Quarterly Review: Muto Tapes, Turkey Vulture, Polymerase, Troy the Band & Cower, Jaspe, Yung Druid, The Crystal Teardrop, Doom Lab, Liquid Pennies, Mordbear

Posted in Reviews on July 3rd, 2025 by JJ Koczan

quarterly-review-winter 2023

This is day four of the Summer 2025 Quarterly Review, and though I might pay for it later, say right around late-September when I’m doing the Fall one, I think I’m going to keep it to five days. Mostly that’s about not pressing my luck. This has been an exceedingly easy QR to get through, a breeze compared to some — one downer day is all it takes and I feel like I never have my groove again, but that hasn’t happened here — and I’m content to take the win and move on, as opposed to pushing for an extra day or two next week.

So this is the penultimate day, and we’ll finish tomorrow. I hope you’ve enjoyed the Quarterly Review nearly as much as I have. Not one day has passed without me adding at least one release to my year-end list(s), which is a pretty killer thing to realize as I type it. Let’s see how today goes.

Quarterly Review #31-40:

Muto Tapes, Side Effects

muto tapes side effects

One of apparently five singles that Mexico City’s Muto Tapes will release over the course of 2025 — year’s half-over, they’d better hurry up — “Side Effects” runs four riffy minutes of thickened, aggressive chug-metal, calling to mind Sepultura in its spit-out guttural vocals, but creating a denser mass of distortion and leaving in trade the thrashy, sometimes bloody, roots. Past the halfway point in the song, circa 2:30 into the total 4:05, the tempo drops and the guitar/drum duo bask in some of the minimal spaces their configuration lets them occupy, saving a fair round of shove for the finish after setting it up with due foreboding guitar creep. Not sure if Muto Tapes are building toward an EP or LP or what, or just releasing singles because not everything needs to be a package to sell, but they bring a blend of heft and intensity that immediately distinguishes them in the heavy underground, and they look to be developing their sound on their own terms. Guitarist/vocalist/bassist Jorge S. and drummer Roy B. have been meting out punishment in this manner since 2023, so we’re just beginning to see where it’s all headed.

Muto Tapes website

Muto Tapes on Bandcamp

Turkey Vulture, Dead to Me

Turkey Vulture Dead to Me

It hasn’t been that long since Turkey Vulture released their Oct. 2024 EP, On the List, or maybe I just blinked out for a few months. The Connecticut duo of Jessie May (guitar, bass, vocals) and Jim Clegg (drums, backing vocals) have long-enough since carved their niche in doom and punk rock, and “Dead to Me” and “Jill the Ripper (Heavy Take)” — the two of them running about four and a half minutes, combined — continues the thread. They don’t list the recording info, so I don’t know if these two songs were done at the same time as the EP or not, but “Jill the Ripper (Heavy Take),” as the title describes, is a louder and punkier take on the closing “Jill the Ripper” from that also-short release. “Dead to Me,” meanwhile, seems to be about not going to shows anymore, presumably because you have a kid, and the changing nature of friendships as a result of that. Turkey Vulture have a whole series of songs about these life-stages; just six years on from their debut, they’ve done a lot of growing.

Turkey Vulture on Bandcamp

Turkey Vulture on Instagram

Polymerase, Mindspace

Polymerase Mindspace

Philippines heavy psych wanderers Polymerase are back two years after their two-part Dreams and Realities I & II full-length cycle with the mood-altering 78 minutes of Mindspace, seemingly named for the two things on which the material has the greatest effect. Pairing extended, jammier pieces with, well, shorter, jammier pieces, songs like “Divine Reefer” (12:08) can touch on Sleep while “Space Child” (7:10) is anything but grounded in its repetitions and evident outbound plotted trajectory. There’s more to Mindspace than mellow-out stoner idolatry, though, as the bassy rumble underwriting the harsher shouts of “Interplanetary Echoes” (13:08) demonstrates, taking some of the sludgier moments paired with heavygaze in “Crows and Doves” (11:57) and using them to call out to the expanse of the band’s own making. Closer “Downward Spiral” (12:22) functions similarly at the conclusion, calling to mind modern practitioners like Rezn while feeling empowered through their individual processes. I don’t know how much is actually improv, but Mindspace is way open, and that’s how it should be.

Polymerase on Bandcamp

Polymerase on Instagram

Troy the Band & Cower, Fade Into You

Troy the Band and Cower Fade Into You

Something of a specialty item, perhaps. Fade Into You is a two-tracker split 12″ with London outfits Troy the Band and Cower taking its name from the Mazzy Star song, which both bands cover. Like, they do the same song. And much to their credit, they do it differently. Troy the Band, who early last year released their debut album, Cataclysm (review here), on Bonebag Records, take a heavygaze viewpoint on the 1993 single, fleshing out the moody atmosphere with echoing effects and hard-landing, immersive roll. Cower, whose second full-length, Celestial Devastation (review here), also came out last year, reimagine it as Nick Cave or latter-day Wovenhand, holding to the emotional crux of the original with ethereal drones and new age-y keyboard. A stopgap? Probably, but an interesting project just the same, and the song, of course, stands up to the manipulation.

Troy the Band on Bandcamp

Cower on Bandcamp

Troy the Band & Cower at ElasticStage

Jaspe, Grietas

jaspe grietas

What would seem to be the debut offering from Tijuana-based post-metal four-piece Jaspe, Grietas runs just 23 minutes at three songs, but carries a full-length’s sense of breadth in doing so. Shades of Amenra persist in the quiet/spoken stretch of “Rios de Polvo II” (11:52), where the lumber that begins opener “Litorales” (9:46) crushes as might a modern Isis before departing into the inevitable stretch of pretty guitar, Russian Circles-esque, but with more plunge in the low frequencies, and the arriving guttural growl of vocals is genre-transgressive in a way that satisfies wholly. Separating the larger pieces is the two-minute droner “Rios de Polvo I,” obviously aligned to the second part that follows, which adds to both the tension and atmosphere of this resoundingly impressive post-doom showcase and highlights the potential that’s so prevalent in Jaspe‘s sound. I’ll take an album of this for sure. Just say when.

Jaspe on Bandcamp

Jaspe on Instagram

Yung Druid, Wooden Lungs

Yung Druid Wooden Lungs

Two songs, 20 minutes. Yung Druid, in continued collaboration with Totem Cat Records, offer Wooden Lungs, comprised of the 11-minute “Wooden Lung” and the nine-minute “Space Cowboy.” Both songs owe some debt in swagger to Led Zeppelin, but “Wooden Lung,” in the vocal arrangement and steady nod, reminds more of Iota‘s 2024 return, Pentasomnia, in its fluid progression and grunge-style harmonies. Not a complaint. Also not complaining about the uptick in fuzz for “Space Cowboy,” which still manages to move despite the primordial pool of tone in which it seems to soak. A riff for riffers, that one. Originally based in London around the time of their 2019 self-titled debut (discussed here), the band have moved between the Spain, Australia and New Zealand. It can be difficult for a band who were all together in the rehearsal space to transition to working remotely, but if Wooden Lungs is their proof of concept, they can make a go of it.

Yung Druid on Bandcamp

Totem Cat Records store

The Crystal Teardrop, …Is Forming

The Crystal Teardrop Is Forming

Issued through Rise Above Records imprint Popclaw (see also Bobbie Dazzle and Scott Hepple and the Sun Band), The Crystal Teardrop‘s debut long-player, …Is Forming, sounds remarkably ‘formed,’ if you want to think of it in those terms, as regards aesthetic. Taking a heaping dose of influence from ’60s garage and daring toward Beatlesism on the sweetly bouncing “Borrowed Time” or the Help-toned “Two Hearts,” the band present a retroist face but hold back from IYKYK-style gatekeeping via pop songwriting and the sweep of the later “Turn You Down,” which is a ruffled-hair rush ahead of the similarly shoving “Stealing Suggestions” and the perhaps inevitable psychedelic delve of the closing pair “Nine Times Nine.” and “…Is Forming,” the latter of which has enough backward guitar to meet whatever your quota might be before it unfurls darker instrumental heavy proto-prog like it’s something the band just invented. Rise Above is ready for the garage rock revolution, ready to foster a new generation of artists, but as ever, the question is whether or not the world at large can keep up. …Is Forming argues fervently in favor of trying.

The Crystal Teardrop links

Rise Above Records website

Doom Lab, Desert Caravan Doom

Doom Lab Desert Caravan Doom

The adventures of Alaska’s Leo Scheben and his Doom Lab continue, declaring a genre in Desert Caravan Doom and then immediately setting about defying its parameters with an encompassing, continually on-its-own-wavelength craft, increasingly clear production, and varied intent across the 12-song/43-minute long-player, with creeps like raw East Coast hardcore in “What’s Your Angle?” before the jazzy puns take further hold in “Feeling Minor and Diminished,” pieces like “Fives” and “Desert Hailstorm” tapping into some Stinking Lizaveta-type intensity while the sweetly alt-rocking “At Dusk” and the “Gimmie One Drop (Dub)” and “Desert Caravan Improvisation” — with a new live drummer, reportedly — add to the fabric of Doom Lab‘s ongoing explorations in style and expression. Desert Caravan Doom isn’t as dark, on average, as some of Doom Lab‘s output, and that comparative lightness of mood lets it swing all the more, but Scheben‘s never just been/done one thing, and Desert Caravan Doom holds to this dynamic as well.

Doom Lab on Bandcamp

Doom Lab on YouTube

Liquid Pennies, Fore

liquid pennies fore

The synth and keyboard elements play a significant role throughout Liquid PenniesFore, as “Tapered Scape” and “Ready Tide” demonstrate early on, never mind the 11-minute “Echolalia,” which also has plenty of time for its heavy breakout in the middle third and doomier-until-it-thrashes ending. “Sight Skewer” finds the adventurous Floridian unit evoking nostalgia with fuzz and melody, the drum machine patterning working in contrast to the heavier tones, but feeling by that point very much part of the thing. Presumed side B starter “Elliptic Triptych” brings a bit more functional aggression to the mix, while the three-minute droner “Further Ennui” gives transition to the terrestrial acoustic strum in the pastiche of “The Bone,” which grows broader while remaining melodically intricate, and the closing title-track runs the atmospherics backwards for, well, backwards atmospherics. There’s some influence from All Them Witches at work, but four albums in, Liquid Pennies are onto something special in sound, and one hopes the pursuit continues.

Liquid Pennies links

Threat Collection Records website

Mordbear, Mordbear

mordbear mordbear

A fascinating debut three-song EP from Portland, Oregon’s Mordbear, released by Dipterid Records as a single-sided 12″ vinyl, comic book included. If that seems elaborate for what’s basically a demo, there’s the rub. “Like the Dead,” “A Mirror with a Sea of Flames” and “The Alchemist” are resoundingly cohesive and sure of their construction. The style is modern stoner with nascent hints of prog leaking through — again, modern — and in the seven minutes of “The Alchemist,” the scope feels broader as they methodically unfurl their riffing. Meanwhile, “Like the Dead” leads off with atmospheric semi-desert heavy, catchy and nodding and slow, and “A Mirror with a Sea of Flames” has more of a rhythmic tumble. When Mordbear lock into a bigger groove in the middle cut, there’s some hint of Monolord to their sound, but ‘their sound’ is hardly a settled issue, so the exploration is welcome even as they seem to have so much nailed down in terms of style.

Mordbear on Bandcamp

Dipterid Records on Bandcamp

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Entheomorphosis Premiere Pyhä Kuilu in Full; Out Friday

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on May 21st, 2025 by JJ Koczan

Entheomorphosis Pyhä Kuilu

Finnish collective Entheomorphosis will release their four-song LP, Pyhä Kuilu, this Friday, May 23. Set to issue through Svart Records, it is the first record for the band under this guise, but part of a lineage that can be followed backward for more than a decade to some of these players’ time in Mr. Peter Hayden, which evolved first into PH, later into Enphin, and now emerges sludgy and expansive through a 31-minute procession of works mostly centered around the extended opener “Alkiema” (13:26) and closer “Iätön” (12:11). These bookends that put the longest track first (immediate points) surround “Sikinä” (4:22) and “Huntu” (1:55), but although shorter, each one of those adds something distinct to the entirety.

Sludge is the foundation, weird is the mandate. Entheomorphosis sidestep the PH/Enphin progression of synthesizer cosmic megadrone in favor of painting a rawer futuristic sound, the tones of guitar and bass coming through after the ambient unfolding of “Alkiema” with post-metallic sprawl, but the count-in on drums a bit past the four-minute mark leads into a more directly-, purposefully-riff-driven verse, the gutted out vocals of guitarist Vesa Ajomo (also Moog) calling to mind harsh turn-of-the-century-era fuckall while remaining its own thing atmospherically — not to mention it’s in Finnish. The nod grows tortured and comes apart to thuds and ambience circa 9:30, and the minimalism feels particularly stark for how consuming the volume got before they dropped it. A meditative, liquefied pattern takes hold, topped suitably with throat-singing, and Pyhä Kuilu‘s initial movement ends in murk.

Thus the drums and bass rumble that start “Sikinä” — provided by Lassi Männikkö and Lauri Kivelä, respectively — and the backing howl of guitar eitherEntheomorphosis (photo by Maija Ajomo) from Ajomo or JP Koivisto feel like a mismatch to the blackened rasp of the vocals, but that’s the point, and the way the guitar and synth subtly comes forward over the Godfleshian roll before, again, they drop it back to the bass and drums and then just the drums, is hypnotic. “Huntu” strikes a more foreboding cast. Synth-driven, it is more willfully cinematic, evoking a sense of unease in the world, like you’re in the wrong timeline and there’s robots — so maybe I recently watched that Blade Runner sequel on a plane — and though it’s short, it is both a setup for the riff-led return that closes with “Iätön” and a claim laid to future atmospheric exploration beyond that led by the guitar elsewhere.

Not necessarily a surprise they’d foster an open context given the band’s pedigree and the attention to fleshing out ideas, but it’s part of what furthers the feel of Pyhä Kuilu as a debut album, and “Iätön” ebbs and flows like mid-’90s Neurosis and is no less viscerally noise-laced when they let it drift into feedback after five minutes in, eventually making their way down to barely-there emptiness before bringing it all the way slamming back into a squibbly-topped final culmination. Here too, Entheomorphosis complete the bookend, just as “Iätön” itself answers back to “Alkiema” at the outset in its longer-form structure, outward heft and well-mixed vocal shout. It is a short full-length at 31 minutes, as noted, but “Iätön” assures by the time it’s done that Pyhä Kuilu feels complete in the now as it sets the trajectory for the band’s evolution.

And as to whether or not that will happen, that is, if Entheomorphosis will develop as a project over multiple releases or if the whims and directions of those behind it will lead them elsewhere, I know better than to predict. In the interest of full disclosure, I’ll note that Lauri Kivelä and I were both involved in the industrial project Alitila, which released an album in March. This collaboration had no bearing on my choice to feature this record, and if you doubt that, I’ve got a decade-plus of writing about Kivelä‘s writing from before we actually worked together to demonstrate that I’d probably be writing about this anyhow. I don’t know why I feel the need to say these things at a time when $400 million jetliners are being tossed at government officials for seen and unseen favors, but the Gen X in me can’t help but give a shit about integrity. Thanks for reading.

Pyhä Kuilu streams in its entirety below, followed by more background on the songs and narrative from the PR wire.

Please enjoy:

23.5.2025 Entheomorphosis: Pyhä kuilu (LP/CD Pre-order)
https://www.svartrecords.com/en/product/entheomorphosis-pyha-kuilu/13153

PYHÄ KUILU is a journey across four movements, with each composition unravelling layers of profound symbolic meaning:

● “Alkiema” explores the absorption and distillation of light into a singularity—a dark, cosmic initiation leading to a metamorphosis of flesh and spirit.

●”Sikinä” follows with the re-birth of refined truth in flesh—a process of nourishment, ascension, and the painful shedding of old forms.

●”Huntu” acts as an atmospheric interlude, representing the tearing away of the illusory, exposing the core essence of the soul’s path.

●”Iätön” culminates the album’s journey in the transformation of the refined soul into an active operator of the Universal current, altering reality itself.

Entheomorphosis
Vesa Ajomo: Vocals, Guitar, Moog
Lauri Kivelä: Bass
JP Koivisto: Guitar
Lassi Männikkö: Drums

Band photo by Maija Ajomo.

Entheomorphosis on Instagram

Entheomorphosis website

Entheomorphosis on Bandcamp

Svart Records website

Svart Records on Facebook

Svart Records on Instagram

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Entheomorphosis to Release Pyhä Kuilu May 23

Posted in Whathaveyou on February 10th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

Entheomorphosis (photo by Maija Ajomo)

There’s a lot to unpack here, so sit tight. First, in the interest of full disclosure, I’ll note that these are artists with whom I’ve collaborated before. Lauri Kivelä, Vesa Vatanen and I made a record a little while back for a project called Alitila that’s coming out in March. So that’s worth mentioning. Second, Entheomorphosis, in which Kivelä is joined by Vesa Ajomo of Dark Buddha Rising, etc., is a new project but part of a longer thread of work these guys have undertaken starting over 15 years ago when Mr. Peter Hayden set out and following through to more recent output as Enphin, blowing out electronic psych and experimentalist textures of drone.

Some of that is happening on the upcoming Pyhä Kuilu as well, as you can hear in the synth-horror of the penultimate interlude “Huntu” ahead of the finale “Iätön,” a bookend with opener and longest cut (immediate points) “Alkiema,” which follows a similar path of somewhat agonized longform sludge experimentalism, Ajomo‘s lyrics (in Finnish) giving voice to the overarching meditation and spiritual journey in the music. As has been the case with their work all along, it doesn’t sound like anything so much as itself.

May is a while off, so there’s no audio yet, but Svart sent this down the PR wire:

Entheomorphosis Pyhä Kuilu

Entheomorphosis’ debut album PYHÄ KUILU will stare through you!

Featuring members of Dark Buddha Rising and Mr Peter Hayden/PH/Enphin

The Finnish underground music scene is set to welcome a formidable new entity as Entheomorphosis announce the release of their debut album PYHÄ KUILU (“Holy Abyss”) on May 23rd, 2025 via Svart Records. A collaborative new outfit featuring seasoned members from the enigmatic Dark Buddha Rising and the genre-defying Mr Peter Hayden/PH/Enphin, Entheomorphosis has crafted an immersive sonic purge that plunges into the depths of transformation, spirituality, and cosmic dissolution.

Guitarist Vesa Ajomo (Dark Buddha Rising), one of the principal architects behind the project, explains:

“Entheomorphosis was born in the need to refine artistic and spiritual work. During the years of turmoil and isolation, the main riffs were forged and over time they meandered into an album that has the most emotional weight that I have ever been involved with. This is the process of physical, spiritual, and mental transformation.”

With crushing riffs, hypnotic rhythms, and dark, ceremonial vocals, PYHÄ KUILU carves out an abyssal space where listeners can confront their own psychic dissolution and re-creation. Each track invites the audience to partake in the process of unveiling, where the descent into swirling chaos of Entheomorphosis leads to spiritual refinement and ascension. It’s not all about leaving the listener in the dark however, as there is a more transcendent mission within the Entheomorphosis quest.

As Vesa Ajomo puts it:

“Within this album we have captured the energy, intuition, and guidance in the most organic form possible and allowed the compositions to take their final form at a slow pace. Through this initiation, we have found the holy abyss and bravely dived into the darkness in order to find the light.”

Entheomorphosis channels the influences of doom, drone, and avant-garde metal, yet the album stands as a work of unique potency. For fans of Neurosis, Godflesh, and especially the celebrated Finnish dark and heavy Psychedelic underground, Entheomorphosis is at the very underneath of the hypnotic dark underbelly of psychedelia. Recorded with a minimalist ethos, the band prioritized capturing the raw intensity and spiritual essence of their compositions, ensuring that PYHÄ KUILU resonates with both primal and metaphysical power.

PYHÄ KUILU is available on Svart exclusive transparent violet/black smoke vinyl, band exclusive transparent green/black smoke, limited gold vinyl, black vinyl, CD, and digital platforms on May 23rd, 2025. The album release show will take place at the Sonic Rites festival in Helsinki on 23rd – 24th of May, 2025.

23.5.2025 Entheomorphosis: Pyhä kuilu (LP/CD Pre-order)
https://www.svartrecords.com/en/product/entheomorphosis-pyha-kuilu/13153

PYHÄ KUILU is a journey across four movements, with each composition unravelling layers of profound symbolic meaning:

● “Alkiema” explores the absorption and distillation of light into a singularity—a dark, cosmic initiation leading to a metamorphosis of flesh and spirit.

●”Sikinä” follows with the re-birth of refined truth in flesh—a process of nourishment, ascension, and the painful shedding of old forms.

●”Huntu” acts as an atmospheric interlude, representing the tearing away of the illusory, exposing the core essence of the soul’s path.

●”Iätön” culminates the album’s journey in the transformation of the refined soul into an active operator of the Universal current, altering reality itself.

Entheomorphosis
Vesa Ajomo: Vocals, Guitar, Moog
Lauri Kivelä: Bass
JP Koivisto: Guitar
Lassi Männikkö: Drums

Band photo by Maija Ajomo.

https://www.instagram.com/entheomorphosis/
https://www.entheomorphosis.com/
https://entheomorphosis.bandcamp.com/

https://www.svartrecords.com/
https://www.facebook.com/svartrecords/
https://www.instagram.com/svartrecords/

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