The Well and Firebreather Announce Tour

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 23rd, 2023 by JJ Koczan

There are a bunch of ticket links here, which, hey, if you happen to be in one of cities listed below and up for hitting the gig, might be helpful. I don’t know. It doesn’t make the post look any neater — and you know I’m all about aesthetics and visual presentation; hence the by-now-retro theme of this site — but I left them there just in case. If you click one and go to the show, fair enough.

Firebreather and The Well, aside from being labelmates on RidingEasy Records and under the general umbrella of ‘heavy music’, don’t have a ton in common sound-wise, and I think that’s a good thing. They’ll complement each other well, with the bombast of the former and the semi-cultish weirdo-heavy rawness of the latter, and while Firebreather‘s Dwell in the Fog (review here) will have been out for more than a year by the time this run starts, it’s still their first time supporting it in the States. It doesn’t seem unreasonable to expect some new material live from The Well, meanwhile, since their most recent album, Death and Consolation (review here), came out in 2019.

In any case, it’s a solid run little less than a month, and I’m curious to see where that TBA date puts them:

The Well Firebreather tour

PREPARE THE FIRE !!! THE WELL x FIREBREATHER FULL US TOUR THIS SPRING!!

Tue 3/28 – San Diego
Wed 3/29 – LA
Thu 3/30 – Oakland
Fri 3/31 – Portland
Sat 4/1 – Seattle
Mon 4/3 – Denver
Tue 4/4 – Omaha
Wed 4/5 – Chicago
Thu 4/6 – Detroit
Fri 4/7 – Buffalo
Sat 4/8 – Providence
Mon 4/10 – TBA
Tue 4/11 – Brooklyn
Wed 4/12 – Columbus
Thu 4/13 – Louisville
Fri 4/14 – Memphis
Sat 4/15 – New Orleans
Sun 4/16 – Houston
Mon 4/17 – TBA
Tue 4/18 – Austin
Wed 4/19 – Dallas
Thu 4/20 – El Paso (Firebreather only)
Fri 4/21 – Albuquerque (Firebreather only)
Sat 4/22 – Phoenix (Firebreather only)

——————–
This list of ticket links will be updated:

Scottsdale http://bit.ly/thewellpub
San Diego https://addmi.com/e/-NLwmHecNdzlxlyqKhGW
NYC https://link.dice.fm/Xd95d40f17a7
Detroit https://www.ticketweb.com/event/the-well-firebreather-the-sanctuary-detroit-tickets/12852365?pl=sanctuary
Seatlle https://wl.seetickets.us/event/The-WellFirebreather/528015?afflky=ElCorazon
Buffalo https://aftr.dk/3iJ9HVY
Columbus https://www.eventbrite.com/e/518740816747
Houston https://wl.seetickets.us/event/The-Well-Firebreather/528520?afflky=WhiteOakMusicHall
Memphis https://wl.seetickets.us/event/The-Well-with-Firebreather-at-Growlers-Memphis-TN/528261?afflky=Growlers
Portland https://www.treetix.com/198475/soundcontrol

http://www.facebook.com/thewellband
https://www.instagram.com/thewellband/
http://thewellaustin.bandcamp.com/

https://www.facebook.com/firebreathergbg/
https://www.instagram.com/firebreathergbg/
https://firebreatherdoom.bandcamp.com/

https://www.facebook.com/ridingeasyrecords/
https://www.instagram.com/easyriderrecord/
http://www.ridingeasyrecs.com/

The Well, Death and Consolation (2019)

Firebreather, Dwell in the Fog (2022)

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Album Review: Firebreather, Dwell in the Fog

Posted in Reviews on February 10th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

FIREBREATHER-dwell in the fog

How much volume do you need? How much you got? Many records are made to sound their best when played loud — many more claim to be — but I’ve yet to find the maximum tolerance for Dwell in the Fog, which is the third full-length from Gothenburg, Sweden’s Firebreather and second for RidingEasy Records behind 2020’s Under a Blood Moon (review here) and their 2017 self-titled debut (review here), the latter of which was on Suicide Records. As loud as you want to go, the six-song collection seems ready to meet you there, with an increasing sonic fullness that readily pushes over into outright crush. At some point, in all that fog, the three-piece of guitarist/vocalist Mattias Nööjd, newcomer bassist Nicklas Hellqvist and drummer Axel Wittbeck would appear to have found concrete to add to their tonality and the impact of their groove, and as a result, tracks like opener/lead single “Kiss of Your Blade” and the side A capper “Weather the Storm” land with an all the more forceful and purposeful thud. This is all a long way of telling you that Dwell in the Fog is very, very heavy, that it knows this about itself and that said heft is integral to the mission of the band on the whole.

It is not, however, the entire mission. Those who’ve followed Firebreather since their inception following the transmogrification from Nööjd‘s prior outfit, Galvano, will note that one of the distinguishing factors between the two projects was Firebreather‘s commitment to a post-High on Fire sense of crash ‘n’ bash, and that element is still a starting point from which they work on Dwell in the Fog, the influence present in cuts across the album’s 39-minute span. The difference, then, between these songs and even those on the last record — aside from the cowbell on “Sorrow”; I hear you in there, you don’t need to hide — is the framing of that influence as a starting point from which Firebreather actively work to cast their own identity. In “Sorrow” and elsewhere — the title-track on side A, for example — one can hear in the band’s songwriting not only these individualized aspects being realized, but the band actively working to make them so. There is much more to Dwell in the Fog, at any volume, than raw charge or the swinging of a battle axe, though to be sure a given listener’s skull may still be cleaved at any moment.

At the same time, there are details throughout Dwell in the Fog that command attention. The stops and the shift in tone before the build-up to the big groove in the penultimate “The Creed” qualify, as do the layered vocals that ensue following that crescendo. Likewise, Hellqvist‘s bass tone brings a character to the low end beneath Nööjd‘s guitar solo on “Weather the Storm” that is especially righteous. It doesn’t seem aesthetically appropriate to call the tracks nuanced or progressive, but there is consideration and awareness of self behind all that pummel that stems from the evolution of the band over the course of the last half-decade, on tour (when possible) as well as in the studio and in the writing.

FIREBREATHER

“Dwell in the Fog” itself is a demonstration of this, for its more patient tempo as well as for the melody underpinning Nööjd‘s vocals. He reminds of Crowbar‘s Kirk Windstein there and in the later moments of “Sorrow” at the outset of side B with his ability to move from barbarian shouts, echoing out from deep in the mix, to a kind of semi-melodic gutturalism. Even on a more intense piece like “Kiss of Your Blade” or the two main verse sections in closer “Spirit’s Flown,” this development of his approach can be heard, and since Firebreather have been consistent in working with producer Oskar Karlsson (Morrow, Agrimonia, Bror Gunnar Jansson, many others) at Elementstudion in Gothenburg, the conclusion one can reach on the issue is that it’s an intentional pushing of boundaries on his part and the band’s.

That’s plenty respectable in principle, but all the more because it works to serve the interests of the songs themselves. “Dwell in the Fog” is a highlight of the full-length that shares its name, and their ability to play tempos off of each other, move one instrument forward or back in the mix at a given time, and have no shortage of bludgeonry on hand when it’s called for, is a resilient strength of their craft. That “Sorrow” can shift so fluidly from its beginning nod into and through its chugging verses, opening to a broader chorus that remains consistent in atmosphere before “The Creed” begins its wavy rollout adds to the flow of side B and the entirety of the release, and while “Weather the Storm” and “Spirit’s Flown” serve different purposes in capping their respective halves of Dwell in the Fog, their ability to make their sound do more than just one thing is further evidence of the growth they’ve won as a result of the work they’ve put in.

It’s a convenient narrative for a third LP to be a moment of arrival for a band functioning on the longer term — that is, the point at which a given act “figures it out” after an initial album and a second in response to the first. Dwell in the Fog may indeed be that for Firebreather; it depends entirely on what they do from here forward. For now, it is unquestionably the strongest work they’ve done, both on a per-song basis and in terms of the album as a whole. The balance they find is more than just that between fast and slow parts, and stems no less from their ability to pull back on outright aggression in favor of establishing a mood that feeds into the overarching impression Dwell in the Fog makes, and more, knows it is making. Despite a change in lineup, Firebreather have made themselves into a broader-reaching and more distinctive unit in the two tumultuous years since their last album. Whatever volume one might enjoy it at, that’s worth appreciating.

Firebreather, “Kiss of Your Blade”

Firebreather on Facebook

Firebreather on Instagram

Firebreather on Bandcamp

RidingEasy Records website

RidingEasy Records on Facebook

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Firebreather to Release Dwell in the Fog Feb. 25

Posted in Whathaveyou on December 15th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

FIREBREATHER

Gothenburg heavy bastards Firebreather will issue their third album, Dwell in the Fog, on Feb. 25 in a continued association with RidingEasy Records. The three-piece now includes bassist Nicklas Hellqvist in place of Kyle Pitcher, and their new streaming single “Kiss of Your Blade” seems to have a current of murk in accord with the marauding heavier-thrash groove one has come to anticipate from their post-High on Fire style. I take that as a good sign, to be sure, and while I can’t speak as to what the rest of the record has in store — it may be all bludgeon and battleaxes or it could be an all-out doom antistravaganza — the fact that they went with this track to give a first impression and the fact that they went so far as to mention fog in the album’s title could speak to an awareness of where they’ve headed with their sound and, indeed, intent behind their direction in that regard.

Speculation! Anticipation! New records are so much fun. All the more with a band you dig, and I dig these guys.

From the PR wire:

FIREBREATHER-dwell in the fog

Firebreather announce new album, share first single “Kiss of Your Blade”

Swedish trio Firebreather announce their return with an incendiary new album due out in February 2022, and today share the first track. Hear and share “Kiss of Your Blade” HERE.

Gothenburg, Sweden trio Firebreather’s 2019 RidingEasy Records debut album Under a Blood Moon was a powerhouse that most certainly established the band’s incendiary potential. But none of us would be prepared for the suffocating onslaught that is Dwell in the Fog. While that album was in-your-face and raw, Dwell in the Fog rumbles and rages with a fury the band had only hinted at previously.

Firebreather has a streamlined focus on driving, symphonic riffs in the vein of High on Fire, Inter Arma and their tour- and label-mates Monolord. The guitar and bass tones are, quite simply, entrancing. Paired with vocalist/guitarist Mattias Nööjd’s guttural yet melodic howls and drummer Axel Wittbeck’s groove based rhythms, their entire sound flows like thick, viscous lava.

“The album is a cathartic journey inwards and a musical continuation from Under A Blood Moon, but with more emphasis on groove and feel,” Nööjd says. From the first notes of album opener “Kiss Of Your Blade” you’ll know exactly what he means.

Like their preceding two albums, Dwell in the Fog was also recorded and mixed by engineer Oskar Karlsson at Elementstudion in Gothenburg. The band is joined by new bassist Nicklas Hellqvist on this album, who seems to have increased the thunder rumble tenfold.

From the aforementioned album opener “Kiss Of Your Blade”, with its droning opening chords over a rollicking tom pattern, the band quickly shifts gears into a head bobbing, serpentine riff with a transcendent melodic hook. Elsewhere, as on the title track and “Weather The Storm” rapid-fire hummable riffs come and go in an ever-shifting mass of devastating swirling churn. It’s like the band has such an endless supply of great hooks that to, ahem, dwell for too long on any one would undo their constantly building momentum. That they somehow give each song, and the album as a whole, a streamlined and cohesive, monolithic groove is testament to their skill. And, proof that the album must be absorbed in its entirety to experience the overwhelming swaying and lunging low end growl that drives the band’s most captivating work to date.

Dwell in the Fog will be available on LP, CD and download on February 25th, 2022 via RidingEasy Records.

Firebreather are:
Mattias Nööjd – Guitar/vocals
Axel Wittbeck – Drums
Nicklas Hellqvist – Bass

https://www.facebook.com/firebreathergbg/
https://www.instagram.com/firebreathergbg/
https://firebreatherdoom.bandcamp.com/
ridingeasyrecs.com

Firebreather, “Kiss of Your Blade”

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