Album Review: Terry Gross, Huge Improvement

Posted in Reviews on October 1st, 2024 by JJ Koczan

terry gross huge improvement

With a sound so impeccably Californian it sounds like it’s skate-surfing itself on a Back to the Future II hoverboard, San Francisco’s Terry Gross — guitarist/vocalist Phil Manley, bassist/vocalist Donny Newenhouse and drummer Phil Becker — offer much more than encouraging self-assessment on their second long-player, Huge Improvement. In relation to their 2021 debut, Soft Opening (review here), the new four-track/34-minute semi-cosmic burner answers a few pivotal questions more or less immediately.

Foremost, it proves Terry Gross — who cheekily borrow their moniker from the host of National Public Radio’s “Fresh Air” interview program, produced at WHYY in Philadelphia — aren’t a one-off, which since Newenhouse and Manley (the latter also of Trans Am) are owners of El Studio, where the likes of Hot LunchMammatusMoon Duo and scores of others have recorded, and Becker (also also Trans Am) is the house engineer at El Studio who in the last year-plus alone has produced albums for the likes of Mondo DragHaurun and Carlton Melton, they very easily could have been. They are not lacking for other things to do, any of them.

Starting with a kind of wakeup groan, or maybe some disbelief as you drive by the shop depicted on the cover — reportedly a real place selling, you guessed it, stuff made out of hides — “Sheepskin City” commences a rush that seems to continue front-to-back. It doesn’t, actually, but within the first 90 seconds of the album, Terry Gross have pushed a kind of cosmic mania, the guitar spacing out as the drums propel the overdrive. The opener’s intro is all very tightly wound, very dug in, and gives a hint at some of the jammier thrust that Huge Improvement will foster later on, if not necessarily in the 12-minute galaxy-churner “Full Disclosure.”

Like “Sales Pitch,” which follows, and “Effective Control,” which closes the record after the big slowdown and noise-laced march in said penultimate cut, “Sheepskin City” is over seven minutes long but less than eight, and that’s likely a result of how the songs were built out of the jams and on the riffy foundations upon which they seem to be based rather than something that was implemented consciously on the part of NewenhouseBecker and/or Manley. Certainly it’s not impossible for them to have said, “okay, we’re gonna have three seven-minute songs and one 12-minute song” — it would be weird but appropriate enough to the spirit of the proceedings, and you never know when bands have producers in the lineup; it’s arguable that a level of self-awareness if part of the point if you want to go by the LP titles — but either way, it gives the album a shape and something of a symmetry from the listener’s standpoint, highlighting the departure in the longer piece while seeming to understate the shifts in character between the others.

If that comes off feeling clever, there are a multitude of instrumental twists and turns of phrase in the sometimes-harmonized vocal melodies to back up Terry Gross giving actual consideration to this material, and the progressivism that emerges as a result of this doesn’t come at the expense of the songs. The sheer technical ability to pull off some of what they do is tempered by verse and chorus melodies holding a catchy track together as something more than a self-indulgent wank. The already-mentioned Mammatus are a partial comparison point for the shimmer in Terry Gross‘ guitar, and from Big Business to Psychic Trash, the urgency with which even the more lumbering descent in “Sales Pitch” is executed is definitively West Coast punk-rooted capital-‘h’ Heavy. There is no mistaking it. A band from where I live couldn’t sound like Huge Improvement if they wanted to, and everybody here is too angry and cold to try.

terry gross

This sense is further reinforced with a penchant for over-the-top shred that’s as likely to manifest on snare drum as guitar and feels feels born of an Earthless influence, but again, met with Terry Gross‘ more individualized songcraft, finding a middle-ground between taut structuralizing and songs-as-excursion freakouttery, carving a niche for the band despite the familiarity of some of the elements being put to use. The way “Sales Pitch” resolves its earlier frantic space boogie with a bassline-led comedown in the second half after a particularly fervent build is consuming and brims with purpose as Manley‘s guitar reaches into an echo chamber of squibblies and Newenhouse carries a complementary melody to gradually lull Becker‘s drums into the slower final movement, a showcase for the vocals punctuated by thud and crash. “Full Disclosure” is suitably all-in, languid with a threatening rumble that builds into a ground-scorch of feedbacking guitar undulations, and the groove becomes a deceptively patient flow into addled bliss. That it’s all so Californy in style is the beginning of what’s working about it, not the sum total.

It’s probably noteworthy too that the members of Terry Gross have also contributed in a variety of fashions to that impression — i.e., the sound of heavy CA — over the last however many years/decades, but that’s less immediately relevant in part because Huge Improvement, thankfully, feels fresh in its approach and balance. The hard, clear strum of “Effective Control” and the vocal melody that sits on top once the riff is established are a willful re-grounding after “Full Disclosure,” righteous in their showcase of dynamic and calling back to the energy and at-full-impulse engagement of the record’s launch in “Sheepskin City,” but able to leave off with both a more memorable hook and a psychedelic-wash finish with Becker‘s galloping snare punching through.

There’s a lot happening in that finale and the album more broadly, but Terry Gross are right there the whole time, brighter in resonance and encouraging the listener to keep up as much as possible. The level of activity will be too much for some heads not wanting to be spun — so it goes — but Huge Improvement gives more in terms of the band declaring themselves, revealing Soft Opening as tentative in a way the title spoke to, and is exciting for what it might portend as well as its own accomplishments. If they continue on this trajectory, it will be fascinating to learn what they decide to call the next one, but there’s plenty to chew on here in the meantime, and more revealed with each runthrough. I liked Soft Opening, so I won’t disparage it by saying Huge Improvement lives up to its title — admittedly, it’s arguable — but it does make Terry Gross feel both underhyped and deeper in their knowledge of who they are as a group. They just might knock you on your ass, but they’ll also stick out a hand to help you up after.

Terry Gross, Huge Improvement (2024)

Terry Gross on Facebook

Terry Gross on Bandcamp

Thrill Jockey Records website

Thrill Jockey Records on Facebook

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About That Fake Kyuss Track You’ve Been Seeing Around Today…

Posted in Bootleg Theater on October 1st, 2024 by JJ Koczan

aikyuss game over cover

…It’s fake and it sucks.

That’s pretty much what there is to say about it. I’ve seen a couple people this morning post about what alleges itself as a new Kyuss song — it would be the first from the desert rock progenitors since their Man’s Ruin Records split passed the torch to Queens of the Stone Age in 1997 (discussed here) — and frankly, if such a thing were to really happen, if some incarnation or other of Kyuss reformed, I would hope the algorithm that’s been tracking my every digital and physical movement for the last decade and a half would know by now that’s something I want to be in the loop about. But no, Kyuss aren’t back together. It’s AI, or something close to it, and the track, “Game Over,” sounds nothing like Kyuss. It’s instrumental — which would be possible but unlikely for a “we’re back” first song to reestablish the band who very much had a singer in John Garcia — and it’s metal. So yes, it’s fake and it sucks.

There’s little question that a Kyuss reunion would be mostly welcomed. In 2010, Garcia began touring the band’s classic material under the name Garcia Plays Kyuss, which evolved into Kyuss Lives! and Vista Chino, who to-date remain as close as the band has come to getting back together. Garcia, bassist Nick Oliveri (who was eventually replaced in Vista Chino by Mike Dean of C.O.C.) and drummer Brant Bjork, as well as European ringer guitarist Bruno Fevery, explored both the Kyuss legacy and where it might go in moving forward with new ideas and styles, but without original guitarist Josh Homme involved — which he clearly wasn’t going to be since he sued the band for using the Kyuss name in the first place, forcing their hand to change to Vista Chino — they didn’t get the attention they deserved and the project fizzled after one album, 2013’s Peace (discussed here, review here). That record was awesome, and did what it set out to do, but the lawsuit was kind of an unfortunate addendum to one of the greatest legacies in underground heavy rock. As with Kyuss‘ original four-LP run, Vista Chino left a lot on the table in terms of what could’ve been.

If Kyuss-proper were ever to return — and I wouldn’t hold my breath until Queens of the Stone Age are absolutely void of any commercial potential whatsoever, whatever platitudes might be offered in the meantime — I would certainly hope they’d do it with something better than “Game Over.” Of course, Oliveri and Bjork collaborated in recent years in Stöner, and Garcia has woven through a number of projects and solo outings — Hermano are about to release an EP with their first new material since 2007; it’s out Friday on Ripple Music — and Homme built Queens of the Stone Age into a powerhouse of influence and a figurehead outfit in the greater sphere of rock music. The legend of Kyuss, of records like Blues for the Red Sun and Sky Valley (yes, officially it’s self-titled; thank you), deserves better than to be the subject of a stupid AI trolling, but honestly, I’m not sure why it would be exempt when nothing else is.

But the bottom line either way is about five seconds into the song, you know it’s a fake, so if I just saved you hearing it, so much the better. If you’re curious and want to check out what an artificial intelligence that clearly needs to listen to more actual-Kyuss came up with to represent the band, it’s below. I don’t recommend it, but there you have it.

Thanks for reading.

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Høstsabbat 2024 Completes Lineup; Nightstalker Added & Day Splits Announced

Posted in Whathaveyou on October 1st, 2024 by JJ Koczan

hostsabbat 2024 banner 1

As the lineup for Høstsabbat 2024 declares itself finished with the addition of Greek heavy forebears Nightstalker — whose series of catalog reissues through Heavy Psych Sounds was announced just last week — and the day splits are unveiled to let attendees know that, indeed, you will in your life be able to witness Träd, Gräs och Stenar and Inter Arma sharing a stage in a showcase of righteous disparity only enhanced by the fact that it’s happening at Kulturkirken Jakob in Oslo, I can’t help but feel somewhat relieved that I can maybe take a break from flagellating myself for missing it. Staring at all the names though, and their sundry evocations in terms of aesthetic, it’s all the more astonishing an assemblage for how much it delivers and how broadly. To have Barren Womb and The Body & Dis Fig on the same bill as Tusmørke and Kosmodome and Monkey3 just tells you how far Høstsabbat has come in its decade-plus and how expansive their reach has gotten. It doesn’t stop there, either.

Day tickets are on sale, if there’s one or the other between the Friday and Saturday that’s shouting at you or, you know, if you have some real-life obligation to account for in part of your weekend, but the arguments for going both days are best made by the completed lineup itself, and that’s right here:

hostsabbat 2024 day splits

We’re sticking with the Olympian theme from the last artist announcement guys. 🔥

We are sprinkling some Greek spice to our lineup! 🇬🇷

From Mount Olympus to The Chapel stage, please welcome Nightstalker!

Having played together longer than some of us have been alive, these Greek legends now how to rock the stage. Herculean riffs, tight-as-can-be ensemble and lyricism (that’s a word right?) only surpassed by Homer. This gang of rugged, weathered Rock’n’roll half-gods will shake the Church’s pillars so hard that Oslo will get its own Akropolis after. 💥

Nightstalker, like a perfect jigsaw piece, completes our line up, and gives it the golden bowtie we wanted!

This completes our line up, so keep your eyes peeled for a day-split and day-tickets the coming days! 👀

Come the sabbath, we’re all Greek Freaks!

DAY TICKETS

With the completed schedule and lineup ready, we are also dropping some limited day tickets for those unable to attend both days. Get’em while they’re hot!

Friday: https://www.ticketmaster.no/event/753553

Saturday: https://www.ticketmaster.no/event/753559

Festival: https://www.ticketmaster.no/event/hostsabbat-2024-tickets/739279

Design by Thomas Moe Ellefsrud / hypnotistdesign

SPOTIFY PLAYLIST
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Høstsabbat Spotify Playlist

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Weite Announce Jan. 2025 Tour Dates

Posted in Whathaveyou on October 1st, 2024 by JJ Koczan

weite (Photo by Maren Michaelis)

If Weite wanted to, they probably could parlay their collective in-other-bands pedigree — names there for the dropping like Elder/Delving, High Fighter and Perilymph — into slots on any and every Spring 2025 European heavyfest they might be able to play (actually, Elder are already on a decent number of those bills), but their first tour in support of the upcoming second album, Oase, is nothing so career-minded. A DIY run set for this January instead puts the exploratory progressive outfit led by bassist Ingwer Boysen on the road when most bands aren’t, working smart and hard to promote at a time when most bands are hunkered down for the winter, writing, recording or sitting on ass (nothing against any of that). There’s less out there grabbing at fickle audience attention spans, and it suits the organic nature of Weite generally to be a little lower key, even as they work at a relatively quick turnaround from their 2023 debut, Assemblage (review here).

The dates were posted on social media as follows, and Stickman will have Oase out on Nov. 22 as detailed here. Tour starts Jan. 10, goes to Jan. 25, and probably won’t be the only one they do heralding the new record:

weite oase tour

Oase Tour 2025! We’ll be presenting our new record “Oase” (out November 22 on Stickman Records) this January. Excited to play this record we worked hard on the past year, along with most likely even more new tunes. This is a self-booked tour and we’d like to thank all the promoters who helped us put this together. Support your local scene!

The first single from “Oase” will be out in a few weeks.

10.01. Halle (DE), Hühnermanhattan
11.01. Berlin (DE), Neue Zukunft
12.01. Dresden (DE), Ostpol
13.01. Jena (DE), Kulturbahnhof
14.01. Potsdam (DE), Archiv
15.01. Kiel (DE), Hansa48
16.01. Hamburg (DE), Hafenklang
17.01. Bochum (DE), Die Trompete
18.01. Leuven (BE), Sojo
19.01. Nijmegen (NL), De Onderbroek
20.01. TBA
21.01. Darmstadt (DE), TBA
22.01. Munich (DE), Import Export
23.01. Würzburg (DE), Immerhin
24.01. Prague (CZ), Klub 007
25.01. Nürnberg (DE), Z-Bau

Weite was formed in Berlin in winter 2022 by bassist Ingwer Boysen recruiting drummer Nick DiSalvo and guitarists Michael Risberg and Ben Lubin. Initially intended as a one-off recording session, the four recognized an obvious musical chemistry and common ground and decided to turn the project into a proper band. Keyboardist Fabien deMenou joined in 2024. “Oase” will be available on 180gr. pink marbled 2LP, on CD and digitally on November 22, 2024 via Stickman Records.

Amazing artwork by Sofia Hjortberg. Band photo by Maren Michaelis.

https://www.facebook.com/weite.band/
www.instagram.com/_weite
https://weiteband.bandcamp.com/

https://www.stickman-records.com/
https://www.facebook.com/Stickman-Records-1522369868033940

Weite, Assemblage (2023)

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