Quarterly Review: Godzilla Was Too Drunk to Destroy Tokyo, Ritual Arcana, Brass Hearse, Dr. Paradiso Meets Dr. Space, Mollusk, Zahn, Prophets of Thwaites, Shizumunamari, Desert Collider, Üga Büga

Posted in Reviews on March 23rd, 2026 by JJ Koczan

the obelisk quarterly review

Hope you had a banner weekend. Last week was pretty slammed. As ever, I’m like three days’ worth of news behind, and this is still just the penultimate day of the Spring 2026 Quarterly Review, so there may yet be more creative ways for me to find to shoot myself in the ass and make myself feel overwhelmed because… well anyway, stick around, folks!

In all seriousness, considering The Patient Mrs. was away last week — who schedules these things? — and my daughter spent two and a half of five possible days at school, I came through it pretty well. I’m just tired and I missed my wife while she was gone. Ain’t no sunshine, and so on.

We wrap up tomorrow. Thanks for reading.

Quarterly Review #51-60:

Godzilla Was Too Drunk to Destroy Tokyo, Sideral Voivod

Godzilla-Was-Too-Drunk-to-Destroy-Tokyo-Sideral-Voivod

Fuzz rockers Godzilla Was Too Drunk to Destroy Tokyo — or Godzilla WTDTDT, if you want to go by how they abbreviate their Instagram — give automatic impressions of quirk, and their most realized work to-date, their second full-length, Sideral Voivod, thankfully has more going for it than the in-genre radness of the band’s moniker. Based on the coast of Northern Italy, the trio of bassist/vocalist Sara de Luca, guitarist Alessandro “Camu” Camurati and drummer Nicola Viola find a place between art-punk and weighted fuzz, each piece contained in itself and its intention, but feeding into a tense flow with periodic blowouts like “Telekinetic Thunder Yeti” or “Space Leech,” somewhere between Black Flag and Black Sabbath, while “Worship the Middle” makes the latter allegiance plainer. It might sound like it’s coming at you flailing, but the really dangerous thing is I think Godzilla Was Too Drunk to Destroy Tokyo might know what they’re doing. Imagine that.

Godzilla Was Too Drunk to Destroy Tokyo on Bandcamp

Argonauta Records store

Ritual Arcana, Ritual Arcana

Ritual Arcana Ritual Arcana

Ritual Arcana‘s Heavy Psych Sounds-issued debut offers cultish bikerisms and doomed roll, never quite veering into caricature as classic-styled modern cult-heavy does, but kept aligned to a central tonal weight as heard in the atmospheric “Berkana” or in the nodding “Occluded.” The band is comprised of SharLee LuckyFree on bass/vocals, Scott “Wino” Weinrich (The Obsessed, et al) on guitar, and Oakley Munson (The Black Lips) on drums, and some of the roll throughout is recognizably Weinrich‘s style, but in a song like the declarative “Free Like a Pirate” or “Road Burnt,” there are elements that speak to the songwriting collaboration taking shape in their darkly-presented but still accessible style, and with that in mind, those finding their way to Ritual Arcana through their guitarist’s sundry projects will find Ritual Arcana harnessing something distinct from all of them. I’ll be curious to hear how the balance between push and dwell Ritual Arcana lay out here comes to fruition over the longer term, and by that I mean it’s an exploration worth following.

Ritual Arcana website

Heavy Psych Sounds website

Brass Hearse, Salem Rain

Brass Hearse Salem Rain

New Brass Hearse? Well hello. The Boston-based outfit fronted and I think steered by the classic-psych-meets-weirdo-doom-melancholia whims of frontman Ron Rochondo present their first single in six years with the four-minute “Salem Rain,” which sets its drunken-singalong of a hook “Let’s go to Salem in the rain” at the foundation of its intent. Musically, the song is wistful in the guitar and starts as backing ambience as the lyrics immediately begin a conversation leading to the suggestion in the chorus — at one point there’s even mention of the Willows, wihch is a park in town — which is forward in the mix and presented in layers as an escape from monotony. In the final minute, they depart the verse/chorus format and over complementary guitar, finish out with a Beach Boys-y vocal arrangement, toying with that notion of sentimental sounds but coming across as sincere in the delivery. As in maybe the song really does want to get out of here for a while and go hang out in the park and smoke cigarettes and whatnot. Fair.

Brass Hearse on Bandcamp

Playing Records on Bandcamp

Dr. Paradiso Meets Dr. Space, Liquid Planetscapes

Dr Paradiso meets Dr Space Liquid Planetscapes

If you might read ‘three songs/79 minutes’ and that’s a lot, well, the three songs are actually part of the same overarching movement — it’s all one song — so yes, the good doctors Paradiso and Space (also Øresund Space Collective) aren’t kidding when they allude to operating at a planetary scale. “Swampworld” is the name of all three tracks (broken down as Part 1, Part 2, Part 3), and the longform drone marked by croaking sounds and vague mists of synthesizer indeed evokes things alien, humid and teeming with unseen animal life. Surely the power of suggestion plays a role there, but I don’t think that’s invalidating. If you looked at a museum painting of a swamp world and it was called ‘Swampworld’ and it brought to mind a swampy kind of world, would you say it was using the power of suggestion? That’s art. Liquid Planetscapes‘ immersion requires a willing participant, but if you’re able to get yourself in a state of mind open to its happening-on-a-different-scale-of-time procession, the sense of journey is duly otherworldly, and warm besides.

Dr. Space on Bandcamp

Space Rock Productions website

Mollusk, Cursebreaker

Mollusk Cursebreaker

Boston despondent sludge metallers Mollusk made their debut a decade ago with Children of the Chron (review here), and they’ve reportedly had Cursebreaker in the works since not long after, but if the seven songs (six and a demo) have been seasoned for the years between, don’t worry, you’d never know it from the sheer pummel they elicit. “Trapped in a Cave” opens with telltale density and plod, and though the subsequent “Azathoth” and “Two Things” might up the tempo or delve into willful repetition, the downer cast remains right into and through “Human Suffering” and the closing linear build of “Apostle,” which is immediately backed by its own demo, which is even rawer and dirtier feeling than the proper album track just before. However long it’s been in the making, rest assured it sounds like they just dug it up. Fresh, in that way.

Mollusk on Bandcamp

Mollusk on Instagram

Zahn, Purpur

ZAHN Purpur

Maybe the proggiest thing about Berlin instrumental three-piece Zahn is the sense of adventure they bring to their songcraft, the feeling of intention behind what they do, even when it’s an idea that probably came about spontaneously. Their heavy, electronics-infused sound is always textured and atmospheric, and Purpur‘s eight songs fit that mold more than they fit any other, as Felix Gebhard, Chris Breuer and Nic Stockmann range through the futurism of “Diaabend,” or go big-riff in the later build-into-crush of “Katamaran” or “Atoll,” start dancey and post-punk with “Stroboskop” or finish hypnotic with a build around the central strum of “Butter.” If there’s middle-ground to be had, it might be in “Alhambra,” but middle-ground isn’t necessarily what I’m looking for when they’ve got the rad electro-density mashup of “Gensher” instead. Zahn don’t always want to be very, very heavy, but they keep their ability to get there in use as one of the many tools of their craft.

Zahn on Bandcamp

Crazysane Records website

Prophets of Thwaites, Vulnerant Omnes Ultima Necat

Prophets of Thwaites Vulnerant Omnes Ultima Necat

Preceded only by demos and rehearsal recordings, Vulnerant Omnes Ultima Necat is the first EP from the Netherlands’ Prophets of Thwaites — comprised of guitarist/vocalist Esma Larabi, bassist Ferry Vermeeren and drummer Nico Beemster — who with it offer two dug-in slabs of atmospheric doom/post-metal in “Deadlock” (7:32) and “Vulnerant Omnes Ultima Necat” (6:38); probably too long to press to a 7″, and well enough to give an impression of the spaciousness of their sound, whether that’s in the vocals and corresponding plod of the former or the squibbly solo as the title-cut works into its final minute. The vocals come through too clearly to really feel shoegazey in my mind (like, I would expect more effects on Larabi‘s voice in a ‘gazier context), but I don’t think that hurts them so much as it sets the band up for a more individualized exploration as they continue to grow. They make it easy to look forward to where they might be headed.

Prophets of Thwaites on Bandcamp

Prophets of Thwaites on Instagram

Shizumunamari, Nagasugita Genjitsu

Shizumunamari Nagasugita Genjitsu

Tokyo bass-and-drum duo Shizumunamari offer the two-song Nov. 2025 sophomore full-length Nagasugita Genjitsu as a herald of what the band calls the ‘New Wave of Japanese Doom Metal’ (sadly not called the ‘New Wave of Japanese Weirdo Doom’), and shit, here’s hoping. With Namari Toyama on vocals, bass and keys and Ebianime on drums, “Nagayama” (14:34) celebrates raw tones and drawling vocals, reminding of some of Queen Elephantine‘s open-air Cisnerosism, but less directly meditative in style and sneaking in a dub break later on before they bring back the nod to close and let “Nagai Kyoku” (22:17) begin its longform procession with a grungier intro and a persistent roll punctuated with crash cymbal and building on the original vocal reachout. They use minimalism more in “Nagai Kyoku,” and the late-arriving organ sounds don’t detract from that, but “Nagai Kyoku” sounds like it could easily kepe going when it ends. Shizumunamari took six years before following up their first record. Hopefully their third comes on a shorter turnaround and we can really get this ‘wave’ going. I’m ready for it.

Shizumunamari on Bandcamp

Shit Eye Cassettes on Instagram

Desert Collider, Generation Ship: Endless Drift Through Infinity

Desert Collider Generation Ship Endless Drift Through Infinity

Generation Ship: Endless Drift Through Infinity is the ambitious, sci-fi-conceptual (at least semi-conceptual) debut full-length from Italian desert-style heavy rockers Desert Collider, delivered through Small Stone and Kozmik Artifactz. I don’t know if they’re setting up a continuity, if all their releases forever will be telling metaphorical tales under the banner of ‘Generation Ship,’ or when the thematic emerged from the material. But it rocks. For a highlight, one might suggest either “Sonic Carver,” where they hit hard and space out in the back half, or the 13-minute “Far Centaurus: Drifting without Guidance through Interstellar Space,” which takes stoner ambience and uses it as the basis for a dynamic, melodic and Mellotron-inclusive build. They’re able to play back and forth between immediacy and atmospherics (though “Nomads of the Red Sun” starts and stays acoustic), and while they’re on familiar ground stylistically, the push for an individual point of view is there, musically as well as in the presentation. Guess we’ll see where their journeys take them.

Desert Collider’s Linktr.ee

Small Stone Records website

Kozmik Artifactz website

Üga Büga, Valley of the Wolf

Üga Büga Valley of the Wolf

Get up. Such is the clear message of Üga Büga at the outset of Valley of the World as the Virginian trio of Calloway Jones (guitar, keys, vocals), Niko Cvetanovich (bass, backing vocals, more keys), and Jimmy Czywczynski (drums, backing vocals, consonants) approach sludge from a distinctively metallic place. Double-kick drumming, sharp-cornered structures, and vocals that veer before declarative melody and screams all feed into an overarching sense of aggression, even if the grooves themselves aren’t bludgeoning. Is it party metal? I wouldn’t tell you no, but don’t take that as “it’s stupid,” because the complexity even in the breakdown of “Nail That Binds” speaks to the consideration given to these parts and songs. That said, “The Sand Witch” (the sandwich?) thumps in a way that feels like it wants you to clap along at the show, and the chug and lurch of “Earthsuckers” early on stays on the beat, so put that with the thrashing in “Divination” and the big rolling finish in eight-minute closer “Revolting Power” and you get some picture of where they’re at on the idea of your good time.

Üga Büga on Bandcamp

Üga Büga on Instagram

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Quarterly Review: Pelican, Earth Tongue, Boozewa & Nowhere, Fjords, Gran Moreno, Lord Elephant, Black Magic Tree, CB3, Mortal Blood, Faraj Risberg Rogefeldt

Posted in Reviews on March 20th, 2026 by JJ Koczan

the obelisk quarterly review

Hey hey, it’s Friday. I’m not closing out the week this week because we’re not done with this Quarterly Review yet and that shift in writing mindset feels like too much of a jump at just this moment, but even though the QR will continue Monday, it still feels worth marking this as the end of a week. Yeah, I’ll be writing all weekend. Yeah, it ends next Tuesday, but making it through a Monday to Friday — especially this Monday to Friday — doesn’t feel like nothing as far as achievements go.

I hope you have a great and safe weekend, and I hope you find something to listen to hear that makes it even better. Thanks for reading.

Quarterly Review #41-50:

Pelican, Ascending

PELICAN ASCENDING

Chicago instrumentalists Pelican released their seventh album, Flickering Resonance (review here), in 2025, which filled three sides of a 2LP, and the title-track of their new EP, Ascending, would have fit right in as a seven-plus-minute crunch-riffer that chugs itself into an oblivion of lush bombast. I guess they figured they had enough, and fine. Certainly the album wasn’t missing anything. But “Ascending” stands well on its own, or in this case, leading off a succession of four cuts compiled for this release, the final two of which were previously issued on tape as  Adrift/Tending the Embers (review here) in 2024, and the other being a version of “Cascading Crescent” from the EP with Geoff Rickley of Thursday on vocals. For the life of me, I’ve never been able to conceive a man’s voice singing Pelican songs, but Rickley‘s ability to work in dynamic layers, and of course the emotive cast, make the experiment fluid. More right-now-Pelican, you say? That’s a no-brainer yes.

Pelican website

Run for Cover Records website

Earth Tongue, Dungeon Vision

Earth Tongue Dungeon Vision

Dungeon Vision is the third full-length from now-Berlin-based duo Earth Tongue, and it brings a potently-fuzzed choose-your-adventure run through medieval horrors presented with due quirk and subtle intricacy by guitarist/vocalist Gussie Larkin and drummer/vocalist Ezra Simons. It is not a radical shift from where they were on 2024’s Great Haunting (review here), full of dark themes and floaty melodies, the let’s-start-a-satanic-panic lyrics continuing as a basis here, but “Body of Water” toys with the arrangement, and who the hell could resist a nod like “Living Hell” anyway? You can hear growth in their songwriting along with the gnarl in their tone, and with cultish charisma, they lead the way deeper into the proceedings for hooks like “Watchtower,” “Orbit of a Witch” and the bounce of the penultimate “Harvester.” I’m not saying you should sell your soul for it, but that might actually be a decent investment.

Earth Tongue on Bandcamp

In the Red Records website

Boozewa & Nowhere, Split

boozewa nowhere split

They are, perhaps, somewhat united in their punkish undertones, but Pennslyvania’s Boozewa and Nowhere each build a sound of their own atop that foundation, and both turn out roilingly heavy. Each band adds four songs to this split. Nowhere plunder toward powerviolence as they move through “Neurogénesis” into “New JNCOs” and the 22-second capper “You Lose,” but the groove from “Convicción” onward is brash, so not that you see it coming, but the destination is justified by the journey. For Boozewa, their grunge seems to land ever harder, as “Garbage Day” and “Landline” push deeper into aggression before the narrative divergence in “The Big Dumb” leads into “4 Out of 10” finding the middle-ground in heavy rock and characteristic post-hardcore melody. You get about 11 minutes of Boozewa and about six of Nowhere and both leave you wanting more, so it’s a win for the classic-punk-rock, let’s-split-costs, limited-numbers DIY split 12″.

Boozewa website

Nowhere on Bandcamp

Fjords, Gehenna

fjords gehenna

The 13:51 “Inferno” trades genres like most bands trade riffs, between progressive heavy rock, twisty garage rawness, hardcore crunch and intensity, and fluid doom nod. Don’t get me wrong. The five-minute “Purgatorio” on Fjords‘ four-track Gehenna LP, or the shorter opener “Virgilio” and the avant drone-stoner close they mount with “Paradiso” each have their respective scope, but as the Portuguese band run a line down the middle between madcap and methodical, their creative reach and their sheer chops align to lend their material a feeling of cohesion. The production is pretty barebones in terms of depth — it’s not a ‘huge’ sound on its face — but the jangly guitar suits the synth pulses in “Purgatorio” and “Paradiso,” giving an impression of outsiderism and of disruptive purpose behind all the movement in the songs. But if they’re transgressing, they’re gleeful in it; more mischief than destruction, and maybe influenced by the Melvins without trying to sound like them, which is twice as admirable.

Fjords on Bandcamp

Fjords on Instagram

Gran Moreno, El Sol

gran moreno el sol

Austin two-piece Gran Moreno offer one of heavy rock’s best debut albums of 2026 with El Sol. The songs are sharply composed, energeticaly delivered, full-sounding and professional without being overwrought. It is cohesive but not repetitive, and rife with hooks even as lyrics go back and forth between English and Spanish and the later “Oaxaca/Please Don’t Cry” brings in Mariachi horns. “Las Montañas” opens at a medium tempo to set an atmosphere and introduce the audience-engagement factor in its second half, but the subsequent “Aztlan” ignites a charge that affects the ’70s-styled blues riffing of “Huracán” and the desert strut and take-the-air of “Temple of Fire” (premiered here) before the organ-laced “La Mentira” pushes over the top into “Oaxaca/Please Don’t Cry” and six-minute strum’n’fuzz closer “Hikuri,” where they ride out the riff until it’s all the way gone. Skillfully conceived and executed modern underground heavy rock.

Gran Moreno on Bandcamp

Gran Moreno on Instagram

Lord Elephant, Ultra Soul

Lord Elephant Ultra Soul

The second Lord Elephant full-length, Ultra Soul, finds the Florence-based instrumentalist trio both exploring and providing comfort and warmth to the listener. That is, one can hear them pushing themselves further into desert rock as “Gigantia” picks up from the more laid back “Electric Dunes” at the record’s outset, before they up the plod for “Smoke Tower,” but their approach — as heavy as the album gets on “Astral” and “MindNight” and “Leave” on side B — is never so aggressive as to remove the listener from that mellower mindset. This lets crush become a gift, and encourages active listening and immersion. The centerpiece “Black River Blues” celebrates its heft in its contrasting stops, but the other thing “Electric Dunes”-into-“Gigantia” clues you into is the overarching flow across the 48-minute run, and Lord Elephant maintain this gorgeously while asking no more from the audience than to put it on and go with its roll, which they make it a pleasure to do.

Lord Elephant on Bandcamp

Heavy Psych Sounds website

Black Magic Tree, Terra

Black Magic Tree Terra

Like their 2021 debut, Through the Grapevine (discussed here), Black Magic Tree‘s sophomore LP, Terra, was recorded by Richard Behrens, who is no stranger to sounds that span decades as this Berlin five-piece’s does. They can shuffle, they can fuzz-push, and if it’s a subdued vocal showcase like “Love and Doubt,” they can hold up to that, too. There is no ground they touch on the nine-song outing that they do not approach from a place of mastery, and while that might sound like they’re not taking risks, I don’t think that’s actually the case. I think they’ve just worked on these songs, hammered out the lyrics and instrumental parts to convey ideas that are classic in form but unplaceable to any time other than now. It’s a much more complex blend than the straightforward, traditionalist structures might lead you to believe; vital, intentional, efficient and heavy.

Black Magic Tree on Instagram

Majestic Mountain Records store

CB3, Edge, End and Discovery

CB3 Edge End and Discovery

Why the hell didn’t someone tell me CB3 were done? The often-improvisational Malmö, Sweden, heavy psychedelic rockers led by guitarist/sometimes-vocalist Charolotta Andersson called it quits last Fall with the release of the three-song Edge, End and Discovery, following the progressive/songwriting-based turn that 2022’s Exploration (review here). “Edge of Forever,” “End of It All” and “Discovery” — which is broken into five-parts on the release, shifting between improv and pre-structured progressions — are lush with layers of synth and guitar alongside the fluid rhythms, and the movement through any of them should be enough to make you understand why it’s such a bummer they’re not a band anymore. Thanks to Andersson, bassist Pelle Lindsjö and drummer Natanael Solmonsson for the decade of growth. If it needed to end, Edge, End and Discovery is as suitable a place to land as one could ask.

CB3 on Bandcamp

Mortal Blood, Vigil for a Hollowed Earth

Mortal Blood Vigil for a Hollowed Earth

Somewhere between gothic dirge metal and funeral doom’s rawer morose cast, Maryland solo-band Mortal Blood dwell in the noisy shadows of Vigil for a Hollowed Earth, with sole denizen Dan Krell not so much basking in the camp theatricality of goth doom/metal, but the darker despoondency, made all the more real through a solo-project’s inherently singular perspective. No, I’m not saying Krell‘s material lacks variety — Vigil runs 10 songs/58 minutes and is by no means unipolar — but that the programmed-sounding drums, the bite on the harsh vocals in “Decay and Burn,” early in “Crow’s Sweet Caress,” the closer “Clay Born Titan,” etc., the from-the-graveyard echo on the guitar and the feeling that it’s raining the whole time you’re listening are all part of the same expression of Krell‘s sonic ideal. It is not a minor undertaking, and not without its challenging aspects, but Vigil for a Hollowed Earth revels on its way to grim accomplishment.

Mortal Blood’s Linktr.ee

Mortal Blood on Bandcamp

Faraj Risberg Rogefeldt, Faraj Risberg Rogefeldt

Faraj Risberg Rogefeldt Farah Risberg Rogefeldt

Sweet-toned heavy blues, and the more-than-an-edge of retroism in the tone and production on their self-titled debut give Faraj Risberg Rogefeldt an even more welcoming vibe as they bring the listener into the eight-song/50-minute course of the album, which isn’t gonna rush until it’s time to rush, so don’t worry about it. They get there in 11-minute highlight “Rötter,” to be sure, but even the proto-doom of the penultimate “Skepnad” is set to a march, so movement isn’t a problem throughout. With lyrics in Swedish, the trio nonetheless make the mellow early cut “Flera dagar bort” catchy enough for me to get my brain around the chorus, and the consideration behind the songs goes well beyond the tambourine perfectly placed in “En ny dag” and the cowbell in “Vet Hur Visorna Går,” however off-the-cuff, just-walked-in-and-hit-record they make it sound. Not reinventing the wheel, not trying to. They remind me most of Dirty Streets, who occupy a similar place between heavy rock and blues — I also feel compelled to namedrop November — but as they begin this exploration, Faraj Risberg Rogefeldt are softshoe fodder all the way. Language means nothing when you can boogie.

Faraj Risberg Rogefeldt’s Linktr.ee

Faraj Risberg Rogefeldt on Instagram

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Black Magic Tree Premiere “Mandala Lady” Video; Through the Grapevine out Next Week

Posted in Bootleg Theater on January 15th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

black magic tree

Germany’s Black Magic Tree will release their first full-length, Through the Grapevine, on Jan. 22 through Karma Conspiracy Records. Ahead of that momentous occasion — and I’m not being sarcastic, a band releasing their debut is a special moment in their lives, perhaps even more considering they’ve waited over a year to do it — they’re premiering today a video for the song “Mandala Lady” that you can see below. Should you be surprised that it features a lot of mandala-type designs? No you should not. But actually in terms of that it does some cool things with animation and bringing a feeling of motion to the proceedings, though the song itself is by no means lacking movement.

Primarily you’ll find that “Mandala Lady,” which was recorded by Richard Behrens (Heat, ex-Samsara Blues Experiment) at Big Snuff Studio, is catchy as hell, and immediately establishes the Berlin five-piece’s penchant for classic hooks. Classic hooks, but not necessarily vintage sound. Behrens has done plenty of heavy ’70s worship before for bands, and done it well, but though Black Magic Tree‘s roots may lie there (pun TOTALLY intended; bite me), the tones of the two guitars are more modern and though the groove is comfortable and warm, it’s not necessarily trying to adhere to the tenets of heavy boogie.

Perhaps that happens elsewhere on Through the Grapevine, I don’t know — haven’t heard the record but I wouldn’t mind doing so — and if it does, cheers to the band on changing things up. But we don’t have long to wait for the seven-song Through the Grapevine to come out, just a week, and until that happens, the clip for “Mandala Lady” makes for an enticing glimpse at things to come. The heavy rock converted will find it no challenge to dig into what’s going on here, and though the black and white flashes speed up a bit during the solo in the second half, if you’re sensitive to that kind of thing, you should still be alright. It’s not hard strobe or anything.

With that and some comment from the band below, I’ll just say enjoy and get ready to have this song repeating in your head for the rest of the day:

Black Magic Tree, “Mandala Lady” official video premiere

Black Magic Tree on “Mandala Lady”:

“Mandala Lady” is the second single off our debut album “THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE” which is due out on January 22, 2021 through Karma Conspiracy Records. The song is about a mysterious “Mandala Lady”. The lyrics revolve around a graceful, spiritual figure everyone is attracted to. Is she real or maybe just an illusion?

The video for the song was shot in September 2020 in front of a green screen. We wanted to utilize psychedelic animations while incorporating video shots of the band members and a dancer who embodies the “Mandala Lady” metaphor. The video turned out really cool and interesting with lots of swirly and hallucinatory visuals while keeping an old school black/white style. Stylistically, the song combines elements of heavy blues rock, heavy psych and stoner rock.

Vinyl preorder: https://www.karmaconspiracy.it/store/black-magic-tree/33-1-through-the-grapevine.html#/74-version-vinyl

Founded in 2018 in Berlin, Germany, BMT released its first EP, “Of Animals and Men”, soon after in 2019. The band has now taken the next step in its evolution with the recording of a full debut album, “THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE”. The seven slabs of rock were laid down in Big Snuff studio in late 2019 under the guidance of Richard Behrens (FOH mixer for Kadavar) and Nene Baratto, who also mixed and mastered the album. The psychedelic album cover art was designed by renowned Berlin-based artist Martin Meir. “THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE” will be available digital and on vinyl on Karma Conspiracy Records.

Black Magic Tree on Facebook

Black Magic Tree on Instagram

Black Magic Tree on Bandcamp

Karma Conspiracy Records on Facebook

Karma Conspiracy Records website

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