutes after this post goes live if my usual luck for these things holds? Well, this is usually the part where I tell you I sent the band a message or something to find all this stuff out, but the truth is I keep up pretty vigorously on Ealdor Bealu‘s doings, and after a while it kind of starts to feel a little stalker-ish. Like, maybe this band from more than halfway across the country has something better to do than field who-what-when-wheres from my couchbound ass. Maybe for today we can just be stoked the recording is nearly done and leave it at that? Yeah? Cool.

Here’s what they had to say for the time being, emojis and all:

ealdor bealu with Andy Agenbroad

That’s a wrap on 4 incredible days recording at The Chop Shop recording services!! It was such a pleasure to reunite with the legendary Andy Agenbroad, a consummate professional and an excellent human being (#128420#)

One more short session to go next Monday and we’ll have this thing in the bag!! Next up will be Z.V. House of Rabbitbrush Audio on the mix, can’t wait to see this music continue to evolve and grow (#127926#)

Next Ealdor Bealu show will be announced later this week, and it’s gonna be a BANGER!! Stay tuned…

EALDOR BEALU is:
Carson Russell: Guitar, Vocals
Rylie Collingwood: Bass, Vocals
Travis Abbott: Guitar, Vocals
Cameron Elgart: Drums

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

http://facebook.com/metalassaultla
http://instagram.com/metalassault
https://metalassault.bandcamp.com/

Ealdor Bealu, Psychic Forms (2022)

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