Quarterly Review: Rotor, Seer of the Void, Moodoom, Altered States, Giöbia, Astral Hand, Golden Bats, Zeup, Giant Sleep, Green Yeti

Posted in Reviews on April 13th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

the-obelisk-qr-summer-2020

Oh hi, I’m pretending I didn’t see you there. Today the Spring 2023 Quarterly Review hits and — if Apollo is willing — passes the halfway point en route to 70 total records to be covered by the end of next Tuesday. Then there’s another 50 at least to come next month, so I don’t know what ‘quarter’ that’s gonna be but I don’t really have another name for this kind of roundup just sitting in my back pocket, so if we have to fudge one or expand Spring in such a way, I sincerely doubt anyone but me actually cares that it’s a little weird this time through. And I’m not even sure I care, to be honest. Surely “notice” would be a better word.

Either way, thanks for reading. Hope you’ve found something cool thus far and hope you find more today. Let’s roll.

Quarterly Review #31-40:

Rotor, Sieben

rotor 7

Seven full-lengths and a quarter-century later, it’s nigh on impossible to argue with Berlin instrumentalists Rotor. Sieben — or simply 7, depending on where you look — is their latest offering, and in addition to embracing heavy psychedelia with enough tonal warmth on “Aller Tage Abend” to remind that they’re contemporaries to Colour Haze, the seven-song/38-minute LP has room for the jazzy classic prog flashes of “Mäander” later on and the more straight-ahead fuzzy crunch of “Reibach,” which opens, and the contrast offered by the acoustic guitar and friendly roll that emerges on the closing title-track. Dug into the groove and Euro-size XXL (that’s XL to Americans) riffing of “Kahlschlag,” there’s never a doubt that it’s Rotor you’re hearing, and the same is true of “Aller Tage Abend,” the easy-nodding second half and desert-style chop of “Schabracke,” and everything else; the simple fact is that Rotor these 25 years on can be and in fact are all of these things and more besides while also being a band who have absolutely nothing to prove. Sieben celebrates their progression, the riffs at their roots, the old and new in their makeup and the mastery with which they’ve made the notion of ‘instrumental heavy rock’ so much their own. It’s a lesson gladly learned again, and 2023 is a better year with Sieben in it.

Rotor on Facebook

Noisolution website

 

Seer of the Void, Mantra Monolith

Seer of the Void Mantra Monolith

Athens-based sludge-and-then-some rockers Seer of the Void follow their successful 2020 debut, Revenant, with the more expansive Mantra Monolith, enacting growth on multiple levels, be it the production and general largesse of their sound, the songs becoming a bit longer (on average) or the ability to shift tempos smoothly between “Electric Father” and “Death is My Name” without giving up either momentum or the attitude as emphasized in the gritty vocals of bassist Greg “Maddog” Konstantaras. Side B’s “Demon’s Hand” offers a standout moment of greater intensity, but Seer of the Void are hardly staid elsewhere, whether it’s the swinging verse of “Hex” that emerges from the massive intro, or the punkish vibe underscoring the nonetheless-metal head-down chug in the eponymous “Seer of the Void.” They cap with a clearheaded fuzzy solo in “Necromancer,” seeming to answer the earlier “Seventh Son,” and thereby highlight the diversity manifest from their evolution in progress, but if one enjoyed the rougher shoves of Revenant (or didn’t; prior experience isn’t a barrier to entry), there remains plenty of that kind of tonal and rhythmic physicality in Mantra Monolith.

Seer of the Void on Facebook

Venerate Industries on Bandcamp

 

Moodoom, Desde el Bosque

Moodoom Desde el Bosque

Organic roots doom from the trio Moodoom — guitarist/vocalist Cristian Marchesi, bassist/vocalist Jonathan Callejas and drummer Javier Cervetti — captured en vivo in the band’s native Buenos Aires, Desde el Bosque is the trio’s second LP and is comprised of five gorgeous tracks of Sabbath-worshiping heavy blues boogie, marked by standout performances from Marchesi and Callejas often together on vocals, and the sleek Iommic riffing that accounts as well for the solos layered across channels in the penultimate “Nadie Bajará,” which is just three minutes long but speaks volumes on what the band are all about, which is keep-it-casual mellow-mover heavy, the six-minute titular opening/longest track (immediate points) swaggering to its own swing as meted out by Cervetti with a proto-doomly slowdown right in the middle before the lightly-funked solo comes in, and the finale “Las Maravillas de Estar Loco” (‘the wonders of being crazy,’ in English) rides the line between heavy rock and doom with no less grace, introducing a line of organ or maybe guitar effects along with the flawless groove proffered by Callejas and Cervetti. It’s only 23 minutes long, but definitely an album, and exactly the way a classic-style power trio is supposed to work. Gorgeously done, and near-infinite in its listenability.

Moodoom on Facebook

Moodoom on Bandcamp

 

Altered States, Survival

ALTERED STATES SURVIVAL

The second release and debut full-length from New Jersey-based trio Altered States runs seven tracks and 34 minutes and finds individualism in running a thread through influences from doom and heavy rock, elder hardcore and metal, resulting in the synth-laced stylistic intangibility of “A Murder of Crows” on side A and the smoothly-delivered proportion of riff in the eponymous “Altered States” later on, bassist Zack Kurland (Green Dragon, ex-Sweet Diesel, etc.) taking over lead vocals in the verse to let guitarist/synthesist Ryan Lipynsky (Unearthly Trance, Serpentine Path, The Howling Wind, etc.) take the chorus, while drummer Chris Daly (Texas is the Reason, Resurrection, 108, etc.) punctuates the urgency in opener “The Crossing” and reinforces the nod of “Cerberus.” There’s an exploration of dynamic underway on multiple levels throughout, whether it’s the guitar and keys each feeling out their space in the mix, or the guitar and bass, vocal arrangements, and so on, but with the atmospheric centerpiece “Hurt” — plus that fuzz right around the 2:30 mark before the build around the album’s title line — just two songs past the Motörheaded “Mycelium,” it’s clear that however in-development their sound may be, Altered States already want for nothing as regards reaching out from their doom rocking center, which is that much richer with multiple songwriters behind it.

Altered States on Facebook

Altered States on Bandcamp

 

Giöbia, Acid Disorder

giobia acid disorder

Opener and longest track (immediate points) “Queen of Wands” is so hypnotic you almost don’t expect its seven minutes to end, but of course they do, and Italian strange-psych whatevernauts Giöbia proceed from there to float guitar over and vocals over the crunched-down “The Sweetest Nightmare” before the breadth of “Consciousness Equals Energy” and “Screaming Souls” melds outer-rim-of-the-galaxy space prog with persistently-tripped Europsych lushness, heavy in its underpinnings but largely unrestrained by gravity or concerns for genre. Acid Disorder is the maybe-fifth long-player from the Italian cosmic rocking aural outsiders, and their willingness to dive into the unknown is writ large through the synth and organ layers and prominent strum of “Blood is Gone,” the mix itself becoming no less an instrument in the band’s collective hand than the guitar, bass, drums, vocals, etc. Ultra-fluid throughout (duh), the eight-songer tops out around 44 minutes and is an adventure for the duration, the drift of side B’s instrumental “Circo Galattico” reveling in experimentalism over a somehow-solidified rhythm while “In Line” complements in answer to “The Sweetest Nightmare” picking up from “Queen of Wands” at the outset, leaving the closing title-track on its own, which seems to fit its synth-and-sitar-laced serenity just fine. Band sounds like everything and nobody but themselves, reliably.

Giöbia on Facebook

Heavy Psych Sounds website

 

Astral Hand, Lords of Data

Astral Hand Lords of Data

Like everything, Milwaukee heavy psychedelia purveyors Astral Hand were born out of destruction. In this case, it’s the four-piece’s former outfit Calliope that went nova, resulting in the recycling of cosmic gasses and gravitational ignition wrought in the debut album Lords of Data‘s eight songs, the re-ish-born new band benefitting from the experience of the old as evidenced by the patient unfolding of side A capper “Psychedelicide,” the defining hook in “Universe Machine” and the shove-then-drone-then-shove in “End of Man” and the immersive heft in opener “Not Alone” that brings the listener deep into the nod from the very start of the first organ notes so that by the time they’ve gone as far out as the open spaces of “Navigator” and the concluding “God Emperor,” their emergent command of the ethereal is unquestionable. They work a little shuffle into that finale, which is an engaging touch, but Lords of Data — a thoroughly modern idea — isn’t limited to that any more than it is the atmospheric grandiosity and lumber of “Crystal Gate” that launches side B. One way or the other, these dudes have been at it for more than a decade going back to the start of Calliope, but Astral Hand is a stirring refresh of purpose on their part and one hopes their lordship continues to flourish. I don’t know that they’re interested in such terrestrial concerns, but they’d be a great pickup for some discerning label.

Astral Hand on Facebook

Astral Hand on Bandcamp

 

Golden Bats, Scatter Yr Darkness

Golden Bats Scatter Yr Darkness

Slow-churning intensity is the order of the day on Scatter Yr Darkness, the eight-song sophomore LP from now-Italy-based solo-outfit Golden Bats, aka Geordie Stafford, who sure enough sprinkles death, rot and no shortage of darkness across the album’s 41-minute span, telling tales through metaphor in poetic lyrics of pandemic-era miseries; civic unrest and disaffection running like a needle through split skin to join the various pieces together. Echoing shouts give emphasis to the rawness of the sludge in “Holographic Stench” and “Erbgrind,” but in that eight-minute cut there’s a drop to cinematic, not-actually-minimalist-but-low-volume string sounds, and “Breathe Misery” begins with Mellotron-ish melancholy that hints toward the synth at the culmination of “A Savage Dod” and in the middle of “Malingering,” so nothing is actually so simple as the caustic surface makes it appear. Drums are programmed and the organ in “Bravo Sinkhole” and other keys may be as well, I don’t know, but as Stafford digs into Golden Bats sonically and conceptually — be it the bareknuckle “Riding in the Captain’s Skull” at the start or the raw-throated vocal echo spread over “The Gold Standard of Suffering,” which closes — the harshness of expression goes beyond the aural. It’s been a difficult few years, admittedly.

Golden Bats on Facebook

Golden Bats on Bandcamp

 

Zeup, Mammals

zeup mammals

Straightforward in a way that feels oldschool in speaking to turn-of-the-century era heavy rock influences — big Karma to Burn vibe in the riffs of “Hollow,” and not by any means only there — the debut album Mammals from Danish trio Zeup benefits from decades of history in metal and rock on the part of drummer Morten Barth (ex-Wasted) and bassist/producer Morten Rold (ex-Beyond Serenity), and with non-Morten guitarist Jakob Bach Kristensen (also production) sharing vocals with Rold, they bring a down-to-business sensibility to their eight component tracks that can’t be faked. That’s consistent with 2020’s Blind EP (review here) and a fitting demonstration for any who’d take it on that sometimes you don’t need anything more than the basic guitar, bass, drums, vocals when the songs are there. Sure, they take some time to explore in the seven-minute instrumental “Escape” before hitting ground again in the aptly-titled slow post-hardcore-informed closer “In Real Life,” but even that is executed with clear intention and purpose beyond jamming. I’ll go with “Rising” as a highlight, but it’s a pick-your-poison kind of record, and there’s an awful lot that’s going to sound needlessly complicated in comparison.

Zeup on Facebook

Ozium Records store

 

Giant Sleep, Grounded to the Sky

giant sleep grounded to the sky

Grounded to the Sky is the third LP from Germany’s Giant Sleep, and with it the band hones a deceptively complex scope drawn together in part by vocalist Thomas Rosenmerkel, who earns the showcase position with rousing blues-informed performances on the otherwise Tool-ish prog metal title-track and the later-Soundgardening leadoff before it, “Silent Field.” On CD and digital, the record sprawls across nearly an hour, but the vinyl edition is somewhat tighter, leaving off “Shadow Walker” and “The Elixir” in favor of a 43-minute run that puts the 4:43 rocker “Sour Milk” in the closer position, not insubstantially changing the personality of the record. Founded by guitarist Patrick Hagmann, with Rosenmerkel in the lineup as well as guitarist/backing vocalist Tobias Glanzmann (presumably that’ll be him in the under-layer of “Siren Song”), bassist Radek Stecki and drummer Manuel Spänhauer, they sound full as a five-piece and are crisp in their production and delivery even in the atmospherically minded “Davos,” which dares some float and drift along with a political commentary and feels like it’s taking no fewer chances in doing so, and generally come across as knowing who they are as a band and what they want to do with their sound, then doing it. In fact, they sound so sure, I’m not even certain why they sent the record out for review. They very obviously know they nailed what they were going for, and yes, they did.

Giant Sleep on Facebook

Czar of Crickets Productions website

 

Green Yeti, Necropolitan

Green Yeti Necropolitan

It’s telling that even the CD version of Green Yeti‘s Necropolitan breaks its seven tracks down across two sides. The Athens trio of guitarist/vocalist Michael Andresakis, bassist Dani Avramidis and drummer Giannis Koutroumpis touch on psychedelic groove in the album-intro “Syracuse” before turning over to the pure post-Kyuss rocker “Witch Dive,” which Andresakis doing an admirable John Garcia in the process, before the instrumental “Jupiter 362” builds tension for five minutes without ever exploding, instead giving out to the quiet start of side A’s finish in “Golgotha,” which likewise builds but turns to harsher sludge rock topped by shouts and screams in the midsection en route to an outright cacophonous second half. That unexpected turn — really, the series of them — makes it such that as the bass-swinging “Dirty Lung” starts its rollout on side B, you don’t know what’s coming. The answer is half-Sleepy ultra-burl, but still. “Kerosene” stretches out the desert vibe somewhat, but holds a nasty edge to it, and the nine-minute “One More Bite,” which closes the record, has a central nod but feels at any moment like it might swap it for further assault. Does it? It’s worth listening to the record front to back to find out. Hail Greek heavy, and Green Yeti‘s willingness to pluck from microgenre at will is a good reason why.

Green Yeti on Facebook

Green Yeti on Bandcamp

 

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Rotor to Release Sieben Feb. 15; Spring Tour Announced

Posted in Whathaveyou on December 27th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

rotor

Suitably enough, Rotor‘s impending Sieben is the follow-up to 2018’s Sechs (review here), and if you’re wondering why that’s suitable, it’s because ‘sieben’ is ‘seven’ in German, and ‘sechs’ is ‘six.’ It is — wait for it — their seventh album. Noisolution has the release and will have a limited-to-100 special edition up for sale through their store starting on Jan. 15. Those preorder links are below.

Okay, so maybe obvious plot points here are obvious. Nonetheless, Rotor‘s continual progression as a four-piece presents something to look forward to hearing — no audio yet; so it goes — and if you happen to be in Germany or the surrounding area in April, they’ve got two weeks of tour dates lined up to support the record that no doubt will be accompanied by festival gigs and other doings throughout the rest of 2023. I’m also pretty sure 2023 marks 25 years of the band, so can’t help but wonder if they might not have some celebration in mind for that too. There’s a lot of year to come, so I guess we’ll find out.

From socials and Noisolution‘s page:

rotor 7

ROTOR – Sieben

Deluxe edition preorder: https://www.noisolution.de/shop/Vinyl/Rotor-Sieben-LP-CLUB-100-Edition-limitiert-180gr-rotes-Vinyl-Kunst-Siebdruck-signiertes-Foto-auf-Silberpapier-Sticker::355.html

Black LP edition preorder: https://www.noisolution.de/shop/Vinyl/Rotor-Sieben-LP-Schwarzes-Vinyl-140-gr::354.html

After five years they are back and the number game continues. The seventh album is now the third since 2015 as a quartet and what started with “Fünf” and got its own sound with the addition of the second guitarist Martin has been refined over and over again. The production – again by Charlie Paschen (Coogan’s Bluff) – has become bigger, lighter and more transparent, while the rhythm section shows itself grooving heavily and unimpressed by all this and ROTOR continues to look massive like old bunkers in the Berlin cityscape.

Tracklisting:
1. Reibach
2. Auf Grund
3. Aller Tage Abend
4. Schabracke
5. Mäander
6. Kahlschlag
7. Sieben

ROTOR – a phenomenon in the alternative rock scene that swims stubbornly, stubbornly and eccentrically against the tide.

ROTOR Sieben Tour 2023
15.04 Leipzig DE Conne Island
16.04 Hannover Mephisto
17.04 Rostock Jaz
18.04 Hamburg DE Knust
19.04 Nijmegen Merleyn
20.04 Luxembourg Kulturfabrik
21.04 Köln Gebäude 9
22.04 Mannheim Forum
24.04 Wintherthur Gaswerk
25.04 München Feierwerk
26.04 Wien Arena
27.04 Nürnberg Z-Bau
28.04 Linz Kapu
29.04 Dresden Chemiefabrik

https://www.facebook.com/rotor.berlin
http://rotor1.bandcamp.com/
http://rotorotor.de/rotor-band

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

Rotor, Sechs (2018)

Rotor, Sieben album teaser

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Album Premiere & Review: Papir, 7

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on January 11th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Papir 7

[Click play above to stream Papir’s 7 in full. Album is out Friday on Stickman Records.]

What if, instead of psychedelia being thought of as a means toward escapism, it could be a way to be present in the moment? To put yourself in existence and thus transform it instead of leaving it behind? Papir‘s latest work, 7, follows behind the Copenhagen trio’s 2021 sidestep Jams (review here) and 2019’s VI (review here) and brings the instrumentalist unit to a particularly soothing place in terms of sound. And it would be easy, given the confused and often terrified state of the world in which it arrives, to think of 7 as a vehicle for the listener to at least close their eyes and imagine something else, some version of the escapism noted above, whatever it may be. But across the four extended tracks — the first of which is the longest (immediate points) with “7.1 (Part I-III)” at 19:52, more than 10 minutes longer than anything else — guitarist Nicklas Sørensen, bassist Christian Becher Clausen and drummer Christoffer Brøchmann Christensen could just as easily be looking for a way to exist in the present moment as to leave it behind. Mindfulness as manifest through psychedelic exploration of sound.

I don’t know that that’s the case and I don’t know that it isn’t. Papir‘s trajectory has grown mellower and more informed by post-rock with time — Sørensen‘s guitar taking on various jazzy impulses here with a gentle feel even as the album’s most active, which is unquestionably the second cut, “7.2” — and even the language one might use to describe their tonality, whether the depth of Clausen‘s bass or the drift in the lead guitar notes, the ethereality of the keyboard lines that emerge after two minutes into the track’s total 6:17, all conjures visions of something other than the reality of a band in a room, creating it, or a listener in a room (or wherever), hearing it. I’m not meaning to argue against psychedelia or heavy psychedelia — and Papir have largely left the pressure to be heavy behind them at this point; they’re no worse off for it — as a transformative experience. It can change you, and it can put you someplace other than where you started out, figuratively or literally. But with 7, I find I’m just as much drawn into the course of the record, from the first graceful awakening of “7.1” to Christensen‘s tom work some six minutes in and the longform drone that ensues over the final two of the piece’s three parts, and it’s as much evocative of itself as of any other atmosphere I might want to put it to.

Perhaps ‘grace’ is the defining feature throughout 7. If one thinks of it in the religious context, the sudden act of being ‘saved,’ then there’s another layer entirely to appreciate along with the smooth fluidity of the material throughout the album, but again, it doesn’t have to be one or the other. 7 is never brash, Papir never tip into the bombastic even as much as they did on Jams, and it doesn’t lose its sense of flow when “7.2” brings the drums in after a long absence in the ending sections of “7.1 (Part I-III)” and bids them farewell once more for the eight-minute “7.3” only to have far-off toms punctuate “7.4” in a shifted priority from the ready hi-hat of the opener.

papir

The material throughout is uniformly gorgeous and spontaneous feeling, but each piece has its own life and its own impression to make within the overarching serenity of the whole, whether it’s “7.1 (Part I-III)” seeming to let go as it transitions from its first movement into the second and more synth-driven third, the regrounding effect of “7.2” after all that spaciousness has been cast — a soft, pastoralist jam with keyboard layered over, resulting in a vibrant wash of melody — the seeming standalone-guitar minimalism that builds upward in “7.3” and the long and winding echoes of “7.4” that are all the more resonant for the reaches they leave open, unpopulated.

Take a deep breath. In through your nose, out through your mouth. I’m not going to sit here on my couch in front of my laptop, needing a shower, coffee on my breath — present in my moment, for better and worse — and tell you how to listen to Papir‘s 7. Or that, if you want to put your headphones on and use Sørensen‘s weaving drones on “7.3” as a means to divorce yourself from whatever negativity, baggage or tumult you’re living through either on a micro or macro level, that you’re wrong to do so. Shit, I don’t know. You might’ve got the plague. These are traumatic, uncertain times. But to me, the comfort bring offered by Papir doesn’t seem to forget that, or to ignore it. Maybe I’m reading into the proceedings — scratch that, I definitely am — but the creativity so much on display throughout 7, and even the chemistry between the members of the band, the sense of arrangement and subtlety they bring to one track and then another is empathetic more than escapist. They’re here too.

While I’m establishing a great list of things I don’t know — there are so many! — I also don’t know when these tracks were recorded. Maybe it was three years ago, maybe it was in the height of pandemic lockdown. What matters more in the end are the feelings they elicit in the audience now that they’re seeing release, and the fact that they seem to offer a place to be that isn’t separate from the world around so much as working to reshape that into something more quiescent. It’s not about numbing out, but about being there for each other and coming to a kind of aural understanding even just of yourself and your place amid all the chaos. What is it that they’re ultimately saying? I don’t know; there are no words. Maybe it’s okay not to know, and to just be, without knowing. What if the argument Papir are making with these songs is a case for the world that is as much as a world that could be? What if the letting go and the escape are a distraction and the thing to do is hold on tighter to right now because it and each other are all we have and so much is lost so easily?

Papir, “7.2” official video

Papir on Facebook

Papir on Instagram

Papir on Bandcamp

Stickman Records website

Stickman Records on Facebook

Stickman Records on Twitter

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The Obelisk Questionnaire: Papir

Posted in Questionnaire on November 12th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

papir

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: Papir

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

It can be a real challenge to define what it is you do, besides the obvious (music – the musical praxis, playing, listening, composing, improvising, whatever you want to call the process of creating something with sound and musical elements). It is probably hard for us to neglect the social aspect of playing together and reacting to each other in a musical context, getting something done (making a record, playing concerts) and learning from it – that is of course very important too. In that sense you could define what we do essentially as “band stuff” – we are primarily a band, a collective of three individuals who happen to play and make music together, which includes all the above-mentioned stuff.

How we came to do it? Besides sharing an early common and serious interest in playing music we had the privilege of being introduced to a good social and musically stimulating environment at a young age, attending music school and hanging out in the local youth club, that had some great facilities (rehearsal spaces for bands, music pedagogues, etc.). That was probably an important part of the foundation of getting inspired to play music and play in a band – to meet other people interested in the same thing, having access to equipment and having adults around who were supportive in what we did.

Describe your first musical memory.

The first musical memory we share, is probably from around 2002, when Christoffer joined Christian and me in the band we played in back then. We had an audition and played a self-made song and then jumped directly into a jammy cover-version of the well-known classic “Mustang Sally.” Don’t recall how it sounded, but I do remember that we all instinctively knew that Christoffer was the right drummer for our band.

Describe your best musical memory to date.

There are a lot of contenders! We still have some very fond memories of the first studio session we ever did back in 2009. That was in the early stages of playing and creating instrumental music together, we hadn’t even played any concerts in this format with this then “new music” and we were still in a process of searching and finding a path to follow. In the context of recording an album of instrumental music it was a very open session musically speaking – perhaps best reflected in the non-released jam material from that session, this can be heard as documented processes that really bear witness to a band wide searching for a path, a music, expressions of something.

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

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

Not sure that we work with artistic progression per se, or to put it in other words: we are not sure we see/hear music as art. Music can probably be seen as an artform, but we don’t think that’s our domain – to create music as art. We mainly work within the terms and elements of music itself, so you can say that we work with musical progression and in that sense it wouldn’t make sense at all to continue creating music if we didn’t have a feeling of progression. So basically, the aspect of progression happens through a kind of learning process. For instance, making a new record is an opportunity to learn something new about music or the “art” of making an album or whatever you are open to take from it and hopefully that leads to a progression in the short or long term. The progression itself can probably lead to anything – theoretically speaking there are no boundaries.

How do you define success?

There is an elemental feeling of success knowing the fact that we can still find the time to meet and play together, when members of the band have full time jobs, kids and all the other adult stuff. Having a record label who continues to release our music, the fact that people still come out to our concerts buy our records and that music lovers like yourself dedicate their time to listen and write about us – all that could be interpreted as a sign of success. There is a lot to be grateful for.

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

A drunk, naked musician unknown to us once sleepwalked into our hotel room while we were asleep. We woke up realizing that he was leaning against our bed, mumbling something in a language we didn’t understand. Very weird and shocking experience that we wish we hadn’t witnessed. Or?

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

To have our own recording studio would probably be a dream come true. We could probably create that if we wanted and had the time to do it. And to create a new record is always something special.

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

The most essential function of art is to open and expand your mind and senses – to invite you to experience something that is meaningful beyond words and doesn’t necessarily have a function.

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

We are looking forward to the next “bandaften” (band night), which is a something we do once in a while – just hanging out together, not necessarily playing music (not that it’s forbidden of course), bowling?, cooking together and drinking a well-considered or not-well-considered amount of IPAs.

http://www.facebook.com/papirband
http://www.papir.bandcamp.com
http://www.instagram.com/papirband
http://stickman-records.com

Papir, 7 (2022)

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Papir to Release New Album 7 on Jan. 14

Posted in Whathaveyou on October 18th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

I’ve been having tech issues all day with the site’s back end and that’s infuriating, so I haven’t even had the chance to check it the new Papir song yet. Surely, if I had, I’d be in a much less smash-my-face-into-the-wall place mentally, but let’s hope that I’m able to get there sooner than later. To the song, that is.

Plenty of bands number their records. Fewer get to 7 as a part of that — also worth noting that not all the Papir LPs are numbered — but the Danish outfit can just keep going as far as I’m concerned. This year they released the aptly-titled Jams, as if to ask what question what more anyone could want. Another record will do fine, thank you. Jan. 14? Great. Something to look forward to when winter seems to be at its deadest.

The PR wire has details and the preorder from Stickman:

Papir 7

Copenhagen Post-Krautrock Trio PAPIR Shares Album Details + Brand New Video!

“7” coming out on January 14, 2022 through Stickman Records!

Copenhagen-based psych and melodic krautrock trio PAPIR has revealed the first details about their forthcoming album, aptly-titled “7”, which is slated for a release on January 14, 2022 via Stickman Records.

On their 7th full-length album, the band dials back their fuzz pedals and returns to the heavily atmospheric soundscapes that define much of their recent work. Many aspects of PAPIR’s music seem to have much in common with the sea – be it a willful association by the Danish trio or not. Their output moves in waves, sometimes fierce and blustery, sometimes gentle and calming, but always performed with unforced, organic talent. Over the course of their 7 full-length albums, the band sways between psychedelic guitar meltdowns and long atmospheric passages with grace and ease. “7”, with its blurred aquatic cover artwork is of course no exception to this rule, and the album is comprised of four long songs that return to calming waters after 2021’s heavier Jams.

But give ear, as the band just shared a first single taken from “7”! Watch the new video, created by Søren Bang Clemmensen, for the song “7.2” here.

Album side A is made up entirely of one 20-minute composition that flows seamlessly from the band’s signature melodic kraut-inspired rock into an ebb and flow of gorgeous ambient soundscapes. Guitarist Nicklas Sørensen’s shows a remarkable versatility, conjuring up a variety of sounds with his guitar that seem hardly possible with one instrument. When drummer Christoffer Brøchmann Christensen and bassist Christian Becher Clausen rejoin on side B, three further blissed-out tracks carry the listener away into their own world. If ambient post-krautrock isn’t yet a genre title, PAPIR should certainly be credited with its invention.

Album track listing:
1. 7.1 (part I-III)
2. 7.2
3. 7.3
4. 7.4

Coming out as LP including download card and as CD, the album pre-sale will be available on October 22 at THIS LOCATION: http://stickman-records.com

http://www.facebook.com/papirband
http://www.papir.bandcamp.com
http://www.instagram.com/papirband
http://stickman-records.com

Papir, “7.2”

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