Album Review: Steak, Acute Mania

Posted in Reviews on May 5th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Steak - Acute Mania artwork

There are a few things happening with Steak on Acute Mania. The London-based band’s third full-length and second for Ripple Music behind 2017’s No God to Save (review here), it marks a decade since the four-piece issued their 2012 debut EP, Disastronaught (review here) — which was soon followed by 2013’s Corned Beef Colossus EP (review here) — and set in motion a comic storyline that has continued throughout their sundry adventures in the years since. Comic-style art is a big part of Acute Mania as well, as the special edition vinyl of the eight-song/47-minute outing includes the graphic novel Mad Lord, written by Steak guitarist Reece Tee with Rhys Wooton — who also did the cover art for the album with Schoph Schofield and has worked with the band before — and Samuel Smith. That in itself would be enough, but there’s also a film called Mad Lord: Samurai of 1,000 Deaths — Tee has an Executive Producer credit on that, while Smith wrote and directed — that ties into the story as well.

That too would be enough, but it’s also Steak‘s first record with drummer Dean Deal (formerly of Crystal Head and Magna Saga) in the lineup alongside Tee, bassist James “Cam” Cameron and vocalist Chris “Kippa” Haley, and that’s a dynamic shift that can be heard from opener “Wolves” onward, and it sees them bringing in guest vocalists Tom Cameron (also formerly Crystal Head, may or may not be related to James, I honestly don’t know) on side B’s “System” and Chantal Brown of Vodun and many, many other guest spots throughout London heavy on the album finale “Mono.” Further, in performance and construction, Acute Mania is the richest offering Steak have yet made, and as they ascend into veteran status within one of Planet Earth’s most vibrant and populated creative undergrounds, they absolutely own every moment of the album. That is to say, each song on Acute Mania has its purpose serving the greater whole, and the entirety of the release shows Steak as heavier, more realized, more melodic and more mindful in their arrangements than they’ve ever been.

If nothing else, the very least one might say of Acute Mania is that the band found the right producer in JB Pilon at Buffalo Studio, who also mixed with Simone Lomardi while the esteemed Karl Daniel Lidén (Katatonia, Greenleaf, so many others) at Tri-Lamb Studios in Sweden mastered. The sound of the record is spacious when it needs to be in pieces like “Ancestors” with its memorable, vocal-highlight hook in its second half, “Wolves” — speaking of Greenleaf, the atmospheric beginning of Acute Mania calls to mind how Greenleaf‘s 2021 LP, Echoes From a Mass, also worked in defiance of rockers-up-front expectation in favor of something more gradually unfolding — or the mellow, All Them Witches-style psych-blues in the early going of “Last Days,” with Haley channeling Nick Cave in Grinderman with his intonations that “It’s getting too late…” (thinking “Kitchenette” from the second album; willing to accept it as sonic coincidence but that’s where my head goes anyhow), or the drifting psychedelia that begins the subsequent “Frequencies,” with the guitar far back in that deep mix and thus landing that much harder when the riff kicks in for real, backed by a fervent nodding groove in the bass and drums and verse vocals with just the right edge of distortion on them. Again, the right producer, in terms both of capturing that performance and knowing how to treat it.

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With Tom Cameron stepping in for “System” between, that is all before the penultimate “Papas Special Custard” (premiered here) establishes itself as one of the most ambitious single tracks the band has ever done, building on the volume trades of “Frequencies,” but less beholden to one-or-the-other-ism, arriving at layered-solo apex that’s worthy of its placement as the crescendo of Acute Mania before the even more pointedly atmospheric “Mono” closes out, Chantal Brown‘s arrival in choral fashion and playing off the melody of the guitar at about 3:32 into the 5:05 not to be understated as a peak of its own. Even the manner in which “Wolves” sets up the brash three-minute run of second cut “Dead Meat” — which has guitar acting like backing vocals, maybe a theremin, before shredding its final measure to bits and feeding directly into “Ancestors” — feels conceived and executed with a level of care emblematic of a band seeing the broader scope of their whole work.

Almost none of this should come as a surprise to those who’ve followed Steak at any point over the last 10 years. They’ve always rocked with a bit of edge and a chip on their collective shoulder, perhaps feeling like there’s something to prove, but with both time and their creative development up to now behind them, Acute Mania leaves no real questions to ask except perhaps whether it will be another five years before their next LP surfaces — and hopefully not. As much as the focus throughout is on mood, almost in defiance of the title, “Wolves,” “Dead Meat,” “Last Days,” the more aggro moments of “Frequencies” and the pull-it-all-together-and-pay-it-off “Papas Special Custard” want nothing either for tonal presence or weighted push, even if on average the tempo throughout Acute Mania might be slower than one would expect.

But if the story of No God to Save — the real-world story, not the album’s actual narrative — was of a band finding their place within a style, Acute Mania is a logical, sizeable next forward step in manifesting their persona in that place. On a level of craft, these are the most complex songs Steak have written, and serve well across repeat listens to satisfy with detail and nuance and more to find the more one hears them. Tom Cameron‘s guest spot on “System” and Deal‘s drumming throughout serves as a reminder of how undervalued Crystal Head were in their time, and Chantal Brown is a force to behold, but Acute Mania is Steak grabbing hold of a pivotal moment for themselves and every bit living up to its demand. Whether it’s the balance of heft and flourish, the carefully wrought turns in atmosphere or the stretches of all-go urgency that still feel essential to who they are, Steak handle it all with professional-style grace while coming across as sincere and vital. And even before you account for the comic, film or any of the other not-directly musical aspects surrounding it, the result is the kind of record that not every band gets to make.

Steak, Acute Mania (2022)

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Steak Announce Acute Mania Out April 1; Premiere “Papas Special Custard” Video

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 26th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

steak papas special custard video

London heavy rockers Steak release their new album, Acute Mania, on April 1 through Ripple Music. It is the third full-length from the UK four-piece, and with its arrival, the video premiering below for “Papas Special Custard,” and especially the advent of the Steak: Mad Lord comic book that will be included with the vinyl and the accompanying short film Mad Lord, the band seem to be tying all the pieces together for where their interests and ambitions have led them all along, from Chris “Kippa” Haley reminding of Nick Cave‘s Grinderman as guitarist Reece Tee leads bassist James “Cam” Cameron and drummer Dean Deal (ex-Magna Saga/Crystal Head) through a fluid, All Them Witches-style build on “Last Days,” to the samurai visualsteak mad lord thematic seen in “Papas Special Custard” and in other videos still to come. By the time Acute Mania arrives, Steak will be bordering on five years since 2017’s No God to Save (review here), and while I don’t know the actual circumstances of the writing or recording for this eight-track/47-minute collection, if you wanted to apply the ‘probably had more time to work on their songs because they couldn’t tour’ pandemic narrative that’s been so gosh darn popular these last couple years, true or not, it would fit.

That is to say, Acute Mania is the most complex and the broadest-ranging work Steak have done to-date. I’ll spare you a review, but in songs like “Frequencies,” the aforementioned “Last Days” and closer “Mono” with a guest vocal spot from Vodun‘s Chantal Brown, their songs are patient in a way they’ve never been before. “Dead Meat” seethes rather than rushes. “System,” with Tom Cameron on vocals, manages to resonate its urgency without hitting full throttle in a way that feels like Steak have grown up. “Ancestors” is still the kind of hook that might define a record, and the lads might still, say, title a song something like “Papas Special Custard,” but Acute Mania is a more mature vision of who they are, building on what they’ve accomplished in the last decade since 2012’s Disastronaught EP (review here) introduced them to the world.

If this is Steak marking their own status as veterans, consciously or not, then fair enough. Their sound is noSteak MAD LORD FILM POSTER less physical than it has been, and their progression in style has been both marked from release to release and well earned both in songwriting and in slogging it out on tour when able, but they present their material in a way that comes across as more thoughtful, more dynamic, and able to shift in ways that, when plowing straight ahead, aren’t necessarily possible. “Papas Special Custard,” which is the longest cut on Acute Mania at 8:29, demonstrates this well, with a break in its midsection that’s cleverly built back up to a solo-topped crescendo for the album and story alike. The video, which gives a preview of the comic book with illustrations by Rhys Wootton, with whom the band has worked all along, has graphic violence and some nudity, so if you want to call it NSFW, that’s probably reasonable, but you should quit your job anyway because life’s too short for that shit and you know it. I’m not advocating going out in a blaze of cartoon geisha boobage (nor would I advocate said boobage to start with), but anyhow, quit your job. The track’s killer. Rock and roll.

Next stop: A box set of action figures. Oh yeah, and the album release.

Steak — who got booted off their Facebook page because it was hacked and had to start all over and could use a ‘Like’ if you’d want to throw one their way — will be appearing at Desertfest London and Desertfest Berlin 2022 this Spring, and recently took part in Glory or Death Records‘ Bow to Your Masters Vol. 2 tribute to Deep Purple. One expects that, conditions permitting, more tour dates will follow.

Below, you’ll find the video as well as art, the album preorder links and credits.

Please enjoy:

Steak, “Papas Special Custard” video premiere

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Preorders:
Digital – https://ripplemusic.bandcamp.com/album/acute-mania
Physical – https://ripplemusic.bigcartel.com/products?utf8=%E2%9C%93&search=acute+mania

London’s premier stoner rockers, Steak, return with their latest full-length album for Ripple Music – “Acute Mania” – scheduled for an April 1st release (No April Fooling here, folks)

Take a gander and open up your ears for the first taste of the upcoming album – this is the animated music video for “Papas Special Custard.”

All songs written and performed by Steak
Guest vocal and lyrics’ System’ by Tom Cameron
Guest vocal and arrangement on ‘Mono’ by Chantal Brown
Recorded by JB Pilon at Buffalo Studio
Mixed by JB Pilon and credit to Simone Lomardi
Mastered by Karl Daniel Lidén at Tri-Lamb Studios
Album art by Schoph Schofield and Rhys Wootton

Video director : Samuel Smith www.samuelsmithdirector.com

More info about the comic book that will come alongside the super limited vinyl edition (250 copies):
https://www.samuelsmithdirector.com/comic-book

Illustrator : Rhys Wootton

Production Company : IMAGECLEAVER: http://www.imagecleaver.com

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