Child Sign to Heavy Psych Sounds; Soul Murder & Other Reissues Coming Soon

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 23rd, 2024 by JJ Koczan

I like it when cool things happen to good bands generally, but specifically in this case I’m glad that Child‘s 2023 heavy-blues delve, Soul Murder (review here), is getting another look with the backing of Heavy Psych Sounds — from whom I’m almost an hour removed from discussing as one of the premier heavy labels in the world, so I must be due — since the Melbourne trio basically opened their veins and bled onto the tape, at least if the audio was anything to go by, and at least in the narrative I have of last year in my mind, the corresponding response was not what the record had earned. A Heavy Psych Sounds reissue, which is a first proper physical pressing, will fix that. The concept of one kind of already does.

That Soul Murder will feature alongside reissues for the band’s other releases — 2018’s I EP (review here), 2016’s Blueside (review here) and 2013’s self-titled debut (discussed here) — should hopefully bring more validation the band’s way for what they’ve done over the last decade-plus, and that’s super too, but getting the material out for international distribution is where it’s at here, and preorders for everything go up early next month. If you need more info than that, well, stick around because I’m sure it’s coming.

What I’ve got for now follows here, courtesy of the PR wire:

child hps

*** CHILD *** repressing the australian band catalogue with 2023 album Soul Murder for the first time on VINYL and CD

We’re incredibly stoked to announce that the australian psychedelic hard rockerz CHILD are now part of the Heavy Psych Sounds Family !!!

Heavy Psych Sounds Records will release the band’s highly acclaimed 2023 album SOUL MURDER for the very first time on VINYL and CD + repress the first two albums Child and Blueside and the EP I

FOUR ALBUMs PRESALE STARTs: February 7th

BIOGRAPHY

Combine the heavy emotion of the blues, the tone and raw power of hard rock, the finesse of soul and a twist of 60’s psychedelia. It will give you a visceral musical experience that plays directly to your being. That is CHILD. Living for their art, the pubs, the booze, the endless highways and the blues is what makes this band who they are. Child are a must see for those who are worshippers at “the electric church”. The freedom and power of a live performance is important to CHILD in their approach to music, endeavouring to never perform the same way twice. They look forward to once again bringing this to the world on their continued search for sonic paradise.

Since the release of their runaway self-titled debut in 2014, Child have continued to develop their unique brand of heavy blues through constant writing and extensive national/international touring. The band released the follow-up ‘Blueside’ in December 2016, which builds on this foundation to deliver a disc of pure sonic expression whilst following in the long tradition of the blues. 2018 saw the release of Child’s first EP, simply titled ‘I’. Recorded live to tape, ‘I’ is a glimpse into the boundless directions that could be taken on upcoming releases.

CHILD is
Mathias Northway – guitar/vocals
Michael Lowe – drums
Rhys Kelly – bass

https://www.facebook.com/childtheband
https://www.instagram.com/childtheband/
https://childtheband.bandcamp.com
https://www.youtube.com/childtheband
http://www.childtheband.com

heavypsychsoundsrecords.bandcamp.com
www.heavypsychsounds.com
https://www.facebook.com/HEAVYPSYCHSOUNDS/
https://www.instagram.com/heavypsychsounds_records/

Child, Soul Murder (2023)

Tags: , , , , ,

Child Announce Australian Tour Dates Supporting Soul Murder

Posted in Whathaveyou on March 30th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Heavy blues rockers Child have booked a run of mostly-east-coast tour dates in their home country of Australia to support the recent release of their third album, Soul Murder (review here). That record has a bit of a temporal slip going on, since it was recorded at least largely in 2018 and only greets public ears now, but that’s still long enough for it to show progression from 2016’s Blueside (review here) — 2018’s I EP (review here) makes that seven-year stretch between LPs somewhat less mammoth — and if you haven’t heard it, god damn, the songs.

Headlined by a virtuoso performance from guitarist/vocalist Mathias Northway, and with the classic heavy rock rhythm section of bassist Danny Smith (since replaced by Rhys Kelly) and drummer Michael Lowe at its foundation, Soul Murder collects seven individual pieces with an unmitigated flow between them and while coming across as oh-you-know-nothin’-too-fancy casual on its face — not literally, the Nick Keller cover art is likewise gorgeous and epic — it harnesses a ’70s spirit through a presentation all its own.

It is quite an album, in other words, and if you didn’t hear it, I’d advise you hit play on the Bandcamp embed below and kiss a decent portion of your afternoon goodbye as you lose yourself in its dynamic sprawl. The tour dates, which are set for April and May, follow here, as posted on social media with some additional comment from Northway. And by the way, if you’re not from Oz or have never seen Bluey, a dunny is a toilet.

Here you go:

Child oz tour

CHILD – Soul Murder Tour 2023

Says Mathias Northway (guitar/vocals): “After being lost at sea on a sinking ship there is no better feeling than seeing land. Especially when everyone is there waiting on the beach for you.”

“I’m comin’ around to use your dunny and drink your beers.”

TICKETS: https://linktr.ee/childtheband

April 8 Tanswells Hotel Beechworth VIC
April 14 The Barwon Club Geelong VIC
April 15 The Brunswick Ballroom Melbourne VIC
April 20 Mo’s Desert Clubhouse Gold Coast QLD
April 21 Bad Luck Brisbane QLD
April 22 Factory Floor Sydney NSW
April 24 UniBar Adelaide SA
April 28 SoundBar Capel Sound VIC
April 29 TBC
May 5 Transit Bar Canberra ACT
May 6 The Eastern Ballarat VIC

Child are:
Mathias Northway – guitar/vocals
Rhys Kelly – bass
Michael Lowe – drums

https://www.facebook.com/childtheband
https://www.instagram.com/childtheband/
https://childtheband.bandcamp.com
https://www.youtube.com/childtheband
http://www.childtheband.com

Child, Soul Murder (2023)

Tags: , , , ,

Album Review: Child, Soul Murder

Posted in Reviews on March 6th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

child soul murder gatefold

Child are all-in on heavy blues. It’s been seven years since the release of their second album, 2016’s Blueside (review here), nine since they issued their 2014 self-titled debut (discussed here) and five even since their 2018 I EP (review here), but somehow when the Melbourne trio led by guitarist/vocalist Mathias Northway lock into the sweet flowing fuzz boogie of “Free and Humble” — also released as a single in 2020 — as the first of seven songs dug into classic heavy vibes, organic performance-capture and soul, time seems to matter much, much less. Soul Murder is a severe title — it was originally Soul Merda, which they were correct in changing — and to coincide with the once-again-stunning Nick Keller oil-on-canvas cover art playing off ‘The Creation of Adam,’ the returning lineup of Northway, bassist Danny Smith and drummer Michael Lowe push everything further in their sound.

The blues is bluer. The rock is heavier. The done-me-wrong woes wrought through the lyrics and the tales there of lessons hard-learned feel sincere in the telling, and the entire feel of Soul Murder is one of accomplishment front to back, having built on the first two albums (less the EP, but that too if you want) and continued their progression to a critical stage in the life cycle of the band; a third album realization of who they are, marked by songs that carry across emotion and heft regardless of volume, feeling purposeful even as they ‘keep it loose’ in terms of flow and use open space to emphasize a live feel in songs like “Standing on My Tail” — dig that bass after the three-minute mark — and “Soul Murder” itself, where the guitar takes a break for most of the verses early on and sets up a move into a going-way-out heavy jam stretched across the bulk of its five minutes, Northway vibrato’ing out sorrows as the band taps Sabbath-rooted nod not for the first or last time with before shifting into a feedback-layer-inclusive solo-section.

In comparison to Blueside, some of Soul Murder is more stark in its trades, not so much with “Free and Humble,” which shimmies a middle line of blues rock comfortably and with a rhythmic sleekness that’s a credit to Smith and Lowe even if so much of the record from that point on is highlighted by Northway‘s mastery on guitar and vocals, be it the soft noodling after the crash-in intro to “Trouble with a Capital ‘T'” and the improvised-sounding final moments of centerpiece “Feels Like Hell” or the especially Hendrixian blues lines he brings to “Standing on My Tail,” his can-sing delivery shifting slightly to follow-suit.

Dropping hints along the way of fine detailing like the distant echoes of “by now” at two minutes into “Free and Humble” or some handclaps worked in with Lowe‘s mellow-swinging snare in that same chorus and again later, even just the tones of the guitar, bass and drums as recorded — in 2018, at least in part — by Nao Anzai at Head Gap Studios, who also mixed and mastered, Soul Murder presents a multi-tiered experience, with dynamic and reach enough to warrant and reward close listens and an overarching groove on its face.

There’s progression in the patience of their delivery as well, holding together “Trouble with a Capital ‘T'” no less than Smith‘s bassline, as Child make it clear early on they’re going to take their time and that’s alright. Second behind “Free and Humble,” “Trouble with a Capital ‘T'” is expansive and purposefully placed as the first of three included longer songs, with the other two being the closing salvo of “Moment in Time” and “Coming up Trumps,” all over six minutes. Unlike their first two LPs, Child don’t touch the 10-minute mark on Soul Murder, and on average the individual cuts are shorter, but the band are deceptively efficient, seeming to bring each song to life from the silence at its start, leaving a trail of memorable riffs and leads behind them in “Standing on My Tail,” the funk-as-stoner midsection of “Soul Murder,” etc. en route to “Moment in Time,” which makes a point of its minimalism initially as if to leave room for the vibrant fuzz and weeping feedback that soon enough fills it, and “Coming up Trumps,” which at 8:13 is by no means the longest song the three-piece have ever done but is an epic just the same recalling “Dazed and Confused” in its affect and, in its heaviest stretches, lumber that feels born of the intro to “War Pigs.”

child soul murder

Structurally, most of Soul Murder works on builds, and by the time “Standing on My Tail” starts with its unrepentant lean into R&B crossover, Child make it clear where they’re headed, but the paths they take are varied and satisfying. And more over, fluid. That is to say, while there are definite points at which a pedal is clicked on and the distortion swells — “Moment in Time” at 3:22 and “Soul Murder” at 1:39 come to mind — the material isn’t necessarily relying on its impending ‘heavy part’ as a payoff, or limited either in speaking to one side or the other in their sound. This ultimately makes Soul Murder a more immersive listen and more complete-feeling album in fostering that aforementioned overarching groove as something that persists regardless of how loud a given stretch might be.

Perhaps stripping down some of the more psychedelic and jammier aspects of their style has let Child flourish in craft while not leaving a spontaneous/on-stage spirit behind, which would seem at least in listening to be the best of both worlds, hints of ethereality in some of the instrumental passages doing nothing to pull away from the emotive impact of Northway‘s vocals. Those are every bit worthy of the showcase they’re given in “Trouble with a Capital ‘T'” and “Standing on My Tail” on side A and provide a grounding effect as “Moment in Time” and “Coming up Trumps” shift more into jams, the former capping with amp hum and residual feedback and cymbal taps as if in direct precursor to the outright doom in the apex of the subsequent finale, which ends Soul Murder with an actually-satisfying big-rock finish, pulled out and held, twisted around and hinting that they’re going to drop back into the heavier roll just before the last wash enters its fade; damn near perfect. They make you believe it.

And that’s true of the record as a whole as well. I don’t know and won’t speculate on anyone’s life situation, but the blues on Soul Murder feels real in terms of channeling personal turmoil into accessible songwriting, and Northway‘s emergence as a frontman — which has been a plot thread for Child‘s work to this point — is a settled issue. There are parts where the songs seem to recede specifically so he can carry them — 30 seconds into the title-track, for example — and he does without fail each time, backed in the spirit of ’70s heavy by Smith and Lowe as the essential foundation of the power trio.

As much as one wonders what might cause Soul Murder to have been so long in arriving after being recorded half a decade ago, the results of the album are enough to just make one glad it arrived at all. I won’t try to predict their future either or delve into hyperbole of Child among the forefront of Australia’s ultra-packed and diverse heavy underground, but whatever comes of it after the fact, Soul Murder is a significant achievement on their part in living up to and surpassing the high standard set by their first two full-lengths. It is multifaceted in its growth, expressive, and genuine. Again, they are a band to make you believe, and one expects their testimony to win converts accordingly.

Child, Soul Murder (2023)

Child on Facebook

Child on Instagram

Child on Bandcamp

Child on YouTube

Child website

Tags: , , , ,