Friday Full-Length: Kaiser, 1st Sound

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

Note immediately that despite the title it’s not actually the first sound the band made. Helsinki-based Kaiser — guitarist/vocalist Olli “Otu” Suurmunne (Headless Monarch, Altar of Betelgeuze, etc.), bassist Pekka “Pex” Sauvolainen (also Amputory) and drummer Riku “RiQ” Syrjä — formed 10 years ago and had a self-titled EP out in 2014 with five tracks. But 1st Sound, even with the invisible asterisk, is the debut full-length from the Finnish three-piece, and in its 10-song/45-minute stretch, the 2018 release speaks to an older school take on heavy rock. It knows it, too. They tell you that pretty much ‘1st’ thing.

Beginning at a subtle misdirection of slow nod, “High Octane Supersoul” is one of two instances of that last word in a title that I’ve ever encountered in a heavy rock context. If there are more within the genre, I hope someone will tell me, but seeing the word immediately associates “High Octane Supersoul” and the initial impression Kaiser make on 1st Sound in my mind with Dozer, who opened their own first album, 2000’s In the Tail of a Comet, with the telltale rush of “Supersoul.” If Kaiser are upping the stakes on that, the boldness is no less admirable than the opener’s hook, which carries some shove that continues in “Desert Eye,” which is duly sandy and coursing in pace, the trio building momentum and opening into the chorus in a way that reminds of Sasquatch — they answer that particular uptempo thrust later as well in “Fuzz of Fury” — and revel in the lead layers, apex shouts and dense groove with an effects current shifting directly into “We Bleed for This.”

As to what they bleed for, it’s this. And that’s clearly true, or at least was when 1st Sound was recorded. While bringing their own elements of songwriting and performance to their material, Kaiser did not end up playing fuzzy riffs by accident. They sound like fans, and when “Desert Eye” winks at Kyuss or they unfurl the elephantine lumber of “Earthquake” — very clearly a song named after its riff, and not the only one here between “Ouroboros,” which runs in circles late with depth-charge pings of synth in the verse just before its last chorus, space-doom jamming closer “Galactic Crusade,” or the aforementioned “Fuzz of Fury” and “Desert Eye” — part of the passion driving it comes from that foundation. But while familiarity abounds and (potential, because it could always be a coincidence) dogwhistles like “High Octane Supersoul” drop hints about where the trio are coming from, 1st Sound doesn’t come across as derivative or like it’s trying to hard to perform to stylistic tropes.

Instead, after the speedier first three songs, Otu puts a bit of Chris Cornell soul into “Voidmaster” over a slightly-slower Kaiser 1st Soundprocession that’s more swing than thrust at its start. They kick the tempo in the second half, but they pair that with a big slowdown after the solo, so it’s a bit of everything and a departure enough from “High Octane Supersoul,” “Desert Eye” and “We Bleed for This” to signal the change to the next stage of the record, which expands on what Kaiser have thus far put forth with an atmospheric verse in “Ouroboros” before the noted expressively spheric guitar in its midsection. There’s nothing too fancy about “Ouroboros” structurally, but it makes bummer lyrics about species death catchy, and that’s not nothing when it comes to considerations of songwriting and piecing an album together.

And to be sure, whatever elements they might explore around it, as with the echoing synthy drone in “Intermission” along with the quiet creeper guitar, Kaiser remain rooted in heavy rock and roll. A sample as “Intermission” gives over to “Earthquake” warns that “What you are about to hear is very disturbing indeed.” Crashes ensue and immediately the intention is toward largesse. Bass anchors the verse as the massive central riff takes a break. Don’t worry, it comes back, and the moment of cathartic nod is the stuff of hair-on-end autonomic response, but they can’t resist turning after three minutes into the total 4:43 to a faster swing to back the solo. They have a separate ending riff that’s kin to the chorus but different enough to be something else, and they finish the highlight cut with suitably big crashes and residual effects fade, drums beginning the smooth shift to “Fuzz of Fury.”

Doing so means meeting stomp with sprint. Without mapping out BPMs, “Fuzz of Fury” is as fast as Kaiser get on 1st Sound, but more, it is the complement and culmination of a movement that began on “Intermission” and cycled dynamically through “Earthquake” and its own willful contrast thereof. I don’t know if those three songs, or perhaps the latter two, were presented live in that manner, but on the record they sound like that’s where the idea came from. And the adrenaline-mainline, scream-topped crescendo of “Fuzz of Fury” supports the case. That last shout finishes cold and the penultimate “King of Horizon” chug-thumps in as if mocking its own pomp. A layered melodic pre-chorus leads into a hook answering the screams from the track before, but “King of Horizon” and “Galactic Crusade” are the two longest inclusions on 1st Sound, and that speaks to the band presenting a different kind of immersion at the album’s end.

Various spoken/old movie samples play out over a slowdown and they instrumentally seem to flesh out in a way they haven’t yet, loosely psychedelic and progressive but still grounded rhythmically. “King of Horizon” — make no mistake, critical in its point of view rather than celebratory — ends big but is more about how it gets there, and “Galactic Crusade” builds up through its verse to a plod not as actively engulfing as “Earthquake” but that allows the floating line of fuzzy lead guitar proper space in the jammy middle stretch that follows, bass and drums again keeping it together. On a record that’s been so tight, the sense of letting go in “Galactic Crusade” is palpable; the drums drop out and they bring it down gradually to silence, having succeeded not only in paying tribute to the aughts-era influences that formed them, but brought a fresh perspective and sense of craft to that backdrop. It’s a rocker, to be sure. Sometimes that’s just what you need.

Kaiser haven’t done another full-length yet, but they will play Truckfighters Fuzz Festival in Stockholm in a couple weeks and they took part last year in Ripple‘s Turned to Stone Chapter 6 (review here) split alongside Norway’s Captain Caravan, so there’s no indication more won’t be forthcoming. In the meantime, as always, I hope you enjoy this one and thank you from the bottom of my wretched heart for reading.

Every week, barring disaster or other various circumstance (at a fest, etc.), I do a little summary of the week, a bit about what’s been going on in my life while the writing that’s taken place was happening. I’ve been doing this for about a decade now, I guess, and it’s become a crucial outlet for me in how I organize my existence.

Here’s the update.

There is very little in my life that doesn’t feel insurmountable difficult right now. Things that should feel or be easy aren’t, and while I might sit and effectively bang out 1,200 words about a record in a given morning before The Pecan gets up if I’m lucky, even that satisfaction seems to be taking place at some distance from where I’m sitting.

I have failed and am failing my family, daily, as a husband and father and am seem to be unable to provide the support either of them needs, especially my daughter, who gives way less of a shit that the dishes and laundry are done than she does that I think she’s a good person. And we butt heads daily. All the time. Last night, I’m on the couch, actively begging her to go to bed before it comes to frustration and yelling and everyone is miserable most of all her and — to her eternal fucking credit — she went upstairs, but sure enough was back down 10 minutes later.

It wasn’t until my wife pointed out that given how late it was (coming on, then after 9PM), she likely would be asleep if she could. In the context of yesterday at school, when I got called in to pick her up early for punching, kicking, biting her para and stepping on another kid’s hand — obviously an outburst triggered by something but I have no idea what — the restlessness makes sense. She felt remorse enough to keep her up at night.

But I had the wrong read. And I do all the time. I’ll say it’s not without reason — because this child has never fucking listened to me and these days often just ignores me outright when I speak to her — but my frame of reference is out of balance. She’s not a bad person. She’s struggling. Yelling doesn’t help. Didn’t put her to bed last night. She needs sympathy and openness that apparently I’m too broken to provide when called upon to do so.

There are a thousand daily frustrations. She’s rude, she’s disrespectful or disregarding of others, whether it’s kids at drop-off, my wife and I, or the adults at school. She picks her nose. She swisher her spit compulsively. She hits me every single day. And I get caught in this cycle of feeling like shit, acting like a shit, giving her the response she wants — because what she’s looking for is to manipulate attention and the direction of individual attention and energy, and my god is she good at it — and who the fuck ever did any good being sarcastic to a small child? Or nagging her to keep her finger out of her nose?

This is a passionate, brilliant, beautiful person, with an obviously complex inner life. How many trans six year olds have you met? I’ve got one. We read books all the time. As I sit here and write, she is across the table finishing a Lego submarine that’s rated for a kid three years older with however many hundreds of pain in the ass tiny pieces, demonstrating focus, attention to detail, an ability to follow instructions, and joy and pride at the accomplishment. Healthy, wonderful feelings. And all I can think about is the shape of the day when her pinkeye has moved from the left to the right and that means no school and how are we just going to get through like we’re still in the first-year trenches, while also being a bit relieved that no one at school is going to get hurt and a whole separate emotional load from that. What the fuck is wrong with me?

Nothing new, to be sure. In fact, I find at this point in my life that I’m exhausted by the whole thing. I turned 42 last week. For what on earth do I need to be hating my body like I did when I was 15? What essential function isn’t there that would let me get through the day? I practically leak privilege. I don’t work outside the house. I have a wife who only grows more amazing with each passing year. A kid who is twice exceptional and often difficult — you’re not supposed to say that about kids anymore, I know, but everything else is a euphemism and when something is hard it shouldn’t be diminished; I’d belittle her troubled times no more than my own — but also wonderful and funny and fun and clever, who makes plays on homophones I think just because she knows I like them.

I have my family, a house, a car, a puppy, a trampoline in the back yard. We spend our evenings together playing Zelda on Switch. Every now and then someone flies me to Europe for a fest. How can I be so miserable when I have everything I could ever need or want, other than to have seen My Sleeping Karma?

Meds have gotten me nowhere. I need to be back in therapy, because aside from this site, I don’t have anybody in my life I really feel like I can vent to and be heard while being neither short on emotional support from family — my wife makes me fried cheese in fucking heart shapes! — but there’s this giant opaque block in my way from reading my life the way I should and while I know it’s not like this all the time, it kind of also is with enough regularity that I’m left wondering what the fuck the point of any of it is? Another 30, 40 years if I’m lucky? Of self-loathing and bitterness?

And separate from all of this, I think I might be one of those intolerable dudes who has nothing to talk about except music, because, well, I’ve met a bunch of new humans in the last two months and it wasn’t until going through weirdo prog bands I’ve seen with one of the dads at my daughter’s birthday party that I realized it was probably the most engaged I’ve been with someone not in my immediate circle in months. So, again, fuck.

Thanks for reading if you did. Have a great and safe weekend.

FRM.

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Projeto Trator Premiere New Single “Agonia”; Out Tomorrow

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on October 27th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

projeto-trator

Tomorrow marks the release of ‘Agonia,’ the new single from Brazilian grime-sludge two-piece Projeto Trator, who are using the track to say goodbye to founding drummer Thiago Padilha, making a reportedly final appearance here as Igor Oliveira joins guitarist/vocalist Paulo Ueno in the project moving forward. They begin, then, by living up to the title. “Agonia” runs five minutes and while one might recognize some Godflesh churn in Ueno‘s riffing, that could just as easily be the omnidirectional discontent the two outfits share. Sound-wise, Projeto Trator have a roll and lurch of their own, with Padilha seeming to revel in his last march as Ueno snarls and shouts the song’s Portuguese lyrics.

And while of course the band — who’ve been around since 2006 and put out their first EP, the stonerlier-fuzzed A Bombástica Barafunda do Batizado; time would seem to have made them angrier, which is relatable — have tonal density to spare even in a guitar/drum configuration, that rawness becomes part of the persona of “Agonia” as its five minutes unfold, feedback and inhumane rumble plodding into motion at the outset and Projeto Trator holding it there until about three minutes in when they ever-so-slightly up the tempo and introduce the next section. The roll remains flattening, and is steady in its procession but leant a chaotic aspect by the rippling low distortion of its chug as Ueno and Padilha uphill-shove toward the eventual deconstruction and noisy ending.

“Agonia” makes no secret of its harsh purposes and I won’t delay your engagement with it much further — you could always start the song; it’s right down there — except to point out the curiosity that is Projeto Trator outsourcing lyrics, in this case to Luciano Penelu of Erasy. That’s not a letting-go that every artist who has contributed lyrics to a band can handle, and in addition to the awkwardness of putting someone else’s phrasing over your own material when you’ve never done that before, it’s a pointed change in methodology, and I suspect part of the idea’s appeal is the challenge it presents. I don’t know if Projeto Trator will keep up the ethic as they move on from “Agonia,” but at very least they offer a brutal proof of concept in the single ahead of whatever may come next.

Also, I ran those lyrics through a major internet company’s translation matrix and while I won’t print them here for fear of misrepresenting the art — if they wanted it to be in English, they’d make it that way — and, yup, that’s depression.

The PR wire has narrative — blessings and peace upon it — and the song has punishment below.

Please enjoy:

Projeto Trator, “Agonia” track premiere

Formed at the end of 2006 in São Paulo/SP by Paulo Ueno (guitar and vocals) and Thiago Padilha (drums), Projeto Trator has thirteen releases, including two on vinyl: “CORIFEU” (2020), released by 1954 Records from Argentina, and the split with the trans artist UMBILICHAOS, entitled “Projeto Trator & Umbilichaos” (2019) (Crocodilo/Zoom Discos). They toured almost all of Brazil, South America and Europe totaling more than 600 shows in 14 countries to date.

Anchored in the do-it-yourself punk playbook the duo created their own label Crocodilo Discos, focused on physical and digital releases, in addition to organizing their own events and festivals such as Crocodilo Fest, with bands from other states. They are also responsible for audiovisual production, producing music videos, graphic arts, capturing and mixing most of their releases. The band bases its sound on elements of sludge, stoner and doom, being one of the pioneers and main representatives of these aspects in Brazil.

Psychedelic melodies, trances, repetitions, noises, echoes, choruses, apocalyptic choirs, low tunings, dissonances, muddy fuzzes, slowness, chaos and lo-fi aesthetics are natural elements of the duo, which is not concerned with patterns, trends and places- common on shelves. Acidic lyrics and corrosive humor, based on human behavior and its paradoxes, combined with decolonial criticism in Portuguese, are part of the duo’s atmosphere.

Recently, the drummer and founder, Thiago Padilha, left the band, but the idea continued with the effective entry of friend, enthusiast and former drummer of Os Brutus, Harpago and Vingança Suprema, Igor Oliveira (drums and vocals).

The band’s newest release, the track “Agonia”, was recorded at the Plug’n Play studio in the city of Curitiba, and is the band’s last record with drummer Thiago Padilha in the band, and will be the first released with new lineup, produced by frontman Paulo Ueno himself and Ivan Terrorscreen. The track marks, at the same time, a new phase in the band and a continuity in their already traditional work, maintaining the elements inherent to the band. The single precedes a new album and a series of episodic releases, presenting yet another theme that is already traditional to the band: “Agonia” portrays nonconformity, suffering, pessimism, even while searching for a meaning to existence.

The song presents a new concept, in which the band Projeto Trator (represented by its frontman) invites vocalists from other bands to write song lyrics. In this one, the guest is Luciano Penelu, lead singer of the Brazilian sludge/doom band Erasy.

Projeto Trator on Facebook

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Projeto Trator on Bandcamp

Projeto Trator website

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Nebula Drag to Release Western Death on Dec. 8

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

That’s some vital chug going on in the new Nebula Drag single, which is reportedly one of the seven cuts on the San Diego trio’s upcoming third long-player, Western Death, which will see release through Desert Records on Dec. 8 with preorders opening tomorrow. The song in question is called “Crosses” and it starts the 34-minute full-length with heavy garage-psych thruster with a declarative howl of guitar, only to see the momentum continue into “Sleazy Tapestry” ahead of the space out on “Failure” and the sort of evening of roll that seems to happen from there as they make their way to what sounds like the entire room full of broken strings that might’ve resulted after the recording of the closing title-track.

We have some time before the album’s out, but you might want to take note if you dig the video, because I think the first two weeks of December are going to be packed and then things will be relatively quiet (ha) until late January or so. At least that’s how it traditionally has gone, except we’re pushing further into end-of-year scheduling than used to happen. So it goes. Let more new music be the worst shit that happens to humanity on a given day. Especially when it’s good.

The PR wire has preliminaries:

Nebula Drag Western Death

‘Western Death’ out on Desert Records on December 8th, 2023

The San Diego trio NEBULA DRAG, have announced their third full-length and vinyl LP release.

Their first release in four years, ‘Western Death’ is a 7-song thundering full-length.

The new album showcases their signature sound – massive drums, blazing guitar, and fuzzy bass – as they push the psychedelic heaviness into new musical territory.

Vinyl Preorder for ‘Western Death’ begins Friday, October 27th on Bandcamp.

Limited Edition – 300 LP’s of four vinyl variants.

Video Shot & edited by Stephen Varns

Band Members:
Corey Quintana – Guitar / Vocals
Garrett Gallagher – Bass
Stephen Varns – Drums

https://www.facebook.com/NebulaDragz/
https://www.instagram.com/nebuladrag/
https://nebuladrag.bandcamp.com/

https://www.facebook.com/desertrecordlabel/
https://desertrecords.bigcartel.com/
https://desertrecords.bandcamp.com

Nebula Drag, “Crosses” official video

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The Watcher Sign to Cruz Del Sur; Debut Album Coming Next Year

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

Perhaps by the time they get the ball rolling on their debut album through Cruz Del Sur Music — to which the band are newly announced as signed — Boston’s The Watcher will have a band photo. Maybe they won’t; you know heavy metal is shy like that sometimes. I don’t like looking at pictures of myself either, and that might be the most metal thing about me save for the crushingly accurate lack of self worth of which that’s a symptom, but then again, I’m not promoting a first record being put out by one of the best underground heavy metal and doom imprints going. The Watcher — who are not to be confused with San Fran’s The Watchers or any other lookie-loo type monikers out there — find themselves, or will soon find themselves, in that very position.

The trio released their debut EP, Your Turn to Die, in 2021. You’ll note the cover where the band photo discussed above might otherwise be. You can stream the EP below because Bandcamp hasn’t actually collapsed yet after firing half their staff blah blah corporate bullshit ruining lives. Comprised of three songs and topping 13 minutes, it was recorded in 2017. Six years ago! How you can guess the album will be good is that Cruz Del Sur probably wouldn’t ink a band whose only offering came out two years ago and was recorded six years ago and who haven’t spent all that time touring incessantly without at least hearing some new music first, whether that’s demos or partial finished tracks as The Watcher will look to complete the recording process in November, as the PR wire tells it. Though if it was just Your Turn to Die that hooked the label, that’s fine too.

From the PR wire:

the watcher your turn to die

THE WATCHER Joins Cruz Del Sur Music, New Album Due in 2024

Cruz Del Sur Music is proud to announce the signing of Boston classic metal/doom outfit, THE WATCHER. The label will release the band’s first full-length album in 2024.

THE WATCHER is the 2016 creation of guitarist/bassist Max Furst, who, after many years of playing darker and heavier styles of metal, wanted to write music that was more driving, epic and up-tempo. Furst embarked on finding the proper musicians, first landing on drummer Chris Spraker. The two promptly began work on the music that would become the Your Turn To Die EP. But first, they needed to find a vocalist.

“After years of dead ends and countless ‘no’s,’ I was fortuitously introduced to Paden Reed in late 2020 through a mutual acquaintance,” says Furst. “Paden was the first person to come at the project with sincere enthusiasm, and in July 2020, he sent me a demo of what would become Your Turn To Die. I was beyond floored by his delivery of the vocals and his interpretation of the music. I immediately knew we had something special, so we spent the next few months developing vocals for two additional songs from a 2017 instrumental demo. Paden then went into a studio to properly record the vocals; we then mixed and mastered the entire session.”

The Your Turn To Die EP finally saw the light of day in 2021. The wait for THE WATCHER was worth it — the EP was warmly received across the metal underground for its tight, immediate songwriting and timeless blend of BLACK SABBATH and NWOBHM. (To boot, all physical copies of Your Turn To Die are sold out!)

Furst says THE WATCHER is currently set to finish tracking the album this coming month with Sasha Stroud at Artifact Audio in New York City.

With new tracks on the way along with the promise of future live shows, joining the Cruz Del Sur Music roster is the logical next step for THE WATCHER.

“Finding a label that felt right for the band was tricky,” says Furst. “I was fortunate enough to be put in touch with Cruz Del Sur through a mutual friend. Cruz Del Sur stood out to me because of the wide range of bands they release. While everything is squarely within the scope of the metal genre, each band has a distinct and unique quality about them. Above all, all of the folks at Cruz Del Sur seem incredibly passionate about the music they release. To me, that implies a true personal investment in what they do and that is the most important trait a label should have, in my opinion.”

The Watcher is:
Paden Reed – Vocals
Max Furst – Guitars & Bass
Chris Spraker – Drums

https://instagram.com/the.watcher.heavy.metal
https://thewatcherheavymetal.bandcamp.com

cruzdelsurmusic.com
facebook.com/cruzdelsurmusic
cruzdelsurmusic.bandcamp.com

The Watcher, Your Turn to Die EP (2021)

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Ufomammut Premiere Crookhead EP in Full; Out on Halloween

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on October 27th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

ufomammut crookhead

Italian cosmos compilers Ufomammut will celebrate Halloween 2023 with the release of Crookhead, a new three-song EP. Releasing through their own Supernatural Cat imprint and of course handling the artwork in-house through their (partial) visual arts alter ego Malleus as per standard operating procedure, the three-piece of guitarist/vocalist Poia, bassist/vocalist/synthesist Urlo (also The Mon) and still-recent-but-has-an-album-under-his-belt-now drummer Levre — all of whom make a great deal of noise — revel in raw spaces across the 17-minute outing, which serves triple duty as the follow-up to 2022’s Fenice (review here), a preface to their 10th album next year, and a solid merch-table feature for the Fall tour they’re about to start this weekend ahead of the EP’s actual release. No sweat to those in Maastricht and Munich, though. I’m sure they’ve got you covered as regards vinyl.

Also crush. Crookhead begins its offload with the title-track and works righteously longest to shortest through “Crookhead” (8:59), “Supernova” (5:12) and “Vibrhate” (3:35), and wholly justifies its release in about the first 15 seconds. “Crookhead” quickly establishes itself as a physical force of tonality. There’s historical context as regards the trajectory of their growth, but in order to make this sentence shorter than the actual EP, I’ll spare you some of it.

Suffice it to say that Ufomammut have never stopped seeking new dimensions within the void. Their heavycraft, which as the PR wire notes is nearly 25 years on from its initial manifestations, is singularly identifiable and constantly evolving Ufomammut (Photo by Francesca De Franceschi Manzoni)within its sphere. When Poia and Urlo (both founding members) brought Levre on as drummer in 2021, coming back from a hiatus announced in Jan. 2020, the result on Fenice was reorientation of principles.

Crookhead shares with Fenice a play between the expansive and the claustrophobic. Ufomammut craft huge spaces and drop them on your bones with all due gravity, and Crookhead effectively and efficiently showcases the various sides of their methodology, from the title-cut’s ultra-low distortion rumbling at a mean clip into the sampled-speech-topped central riff.

They ride that current of aural concrete to a stop at 1:50 and kick back in with Levre setting the slow march on hi-hat, as the speech echoes, complemented by grunts or effects-twists, whatever it might be — since it’s technology I don’t understand I’ll just call it magic — and pummel themselves into a break after four minutes in with a pinging sound like the construction across the street from where I live when they pull out rebar (it’s not the same sound, I checked), and a creeping melody of mosquito-buzz synth to bolster the tension ahead of the smooth return to full volume. Onward they roll, to victory, death, or that spot on an accretion disk where you might get a bit of both at once as the light bends around you and you watch the universe’s entire future unfurl in whacked-out spacetime.

It’s a build, and they’re galloping by the finish, but because it’s Ufomammut, “Crookhead” is as much an expression of ambience as heft. With a memory-wipe 30 seconds of drone/synth noise, “Supernova” soon enough meets “Crookhead” on its own level of impossibly-dense noise riffing, but the turn toward atmospherics happens sooner, and is more patient, more willfully psychedelic.

Interesting to note that the vocals are spoken there too, but it’s a short stretch as Poia soon draws a solo over the soundscape, and a few more words lead into to a full-bore layered melodic verse before opening again to the speech and cycling through one more time. As will certainly happen, the vocals are in part consumed by the surrounding instruments, but that’s part of the immersion; the sense that all things are being consumed and so you are too. This is who they are.

They’re also the quiet psychedelics and the furious bludgeoning, and however fuck-yes-this-is-what-my-brain-needs the heaviest moments of Crookhead might be, dynamic is essential to the character of Ufomammut new or old. They have purposefully stripped down their style, but “Crookhead” and “Supernova” and “Vibrhate,” which also opens synthy and runs that thread alongside the relatively uptempo push of the guitar, bass and drums. For them, it’s a departure in structure and among the most straightforward, ‘traditional’-style metal songs they’ve ever done, but it’s neither out of place in style nor sound next to the other two, and the defined verses help ground the proceedings ahead of the last shove. In the spirit of the EP as a whole, I’ll call it ‘brutiful.’

And I’ll leave it there so you can actually hear the thing. You know the drill. Tour dates, preorder link and whatnot follow the EP premiere on the player below, courtesy of the aforementioned PR wire.

Please enjoy:

Ufomammut, Crookhead EP premiere

UFOMAMMUT presents a brand new EP, Crookhead, with three new songs that continue the expansion of the band’s sonic vision. The EP was recorded at Flat Scenario Studio in Italy by Lorenzo Stecconi in July 2022, and was mixed and mastered at Triple Sun by Stecconi. The artwork, as with all of the band’s releases, was designed and printed in Italy by Malleus Rock Art Lab, the graphic design collective of which Poia and Urlo are both founding members. The artwork, with its handprinted and numbered silkscreened cover, adds an artistic touch to the EP. Crookhead is a foretaste of the band’s impending tenth album, which will be released when the band celebrates their 25th anniversary in 2024.

The band reveals, “Crookhead is the Middle Earth, the gateway to something that lies within us and has yet to come, a bridge connecting our rebirth place called Fenice and the incoming journey. These three pieces perfectly represent how the new UFOMAMMUT form takes definitive shape and unfolds its fangs towards space, towards the unknown lands that await each of us. Crookhead is simply the final result of the urge to write new music, the natural introduction of our next record.”

UFOMAMMUT’s Crookhead EP will be released on Halloween, October 31st. The EP will released digitally and in a limited edition vinyl version of 500 copies: 200 on Marble Red Vinyl, 200 in Marble Gold Vinyl, and 100 in clear transparent vinyl which will be available only on the band’s fall tour. Preorders are now live at the Supernatural Cat shop HERE: https://www.supernaturalcat.com/home/?s=crookhead

UFOMAMMUT has booked a Fall tour across Europe in conjunction with the release of Crookhead, with dates running from October 29th through December 3rd. See the confirmed dates below and expect new tours to be announced into the new year.

UFOMAMMUT Tour Dates:
10/29/2023 Samhain Festival – Maastricht, NL
10/30/2023 Feierwerk – Munich, DE
11/04/2023 Sonic Rites – Helsinki, FI
11/15/2023 Mostovna – Nova Gorica, SLO
11/16/2023 Arena – Wien, AT
11/17/2023 Turbina – Budapest, HU
11/18/2023 Stadtwerkstatt – Linz, AT
11/19/2023 Kamienna – Krakow, PL
11/20/2023 Hydrozagadka – Warsaw, PL
11/21/2023 Kabinet Muz – Brno, CZ
11/22/2023 Club 007 Strahov – Prague, CZ
11/23/2023 Cassiopeia – Berlin, DE
11/24/2023 Hafenklang – Hamburg, DE
11/25/2023 4AD – Diksmuide, BE
11/26/2023 GeBAude 9 – Koln, DE
11/27/2023 P8 – Karlsruhe, DE
11/29/2023 Effenaar – Eindhoven, NL
11/30/2023 Le Bulle – Lille, FR
11/01/2023 Petit Bain – Paris, FR
11/02/2023 La Poudriere – Belfort, FR
11/03/2023 Old Capitol – Langenthal, CH

UFOMAMMUT:
Poia – guitars, effects
Urlo – bass, vocals, effects, synths
Levre – drums, effects
Ciccio – soundlord

Ufommammut website

Ufomammut on Facebook

Ufomammut on Instagram

Supernatural Cat website

Supernatural Cat on Facebook

Supernatural Cat on Instagram

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Slift Announce 2024 UK/European Tour Dates Supporting New Album Ilion

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

slift

Should probably go without saying that this won’t be the last tour French heavy space rockers Slift announce supporting their upcoming label debut for Sub Pop Records, Ilion, or the last region. The record is set to release on Jan. 19, and from the looks of the below and the band’s ethic of hard touring up to this point, it seems likely they’re entering a genuine album cycle. They’ll do these dates in Western Europe and then likely run down a checklist of various other parts of Europe, North America, maybe South America, Australia/New Zealand. Wouldn’t be surprised if they popped up in Japan or Egypt or South Africa. The demand seems to be there, and the trio up to this point have been ready to go just about anywhere they’re asked. They’ve got a long road and a lot of work ahead of them.

The tradeoff, I suppose, is entering the next phase of their tenure as their exit-velocity ascent to the forefront of the international heavy underground has now led to things like listener expectations and the inevitable internet reactionary I-don’t-see-what-the-big-deal-is shrugs and shit-talking. That’s how you know they’re popular. But even my couchlocked ass got to see them this year, so if you haven’t sit tight and I’m sure they’ll get there faster than social media can complain about their not.

Speaking of socials, that’s where this comes from:

slift poster

Oï !

Thrilled to announce that we’ll be on tour next year, starting with Europe & UK !

There’s some crazy venues, we can’t wait to see ya’ll during this new trip around the sun.

Tickets available via the farcaster portal : sliftrock.com

Peace (#128406#)(#128420#)✨
Poster by Caza
Radical Production

SLIFT live:
23.02 Brighton UK Chalk
24.02 Manchester UK Gorilla
25.02 Dublin IE Whelan’s
27.02 Leeds UK Brudenell
28.02 London UK Electric Ballroom
29.02 Lille FR L’Aeronef
01.03 Paris FR Cigale
02.03 Saint-Malo FR Route du Rock Hiver
13.03 Toulouse FR Le Bikini
15.03 Nantes FR Stereolux
18.03 Bruselles BE Ancienne Belgique
19.03 Utrecht NL Tivolirendenburg
20.03 Köln DE Club Volta
21.03 Groningen NL Vera
22.03 Hamburg DE Gruenspan
24.03 Kobenhavn DK Loppen
25.03 Gothenburg SE Pustervik
26.03 Oslo NO John Dee
27.03 Stockhom SE Hus 7
30.03 Berlin DE Lido
01.04 Leipzig DE UT Connewitz
02.04 Stuttgart DE Im Wizemann
03.04 Esch sur Alzette LUX Rockhal
04.04 Zurich CH Mascotte
05.04 Lyon FR L’Epicerie Moderne
06.04 Marseille FR Espace Julien

SLIFT are:
Jean Fossat : guitar, vocals, synth
Rémi Fossat : bass
Canek Flores : drums

https://www.facebook.com/sliftrock/
https://www.instagram.com/sliftrock/
http://slift.bandcamp.com/
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAW8AFXEOMkqInX3f9HD0aA

https://www.facebook.com/subpoprecords
http://instagram.com/subpop
https://www.subpop.com/

Slift, Ilion (2024)

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Acid King Announce Final Shows of 2023

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

Beginning this weekend at Heavy Chicago in, yup, Chicago, heavy psych heroes Acid King will begin to wind down a busy 2023 executed successfully after several years of restructuring. Founding guitarist/vocalist Lori S. remade and arguably reimagined the band at least partially ahead of this Spring’s Beyond Vision (review here) LP, which if it isn’t a contender for album of the year is only proof of the dumbassery behind those lists in the first place. Forever in short supply are acts who’ve been together in one form or another for 30 years and are still exploring new ideas. Acid King not only did that in 2023, but righteously expanded their base aesthetic as part of the process.

I just had a whole rant here going on about how crucial Beyond Vision is for how it grows Acid King‘s sound, opening stylistic doors to synth, meditative psych, etc., but let me say this instead. These are some badass shows, and if you’ve ever seen Acid King before or you haven’t, the imperative of the moment is here. As someone who was lucky enough to do so this August, I urge you to see Acid King for this album, playing these songs (plus classics, of course). Yeah, it’s select-shows rather than 28-gigs-in-30-days or whatever, but if you’re on the West Coast of the US or can put yourself there without much difficulty, I promise you have valid reason to do so.

That’s all for now. From the PR wire:

acid king

ACID KING on tour this fall!

Following their recent European and South American live takeovers, US psychedelic doom trailblazers ACID KING have just announced their final string of shows for 2023, as they keep supporting the release of their widely acclaimed comeback album “Beyond Vision” on Blues Funeral Recordings.

Released in the spring of 2023 as part of Blues Funeral Recordings’ PostWax series, ACID KING’s new album “Beyond Vision” sees the band venturing into epic sci-fi-inspired territory, the result of a collaboration between Acid King founder, guitarist and vocalist Lori S., guitarist Jason Landrian (Black Cobra), bassist and keyboardist Bryce Shelton (Hawkwind) and drummer Jason Willer (Charger, Jello Biafra). Breaking a new record in the international heavy scene by reaching #96 on the Billboard Top Albums chart, the anticipated followup to 2015’s “Middle of Nowhere, Center of Everywhere” has garnered unanimous press from critics and fans alike, bringing ACID KING to the doom and heavy metal scene’s forefront with their thundering, swinging and trip-inducing heavy psychedelia.

Following their extensive summer European tour and shows in South America, the mighty trio is now set to come full circle with a string of West Coast shows as well as an appearance at Chicago’s Heavy Chicago Festival this fall.

ACID KING ON TOUR — Tickets on sale at this location
Oct 28 – Chicago, IL – Heavy Chicago Festival (w/ Trouble, Bongzilla, November’s Doom)
Nov 3 – Portland, OR – Mississippi Studios (w/ Abronia, Simple Forms)
Nov 4 – Seattle, WA – Substation (w/ Simple Forms, Sorcia)
Nov 17 – Los Angeles, CA – The Belasco (w/ John Garcia Band, Mondo Drag, HTSOB)
Nov 18 – San Diego, CA – Brick by Brick (w/ Mondo Drag, Nebula Drag)
Dec 9 – Bellingham, WA – Structures Brewery 8th Anniversary (w/ Kadabra, Dark Meditation)

Buy Tickets Here: http://www.acidking.com/tour-dates/

ACID KING lineup:
Lori S. – guitar & vocals
Bryce Shelton – bassist & keyboardist
Jason Willer – drummer

https://www.facebook.com/AcidkingSF
https://www.instagram.com/acidkingrocks/
https://acidking.bandcamp.com/
www.acidking.com

https://www.facebook.com/bluesfuneral/
https://www.instagram.com/blues.funeral/
https://bluesfuneralrecordings.bandcamp.com/
bluesfuneral.com

Acid King, Beyond Vision (2023)

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Megaton Leviathan to Release Instrumental LP Magick Helmet Dec. 8

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

Megaton Leviathan

Remaining reliably too weird for the planet, Megaton Leviathan will issue an all-instrumental LP called Magick Helmet on Dec. 8. The band, if it wasn’t always, seems at this point to be a solo outlet at least in terms of composition for founding frontman Andrew James Costa Reuscher, below mentioned only by his surname, though the PR wire notes a live trio in the sentence before listing Reuscher as the only person in the lineup, so maybe one needs to be less uptight in definitions of things like ‘who’s in the band’ and ‘what are songs anyhow.’

The latter I’d count among the most essential questions Megaton Leviathan have been asking since their groundbreaking 2010 debut, Water Wealth Hell on Earth (review here), and that Reuscher and various others haven’t found a definitive answer is only to their credit. I’d expect Magick Helmet to be cosmic, ritualistic in its making, and expansive in its reach if perhaps raw in presentation, but those are broad generalizations on purpose, because this is a band who’ve pushed themselves into an individualistic exploratory place and have made it plain they can and will do whatever the hell they want. Right on.

Info from the PR wire:

megaton leviathan magick helmet

MEGATON LEVIATHAN Announces Instrumental Album ‘Magick Helmet’

The Magick Helmet is demanding of the listener pushing them to their limits. Armed to the teeth with face-melting fuzz and Godzilla delays courtesy of the Doomgazer Pedal (a collaboration between Emmergy FX UK and MEGATON LEVIATHAN). It’s an album that you don’t just listen too in enjoyment but endure. Begging the question who is this rhythm section extemporaneously pulsing deep within the thrall of the MEGATON LEVIATHAN. The Magick Helmet will be unleashed on December 8th, 2023.

Reuscher comments:

“Outside inside, dawn the Magick Helmet and take her for a ride. It is available free on the band website and band camp, for the friends, fans and supporters of MEGATON LEVIATHAN. Thank you.”

Succumb to the immersive soundscapes of The Magick Helmet. “The Final Form Of Nothing Is Final” exudes wailing guitars, driving percussion and rumbling bass melodies. The unceasing momentum keeps you hooked – it’s a constant, while soaring, banshee-like wails freely spiral above. Taking a haunting and twisting turn, “The Final form Of Nothing Is Final (A Slight Return)” makes for an eerie sequel as the familiar returns feeling not quite so familiar. Harsher, darker, the sound begins to warp at times feeling sharp like a razor’s edge. Dissonance, noise, screeching shrills, all lay waiting in “The Belly Of The Beast”. The discordant textures take prominence, while dynamic percussion and bass add depth in the instrumental layers beneath. The final offering is the epic “Helios Creeds Magick Helmet”, the track emerges with a touch of the theatrical through enticing rhythms and dramatic gong hits. The music gradually builds with subtle hints of dissonance intermittently revealed, and soon wailing leads return. “Helios Creeds Magick Helmet” traverses through different realms each with their own atmospheres, styles and moods; it ebbs and flows.

About MEGATON LEVIATHAN:

Creating a sound that would stump critics and come to be described as Doomgaze. In the late 2000s, Reuscher, in a gritty Gateway basement of Portland, OR, committed the shoegaze of MY BLOODY VALENTINE, SPACEMEN 3, LOOP, and SLOWDIVE, to the heavy prodigiousness of SUNN O))), GODFLESH/JESU, SWANS, and CORRUPTED in a chemical wedding. Reuscher further mutated the genome of the Mega-Beast by coalescing the industrial experimentations of CHROME and THROBBING GRISTLE into the Kosmische minimalism of TANGERINE DREAM, FAUST, and CLUSTER. All made indelible in the DNA of the narcotic, primal, cinematic vibe of MEGATON LEVIATHAN.

In the 5 years plus since MEGATON LEVIATHAN’s critically acclaimed album Mage, the band has undergone an overhaul. From being signed to Outrun and label Blood Music and having a wrecking crew of musicians, MEGATON LEVIATHAN is now completely independent on Reuschers own Volatile Rock Recordings, with a maximum Doomgaze and minimalist approach embracing change and employing his love for things gritty, CVLT and mind-altering. With a new line up, in a new town (Astoria Or.) consisting of a power trio, pounding out primitive, subversive, and psychedelic Doompop hooks before re-committing to the ecstasy of becoming once again, half machine.

MEGATON LEVIATHAN is:
Reuscher

Credits:
Recorded by Reuscher in his Psychedelic Inner Fortress Studios

https://www.facebook.com/MegatonLeviathan
https://www.instagram.com/megaton_leviathan
http://megatonleviathan.bandcamp.com
http://megatonleviathan.com
https://www.tiktok.com/@megatonleviathan

https://www.facebook.com/VolatileRockRecordings
http://volatilerock.com

Megaton Leviathan, “Helios Creed’s Magick Helmet” Studio Improv 1

Megaton Leviathan, Doomgazer Pedal Demonstration I

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