Album Review: Dirtmother, Dirtmother

Posted in Reviews on March 4th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

dirtmother dirtmother

They don’t make you wait much longer than the four-count into opener “Soil the Dove” before Dirtmother tell you what they’re all about. And even that count-in has feedback behind it. Based in Fayetteville, Arkansas, and counting their origins back to 2006, the four-piece reformed in 2023 after I don’t know how long of a break, and make their self-released debut with the eight songs and 44 minutes of Dirtmother. The tracks are raw to the point of being raw as a point, and across the span, the band — vocalist Tim Stockburger, guitarist Anthony Harvell, bassist Todd Bohannon (ex-DeadbirdDeadeyejack), and drummer Jay Hollingshead (ex-Wrought) — capture the groove and despondent aggression of classic Southern sludge.

Riffs are followed, nods are nodded, screams are screamed, and that explosion as “Soil the Dove” picks up that count is a scouring, lumbering, nasty-ass take on the style, meaner at high volumes but intentionally caustic regardless. I don’t know how long these songs have been around — for a band with 19 years of history releasing their first album, the possibility for vintage riffs grows — but Dirtmother show up with the clear purpose of laying waste and “Plinko” starts with a “shit! fuck!” sample before setting out on its own roll, backing the opener with mid-tempo low-end push as aural torque behind Stockburger growls and higher-register throatrippers, only intermittently intelligable, but in little danger of not making their statement regardless. “Close your eyes…” is repeated in the chorus of “Plinko,” but Dirtmother are less about hooks or accessibility than about pummel, and their energies are thusly directed in songwriting.

Once upon a time, about 20-25 years ago, scores of bands like this wandered the earth. I was in one. The hillsides were painted with them, all pissed off and crashing around about who knows what. Dirtmother‘s Dirtmother doesn’t really feel anachronistic — such as it is, the production is way more 2020s than 2000s, but after a certain point, raw is raw — as longest cut “Goodnight Mommy” (7:53) draws down the pace to emphasize the doomly pulls and rearing-back before the next crushing measure, but it’s a take on sludge that I can only think of as ‘classic’ in my mind, odd as that seems. The way everything stops to let the guitar establish a riff after two minutes into “Goodnight Mommy” and for how the scream starts before they crash back in on that same groove; or the way “None Would Name It” pushes even further into grueling tempo and filthy revelry, a bit of swing arriving for contrast coinciding with a ’00s janga-janga shuffle — the stuff of stoner rock when it was still embarrassed to be called that.

“None Would Name It” feels especially dark in tone, but it moves fluidly even if the band sound like they have knives for teeth. There aren’t going to be a ton of surprises for those who’ve had experience with Southern sludge, but neither should that be taken to mean Dirtmother are aping Eyehategod or anyone else in the sphere. If you look at Dirtmother as a first record from a band who got going in 2023, it’s a fascinating and righteous representation of the style.

dirtmother

The fact that they started in the aughts, and that they highlight that longevity — something that one generally expects from black metal bands, who somehow all formed in 1991 — even with the implication of a break of some years between eras, changes the context. I didn’t see Dirtmother in Arkansas circa 2006, or 2007, or ever, so I can’t speak to how they sounded then vs. how they sound now — I found a clip on YouTube from 2008; way blown out, but consistent in methodology — but as they start the second half of the record with “Bad Ideas All Around,” with Stockburger seeming to open wide and swallow the whole song in the first minute, only to have the riff persist thereafter, it’s a strange thing to feel nostalgic about. Obviously, different listeners will bring themselves to it in their own way.

Growing deathly in its grows, “Bad Ideas All Around” comes to a halt around a sample and feedback at around the halfway point — the use of samples serving as another tie to original-era sludge; think Buzzov*en, Rwake, etc. — and crawls to its finish from there. Nothing on side B hits the seven-minute mark like “Goodnight Mommy,” but there’s little letup just the same. “Beware of God” is likewise harsh and Sabbathian, another sample after the first verse and a slowdown into a lower-growling middle eventually gives back to swing, but keeps the barebones feel of its most methodical crush.

I don’t know what the lyrics are and I’m not sure I want to, but “Reverse Cowgirl” follows suit in its first verse, opening to a chorus that cycles through around crashes and a twist of riff, Stockburger as scathing as he’s yet been on vocals. There’s a slowdown, a speed-up, and even some cleaner shouts in the last minute, so “Reverse Cowgirl” isn’t without its dynamic — it’s the shortest cut at 4:05 — and it ends with push and the repeated line, “Baby, you’ve got no reason to stop..” giving over to a sample at the start of closer “Trucker,” someone in a Southern accent talking about hitting something or someone; it’s pretty vague.

The capper is no less an assault than one would hope. No, Dirtmother haven’t been hiding some too-clever-by-half divergence up their collective sleeve, and they’re not about to take away from the album-as-monolith impression they’ve given throughout while still highlighting different pieces of individual tracks. “Trucker” is a rolling stoner riff, blues-via-Sabbath-via-Southern-Baptist-trauma, and it finishes Dirtmother‘s Dirtmother with six and a half minutes of reaffirmed assault.

They get a little Goatsnakey in the second half, and that’s certainly welcome and suited to Hollingshead‘s drumming, but hit into the inevitable slowdown and there make their final stand. There’s the expected amount of fanfare to cap — i.e. not very much at all; a sample gives over to residual echo as the amps drop to hum and cut to silence — and Dirtmother exit the proceedings with no more pretense than they came in. A band who showed up, wrecked the place, got out. I’d say they don’t make ’em like that anymore, but apparently they do. Sludge on.

Dirtmother, Dirtmother (2025)

Dirtmother on Instagram

Dirtmother on Facebook

Dirtmother on Bandcamp

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Dirtmother Post “Plinko”; Self-Titled Debut Out March 8

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 16th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

The roots of Arkansas sludge metallers Dirtmother trace back to 2006, as will happen, but it’s still their debut album that’s set to release on March 8. Release show is the same night. To be issued by the band, Dirtmother‘s Dirtmother follows a 2023 regrouping and brings together players known for their work in Deadbird, Mud Lung and others. Their first audio showcase from the album — a four-minute teaser single obviously named “Plinko” in honor of the coolest game on The Price is Right — is a vicious reminder of the nasty turn Southern heavy took right around the turn of the century, when the lessons of Eyehategod, or Buzzov*enGrief and so on, seemed to be taken up by screamy riffers with harsh intent and more aggressive underpinnings of metal emerged alongside the punker roots of the genre.

It’s something of an oldschool sound, is what I’m saying, but the truth is that even when there was a lot of it happening — and right around 2005/2006 that kind of waned and post-metal picked up a more atmospheric slack, for better or worse — sludge metal has never been the cool thing. There are microtrends within the correspondingly micro genre, but even in the days when Emissions From the Monolith was nestled into the Midwest teaching a generation of listeners how to make and embrace heavy music, sludge was an outsider thing. It remains one now, and “Plinko” revels in that. I look forward to hearing the rest of the album.

Info is minimal, but you get the audio below and that’s the thing. Have at it:

dirtmother (Photo by Austin.g123)

The song Plinko, from Dirtmother’s self-titled album debut, available March 8th 2025. Sludge, Blues Doom, from Fayetteville, Arkansas. Birthed in 2006, Reformed in 2023. Featuring current members of Mud Lung, and Liquid Courage. Former members of Deadbird, Deadeyejack, Sinking South.

Album mixed and Mastered by Sabin Hice.
Recorded by Mason Gills at Huntsville Road Studios.

DIRTMOTHER Album Release Show
Saturday March 8th
w/ Grand Inquisitor & Ghost Hollow

Waystone Pizza Co.
1200 Garland Ave Fayetteville AR
8pm $10 All Ages
Event page: https://www.facebook.com/events/1544499859463756

Band photo by Austin.g123.

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100090574166760
https://www.instagram.com/dirtmother_doom

Dirtmother, “Plinko”

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Quarterly Review: Thief, Rise to the Sky, Birth, Old Horn Tooth, Solemn Lament, Terminus, Lunar Ark, Taxi Caveman, Droneroom, Aiwass

Posted in Reviews on September 29th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

the-obelisk-fall-2016-quarterly-review

According to my notes, today is Day Three of the Fall 2021 Quarterly Review. Are you impressed to have made it this far? I kind of am, but, you know, I would be. I hope you’ve managed to find something you dig over the course of the first 20 records, and if not, why not? I’ve certainly added to a few year-end lists between debut albums, regular-old albums and short releases. Today’s no different. Without giving away any secrets ahead of time, this is a pretty wacky stylistic spread from the start and that’s how I like it. Maybe by next Tuesday it’ll all make a kind of sense, and maybe it won’t. In any case, this is apparently my idea of fun, so let’s have fun.

Quarterly Review #21-30:

Thief, The 16 Deaths of My Master

Thief The 16 Deaths of My Master

Someone used the phrase “techno for metalheads” in an email to me the other day (about something else) and I can’t get it out of my head concerning Thief‘s The 16 Deaths of My Master. From the swelling distortion of opener “Underking” to the odd bit of harpsicord that shows up in “Scorpion Mother” to the bassy rumble underscoring “Fire in the Land of Endless Rain,” the post-everything “Lover Boy,” droning “Life Clipper,” lazyman’s hip-hop on “Gorelord” and “Crestfaller” and Beck-on-acid finale in “Seance for Eight Oscillators,” there’s certainly plenty of variety to go around, but in the dance-dream “Apple Eaters” and goth-with-’90s-beatmaking “Bootleg Blood” and pretend-your-car-ride-is-a-movie-soundtrack “Wing Clipper,” the metallic underpinning of Dylan Neal (also Botanist) is still there, and the lyrical highlight “Teenage Satanist” rings true. Still, songs like the consuming washer “Night Spikes and subsequent drum’n’bass-vibing “Victim Exit Stage Left” are inventive, fascinating, short and almost poppy in themselves but part of a 16-track entirety that is head-spinning. If that’s techno for metalheads, so be it. Horns up for dat bass.

Thief on Facebook

Prophecy Productions website

 

Rise to the Sky, Per Aspera Ad Astra

rise to the sky per aspera ad astra

The album’s title is kind of another interpretation of the band’s name, the idea behind the Latin phrase Per Aspera Ad Astra being moving through challenges to the stars and the Santiago, Chile, one-man death-doom outfit being Rise to the Sky. Multi-instrumentalist/vocalist Sergio González Catalán reportedly wrote and arranged the title-track in the days following his father’s funeral, and the grand, flowing string sounds and engrossing heft that ensues feel genuinely mournful, capping with a progression of solo piano before “End My Night” seems to pick up where “The Loss of Hope” left off. The lyrics to closer “Only Our Past Remains” derive from a poem by Catalán‘s father, and the sense of tribute is palpable across the album’s 46 minutes. I’m not sure how the Russian folk melody bonus instrumental “Horse” might tie in, but neither is it out of place among “Deep Lament” and “Bleeding Heart,” the latter of which dares some clean vocals alongside the gutturalism, and in context, the rest of the album seems to answer with loss what opener “Life in Suspense” is waiting for.

Rise to the Sky on Facebook

GS Productions website

 

Birth, Demo

birth birth

Those familiar with Brian Ellis and Conor Riley‘s work in Astra should not be surprised to find them exploring ’70s-style progressive rock in Birth, and anybody who heard Psicomagia already knows that bassist Trevor Mast and drummer Paul Marrone (also Radio Moscow) are a rhythm section well up to whatever task you might want to set before them. Thus Birth‘s Demo arrives some four years after its recording, with “Descending Us” (posted here) leading off in dramatic Deep Purple-y fashion backed by the jammier but gloriously mellotroned and Rhodes’ed “Cosmic Wind” and “Long Way Down,” which digs itself into a righteous King Crimson payoff with due class even as it revels in its rough edges. Marrone‘s since left the band and whoever replaces him has big shoes to fill, but god damn, just put out a record already, would you?

Birth on Facebook

Bad Omen Records website

 

Old Horn Tooth, True Death

old horn tooth true death

Wielding mighty tonality and meeting Monolordian lurch with an aural space wide enough to contain it, Old Horn Tooth follow their 2019 debut LP, From the Ghost Grey Depths, with the single-song EP True Death, proffering a largesse rarely heard even from London’s ultra-populated heavy underground and working their way into, out of, back into, out of and through a nod that the converted among riff-heads will likely find irresistible and hypnotic in kind. To say the trio of guitarist/vocalist Chris, bassist/keyboardist Ollie and drummer Mark ride out the groove is perhaps underselling it, but as my first exposure to the band, I’m only sorry to have missed out on both the orange tapes and the limited flash drives they were selling. So it goes. Slow riffs, fast sales. I’ll catch them next time and drown my sorrows in the interim in this immersive, probably-gonna-get-picked-up-by-some-label-for-a-vinyl-release offering. And hey, maybe if you and I both email them, they’ll press a few more cassettes.

Old Horn Tooth on Facebook

Old Horn Tooth on Bandcamp

 

Solemn Lament, Solemn Lament

Solemn Lament Solemn Lament

Pro-shop-level doom from an initial public offering by Solemn Lament, bringing together the significant likes of vocalist Phil Swanson (ex-Hour of 13, Vestal Claret, countless others), drummer Justin DeTore (Magic Circle and more recently Dream Unending) as well as Blind Dead‘s Drew Wardlaw on bass and Adam Jacino on lead guitar, and Eric Wenstrom on rhythm guitar. These personages cross coastlines to three tracks and intro of grand and immersive doom metal, willfully diving into the Peaceville-three legacy on “Stricken” to find the beauty in darkness after the lumber and chug of the nine-minute “Celeste” resolves with patient grace and “Old Crow” furthers the Paradise Lost spirit in its central riff. Geography is an obvious challenge, but if Solemn Lament can build on the potential they show in this debut EP, they could be onto something really special.

Solemn Lament on Facebook

Solemn Lament on Bandcamp

 

Terminus, The Silent Bell Toll

Terminus The Silent Bell Toll

A stunning third full-length from Fayetteville, Arkansas, trio Terminus, The Silent Bell Toll bridges doomed heft and roll, progressive melodicism and thoughtful heavy rock construction into a potent combination of hooks and sheer impact. It’s worth noting that the 10-minute closer of the nine-song/40-minute outing, “Oh Madrigal,” soars vocally, but hell, so does the 3:18 “Black Swan” earlier. Guitarist Sebastian Thomas (also cover art) and bassist Julian Thomas share vocal duties gorgeously throughout while drummer Scott Wood rolls songs like “The Lion’s Den” and “The Silent Bell Toll” — that nod under the solo; goodness gracious — in such a way as to highlight the epic feel even as the structure beneath is reinforced. With three instrumentals peppered throughout to break up the chapters as intro, centerpiece and penultimate, there’s all the more evidence that Terminus are considered in their approach and that the level of realization across The Silent Bell Toll is not happenstance.

Terminus on Facebook

Terminus on Bandcamp

 

Lunar Ark, Recurring Nightmare

Lunar Ark Recurring Nightmare

Clearly named in honor of its defining intent, Recurring Nightmare is the three-song/48-minute debut full-length from Boston-based charred sludge outfit, who take the noisy heft of ultra-disaffected purveyors like Indian or Primitive Man and push it into a blackened metallic sphere further distinguished by harshly ambient drones. One can dig Neurosis-style riffing out of the 19:30 closer “Guillotine” or opener “Torch and Spear,” but the question is how much one’s hand is going to be sliced open in that process. And the answer is plenty. Their tones don’t so much rumble as crumble, vocals are willfully indecipherable throat-clenching screams, and the drums duly glacial. There is little kindness to be had in 16:43 centerpiece “Freedom Fever Dream” — originally broken into two parts as a demo in 2019 — which resolves itself lyrically in mourning a lost ideal over a dense lurch that’s met with still-atmospheric churning. Their established goal, if that’s what it is, has been met with all appropriate viciousness and extremity.

Lunar Ark on Facebook

Trepanation Recordings on Bandcamp

Lunar Seas Records on Bandcamp

Realm and Ritual on Bandcamp

 

Taxi Caveman, Taxi Caveman

taxi caveman self titled

An ethic toward straight-ahead riff rock is writ large throughout Taxi Caveman‘s self-titled debut full-length, the Warsaw trio offering a face-first dive into fuzz of varying sizes and shaping their material around the sleek groove of “Prisoner” or the more aggressively bent vinyl-side-launchers “Building With Fire” and “Asteroid.” There’s a highlight hook in “I, the Witch” and the instrumental “426” leads into the Dozer-esque initial verse of 10-minute closer “Empire of the Sun,” but the three-piece find their own way through ultimately, loosening some of the verse/chorus reins in order to affect more of a jammed feel. It’s a departure from the crunch of “Asteroid” or “Prisoner” and the big, big, big sound that starts “Building With Fire,” but I’m certainly not about to hold some nascent sonic diversity against them. They’re playing to genre across these 33 minutes, but they do so without pretense and with a mind toward kicking as much ass as possible. Not changing the world, but it’s not trying to and it’s fun enough in listening that it doesn’t need to.

Taxi Caveman on Facebook

Piranha Music on Bandcamp

 

Droneroom, Negative Libra

Droneroom Negative Libra

“Negative Libra” runs 36:36 and is the lone track on the album that bears its name from Las Vegas-based solo-project Droneroom. The flowing work of Blake Conley develops in slow, meditative form and gradually introduces lap steel to shimmer along with its post-landscape etherealities, evocative of cinema as they are without exactly playing to one or the other film-genre tropes. That is to say, Conley isn’t strictly horror soundtracking or Western soundtracking, and so on. Perhaps in part because of that, “Negative Libra” is allowed to discover its path and flourish as it goes — I’m not sure as to the layering process of making it vis-à-vis what was tracked live and put on top after — but the sense of exploration-of-moment that comes through is palpable and serene even as the guitar comes forward just before hitting the 27-minute mark to begin the transition into the song’s noisier payoff and final, concluding hum.

Droneroom on Facebook

Somewherecold Records website

 

Aiwass, Wayward Gods

Aiwass Wayward Gods

Blown-out vocals add an otherworldly tinge to Arizona-based one-man-band Aiwass‘ debut full-length, Wayward Gods, giving the already gargantuan tones a sense of space to match. Opener “Titan” and closer “Mythos” seem to push even further in this regard than, say, the centerpiece “Man as God” — the last track feeling particularly Monolordly in its lumbering — but by the time “Titan” and the subsequent, 10-minute inclusion “From Chains,” which ends cold with a guest solo by Vinny Tauber of Ohio’s Taubnernaut and shifts into the cawing blackbird at the outset of “Man as God” with a purposefully jarring intent. Despite the cringe-ready cartoon-boobs cover art, the newcomer project finds a heavy niche that subverts expectation as much as it meets it and sets broad ground to explore on future outings. As an idea, “gonna start a heavy, huge-sounding band during the pandemic,” is pretty straightforward. What results from that in Aiwass runs deeper.

Aiwass on Facebook

Aiwass on Bandcamp

 

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The Obelisk Questionnaire: Raif Box

Posted in Questionnaire on March 8th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

raif box bones of the earth

The Obelisk Questionnaire is a series of open questions intended to give the answerer an opportunity to explore these ideas and stories from their life as deeply as they choose. Answers can be short or long, and that reveals something in itself, but the most important factor is honesty.

Based on the Proust Questionnaire, the goal over time is to show a diverse range of perspectives as those who take part bring their own points of view to answering the same questions. To see all The Obelisk Questionnaire posts, click here.

Thank you for reading and thanks to all who participate.

The Obelisk Questionnaire: Raif Box of Bones of the Earth

How do you define what you do and how did you come to do it?

I play bass and sing in Bones of the Earth. I also own a small studio called Holy Anvil Recording Co. Being a musician has been a dream of mine since I was a kid but becoming an audio engineer happened purely out of curiosity. It was like, “hey I wonder if I could learn how to do this?” and that just spiraled out of control until I eventually came to open up a little studio here in Fayetteville, AR.

Describe your first musical memory.

I want to say my family went to some sort of country festival in Texas when I was real young. I believe it to be one of my first memories, although to be honest I have a terrible memory. Alan Jackson was the headliner. All I remember is that it was very hot, and at some point the people a couple rows up had too much to drink and started fighting.

Describe your best musical memory to date.

Russian Circles at George’s Majestic Lounge was easily the best performance from any band I’ve ever seen. What they can accomplish live is incredible.

When was a time when a firmly held belief was tested?

I’ve been struggling lately with the notion that most people are generally well intentioned and kind. Perhaps that was just a naivety.

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

I think that there is a very fine line between refining your craft and becoming stagnant. I doubt that it’s a simple thing to find once you arrive there, but I can hope that if that time comes for me I can look back at what I’ve accomplished and be proud.

How do you define success?

If I can survive purely off of doing what I love to do, I’d call that a success. If that’s living in a van with my best buds, hell yeah.

What is something you have seen that you wish you hadn’t?

I went to see Nickelback with my dad once. I love my dad, but boy I really could’ve done without seeing that.

Describe something you haven’t created yet that you’d like to create.

One day I want to start an actual play D&D podcast with some friends.

What do you believe is the most essential function of art?

Empathy. I think regardless of the medium, the goal is to share something unique to you with other people and hope that they can make a connection with it. When someone does that and you see it happen, and you know that you took part in creating something that changed something in the world, however small, that’s just the best feeling in the world.

Something non-musical that you’re looking forward to?

The new Mass Effect.

http://www.facebook.com/bonesoftheearthband
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https://bonesoftheearth.bandcamp.com/

Bones of the Earth, II. Eternal Meditations of a Deathless Crown (2021)

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