Quarterly Review: Brant Bjork, Dresden Wolves, Sherpa, Barren Heir, Some Pills for Ayala, Stonebirds, Yurt, Evoken, Mourners & Yanomamo, Muttering Bog

Posted in Reviews on November 21st, 2025 by JJ Koczan

the obelisk quarterly review

Thus ends my favorite Quarterly Review since the last one. Yeah, some of my motivation was in bookkeeping, in wanting to cover this stuff before the year’s done, but trying to keep up is always part of the thing, so that’s nothing new. I am grateful to have spent so much time this listening to music. I get asked a lot to listen to stuff and I’m not sure I’ve ever had less time for hearing new music than I presently have. So take a week and do nothing but that has been fulfilling.

As always, I hope you’ve found something cool to check out, and I hope you tune in for the next one, maybe in December, maybe in January, maybe this is low-key evolving into a monthly thing and eventually I’m going to have to rename the feature — and so on.

Quarterly Review #41-50:

Brant Bjork and the Bros., Live in the High Desert

BRANT BJORK AND THE BROS LIVE IN THE HIGH DESERT

The difference between Brant Bjork and the Bros. and prior Brant Bjork solo incarnations was that it was the first time the desert rock figurehead had stepped into the role of being a genuine live bandleader. He’d of course toured with solo bands, as he’s continued to, but The Bros. as a backing band gave him the space to shine in a different way onstage, and that comes through in classics like “Too Many Chiefs” and the medleys near the finish of the 78-minute set from 2009 captured on Live in the High Desert, recorded at Pappy & Harriet’s in Pioneertown, CA. I saw this band, and they were hot shit. If you don’t believe me, “Low Desert Punk” here makes the point better than I could, while a piece from the era like “Freaks of Nature” emphasizes the chemistry Bjork and his Bros. fostered during their time. As a follow-up to recent studio LP reissues, as an archival fan-piece, and as nearly 80-minutes of blowout heavy dezzy grooves, this should be an absolute no-brainer for Bjork followers or aficionados.

Brant Bjork website

Duna Records website

Dresden Wolves, Vol. IV

Dresden Wolves Vol. IV

Mexico City heavy rocking two-piece Dresden Wolves named their six-song EP Vol. IV presumably because by some count it’s their fourth release, but that’s not the same as being their fourth full-length album, if that’s what you were thinking. Here they offer 25 minutes of brash, cymbal-and-low-end-heavy crunch. “Tiempo” has some debut to psychedelia, but mostly in the echo, and the density of the prior “ECO” feels more representative, though with the movement of bassfuzz in “Wherter” I’m not sure one is more weighted than the other. They’re in the element stoner punking in “Robin,” and “Pesadilla” rounds out answering the Sabbathism of “Ketamina” with raw shouts and a swirling current of noise laced around a central shove. They’re not reinventing riffery, but they execute with both personality and a sense of craft while simultaneously bashing away in a manner that my silly lizard brain finds utterly delightful. They’ve been around a decade now. Album?

Dresden Wolves on Bandcamp

Dresden Wolves on Instagram

Sherpa, Alignment

sherpa alignment

The obscuring-all-else drones of the nine-minute title-, opening and longest track (immediate points) are the major draw to Alignment, as “Alignment” is the only one of the seven inclusions not previously released in some form. Thus can it be said that Italian experimental psych post-rockers Sherpa remained experimental right up to the very end, as Alignment sees issue as a farewell release, comprised most of demos from Matteo Dossena of what would become Sherpa songs featured on their albums, which is fair enough. There’s sun reflecting on “River Nora” and “The Mother of Language,” from 2018’s second LP Tigris and Euphrates (review here), remains hypnotic even in this raw take, samples and/or field recordings seemingly a part of its skeleton. If you didn’t know Sherpa during their time, Alignment probably isn’t the place to start, since the material isn’t finished, but whatever if it gets you to hear the band.

Sherpa on Bandcamp

Subsound Records website

Barren Heir, Far From

Barren Heir Far From

Crushing. Far From is the third full-length from Chicagoan post-sludge tonebearers Barren Heir, and when “Patient” ends and you feel like you can finally breathe after that four-minute assault, know you’re not alone. Uniformly harsh in vocals, intense in impact and aggression alike, and weighed down by copious amounts of distorted concrete, one piece bleeds into the next as Far From builds momentum through the megariffed “Medicine” and the subsequent, slightly more angular “No Roses,” which seems to get eaten by its own chug before it’s done. The remnants fade into the more peaceful beginning of “Abcesstral,” which serves as a quiet interlude creating tension ahead of the start of “Way In,” which scorches. I guess, if you don’t know the band, what you need to take away is they’re very, very heavy, and they know just where on the upside of your head to hit you with it. There’s a thread of noise rock, but I think maybe it’s just the trio being pissed off, and the blasting away, successive slowdowns and residual noise in closer “Inside a Burning Vehicle” are as punishing an end as Far From justifies. You know I never mention Swarm of the Lotus lightly. Well, here we are.

Barren Heir Linktr.ee

Barren Heir on Bandcamp

Some Pills for Ayala, Dystopia

SOME PILLS FOR AYALA Dystopia

There’s a moment about five minutes in, before the solo starts, where opening cut “Little Fingers” sort of settles into its groove, and the effect is an immediate chill on the listener. Néstor Ayala Cortés, vocalist, multi-instrumentalist and the sole denizen of the project, has long specialized in the heavy and languid, and without lacking either activity or swing — lookin’ at you, “Black Rains” — as the melodies touch on a heavy psychedelia only bolstered by the abiding tonal warmth. Three tracks top eight minutes — “Little Fingers,” “Above and Below” and “Falling Down” — and while these are obvious focal points, both for how they dwell in parts and how they differentiate from the shorter pieces that space them out, a song like “Rise to the Surface” or experiments like “Regrets” and “Flying to Nowhere” use their relative brevity as a strength, and while one might as well hang a big old ‘you are here’ sign on Dystopia, the closing title-track, a subdued instrumental flesh-out into a quick fade and the only song under three minutes long, is arguably the most hopeful sounding of the bunch. Go figure. Cortés, like South American heavy as a whole, remains underappreciated, but his songwriting remains vibrant and forward-looking.

Some Pills for Ayala on Bandcamp

Some Pills for Ayala on Instagram

Stonebirds, Perpetual Wasteland

Stonebirds Perpetual Wasteland

Cerebral French post-metallers Stonebirds offer their first new music in five years with Perpetual Wasteland, their fifth full-length. The album is comprised of six tracks that range from minimalist guitar standing alone to an explosive, big-the-way-modern-pop-is-big chorus like that of “Sea of Sorrow” (not a cover). Stonebirds might be aggressive, as on “Circles” at the outset, or they might even delve into a bit of post-black metal in “Croak,” but there’s never a point at which Perpetual Wasteland lacks purpose. Each side is three songs, two between five and six minutes and a closer circa eight; I’m telling you the symmetry is multi-tiered. And as destructive as “So Far Away” feels at its start, “The Last Time” mirrors with a more open-sounding approach, lush in melody in a way they’ve been before by then, and still tense in chug, but pulled back in the delivery. They’re dynamic, they have range, and they craft their material with clear consideration of how every second is going to unfold.

Stonebirds on Bandcamp

Ripple Music website

Yurt, VI – Rippling Mirrors of the Other

YURT VI RIPPLING MIRRORS OF THE OTHER

VI – Rippling Mirrors of the Other is indeed the sixth LP from Irish space rockers Yurt, as I remind myself that just because I’d never heard the band before doesn’t mean they haven’t been around over 16 years. So it goes. The keyboard-prone three-piece — Andrew Bushe and drums and then some, Steven Anderson on guitar/vocals and sax, and Boz Mugabe on bass, vocals, keys (plus visuals) — find a way to make a classic-style motorik push feel mellow on “From the Maggot’s Perspective,” where “Shop of the Most Auspicious Frog” is more of a freakout and “Seventh is the Skut” is more about the jazzprog instrumental chase. Those three songs are shorter, but the album has three more extended pieces as well in opener “The Cormorant Tree” (15:33), “Pagpag Variations” (16:28) and “Sun Roasted Rodent” (13:30), which unfurl across multiple movements, bringing heavy doomjazz skronk and more experimentalist space rock together in a way that makes me bummed to be late to the party, but also kind of feel like I’m right on time.

Yurt website

Yurt on Bandcamp

Evoken, Mendacium

evoken mendacium

As the band are now past the 30-year mark, it is an honor to once again be drenched in Evoken‘s pouring, grey, cold, wretched visions. Mendacium brings eight songs themed, because obviously, around the slow decline and death of a 14th century Benedictine monk, running 62 dug-in minutes of beauty-in-darkness extremity. It is not universally crawling, as “Lauds” and “Sext” move with a poise that feels kin to modern Paradise Lost, but for sure is defined by and uses that sense of slow, grueling churn to bolster its atmosphere, which is duly wood-churchy for its subject matter. They’re not all-pummel, of course, and never were. The penultimate “Vesper” is a brief organ interlude before closer “Compline” lowers you down into the pit to face whatever it is that takes place in the song after the seven-and-a-half-minute mark, and there is a morose peace to be found in the quiet moments throughout, as with what might be their only album this decade, Evoken land that much harder for the emotional weight the songs carry, whatever metaphor might be applied to them.

Evoken website

Profound Lore Records website

Mourners & Yanomamo, Mourners & Yanomamo Split EP

Mourners Yanomamo Split EP

Oh that’s nasty. You might think you’re ready for what Mourners and Yanomamo are bringing in gutter-dwelling death-doom and gnashing, crush-prone sludge roll, but that isn’t likely to save you as the two Sydney-based acts align for a three-song/20-minute split EP that wastes not a second in terms of efficiency of infliction. Mourners present “It Only Gets Worse,” with a raw punch in its bass chug, low-deathly growls and a sound that’s so down and dense across 11 minutes that it sounds slower than it actually is. It dies loud in a wash of noise to let Yanomamo‘s feedback-and-sample start “Lifefucker,” pointedly miserable in its unfolding. It and the growl-into-a-void-but-the-void-is-you diagnosing of mankind’s miseries in “Self-Inflicted” are shorter together than “It Only Gets Worse,” but more outwardly aggressive, as if to make sure you got spit out after being so thoroughly chewed up. I guess what I’m trying to say is it’s pretty heavy in that the-world-is-dying-and-nobody’s-coming-to-stop-it kind of way.

Yanomamo on Bandcamp

Mourners on Bandcamp

Muttering Bog, Sword Axe Wizard Cult

muttering bog sword axe wizard cult

The craggy dark-wizard-giving-soon-to-be-unheeded-warnings vocals of Muttering Bog‘s first release, the sludgy Sword Axe Wizard Cult, become a defining aspect. The Winchester, Virginia, band’s lone member, credited only as Ben, hones a raw-throated rasp that, where parts of the album might otherwise be stoner metal, keep a tether to extremity that feels as much born of black metal as Bongzilla. It is a challenging but not unrewarding listen; a just-out-of-the-dirt basement doom that isn’t afraid of being caustic or harsh in its riffy, weedian homage. And yeah, it comes across as pretty rough. Some of the changes are choppy on the drums and such, but hell’s bells, it’s a fully DIY make-and-release-a-thing from one person that pushes limits, is certain to evoke an emotional response, and is absolutely uncompromising in the identity being carved. None of that makes it listenable, if you’re looking for listenability, but it does make it art.

Muttering Bog on Bandcamp

Muttering Bog on Instagram

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Brant Bjork & The Bros. to Release Live in the High Desert Aug. 1

Posted in Whathaveyou on July 24th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

This would’ve been later in the tenure of Brant Bjork and The Bros., as this particular band incarnation of Brant Bjork‘s ongoing solo-project set forth with 2005’s double-album, Saved by Magic, and issued their second and final studio statement, Somera Sól, in 2007. Both records have been reissued — the former reworked and retitled Saved by Magic Again, the latter a more straight-up remaster — by Heavy Psych Sounds, and this April 2009 show coming out through Bjork‘s own Duna Records imprint will be a crucial third installment from the long-defunct band that was.

Of course, Bjork‘s band-that-is, the Brant Bjork Trio, with Mario Lalli on bass and Mike Amster on drums, spent the early part of this year on tour supporting their Duna-delivered 2024 debut, Once Upon a Time in the Desert (review here), and they just finished a Euro run at Stoned From the Underground, so there’s no lack of activity in or around Bjork‘s camp. Either way, though it’s unquestionably a fan-piece, Live in the High Desert represents a time when heavy rock was on the cusp of welcoming a new generation of listeners and Bjork‘s ascent to being desert rock’s primo ambassador was in-progress. I saw this band in New York one time. Had a beer with one of the Bros. at the bar of Club Midway and everything. I don’t even know how long ago that was, but it was before ’09 or there’d be a review to link to, so there you go. Yes, my life is very much ‘before’ and ‘after,’ in terms of the links I can find to remember how I’ve spent my time.

Stay cool ‘cuz you know he will. Here’s art and words from the PR wire:

BRANT BJORK AND THE BROS LIVE IN THE HIGH DESERT

Californian label Duna Records presents a new desert rock treasure with Brant Bjork and the Bros’ scorching “Live in the High Desert” album recorded at legendary Pappy & Harriet’s venue. Turn it up and ride the groove!

Unearthed from the personal archives of the legendary desert rocker, Brant Bjork’s newly relaunched Duna Records is set to release a seminal live performance of Brant Bjork and the Bros at Pappy & Harriet’s Pioneertown Palace — one of Southern California’s most eclectic and storied venues located in the Mojave desert near Joshua Tree.

The two-hour performance was recorded on April 4th, 2009 and features a classic lineup of Brant Bjork on guitar and vocals, Dylan Roche on bass, Max Raddings on guitar and Giampaolo Farnedi on drums, capturing the band digging into deep groovy desert rock jams including fan favorites from Brant Bjork’s 30-year career. The “Live in the High Desert” album is available in Limited Sunburst LP, Limited Transparent Blue LP, Black LP as well as CD digipack, with orders available now through Duna Records.

Brant Bjork and the Bros “Live in the High Desert”
Available now on Duna Records (LP/CD)

TRACKLIST:
1. Turn Yourself On
2. Low Desert Punk
3. 73
4. Too Many Chiefs
5. Dr Special
6. This Place
7. Hydraulicks
8. Freaks Of Nature
9. Chick/Kickback
10. Lazybones/Automatic
11. Adelante

Brant Bjork has spent over a quarter-century at the epicenter of Californian desert rock. From cutting his teeth drumming and composing on the legendary Kyuss’ landmark early albums, to propelling the seminal fuzz of Fu Manchu from 1994-2001 while producing other bands, putting together offshoot projects, and over the last 20 years embarking on his solo career as a singer, guitarist and bandleader, founding his own record label and more, his history is a winding narrative of relentless, unflinching creativity. Brant Bjork is considered a founding pioneer of the stoner rock and desert rock music scenes. He recently relaunched his own music label Duna Records alongside long-time friend and fellow desert icon Mario Lalli, with Brant Bjork Trio’s “Once Upon a Time in the Desert” as inaugural release.

Brant Bjork shares some memories about this special night at Pappy & Harriet’s:

“April 4th, 2009. I remember it was a cold, high desert night, but it was hot inside. There were a lot of familiar faces in the crowd, all of whom were well “primed” and right up on the stage, which at Pappy’s is only about a foot and a half off the floor. To call it an intimate setting would be an understatement and you can certainly hear it in this recording. Earlier that evening, Tony Mason brought his portable studio rig into the club, which included his Fostex 16-track 1/2 tape machine. He set it all up on a dinner table right to the left of the stage. It was pretty much the same gear and set-up that would have recorded ‘Jalamanta’, ‘Local Angel’, ‘Saved by Magic’ and ‘Tres Dias’. Tony and I were still analog purists then and our general concept was to record a live show the same way we recorded my studio records, which would be best described as “old school.” We were convinced that nobody at the time was recording live records to tape and looking back, I think we were probably right. I’ve played at Pappy’s quite a bit over the years. Robyn, Linda and many of the staff were like family to myself and many other local musicians who performed there regularly.

I believe this was the only time I played Pappy’s with this last and final line-up of The Bros with Dylan Roche on bass, Max Raddings on guitar and “Thee Italian Stallion”, Giampaolo Farnedi on drums. We had just recently returned from a tour down in Australia, so we were still in rock mode. In all fairness, great shows are rare and even more rare if you are recording, if you know what I mean, but it was a good show on a great night. A great time was had by all and that’s what it ultimately is all about. The band and the crowd were on and totally feeling it and when this happened at Pappy’s, there was a vibe not felt elsewhere. So yes, there is some very real magic here and even though it was sixteen years ago, when I listened to this recording for the first time in age. I could still hear and feel the magic. It was a wonderful moment in time, but what seems like not very long after this night, much would change in my world and the world at large. Naturally, some good, some not so good but that’s what makes listening to a recording like this pretty rad! It’s a sonic slice of life, so dig in.”

http://www.brantbjork.com
https://www.instagram.com/brant_bjork
https://www.facebook.com/BrantBjorkOfficial

https://www.dunarecords.net/
https://www.instagram.com/duna_records_official/
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61561926286972

Brant Bjork and the Bros., Somera Sól (2007)

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