Posted in Radio on September 17th, 2021 by JJ Koczan
I try really hard not to make these shows suck. I do. And I think I’m mostly successful in that endeavor, but I tried extra hard this time. With my voice tracks as well as the playlist, which is almost entirely new music apart from the Orange Goblin and Mars Red Sky songs. I wanted to put a little life in my voice and I hope I managed to do so. I know last ep was a special consideration, with the death of Eric Wagner and all, but I’m not trying to be the most softspoken guy on Gimme Metal or anything. I just want to play music that isn’t necessarily aggro all the time. I’m actually pretty excited generally about doing so.
Tried to show that a little bit more. Nobody said anything to me about it or anything. I highly doubt anyone gives a crap. As long as I’m not doing like three-song shows with no voiceovers, Gimme seems content enough to let me do me. But just for myself, I wanted to hopefully convey a little bit of how much I enjoy talking about and sharing music. That’s the point of the whole thing.
Thanks for listening if you do and/or reading. I hope you enjoy.
The Obelisk Show airs 5PM Eastern today on the Gimme app or at: http://gimmemetal.com
Full playlist:
The Obelisk Show – 09.17.21
Crystal Spiders
Septix
Morieris
Canyyn
Crush Your Bones
Canyyn
Orange Goblin
Cities of Frost
Healing Through Fire
VT
Sonolith
Star Worshipers
Voidscapes
ASTRO CONstruct
Hand Against the Solar Winds
Tales of Cosmic Journeys
Slowshine
Living Light
Living Light
EMBR
Born
1021
Vokonis
Null & Void
Null & Void
VT
Floored Faces
Shoot the Ground
Kool Hangs
Carcaňo
Riding Space Elephants
By Order of the Green Goddess
Malady
Dyadi
Ainavihantaa
River Flows Reverse
Final Run
When River Flows Reverse
Gondhawa
Raba Dishka
Käampâla
Mars Red Sky
Crazy Hearth
The Task Eternal
Terminus
The Falcon
The Silent Bell Toll
Djiin
Black Circus
Meandering Soul
VT
Negură Bunget
Brad
Zau
The Obelisk Show on Gimme Metal airs every Friday 5PM Eastern, with replays Sunday at 7PM Eastern. Next new episode is Oct. 1 (subject to change). Thanks for listening if you do.
Posted in audiObelisk on August 27th, 2021 by JJ Koczan
Floored Faces release Kool Hangs on Nov. 12. So can you hang with it? Are you kool? Yeah, probably. The Seattle-based trio are hardly barring entry when it comes to the flowing, nine-song/34-minute offering that is their second long-player in two years’ time, comprised of catchy — sometimes angular like opener “Shoot the Ground” (premiering below), sometimes aggressive like “Upended,” sometimes desert-hooky like “Now You See It” and sometimes very much of their geography like “I’d Be Broke” and “Out of the Ground” — tracks likewise warm in tone and melody. There’s a linear course, and a narrative underpinning to boot, but even if you just put the record on and let it roll out, it’s ready and willing to carry you along its utterly manageable course. So yeah, you can hang. How do you feel about the ’90s?
For those already down, who might’ve tapped into their earlier EPs or March 2020’s Escapism Prism — prescient of title and limited of vinyl — the songs of Kool Hangs feel somewhat less raw, tighter in their production and structure, but as “Shoot the Ground” demonstrates at the outset, that doesn’t necessarily mean a sacrifice of edge. “All Around You” foreshadows the Monster Magnetism of closer “Bash Machine,” which serves as a near-hopeful conclusion to the post-apocalyptic theme after the noisy “Out of the Ground” and more intense shove of “Head First.” These songs are united in their spaciousness and unflinching in their sense of craft, which is to say, guitarist/vocalist Joe Syverson, bassist Erik Cargill and drummer/synthesist Colin English sound like they’ve taken the time they reportedly did in order to think through and hammer this material into the shape it’s taken — the last year and a half has been good for that and precious little nothing else — and Floored Faces have effectively found a balance between pop efficiency and heavier breadth.
This is to their advantage wherever they want to take an individual track, with centerpiece “Into the Ground” — not to insinuate that anybody was contemplating death while writing about civilization collapse during an actual plague and sundry personal trials, but three songs of the nine here have the word “ground” in the name — building on the momentum of the prior, earliest-Queens of the Stone Age careening vibe of “Now You See It” with a shove the three-piece continue in the nigh-on-motorpunk “Upended.” There’s sonic as well as narrative progression in the interaction between individual pieces, each offering a standout element here or there brought together into the context of the entirety through Syverson‘s vocals, the steady class of the rhythm section’s reinforcement of the riffs, and the subtlety of play that adds value to repeat listens even as the choruses implant themselves on your brain.
Shit, if you can write songs like this, I can’t think of a reason why you shouldn’t. You wanna hang with Kool Hangs? Do it. As my introduction to the band, I find it’s only more encouraging to do exactly that the more I hear it, and with the pattern of quick turnarounds from one release to the next, I can’t help but think Floored Faces might already have the inevitable “next thing” already in the works. They seem like the types to plan ahead to one degree or another.
“Shoot the Ground” is on the player below. Album info for Kool Hangs follows, courtesy of the PR wire:
Floored Faces are the latest to emerge from Seattle’s stoner-psych scene, drawing influence from Northwest greats like the Melvins, Tad and the Sonics. Their new album ‘Kool Hangs’ will be self-released on November 12, 2021.
In early-2020, with the world on hold, FLOORED FACES had time to reflect on their first three years of explosive throughput, and ponder what it is that fuels the band’s creative spark and drive to produce: lifechanging experiences, finding resilience in the face of adversity and hardship, serve as a major influence in their productivity and desire to feed their passions, knowing first-hand that life is short and can change when you least expect it. This is not emotional fluff we’re talking about, recognizing the band has found unbelievable influence from collectively enduring the hardship of nearly losing one of its members to a heart condition, a partner to gun violence, and coming to terms with the reality of managing the mental health of loved ones.
Their new album ‘Kool Hangs’ explores the absurd yet tangible fantasy of an apocalyptic world where the only personal belongings that remain are a motocross bike and a cassette copy of Monster Magnet’s ‘Dopes to Infinity’, and a shotgun. But there’s more than that. “Shoot the Ground” begins this fantasy journey as the main character scavenges for food and other people; strapped with a shotgun he vents his frustration of hours, days and weeks of loneliness. “I’d Be Broke” is about time slipping away from the main character of this fantasy as “Now You See It” explores mentally going against the norm, and the heartbreak of going insane. Kool Hangs is pure fantasy staring down the band’s collective, real-life trauma. It’s genuine, sincere and has no pretense, a Holy Diver meets Bleach mind-melter of an album that the band cannot wait for the world to hear.
Tracklisting: 1. Shoot the Ground 2. All Around You 3. I’d Be Broke 4. Now You See It 5. Into the Ground 6. Upended 7. Out of the Ground 8. Head First 9. Bash Machine
Floored Faces are: Colin English – Drums, Synths Erik Cargill – Bass Joe Syverson – Guitars and Vocals