Quarterly Review: Megaton Leviathan, Merlin, Stonerhenge, Guiltless, MR.BISON, Slump & At War With the Sun, Leather Lung, Citrus Citrus, Troubled Sleep, Observers

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

The-Obelisk-Quarterly-Review

So this is it, but before we — you and I, not at the same time but together nonetheless — dive into the final 10 records of this well-still-basically-winter-but-almost-spring-and-god-damn-I-wish-winter-was-over Quarterly Review, how about a big, deep breath, huh? There. In occupational therapy and other teach-you-how-to-keep-your-shit-together circles, deep breathing is spoken of like it’s a magic secret invented in 1999, and you know what, I think it was. That shit definitely didn’t exist when I was a kid. Can be helpful though, sometimes, if you need just to pause for a second, literally a second, and stop that rush in your brain.

Or my brain. Because I’m definitely talking about me and I’ve come to understand in time not everyone’s operates like mine, even aside from whatever I’ve got going on neurologically, sensorially, emotionally or in terms of mental health. Ups and downs to that, as regards human experience. There are a great many things that I’m useless at. This is what I can do, so I’m doing it. Put your head down, keep working. I can do that. 10 records left? Easy. You might say I did the same thing yesterday, and that was already my busiest day, so this is gravy. And gravy, in its various contexts, textures, tastes, and delivery modes, is delicious. I hope you heard something new this week that you enjoyed. If not yet, there’s still hope.

Quarterly Review #41-50:

Megaton Leviathan, Silver Tears

Megaton Leviathan Silver Tears

I’ll confess that when I held this spot for groundfloor now-Asoria, Oregon, dronegazers Megaton Leviathan, I was thinking of their Dec. 2023 instrumental album, Magick Helmet, with its expansive and noisy odes to outsider experimentalism of yore, but then founding principal Andrew James Costa Reuscher (vocals, guitars, synth, bass, etc.) announced a new lineup with the rhythm section of Alex Wynn (bass) and Tory Chappell (drums) and unveiled “Silver Tears” as the first offering from this new incarnation of the band, and its patient, swirling march and meditative overtones wouldn’t be ignored, however otherwise behind I might be. Next to Magick Helmet, “Silver Tears” is downright straightforward in its four-plus minutes, strong in its conveyance of an atmosphere that’s molten and maybe trying to get lost in its own trance a bit, which is fair enough for the hypnotic cast of the song’s ending. The lesson, as ever with Megaton Leviathan, is that you can’t predict what they’ll do next, and that’s been the case since their start over 15 years ago. One assumes the new lineup will play live and that Reuscher will keep pushing into the ether. Beyond that, they could head anywhere and not find a wrong direction.

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Megaton Leviathan on Instagram

Merlin, Grind House

merlin grind house

They put their own spin on it, of course, but there’s love at heart in Merlin‘s take on the classic “Let’s All Go to the Lobby” jingle that serves as the centerpiece of Grind House, and indeed, the seven-song late-2023 long-player unfolds as an intentional cinematic tribute, with “Feature Presentation” bringing the lights down with some funkier elevator vibes before “The Revenger” invents an ’80s movie with its hook alone, “Master Thief ’77” offers precisely the action-packed bassline and wah you would hope, “Endless Calamity” horror-soundtracks with keyboard, “Blood Money” goes west with due Dollars Trilogy flourish, and the 12-minute “Grindhouse,” which culls together pieces of all of the above — “Let’s All Go to the Lobby” included — and adds a voiceover, which even though it doesn’t start with “In a world…” sets its narrative forth with the verve of coming attractions, semi-over-the-top and thus right on for where Merlin have always resided. Interpreting movie music, soundtracks and the incidental sounds of the theater experience, isn’t by any means the least intuitive leap the Kansas City four-piece could make, and the ease with which they swap one style for another underscores how multifaceted their sound can be while remaining their own. If you get it, you’ll get it.

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Stonerhenge, Gemini Twins

stonerhenge gemini twins

After what seem to have been a couple more group-oriented full-lengths and an initial solo EP, Minsk-based heavy rockers Stonerhenge seem to have settled around the songwriting of multi-instrumentalist Serge “Skrypa” Skrypničenka. The self-released Gemini Twins is the third long-player from the mostly-instrumental Belarusian project, though the early 10-minute cut “The Story of Captain Glosster” proves crucial for the spoken word telling its titular tale, which ties into the narrative derived Gemini myth and the notion of love as bringing two halves of one whole person together, and there are other vocalizations in “Time Loop” and “Hypersleep,” the second half of “Starship Troopers,” and so on, so the songs aren’t without a human presence tying them together as they range in open space. This is doubly fortunate, as Skrypničenka embarks on movements of clear-eyed, guitar-led progressive heavy exploration, touching on psychedelia without getting too caught up in effects, too tricky in production, or too far removed from the rhythm of the flowing “Solstice” or the turns “Over the Mountain” makes en route its ah-here-we-are apex. Not without its proggy indulgences, the eight-song/46-minute collection rounds out with “Fugit Irreparable Tempus,” which in drawing a complete linear build across its five minutes from clean tone to a distorted finish, highlights the notion of a plot unfolding.

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Guiltless, Thorns

GUILTLESS Thorns

Guiltless make their debut with the four songs of Thorns on Neurot Recordings, following on in some ways from where guitarist, vocalist, noisemaker and apparent-spearhead Josh Graham (also ex-Battle of Mice, Red Sparowes, Neurosis visuals, etc.) and guitarist/more-noisemaker Dan Hawkins left off in A Storm of Light, in this case recording remotely and reincorporating drummer Billy Graves (also Generation of Vipers) and bringing in bassist Sacha Dunable, best known for his work in Intronaut and for founding Dunable Guitars. Gruff in the delivery vocally and otherwise, and suitably post-apocalyptic in its point of view, “All We Destroy” rumbles its assessment after “Devour-Collide” lays out the crunching tonal foundation and begins to expand outward therefrom, with “Dead Eye” seeming to hit that much harder as it rolls its wall o’ low end over a detritus-strewn landscape no more peaceful in its end than its beginning, with subsequent closer “In Radiant Glow” more malleable in tempo before seeming to pull itself apart lurching to the finish. I’d say I hope our species ultimately fares a bit better than Thorns portrays, but I have to acknowledge that there’s not much empirical evidence to base that on. Guiltless play these songs like an indictment.

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Neurot Recordings website

MR.BISON, Echoes From the Universe

mr.bison echoes from the universe

The latest check-in from the dimension of Italian four-piece MR.BISON, Echoes From the Universe is the band’s most realized work to-date. It’s either their third LP or their fifth, depending on what counts as what, but where it sits in the discography is second to how much the effort stands out generally. Fostering a bright, lush sound distinguished through vocal harmonies and arrangement depth, the seven-song collection showcases the swath of elements that, at this point, has transcended its influence and genuinely found a place of its own. Space rock, Elderian prog, classic harmonized melody, and immediate charge in “The Child of the Night Sky” unfold to acoustics kept going amid dramatic crashes and the melodic roll of “Collision,” with sepia nostalgia creeping into the later lines of “Dead in the Eye” as the guitar becomes more expansive, only to be grounded by the purposeful repetitions of “Fragments” with the last-minute surge ending side A to let “The Promise” fade in with bells like a morning shimmer before exploring a cosmic breadth; it and the also-seven-minute “The Veil” serving as complement and contrast with the latter’s more terrestrial swing early resolving in a an ethereal wash to which “Staring at the Sun,” the finale, could just as easily be referring as to its own path of tension and release. I’ve written about the album a couple times already, but I wanted to put it here too, pretty much just to say don’t be surprised when you see it on my year-end list.

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Heavy Psych Sounds website

Slump & At War With the Sun, SP/LIT

slump at war with the sun split

You’d figure with the slash in its title, the split release pairing UK sludge upstarts At War With the Sun and Slump, who are punk-prone on “Dust” and follow the riff on “Kneel” to a place much more metal, would break down into two sides between ‘SP’ and ‘LIT,’ but I’m not sure either At War With the Sun‘s “The Garden” (9:54) or the two Slump inclusions, which are three and seven minutes, respectively, could fit on a 7″ side. Need a bigger platter, and fair enough for holding the post-Eyehategod disillusioned barks of “The Garden” and the slogging downer groove they ride, or the way Slump‘s two songs unite around more open verses, the guitar dropping out in the strut of “Dust” and giving space to vocals in “Kneel,” even as each cut works toward its own ends stylistically. The mix on Slump‘s material is more in-your-face where At War With the Sun cast an introverted feel, but you want to take the central message as ‘Don’t worry, England’s still miserable,’ and keep an eye to see where both bands go from here as they continue to develop their approaches, I don’t think anyone’ll tell you you’re doing it wrong.

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At War With the Sun on Bandcamp

Slump on Facebook

Slump on Bandcamp

Leather Lung, Graveside Grin

leather lung graveside grin

They know it’s gonna get brutal, the listener knows it’s gonna get brutal, and Massachusetts riff rollers Leather Lung don’t waste time in getting down to business on Graveside Grin, their awaited, middle-fingers-raised debut full-length on Magnetic Eye Records. An established live act in the Northeastern US with a sound culled from the seemingly disparate ends of sludge and party rock — could they be the next-gen inheritors of Weedeater‘s ‘ I don’t know how this is a good time but it is’ character? time will tell — the 40-minute 11-songer doesn’t dwell long in any one track, instead building momentum over a succession of pummelers on either side of the also-pummeling “Macrodose Interlude” until “Raised Me Rowdy,” which just might be an anthem, if a twisted one, fades to its finish. I’ve never been and will never be cool enough for this kind of party, but Leather Lung‘s innovation in bringing fun to extreme sounds and their ability to be catchy and caustic at the same time isn’t something to ignore. The time they’ve put in on EPs and touring shows in the purpose and intensity with which they execute “Empty Bottle Boogie” or the modern-metal guitar contortions of “Guilty Pleasure,” but they are firm in their purpose of engaging their audience on their own level, and accessible in that regard. And as raucous as they get, they’re never actually out of control. That’s what makes them truly dangerous.

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Magnetic Eye Records store

Citrus Citrus, Albedo Massima

citrus citrus albedo massima

A new(-ish) band releasing their first album through Sulatron Records would be notable enough, but Italy’s Citrus Citrus answer that significant endorsement with scope on Dec. 2023’s Albedo Massima, veering into and out of acid-laced traditions in what feels like a pursuit, like each song has a goal it’s chasing whether or not the band knew that when they started jamming. Drift and percussive intrigue mark the outset with “Sunday Morning in the Sun,” which lets “Lost It” surprise as it shifts momentarily into fuzzier, Colour Haze-y heavy psych as part of a series of tradeoffs that emerge, a chorus finish emphasizing structure. The Mediterranean twists of “Fantachimera” become explosively heavy, and that theme continues in the end of “Red Stone Seeds” after that centerpiece’s blown out experimental verses, keyboard drift building to heft that would surprise if not for “Lost It” earlier, while “Sleeping Giant” eschews that kind of tonal largesse for a synthier wash before “Frozen\Sun” creates and fills its own mellow and melancholy reaches. All the while, a pointedly organic production gives the band pockets to weave through dynamically, and melody abides. Not at all inactive, or actually that mellow, Albedo Massima resonates with the feel of an adventure just beginning. Here’s looking forward.

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Sulatron Records webstore

Troubled Sleep, A Trip Around the Sun & Solitary Man

troubled sleep a trip around the sun

Two initial tracks from Swedish newcomers Troubled Sleep, released as separate standalone singles and coupled together here because I can, “A Trip Around the Sun” and “Solitary Man” show a penchant for songwriting in a desert-style sphere, the former coming across as speaking to Kyuss-esque traditionalism while “Solitary Man” pushes a little further into classic heavy and more complex melodies while keeping a bounce that aligns to genre. Both are strikingly cohesive in their course and professional in their production, and while the band has yet to let much be known about their overarching intentions, whether they’re working toward an album or what, they sound like they most definitely could be, and I’ll just be honest and say that’s a record I’ll probably want to hear considering the surety with which “A Trip Around the Sun” and “Solitary Man” are brought to life. I’m not about to tell you they’re revolutionizing desert rock or heavy rock more broadly, but songs this solid don’t usually happen by accident, and Troubled Sleep sound like they know where they’re headed, even if the listener doesn’t yet. The word is potential and the tracks are positively littered with it.

Troubled Sleep on Facebook

Troubled Sleep on Bandcamp

Observers, The Age of the Machine Entities

observers the age of the machine entities

I’m not sure how the double-kick intensity and progressive metal drive translates to the stately-paced, long-shots-of-things-floating-in-space of Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, but Observers‘ debut, The Age of the Machine Entities, is sweeping enough to bridge cynical headscratching. And of course there were the whole lightspeed freakout and we-invented-murder parts of Arthur C. Clarke’s narrative as well, so there’s room for All India Radio‘s Martin Kennedy, joined by bassist Rich Gray, drummer Chris Bohm and their included host of guests to conjure the melodic wash of “Strange and Beautiful” after the blasting declarations of “Into the Eye” at the start, with “Pod Bay Doors” interpreting that crucial scene in the film through manipulated sampling (not exclusive to it), and the 11-minute “Metaphor” unfurls a subtly-moving, flute-featuring ambience ahead of the pair “The Star Child” and “The Narrow Way Part II” wrap by realigning around the project’s metallic foundation, which brings fresh perspective to a familiar subject in the realm of science fiction.

Observers on Facebook

Observers on Bandcamp

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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

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

Megaton Leviathan, Doomgazer Pedal Demonstration I

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Megaton Leviathan Announce Guns and LSD: The Complete Demos 2007-2013 3LP

Posted in Whathaveyou on December 6th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Megaton Leviathan

The world is a more bizarre place with Megaton Leviathan in it, and fortunately I don’t mean that in a horrifying way. The now-long-running, long-since-dug-in doomgaze outfit led by founding guitarist, vocalist and songwriter Andrew James Costa Reuscher have a new collection of demos in the offing, and true to (long)form, it’s a triple-LP. I don’t know about you, but I’m for sure interested in hearing the psychological expanse of a 33-minute Megaton Leviathan song — itself invariably too much to fit on a single vinyl side — and wouldn’t you know, Guns and LSD: The Complete Demos 2007-2013 would seem to provide.

The band’s must recent offering was 2018’s Mage (discussed here), so Guns and LSD arrives in good time to follow that up while giving a glimpse at the process behind the expanded-definition heavy the band has perveyed for the last 15 years, refusing to rest on laurels or stop progressing all the while.

Until the next thing, then:

Megaton Leviathan Guns and LSD The Complete Demos 2007-2013

DOOMGAZE PIONEERS MEGATON LEVIATHAN RELEASE “REPEATING PATTERNS OF LOVE”, THE FIRST TRACK FROM UPCOMING SPECIAL 3 LP DEMOS SET, “GUNS AND LSD, THE COMPLETE DEMOS 2007-2013”

Astoria, OR-based Megaton Leviathan has been creating heavy, cinematic music that has mystified and enthralled listeners since the band’s debut album, “Water Wealth Hell On Earth”, in 2010. Always looking to expand musically on what the band helped define as the burgeoning Doomgaze-Doompop genre, Megaton Leviathan’s creative visionary, Andrew Reuscher, is continually redefining the band’s vision while setting a new standard with the mixing of lo-fi elements and modern production.

It’s been four years since Megaton Leviathan’s third and last full length album, the industrial Doomgaze masterpiece “Mage”, and now Reuscher is proud to announce that the band will soon be releasing “Guns and LSD, The Complete Demos 2007-2013”. Featuring the complete demos of the 2011 demo tape “Repeating Patterns of Love”, and 2010’s “Water Wealth Hell On Earth”, “Guns and LSD” will be available digitally as well as a special 3 LP set. Reuscher says, “The idea with this album was to experiment and push the listener. It’s heavy, but doom isn’t my permanent residence. I incorporated some industrial and shoegaze. The second demo is especially heavier. A lot of feedback noise art and power electronics with two heavy songs and a 33 minute track that ends with a string section. The bonus tracks are outtakes. I did my best to stay true to my vision, but definitely leaned into the harder.” In advance of the release of the albums, Megaton Leviathan unveils the track “Repeating Patterns of Love”.

Reuscher wrote “Repeating Patterns of Love” in his Gateway Portland home in 2007 and he produced and remixed it from the original files for the demo mastered by Warren Defever at Third Man. “With all these songs from this time, ‘Repeating Patterns Of Love’ was an exercise in being vulnerable lyrically and with my ability as a musician”, he says. ‘It’s all here, open to being torn apart. It is the story of a screwed up kid from Turlock, California, trying to start a band. I tuned my guitar down a step, plugged a fuzz pedal into The Fender Super 6 I borrowed from my friend Billy Kyle and followed my heart. Turns out the ‘Doom’ gazes back.”

Putting together “Guns and LSD, The Complete Demos 2007-2013” has given Reuscher the much-needed time to look back and reflect on the over thirteen years of Megaton Leviathan. “I am still, to this day, driven to feed the beast. That’s how it breathes fire. So here we are long overdue, but suffice it to say the time has come to deliver the goods.”

2018’s “Mage” featured a cover of Cluster & Brian Eno’s song “The Belldog”, in addition to contributions from Acid Punk visionary Helios Creed and Secret Chiefs 3 alumni Ada Stacy. The band’s second full length release was 2014’s “Past 21 Beyond the Arctic Cell.”

The last few years Reuscher has taken Doomgaze to a different dimension. He has collaborated with the UK’s Emmergy FX on a fuzz/delay effect pedal and has created a demonstration video that showcases the absolute beauty and mayhem this pedal is capable of. The video is available on YouTube.

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Megaton Leviathan, “Repeating Patterns of Love”

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