Quarterly Review: Dorthia Cottrell, Fvzz Popvli, Formula 400, Abanamat, Vvon Dogma I, Orme, Artifacts & Uranium, Rainbows Are Free, Slowenya, Elkhorn

Posted in Reviews on May 11th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

the-obelisk-qr-summer-2020

Here we go day four of the Quarterly Review. I would love to tell you it’s been easy-breezy this week. That is not the case. My kid is sick, my wife is tired of my bullshit, and neither of them is as fed up with me as I am. Nonetheless, we persist. Some day, maybe, we’ll sit down and talk about why. Today let’s keep it light, hmm?

And of course by “light” I mean very, very heavy. There’s some of that in the batch of 10 releases for today, and a lot of rock to go along, so yes, another day in the QR. I hope you find something you dig. I snuck in a surprise or two.

Quarterly Review #31-40:

Dorthia Cottrell, Death Folk Country

Dorthia Cottrell Death Folk Country

Crafted for texture, Death Folk Country finds Windhand vocalist Dorthia Cottrell exploring sounds that would be minimal if not for the lushness of the melodies placed over them. Her first solo offering since 2015 runs 11 tracks and feels substantial at a manageable 42 minutes as delivered through Relapse Records. The death comes slow and soft, the folk is brooding and almost resistant in its Americana traditionalism, and the country is vast and atmospheric, and all three are present in a release that’s probably going to be called ethereal because of layering or vocal reverb but in fact is terrestrial like dry dirt. The seven-minute “Family Annihilator” is nigh on choral, and e-bow or some such droner element fills out the reaches of “Hell in My Water,” expanding on the expectation of arrangement depth set up by the chimes and swells that back “Harvester” after the album’s intro. That impulse makes Death Folk Country kin to some of earlier Wovenhand — thinking Blush Music or Consider the Birds; yes, I acknowledge the moniker similarity between Windhand and Wovenhand and stand by the point as regards ambience — and a more immersive listen than it would otherwise be, imagining future breadth to be captured as part of the claims made in the now. Do I need to say that I hope it’s not 2031 before she does a third record?

Dorthia Cottrell on Bandcamp

Relapse Records website

Fvzz Popvli, III

FVZZ POPVLI III

It’s been a quick — read: not quick — five years since Italian heavy rockers Fvzz Popvli released their second album, Magna Fvzz (review here), through Heavy Psych Sounds. Aptly titled, III is the third installment, and it’s got all the burner soloing, garage looseness and, yes, the fvzz one would hope, digging into a bit of pop-grunge on “The Last Piece of Shame,” setting a jammy expectation in the “Intro” mirrored in “Outro” with percussion, and cool-kid grooving on “Monnoratzo,” laced with hand-percussion and a bassline so thick it got made fun of in school and never lived down the trauma (a tragedy, but it rules just the same). “Post Shit” throws elbows of noise all through your favorite glassware, “20 Cent Blues” slogs out its march true to the name and “Tied” is brash even compared to what’s around it. Only hiccup so far as I can tell is “Kvng Fvzz,” which starts with a Charlie Chan-kind of guitar line and sees the vocals adopt a faux Chinese accent that’s well beyond the bounds of what one might consider ‘ill-advised.’ Cool record otherwise, but that is a significant misstep to make on a third LP.

Fvzz Popvli on Facebook

Retro Vox Records on Bandcamp

 

Formula 400, Divination

Formula 400 Divination

San Diegan riffslingers Formula 400 come roaring back with their sophomore long-player, Divination, following three (long) years behind 2020’s Heathens (review here), bringing in new drummer Lou Voutiritsas for a first appearance alongside guitarist/vocalists Dan Frick and Ian Holloway and bassist Kip Page. With a clearer, fuller recording, the solos shine through, the gruff vocals are well-positioned in the mix (not buried, not overbearing), and even as they make plays for the anthemic in “Kickstands Up,” “Rise From the Fallen” and closer “In Memoriam,” the lack of pretense is one of the elements most fortunately carried over from the debut. “Rise From the Fallen” is the only cut among the nine to top five minutes, and it fills its time with largesse-minded riffing and a hook born out of ’90s burl that’s a good distance from the shenanigans of opener “Whiskey Bent” or the righteous shove of the title-track. They’re among the best of the Ripple Music bands not yet actually signed to the label, with an underscored C.O.C. influence in “Divination” and the calmer “Bottomfeeder,” while “In Memoriam” filters ’80s metal epics through ’70s heavy and ’20s tonal weight and makes the math add up. Pretty dudely, but so it goes with dudes, and dudes are gonna be pretty excited about it, dude.

Formula 400 on Facebook

Animated Insanity Records website

No Dust Records website

 

Abanamat, Abanamat

Abanamat Abanamat

Each of the two intended sides of Abanamat‘s self-titled debut saves its longest song for its respective ending, with “Voidgazer” (8:25) capping side A and “Night Walk” (9:07) working a linear build from silence all the way up to round out side B and the album as a whole. Mostly instrumental save for those two longer pieces, the German four-piece recorded live with Richard Behrens at Big Snuff and in addition to diving back into the beginnings of the band in opener “Djinn,” they offer coherent but exploratory, almost-UncleAcidic-in-its-languidity fuzz on “Thunderbolt of Flaming Wisdom,” growing near-prog in their urgency with it on the penultimate “Amdest” but never losing the abiding mellow spirit that manifests out of the ether as “Night Walk” rounds out the album with synth and keys and guitar in a jazzy for-a-walk meander as the band make their way into a fuller realization of classic prog elements, enhanced by a return of the vocals after five minutes in. They’re there just about through the end, and fit well, but it demonstrates that Abanamat even on their debut have multiple avenues in which they might work and makes their potential that much greater, since it’s a conscious choice to include singing on a song or not rather than just a matter of no one being able to sing. The way they set it up here would get stale after a couple more records, but one hopes they continue to develop both aspects of their sonic persona, as any need to choose between them is imaginary.

Abanamat on Instagram

Interstellar Smoke Records store

 

Vvon Dogma I, The Kvlt of Glitch

Vvon Dogma I The Kvlt of Glitch

Led by nine-string bassist Frédérick “ChaotH” Filiatrault (ex-Unexpect), Montreal four-piece Vvon Dogma I are a progressive metal whirlwind, melodic in the spirit of post-return Cynic but no less informed by death metal, djent, rock, electronic music and beyond, the 10-song/45-minute self-released debut, The Kvlt of Glitch confidently establishes its methodology in “The Void” at the outset and proceeds through a succession marked by hairpin turns, stretches of heavy groove like the chorus of “Triangles and Crosses” contrasted by furious runs, dance techno on “One Eye,” melody not at all forgotten in the face of all the changes in rhythm, meter, the intermittently massive tones, and so on. Yes, the bass features as it inevitably would, but with the precision drumming of Kevin Alexander, Yoan MP‘s backflipping guitar and the synth and strings (at the end) of Blaise Borboën (also credited with production), a sound takes shape that feels like it could have been years in the making. Mind you I don’t know that it was or wasn’t, but Vvon Dogma I lead the listener through the lumbering mathematics of “Lithium Blue,” a cover of Radiohead‘s “2+2=5” and the grand finale “The Great Maze” with a sense of mastery that’s almost unheard of on what’s a first record even from experienced players. I don’t know where it fits and I like that about it, and in those moments where I’m so overwhelmed that I feel like my brain is on fire, this seems to answer that.

Vvon Dogma I on Facebook

Vvon Dogma I on Bandcamp

 

Orme, Orme

orme orme

Two sprawling slow-burners populate the self-titled debut from UK three-piece Orme. Delivered through Trepanation Recordings as a two-song 2LP, Orme deep-dives into ambient psych, doom, drone and more besides in “Nazarene” (41:58) and “Onward to Sarnath” (53:47), and obviously each one is an album unto itself. Guitarist/vocalist Tom Clements, bassist Jimmy Long (also didgeridoo) and drummer Luke Thelin — who’s also listed as contributing ‘silence,’ which is probably a joke, but open space actually plays a pretty large role in the impression Orme make — make their way into a distortion-drone-backed roller jam on “Nazarene,” some spoken vocals from Clements along the way that come earlier and more proclamatory in “Onward to Sarnath” to preface the instrumental already-gone out-there-ness as well as throat singing and other vocalizations that mark the rest of the first half-hour-plus, a heavy psych jam taking hold to close out around 46 minutes with a return of distortion and narrative after, like an old-style hidden track. It’s fairly raw, but the gravitational singularity of Orme‘s two forays into the dark are ritualistic without being cartoonishly cult, and feel as much about their experience playing as the listener’s hearing. In that way, it is a thing to be shared.

Orme on Facebook

Trepanation Recordings on Bandcamp

 

Artifacts & Uranium, The Gateless Gate

Artifacts & Uranium Gateless Gate

The UK-based experimentalist psych collaboration between Fred Laird (Earthling Society) and Mike Vest (Bong, et al) yields a third long-player as The Gateless Gate finds the duo branching out in the spirit of their 2021 self-titled and last year’s Pancosmology (review here) with instrumentalist flow and a three-dimensional sound bolstered by the various delays, organ, synth, and so on. Atop an emergent backbeat from Laird, “Twilight Chorus” (16:13) runs a linear trajectory bound toward the interstellar in an organic jam that comes apart before 12 minutes in and gives over to church organ and sampled chants soon to be countermanded by howls of guitar and distortion. Takest thou that. The B-side, “Sound of Desolation” (19:55), sets forth with a synthy wash that gives over to viol drone courtesy of Martin Ash, a gong hit marking the shift into a longform psych jam with a highlight bassline and an extended journey into hypnotics with choral keys (maybe?) arriving in the second half as the guitar begins to space out, fuzz soloing floating over a drone layer, the harder-hit drums having departed save for some residual backward/forward cymbal hits in the slow comedown. The world’s never going to be on their level, but Laird and Vest are warriors of the cosmos, and as their work to-date has shown, they have bigger fish to fry than are found on planet earth.

Artifacts & Uranium on Facebook

Riot Season Records website

Echodelick Records website

 

Rainbows Are Free, Heavy Petal Music

Rainbows Are Free Heavy Petal Music

What a show to preserve. Heavy Petal Music, while frustrating in that it’s new Rainbows Are Free and not a follow-up to 2019’s Head Pains, but as the Norman, Oklahoma, six-piece’s first outing through Ripple Music, the eight-song/43-minute live LP captures their first public performance in the post-pandemic era, and the catharsis is palpable in “Come” and “Electricity on Wax” early on and holds even as they delve into the proggier “Shapeshifter” later on, the force of their delivery consistent as they draw on material from across their three studio LPs unremitting even as their dynamic ranges between a piano-peppered bluesy swing and push-boogie like “Cadillac” and the weighted nod of “Sonic Demon” later on. The performance was at the 2021 Summer Breeze Music Festival in their hometown (not to be confused with the metal fest in Germany) and by the time they get down to the kickdrum surge backing the fuzzy twists of “Crystal Ball” — which doesn’t appear on any of their regular albums — the allegiance to Monster Magnet is unavoidable despite the fact that Rainbows Are Free have their own modus in terms of arrangements and the balance between space, psych, garage and heavy rock in their sound. Given Ripple‘s distribution, Heavy Petal Music will probably be some listeners’ first excursion with Rainbows Are Free. Somehow I have to imagine the band would be cool with that.

Rainbows Are Free on Facebook

Ripple Music website

 

Slowenya, Angel Raised Wolves b/w Horizontal Loops

slowenya angel raised wolves horizontal loops

It’s the marriage of complexity and heft, of melody and nod, that make Slowenya‘s “Angel Raised Wolves” so effective. Moving at a comfortable tempo on the drums of Timo Niskala, the song marks out a presence with tonal depth as well as a sense of space in the vocals of guitarist/synthesist Jan Trygg. They break near the midpoint of the 6:39 piece and reemerge with a harder run through the chorus, bassist Tapani Levanto stepping in with backing vocals before a roar at 4:55 precedes the turn back to the original hook, reinforcing the notion that there’s been a plan at work the whole time. An early glimpse at the Finnish psych-doom trio’s next long-player, “Angel Raised Wolves” comes paired with the shorter “Horizontal Loops,” which drops its chugging riff at the start as though well aware of the resultant thud. A tense verse opens to a chorus pretty and reverbed enough to remind of Fear Factory‘s earlier work before diving into shouts and somehow-heavier density. Growls, or some other kind of noise — I’m honestly not sure — surfaces and departs as the nod builds to an an aggressive head, but again, they turn back to where they came from, ending with the initial riff the crater from which you can still see right over there. The message is plain: keep an ear out for that record. So yes, do that.

Slowenya on Facebook

Karhuvaltio Records on Facebook

 

Elkhorn, On the Whole Universe in All Directions

Elkhorn On the Whole Universe in All Directions

Let’s start with what’s obvious and say that Elkhorn‘s four-song On the Whole Universe in All Directions, which is executed entirely on vibraphone, acoustic 12-string guitar, and drums and other percussion, is not going to be for everybody. The New York duo of Drew Gardner (said vibraphone and drums) and Jesse Sheppard (said 12-string) bring a particularly jazzy flavor to “North,” “South,” “East” and “West,” but there are shades of exploratory Americana in “South” that follow the bouncing notes of the opener, and “East” dares to hint at sitar with cymbal wash behind and rhythmic contrast in the vibraphone, a meditative feel resulting that “West” continues over its 12 minutes, somewhat ironically more of a raga than “East” despite being where the sun sets. Cymbal taps and rhythmic strums and that strike of the vibraphone — Elkhorn seem to give each note a chance to stand before following it with the next, but the 39-minute offering is never actually still or unipolar, instead proving evocative as it trades between shorter and longer songs to a duly gentle finish. Gardner formerly handled guitar, and I don’t know if this is a one-off, but as an experiment, it succeeds in bridging stylistic divides in a way that almost feels like showing off. Admirably so.

Elkhorn on Facebook

Centripetal Force Records website

Cardinal Fuzz Records BigCartel store

 

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The Obelisk Questionnaire: Temple of the Fuzz Witch

Posted in Questionnaire on March 29th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

temple of the fuzz witch

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: Noah Bruner, Taylor Christian and Joe Peet of Temple of the Fuzz Witch

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

Taylor: It’s hard for me to define what I do because really, I just see myself as a guy who beats on shit and calls it music. I was introduced to drumming at a young age, by my dad actually who showed me rock and metal music at such a young age, and it’s something I’ve always been able to go to as therapy and making myself feel as if I have a purpose.

Noah: It’s really just a form of mostly negative expression. Spewing the hatred. It’s kind of a release in a form at times.

Describe your first musical memory.

Joe: My first musical memory comes from my mom. I used to be a real shithead to get ready in the morning so to coax me out and get me motivated she’d put on music. I grew up in Indy so the big station for us was X103.3. Listening to stuff like Alice in Chains before being dropped off for grade school is something I really look back on fondly.

Describe your best musical memory to date.

Taylor: In terms of being at a show, being smashed up against the barrier in front of Jus Oborn of Electric Wizard yelling the end of “Funeralopolis” right into my face. Absolute mind melting moment; couldn’t hear a thing for a good few days.

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

Joe: I was fortunate to be from a family that was pretty open minded when it comes to religion. I was never explicitly forced to go to church on Sunday. But my parents were really open to me investigating religion and seeing where, if anywhere, I felt like I could belong. So I tried out the youth group thing for a bit in high school, and honestly the peer pressure there was worse than any party or show I went to. Just the sheer amount of judgement really put me off and caused me to drop it pretty quick. I think my parents’ openness really paved the way for me to do what I do, and I’m really thankful for it.

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

Noah: Sometimes you can tap into something you can get to “that place.” It’s pretty much just chasing it.

How do you define success?

Noah: Well there’s success on many levels. Anything from having a good guitar take in the recording process. On a bigger scale, releasing an album or playing a really good show.

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

Noah: Too many things, but those things make me what I am today. I take pride in it in a morbid way.

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

Joe: I’m a huge nerd, and a big sucker for concept albums. Outside of music I’m a writer, and I really want to create an album that ticks all the boxes that a good story does.

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

Joe: Again, cliché, but I think it’s an agent of change. The artist creates something that’s pulled from inside of them, then it’s taken in by the audience and starts making internal changes.

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

Taylor: Seeing where life takes me. Life is a hell of a journey and I’ve got a long way to go with so many stones yet to be turned.

https://www.facebook.com/ToTFW/
http://www.instagram.com/templeofthefuzzwitch/
https://templeofthefuzzwitch.bandcamp.com/

https://www.facebook.com/Interstellar-Smoke-Records-101687381255396/
https://interstellarsmokerecords.bigcartel.com/

Temple of the Fuzz Witch, “A Call to Prey” (2022)

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Risin Sabotage Announce New Album Macabre Out June 2; Premiere “Silence Queen”

Posted in audiObelisk, Whathaveyou on March 1st, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Risin Sabotage

Veterans of Nasoni Records and Robustfellow Productions and now signed to Interstellar Smoke Records, the Kyiv-based heavy rock/psych trio Risin Sabotage announce the release of their new album, Macabre. Set to arrive on June 2, the album emerges as the band’s first following 2017’s prescient Planet Dies (discussed here) and features material dating back at least to 2018, when the included-on-the-record “Serpent” was issued as a standalone single. Fair enough.

Macabre, as a title, is a decent way to describe how it’s felt to — while at a far off geographic remove — watch for the last year as Russia has scaled up its invasion of Ukraine into an actual war rather than the casually cruel annexation of territory it had been since circa 2014. The album remains colorful in its psychedelic purpose, and fascinates with a blend of garage rock, shimmering, floating leads over solidified grooves, and a density of tone that underpins a song like “Mentor” or the payoff of the spacious “Hum” with resonance that adds depth to the mix and results in a fascinating, engrossing blend across the 40 minutes of the album as a whole.

In addition to war returning to Europe and the global pandemic that I’ll go out on a limb and assume you heard something about, the years since their last offering have seen Risin Sabotage part ways with singer Kirill Chepilko, with guitarist Vitya Panchishko and drummer Igor Nedyuzhiy taking over vocal duties and the band pressing on as a trio. Doesn’t seem to have slowed them down any, if the single “Silence Queen” — premiering at the bottom of this post — is anything to go by. The meld of lysergic breadth and rhythmic force is deceptively immersive, and though none of the tracks are especially lengthy, there’s still a sense of world-creation to coincide with the raw push of their more intense moments.

They talk about it as nine songs below and the version I got has 10, but there’s plenty of time between now and June to sort these things out. Initial info follows, from the PR wire:

RISIN SABOTAGE – Macabre – Interstellar Smoke Records

Says the band: “The album was written during the time of the global pandemic and mastered during the currently ongoing war in our country, Ukraine. These events have definitely affected the sound and, as a result, the title of this album. The release features nine songs that tell nine stories. Some of them put you in the atmosphere of today’s horrors, and others help you escape them.”

About “Silence Queen”: “It’s broken, it’s not alive, it fades away, but it’s beautiful, unique, and it drags you in.”

Kyiv based Risin Sabotage slams with heavy psych and desert rock since 2015. In the quest for a new sound the music is giving the best of desert rock, heavy psych, stoner and doom. Risin Sabotage’s fuzzy riffs and grooves inspired by the sounds of 70’s astound with the incredible energetic performance.

Tracklisting:
01. Abundance
02. Serpent
03. Silence Queen
04. Circus
05. Mentor
06. Loom (Forswear Intro)
07. Forswear
08. Hum
09. Macabre
10. Thawing

Risin Sabotage:
Igor Nedyuzhiy – drums/vocals
Vitya Panchishko – guitar/vocals
Valerii Skorzhenko – bass

https://www.facebook.com/risin.sabotage/
https://www.instagram.com/risin_sabotage/
https://risinsabotage.bandcamp.com/

https://www.facebook.com/Interstellar-Smoke-Records-101687381255396/
https://www.instagram.com/interstellar.smoke.label/
https://interstellarsmokerecords.bigcartel.com/

Risin Sabotage, “Silence Queen” track premiere

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The Obelisk Questionnaire: Dima from Abanamat

Posted in Questionnaire on February 17th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Dima from Abanamat

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: Dima from Abanamat

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

I play guitar for, about, 20 years now, wanted to learn drums at the beginning, but my mother said its too loud and too expensive. Looking back, I believe, it was for the best, its way easier to be a good guitar player than a good drummer.

Describe your first musical memory.

That would be the Pulp Fiction soundtrack. Was about 8 or 9. Till that time all the music that was played at home was from my parents, and this one was too; but that album was the one I digged too and now, thinking about it, I realise my music playing is influenced by it in really strange and subtle ways. Except Urge overkill, thought it was too cheesy at the time, still think it is. All the surf rock, son of a preacher man (the drums!) jungle boogie, lets stay together and the rest – all great songs

Describe your best musical memory to date.

First time I saw Earthless live, ten years ago or so. Blew my mind.

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

Not a “firmly held belief” but more like “the faith in humanity” kinda moment. When I heard Gucci gang, the second time was just around the corner, when I learned how many views it has.

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

Its hard for me to answer, because progression feels like a natural thing to do when you are playing music, I am simply bored of doing the same thing. When theres no progression, art becomes craftsmanship. So, I guess, in this sense, it leads to a new period in an artists career.

How do you define success?

For the artist, its to be at peace with the result of his work. For the final piece to be as close as you’ve imagined it in your head. In a broader sense, it can also be when the results of your artistic expression allow you to be independent creatively and financially.

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

Easy, Axel Rose with the Chinese Democracy tour.

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

A triptych concept album, so that when you put all the three gatefold sleeves, you can construct a huge penis. That’s the only concept for the concept album so far, but I think it’s worth developing.

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

Is to bring people together.

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

The arrival of the Four Horsemen.

https://www.facebook.com/ABANAMAT.BAND/
https://www.instagram.com/abanamat_band/
https://abanamat.bandcamp.com/

https://www.facebook.com/Interstellar-Smoke-Records-101687381255396/
https://interstellarsmokerecords.bigcartel.com/

Abanamat, Abanamat (2023)

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Album Review: Mathew’s Hidden Museum, Mathew’s Hidden Museum

Posted in Reviews on February 3rd, 2023 by JJ Koczan

mathew's hidden museum self titled

The eponymous Mathew in Mathew’s Hidden Museum is Mathew Bethancourt, best known as the guitarist/vocalist of reignited fuzz rockers Josiah, who in 2022 issued We Lay on Cold Stone (review here) as their first full-length in 15 years. Formed at the turn of the century, that band released three albums and a kind of wrap-up session/live collection during their initial run in the aughts, preceding and then concurrent to Bethancourt‘s participation in the first three LPs from The Kings of Frog Island, released 2005-2010. After leaving that band, Bethancourt would form Cherry Choke, at first in more of a garage rock vein, then later moving into a deeper-hued psychedelia on 2015’s Raising the Waters (review here) before themselves (not quite) fading out, leading to the return of Josiah.

As that band resolidified and moved toward their eventual comeback, Mathew’s Hidden Museum emerged in 2020 with the EP Golden Echoes (review here), a home-recording solo-project for Bethancourt to explore reaches that, for one reason or another, didn’t seem to fit anywhere else. In his Interstellar Smoke Records-released self-titled debut, Mathew’s Hidden Museum, he presents 10 songs and 41 minutes of boldly captured scope, intense creative drive, melodic psych atmospheres, and a bit of boogie for good measure. Some is in conversation with his past work, as the lead single and second track “Naked and Rolled in that Rotten Dirt” (premiered here) shoves and stomps throughout its three minutes with a Josiah-worthy groove, even if all that echo and later deconstruction takes it elsewhere ultimately. Other pieces, like the intro “The Resurrectionist” or the later, ultra-brief “Sinphony” and the closer “(Golden) Kiss Divine” are more ambient and textural, weaving flowing wavelengths of drone, guitar, and synth/keys/organ/etc. to cinematic effect.

Through it all, the temptation is to say that Bethancourt retains a master’s hand when it comes to craft, but that doesn’t seem to be the point of Mathew’s Hidden Museum. Rather, while still the auteur of the project from the basic songwriting through the entire process of recording, Bethancourt seems to will himself to let go of some, not all, of his impulses toward structure and making songs in a given style. To be sure, Mathew’s Hidden Museum is a work of heavy psychedelia, but whether it’s the play with sonic hot-shit arrogance in “Born on the 3rd of July” or the almost-entirely-drift “Echoes Flow,” there are multiple avenues taken to get there, and to further the cliché, sometimes Bethancourt seems to take his hands off the wheel, all in the name of adding a bit of danger and unpredictability to the proceedings. The songs feel built up during the recording process, layers on layers, guitars spanning channels in ultra-fuzzy leads, piano looped in “Golden,” and so on, but as Bethancourt shows with “The Voyage of Psyche,” which is the longest inclusion here at 7:20, he’s also capable of constructing a legitimate jam on the foundation of his own drumming; improvising with himself even as he works to the plot in his own head.

Indeed, doing so seems part of what allows Mathew’s Hidden Museum to so comfortably reside in different styles; there is a purity in its nebulousness, a kind of plan-of-no-plan that inherently can never be as open as it is here again since Bethancourt will invariably have some firmer idea of what the project is after this first album, wherever its outward progression may lead, whenever, if ever, it does. It is of all the more value to the listener, then, to engage with these layers and variations in structure and intent, to find the places Mathew’s Hidden Museum is charging through and the places it isn’t, and to try to understand how songs like “Golden” and “(Golden) Kiss Divine” are speaking to each other and why or why not. It is doubly fortunate that the record allows for this interaction in its spaciousness, its diversity of approach, and its richness of performance.

Laughter begins “The Resurrectionist” along with a few mouthy noises — maybe a ‘meow’ tossed in there quickly — before the first notes of a fuzzy lead establish the dirge. A kick drum thuds, first with the guitar, then by itself, then rejoined. Harder distortion enters over a declining progression and is grandiose but raw, bordering on the first wash but not quite going all the way in and, at two minutes long, too short to really be a drone. But the long fade and stretch of silence before the troubled piano glimpse at the start of “Naked and Rolled in that Rotten Dirt” makes it a substantial mood-setting piece just the same. The second cut is soon onto a funk that resides as much in the emphasis of the snare drum hits as in its fuzzed-out guitar and bass, turning hypnotic before the lead lines come in to confirm the party underway, harmonies ripping back and forth, one channel then the other, setting the stage for Bethancourt‘s coming preach. He’s post-Dave Wyndorf, post-’70s soul, but echoing and swirling effects give a decisively lysergic bent around that well-grounded bass, drums and guitar.

Vocals move into a call and response, guitar effects are layered in, lines coming and going. Some cymbal crash is dared at 2:20 and seems like a good idea so Bethancourt follows that impulse through the next turn on the toms as more twisted distortion enters, a preface to the title-line intonation — a tale of who the fuck knows what — as the placement of “Naked and Rolled in That Rotten Dirt” feels as though Bethancourt is using heavy rock as a gateway to the multifaceted fare to come while still sounding fervent in his weirdo purposes. It’s only three minutes long, just one more than the intro, but “Naked and Rolled in That Rotten Dirt” is emblematic of the detail put into the construction of these songs more generally, and its somewhat madcap spirit carries even into the quietest moments of Mathew’s Hidden Museum. As even the name of the project/record hints, there’s something playful about the entire affair. Fun, and perhaps a bit subversive in that.

Bethancourt enters “Golden” sooner on vocals, but already by then the mood is different than “Naked and Rolled in that Rotten Dirt,” driven by stomp on the piano with more space in the drums. His voice is lower in register over the key dum-dum-da-dumdum that will repeat throughout the five-minute stretch, either looped or played straight through. Taps on a pan or some such trade channels through the verse, rhythmic in placement as well as in themselves. What might be melodica enters at the two-minute mark, then everything solidifies around an explosion led by voice layers, more taps on pan, and gradually evens out as that central rhythmic piano and drum figure comes forward again, having been buried under the brighter guitar but there all the while, peppered with flecks of guitar noise, not quite chords. Held organ lines and more prominent thuds after 3:30 make a duly horror-show setting for a return of the laughter from “The Resurrectionist,” as it turns out you’ve been in the dungeon or maybe it’s the laboratory all along and nostalgia was the trap that put you there. The drumless sinister-psych drone continues, melodica present again amid the drift, until it suddenly cuts out to residual echo. The only way to end it, really.

“The Voyage of Psyche” is a crucial moment, deepening the multi-hued scope of the album on the whole and boasting a kind of process-as-art mindset that seems at the heart of Mathew’s Hidden Museum itself. And it is fairly called a voyage as well, holding sustained notes of organ at its start with cymbal taps soon joining. The first change is at 40 seconds, and there’s something Kubrickian about it, then guitar kicks in at 1:05 with the organ and a melancholy blues vibe arises but is progressive too in an interplay of different keyboard layers, the organ and other synth working out some argument or other while the guitar recounts the plot; there are vocal ‘oohs’ but no lyrics. It’s loosely Floydian, but really that might just be the VHS grit in the video playing in my head for it. Some possible accordion or keyboard enters ahead of another change around that nailed-down organ line, a swirl-in of drums and a for-a-walk bassline show up, the song riding a groove by the time it’s passed four minutes.

It is a self-jam, which sounds easy enough on paper but requires a mentality limber enough that few actually can pull it off believably, let alone in a situation of self-recording as Bethancourt is here. His voice comes through but isn’t really part of the trip underway so much as an ambient reminder humans exist somewhere else. Fuzz guitar unveils one of the album’s finest instrumental hooks, and bass follows. Drums change then everything changes. The drums turn again, bass takes a solo and guitar makes its way back into that hook and carries it to the finish. Improvisation is at its core, the plot built from that. Songwriting for one, roughly conveyed but intentional in that. “The Voyage of Psyche” ends in its low-end heavy fuzz turns, a last tom hit, and “Echoes Flow” sweeps in to deliver on its titular promise almost immediately.

mathew's hidden museum

Contrasting the mostly-instrumental prior song, vocals float no less than guitar at first in “Echoes Flow,” and are more prominent. String-sound keys add flourish, harmonic shimmer, the lights bright, almost blinding but still a dream so there’s no conscious danger. Second verse is a little more forward vocally, a beach or an open field with an impossibly blue sky overhead, but channels swap and Bethancourt inhabits different levels of the mix before seeming to fade into it altogether until everything is one melodic churn and then it’s only been two minutes and you’re out in open space and there’s just a melody playing far away and then nothing. A mini-voyage of psyche, headed in its own direction as is so much of Mathew’s Hidden Museum, with the 33-second “Sinphony” gracefully entering from the silence, distinctly soundtracky with, yes, an orchestral lean, well placed to open side B and cut off in a way that “(Golden) Kiss Divine” won’t be when it picks up the thread of graceful gradualness and scoring some unseen visual at the album’s conclusion.

Elbowing in as only an American via British interpretation might, “Born on the 3rd of July” builds up through garage rock hairiness and feels like something of a return after the two songs before it moved away, Bethancourt speaking to Josiah or maybe the rampant swagger of his final outing with The Kings of Frog Island, but the solos are layered and a lead line comes across drenched in fuzz. It’s there twice, suitably Hendrixian, and all the while the drums still hold the this tension through the first minute. Guitar is freaking out soon before some la-la-la vocals start à la Chris Goss, but the guitar drains out the left channel and a more percussive jam takes hold for a moment, cymbals and hand drumming holding sway before the guitar starts coming back around.

Then suddenly, the verse, and that tension in the drums? Just so happens it’s been funk all along. And there you are, dancing. There’s a chorus but there’s also swirling guitar solos all over it and that’s cool too, you know. A shift at 3:20 brings the next stage as the drums work their way out and soon back with their own in-wormhole swirl across channels. Then the guitar sneaks back and directs all into a grunge twist and push, turning around to the verse, and back again like this has been the song the entire time. The drums move to cymbals, then back, then cymbals and back again and it’s the beginning of “Born on the 3rd of July” coming apart, which it does, like everything, before the wistful ’70s folk rock procession of “Summer Rain (Will Fall)” begins, too barebones in the drum sound to be wholly retro, but not far off.

Some willfully divergent lines of guitar have their say amid some classic-style soloing and a distinctly Beatles-circa-AbbeyRoad — I said Get Back when last I posted about the record, but I agree more with myself now, so take that as you will; the difference is the smoothness of tonality — and maybe we’ve been George Harrison all along as another instrumental hook makes its presence felt. It comes around a second time, with piano embellishment, the bassline buried but righteous. There’s a moment at 2:04 where the ride cymbal and piano and guitar seem like they want to wrap it up, but the ‘band’ takes “Summer Rain (Will Fall)” for another quick go before an actual crash and finish. If I was the daring type, I’d dare Bethancourt to put vocals on it.

“All of the Saints Will Sin Again” answers with acoustic strum and a voice nodding toward low-key Kurt Cobain in its seeming move to flesh out what grunge was in the second half of “Born on the 3rd of July,” but keyboard and electric guitar take the song someplace more London than Seattle, shades of Britpsych and what might be slide guitar or pedal steel filling out the repeated line, “If I was a gambling man,” before vocal change around 1:20 in, the melody held strong in an expressive highlight before it all drops out and the acoustic line reestablishes itself complemented by Curtis Mayfield strings and keys working in unison.

A chorus of the earlier vocal highlight sets a backdrop for a return of the vintage tonal tint of “Summer Rain (Will Fall)” in the lead, then it’s back to “Wish I was a gambling man” across channels, with swirls of guitar like radiation waves unfurled from one side of the song to the other, howling, purposefully repetitive. As “All of the Saints Will Sin Again” fades out, other voices join in to finish the line “Wish I was a gambling man” rising on the last word in three-part harmony as had happened at about 50 seconds into the song before a speedier turn of lyrics, but with more voices, as if to underscore the build that’s happened and the intensity beneath the serene but not at all still movement on the track’s surface. It ends, in any case, and all is quiet.

Its first half-minute or so isn’t actually empty, but it is the sound of expectation that’s there in the early going of “(Golden) Kiss Divine,” an as-noted response to the patience in “Sinphony,” broader in its low mixed drones before the fade-in starts in earnest around 30 seconds via a more prominent swell of keys. Sunrise is in organ and the swelling of the day results in exploratory prog, another manifestation of the idea of cinematic music, but more krautrock in its synthy realization, meditative and contemplative like Solaris, thoughtful in its way but maybe written in a more stream-of-conscious primal mindset. At 2:45 the next narrative begins in a minor conflict between drones and keys, a kind of back and forth before diplomacy wins the day, circa 3:20, and those drones and keys seem to around to face forward,.

Soon enough “(Golden) Kiss Divine” is a different kind of aural ethereality, the guitar way in back reminding of “And I Love Her” — that’s right, a second Beatles reference; live with it — while a soft guitar corresponds with “Echoes Flow” earlier, distilling psychedelia to a pastoral essence. That lead guitar over the wash of drone and organ is gorgeous, even as it turns somewhat foreboding after five minutes in, when you can hear fingers slide on strings quickly ahead of the keys swelling again, paradise so momentary en route to more dramatic lines of organ which fade out soon, that memory of soft guitar still part of it, and all is drawn down in the middle but there enough to say goodbye in its actual concluding fade, the resonance in the final movement of Mathew’s Hidden Museum both a payoff for the album and an understated example of the level of composition throughout. It is not a piece that would make sense in many other situations, but here, its flowering can’t help but fit.

That may well be the magic of Mathew’s Hidden Museum‘s Mathew’s Hidden Museum — how much the album makes its own place and what it allows to grow there. The ideas and terrains in which it ventures, united sometimes by not much more than the venturing itself, and the manner in which by the finish it comes to find peace with cohesion, the lack thereof, and its relationship to both. It feels like a deeply personal work, sometimes brave in its intimacy, and perhaps some of its more flippant moments are a bulwark against that on the part of Bethancourt, but the range and complexity manifested in the material isn’t to be understated, missed, or cast as purely self-indulgence from their maker. For what it’s worth, “(Golden) Kiss Divine” lets go more like a chapter ending than the entire novel, and one hopes that, however long it might take to do so, Bethancourt can find a way to continue to the story he’s telling here. It is one worth being told.

Mathew’s Hidden Museum, Mathew’s Hidden Museum (2023)

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Mathew’s Hidden Museum Announce Self-Titled LP Out Feb. 3; Premiere “Naked & Rolled in That Rotten Dirt”

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on November 4th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

mathew's hidden museum

When I asked Mathew Bethancourt, frontman of Josiah and spearhead of the solo-project Mathew’s Hidden Museum, what the name of this debut album was, he told me it was self-titled, “Like Led Zeppelin, etc.” Perfect.

As an artist, Bethancourt is not unthoughtful or unconsidered or lacking self-awareness. Mathew’s Hidden Museum is an experimentalist outlet, and the first full-length being announced here is set to release on Feb. 3 through Interstellar Smoke Records. So when he says it’s self-titled, “like Led Zeppelin,” I can’t help but think of all the other self-titled albums out there and why he might choose that specific one for a comparison point. Even over Black Sabbath.

Well, consider how that band flourished after their first record, raw and bluesy as it was. It was the testing ground for nearly everything they’d later become, and perhaps as Bethancourt unfurls the 10 songs and 41 minutes of Mathew’s Hidden Museum, having already done a proof of concept in 2020’s soft-launch Golden Echoes EP (review here), in a similar light. Expansive as it is, the full-length may just be the beginning of a broader exploration.

So be it. As a multi-instrumentalist/vocalist and producer, Bethancourt comfortably inhabits a variety of personae across the span, from the ethereal jab-fuzz of “Naked and Rolled in that Rotten Dirt” (premiering below) to the organ-led-then-bass-led-then-drum-solo-then-the-riff-comes-back seven-minute self-jam “The Voyage of Psyche,” which sounds improvised on top of its drums — a rare feat for a track invariably recorded one layer at a time to feel made up on the spot — dropping hints in “Sinphony” of the post-grunge-and-still-shimmering “All of the Saints Will Sin Again” only before “Summer Rain (Will Fall)” noodles out like a Beatles Get Back jam that Peter Jackson found and the prior “Born on the 3rd of July” mathew's hidden museum self titledlights its fuzz on fire with classic urgency.

The droning and spacious “Echoes Flow” caps side A and the even-more spacious and atmospherically weird keyboard piece “(Golden) Kiss Divine” answers back on side B, so there’s some underlying structure even where it least feels like it, but “The Resurrectionist” at the outset sets up open expectations, if the EP didn’t, and whether it’s the hard, low piano notes before the freakout in “Golden” or the alternate-universe strut in “Naked and Rolled in that Rotten Dirt,” Mathew’s Hidden Museum indeed offer a host of treasures for close examination and study. Or, you can put it on, be like, ‘Oh hey this is some weirdo shit right here’ and just dig on it as it happens. Totally up to you. The album seems cool with it either way.

And if the message of the self-titled is ‘this is where it starts’ rather than a declaration of everything Mathew’s Hidden Museum is as a project, yeah, that tracks. Even in bringing back Josiah with a series of reissues and the new album, We Lay on Cold Stone (review here), earlier this year, Bethancourt almost couldn’t help but progress in his craft while, you know, shredding as one will. Mathew’s Hidden Museum builds on that impulse while reminding of some of the off-kilter blues/garage moments during his time in The Kings of Frog Island in its dug-in, self-made spirit and outright refusal to limit itself to one thing or one style.

I’m gonna hope to have more to come before it’s out in February, but you can dig into “Naked and Rolled in the Rotten Dirt” on the player below, followed by some preliminary album info and a quote from Bethancourt on the track.

Please enjoy:

Interstellar Smoke Records brings forth a musical offering from the open mind of Mathew Bethancourt. The Josiah (and once Kings of Frog Island) frontman looks to the spaces between spaces for creative inspiration, evoking a sense of all things fornicating, all the time. Make of this what you will as you experience Mathew’s Hidden Museum. Limited Edition LP/CD/MC available to pre-order from Interstellar Smoke Records now. Album to be released February 3rd 2023.

“An ode to the season of decay. Naked & Rolled In That Rotten Dirt speaks to my love of Autumn. In all its dying, lay an inherent beauty. Senses filled with the sent of sweet damp rotting flora and the sight of burning leaves setting the sky a flame. Mycelium earth magick guides us across narrow paths, through blackening woods to call at Lady Winters door. The earth, the dirt, enriched by death will summon new life.”
Mathew: 31.10

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Cavern Deep Premiere Philip Glass Cover “Koyaanisqatsi” in New Video

Posted in Bootleg Theater on October 11th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

cavern deep logo

The Philip Glass piece ‘Koyaanisqatsi’ takes its name from the Hopi language and translates as ‘life out of balance.’ Fair enough, and certainly more erudite than the modern English equivalent, which would probably just be ‘fucked up’ because we actually live in Idiocracy.

Speaking of classic filmmaking, “Koyaanisqatsi” was first featured on the no-words-just-images-and-music 1982 documentary Koyaanisqatsi: Life Out of Balance by Godfrey Reggio (who turned it into a trilogy), and in addition to being covered by Cows previously and featuring on The Simpsons apparently also showed up on season four of Stranger Things. Thanks, Wikipedia. So needless to say, the piece has had a fascinating life, and that continues as the Umeå, Sweden-based Cavern Deep offer their interpretation via the live video premiering below.

It’s now been over a year since Cavern Deep announced they’d finished recording their second album less than a month after the release of their self-titled debut (review here). They’d already by then proceeded through a series of videos similar to this one playing the album tracks front to back, and later last year they’d unveil a cover of Frank Zappa‘s “Muffin Man” (posted here) and an instrumental single “L B & M,” and they’ve continued writing even as there’s reportedly another original single that will follow this cover, more besides and the next album, which is apparently completely finished, but most of 2022 seems to have been geared toward getting their act together in terms of live performance; doing shows, in other words. Reasonable if, you know, you want to be a band.

“Koyaanisqatsi” is out Oct. 14 as a standalone single and gives a look at their recording process — guitar, bass, drums basic tracks together in the room, vocals and lead guitar punched in after; the editing makes that smooth in the video — and is a suitably atmospheric work for the band to take on considering what they offered throughout the self-titled. I don’t yet know what’s in store for the follow-up or when it will arrive, but after it seemed like every week of 2021 they had something new come down the wire, I’m glad to hear them put something new out. And that’s it. Simple as that.

The video for “Koyaanisqatsi” is below, followed by comment from the band:

Cavern Deep, “Koyaanisqatsi” video premiere

Max Malmer on “Koyaanisqatsi”:

“We in Cavern Deep have been working a lot behind the curtain lately to get some new music out into the world. Our second album is already mixed and mastered, and we have a lot of interesting single releases in the works as well. One of them features Thomas V. Jäger from Monolord.

So there will be a steady stream of releases from now on and this is the first of them. We have made a cover of “Koyaanisqatsi”, a Philip Glass piece that features in the movie with the same name. Our thinking was to make a cover of a non-Doom song that still Dooms more than any Doom we have ever heard.

Enjoy.”

Cavern Deep is:
Kenny-Oswald Duvfenberg – Guitars and Vocals
Max Malmer – Bass and Vocals
Dennis Sjödin – Drums, Backup Vocals and Keys

Cavern Deep, Cavern Deep (2021)

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Sergio Ch. Posts “El Manantial”; The Red Rooster Coming Oct. 14

Posted in Whathaveyou on October 4th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Ever prolific and experimental, Sergio Chotsourian — aka Sergio Ch., as I know you know — will digitally release his latest solo album, The Red Rooster, on Oct. 14 through Spotify, Bandcamp, etc. That’s next week, which I also know you know. Vinyl is set to follow for the nine-tracker early next year in continued collaboration with Interstellar Smoke Records, and of course Chotsourian‘s own South American Sludge imprint has a hand in putting it out as well.

As, frankly, it should. You’ll note Chotsourian — who earlier this year surprised with an unexpected fourth Ararat album, Volumen 4 (review here), and whose pedigree includes not only that band and his solo work, but also Brno, Soldati and, once upon a time, South American desert rock trailblazers Los Natas — plays all the instruments on the song “El Manantial” that’s streaming below ahead of the new record’s release, and recorded it. Self-sufficiency is nothing new for him, either in terms of aesthetic or the practicalities of writing, performing and producing music.

“El Manantial” has a pretty bass-heavy sound that puts it in my mind in alliance with Ararat‘s general feel. I don’t think it’s a song that band has done, but it’s tempting to add a “yet” to that, since Chotsourian has certainly bled material over from one project to another, sometimes resulting in a completely different listening experience. I have said “why do I recognize this?” many times through the years. Generally, there’s a reason.

I’ve paid respect to Chotsourian‘s general ouevre over the last, I don’t know, 20 years now?, and no regrets, but I’ll note that especially as he’s opened new avenues for expression in solo work and collaborations, including those with his own family, his breadth as an artist has likewise flourished. One more thing I know you know: the same cannot be said of everybody who was once signed to Man’s Ruin. As an artist, he is unto himself.

So here’s a bit about the track and, of course, the track, which is why we’re here in the first place:

Sergio ch

ADELANTO DEL NUEVO DISCO DE SERGIO CH. – “THE RED ROOSTER”
GRABADO, MEZCLADO Y MASTERIZADO EN DEATH STUDIOS POR SERGIO CH.
ARTWORK POR SERGIO CH.
PRODUCIDO POR SERGIO CH.

SERGIO CH. – GUITARRA, KEYS, BASS & VOCALS

https://sasrecords.bandcamp.com/album/the-red-rooster
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INTERSTELLAR SMOKE RECORDS
SOUTH AMERICAN SLUDGE RECORDS

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Sergio Ch., “El Manantial”

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