Quarterly Review: James Romig & Mike Scheidt, Mythic Sunship, Deville, Superdeluxe, Esel, Blue Tree Monitor, Astrometer, Oldest Sea, Weddings, The Heavy Crawls

Posted in Reviews on September 28th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

THE-OBELISK-FALL-2020-QUARTERLY-REVIEW

I’m in it. The only reason I even know what day it is is because I keep notes and I set up the back end of these posts ahead of time. They tell me what number I’m on. As for the rest, it’s blinders and music, all all all. Go. Go. Go. I honestly don’t even know why I still write these intro paragraphs. I just do. You know the deal, right? 10 records yesterday, 10 today, 10 more tomorrow. At some point it ends. At some point it begins again. Presumably before then I’ll figure out what day it is.

Quarterly Review #71-80:

James Romig & Mike Scheidt, The Complexity of Distance

James Romig Mike Scheidt The Complexity of Distance

James Romig is a Pulitzer-finalist composer, and Mike Scheidt is the founding guitarist/vocalist of YOB. I refuse to cut-and-paste-pretend at understanding all the theory put into the purported ’13:14:15′ ratio of beat cycles throughout The Complexity of Distance — or, say, just about any of it — but the resulting piece is about 57 minutes of Scheidt‘s guitar work, as recorded by Billy Barnett (YOB‘s regular producer). It is presented as a single track, and with the (obviously intentional) chord progressions in Romig‘s piece, “The Complexity of Distance” is a huge drone. If you ever wanted to hear Scheidt do earlier-style Earth guitar work — yes, duh — then this might satisfy that curiosity. There’s high-culture intersecting with low here in a way that takes Scheidt out of it creatively — that is to say, Romig did the composing — but I won’t take away from the work in concept or performance, or even the result. Hell, I’ll listen to Mike Scheidt riff around for 57 minutes. It’ll be the best 57 minutes of my god damned day. Perhaps that’s not universal, but I don’t think Romig‘s looking for radio hits. Whether you approach it on that theory level or as a sonic meditation, the depths welcome you. I’d take another Scheidt solo record someday too, though. Just saying.

James Romig website

Mike Scheidt on Facebook

New World Records store

 

Mythic Sunship, Light/Flux

mythic sunship light flux

Copenhagen’s Mythic Sunship turned Light/Flux around so quick after 2021’s Wildfire (review here) they didn’t even have time to take a new promo photo. There is no question the Danish five-piece have been on a tear for a few years now, and their ascent into the psych-jazz fusion ether continues with Light/Flux, marrying its gotta-happen-right-this-second urgency to a patience in the actual unfolding of songs like the sax’ed out “Aurora” and the more guitar-led “Blood Moon” at the outset — light — with the cosmic triumphalist horn and crashes of “Decomposition” leading off side B and moving into the hey-where’d-you-come-from boogie of “Tempest,” presumably flux. Each half of the record ends with a standout, as “Equinox” follows “Blood Moon” with a more space rock-feeling takeoff pulse, right up to the synth sweep that starts at about 2:50, and “First Frost” gives high and low float gracefully over steady toms like different dreams happening at the same time and then merging in purpose as the not-overblown crescendo locks in. May their momentum carry them ever forward if they’re going to produce at this level.

Mythic Sunship on Facebook

Tee Pee Records store

 

Deville, Heavy Lies the Crown

Deville Heavy Lies the Crown

What a fascinating direction the progression of Sweden’s Deville has taken these 15 years after Come Heavy Sleep. Heavy Lies the Crown finds the Swedish journeymen aligned to Sixteentimes Music for the follow-up to 2018’s Pigs With Gods (review here), and is through its eight tracks in a dense-toned, impact-minded 33 minutes with nary a second to spare in cuts like “Killing Time” and “Unlike You” and “A Devil Around Your Neck.” Their push and aggressive edge reminds of turn-of-the-century Swedish heavy rockers like Mustasch or Mother Misery, and even in “Hands Tied” and “Serpent Days” — the two longest cuts on Heavy Lies the Crown, appearing in succession on side A — they maintain an energy level fostered by propulsive drums and a rampant drive toward immediacy rather than flourish, but neither does the material feel rushed or unconsidered right up to the final surprising bit of spaciousness in “Pray for More,” which loosens up the throttle a bit while still holding onto an underlying chug, some last progressive angularity perhaps to hint at another stage to come. One way or the other, in craft and delivery, Deville remain reliable without necessarily being predictable, which is a rare balance to strike, particularly for a band who’ve never made the same record twice.

Deville on Facebook

Sixteentimes Music store

 

Superdeluxe, Superdeluxe

Superdeluxe Superdeluxe

Guitarist/vocalist Bill Jenkins and bassist Matthew Kahn hail from Kingsnake (begat by Sugar Daddie in days of yore), drummer Michael Scarpone played in Wizard Eye, and guitarist Christopher Wojcik made a splash a few years back in King Bison, so yes, dudes have been around. Accordingly, Superdeluxe know off the bat where their grooves are headed on this five-song self-titled EP, with centerpiece “Earth” nodding toward a somewhat inevitable Clutch influence — thinking “Red Horse Rainbow” specifically — and seeming to acknowledge lyrically this as the project’s beginning point in “Popular Mechanix,” driving somewhat in the vein of Freedom Hawk but comfortably paced as “Destructo Facto” and “Severed Hand” are at the outset of the 19-minute run. “Ride” finishes out with a lead line coursing over its central figure before a stop brings the chorus, swing and swagger and a classic take on that riff — Sabbath‘s “Hole in the Sky,” Goatsnake‘s “Trower”; everybody deserves a crack at it at least once — familiar and weighted, but raw enough in the production to still essentially be a demo. Nonetheless, veteran players, new venture, fun to be had and hopefully more to come.

Superdeluxe on Instagram

Superdeluxe website

 

Esel, Asinus

Esel Asinus

Based in Berlin and featuring bassist Cozza, formerly of Melbourne, Australia’s Riff Fist, alongside guitarist Moseph and drummer 666tin, Esel are an instrumentalist three-piece making their full-length debut with the live-recorded and self-produced Asinus. An eight-tracker spanning 38 minutes, it’s rough around the edges in terms of sound, but that only seems to suit the fuzz in both the guitar and bass, adding a current of noise alongside the low end being pushed through both as well as the thud of 666tin‘s toms and kick. They play fast, they play slow, they roll the wheel rather than reinvent it, but there’s charm here amid the doomier “Donkey Business” — they’ve got a lot of ‘ass’ stuff going on, including the opener “Ass” and the fact that their moniker translates from German as “donkey” — and the sprawling into maddening crashes “A Biss” later on, which precedes the minute-long finale “The Esel Way Out.” Want to guess what it is? Did you guess noise and feedback? If you did, your prize is to go back to the start and hear the crow-call letters of the band’s name and the initial slow nod of “Ass” all over again. I’m going to do my best not to make a pun about getting into it, but, well, I’ve already failed.

Esel on Facebook

Esel on Bandcamp

 

Blue Tree Monitor, Cryptids

Blue Tree Monitor Cryptids

With riffs to spare and spacious vibes besides, London instrumentalists Blue Tree Monitor offer Cryptids, working in a vein that feels specifically born out of their hometown’s current sphere of heavy. Across the sprawl of “Siberian Sand” at the beginning of the five-song/38-minute debut album, one can hear shades of some of the Desertscene-style riffing for which Steak has been an ambassador, and certainly there’s no shortage of psych and noise around to draw from either, as the cacophonous finish manifests. But big is the idea as much as broad, and sample-topped centerpiece “Sasquatch” (also the longest cut at 8:41) is a fine example of how to do both, complete with fuzzy largesse and a succession of duly plodding-through-the-woods riffs. “Antlion” feels laid back in the guitar but contrasts with the drums, and the closer “Seven” is more straight-ahead heavy rock riffing until its second half gets a little more into noise rock before its final hits, so maybe the book isn’t entirely closed on where they’ll go sound-wise, but so much the better for listening to something with multifaceted potential in the present. To put it another way, they sound like a new band feeling their way forward through their songs, and that’s precisely what one would hope for as they move forward from here.

Blue Tree Monitor on Facebook

Blue Tree Monitor on Bandcamp

 

Astrometer, Incubation

Astrometer Incubation

Vigilant in conveying the Brooklynite unit’s progressive intentions, from the synthy-sounding freakout at the end of “Wavelength Synchronizer” to the angular beginning of “Conglobulations,” Incubation is the first two-songer offering from Astrometer, who boast in their ranks members of Hull, Meek is Murder and Bangladeafy. The marriage of sometimes manically tense riffing and a more open keyboard line overhead works well on the latter track, but one would at no point accuse Astrometer of not getting their point across, and with ready-for-a-7″ efficiency, since the whole thing takes just about seven and a half minutes out of your busy day. I’m fairly sure they’ve had some lineup jumbling since this was recorded — there may be up to three former members of Hull there now, and that’s a hoot also audible in the guitars — but notice is served in any case, and the way the ascending frenetic chug of the guitar gives way to the keyboard solo in “Wavelength Synchronizer” is almost enough on its own to let you know that there’s a plan at work. See also the melodic, almost post-rock-ish floating notes above the fray at the start of “Conglobulations.” I bought the download. I’d buy a tape. You guys got tapes? Shirts?

Astrometer on Facebook

Astrometer on Bandcamp

 

Oldest Sea, Strange and Eternal

Oldest Sea Strange and Eternal

Somewhere between a solo-project and an actual band is Oldest Sea. Led by songwriter, vocalist, multi-instrumentalist and recording engineer Sam Marandola — joined throughout the four tracks of debut EP Strange and Eternal by lead guitarist/drummer Andrew Marandola and on 10-minute closer “The Whales” by bassist Jay Mazzillo — the endeavor is atmospherically weighted and given a death-doom-ish severity through the echoing snare on “Consecration,” only after opener “Final Girl” swells in distortion and melody alike until receding for string-style ambience, which might be keyboard, might be guitar, might be cello, I don’t know. Marandola also performs as a solo folk artist and one can hear that in her approach to the penultimate “I’ll Take What’s Mine,” but in the focus on atmosphere here, as well as the patience of craft across differing methodologies in what’s still essentially an initial release — if nothing before it proves the argument, certainly “The Whales” does — one hears shades of the power SubRosa once wielded in bringing together mournful melody and doomed tradition to suit purposes drawing from American folk and post-metallic weight. At 25 minutes, I’m tempted to call it an album for its sheer substance. Instead I’ll hang back and just wait and get my hopes up for when that moment actually comes.

Oldest Sea on Facebook

Oldest Sea on Bandcamp

 

Weddings, Book of Spells

Weddings Book of Spells

Based in Austria with roots in Canada, Spain and Sweden, Weddings are vocalist/guitarist Jay Brown, vocalist/drummer Elena Rodriguez and bassist Phil Nordling, and whether it’s the grunge turnaround on second cut “Hunter” or the later threatening-to-be-goth-rock of “Running Away” — paired well with “Talk is Cheap” — the trio are defined in no small part by the duet-style singing of Brown and Rodriguez. The truly fortunate part of listening to their sophomore LP, Book of Spells, is that they can also write a song. Opener “Hexenhaus” signals a willful depth of atmosphere that comes through on “Sleep” and the acoustic-led gorgeousness of “Tundra,” and so on, but they’re not shy about a hook either, as in “Greek Fire,” “Hunter,” “Running Away” and closer “Into the Night” demonstrate. Mood and texture are huge throughout Book of Spells, but the effect of the whole is duly entrancing, and the prevailing sense from their individual parts is that either Brown or Rodriguez could probably front the band on their own, but Weddings are a more powerful and entrancing listen for the work they do together throughout. Take a deep breath before you jump in here.

Weddings on Facebook

StoneFree Records store

 

The Heavy Crawls, Searching for the Sun

The Heavy Crawls Searching for the Sun

A classic rock spirit persists across the nine songs of The Heavy Crawls‘ sophomore full-length, Searching for the Sun, as the Kyiv-based trio of guitarist/vocalist/keyboardist Max Tovstyi, bassist/backing vocalist Serj Manernyi and drummer/backing vocalist Tobi Samuel offer nods to the likes of the Rolling Stones and Jimi Hendrix, among others, with a healthy dose of their own fuzz to coincide. The organ-laced title-track sounds like it was recorded on a stage, if it wasn’t, and no matter where the trio end up — looking at you, Sabbath-riffed “Stoner Song” — the material is tied together through the unflinchingly organic nature of their presentation. They’re not hiding anything here. No tricks. No BS. They’re writing their own songs, to be sure, but whether it’s the funky “I Don’t Know” or the languid psych rollout of “Take Me Higher” (it picks up in the second half) that immediately follows, they put everything they’ve got right up front for the listener to take in, make of it what they will, and rock out accordingly, be it to the mellow “Out of My Head” or the stomping “Evil Side (Of Rock ‘n’ Roll) or the sweet, sweet guitar-solo-plus-organ culmination of “1,000 Problems.” Take your pick, really. You’re in good hands no matter what.

The Heavy Crawls on Facebook

Clostridium Records store

 

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The Obelisk Questionnaire: Jon Ehlers of Astrometer & Bangladeafy

Posted in Questionnaire on September 5th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

john ehlers

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: Jon Ehlers of Astrometer & Bangladeafy

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

I’d like to think that I take the overlooked elements of musical timbres and turn it into something that demands attention. If it’s a synth tone, I kind of zero in on the ugliest feature of it and extract it in its purest form and put truck nuts on it.

Describe your first musical memory.

I remember sitting in the backwards facing seat of a station wagon and listening to Marshall Tucker and ZZ Top on the radio while watching the world pass by in reverse.

Describe your best musical memory to date.

Watching Nine Inch Nails perform as I was crammed at the foot of the stage on Randall’s Island during the Panorama Music Festival. It was extremely hot out and I had already drank all my water but was too stubborn to leave my coveted spot. As the band began to play, a cool breeze came off the East River and everything fell into place.

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

I’ve never thought this strongly about my convictions and it’s tough to answer. I’ve been in certain situations where I am forced to interact with extremely ignorant people and I believe that they are victims of some awful circumstance out of their control. I try to approach them with patience and understanding until I can’t because my own circumstances have reached a breaking point.

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

I can tell you where it does not lead: perfection. It is a series of challenges, pride and letdowns that hopefully amount to a legacy that will be uncovered by alien archaeologists.

How do you define success?

Success in terms of music or the visual medium of art is best defined in its replay value. How often do you listen or look at what you created and feel satisfaction?

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

When I was about 10 years old, I watched my dog kill a puppy when I was home alone. I blocked it out for a long time.

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

I would one day like to create a retro-style kaiju series that captures and expands on the magical campiness of it all.

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

Discipline in regards to the time put aside for it.

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

What quantum computing will bring to mankind.

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Astrometer, Incubation EP (2022)

Bangladeafy, House Fly (2020)

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The Obelisk Questionnaire: Drew Mack of Astrometer

Posted in Questionnaire on August 12th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Drew Mack of Astrometer

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: Drew Mack of Astrometer, Cleanteeth, ex-Hull, ex-Somnuri, etc.

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

I define my artist identity as a Songwriter. I play guitar but have never been very interested in shredding the hardest or coming up with the craziest solos to play, I have always been more interested in the structure of a song and I’m consistently drawn to the rhythm section of a band.

I grew up in a small town in Wyoming that, to this day, is extremely behind the times as far as music goes. I was fortunate enough to land a gig DJing on a local FM radio station toward the end of high school, during the same time that the internet was blossoming, and this lead to an exhilarating discovery of bands all over the country playing types of music (mostly metal) I had never even dreamed of. So began my bloodlust toward finding ALL of these bands and driving five hours each way to Salt Lake City, Utah, to see any heavy band play in the live setting.

I eventually thought that maybe I could be a musician, since I felt so passionate about music, and I decided I wanted to be a drummer. I don’t know why it came as such a surprise to me that buying a set of drums was so damn expensive, but I lucked out when I found that a friend of mine had an old kit sitting in his garage. We set this thing up and I have to be honest, it was the worst drum set I have ever seen! The cymbals were so old that if you hit the crash or ride, they would invert like an umbrella in a windstorm, and even the mechanism that powers the movement of the kick pedal was made of LEATHER! I tried to make that work for a couple of garage bands that I started with my dudes, but didn’t get much satisfaction out of trying to make that kit sound even remotely decent.

So I did what I think a lot of people in that situation would do: I decided that the singer of a band is the one that gets the most attention, and since I could scream better than most of my friends, I transitioned into that role. More mediocrity ensued with my bands, until my 18th birthday came around and my step-sister handed me a guitar! I honestly looked at her like she was a crazy person and said, “what the hell is this for?” She thought I may enjoy playing it and SHE WAS CORRECT! As soon as I started learning how to play that guitar (still have and play that piece of shit ‘X-Cort’ to this day) I was hooked!

Describe your first musical memory.

The first musical experience that I really wish I had a clearer memory of was being taken to my first real show to see Lynyrd Skynyrd (one of the members happened to live in my home town in Wyoming). In this day and age, it would be pretty cool to be able to say ‘yeah I sang along to freebird when I was a kid at my first show’, but I really don’t recall much of the show, aside from the general good vibes in the crowd. My first real musical memory would be from hanging out with my mom(also responsible for the Skynyrd show). We would ride around in her car and she would just BLAST classic rock and sing her ass off and rock the fuck out and then would turn the music down real quick and ask my sister and I if we could name the artist.

It was a fantastic game and I fully appreciate that she acclimated my ears to the volume my future self would require. I also remember quite vividly any time I said I want-want-wanted a toy or something, she would sit me down in our living room and play ‘You can’t always get what you want’ by the Rolling Stones, which somehow eased the pain of not getting that silly toy or whathaveyou. Parents, please carry on the torch of this tradition!!

Describe your best musical memory to date.

I would have to say the best musical memory to date would be my collective experience performing in Hull over eight years. That was the band I first got to go out on the road with (my happy place) and through very thick and very thin, every single issue or struggle or problem in the world would melt away when my brothers and I got on that stage and did our thing. It really was an awakening experience of how you can achieve something so much bigger than success or fame or just having fun or partying, but a deep connection within the mind and spirit of my brothers in arms that, even though Hull didn’t last the test of time, we will all have this heightened experience engrained in us for the rest of our time on earth.

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

Well, New York City will absolutely chew you up and spit you out and then be like “WHAT, FOOL?! DEAL WITH IT!” and I was no exception. I have lived in NYC for 18-plus years now and have been homeless for some of them, living out of my practice space, working my bones into a powder, and trying not to succumb to the idea that I had made a huge mistake in moving to NYC to follow my passion in music. In the lowest of those times, I absolutely questioned everything, but today I can confidently say that I did make the right choice and all of those struggles only sweetened the horizon for me.

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

I believe that true artistic progression literally leads EVERYWHERE. I find it hard to believe that some people will listen to basically one band or one genre their entire life. To me, that sounds like a lack of curiosity and/or passion. I remember back in my ‘hardcore days’ we would tell an urban legend type of joke about someone’s roommate who used to be into grimy, gnarly noise rock and metal but then got a little older and now he only listens to Bjork. As if that would be too absurd for this world to handle! I like to remind myself of the tiny stereocilia in your ears that get tired after hearing certain frequencies too often- or the theory that plants and animals respond differently to various types of music. If that is not nature’s sign to follow your physiological responses towards new things, well I don’t know what is.

I also try to remind myself how slowly susceptible we can be to things we experience only for a moment or even once. Like the time I was first introduced to the band Isis. My friend put on SGNL>05 for me and I vividly remember ABSOLUTELY HATING it. I even told my pal, ‘this is so dumb! Why are they playing so slow?! This is so two dimensional!’ and I made him turn it off after only hearing a minute or so of the song. Fast forward to a week or two later and that minute of Isis that I had begrudgingly heard was LOOPING NON-STOP IN MY HEAD! So I went out and bought SGNL>05 and rocketed myself into DECADES of loving Isis with all of my being. (REST IN POWER!)

How do you define success?

As a musician and a fabricator who builds things in a woodshop, I define success as creating something that you personally feel proud of, regardless of the response from any other person. It is easy to get sucked into the consumerism of this modern world and to respond in kind by churning out art quickly and specifically for the masses, and yet I believe that without creating inside a place of individual freedom for the strict betterment of yourself and maybe the collaborators you have connected with, this assembly line art can have a much shorter shelf life. Over the years, in the multiple bands I have played in, the conversation has changed from striving for success, into a desire to create something timeless in this fleeting mortal coil.

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

OOF there are many things I wish I had not seen in the past nearly two decades in NYC. Not to mention, growing up in Wyoming had its own special pitfalls, like having nine friends die throughout my years in school. One thing that really sticks with me was witnessing a very dear friend’s bandmate die in front of me in the hallways of my practice space in Brooklyn. I had to operate the freight elevator for the firefighters who had just performed CPR on this man for over 45 minutes and while we were in the elevator, I looked down upon his blue-grey body as they pulled out the manual resuscitator from his mouth and nose and blood spilled out of his face and I knew he was at death’s door. I was completely destroyed for my friends who played in a band with that man. I couldn’t even begin to imagine losing one of my brothers in arms like that and at such a young age!!

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

I have been dreaming for a long time of the day when I have the tools and the collaborators to create a truly magical audio/visual performance. I think if I ever feel too old to climb up on a stage and perform, I would love to have developed some sort of film scoring/soundtrack writing career by then.

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

I believe the most essential function of art is to connect humans with each other. Even on the smallest scale, such as an art enthusiast feeling moved by a painting, there is a connection there even though the artist is not physically present. Critiquing such art can get messy, since we are all individuals and experience everything at least slightly differently, which is why I prefer the musical medium. Standing in a crowd and enjoying the same set of frequency waves washing over everyone equally and feeling so harmoniously as one organism is really so extremely magical. I love feeling all of society’s pigeonholed and compartmentalized ideas of individuality just melt away!

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

As a father of a six-year-old boy, I am very excited to watch him grow up, knowing he may or may not be a musician, he may or may not love heavy metal like I do, he may or may not grow out his hair and a beard, he may or may not become a cop!! Who the fuck knows?! And that is exciting…

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Astrometer, Incubation EP (2022)

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