Quarterly Review: Maggot Heart, Catatonic Suns, Sacri Suoni, Nova Doll, Howl at the Sky, Fin del Mundo, Bloody Butterflies, Solar Sons, Mosara, Jupiter

Posted in Reviews on October 4th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

the obelisk winter quarterly review

Wednesday, huh? I took the dog for a walk this morning. We do that. I’ve been setting the alarm for five but getting up before — it’s still better than waking up at 4AM, which is a hard way to live unless you can go to bed at like 8 on the dot, which I can’t really anymore because kid’s bedtime, school, and so on — and taking Tilly for a walk around the block and up the big hill to start the day. Weather permitting, we do that walk three times a day and she does pretty well. This morning she didn’t want to leave the Greenie she’d been working on and so resisted at first, but got on board eventually.

In addition to physical movement being tied to emotional wellbeing — not something I’m always willing to admit applies to myself, but almost always true; I also get hangry or at least more easily overwhelmed when I’m hungry, which I always am because I have like seven eating disorders and am generally a wreck of a person — the dog doesn’t say much and it’s pretty early and dark out when we go, so I get a quiet moment out under the moon going around the block looking up at Venus, Jupiter, a few stars we can see through the suburban light pollution of the nearby thoroughfares. We go up part of the big hill, have done the full thing a couple times, but she’s only just three-plus months, so not yet really. But we’re working on it, and despite Silly Tilly’s fears otherwise, her treat was right where we left it on the rug when we got back. And she got to eat leaves, so, bonus.

There are minutes in your day. You can find them. You can do it. I’m not trying to be saccharine or to bullshit you. Life is short and most of it is really, really difficult, so take whatever solace you can get however you can get it. Let’s talk about records.

Quarterly Review #21-30:

Maggot Heart, Hunger

maggot heart hunger

This is Maggot Heart‘s third record and they’re still a surprise. It can be jarring sometimes to encounter something that edges so close to unique within the underground sphere, but the Berlin outfit founded/fronted by Linnéa Olsson (ex-The Oath, ex-Grave Pleasures, ex-Sonic Ritual) offer bleak and subversively feminine post-punk informed by black metal on Hunger, and as she, bassist Olivia Airey and drummer Uno Bruniusson (ex-In Solitude, etc.), unfurl eight tracks of arthouse aggro and aesthetic burn, one can draw lines just as easily with “Nil by Mouth” or the later “Looking Back at You” to mid-’70s coke-strung New York poetic no wave and the modern European dark progressive set to which Maggot Heart have diligently contributed over the last half decade. The horn sounds on “LBD” are a nice touch, and “Archer” puts that to work in some folk-doom context, but in the tension of “Concrete Soup” or the avant garde setting out across the three minutes of the leadoff semi-title-track “Scandinavian Hunger,” Maggot Heart demonstrate their ability to knock the listener off balance as a first step toward reorienting them to the atmosphere the band have honed in these songs, slightly goth on “This Shadow,” bombastic in the middle and end of “Parasite,” each piece set to its own purpose adding some aspect to the whole. You wouldn’t call it easy listening, but the challenge is part of the fun.

Maggot Heart on Instagram

Svart Records website

Rapid Eye Records on Bandcamp

Catatonic Suns, Catatonic Suns

Catatonic Suns Catatonic Suns

Adjacent to New Psych Philly with their homebase in Allentown, Pennsylvania, and with a self-titled collection that runs between the shoegazing shine of “Deadzone,” the full-fuzz brunt of “Slack” or “Inside Out,” the three-minute linear build of “Fell Off” made epic by its melody, and the hooky indie sway of advance single “Be as One,” the trio Catatonic Suns make a quick turnaround from their 2022 sophomore LP, Saudade, for the lysergic realization and apparent declaration of this eight tracks/31 minutes. With most cuts punkishly short and able to saunter into the noise-coated jangle of “Failsafe” or the wash of “Sublunary” — speaking of post-punk — Catatonic Suns eventually land at closer “No Stranger,” which tops eight minutes and comprises a not-insignificant percentage of the total runtime. And no, they aren’t the first heavy psych band to have shorter songs up front and a big finale, but the swirling layered triumph of “No Stranger” carries a breadth in its immersive early verses, mellow, sitar-laced midsection jam and noise-caked finish and comes across very much as what Catatonic Suns has been building toward all the while. The same might be true of the band, for all I know — it seems to be the longest piece they’ve written to-date — but either way, put them on the ‘Catatonic Voyage’ tour with Sun Voyager for two months crisscrossing the US and never look back. Big sound, and after three full-lengths, significant potential.

Catatonic Suns on Instagram

Agitated Records website

Sacri Suoni, Sacred is Not Divine

Sacri Suoni Sacred is Not Divine

Densely weighted in tone, brash in its impact and heavy, heavy, heavy in atmosphere, Sacri Suoni‘s second album together and first under their new moniker (they used to be called Stoned Monkey; kudos on the change), Sacred is Not Divine positions itself as a cosmic doom thesis and an exploration of the reaches and impacts to be found through collaborative jamming. Four songs make it — “Doom Perspection of the Astral Frequency 0-1” (8:15), “Six Scalps for Six Sounds” (10:28), “Cult of Abysmus” (13:15) and “Plutomb, Engraved in Reality” (8:02) — and as heavy has they are (have I mentioned that yet?) there is dynamic at play as well in the YOB-ish noodles and strums at the start of “Six Scalps for Six Sounds” or in “Cult of Abysmus” around the 10-minute mark, or in the opener’s long fade, but make no mistake, the mission here is heft and space and the Milano outfit have both in ready supply. I think “Plutomb, Engraved in Reality” has maybe three riffs? Might be two, but either way, it’s enough. The character in this material is defined by its weight, but there are three dimensions to their style and all are represented. If you listen on headphones, try really hard not to pulverize your brain in the process.

Sacri Suoni on Facebook

Zanns Records website

Nova Doll, Denaturing

nova doll denaturing

Earthy enough in tone and their slower rolling moments to earn an earliest-Acid King comparison, Barrie, Ontario’s Nova Doll are nonetheless prone to shifting into bits of aggro punk, as in “Waydown” or “Dead Before I Knew It,” the latter of which closes their debut album, Denaturing, the very title of the thing loaded with context beyond its biochemical interpretations. That is, if Nova Doll are pissed, fair enough. “California Sunshine” arrives in the first half of the seven-song/29-minute long-player, with rhythm kept on the toms, open drones and a vastness that speaks at least to some tertiary affect of desert rock on their sound. Psychedelia comes through in different forms amid the crunch of a song like “Mabon,” or “California Sunshine,” and the bassy centerpiece near-title-track feels willfully earthbound — not complaining; they’re that much stronger for changing it up — but the three-piece of guitarist/vocalist Casey Cuff, bassist Sean Alten and drummer Daniel Allen ride that groove in “Denaturation” like they already know the big spaceout in “Light Her Up” is coming. And they probably did, given the apparent care put into what is sometimes a harsh presentation and the variety they bring around the central buzz that seems to underscore the songs. Grown-up punk, still growing, but their sound is defined and malleable in its noisy approach on their first full-length, and that’s only encouraging.

Nova Doll on Instagram

Tarantula Tapes website

Black Throne Productions website

Howl at the Sky, In Line for the End Times

Howl at the Sky In Line for the End Times

With their self-released debut album, In Line for the End Times, hard-driving single-guitar four-piece Howl at the Sky enter the field with 12 songs and a CD-era-esque 55-minute run that filters through a summary of decades of heavy rock and roll influences. From their native state of Ohio alone, bands like Valley of the Sun and Lo-Pan, or Tummler and Red Giant a generation ago — these and others purveying straight-ahead heavy rock light on tricks and big on drive. More metal in their riffy underpinnings than some, certainly less than others, they foster hooks whether it’s a three-minute groover like “Stink Eye” and opener “Our Lady of the Knives” or the more spacious “Dry as a Bone” and the penultimate “Black Lung,” which has a bit more patience in its sway than the C.O.C.-circa-’91 “The Beast With No Eyes” and modernize ’70s vibes in the traditions of acts one might find on labels like Ripple or Small Stone. That is, rock dudes, rockin’. Vocalist Scott Wherle bears some likeness to We’re All Gonna Die‘s Jim Healey early on, but both are working from a classic heavy rock and metal foundation, and Wherle has a distinguishing, fervent push behind him in guitarist Mike Shope, bassist Scot “With One ‘T'” Fithen and drummer John Sims. For as long as these guys are together, I wouldn’t expect too many radical departures from what they do here. Once a band has its songwriting down like this, it’s really more just about letting grow on its own over time rather than forcing something, and the sense they give in listening is they know that too.

Howl at the Sky on Facebook

Howl at the Sky on Bandcamp

Fin del Mundo, Todo Va Hacia el Mar

Fin del Mundo Todo Va Hacia el Mar

The first two four-song EPs by Buenos Aires psych/post-rock four-piece Fin del Mundo — guitarist/vocalist Lucia Masnatta, guitarist Julieta Heredia, bassist Julieta Limia, drummer/backing vocalist Yanina Silva — wander peacefully through a dreamy apocalypse compiled together chronologically as Todo Va Hacia el Mar, the band’s Spinda Records first long-player. From “La Noche” through “El Fin del Mundo,” what had been a 2020 self-titled, the tones are serene and the melodies drift without getting lost or meandering too far from the songs’ central structure, though that last of them reaches broader and heavier ground, resonance intact. The second EP, 2022’s La Ciudad Que Dejamos, the LP’s side B, has more force behind its rhythms and creates a wash in “El Próximo Verano” to preface its gang-vocal moment, while closer “El Incendio” takes the Sonic Youth-style indie of the earlier material and fosters more complex melodicism around it and builds tension into a decisive but not overblown resolution. It’s 34 minutes long and even between its two halves there’s obvious growth on the part of the band being showcased. Their next long-player will be like a second debut, and I’ll be curious how they take on a full-length format having that intention in the first place for the material.

Fin del Mundo on Facebook

Spinda Records website

Bloody Butterflies, Mutations and Transformations

Bloody Butterflies Mutations and Transformations

A pandemic-born project (and in some ways, aren’t we all?), the two-piece instrumentalist unit Bloody Butterflies — that’s guitarist/bassist Jon Howard (Hordes) and drummer August Elliott (No Skull) — released their first album, Polymorphic, in 2020 and emerge with a follow-up in the seven tracks/27 minutes of the on-theme Mutations and Transformations, letting the riffs do their storytelling on cuts like “Toilet Spider” and “Frandor Rat,” the latter of which may or may not be in homage to a rat living near the Kroger on the east side of Lansing. The sound is punker raw and as well it should be. That aforementioned ratsong has some lumber to its procession, but in the bassy “Fritzi” that follows, the bright flashes of cymbal in opener “BB Theme” (also the longest inclusion; immediate points) and the noisy declaration of post-doom stomp before the feedback at the end of “Wormhole” consumes all and the record ends, they find plenty of ways to stage off monochromatism. Actually, what I suspect is they’re having fun. At least that’s what it sounds like, in a very particular way. Fair enough. It would be cool to have some clever lesson learned from the pandemic or something like that, but no, sometimes terrible shit just happens. Cool for these two getting a band out of it. Take the wins you can get.

Bloody Butterflies on Facebook

Bloody Butterflies on Bandcamp

Solar Sons, Another Dimension

solar sons another dimension

Whilst prone to NWOBHM tapping twists of guitar in the leads of “Alien Hunter,” “Quicksilver Trail,” etc. and burling up strains of ’90s metal and a modern heavy sub-burl that adds nuance to its melodies, Solar Sons‘ fifth album, Another Dimension, arrives at its ambitions organically. The Dundee, Scotland, everybody-sings three-piece of bassist/lead vocalist Rory Lee, guitarist/vocalist Danny Lee and drummer/vocalist Pete Garrow embark with purpose on a narrative structure spread across the nine songs/62 minutes of the release that unveils more of its progressive doom character as it unfolds its storyline about a satellite sent to learn everything it can about the universe and return to save a dying Earth — science-fiction with a likeness to the Voyager probes; “The Voyage” here makes a triumph of its keyboard-backed second-half solo — presumably with alien knowledge. It’s not a minor undertaking in either theme or the actual listening time, but hell’s bells if Another Dimension doesn’t draw you in. Something in the character has me feeling like I can’t tell if it’s metal or rock or prog and yes I very much like that about it. Plenty of room for them to be all three, I guess, in these songs. They finish with the swing and shred and stomp of “Deep Inside the Mountain,” so I’ll just assume everything works out cool for homo sapiens in the long run, conveniently ignoring the fact that doing so is what got us into such a mess in the first place.

Solar Sons on Facebook

Solar Sons on Bandcamp

Mosara, Amena

mosara amena

A 5:50 single to answer back to last year’s second long-player, Only the Dead Know Our Secrets (review here), the latest from Mosara — which is actually an older track given some reworking, vocals and ambience, reportedly — is “Amena,” which immediately inflicts the cruelty of its thud only as a seeming preface for the Conan-like grueling-ultradoom-battery-with-shouts-cutting-through about to take place. A slow, noise-coated roll unfolds ahead of the largely indecipherable verse, and when that’s done, a cymbal seems to get hit extra hard as though to let everyone know it’s time to really dig in. It is both rawer in its harshness and thicker in tone than the last album, so it puts forth the interesting question of what a third Mosara full-length might bring atmospherically to the mix with their deepening, distorted roil. As it stands, “Amena” is both a steamroller of riff and a meditation, holding back only for as long as it takes to slam into the next measure, with its sludge growing more and more hypnotic as it slogs through the song’s midsection toward the inevitable seeming end of feedback and drone. Noisy band getting noisier. I’m on board.

Mosara on Facebook

Mosara on Bandcamp

Jupiter, Uinumas

Jupiter Uinumas

Jupiter‘s Uinumas is a complex half-hour-plus that comprises their fourth full-length, running seven songs — that’s six plus the penultimate title-track, which is a psych-jazzy interlude — as cuts like “Lumerians” and “Relentless” at the outset see the Finnish trio reestablish their their-own-wavelength take on heavy and progressive sounds classic and new. It’s not so much about crazy structures or 75-minute-long songs or indulgent noodling — though there’s a bit of that owing to the nature of the work, if nothing else — but just how much Jupiter make the aural space they inhabit their own, the way “After You” pushes into its early wash, or the later “On Mirror Plane” (so that’s it!) spaces out and then seems to align itself around the bassline for a forward shuffle sprint, or the way that closer “Slumberjack’s Wrath” chugs through until it’s time for the blowout, which is built up past three minutes in and caps with shimmer that borders on the overwhelming. An intricate but recognizable approach, Jupiter‘s more oddball aspects and general cerebrality might put off some listeners, but as dug in as Jupiter are on Uinumas, on significantly doubts they were shooting for mass appeal anyhow. Who the hell would want that anyway? Bunch of money and people sweating everything you do. Yuck.

Jupiter on Facebook

Jupiter on Bandcamp

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Mooch Announce Fall Tour; New Album Out Oct. 6

Posted in Whathaveyou on September 27th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Groovy single from the new Mooch record, which as I understand it will have its details announced probably 37 seconds after this post goes live — train’s never late! — and those who miss the likes of Stubb or Asteroid will want to dig into that hook on “Crimson,” which is streaming below. The verse is more about space and the chorus fills that, which is familiar enough as formulas go, but the prevailing vibe is mellow heavy and the song has kind of an oldschool vibe. No complaints from me, in any case.

The Montreal three-piece will head out the week after release in order to hand deliver riffs to audiences across Canada. There are a couple weekenders and one-offs they’ll undertake, and I would assume that there’s more to come. On the chance that the album announce does happen right as this is getting posted, I’ll update it accordingly and probably add some side parenthetical here about timing. You know, the standard procedure.

The band posted their dates on social media, as will happen. Couple TBDs in there. Look for this and more exciting content, courtesy of your favorite provider.

Blargh:

Mooch

We present to you a Fall 2023 Tour of Quebec, Ontario, and New Brunswick to celebrate the release of their upcoming full length record due October 6th 2023.

Tickets: https://thepointofsale.com/tickets/mooch2023

Oct.12 – Ottawa – Live on Elgin
Oct.13 – Montreal – The Purple Room
Oct.14 – Oshawa – The Atria
Oct.19 – Rimouski – L’Underground
Oct.20 – Québec City – Scanner Bistro
Oct.21 – Trois-Rivières – Taverne Royale
Oct.26 – Hamilton – Doors Taco Joint
Oct.27 – London – Palasad

Nov.2 – Guelph – Silence
Nov.3 – Niagara Falls – Camp Cataract
Nov.4 – Brampton – Tracks Pub
Nov.9 – Fredericton – TBD
Nov.10 – St.John – TBD
Nov.11 – Moncton – Tide and Boar
Nov.17 – Sherbrooke – Le Murdoch

*More dates to come*

MOOCH are:
Ben Cornel – Guitar, Vocals
Alex Segreti – Drums, Backing Vocals
Julian Iac – Bass, Backing Vocals

https://www.facebook.com/moochmusicofficial/
https://www.instagram.com/moochmusicofficial/
https://moochmusicofficial.bandcamp.com/
https://open.spotify.com/artist/1mVwVHtrvo6V2letIqRV7X

Mooch, Hounds (2020)

Mooch, “Crimson” official video

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Sons of Arrakis Announce Fall Live Dates in Canada and Mexico

Posted in Whathaveyou on September 13th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

sons of arrakis

According to the below, Dune-themed Canadian heavy rockers Sons of Arrakis should already have begun recording their second album, tentatively and likely titled Volume II, and a quick glance at their social media confirms at least that the process has begun, if not finished. The Montreal-based four-piece have kept busy since they released last year’s debut, Volume I (review here), up to and including figuring out how to navigate through the plaudits heaped upon them from multiple directions at once, playing shows in Canada, apparently writing. They’ve got a new video for “The Black Mirror” from the first record due out this Friday. As I say, busy. ‘Big things,’ and all that.

They’ve assured that 2024 will be more of the same in terms of the activity level, and with the new record impending, that’s legit. Before any of it, next month, they’ll do a quick run of dates in Ontario and then head south to Mexico for their first international dates, playing three nights in Mexico City and doing a radio interview (sounds like the work of a Tamayo), and joining Blue Cheese and others in Tabacalera. The PR wire bought show posters, all the details and ticket links.

And gadzooks, here they are:

sons of arrakis oct can shows

SONS OF ARRAKIS Announce October Tour Dates For Ontario, Canada, & Mexico

Purchase Tickets Here: https://linktr.ee/PaleHorsePromotions

sons of arrakis oct mex showsMontreal-based SONS OF ARRAKIS are to embark on the first international tour with Pale Horse / Black Throne Productions & Morro-Carnal Prodzsz. Describing themselves as Melange Rock and Cinematographic Sci-Fi Rock, the quartet captivate audiences with their electrifying live performances. In Mexico, their tour coincides with the renowned La Dia de Los Muertos festivities.

The band comments:

‘’SOA strikes again with a first international tour! A lot is in the oven for the next few months and we can’t wait to show you Volume II’’

Tickets: https://linktr.ee/PaleHorsePromotions

Tour Dates:
Ontario:
Oct 5 – Ottawa | with Hempress & Subsun | at Live on Elgin
Oct 6 – Toronto | with Low Orbit, AAWKS & Tumble | at Hard Luck
Oct 7 – Hamilton | with Astral Witch, The Electric Cactus and Cannabusv| at Doors Pub
Oct 8 – London | with Yeti on Horseback and Snakes | at Richmond Tavern
Mexico:
Oct 25 – Mexico City | Local Radio Station Interview at Radio Reaktor
Oct 26 – Tabacalera | with Blue Cheese, Powertrip & Criaturas de la Noches | at Denso Rock Ponciano Arriaga
Oct 27 – Mexico City | with Compadra, Ugly Miss Piggy, and Pis | at LXS Cavaleras: Espacio Cultural
Oct 28 – Mexico City | Chido Carnal Fest
Oct 29 – Mexico City | Georgetown Records

Amidst their busy schedule, SONS OF ARRAKIS will also begin recording their highly anticipated new album in August 2023, with the first single from Volume II scheduled for an early 2024 release.

https://www.facebook.com/sonsofarrakisband
https://www.instagram.com/sonsofarrakis/
https://www.sonsofarrakis.com/merch
https://sonsofarrakis.bandcamp.com/
https://www.sonsofarrakis.com/

Sons of Arrakis, “The Black Mirror” video teaser

Sons of Arrakis, Volume 1 (2022)

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Seum to Release Ratseum Live Tape Sept. 8

Posted in Whathaveyou on September 4th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

There isn’t going to be a digital release for this one. I don’t think there’s any plan for putting it out on anything other than the 10 tapes that Montréal sludge metallers Seum will have for sale at the show they’re playing on Friday. So maybe it’s a little more like the band made a few DIY tapes for themselves and the merch table, but whatever, I dig this band and think that’s kind of cool. They released their second album, Double Double (review here), earlier this year, and that’s got enough disgust packed into it to go around, so if you can’t make it to l’Hémisphère Gauche at the end of this week, there’s still plenty to dive into should you be so inclined.

And considering the one-off nature of the June show that’s become the Ratseum cassette, that they’d want to preserve it, performing as two-thirds of the band did with Ratpiss vocalist Erin Faeth sitting in as singer. Well, I say one-off, but can’t help notice that Ratpiss are playing the gig Friday too, so there’s nothing to say an onstage guest spot can’t happen again with the full band. Stop me if you’ve heard this before, but it’s nice to have friends. And as as one who came of age in the 1990s, I’ll say as well that it’s also nice to make your friends tapes. Still cooler than CDRs.

From their socials:

Seum Ratseum

Surprise: RATSEUM – Live Tape – Dropping on September 8th

On June 10th 2023, as Gaspard could not make it to our show at l’Hémisphère Gauche, he was replaced on Vocal by Erin, singer of the Montreal Power violence band Ratpiss.

For one night SEUM became… RATSEUM!

As the show ended up being recorded we decided to release it on tape as a memory.

Our friend Gorka made a logo, we fixed a quick cover and made 10 DIY copies.

Each copy is hand numbered, and that recording will only be available on tape.

The tape will be released on Friday September 8th on Bandcamp and during our show at The TraXide with Kapitur, Twin Banshee and #ratpiss.

SEUM / TWIN BANSHEE / RATPISS / KAPITUR: https://www.facebook.com/events/261976166562134/

Be there!

Be there!

Seum is:
Fred – Drums
Gaspard – Vocals
Piotr – Bass

https://www.facebook.com/Seumtheband
https://open.spotify.com/album/6ukhuyolnXMYY6MpODgZ37
https://seumtheband.bandcamp.com/
https://www.instagram.com/seumtheband/

https://www.facebook.com/ElectricSparkRecords/
https://www.instagram.com/electricsparkrecords/
https://www.electricsparkrecords.com/

Seum, Double Double (2023)

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Mooch Announce New Single “The Start”; Album Coming Soon

Posted in Whathaveyou on August 22nd, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Heralding their follow-up to 2020’s full-length Hounds (discussed here), yet untitled, Montreal heavy rock trio Mooch unveil “The Start” as a first of three singles from their sophomore LP. When that’s out, what it’s called, and various other details about its making and release — well, I just don’t know. But I’ve heard the track and it’s under three minutes, has an easy roll like earliest Queens of the Stone Age with a bit of the swagger necessary to pull that off, reminding a bit of Heavy Glow in the process, but en route to having their own spin. As regards beginnings, “The Start” is an auspicious one.

You might recall Hounds was recorded by Brant Bjork in the California desert. “The Start” and presumably the album from whence it comes were tracked under different circumstances, but Mooch clearly learned some lessons on how to be heavy and laid back at the same time from the experience. You can hear that in “The Start” for sure. As soon as I find out more about the LP, I’ll let you know. In the meantime, the single releases Aug. 25, which is this Friday.

Info from the PR wire:

MOOCH-THE START

MOOCH – THE START

‘The Start’ is a song inspired by the effort it takes to continuously grow in a relationship. It is a song about MOOCH finding a way to pave a new path forward. Running at 2:57 minutes long, ‘The Start’ lays down a heavy rock groove complete with hand-perc accented sections, stacked vocal harmonies and an eccentric solo section.

The song’s release will be the first of 3 singles, set to come out August 25th, 2023, on all streaming platforms. Promotion will follow the narrative of their latest trip to Yellowknife, Canada. Promo will include professional images and video content for paid ads on socials, a music video shot at the YK Airport, footage from their performance at Folk on the Rocks Festival and a vinyl release for the upcoming record. Lastly, an Eastern Canadian Fall Tour is set to follow the release of the full album.

Recorded by Jordan Barillaro @ Tonebender, Jared Matthews @ Soundbagger Studio, and Julian Iac @ Icebox Studios
Mixed by Julian Iac
Mastered by Richard Addison @ Trillium Sound Mastering Studio

MOOCH are:
Ben Cornel – Guitar, Vocals
Alex Segreti – Drums, Backing Vocals
Julian Iac – Bass, Backing Vocals

https://www.facebook.com/moochmusicofficial/
https://www.instagram.com/moochmusicofficial/
https://moochmusicofficial.bandcamp.com/
https://open.spotify.com/artist/1mVwVHtrvo6V2letIqRV7X

Mooch, Hounds (2020)

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Sons of Otis Post “Way I Feel” Live Video

Posted in Bootleg Theater on August 22nd, 2023 by JJ Koczan

sons of otis

Another night in Toronto. It’s the end of July, and onstage at Bovine Sex Club, hometown-hero space-doom purveyors Sons of Otis are getting ready to play. The video camera has the three-piece founded by guitarist/vocalist Ken Baluke off to the left side of the frame. They look far away and sound it too, but that’s nothing new. Sons of Otis have been aurally gone for over 30 years now.

“Way I Feel” originally appeared on the band’s 2005 album, X, which followed 2001’s Songs for Worship in the post-Man’s Ruin era of the band — that seminal label had released their first two albums, 1996’s Spacejumbofudge (discussed here) and 1999’s Temple Ball (review here), before folding — and X found them on Small Stone after The Music Cartel put out Songs for Worship, a tumultuous period they resolved through molten riffs, massive, lurching groove, and cosmic vibes. In other words, they were Sons of Otis. If bong rock is a thing, Sons of Otis are gravity bong rock.

You can hear some conversation at the very start of the video. People are having a chat as one does between songs or bands. Sons of Otis were filling in this night for The Obsessed, who’d had to cancel a stint of Canadian shows and thusly left an open space at the top of the night’s lineup. Needless to say, they did the job admirably or they probably wouldn’t have put the video up.

I like bootlegs. If you feel the same, remember putting bootleg VHS tapes or DVDs in your player or listening to rough-sounding audience audio recordings, then this might resonate. What strikes me about it is how down to business the band is, and how they get up, hit the sample, lay waste, stop. I’ve never seen Sons of Otis, and already I knew this was an oversight, so I won’t call that fresh learning or anything, but certainly it points out the folly of living this long without.

So, road trip?

I don’t have any real reason for posting this other than it’s good. It’s not tied to an album release — the band put out their latest LP, Isolation (review here), in Fall 2020 through Totem Cat; the stream is below because who the hell wants to stop listening to Sons of Otis after one song? — or being put out to do any kind of active promotion that I know of. But that’s fine. I don’t need an excuse to dig in, and I think the a/v aesthetic value of the clip speaks for itself. In rumble.

Enjoy:

Sons of Otis, “Way I Feel” live in Toronto, July 29, 2023

Bovine Sex Club Toronto 7/29/23

Sons of Otis, Isolation (2020)

Sons of Otis on Facebook

Sons of Otis on Bandcamp

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TarLung and Mares of Thrace Announce European Tour

Posted in Whathaveyou on August 17th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Mares Of Thrace_promo pic

TARLUNG_promo

I didn’t really know Calgary’s Mares of Thrace before this tour announcement, and I’m sure you did because you’re way more on the ball than I am — always — but in case you didn’t hear their 2022 record, The Exile, it’s below with twisting, modern post-Baroness riffing and a nastiness that is both a surprise and a welcome turn from expectation. That kick drum in “In All Her Glory” and the riff it punctuates are both encouraging further dig-ins to the album, so hey, I learned something today. Lifelong process and all that. I say again: nasty. Fucking a.

Vienna-based harsh-vocal nod rockers TarLung, who offered their latest album, Architect (review here), in 2021, are more of a known quantity in their big-toned groove and commanding, death-metal-style vocal. The fact that both bands share a penchant for blending elements from more extreme styles with heavy riffing makes for an enticing combination, leaving one to wonder where, on a given night, the line between metal and rock might exist if it does at all. I already said “fucking a,” so I’ll go with “right on” instead. Right on.

Shows start Oct. 20, as the PR wire tells it:

Mares of Thrace TarLung Tour Poster

CANADIAN NOISE-DOOM DUO MARES OF THRACE AND AUSTRIAN SLUDGE-DOOM TRIO TARLUNG ANNOUNCE EUROPEAN 2023 TOUR BEGINNING OCTOBER 20TH

Mares of Thrace will be embarking on their first-ever European tour, joined by TarLung from Austria. Dates are listed below.

On the tour, the band comments:

“We’re delighted to be finally playing Europe; it’s been a major goal since this project’s inception. We’re also super stoked to be joined by TarLung, who are musical (and otherwise) like minds of the highest order.”

Mares of Thrace released their critically-acclaimed third record, The Exile, on Sonic Unyon Records in 2022, and have followed it up with North American tours with the likes of KEN mode, Vile Creature, and Tribunal.

TarLung are widely considered one of the mainstays of Austrian doom, and have shared stages with such genre luminaries as Eyehategod, Crowbar, and Conan; their 2021 record Architect was hailed.

Fri 20.10. Graz (AT) – Club Wakuum
Sat 21.10. Alseno (IT) – Tingel Tangel
Sun 22.10. (IT) – TBD
Mon 23.10. Maribor (SLO) – Dvorana Gustaf
Tue 24.10. Budapest (HUN) – Robot
Wed 25.10. Krakow (PL) – Pub Pod Ziemia
Thu 26.10. Katowice (PL) – Music Hub
Fri 27.10. Warsaw (PL) – Chmury
Sat 28.10. Berlin (DE) – Köpi
Sun 29.10. Praha (CZ) – Modrá Vopice
Mon 30.10. Brno (CZ) – Kabinet Muz
Tue 31.10. Vienna (AT) – Venster99

https://www.instagram.com/mares_of_thrace/
https://www.facebook.com/maresofthraceca
https://maresofthrace.bandcamp.com/

https://www.instagram.com/tarlung_band/
https://www.facebook.com/tarlungband
https://tarlung.bandcamp.com/

Mares of Thrace, The Exile (2022)

TarLung, Architect (2021)

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La Chinga Stream “Light it Up”; Primal Forces Out Oct. 6

Posted in Whathaveyou on July 27th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

la chinga

The shenanigans of La Chinga‘s forthcoming LP, Primal Forces — the Vancouver trio’s first LP since 2018’s Beyond the Sky (review here) — are immediate and multifaceted. There’s some getting it together noise, classic heavy rock modernized from ’70s influences, and a Van Halen-style break in the second half. The message is clear: La Chinga are rock and rollers. They work from an ideology of what that represents in their raucous grooves and brash, Mötley Crüe/KISS-ish chorus plastering, and as the opening cut from the album, yeah, “Light it Up” serves this purpose remarkably well, dropping hints of Fu Manchu along the way for good (and fuzzy) measure.

And before I turn you over to the PR wire info, you should absolutely know that my tone in talking about the song, the band, the record to come, is all wrong. That paragraph above? It’s fine. I don’t see any typos or blatant misinformation. I certainly stand by what I said. But if I was actually to paint you a picture of what’s going on in “Light it Up” or with La Chinga generally, there’s just about no way I’d not be throwing around images of beer flying through the air, muscle cars, the odd bit o’ smoke and a louder party than phrases like “work from an ideology” can ever hope to capture. Still, one does one’s best and we move forward. Maybe by the time the album comes out I’ll be more fun.

Not holding out tons of hope there, but however you say it the song is a blast. It’s streaming at the bottom of this post, of course. Info came from the PR wire:

la chinga primal forces

LA CHINGA share new single “Light It Up”; new album “Primal Forces” due out October 6th on Ripple Music

Vancouver-based hard rock power trio LA CHINGA have inked a worldwide deal with Ripple Music for the release of their fourth album “Primal Forces”, due out on October 6th. Stream their boisterous new single “Light It Up” on all streaming services now!

LA CHINGA is a hard rock power trio with psychedelic powers sitting on the world’s edge in Vancouver, Canada. Drawing from Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, MC5, and their own superbad habits, the band has established a beachhead with two albums on Detroit’s cult label Small Stone Records and a penetrating buzz across Canada.

Their upcoming fourth album “Primal Forces” was written and recorded during the tumultuous times of riots, lockdowns and pandemic: a perfect ground for dystopian vibes to permeate the lyrics and album storyline. “The themes of love, sex, death, and hell in a handbasket, so why not go for it and go out with a bang are what drive this album to new territory for us,” says the band. The rock’n’roll is heavy, the riffs are flying and so is LA CHINGA. Madness, frustration, joy, terror and ecstasy all mingle in a rip-roaring fusion of electric hooks, hip-swaying grooves and choruses to be sung along til the world collapses!

New album “Primal Forces” Out October 6th on Ripple Music
US preorder: https://ripplemusic.bigcartel.com/products?utf8=%E2%9C%93&search=chinga
Bandcamp preorder: https://ripplemusic.bandcamp.com/album/primal-forces

TRACKLIST:
1. Light It Up
2. Ride The Dragon
3. Bolt Of Lightning
4. Backs To The Wall
5. Witch’s Heart
6. The Call
7. Stars Fall From The Sky
8. Electric Eliminator
9. Rings Of Power
10. Motor Boogie

La Chinga was born in Vancouver, BC in 2012, although in reality it was conceived about a year earlier when bassist/vocalist Carl Spackler was surfing in SoCal and his Chicano beach buddies kept hailing each other with the mysterious phrase: “La chingaaaaa!”

Drummer/vocalist Jay Solyom and guitarist/vocalist Ben Yardley—also a noted professor of theremin—were conscripted shortly after, both veterans of Vancouver’s notoriously dead-end music scene, both beautifully obscene in their own right. La Chinga’s self-titled debut record was rushed out of a makeshift studio in 2013 on nothing but fumes and the liberating force of not giving a shit, landing like a hairball crossed with a stink bomb inside a world of yoga pant commerce, condo developments, and Macbook “musicians.” This was a revolutionary act—or maybe a devolutionary one, at least.

Meanwhile, Spackler was busy pouring all of his demented ’70s obsessions into wild three-minute homemade music videos, finding the visual language of fuzz itself inside shitty horror films as he furnished the great infernal drive-in of his mind. Somehow, miraculously, this charming brew conspired to make La Chinga the hottest bunch of stoned ape groovers to hot wheel out of the Pacific Northwest since forever.

“Freewheelin'” followed in 2016 on Detroit’s Small Stone Records, and so did unhinged tours of Europe, more year-end accolades, festival slots (420 Fest, Sasquatch), and Spackler’s continuing evolution as the Orson Welles of retard-o-tronic found footage scuzz. And then things got serious: in late 2017, La Chinga entered Vancouver’s fabled Warehouse studio with no-less-fabled producer Jamey Koch (DOA, Copyright, Tragically Hip). The result? “Beyond the Sky”, 45 minutes of sublimely confident freedom rock, sometimes meaty and beaty, sometimes glam-handed, and occasionally even dirtbag pretty, where the listener gets rolled, boogied, and otherwise supernaturally conveyed well beyond the sky, maybe even beyond ridiculous. This is how it feels to get chinga’d, amigos. Now the fiery trio is gearing up to release their new offering “Primal Forces”, to be unleashed in the fall of 2023 via Ripple Music.

LA CHINGA is
Carl Spackler – Vocals & Bass
Ben Yardley – Guitars, Vocals & Moog Synth
Jay Solyom – Drums Percussion & Bg vocals

http://www.facebook.com/La-Chinga
https://www.instagram.com/lachingaband/
https://lachinga.bandcamp.com/
https://www.youtube.com/user/LaChingaVideo/

https://www.facebook.com/theripplemusic/
https://www.instagram.com/ripplemusic/
https://ripplemusic.bandcamp.com/
http://www.ripple-music.com/

La Chinga, Primal Forces (2023)

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