Quarterly Review: Primordial, Patriarchs in Black, Blood Lightning, Haurun, Wicked Trip, Splinter, Terra Black, Musing, Spiral Shades, Bandshee

Posted in Reviews on November 28th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

The-Obelisk-Quarterly-Review

Day two and no looking back. Yesterday was Monday and it was pretty tripped out. There’s some psych stuff here too, but we start out by digging deep into metal-rooted doom and it doesn’t get any less dudely through the first three records, let’s put it that way. But there’s more here than one style, microgengre, or gender expression can contain, and I invite you as you make your way through to approach not from a place of redundant chestbeating, but of celebrating a moment captured. In the cases of some of these releases, it’s a pretty special moment we’re talking about.

Places to go, things to hear. We march.

Quarterly Review #11-20:

Primordial, How it Ends

primordial how it ends

Excuse me, ma’am. Do you have 66 minutes to talk about the end of the world? No? Nobody does? Well that’s kind of sad.

At 28 years’ remove from their first record, 1995’s Imrama, and now on their 10th full-length, Dublin’s Primordial are duly mournful across the 10 songs of How it Ends, which boasts the staring-at-a-bloodied-hillside-full-of-bodies after-battle mourning and oppression-defying lyricism and a style rooted in black metal and grown beyond it informed by Irish folk progressions but open enough to make a highlight of the build in “Death Holy Death” here. A more aggressive lean shows itself in “All Against All” just prior while “Pilgrimage to the World’s End” is brought to a wash of an apex with a high reach from vocalist Alan “A.A. Nemtheanga” Averill, who should be counted among metal’s all-time frontmen, ahead of the tension chugging in the beginning of “Nothing New Under the Sun.” And you know, for the most part, there isn’t. Most of what Primordial do on How it Ends, they’ve done before, and their central innovation in bridging extreme metal with folk traditionalism, is long behind them. How it Ends seems to dwell in some parts and be roiling in its immediacy elsewhere, and its grandiosities inherently will put some off just as they will bring some on, but Primordial continue to find clever ways to develop around their core approach, and How it Ends — if it is the end or it isn’t, for them or the world — harnesses that while also serving as a reminder of how much they own their sound.

Primordial on Facebook

Metal Blade Records website

Patriarchs in Black, My Veneration

Patriarchs in Black My Veneration

With a partner in drummer Johnny Kelly (Type O Negative, Danzig, etc.), guitarist/songwriter Dan Lorenzo (Hades, Vessel of Light, Cassius King, etc.) has found an outlet open to various ideas within the sphere of doom metal/rock in Patriarchs in Black, whose second LP, My Veneration, brings a cohort of guests on vocals and bass alongside the band’s core duo. Some, like Karl Agell (C.O.C. Blind) and bassist Dave Neabore (Dog Eat Dog), are returning parties from the project’s 2022 debut, Reach for the Scars, while Unida vocalist Mark Sunshine makes a highlight of “Show Them Your Power” early on. Sunshine appears on “Veneration” as well alongside DMC from Run DMC, which, if you’re going to do a rap-rock crossover, it probably makes sense to get a guy who was there the first time it happened. Elsewhere, “Non Defectum” toys with layering with Kelly Abe of Sicks Deep adding screams, and Paul Stanley impersonator Bob Jensen steps in for the KISS cover “I Stole Your Love” and the originals “Dead and Gone” and “Hallowed Be Her Name” so indeed, no shortage of variety. Tying it together? The riffs, of course. Lorenzo has shown an as-yet inexhaustible supply thereof. Here, they seem to power multiple bands all on one album.

Patriarchs in Black on Instagram

MDD Records website

Blood Lightning, Blood Lightning

Blood Lightning self titled

Just because it wasn’t a surprise doesn’t mean it’s not one of the best debut albums of 2023. Bringing together known parties from Boston’s heavy underground Jim Healey (We’re All Gonna Die, etc.), Doug Sherman (Gozu), Bob Maloney (Worshipper) and J.R. Roach (Sam Black Church), Blood Lightning want nothing for pedigree, and their Ripple-issued self-titled debut meets high expectations with vigor and thrash-born purpose. Sherman‘s style of riffing and Healey‘s soulful, belted-out vocals are both identifiable factors in cuts like “The Dying Starts” and the charging “Face Eater,” which works to find a bridge between heavy rock and classic, soaring metal. Their cover of Black Sabbath‘s “Disturbing the Priest,” included here as the last of the six songs on the 27-minute album, I seem to recall being at least part of the impetus for the band, but frankly, however they got there, I’m glad the project has been preserved. I don’t know if they will or won’t do anything else, but there’s potential in their metal/rock blend, which positions itself as oldschool but is more forward thinking than either genre can be on its own.

Blood Lightning on Facebook

Ripple Music website

Haurun, Wilting Within

haurun wilting within

Based in Oakland and making their debut with the significant endorsement of Small Stone Records and Kozmik Artifactz behind them, atmospheric post-heavy rock five-piece Haurun tap into ethereal ambience and weighted fuzz in such a way as to raise memories of the time Black Math Horseman got picked up by Tee Pee. I don’t think that’s a coincidence. With notions of Acid King in the nodding, undulating riffs of “Abyss” and the later reaches of “Lost and Found,” but two guitars are a distinguishing factor, and Haurun come across as primarily concerned with mood, although the post-grunge ’90s alt hooks of “Flying Low” and “Lunar” ahead of 11-minute closer “Soil,” which uses its longform breadth to cast as vivid a soundscape as possible. Fast, slow, minimalist or at a full wash of noise, Haurun‘s Wilting Within has its foundation in heavy rock groove and riffy repetition, but does something with that that goes beyond microniche confines. Very much looking forward to more from this band.

Haurun on Facebook

Small Stone Records website

Kozmik Artifactz website

Wicked Trip, Cabin Fever

wicked trip cabin fever

Its point of view long established by the time they get around to the filthy lurch of “Hesher” — track three of seven — Cabin Fever is the first full-length from cultish doomers Wicked Trip. The Tennessee outfit revel in Electric Wizard-style fuckall on “Cabin Fever” after the warning in the spoken “Intro,” and the 11-minute sample-topped “Night of Pan” is a psych-doom jam that’s hypnotic right unto its keyboard-drone finish giving over to the sampled smooth sounds of the ’70s at the start of “Black Valentine,” which feels all the more dirt-coated when it actually kicks in, though “Evils of the Night” is no less threatening of purpose in its garage-doom swing, crash-out and cacophonous payoff, and I’m pretty sure if you played “No Longer Human” at double the speed, well, it might be human again. All of these grim, bleak, scorching, nodding, gnashing pieces come together to craft Cabin Fever as one consuming, lo-fi entirety, raw both because the recording sounds harsh and because the band itself eschew any frills not in service to their disillusioned atmosphere.

Wicked Trip on Instagram

Wicked Trip on Bandcamp

Splinter, Role Models

Splinter Role Models

There’s an awful lot of sex going on in Splinter‘s Role Models, as the Amsterdam glam-minded heavy rockers follow their 2021 debut, Filthy Pleasures (review here), with cuts like “Soviet Schoolgirl,” “Bottom,” “Opposite Sex” and the poppy post-punk “Velvet Scam” early on. It’s not all sleaze — though even “The Carpet Makes Me Sad” is trying to get you in bed — and the piano and boozy harmonies of “Computer Screen” are a fun departure ahead of the also-acoustic finish in closer “It Should Have Been Over,” while “Every Circus Needs a Clown” feels hell-bent on remaking Queen‘s “Stone Cold Crazy” and “Medicine Man” and “Forbidden Kicks” find a place where garage rock meets heavier riffing, while “Children” gets its complaints registered efficiently in just over two boogie-push minutes. A touch of Sabbath here, some Queens of the Stone Age chic disco there, and Splinter are happy to find a place for themselves adjacent to both without aping either. One would not accuse them of subtlety as regards theme, but there’s something to be said for saying what you want up front.

Splinter on Facebook

Noisolution website

Terra Black, All Descend

Terra Black All Descend

Beginning with its longest component track (immediate points) in “Asteroid,” Terra Black‘s All Descend is a downward-directed slab of doomed nod, so doubled-down on its own slog that “Black Flames of Funeral Fire” doesn’t even start its first verse until the song is more than half over. Languid tempos play up the largesse of “Ashes and Dust,” and “Divinest Sin” borders on Eurometal, but if you need to know what’s in Terra Black‘s heart, look no further than the guitar, bass, drum and vocal lumber — all-lumber — of “Spawn of Lyssa” and find that it’s doom pumping blood around the band’s collective body. While avoiding sounding like Electric Wizard, the Gothenburg, Sweden, unit crawl through that penultimate duet track with all ready despondency, and resolve “Slumber Grove” with agonized final lub-dub heartbeats of kick drum and guitar drawl after a vivid and especially doomed wash drops out to vocals before rearing back and plodding forward once more, doomed, gorgeous, immersive, and so, so heavy. They’re not finished growing yet — nor should they be on this first album — but they’re on the path.

Terra Black on Facebook

Terra Black on Bandcamp

Musing, Somewhen

musing somewhen

Sometimes the name of a thing can tell you about the thing. So enters Musing, a contemplative solo outfit from Devin “Darty” Purdy, also known for his work in Calgary-based bands Gone Cosmic and Chron Goblin, with the eight-song/42-minute Somewhen and a flowing instrumental narrative that borders on heavy post-rock and psychedelia, but is clearheaded ultimately in its course and not slapdash enough to be purely experimental. That is, though intended to be instrumental works outside the norm of his songcraft, tracks like “Flight to Forever” and the delightfully bassy “Frontal Robotomy” are songs, have been carved out of inspired and improvised parts to be what they are. “Hurry Wait” revamps post-metal standalone guitar to be the basis of a fuzzy exploration, while “Reality Merchants” hones a sense of space that will be welcome in ears that embrace the likes of Yawning Sons or Big Scenic Nowhere. Somewhen has a story behind it — there’s narrative; blessings and peace upon it — but the actual music is open enough to translate to any number of personal interpretations. A ‘see where it takes you’ attitude is called for, then. Maybe on Purdy‘s part as well.

Musing on Facebook

Musing on Bandcamp

Spiral Shades, Revival

Spiral Shades Revival

A heavy and Sabbathian rock forms the underlying foundation of Spiral Shades‘ sound, and the returning two-piece of vocalist Khushal R. Bhadra and guitarist/bassist/drummer Filip Petersen have obviously spent the nine years since 2014’s debut, Hypnosis Sessions (review here), enrolled in post-doctoral Iommic studies. Revival, after so long, is not unwelcome in the least. Doom happens in its own time, and with seven songs and 38 minutes of new material, plus bonus tracks, they make up for lost time with classic groove and tone loyal to the blueprint once put forth while reserving a place for itself in itself. That is, there’s more to Spiral Shades and to Revival than Sabbath worship, even if that’s a lot of the point. I won’t take away from the metal-leaning chug of “Witchy Eyes” near the end of the album, but “Foggy Mist” reminds of The Obsessed‘s particular crunch and “Chapter Zero” rolls like Spirit Caravan, find a foothold between rock and doom, and it turns out riffs are welcome on both sides.

Spiral Shades on Facebook

Spiral Shades on Bandcamp

Bandshee, Bandshee III

Bandshee III

The closing “Sex on a Grave” reminds of the slurring bluesy lasciviousness of Nick Cave‘s Grinderman, and that should in part be taken as a compliment to the setup through “Black Cat” — which toys with 12-bar structure and is somewhere between urbane cool and cabaret nerdery — and the centerpiece “Bad Day,” which follows a classic downer chord progression through its apex with the rawness of Backwoods Payback at their most emotive and a greater melodic reach only after swaying through its willful bummer of an intro. Last-minute psych flourish in the guitar threatens to make “Bad Day” a party, but the Louisville outfit find their way around to their own kind of fun, which since the release is only three songs long just happens to be “Sex on a Grave.” Fair enough. Rife with attitude and an emergent dynamic that’s complementary to the persona of the vocals rather than trying to keep up with them, the counterintuitively-titled second short release (yes, I know the cover is a Zeppelin reference; settle down) from Bandshee lays out an individual approach to heavy songwriting and a swing that goes back further in time than most.

Bandshee on Facebook

Bandshee on Bandcamp

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The Awesome Machine to Reissue It’s Ugly or Nothing in January on Ripple Music

Posted in Whathaveyou on November 9th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

There are a ton of records like this. Issued in the aughts, or right around the turn of the century, largely forgotten as bands and/or labels have phased out, trends have shifted, and the infrastructure through which audience communication has shifted. But now as then, The Awesome Machine kick ass. The Swedish heavy rockers are a band who will make a few things clearer about what was happening in heavy rock around the country at that time, beyond the formative days of Witchcraft or the by-then-manifest charge of Dozer, and deeper into the underground.

Going deeper into the underground would seem to be Ripple Music‘s direct intention as it unveils It’s Ugly or Nothing as the first part of a series called ‘Beneath the Desert Floor’ that will reportedly hone in on albums like this that are at risk of being lost to time. So much the better with the catalogs of imprints like Nasoni, Elektrohasch, People Like You (which originally released this album), This Dark Reign, Molten Universe, or PsycheDOOMelic, among many others, so ripe for a new generation of listeners to explore. Then you get into reissuing comps and we could be here all day filling out installments of ‘Beneath the Desert Floor’ on behalf of Ripple, who it should be noted continue to plumb the modern underground as well with their ‘Turned to Stone’ split series and constant stream of ‘regular’ offerings.

And The Awesome Machine have had a couple rare-tracks collections turn up on vinyl through Ozium Records in the last couple years, so this isn’t completely out of the blue, though frankly even if it were it’d still be cool.

From the PR wire:

the awesome machine it's ugly or nothing

Ripple Music launch “Beneath The Desert Floor” series with special reissue of THE AWESOME MACHINE’s stoner rock classic “…It’s Ugly Or Nothing”.

Ripple Music is proud to launch the “Beneath The Desert Floor” series — unearthing long-lost treasures from the early days of stoner rock — and team up with Swedish scene veterans THE AWESOME MACHINE for the reissue of their cornerstone album “…It’s Ugly Or Nothing” this January 2024.

The legend says that the stoner rock genre was born under the baking sun of Southern California in the mid-80s, somewhere between Palm Desert and Orange County. A sun-baked, punk-infused and largely psychedelic-driven response to the Pacific NorthWest’s grunge movement, its most iconic torchbearers were named Kyuss, Fatso Jetson, Fu Manchu or Sleep. Way before social media existed, it didn’t take long for the first cassette tapes to cross the pond and spark an inextinguishable fire in what would become the cradle of European stoner rock: Sweden. Among the scene forefathers Dozer or Lowrider stood a myriad of hyperactive bands, among which THE AWESOME MACHINE.

An indestructible mass of fuzz-drenched heft, their 2000 cornerstone album “…It’s Ugly Or Nothing” is eleven tracks of uncompromising stoner rock goodness for the ages. An authentic classic of Swedish-brewed mastery that old and new fans of the genre will welcome with open arms and ears in their record collection!

About the “Beneath The Desert Floor” series, Ripple Music founder Todd Severin says: “There were so many amazing albums released in the underground heavy stoner/doom/desert/heavy psych during the late 90’s, early 2000’s that have gotten lost in the passage of time. These albums, from incredible bands, came out in a time before social media was fully formed to help push public awareness before the vinyl resurgence happened so they were never pressed to wax before digital channels existed to spread the music far and wide. My goal is to do our part to change that. To look beneath the desert floor and see what gems and treasures lay there. And spread them with the world.”

THE AWESOME MACHINE “…It’s Ugly Or Nothing” reissue
Out January 12th, 2024 via Ripple Music (vinyl only)

International preorder – https://ripplemusic.bandcamp.com/album/beneath-the-desert-floor-chapter-1-its-ugly-or-nothing

US preorder – https://ripplemusic.bigcartel.com/product/beneath-the-desert-floor-chapter-1-the-awesome-machine-it-s-ugly-or-nothing-obi-edition

https://www.facebook.com/awesomemachinetheband

https://www.facebook.com/theripplemusic/
https://www.instagram.com/ripplemusic/
https://ripplemusic.bandcamp.com/
http://www.ripple-music.com/

The Awesome Machine, “I Never Said I Never Fail” official video

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Domkraft Announce Oct./Nov. Live Shows

Posted in Whathaveyou on September 21st, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Domkraft (Photo by Fredrick Francke)

Two answers to questions nobody asked: First, yes, I am starting to feel a bit the broken record posting endless lists of everybody’s Fall 2023 European tour dates. Second, yes, I knew Domkraft‘s isn’t the most extensive list of shows that I’ve put up as part of that. It’s basically a weekender that starts tonight, a dream-team bill in Denmark with Conan and Slomatics — a power-riff triumvirate when you include Domkraft — and a fest in Germany and another show in Belgium in November. But it’s not a week on the road, 10 days, two weeks, etc. It’s what press releases used to call ‘select dates.’

I almost made that the headline, but didn’t want anyone to think I was trying to be a dick. You don’t see me announcing a three-week tour either. Domkraft‘s new album, Sonic Moons (review here) has only been out for a couple weeks, and if you haven’t heard it — oh, do — it’s of course down at the bottom there, and you should know that posting the player again is almost entirely the reason for this post. Yeah, Fall tour dates have become a theme around here lately. Fine. Here are some more.

The difference is these are Domkraft‘s.

From the PR wire:

Domkraft tour

DOMKRAFT announce European live shows following the release of acclaimed new album “Sonic Moons”!

Order Sonic Moons HERE!: http://lnk.spkr.media/sonic-moons

DOMKRAFT have announced a first string of live shows in Europe following hot on the heels of the release of the Swedish psychedelic doom masters’ acclaimed new album “Sonic Moons”, which hit stores worldwide on September 8, 2023 via Magnetic Eye Records.

DOMKRAFT comment: “We always strive to make music that is close to our hearts without repeating ourselves”, singer and bass player Martin Wegeland writes. “As we see it, if you want to hear something that sounds like our debut ‘The End of Electricity’ that album is already there to be listened to. We try to keep things fresh by taking different routes, inviting new elements into the toolbox that we start from, and it has been a pure joy to see how well received ‘Sonic Moons’ has been. Almost overwhelming, to be honest. Now we want nothing more than to go out and play these songs live. We’e starting with a select run of shows this autumn, and will cover much more ground on the live front in 2024.”

DOMKRAFT Live

21 SEP 2023 Oslo (NO) Vaterland
22 SEP 2023 Linköping (SE) The Crypt
23 SEP Malmö (SE) Plan B
21 OCT 2023 København (DK) Loppen +Conan +Slomatics
17 NOV 2023 Halle (DE) Deep Sound City Fest V
19 NOV 2023 Liege (BE) Kultura

Line-up
Martin Wegeland – vocals, bass
Martin Widholm – guitars
Anders Dahlgren – drums

domkraft.bandcamp.com
facebook.com/domkraftband
https://www.instagram.com/domkraftdomkraft/

http://store.merhq.com
http://magneticeyerecords.com/
https://www.facebook.com/MagneticEyeRecords
https://www.instagram.com/magneticeyerecords/

Domkraft, Sonic Moons (2023)

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Album Review: Domkraft, Sonic Moons

Posted in Reviews on September 14th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Domkraft Sonic Moons

Sonic Moons commemorates the moment when a riff becomes the Riff. The fourth full-length from Swedish trio Domkraft — the stable lineup of bassist/vocalist Martin Wegeland, guitarist Martin Widholm and drummer Anders Dahlgren — is a seven-song/47-minute meditation on nod. As Domkraft have emerged to portray their own vision of psychedelic noise rock and melodic, atmospheric sludge, they haven’t wanted for variety, and they don’t here either as nine-minute cuts “Whispers” and “The Big Chill” bookend a procession that is no less at home casting deep spaces in its mix than honing catharsis via crush.

But Sonic Moons also has this groove. This ur-groove. It is primal, lurching, undulating. Much of the second half of “Whispers” is given to floating lead guitar, but earlier in the track, as all the ambience seems to solidify in the build at about two minutes in and tensely chug through the verse, right at 2:30 it kicks in, and it’s not a full minute before the band are back in the chug from whence they came, but they’ll break up those solos with a reprise and it’s how they end the song as well. It becomes a thread that runs across the album. It’s never quite the same, can be fast like in the barrage shove at the start of “Stellar Winds,” or expansive like when it comes out of the solo in “Magnetism.” It can be the foundation, like in the very-purposeful-seeming centerpiece “Slowburner,” or a blowout like in “Downpour,” maddeningly tense in “Black Moon Rising” and it helps put the crescendo of “The Big Chill” over the top in paying off the entire album while moving deeper into heavy psychedelia than the band have ever gone.

It is able to do all these things, this groove. It is Domkraft‘s own, and it’s never sounded more like a signature than it does here. You understand, I’m not saying Domkraft only have one rhythm. I’m saying that Sonic Moons taps into that node in your brain where the australopithecus once danced to two rocks banged together in time. Each track has its own intention, but feeds into an overarching flow that draws the songs together. A complete work derived from its individual pieces. The Riff becomes the theme around which the material is united. And as themes go, whoever came up with ‘kickass riffs exclusively’ should probably get a trophy.

The album is an accomplishment toward which Domkraft have been steadily building. Clearly working with the production team of Kalle Lilja and Per Stålberg at Welfare Sounds in Gothenburg — they helmed 2021’s Seeds (discussed here) and the band’s 2022 split LP with Slomatics, Ascend/Descend (review here) — and the also-returning Karl Daniel Lidén for mixing and mastering suits them. And Sonic Moons is a step forward from Seeds, which was a step forward from 2018’s Flood (review here), and so on back to 2016’s The End of Electricity (review here), but there will be recognizable elements in some of the harsher vocals, the tonal breadth and the upside-your-head nature of the riffing, but Domkraft are more psychedelic in passages of “The Big Chill” and “Whispers” (thinking the midsection in the latter) than they’ve ever outwardly been, and “Downpour” is heavy space rock à la Monster Magnet that feels like it’s hit the big finish by the time it’s halfway through and only grows more cacophonous from there. Even the cover art by Björn Atldax is in keeping with the spirit of what Domkraft have done before while making it own impression.

Domkraft (Photo by Fredrick Francke)

Trippy, vast, intermittently sprawling though Sonic Moons is, it’s also grounded in the post-hardcore/noise rock sludge of the band’s roots, and that serves them in their heaviest reaches, whether it’s the start of the extra-noisy “Stellar Winds” or the way “Magnetism” grows epic in its chorus like something New Zealand’s Beastwars might conjure, but churning, and part of that whole-album theme in its riffing. “Slowburner” is a landmark for the release as an entirety in no small part because it seems to strip away everything else that the other songs are doing, whether it’s the airy leads or some other exploration, and bask in the purity of its crunch.

But it wouldn’t be a landmark without those other songs around it, and much of the material throughout Sonic Moons interacts in that way, tracks enhancing each other, working off each other, complementing or contrasting like the dizzying finish of “Downpour” stopping cold as the clarity of the intro to “Black Moon Rising” is counted in, seeming to have discovered an extra layer of thickness as it revives the telltale nod following the closest thing to a departure therefrom. Or without the complexity of the shifts in “The Big Chill,” bass and drums mellowing ahead of the suitably massive peak as the vocals, not the guitar, put it over the top and the guitar sneaks a little melodic resonance into the last 30 seconds or so of the closer, as if to say thanks for coming and they’re not done yet.

That may well be the case and nothing on Sonic Moons leaves one thinking Domkraft are finished growing. If anything, the organic nature of how they’ve done so to this point — four LPs of steady, unforced evolution — sets them up for the longer-term progression that would already seem to be playing out. Their take has become more individualized with time and more malleable, and these tracks magnify what has worked to distinguish the band for the last seven years while actively pushing themselves further as musicians and songwriters.

Domkraft have more space than ever before, and they hit harder. They’re more melodic, but arguably more furious as well. It is so much to their credit that these notions that should be in conflict are not when one actually hears the record, and that Domkraft don’t come out of Sonic Moons sounding like anybody more than themselves. This is an act who’ve taken the time to develop their point of view on the kind of music they want to play, and who are able to reshape that perspective in service to their songs.

Domkraft, Sonic Moons (2023)

Domkraft on Facebook

Domkraft on Instagram

Domkraft on Bandcamp

Magnetic Eye Records on Facebook

Magnetic Eye Records on Instagram

Magnetic Eye Records on Bandcamp

Magnetic Eye Records website

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Elephant Hawk Release Debut Single “Non Grata Revisited”

Posted in Whathaveyou on August 8th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

I guess this is the kind of thing you can do when you have your own actual-studio and the barest smidgen of restless downtime. Comprised of the duo of Esben Willems, drummer for Monolord, and Marcus Lilja, also of the experimental Eyemouth, the new project Elephant Hawk has unveiled its first single, “Non Grata Revisited.” Recorded of course at Gothenburg, Sweden’s Studio Berserk, it isn’t the first collaboration between the two, who in May worked together with Here Lies Man‘s Geoff Mann on the aptly-titled “Transatlantic Explorations” (posted here). Aside from the duo format, the key difference between Elephant Hawk — who for sure are not to be mistaken for Elephant Tree, Freedom Hawk, or Freedom Tree, the latter of whom probably exist somewhere — is the focus on synth drone and the fact that Willems adds vocals over top.

In terms of delivery, Willems‘ singing might put one in mind of Steve Von Till in some of his outside-Neurosis solo work, and the textures accompanying the verses — noise made by Lilja, mixed/mastered by Willems — work in three dimensions to establish the atmosphere. Given the moniker, the cover art (which is cool, please know that I’m not knocking it) and the fact that they put it on Bandcamp with minimal advance hype, they seem to be sort of feeling their way into position as outliers in a heavy underground given to riffier and more straightforward songwriting — which certainly might come; universe of infinite possibilities and all that — and “Non Grata Revisited” has the ambient spread to get them there. What it might herald, if anything, is a concern for another time. Like the Willems Lilja Mann track in Spring, this is just interesting stuff being done by cool artists who are very clearly looking to expand their palette and creative reach. If you can’t get down with that, I’ve got nothing for you.

The social post and the info from Willems‘ Bandcamp follow here, but of course the point is the song itself, which is at the bottom of the post where those things go according to the long-established/completely arbitrary rules about how I organize these posts. Enjoy:

ELEPHANT HAWK Non Grata Revisited

ELEPHANT HAWK – Non Grata Revisited

Esben here. We just released our debut song with our sudden new project Elephant Hawk, being Bandcamp Friday and all. Music by Marcus Lilja, vocals, mix and master by me.

Hope you like it.

Artwork by Error! Design

Elephant Hawk are:
Marcus Lilja – Modular synths
Esben Willems – Vocals, mix, master

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100095139416618
https://esbenwillems.bandcamp.com/

http://fb.me/studioberserk/
https://www.instagram.com/studioberserksweden/
https://www.etsy.com/se-en/shop/happyberserk
https://happyhelmet.se/
https://linktr.ee/studioberserk

Elephant Hawk, “Non Grata Revisited” (2023)

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Quarterly Review: Monolord, Somnuri, Void King, Inezona, Hauch, El Astronauta, Thunder Horse, After Nations, Ockra, Erik Larson

Posted in Reviews on July 24th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

the-obelisk-qr-summer-2020

That’s it. End of the Summer 2023 Quarterly Review and the last round of this kind of thing until, I don’t know, sometime here or there in late September or early October. I feel like I say this every time out — and I readily acknowledge the possibility that I do; I’ve been doing this for a while, and there’s only so much shit to say — but it is my sincere hope you found something in this round of 70 records that hits with you. I did, a couple times over at least. One of the reasons I look forward to the Quarterly Review, apart from clearing off album-promo folders from my desktop, is that my end-of-year lists always look different coming out of one than they did going in. This time is no different.

But, you know, if you didn’t get there this time, that’s okay too. There’s always the next one and one of the fortunate things about living in a time with such an onslaught of recorded music is that there’s always something new to check out. The Quarterly Review is over for a couple months, yeah, but new music happens every day. Every day is another chance to find your new favorite album, band, video, whatever. Enjoy that.

Quarterly Review #61-70:

Monolord, It’s All the Same

Monolord It's All the Same

After nearly a decade of hard, album-cycle-driven international touring and standing at the forefront in helping to steer a generational wave of lumbering riffage, it doesn’t seem unreasonable to think Gothenburg, Sweden’s Monolord might feel stuck, and “Glaive (It’s All the Same)” seems to acknowledge that. Stylistically, though the lead and partial title-track on the roller trio’s new EP, It’s All the Same, is itself a way forward. It is more spacious than crushing, and they fill the single out with guitarist Thomas V. Jäger‘s sorrowful vocal delivery and memorable early lead lines, a steady, organic rhythm from drummer/engineer Esben Willems and bassist Mika Häkki — worth noting that all three have either released solo albums or otherwise explored solo work in the last two years — and Mellotron that adds a classically progressive flair and lets the guitar focus on mood rather than stomp, though there’s still plenty of that in “Glaive (It’s All the Same)” and is more the focus of “The Only Road,” so Monolord aren’t necessarily making radical changes from where they were on 2021’s Your Time to Shine (review here), but as there has been all along, there’s steady growth in balance with the physicality of tone one has come to anticipate from them. After scaling back on road time, It’s All the Same feels reassuring even as it pushes successfully the boundaries of their signature sound.

Monolord on Facebook

Relapse Records store

 

Somnuri, Desiderium

Somnuri Desiderium

Raging not at all unthoughtfully for most of its concise-feeling but satisfying 38 minutes, Somnuri‘s third album and MNRK Heavy label debut, the nine-song Desiderium, is a tour de force through metallic strengths. Informed by the likes of Death, (their now-labelmates) High on Fire, Killswitch Engage, Gojira (at whose studio they recorded), thick-toned and swapping between harsh shouts, screams and clean-sung choruses — and yes, that’s just in the first three minutes of opener “Death is the Beginning” — the Brooklynite trio of guitarist/vocalist Justin Sherrell, bassist Mike G. and drummer Phil SanGiacomo brazenly careen and crash through styles, be it the lumbering and impatiently angular doom “Paramnesia,” the rousing sprint “What a Way to Go,” the raw, vocals-rightly-forward and relatively free of effects “Remnants” near the end, or the pairing of the fervent, thrashy shove in “Flesh and Blood” with the release-your-inner-CaveIn “Desiderium,” the overwhelming extremity of “Pale Eyes” or the post-hardcore balladeering that turns to djent sludge largesse in closer “The Way Out” — note the album begins at “…the Beginning” and ends at an exit; happy accident or purposeful choice; it works either way — Somnuri are in the hurricane rather than commanding from the calm center, and that shows in the emotionalism of prior single “Hollow Visions,” but at no point does Desiderium collapse under the weight of its ambitions. After years of touring and the triumph that was 2021’s Nefarious Wave (review here) hinting at what seems in full bloom here, Somnuri sound ready for the next level they’ve reached. Time to spend like the next five years straight on tour, guys. Sorry, but that’s what happens when you’re the kick in the ass heavy metal doesn’t yet know it needs.

Somnuri on Facebook

MNRK Heavy website

 

Void King, The Hidden Hymnal

Void King The Hidden Hymnal

Densely distorted Indianapolis heavybringers Void King have stated that their third full-length, the burly but not unatmospheric 36-minute The Hidden Hymnal, is the first of a two-part outing, though it’s unclear whether both parts are a concept record or these six tracks are meant to start a storyline, with opener “Egg of the Sun” (that would happen if it spun really fast) and closer “Drink in the Light” feeling complementary in their increased runtime relative to the four songs between. Maybe it’s an unfinished narrative at this point, or no narrative at all. Fine. Approaching it as a standalone outing, the four-piece follow 2019’s Barren Dominion (review here) with more choice riffing and metal-threatening, weighted doom, “The Grackle” breaking out some rawer-throat gutturalism over its big, big, big tone. The bassline of “Engulfed in Absence” (tell people you love them) caps side A with a highlight, and “When the Pinecones Close Up” (that means it’s going to rain) echoes the volatility of “The Grackle” before “Brother Tried” languidly swings until it’s time for a 100 meter dash at the end, and the aforementioned “Drink in the Light” rounds out mournful and determined. If there’s more to come, so be it, but Void King give their listeners plenty to chew on in the interim.

Void King on Facebook

Void King on Bandcamp

 

Inezona, Heartbeat

Inezona Heartbeat

At the core of ostensibly Switzerland-based Inezona is multi-instrumentalist and vocalist Ines Brodbeck, and on Heartbeat — the fourth LP from her band and the follow-up to 2019’s Now, released as INEZ, and last year’s sans-vocals A Self Portrait — the sound is malleable around its folkish melodicism, with Brodbeck, guitarist/vocalist Gabriel Sullivan, bassist/synthesist Fabian Gisler and drummer Eric Gut comfortably fleshing out atmospheric heavy psychedelia more about mood than effects but too active and almost too expressive to be post-rock, though it kind of is anyhow. Mellow throughout, “Sea Soul” caps side A and meanders into/through a jam building on the smoky vibe in “Stardust” before the title-track strolls across a field of more ’60s-derived folk rock. “Veil” charms with fuzz, while “In My Heart” seems intent on finding the place where Scandinavian folk meets kosmiche synthesizer, and “Midnight Circle” brings Zatokrev‘s Fredryk Rotter for a guest duet and guitar spot that is a whole-album crescendo, with the acoustic-based “Leave Me Alone” and the brief “Sunday Mornings” at the end to manage the comedown. The sound spans decades and styles and functions with purpose as its own presence, and the soothing delivery of Brodbeck throughout much of the proceedings draws Heartbeat together as an interpretation of classic pop ideals with deep roots underground. Proof again that ‘heavy’ is about more than which pedals you have on your board.

Inezona on Facebook

Czar of Crickets Productions store

 

Hauch, Lehmasche

Hauch Lehmasche

It’s odd that it’s odd that Hauch‘s songs are in German. The pandemic-born Waltrop, Germany, four-piece present their first release in the recorded-in-2021, five-song Lehmasche, and I guess so much of the material coming out of the German heavy underground — and there’s a lot of it, always — is in English. A distinguishing factor for the 31-minute outing, then, which is further marked by an attitudinal edge in hard-fuzz riffers like “Es Ist” and the closer “Tür,” the aesthetic of the band at this (or that, depending on how present-tense we want to be) moment drawing strongly from ’90s rock — and no, that doesn’t necessarily mean stoner — in structure and affect, but presenting the almost-eight-minute leadoff “Wind” with due fullness of sound and ending up not too far in terms of style from Switzerland’s Carson, who last year likewise proffered a style that was straightforward on its face but, like Hauch, stood out for its level of songwriting and the just-right nature of its grooves. Lehmasche, the title translating to ‘clay ash,’ evokes something that can change shape, and the thrust in “Komm Nach Hause” and the hard-landing kick thud of centerpiece “Quelle” bear that out well enough. Keeping in mind it’s their debut, it seems likely Hauch will continue to grow, but they already sound ready to be picked up by some label or other.

Hauch on Facebook

Hauch on Bandcamp

 

El Astronauta, Snakes and Foxes

el astronauta snakes and foxes

Setting its nod in a manner that seems to have little time to waste on opener “The Mountain and the Feather” before breaking out with the dense, chugging swing of “The Corenne and the Prophecy Fulfilled,” Kentucky heavybringers El Astronauta bring a nuanced sound to what might be familiar progressions, but the mix is set up in three dimensions and the band dwells in all of them, bringing character to the languid reach of the mini-album Snakes and Foxes, bolstered by the everybody-might-sing approach from guitarist/keyboardist Seth Wilson, bassist Dean Collier and pushed-back drummer Cory Link, who debuted in 2021 with High Strangeness and who dude-march through “The Gambler and the General” as if the tempo was impeded by the thickness of the song itself. Through a mere 17 Earth minutes, El Astronauta carve out this indent for themselves in the side of a very large, very heavy style of rock and roll, but “The Axe or the Hammer,” which bookends topping five minutes in answer to “The Mountain and the Feather,” has a more subdued verse to go along with the damn near martial shouts of its impact-minded chorus, and fades out with surprising fluidity to leave off. The one-thing-and-another-thing titles give Snakes and Foxes a thematic feel, but the real theme here is the barebones greed-for-volume El Astronauta display, their material feeling built for beery singalongs.

El Astronauta on Facebook

Snow Wolf Records on Bandcamp

 

Thunder Horse, After the Fall

Thunder Horse After the Fall

With their third full-length behind 2021’s Chosen One (review here) and their 2018 self-titled debut (review here), Texan riff rollers Thunder Horse grow accordingly more atmospheric in their presentation and are that much more sure of themselves in leaning into founding guitarist/vocalist Stephen Bishop‘s industrial metal past in Pitbull Daycare. The keys give “Requiem” an epic feel at the finish, and even if the opening title-track is like what Filter might’ve been if they’d been awesome and “New Normal” and “Monolith” push further with semi-aggro metallurgical force, the wall-of-tone remains thusly informed until the two-minute acoustic “The Other Side” tells listeners where to go when it’s over (you flip the record, duh). “Monolith” hinted at a severity that manifests in the doomed “Apocalypse,” a preface in its noise and breadth for the finale “Requiem,” finding a momentum that the layered-vocal hook of “Inner Demon” capitalizes upon with its tense toms and that the howls of the penultimate “Aberdeen” expand on with Thunder Horse‘s version of classic boogie rock. They don’t come across like they’re done exploring the balances of influence in what they do — and I hope they’re not — but Thunder Horse have never sounded more certain as regards the rightness of their path.

Thunder Horse on Facebook

Ripple Music website

 

After Nations, Vīrya

After Nations Virya

The title “Vīrya” is Sanskrit and based on the Hindu concept of vitality or energy, often in a specifically male context. Fair enough ground for Kansas instrumentalists After Nations to explore on their single following last year’s impressive, Buddhism-based concept LP, The Endless Mountain (review here). In the four-minute standalone check-in, the four-piece remind just how granite-slab heavy that offering was as they find a linear path from the warning-siren-esque guitar at the start through the slower groove and into the space where a post-metallic verse could reside but doesn’t and that’s just fine, turning back to the big-bigger-biggest riff before shifting toward controlled-cacophony progressive metal, hints of djent soon to flower as they build tension through the higher guitar frequencies and the intensity of the whole. After three minutes in, they’re charging forward, but it’s a flash and they’re dug into the whatever-time-signature finishing movement, a quick departure to guitar soon consumed by that feeling you get when you listen to Meshuggah that there’s a very large thing rising up very slowly in front of you and surely you’ll never get out alive. Precise in their attack, After Nations reinforce the point The Endless Mountain made that technique is only one part of their overarching brutality.

After Nations on Facebook

After Nations on Bandcamp

 

Ockra, Gratitude

ockra gratitude

There’s some incongruity between the intro “Introspection” (I see what you did there) leading into “Weightless Again” as it takes the mood from a quiet buildup to full-bore tonality and only then gives over to the eight-minute second track, but Ockra‘s Argonauta-delivered debut long-player thrives in that contradiction. Melodic vocals float over energetic riffing in “Weightless Again,” but even that is just a hint of the seven-songer’s scope. To wit, the initially acoustic-based “Tree I Planted” is recognizably parental in its point of view with a guest vocal from Stefanie Spielhaupter, and while centerpiece “Acceptance” is more doomed in its introductory lead guitar, the open strum of its early verses and the harmonies in its second half assure an impression is made. The Gothenburg-based trio grow yet more adventurous in the drone-and-voice outset of “We Who Didn’t Know,” which unfolds its own notions of what ‘heavy prog’ means, with guitarist Erik Björnlinger howling at the finish ahead of the start of the more folk-minded strum of “Imorgon Här,” on which drummer Jonas Nyström (who also played that acoustic on “We Who Didn’t Know” and adds Mellotron where applicable) takes over lead vocal duties from bassist Alex Spielhaupter (also more Mellotron). The German-language closer “Tage Wie Dieser” (‘days like these’) boasts a return from Stefanie Spielhaupter and is both quiet grunge and ambient post-rock before the proggy intensity of its final wash takes hold, needing neither a barrage of effects or long stretches of jamming to conjure a sense of the far out.

Ockra on Facebook

Argonauta Records store

 

Erik Larson, Fortsett

erik larson fortsett

What’s another 20 minutes of music to Erik Larson, I wonder. The Richmond-based songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and vocalist has a career and a discography that goes back to the first Avail record three decades ago, and at no point in those decades has he ever really stopped, moving through outfits like (the now-reunited) Alabama Thunderpussy, Axehandle, The Mighty Nimbus, Hail!Hornet, Birds of Prey, Kilara, Backwoods Payback, Thunderchief, on and on, while building his solo catalog as well. Fortsett, the 20-minute EP in question, follows 2022’s Red Lines and Everything Breaks (both reviewed here), and features Druglord‘s Tommy Hamilton (also Larson‘s bandmate in Omen Stones) on drums and engineer Mark Miley on a variety of instruments and backing vocals. And you know what? It’s a pretty crucial-sounding 20 minutes. Larson leads the charge through his take that helped define Southern heavy in “Cry in the Wind,” the nodder “My Own,” and the sub-two-minute “Electric Burning,” pulls back on the throttle for “Hounder Sistra” and closes backed by drum machine and keys on “Life Shedding,” just in case you dared to think you know what you were getting. So what’s that 20 minutes of music to Erik Larson? Going by the sound of Fortsett, it’s the most important part of the day.

Erik Larson on Bandcamp

 

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The Obelisk Questionnaire: Carlos Ibarra from Maulén

Posted in Questionnaire on June 26th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Carlos Ibarra from Maulén (Photo by Chad Michael Ward)

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: Carlos Ibarra from Maulén

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

Wow! Talk about dropping a bomb as the first question! My current project Maulén was defined by a period in my life where I had to stop making music to take care of my health. During that period I had time to think about WHY I make music and WHAT part of it that gives me joy and energy. I realized that for me music is a vessel, A vessel that has taken me across the world. Music is a sound in a space. And I realized that space was important to me. The actual place that the music is made. So for Maulén the place becomes an important element. It’s a huge part of what inspires me to write and record and I always want to take a piece of the place and freeze it in time to put in on wax.

Describe your first musical memory.

When I was like five years old I loved the band Europe and especially their drummer. I remember seeing the “Rock the night” video where there are big explosions behind him when he makes drum fills. I had a toy drum set at the time and I wanted shit to blow up when I played, so I started beating the drums really hard in hope shit would explode. When that did not happen I got really pissed and thought it was because I wasn’t hitting it hard enough. So in my rage I went and got a hammer and beat my toy drum into a million pieces and when there was no explosion I started to cry.

Describe your best musical memory to date.

There are so many great memories but maybe seeing Fantomas live at Roskilde Festival was one of them. It was a thorough display of Mike Patton’s twisted mind. Bending and twisting some of the best musicians on the planet to create his vision. I stood there with a huge grin on my face!

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

How do you answer that when you don’t believe in anything? Maybe meeting Jesus during an acid trip?
I used to believe in the goodness of mankind but the last 10 years of where the world is going is challenging that really hard.

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

Forward.

How do you define success?

When you allow yourself to have a vision of something and then you accomplish it. It can be a song, getting rich or just about anything else. It can also be when you allow yourself to feel accomplished.

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

Sabaton and Limp Bizkit.

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

One of my idols is Salvador Allende. A deposed democratically elected Chilean president said “No hay revolución sin canciones” with roughly translated means “there is no revolution that does not have songs”. I want to write songs that inspire change.

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

It allows us to feel what we don’t dare to feel and speak about what hurts us the most.

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

This is a hard one! Maybe sleep?

http://www.maulen.org
http://www.facebook.com/officialmaulen
http://www.instagram.com/officialmaulen
http://www.twitter.com/officialmaulen
https://officialmaulen.bandcamp.com/
https://open.spotify.com/artist/2kXcqUWmDpY8EPmgJGzc8u

https://www.facebook.com/iceaofficial/
https://www.instagram.com/iceaofficial
https://twitter.com/icea_label
https://iconscreatingevilart.bandcamp.com/

Maulén, El Miedo De Amar Pero Igual Lo Hago (2022)

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Domkraft to Release Sonic Moons Sept. 8; New Single “Slowburner” Streaming

Posted in Whathaveyou on June 14th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Domkraft (Photo by Fredrick Francke)

Their 2021 album, Seeds (discussed here) was still fresh in memory when in 2022, they partnered with Slomatics for the best short release of last year, the split Ascend/Descend (review here) on Majestic Mountain Records. They covered each other’s songs. The art ruled. I did the liner notes for it and I think I wound up with three copies — at least two — of the vinyl because of the generosity of all parties involved, both bands and the label. If you’re me — and good on you that you’re not — there was nothing not to like. Accordingly, the news that the Göteborg three-piece will issue their fourth long-player, Sonic Moons, on Sept. 8 in continued cooperation with Magnetic Eye has just about made my day, and all the more so since the single they’ve unveiled along with the details of the album, the centerpiece “Slowburner,” is such a banger.

Just dive in. You won’t regret it. The vocals in the first couple minutes remind me of something. Something older, throaty, kind of a gruff bub-bub-bub I’m hearing in my head that I can’t place. Something American, maybe UK. It’s not Mark Lanegan, something more underground. Was it the 2011 Amebix record? I can’t figure it out and it’s driving me up a fucking wall. I’ll be sure to either chase it down or forget the entire question before I review the record, which I’m already looking forward to doing after hearing the single. [EDIT: It was Beastwars on the vocals.]

Also, check out that friggin’ cover art. Domkraft covers are always awesome. I think I fought this thing yesterday in Zelda. The PR wire sent this one with the info:

Domkraft Sonic Moons

DOMKRAFT reveal first single ‘Slowburner’ and details of forthcoming new album “Sonic Moons”

Release date: September 8, 2023

Swedish psychedelic doom masters DOMKRAFT have released the relentless new track ‘Slowburner’ as the first single from their highly-anticipated fourth album “Sonic Moons”, which is slated for release September 8.

DOMKRAFT discuss the forthcoming album: “The theme of ‘Sonic Moons’ is not as much space as the title might suggest, it is essentially all about escapism”, singer and bass player Martin Wegeland writes. “To find that spot in your head and body where you can feel liberated and, if only briefly, escape the constant flood of burden that is life in the real world. Think of ‘Sonic Moons’ as a pill blister pack, where each song has its own active ingredient. Or an imaginary solar system where each track is its own planet. A galaxy of tunes, with different gravity, different temperatures. A riff- and rhythm-fueled exploration of inner and outer space. It’s about longing, hope, frustration, relief, and some plain old mindfucking. All by means of heavy rock.”

DOMKRAFT elaborate about the single: “Of all the songs on the new album, ‘Slowburner’ is probably the most straightforward, as it revolves around a grinding yet kind of catchy riff”, Martin Wegeland continues. “It’s a straight-up heavy rock song about suddenly realizing that you’re drifting into an expanding black hole, be it in a physical or spiritual sense. It could be a fragmented stream of thoughts from someone who is in and out of consciousness, adrift in a galactic escape pod, or it could be what keeps an insomniac earthling awake, given the state of everything.”

Tracklist
1. Whispers
2. Stellar Winds
3. Magnetism
4. Slowburner
5. Downpour
6. Black Moon Rising
7. The Big Chill

Recorded by Kalle Lilja and Per Stålberg at Welfare Sounds, Gothenburg, Sweden
Mixed and mastered by Karl Daniel Lidén
Cover artwork & layout by Björn Atldax

Line-up
Martin Wegeland – vocals, bass
Martin Widholm – guitars
Anders Dahlgren – drums

domkraft.bandcamp.com
facebook.com/domkraftband
https://www.instagram.com/domkraftdomkraft/

http://store.merhq.com
http://magneticeyerecords.com/
https://www.facebook.com/MagneticEyeRecords
https://www.instagram.com/magneticeyerecords/

Domkraft, “Slowburner”

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