Album Review: Mammatus, Expanding Majesty

Posted in Reviews on June 27th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

mammatus expanding majesty

Any addition to the catalog of Santa Cruz, California, merchants Mammatus is noteworthy. Expanding Majesty is all the more so, in being the trio’s fifth album, first for Silver Current Records, and in arriving some eight years after their fourth, 2015’s sharp-visioned Sparkling Waters (review here); they also had their The Ear Food compilation of off-album tracks in 2020. One way or the other, it’s been a while, and the trio who began their run in 2005, released their self-titled debut (discussed here) in 2006, and quickly reaffirmed their penchant for epic and longform heavy psychedelia in 2007’s The Coast Explodes, continue to grow in new directions.

True, Expanding Majesty shares much of its makeup in common with Sparkling Waters; at nearly 70 minutes long, it is presented across the each-to-their-own-vinyl-side “Expanding Majesty” (15:18), “By the Sky” (15:17), “Foreveriff” (22:38) and “Beams of Light” (16:19), and like its predecessor, the latest offering was recorded with Phil Manley (Trans Am/The Fucking Champs) at El Studio in San Francisco (Tim Green mastered at Louder Studios in Grass Valley), and the result is a rich tapestry of prog-informed heavy psych rock, as classic in its exploration as it is evocative in the hearing. Pretty much what Mammatus do, right?

Honestly, that’d probably be enough on its own for Expanding Majesty to accomplish — a new Mammatus record, existing! — but guitarist/vocalist Nicky Emmert, bassist Chris Freels and drummer Aaron Emmert push forward along their individual path, each contributing to the overarching washes of synthesizer/keyboard that become so much a part of the album’s personality. Whether it’s the serene pastoralism in the opening moments of “By the Sky” or the science-fact swirls that fill out along the extended intro to “Expanding Majesty” itself, they play a central role.

That early going of the title-track finds them contrasting but following the rhythm of the purposefully tense guitar circular runs of guitar, gradually becoming more prominent until they’re at the forefront of the mix, not so much competing with the pickslide sweep of distortion that comes in at 7:05 as a setup for the first (yes, first) entry of the vocals half a minute later, but definitely the sky to that grounding rumble. That makes the keys/synth a fit as well alongside Nicky‘s effects-laced-but-gentle vocal delivery, which becomes a part of the atmosphere of the record as a whole and is a uniting factor in the material.

“Expanding Majesty” further establishes the self-awareness that underlies so much of the album that shares its name. The song? Well, it’s majestic and it expands and grows broader throughout its 15-plus minutes. “By the Sky?” Perhaps best summarized by the gorgeous Cristian Eres hinting-at-classic-metal cover art, a dragon flying to a guitar castle above clouds on what may or may not be another planet; it starts with just under three minutes of wakeup before slow-crashing in and taking off into the verse, which does nothing if not look down from above. “Foreveriff?” Yeah, it’s 22 minutes long, but more than that, it’s the way the rolling heavy post-rocker seems to meander even as it weaves into and out of leads, verses, float and crush; the surrounding rhythm is so linear that it’s easy to get lost and not know where it begins or ends. Imagine marching on air, finding clarity in the last nod that starts at about 19 minutes in, growing more fluid en route to the comedown.

mammatus

And do I even have to say it for “Beams of Light?” The dreamy, melody-focused opening section building gracefully to a heavy psych crescendo about five minutes in that puts twists on a riff that would otherwise be signature Colour Haze before going full-cosmic ethereal around the midpoint, soon to pick up the tempo with an earlier Devin Townsend-style chug (note these are my comparisons; I’d be surprised if the band listened to either of the groups mentioned in this sentence) that serves as a bed for the at-least-two layers of guitar soloing that transport Mammatus and their audience alike to the record’s finish, highlighting the shimmer that’s been there all the while in all the songs, each presenting it in its own sculpted form, sometimes vast, sometimes compact, tense like the hi-hat and speedy noodling of “Expanding Majesty” or an exercise in worldbuilding like the closer.

Through it all, Mammatus retain their sense of purpose, and while there’s little doubt these four pieces were born out of jamming and perhaps built around them, they are not jams. They are songs, with structures and plotted directions, considered dynamics and places to go. That difference is crucial to understanding Expanding Majesty as a forward step in Mammatus‘ ongoing progression. Even the logo the band uses on the front cover tells you something about the heavy metal precision that sneaks into some of the lead guitar parts — “Beams of Light” circa 12 minutes in, for example — but from inside out, Expanding Majesty is conscious of what it’s doing and why, and the focusing of that intention around progressive elements, the slowdown in “By the Sky” and “Foreveriff” after “Expanding Majesty” and the way “Beams of Light” seems to draw the different sides together while also finding new ground, makes it even more resonant as arguably the most vocal-minded and definitely the most synth-minded release in Mammatus‘ catalog.

They remain themselves, which is something for which anyone still reading this is likely to be thankful, but as they did following the six years between The Coast Explodes and 2013’s Heady Mental (review here), Mammatus would seem to have used at least part of the longer break between outings to present and develop fresh ideas. The immersion factor in Expanding Majesty is not to be understated. The Emmerts and Freels carefully and lightly guide the listener through the sometimes-sparse, sometimes frenetic course the record takes, having long since earned the trust of their audience. That intro to “By the Sky.” That last push over the top the vocals bring in “Foreveriff” at about 18 minutes in. These are emblematic of the fullness of Expanding Majesty and the band’s ability to steer their particular dragon wherever they want it to fly. Here, they encompass multitudes.

Mammatus, Expanding Majesty (2023)

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Mammatus Announce Expanding Majesty Out June 23; Streaming Title-Track

Posted in Whathaveyou on May 3rd, 2023 by JJ Koczan

I’m well aware that if you’re anything like me, no words I put here are going to make a damn bit of difference in slowing you down from checking out the 15-minute streaming-now title-track of Mammatus‘ impending 2LP full-length, Expanding Majesty. So have at it. I can’t even argue. The Cali psych-prog purveyors make the going sweet, with crisp tonality that reminds of where they were eight years ago on 2015’s Sparkling Waters (review here) without giving up the sense of journey from their earliest work, be it their 2006 self-titled debut (discussed here) or that record’s 2007 follow-up, The Coast Explodes.

Those two records are something of a longform/jam holy duology, but 2013’s Heady Mental (review here) began interweaving progressive textures into the proceedings, and listening to “Expanding Majesty” even as long as it’s been since Sparkling Waters — which, indeed, shimmered — the three-piece are still recognizable in their craft, dynamic and willingness to go, go, go where the song wants to go. I didn’t have a spot saved on my best-albums-of-2023 list for Mammatus when I woke up this morning, but I do now. It’s out June 23 through Silver Current Records.

Enjoy:

mammatus expanding majesty

MAMMATUS return after 8 years with brand new album Expanding Majesty on Silver Current Records

A sprawling masterwork and a career defining album that pushes the boundaries of 21st Century heavy music.

8 years in the making, Santa Cruz California’s reclusive sons of tectonic riffage Mammatus return with Expanding Majesty, a 69 minute magnum opus of kaleidoscopic guitars, soaring analog synths, wall-of-amps fuzz bass and 100ft drums. 4 side-long pieces unfold across a double album in unstoppable riffs that span the meditative and joyful un-earthed flight of 70’s kosmische godfathers like Popol Vuh and Tangerine Dream to the kinds of sub-surface thunder pioneered by Melvins and Sleep.

Like Stanley Kubrick, Mammatus are slowing in output as they forge surely and steadily down the path of their artistic legacy. Now, 8 years since their last release and 20 years since their inception as a band, Mammatus have recorded a sprawling masterwork. Expanding Majesty is not just a career defining album for the band but one that pushes the boundaries of 21st Century heavy music.

Formed by brothers Nicky and Aaron Emmert in 2005 in Santa Cruz, California, the same fertile Redwoods-and-sea incubator that produced fellow outer-region psych travelers Comets on Fire, Residual Echoes and The Fucking Champs, Mammatus have become increasingly reclusive in the years since their inception. They have also been honing their vision of mathy stoner rock, proto-new age, Kraut-prog and organic proto-metal into a panoramic, ever-expanding visionary world uniquely their own resulting in Expanding Majesty. Engineered by Phil Manley (The Fucking Champs/ Trans Am) at El Studio in San Francisco, four extended side-long pieces take the listener on a journey in which they experience reality only through the mind and vision of Mammatus.

The album opens with the 15+ minute ‘Expanding Majesty,’ as guitarist and singer Nicky Emmert strikes a single window-rattling guitar chord and breaks the darkness, shooting a ray of sonic light forth and letting it hang, glowing for a moment before Mammatus begins to assuredly introduce and weave together the album’s strands of DNA; kaleidoscopic guitar notes in infinite double helix, soaring 70’s analog synthesizers, wall-of-amps bass, 100ft drums and finally, no sooner than 71/2 minutes into the song, huge and ethereal vocals in cascading harmonic layers.

Opener ‘Expanding Majesty’ in its long running, epic arc, travels from the meditative and joyful un-earthed flight of 70’s Kosmische godfathers like Popol Vuh and Tangerine Dream to the kinds of tectonic sub-surface riffage pioneered by The Melvins and Sleep and these two poles of heavyosity maintain the balance of the album’s 69 minutes.

Despite the intensity of the music veering between darkness and light, the subject matter and intention of the music is strictly positivism, awe and wonder at the beauty of the natural world and the possibilities of expanded human consciousness.

16 years ago and only two years into their existence, Mammatus essentially dropped out of the indie music rat race and were absorbed back into the Santa Cruz hills and valleys, walking away from an expanding touring career and the traditional non-stop release/ promote/ tour/ release cycle to find out if there was something more profound at the true heart of creativity and ‘being a band.’ In 2007, having just come off a successful US tour with Acid Mothers Temple, they retreated and reconfigured their musical life around the idea of peak creativity and peak quality of output completely off timeline or professional agenda. Their releases began to slow down and they began to create music with glacial precision.

There have been bands that have taken 8 years to release an album but very few who intentionally afford their creativity such time to patiently, steadily and mindfully work on a record and see it through to completion.

The old-growth redwoods, the grassy hills and mountain tops, the crashing ocean, the blue sky into the black of space into the infinite universe are all the stuff of Expanding Majesty, both its subject matter and its genetic structure. It is a slow work, made of patience, tradition and love of craft, a master rendition of the beauty of our world, fantastic and incredible through the eyes of Mammatus.

MAMMATUS
EXPANDING MAJESTY
Silver Current Records
Release date: 23rd June 2023 (2XLP)

Tracklist
1. Expanding Majesty (15:18)
2. By The Sky (15:17)
3. Foreveriff (22:38)
4. Beams Of Light (16:18)

https://www.facebook.com/mammatusband/
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https://mammatus.bandcamp.com/
https://headymental.com/

https://www.facebook.com/SilverCurrentRecords
https://www.instagram.com/silvercurrent/
https://silvercurrent.bandcamp.com/
http://www.silvercurrentrecords.com/
https://linktr.ee/silvercurrent

Mammatus, “Expanding Majesty”

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