Album Review & Full Premiere: Fatso Jetson & All Souls, Live From Total Annihilation

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on August 18th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

All Souls & Fatso Jetson Live From Total Annihilation

[All Souls and Fatso Jetson release Live From Total Annihilation Aug. 19 on Ripple Music. Stream it in full above, find the complete video below. Ripple has preorders here.]

In the lonely middle of the Year of Our Lungs 2021, All Souls and Fatso Jetson aired the livestream (review here) that would become their joint LP release, Live From Total Annihilation. At the time, it was called ‘Virtual Volumes’ in relation to Fatso Jetson‘s 2010 album, Archaic Volumes (discussed here; review here), and the two four-pieces played with masks on with All Souls in color and Fatso Jetson in black and white, an atmosphere tense like everything but clearly a case of two bands wanting to do what they could in the absence of live shows. Helpful in regards to minimizing personnel involved, the two bands share drummer Tony Tornay, who no doubt has pulled double-duty many times over, but did as well when these two groups toured the UK together in 2017. Eddie Rivas from Total Annihilation Studio recorded and mixed, there were projected lightshows, multiple cameras, and so on. It wasn’t a concert, but they made a quality product. And particularly given how the audio came out, it’s not a surprise they’d follow up with a live album release.

All Souls got to play five songs, one new, Fatso Jetson did five, two new, and of the many hours I spent in front of my laptop watching bands play instead of attending concerts or festivals, it was not one I regretted in the least. Thinking of Live From Total Annihilation as a split, the 43-minute LP gets down to business almost immediately with “Who Holds the Answer,” which gave and still gives an early glimpse of what’s since been announced as All Souls‘ third studio album, Ghosts Among Us, out in October (info here). And true to form for them across 2020’s Songs for the End of the World (review here) and 2018’s self-titled debut (review here), “Who Holds the Answer” packs expansive and jammy vibes into a structured three-and-a-half-minute song that’s heavy rock and post-punk and also neither of them and a whole bunch else. They back it with the salvo of “You Just Can’t Win” and “Winds” from the second record, two highlight cuts together that here flow immediately one into the next, the latter providing a tonal highlight for the outing as a whole and a first unclenched minute for All Souls, who even as they unfurl the more open feeling in the second half of “You Just Can’t Win” held the tension in the rhythm from the earlier part of the song.

“Winds” is probably also the best argument for All Souls as a four-piece, though it’s by no means their only song putting two guitars to dynamic use. Matt Price (Behold! the Monolith) was new on second guitar alongside Antonio Aguilar (also vocals), the aforementioned Tornay — who, for all the melodic wash and ambience around him gives a definitive performance on drums for “Wings”; style and technique — and bassist/vocalist Meg Castellanos, but the track’s complexity and depth even in a ‘live’ setting make it clearer why even after Price left the lineup issue still isn’t really settled for the band. They punk out on “Sentimental Rehash” like it’s 2001 again — hey, wait a minute! — and use that shimmy to reground the set before “Time Bomb” from the debut caps with purpose in its vocal melody, insistence in its groove and a kick of volume at the start that lets you know you’ve arrived. It turns somewhat more severe, the air gets heavier, the guitar solos cascade into noise, but not-doing-just-one-thing and not-doing-the-same-thing-all-the-time are trademarks of All Souls‘ work to this point and one would expect no less.

All Souls

fatso jetson

As regards an act who function solely on their own terms, it’s kind of astonishing how little one can know what’s coming when Fatso Jetson take the stage. Not only have they been around for nearly 30 years — long enough that guitarist/vocalist Mario Lalli‘s son, Dino von Lalli, has been in the band now for the better part of the last decade — but their work is so varied that they could put together representative sets for four different kinds of groups and you’d still come out of it saying “hot shit, what a band.” For Live From Total Annihilation, the new song “Drifting Off to Storybook Deth” sets the tone for what follows, with a methodical six minutes of mellow, methodical groove, bassist Larry Lalli reminding where the weight in Fatso Jetson comes from as Mario and Dino space out rhythm and lead tracks and Tornay continues to hold it together with a same-day-different-band-no-problem-who-else-needs-drums fluidity.

“Drifting Off to Storybook Deth” picks up in terms of getting louder, but the mood remains broad and leads into “Monoxide Dreams” from Archaic Volumes, furthering the languid sensibility of the first track while proving deceptive in its efficiency not unlike All Souls‘ “Who Holds the Answer,” fitting a lot of reach into about the same amount of time. “Monoxide Dreams” reminds how undervalued Mario Lalli (also in the instrumental Yawning Man) is as a vocalist, and it’s fitting the band’s personality that the weirdo-jazz-bounce of the not-a-word-in-it “Dream Homes” follows, the band reaffirming their longstanding commitment to chicanery. Missing from the stream is “Living All Over You,” and the songs have been rearranged, but the fuzzy pulse and vocal harmonies of “Long Deep Breaths” round out to give Fatso Jetson‘s side B not a comedown, but a flow and progression of its own in mini-album style. At five and a half minutes, it’s shorter than “Drifting Off to Storybook Deth,” but there’s still plenty of time for it to get its point across, echoing the drifting beginning and keeping enough movement for the whole thing to be comprehensible as a single work.

This stream was a gift when it was badly needed, and though the shape of the covid-19 pandemic has changed and live music has returned albeit not without risk of exposure, Live From Total Annihilation documents the event, gives both bands a bit of momentum going into whatever’s next — new record certainly for All Souls, maybe one in the works for Fatso Jetson as well? — and serves as a reminder of how precious it is to be able to have people in a room together for the sake of live performance and art. If you didn’t miss that, what’s the point of anything?

All Souls & Fatso Jetson, ‘Virtual Volumes’ livestream

All Souls on Facebook

All Souls on Twitter

All Souls on Instagram

All Souls on Bandcamp

All Souls website

Fatso Jetson on Facebook

Fatso Jetson on Twitter

Fatso Jetson on Instagram

Fatso Jetson website

Ripple Music website

Ripple Music on Bandcamp

Ripple Music on Facebook

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The Obelisk Show on Gimme Metal Playlist: Episode 90

Posted in Radio on August 5th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

the obelisk show banner

I don’t remember the last time I did three voice breaks on a show, and while I’m of the general opinion that the less the universe hears my voice the better off said universe will likely be for not having heard me invariably say something stupid, I did turn in three VTs for this episode. Truth is I’ve been pretty dug in as regards this show — music, music, music — and I think that’s a winning philosophy for life in general, if one that doesn’t necessarily take advantage of the full potentialities of radio as a format. Gimme Metal have been kind enough to let me do 90 episodes (so far!) of this show. Making some effort to meet that audience halfway seems like the least my contrarian ass can do.

Maybe that’s just me getting old. Whatever. I sucked at being young anyway.

Further to that “making an effort thing,” I’ve tried last episode and this one specifically to include a few staples of stoner/heavy/doom/psych/whatever that even if people don’t know hopefully they can latch onto. Last ep started with Acid King, this one leads with Goatsnake. There’s Black Sabbath, Stoned Jesus, Sungrazer along the way before the playlist really digs into new stuff. And even some of that — My Sleeping Karma, Abrams, Elephant Tree — is from known parties. I don’t know. I’m trying my best here. I was happy to include the Guhts song that premiered, and CB3 finally putting out “To Space and Away” from their new record is a gift. This won’t be the last time I play that song, I’m sure.

Thanks if you listen and thanks for reading.

The Obelisk Show airs 5PM Eastern today on the Gimme app or at: http://gimmemetal.com.

Full playlist:

The Obelisk Show – 08.05.22 (VT = voice track)

Goatsnake What Love Remains I
Foehammer Recurring Grave Second Sight
VT
Elephant Tree Sails Track-by-Track
Abrams Like Hell In the Dark
Stoned Jesus I’m the Mountain Seven Thunders Roar
My Sleeping Karma Avatara Atma
Guhts Burn My Body Burn My Body
VT
Black Sabbath Into the Void Master of Reality
Sungrazer Goldstrike Mirador
Sons of Arrakis The Black Mirror Volume 1
All Souls I Dream Ghosts Among Us
Sleestak Northwoods Harbinger
Deadly Vipers Big Empty Low City Drone
CB3 To Space and Away Exploration
VT
Obscure Supersession Collective Auroral Purposes I Obscure Supersession Collective
(If needed) Psychlona El Tolvanera Palo Verde

The Obelisk Show on Gimme Metal airs every Friday 5PM Eastern, with replays Sunday at 7PM Eastern. Next new episode is Aug. 19 (subject to change). Thanks for listening if you do.

Gmme Metal website

The Obelisk on Facebook

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All Souls Post “I Dream” Video From Ghosts Among Us

Posted in Bootleg Theater on August 1st, 2022 by JJ Koczan

All Souls

So, last week, Los Angeles heavy rockers All Souls offered up the first single from their forthcoming Ghosts Among Us full-length in the form of “I Dream.” They now follow with a video for the same track.

Between the two — the song stream and the video’s arrival — the three-piece of guitarist/vocalist Antonio Aguilar, bassist/vocalist Meg Castellanos and drummer Tony Tornay played a week of shows on the West Coast with the also-underrated Ape Machine and made a stop at Ripplefest Texas in Austin, playing on a packed four-day bill and featuring a guest performance from Alice Austin (vocalist for Black Sabbitch) on guitar. I just looked for video of that, didn’t find any. I’m sure some will surface at some point.

In any case, even with the notable (and noted) stretch of shows between, it’s not every band in the world for whom I’d post a video 10 days or so after the same song already came out. Usually I might just wait for the video. But I knew this was coming — All Souls run a mean Patreon — and I’m still posting it. First of all, the video rules, with luchador-masked wrestlers, the band turning into zombies, and so on. Second, and perhaps more importantly, it gives me another chance to tell you how much both the song and the album it represents are worthy of your time. If it’s the video — directed by Aguilar — that aids in driving that point home, then that’s easy justification for the one-thing-then-that-thing-but-kind-of-different proximity. Third, it’s an excuse for me to listen the song again.

I showed this to The Pecan yesterday morning when he got up around 5AM. I hadn’t even watched it yet. Obviously he wasn’t quite processing the voodoo, but guys in masks on skateboards? Yeah, his four-and-a-half-year-old self can get down with that. And if he can, I have to believe you can too.

Enjoy:

All Souls, “I Dream” official video

All Souls’ 3rd full length Ghosts Among Us is slated to come out this fall 2022 on Oscura Records. Pre-orders are available HERE: http://allsoulsband.com/

I Dream from the album Ghosts Among Us on Oscura Records.

Staring Dave Carnie as “El Brujo”, Danilo Ruiz as “El Capitán” and All Souls.

Music written and performed by All Souls.

Directed by Antonio Aguilar.

Cameras: Memo Villaseñor, Alicia Kasai.

Editing and Post Production: Jacob Mendel at Flawless Post. Song recorded by Eddie Rivas at Total Annihilation Studios in Los Angeles, produced by Alain Johannes.

All Souls are:
Antonio Aguilar – Guitar/vocals
Meg Castellanos – Bass/vocals
Tony Tornay – Drums

All Souls on Facebook

All Souls on Twitter

All Souls on Instagram

All Souls on Bandcamp

All Souls Patreon

All Souls website

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All Souls Post New Single; Ghosts Among Us Out This Fall

Posted in Whathaveyou on July 20th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

All Souls

I love the phrase in the first verse of this song, ‘beckoning the wrecking crew,’ as sung by All Souls guitarist Antonio Aguilar, who shortly thereafter is backed by bassist Meg Castellanos and producer Alain Johannes in the chorus, further emblazoned by Tony Tornay‘s stomping snare. Listen for it if you’re fortunate enough to actually press play on the embed below. Something about the bounce between the harder ‘ck’ sounds and the melody that carries through the line. It’s a perfect moment emblematic of the many more that populate the band’s third album, Ghosts Among Us.

That record arrives in October as the band’s most vital argument to-date for why they’re so fucking underrated. Never mind that the beckoned wrecking crew is coming to smash apart the various traumas that might hold us back from being who we feel like we should be, just listen to the music. The passion and spirit in it. Yeah, it’s uptempo and well produced and the songwriting is tight and performances sharp — true of the whole album, by the way; I’ve heard it and won’t play coy in saying otherwise — but there’s a layer of resonance to All Souls that resides beneath the surface waiting to be found. It won’t come to you, Aguilar has never been so cloying a songwriter, but met on its own level, All Souls‘ craft offers rare depth of emotion and, yes, soul, to those ready to engage with it.

If that’s you, you get the prize and the prize is the music so fucking have at it. They’re on tour with Ape Machine starting tonight and headed to Ripplefest Texas:

All Souls Ghosts Among Us

All Souls share first single from forthcoming album, tour with Ape Machine starts 7/20

Hear/share “I Dream”

L.A. band All Souls share the first single from their forthcoming album Ghosts Among Us on all platforms today. Hear and share “I Dream” via Bandcamp, Spotify and others.

All Souls announce their forthcoming album Ghosts Among Us with Alain Johannes producing. The album was written and recorded during the height of the pandemic. The song “I Dream” is a meditation on trauma that haunts us and creating a mantra to break it away.

All Souls have shared the stage with Tool, the Jesus Lizard, Melvins and Meat Puppets. They are getting ready to hit the road again out to Ripple Fest in Austin TX.

Live From Total Annihilation split album with Fatso Jetson will be released August 19th on special CD/Vinyl/DVD packaging through Ripple Music.

All Souls’ 3rd full length Ghosts Among Us is slated to come out this fall 2022 on Oscura Records. Pre-orders are available HERE.

ALL SOULS / APE MACHINE TOUR 2022:
07/20 Permanent Records Roadhouse – Los Angeles, CA
07/21 Yucca Tap Room – Tempe, AZ
07/22 Rockhouse Bar – El Paso, TX
07/24 Ripple Fest/Far Out Lounge – Austin, TX
07/26 The Quarry – Bisbee, AZ
07/27 Brick by Brick – San Diego, CA

All Souls are:
Antonio Aguilar – Guitar/vocals
Meg Castellanos – Bass/vocals
Tony Tornay – Drums

https://www.facebook.com/allsoulsband/
https://www.instagram.com/allsoulsband/
https://allsoulsband.bandcamp.com/
http://allsoulsband.com/

All Souls, “I Dream”

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All Souls Announce Southwestern Shows with Ape Machine

Posted in Whathaveyou on May 19th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

all souls

I’m going to tell you something that I probably shouldn’t. The third All Souls record is finished. Done. The mastered files are sitting on my desktop where they’ve been since the Los Angeles-based outfit very generously sent them to me so I could hear the record. And I have lived with it since then. It’s their best work to-date, and their collaboration with producer Alain Johannes has brought not only his own guest spots on various tracks — which certainly isn’t going to hurt the material, ever — but a new level of execution from the band itself. They’re sorting out label stuff — I think? — but I can run off a list of imprints half a mile long that would be lucky to have them. I’m a fan, and I’ve been preaching as hard as I can since their first LP — you might say I posted about them frickin’ yesterday; hey, I like writing about bands I like — but there’s no time like the present to get on board, because if you think you’re too late or you missed it, you didn’t. The best is yet to come.

The fact that they’re releasing their live split with Fatso Jetson — which is what that post from earlier this week was about — through Ripple Music and that this tour with Portland, Oregon’s Ape Machine includes the stop at RippleFest Texas makes me hopeful that the label will pick up the album and work toward giving it and the band their rather significant due, but I have no insider info to share, and if I did, I probably wouldn’t talk about it anyway. There’s only so much trouble I’m willing to get in.

Consider yourself lucky if you get to see this band live. I do.

Poster and dates from socials:

ALL souls ape machine tour

ALL SOULS Tour Dates w/ Ape Machine

We are so excited to announce our upcoming southwestern tour with @apemachinemusic!!!!

7/20 Los Angeles, CA
7/21 Tempe, AZ
7/22 El Paso, TX
7/24 Ripplefest, Austin, TX
7/26 Bisbee, AZ
7/27 San Diego, CA

We hope to see you at a show!!!

All Souls are:
Antonio Aguilar – Guitar/vocals
Meg Castellanos – Bass/vocals
Tony Tornay – Drums

https://www.facebook.com/allsoulsband/
https://www.instagram.com/allsoulsband/
https://allsoulsband.bandcamp.com/
http://allsoulsband.com/

All Souls, “Death Becomes Us” official video

All Souls, Songs for the End of the World (2020)

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Fatso Jetson & All Souls to Release Live From Total Annihilation on Ripple Music

Posted in Whathaveyou on May 18th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Yo, I don’t even care about the release date. Just hook this one directly up to my veins like Barney and beer truck. So good. I watched these sets when they premiered as the ‘Virtual Volumes’ live stream (review here), and even watching Fatso Jetson and All Souls — who share drummer Tony Tornay between them, further minimizing personnel — jam out with masks on was a righteous experience. Live From Total Annihilation will be issued as a split LP in both acts’ first collaboration with Ripple Music — who should also step up and put out the next All Souls already; come on — and from where I sit huddled into the same corner of the same couch where I was when I first saw and heard the thing, it remains an utter no-brainer pickup. August release? Great, that’ll work. Can’t tell you what a precious reminder this one was to just watch bands be in a place and hit it. And the audio was ace. It’ll make a great live split.

From the PR wire:

fatso jetson

LEGENDARY DESERT ROCK INNOVATORS FATSO JETSON JOIN RIPPLE MUSIC FOR UPCOMING NEW RELEASE

Ripple Music is psyched to announce that seminal desert rock innovators FATSO JETSON are joining the Ripple roster! Their new outing is a split release with fellow Californians All Souls, with both bands recording their contributions live in the studio during the pandemic lockdown.

Fatso Jetson is an iconic American desert rock band from Palm Desert, California, formed in 1994 by Yawning Man members Mario Lalli and Larry Lalli, along with Tony Tornay. They are often credited as the fathers of the desert strain of stoner rock later made most famous by their slightly younger neighbors Kyuss and, later, Queens of the Stone Age. While musically similar to some of their brethren, Fatso Jetson have always branched out and expanded the desert sound by incorporating a broader variety of musical influences including punk, jazz and surf.

Fatson Jetson have toured the world several times, with highly regarded appearances at festivals like SXSW, Roadburn, DesertFest Berlin, DesertFest London, and RippleFest Texas, even appearing in the Foo Fighters’ HBO miniseries Sonic Highways.

Paired with Tony Tornay’s other band All Souls, Live from Total Annihilation is the new split release from Fatso Jetson, following in a long line of highly regarded splits from the band. Live from Total Annihilation finds Lalli, Tornay and the rest of the band in fine form, tearing through four classic desert-rocking tracks.

Look for the split to be released this august on Ripple Music.

https://www.facebook.com/fatsojetson/
https://twitter.com/fatsojetsonband
http://fatsojetson.com/

https://www.facebook.com/allsoulsband/
https://www.instagram.com/allsoulsband/
https://allsoulsband.bandcamp.com/
http://allsoulsband.com/

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

Fatso Jetson & All Souls, ‘Virtual Volumes’ teaser

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Totimoshi Post Lost Recording “Reasons Why”

Posted in Whathaveyou on April 18th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

I’ll spare you the diatribe about how Los Angeles aughts-era heavy rockers Totimoshi — before the social-media-everything cultural takeover — have been unjustly forgotten and lost to time. The truth is that the only reason I haven’t written more about them is that their earlier records aren’t streaming. Their last album was 2011’s Avenger (review here) and I was crazy fortunate to see them live as they toured to support it, and I’ve been glad to follow guitarist/vocalist Antonio Aguilar and bassist Meg Castellanos as they’ve pushed forward with All Souls, initially as four-piece and subsequently returned to a trio format as Totimoshi was, at least temporarily.

But Totimoshi were killer, in any case, and if you’re not yet on board with All Souls, I’ve included below the stream of their 2020 sophomore album, Songs for the End of the World (review here) — still their latest release — for you to get introduced even as I enjoy digging back and hearing an extra-raw Totimoshi dive into “Reasons Why” as a lost artifact of their tenure. It’s a short track, kind of a footnote that former drummer Donny Newenhouse apparently stumbled upon, but as a nerd for the band that was and the band that is, I’ll take it and enjoy hearing the differences between Totimoshi‘s half-punk take on heavy and All Souls‘ more melodic reach and complex songcraft.

And maybe if we all listen they’ll put 2003’s Monolí up on Bandcamp and I can finally do a Friday Full-Length for it.

From the PR wire:

totimoshi

https://totimoshi.bandcamp.com/track/reasons-why

Our old drummer Donny Newenhouse recently unearthed the tune while transferring DAT’s to digital from his storage space. He came across an unlabeled DAT tape. No notes – not even a date, name of song, etc. At the time of the recording, Donny lived above the music venue Bottom of the Hill in San Francisco. We tracked this song in his apartment – drums were set up in the kitchen, bass in the living room and guitar above the stairs in the hallway.

Donny also played guitar and wrote music. He is also a really amazing recording engineer. He would go on to engineer Monolí along with our friend Lars Savage (RIP Lars, we all miss you).

When we heard this track for the first time this week, Antonio was reminded of the inspiration to write the riff to this song:

I’d been an AC/DC fan since I was a kid but had never seen them live. I finally got the chance to see them at the Oakland Colosseum.

in the fall of 2000. At that time it had been a while since I had had a real rock and roll experience. By this, I mean losing myself at a show; that feeling of being in a time warp and nothing exists except for what is going on at the moment because it is so so good.

Those experiences were the reason I devoted my life to playing the guitar. I spent 6 hours a day playing scales and positioning chords and dreaming of playing on a massive stage someday. Sep. 20th, 2000 I had that rock n’ roll experience.

Meg and I went from being slightly bored watching Slash’s Snake Pit open the show to being up on our feet at the first loud bell of “Hell’s Bells” to screaming every lyric at the top of our lungs for the rest of the set. We could not believe what we were witnessing. The sheer might and volume that is AC Fucking DC, and Angus running back and forth the whole entire time… it was mind blowing.

That show really effected me. This initial riff was probably written around the time of the AC/DC experience.

Why I never did second guitar parts and put a solo over the overtone solo I will never know – but in a way it preserved that AC/DC rawness of this song.

I must admit, it is weird to hear this song. I had forgotten about it. I was a completely different person then.

Here we are, 20 years later, and we are all still playing music.

Meg and I got to play the Apollo in Glasgow where AC/DC filmed “If You Want Blood, You Got It”.

While Totimoshi played, I couldn’t stop thinking about Angus and Malcolm.

Totimoshi on “Reasons Why”:
Antonio Aguilar – guitar, vocals
Meg Castellanos – bass
Donny Newenhouse – drums, engineer

https://www.facebook.com/totimoshi
https://totimoshi.bandcamp.com/
https://totimoshi.bigcartel.com/

https://www.facebook.com/allsoulsband/
https://www.instagram.com/allsoulsband/
https://allsoulsband.bandcamp.com/
http://allsoulsband.com/

All Souls, Songs for the End of the World (2020)

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RippleFest Texas 2022 Lineup Finalized

Posted in Whathaveyou on March 22nd, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Back for its second year and with a fourth day in tow, Ripplefest Texas 2022 confirms its full lineup, a total beast of legends and newcomers. Really, I don’t even know what to say here except that if you’re lucky enough to go, it’s probably the kind of thing you’re going to remember for a long gosh-darn time, and it’s the kind of lineup that serves as lording-over fodder on the part of those who were there to those who weren’t. Well, at least it would if the heavy underground weren’t too cool to each other for that kind of gatekeeping nonsense. In any case, this looks like a massive undertaking to put on, and the roster of assembled acts gets a hearty ‘fucking a’ from my corner of the universe.

Tickets for all four days will run you $150, but I feel like the festival earns that on both quality and quantity of product.

Here’s the announcement, info and links:

ripplefest texas 2022 final poster

RIPPLE FEST TEXAS – The Far Out Lounge – July 21-24

4-day passes available now!

RippleFest Texas 2022 is back and the lineup is as big and hot as Texas itself! 4 days of blistering hot music at Austin’s premier music venue The Far Out Lounge. There will be everything from crushing heavy riffs, to acoustic and banjo picking, to improvisation jam sessions and puppet shows! So many legends and great music that this will be a 4 day weekend you will not want to miss!

TICKETS:
https://www.tickettailor.com/events/thefaroutloungestage/639551

FULL LINEUP:
Eagles of Death Metal, The Sword, Crowbar, Mothership, Big Business, The Obsessed, Stöner, Spirit Adrift, The Heavy Eyes, Sasquatch, REZN, Fatso Jetson, Heavy Temple, J.D. Pinkus, Lord Buffalo, Lo-Pan, Wino, El Perro, Void Vator, Hippie Death Cult, Howling Giant, Doctor Smoke, Nick Oliveri, High Desert Queen, Destroyer of Light, Ape Machine, High Priestess, Dryheat, Rubber Snake Charmers, Sun Crow, Holy Death Trio, Bone Church, Horseburner, Spirit Mother, Thunder Horse, Mother Iron Horse, The Age of Truth, Salem’s Bend, Las Cruces, All Souls, Kind, Fostermother, The Absurd, Godeye, Ole English, Mr. Plow, Snake Mountain Revival, Blue Heron, Grail, Formula 400, Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol, Eagle Claw, Bridge Farmers.

The Far Out Lounge is located at 8504 South Congress. Winner of Best New Venue at the Austin Music Awards 2020.

http://www.thefaroutaustin.com/

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

Lo-Pan, Live at the Grog Shop, Cleveland, Ohio, Feb 18, 2022

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