Quarterly Review: Paradise Lost, The Vintage Caravan, Spirit Mother, Nadja, Vibravoid, For Fuck’s Sake, Paralyzed, Friendship Commanders, Dee Calhoun, Automatism

Posted in Reviews on October 9th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

the obelisk quarterly review

Today is Thursday, but it’s day five of the Fall 2025 Quarterly Review because I snuck in that first day last Friday. I cannot convey to you how much that has screwed me up. Turns out when you do one thing precisely one way for like 13 years and then all of a sudden flip it around another way it can be confusing. Stay tuned for more deep-impact life hacks and insights like this.

Or maybe riffs instead. It’s okay. That’s most of what keeps me coming back too.

Quarterly Review #41-50:

Paradise Lost, Ascension

paradise lost ascension

More than 35 years on from their outset, Paradise Lost are an institution. I know they’ve had their stylistic divergences, but since recommitting themselves to their morose take on doom metal more than 15 years ago, they’ve hit a rare echelon of reliability one can only call Kreator-esque. That’s not a sonic comparison, but like the German thrash stalwarts, Paradise Lost have their sound — dark and more malleable in tempo than the thickened tones make it feel across these 10 songs — and within that sphere are able to do basically what they want musically and make it work. Side A’s “Salvation,” the longest inclusion at seven minutes, is a tour de force of the appeal of modern Paradise Lost, and a fitting summary of how encompassing they’ve become while still remaining recognizable as themselves. They even get hooky on “Deceivers,” so yes, still growing, still pushing, still Paradise Lost. A once-a-generation band, even as part of a cohort as they were, and not to be taken for granted.

Paradise Lost website

Nuclear Blast Records store

The Vintage Caravan, Portals

the vintage caravan portals

The sixth full-length from still-younger-than-some-bands-who-haven’t-been-around-as-long Icelandic heavy rockers The Vintage Caravan plays out across 17 tracks and 59 minutes, with groups of songs presumably corresponding to double-vinyl side splits separated by interludes each of which is named “Portal.” So, Portals. The first of them follows “Philosopher,” the lead single which features Mikael Åkerfeldt, who turns out to be one of several guests across the record, but the real headliner is the songwriting. In the big choruses of “Here You Come Again,” “Give and Take,” and others, the band recall a heyday when rock could be heavy and accessible outside its own sphere, while “Electrified” later on builds into a tense boogie hook before “Portal V” transitions to the acoustic-based “My Aurora” and the closer “This Road,” one more uptempo, shred-inclusive, exceptionally well-crafted piece of The Vintage Caravan‘s classic-heavy-informed style, efficient in getting its point across despite allowing itself time to dwell as it does throughout.

The Vintage Caravan website

Napalm Records website

Spirit Mother, Songs From the Basin

Spirit Mother Songs From the Basin

It’s not really a huge surprise that Los Angeles dark heavy psych rockers Spirit Mother would ‘go acoustic’ at some point, given the dynamic they’ve showcased to-date on their definitely-plugged studio albums. The most recent of those, 2024’s righteous, Heavy Psych Sounds-issued Trails (review here), is the source for “Wolves” and “Below,” which feature on this short, stripped-down offering. “Wolves,” which capped the record in memorable fashion, leads off here with its foreboding feeling all the more realized given the state of the world, while “Below” finds violinist SJ pushing into a soft crescendo taking off from Armand Lance‘s guitar and vocals. Recorded live, Songs From the Basin sounds duly organic, and whenever Spirit Mother in any form — that is, the full band or just the duo as they are here — wants to drop a full acoustic set, I’m here for it. Once again, the lesson is once you have well-written songs, you can make them do and be just about whatever you want.

Spirit Mother website

Spirit Mother on Bandcamp

Nadja, Cut

nadja cut

I’m pretty sure the now-Berlin-based experimentalist duo of Aidan Baker and Leah Buckareff are north of 30 full-lengths released since their first one in 2002, and that doesn’t count blurring the lines between one project and another with collaborations or Baker‘s solo work. Prolific as they are, they remain expressive in the hard-drum-machined “It’s Cold When You Cut Me” (15:09), one of the four extended inclusions of Cut, where the sinister undercurrent comes to fruition in the song’s second half of manipulated, noisy drone. “Dark, No Knowledge” (13:26) lays out a distorted landscape and rolls through it, Godflesh in a hand-cranked meat grinder, becoming a swell of apocalyptic noise, while “She Ate His Dreams From the Inside and Spat Out the Frozen Fucking Bones” (15:14) dares to be pretty as it leaves spaces open and fills out later with psychedelic processionmaking, leaving the immediate ritual of “Omenformation” to resonate high before piling on low end frequencies while also freakjazzing and riffing out. The noise swallows all but it turns out there’s salvation in that monster’s stomach, so I’ll take it. One Nadja album may be an inevitable precursor to the next one, but that doesn’t mean they don’t make it a world of its own.

Nadja website

Cruel Nature Recordings on Bandcamp

Vibravoid, Remove the Ties

Vibravoid Remove the Ties

Düsseldorf-bred psych rockers Vibravoid belong in a class of undervalued all their own. As they mark their 35th anniversary, they begin their new studio album Remove the Ties with a mischievous redirect of krautrock-style electronics before the garage-wavey “Neustart” and pop-shimmerier “Power of Dreams” dig further into the heart of the record, letting side A round out with the longer, deeper-reverbed “Follow Me Follow You” and its effects barrage play out atop the steady kick drum tasked with holding it together. But nobody who’s been in a band for 35 years is about to actually be sloppy, and there’s no actual danger of off-the-rails on Remove the TiesBaby Woodrose roamed the earth. Vibravoid were there then too. It’s easy to get around when you’re from a different dimension.

Vibravoid on Bandcamp

Tonzonen website

For Fuck’s Sake, 7-Minute Abs/Lobotomy

for fuck's sake seven minute abs lobotomy

Do you have six minutes for a good pummeling? Of course you do. Brooklynite four-piece For Fuck’s Sake offer two tracks like a digital punker 7″ with 7-Minute Abs/Lobotomy, and they make no attempt to hide the fact of their sights being set on destruction. Their sound, rooted in hardcore and sludge in like measure, counting in with the snare on “7-Minute Abs” and daring to cross the three-minutes-long threshold with the fervent chug and bone-on-bone impact of “Lobotomy,” reminds of nothing so much as earlier 16, but with an unmistakable edge of Northeastern confrontationalism. That is, they’ll fuck you up and they know it, so that’s what they’re setting out to do. Barking, gnashing intensity set a harsh backdrop for what’s an engaging groove so long as you’re pissed off enough to process it (which you should be; look around), and the rawness of their delivery, the unabashed assault of it, comes through as genuine. Also punishing.

For Fuck’s Sake on Bandcamp

For Fuck’s Sake on Instagram

Paralyzed, Rumble & Roar

Paralyzed Rumble and Roar

Classic heavy rock and roll forms the core of Paralyzed‘s approach, with guitarist Michael Binder‘s low, gravelly vocals reminiscent of Jim Morrison at his least hinged, suited to the blues behind second cut “Railroad” and the subsequent march of “Rosie’s Town” on the band’s third LP, Rumble & Roar. To say they — that is, Binder, organist/rhythm guitarist Caterina Böhner, bassist Philipp Engelbrecht and drummer Florian Thiele — make it a party across the nine-song/41-minute outing is perhaps understating the case, but if you’d accuse “Heavy Blues” of being too on the nose, you’re missing the fact that on the nose is the point. There’s no irony here, no sneer to the boogie of “White Paper” or the slow organ-laced fluidity of “The Witch,” just heavy vibes and reaffirmation of the band’s growth as songwriters. I’m not even sure where one would start complaining about such a thing.

Paralyzed on Bandcamp

Ripple Music website

Friendship Commanders, Bear

friendship commanders bear

Delivered as their label-debut for Magnetic Eye Records, the 10-song/40-minute Bear is the fourth full-length from Nashville two-piece Friendship Commanders, with guitarist/vocalist Buick Audra and drummer/bassist/synthesist Jerry Roe having recorded with Kurt Ballou in addition to doing some at home for an affect accordingly tight in craft and heavy in impact. “Melt” pushes toward a ’90s-style reimagining of heavy rock as both commercially viable and empowering, while “X” pairs its tonal crunch with the keyboardy reach of its midsection, poppish but still heavy even unto the snare hits. Pop becomes another tool in their arsenal, whether it’s the layered ascent and push of “New” or the weighted culmination presented with closer “Dead and Discarded Girls,” and the band don’t seem to shy away from being able to compose at the level they are. At the same time, “Dripping Silver” feels fully cognizant of the radness in the riff it’s riding, so there’s a balance to it as well. They sound like professionals.

Friendship Commanders website

Magnetic Eye Records store

Dee Calhoun, Angry Old Man

Dee Calhoun Angry Old Man

Former Iron Man and, as of recently, former Spiral Grave vocalist “Screaming Mad” Dee Calhoun is pissed. The Maryland-based acoustic metal troubadour sounds resolute on Angry Old Man, and while his past solo work could hardly be said to pull punches, he hits a different level of laying it all out there on “Kill a Motherfucker” late in the procession here. As ever, hollow-bodied-resonance is the foundation throughout, but other elements like the harmonica in “Voodoo Queen” and the tolling bell at the outset of “VVitch (A Chant)” (not really a chant) fill out the reaches when Calhoun‘s powerhouse voice — still his primary instrument, though the guitar work has gotten more complex with time as well — recedes to a softer delivery. But when he belts it out — looking at you, “Rise Up to March” — he can shake the ground, and if you have any prior familiarity with his work, you already know he’s unmistakable in that regard. That remains the case here, even as he positions himself the titular Angry Old Man. Ain’t none of us getting any younger, dude.

Dee Calhoun Linktr.ee

Black Doomba Records Linktr.ee

Automatism, Sörmland

automatism sormland

The narrative of the band getting together after a few years, enjoying each other’s company as they wrote and recorded Sörmland — named for where in Sweden they were — becomes real with the mellowprog delve of “Honey Trap” more than the shorter leadoff “Video,” as pastoralia takes centerstage with organic melodies and a casual groove. Unsurprisingly if you know Twin Peaks, “Laura Palmer’s Theme” is darker, but the real reference it’s making seems to be to “Moonlight Sonata” as regards the keys, but “Neon Lights” answers back by being in no hurry whatsoever with sweet intertwining guitar lines and a subtle build to later movement. At 11 minutes, the title-track that caps is the longest inclusion, but fair enough since they have to make room for that tenor sax and all. I wouldn’t know from experience, but Sörmland is what I imagine it would sound like to be emotionally regulated, ever, and anytime Automatism want to get together out in the woods or by some fields or a lake or whathaveyou, I hope someone has the presence of mind to hit record.

Automatism on Bandcamp

Tonzonen website

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Automatism Post “Neon Lights” From New Album Sörmland Out Aug. 22

Posted in Whathaveyou on July 31st, 2025 by JJ Koczan

Automatism 2025 2

Right now, in the chillest of timelines, you’re already listening to the new Automatism. Sörmland is the name of the outing, it’s being released through Tonzonen on Aug. 22 — coming up quickly — and it makes for a welcome follow-up to 2020’s Immersion (review here), mellow and pastoral in a way that says ‘Swede-folk’ buried somewhere in the swath of influences, but still exploratory. They just might be too busy taking the trip to congratulate themselves for taking it.

This stands among the most essential differences between the unpretentious and the unlistenable, so I’ll count the first single “Neon Lights” as boding well — and if you can cover Kraftwerk, ever, in any context and make it lack pretense, good luck — for the record to come and just be glad it’s not a super-long wait to find out how the rest will go.

Info came down the PR wire:

automatism sormland

Swedish Instrumental Psychedelic Rock Band AUTOMATISM Reveals New Single Neon Lights from Upcoming Album.

Preorder: https://www.tonzonen.de/shop

From their upcoming new album Sörmland, Swedish instrumental psychedelic rock band Automatism shares the new single Neon Lights, a Kraftwerk cover version.

About the single bass player Mikael Tuominen tells us: “Another one of those occasions when the best stuff comes out when you stop trying. We had been working on a version of Neon Lights for a while, even played it live, that was much closer to the original in feel and tempo. We did a couple of recordings of that version and they were okay. Then, without deciding anything, we just fell into playing the theme really slowly and softly, and again, luckily enough I hit the red button. First it was almost as if we didn’t take it seriously, but soon we entered the zone, and listening to the versions back to back there was no question of which one to choose.”

Listen + share: https://cargorecordsde.ffm.to/automatism-neonlights

It’s been five years since the release of previous album Immersion. This hiatus was not altogether voluntary, so when the band got together again in September of 2023 to start playing and recording, it felt like a special occasion.

New album Sörmland was recorded over a few weekends in the countryside of Sörmland in a beautiful-sounding room that was once a chapel. The building has a very high ceiling and open atmosphere, which somehow helped set the tone for the music on this album. Outside the tall windows we could see the green landscapes of Sörmland; all of which is why, in the end, we decided to name the album after this part of Sweden.

About the other songs on new album Sörmland the band has to say:

Video

Gustav Nygren, guitar: “This song derives from a riff that I made up while sitting with my guitar in my wife’s small fishing cottage by the sea on Orust, an island on the Swedish west coast. I fell in love with the melody and recorded it – my unamplified electric guitar straight into my cell phone camera – so I wouldn’t forget it. When we collected song ideas and demos for the album, I simply uploaded the idea titled ”Video”. Hence, the title of the album’s opening track.”

Honey Trap

Mikael Tuominen, bass: “When we recorded this song we had just had a wonderful dinner courtesy of Jonas, and it was the first night of recording. All the microphones weren’t even rigged yet, we just started improvising. Luckily, I pressed the record button. What came out was one of those rare, completely elevated moments of musical bliss. Somehow it felt like we almost accidentally stepped into a new realm that very much set the tone for the album, a way of playing in synchronization with the room and ambience rather than just playing ”our music” the way we always do, regardless of the surroundings.”

Laura Palmer’s Theme

Hans Hjelm, guitar: “All band members are big fans of David Lynch, and of Twin Peaks in particular. I got caught up completely when the show first aired on Swedish television in 1990 and have rewatched it countless times. Music is such an important part of that show and each time I hear the music it takes me back to Twin Peaks, but of course also back to 1990. I had been planning to record Laura Palmer’s Theme for a long time, and when I talked to Mikael about it, he suggested we record it for this album. It is our tribute to the now late masters David Lynch and Angelo Badalamenti.”

Sörmland

Hans Hjelm, guitar: “This being the title track, we feel it represents the essence of the album. It is based on an improvisation again, with bits of the melody added in later. In the old chapel where we recorded, there is a grand piano and we all agreed that would be the perfect sound for this melody. The last thing you hear in this song and on this album is Mikael releasing the foot pedal of the piano, after finishing the melody.”

Automatism Sörmland will be available on limited edition vinyl LP (special edition yolk, clear + gold) and digital formats. Pre-order the album here: https://www.tonzonen.de/shop/p/automatism-presale-060725-

Tracklist
1. Video
2. Honey Trap
3. Laura Palmer’s Theme
4. Neon Lights (Kraftwerk cover version)
5. Sörmland

All songs by Hjelm, Nygren, Tuominen, and Yrlid unless otherwise noted.
Recorded in Österåker, Sörmland, and Aspudden, 2023-2024
Recording: Mikael Tuominen
Mix: Mikael Tuominen
Mastering: John McBain
Art director: Jonas Yrlid

Automatism are:
Hans Hjelm: electric guitar, synthesizer, percussion
Gustav Nygren: electric guitar, acoustic guitar, tenor saxophone, percussion
Mikael Tuominen: bass, synthesizer, electric piano, grand piano, percussion
Jonas Yrlid: drums, percussion

https://automatismband.bandcamp.com
https://instagram.com/automatismband
https://facebook.com/automatismband

https://www.tonzonen.de
https://tonzonenrecords.bandcamp.com/
https://www.instagram.com/tonzonenrecords/
https://www.facebook.com/Tonzonen/

Automatism, “Neon Lights” (Kraftwerk cover)

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Automatism Premiere Immersion LP in Full

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on October 1st, 2020 by JJ Koczan

AUTOMATISM

Stockholm progressive instrumentalist jammers Automatism will release their third album, Immersion, through Tonzonen Records on Oct. 9. If nothing else, they picked the right title. The album was tracked in a different world and a different time — Feb. 2019 — and its nuanced pastoralism blurs the already-kind-of-imaginary lines between krautrock, classic prog and heavy psychedelic improvisation. From opener “Heatstroke #2” onward, the four-piece of six-stringers Hans Hjelm and Gustav Nygren, bassist Mikael Tuominen and drummer Jonas Yrlid follow the core methodology they’ve had since their 2018 debut, From the Lake, whereby basic tracks are recorded live in the studio and overdubs added latter — a blend of improv and detailing that makes their work all the more, wait for it, immersive. Percussionist Jesper Skarin is a returning guest who features throughout, making an impression right on the leadoff cut, and none other than Per Wiberg — heavy music’s own Vinz Clortho, the Keymaster — brings added fluidity to “Monochrome Torpedo” and others on keys, while Träd, Gräs och Stenar‘s Jakob Sjöholm (also a returning guest) sits in for closer “First Train.”

In some places, it’s easy to imagine where the improv ends and the overdub begins, as on the space-rocking second cut, “Falcon Machine.” Like a mellow Hawkwind homage, its basic track is a relatively straight-outward push. Wiberg‘s keys add to the sweeping wash post-midsection, but the underlying progression and kosmiche flow is maintained, and it’s from that root that the rest of the song, whether it’s those keys or the lead guitar flourish, is built. Automatism have no trouble shifting approach across side A, automatism immersionwhether it’s the bass-punch-intro’ed spacejazz fusion of “Heatstroke #2,” “Falcon Machine”‘s all-systems-go-but-you-know-take-your-time-man-whenever-you’re-ready vibe or the righteous drift that emerges from the cymbal wash on “Monochrome Torpedo,” which is kind of what I wish all post-rock sounded like, but while they’re able to change the sonic context of a given track, they do so by transposing the same working modus. They could go from death metal to reggae — they don’t, and probably wouldn’t — and what would matter is the process beneath the songs and how they’re built up around those basic jams.

They didn’t invent it, but they certainly put it to effective use throughout Immersion. An evocative guitar lead peppers “Monochrome Torpedo” in such fashion as to make it an unexpected album highlight, and soon enough, Automatism are on to side B of the six-track/46-minute outing, which brings “New Box,” “Smoke Room” and the aforementioned “First Train.” As in “Falcon Machine,” the solos on “Monochrome Torpedo” and “New Box” build off the rhythm track in a way that feels complementary but would be nearly impossible to improvise at the time — which means I’m probably wrong and they are — and together with the keyboard melody in “New Box,” they bring to life the balance between patience and performance vitality. If genuine immersion happens anywhere on Immersion though, it might be in the one-two of “New Box” and “Smoke Room,” the latter of which intertwines two leads hypnotically over a steady, easy-flowing rhythm, mixes Wiberg‘s keys perfectly to flesh out the procession, and earns its place as the album’s longest track just ahead of the finale.

And the integration of Sjöholm into “First Train” is likewise seamless, as the added guitar arrives with an off-time jazzy strum that just becomes part of the kitchen-sinkness already happening amid the rest of the band’s doings, suitably coated in sunshine as they are. The keys finish after the rest of the jam comes apart, but the affective experience of Immersion remains, the band having made their point and made it well. It’s interesting to note that both From the Lake and its 2019 sort-of-a-compilation follow-up, Into the Sea, relate to water, since obviously their music has a current beneath its surface much as a moving body of water might. If Immersion, then, is Automatism‘s way of diving deeper into their own processes, the results are richer for it. Their aesthetic becomes a thriving ecosystem of its own.

Immersion is streaming in its entirety below ahead of the Oct. 9 release. Quote from the band and PR wire info follow.

Dive in and enjoy:

Automatism on Immersion:

“This album was recorded by Hans, Gustav, Micke, and Jonas in the exceptional Svartsjölandet Studio during two days in February 2019. We later had Per Wiberg (Kamchatka, Switchblade) add keys and Jesper Skarin (Vak, Gösta Berlings Saga) add percussion, with some — to our ears — pretty spectacular results! And as a bonus, you will hear the guitars of Jakob Sjöholm (Träd, Gräs och Stenar) on the closing track! Not to mention the tasty mix by Konie, or the masterful mastering by Magnus Lindberg. Enjoy!”

Automatism is an instrumental rock band from Stockholm, Sweden. The music of the quartet is based on psych rock, with some added herbal, progressive and modal jazz elements. The band comments: “We look for moments of effortless music creation and try to capture them on record. Most songs are improvised live in the studio, with overdubs added.”

The debut album From The Lake (2018) and the follow-up album Into The Sea (2019) was released on vinyl on Tonzonen Records. Automatism have toured with The Spacelords and Kombynat Robotron in Sweden and Germany, and in 2019 they played together with Acid Rooster at the Psychedelic Network Festival, among others.

Automatism are:
Hans Hjelm: guitar
Gustav Nygren: guitar
Mikael Tuominen: bass
Jonas Yrlid: drums

Guest musicians:
Jesper Skarin: percussion (all tracks)
Per Wiberg: keyboards (all tracks)
Jakob Sjöholm: guitar (First Train)

Automatism on Thee Facebooks

Automatism on Bandcamp

Tonzonen Records on Thee Facebooks

Tonzonen Records on Instagram

Tonzonen Records website

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