Quarterly Review: Katatonia, Black Moon Circle, Bloodhorse, Aawks, Moon Destroys, Astral Magic, Lammping, Fuzz Sagrado, When the Deadbolt Breaks, A/lpaca

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

quarterly-review-winter 2023

Alright, y’all. This is where it ends. The Quarterly Review has been an absolute blast, an easy, fun, good time to have, but inevitably it must come to close and that’s where we’re at. Last day. Last 10 releases. Thanks if you’ve kept up. I’ll be back I think in September with another one of these, probably longer.

Hope you’ve found something killer this week. I did.

Quarterly Review #41-50:

Katatonia, Nightmares as Extensions of the Waking State

katatonia nightmares as extensions of the waking state

Nightmares as Extensions of the Waking State is the first long-player in the 34-year history of Katatonia — upwards of their 13th album, depending on what you count — to not feature guitarist Anders Nyström. That leaves frontman Jonas Renkse as the remaining founder of the band, with two new guitarists in Nico Elgstrand and Sebastian Svalland, bassist Niklas Sandin and drummer Daniel Moilanen, steering one of heavy music’s most identifiable sounds in new ways. “Wind of No Change” is duly subversive, and “Departure Trails” basks in texture in a way Katatonia have periodically throughout the last 20 years, but the Opethian severity of they keys in “The Light Which I Bleed” and the declarative chug at the end of opener “Thrice” speak to the band’s awareness of the need to occasionally be very, very heavy, even as “Efter Solen” shifts into dark, emotive electronics ahead of the sweeping finale “In the Event Of…” Renkse has never wanted for expression as a singer. If he’s to be the driving force behind Katatonia, fair enough for how that manifests here.

Katatonia website

Napalm Records website

Black Moon Circle, A Million Leagues Beyond: Moskus Sessions Vol. I

black moon circle a million leagues beyond moskus sessions vol1

Trondheim, Norway’s Black Moon Circle recorded the four-song set of A Million Leagues Beyond: Moskus Sessions Vol. 1 at the hometown venue of Moskus, a small bar that, to hear them tell it, mostly hosts jazz. Fair enough for cosmic heavy psychedelic grunge rock to join the fray, I should think. It was late in 2023, so earlier that year’s Leave the Ghost Behind (review here) full-length features readily, with “Snake Oil” following the opener “Drifting Across the Plains” — which is jazzy enough, certainly — ahead of the chunkier-riffed “Serpent” and a 20-minute take on “Psychedelic Spacelord (Lighter Than Air),” which has become a signature piece for the three-piece, suitably expansive. If you know Black Moon Circle‘s studio albums, you know they do as much as they can live. Honestly, A Million Leagues Beyond: Moskus Sessions Vol. I isn’t all that different, but it’s definitely a performance worth enjoying.

Black Moon Circle on Bandcamp

Crispin Glover Records website

Bloodhorse, A Malign Star

bloodhorse a malign star

Kudos if you had ‘new Bloodhorse‘ on your 2025 Stoner Rock Bingo card or caught it when they launched an Instagram page last year. I certainly didn’t. The Massachusetts aughts-type prog-leaning riffmakers were last head from with their 2009 debut album, Horizoner (review here), and the six-song/28-minute A Malign Star serves as a vital return, if not one brimming with good vibes as “The Somnambulist” dream-crushes its four-minute course, the band not so much dwelling in atmospheres like the relatively careening “Shallowness,” but getting into a song, making their point, and getting out. This works to their advantage in opener “Saboteur” and the chuggier title-track that follows, but even six-minute closer “Illumination” retains a sense of immediacy amid the dirty fuzz and comparatively laid back roll. This band was once the shape of sludge to come. 16 years later, the future has taken a different course and everybody’s a little more middle-aged, but Bloodhorse still kind of feel like they’re waiting for the world to catch up.

Bloodhorse on Instagram

Iodine Recordings website

Aawks, On Through the Sky Maze

aawks on through the sky maze

Should you find yourself thinking you didn’t remember Canadian riffers Aawks — also stylized all-caps: AAWKS — having quite such a nasty streak, you’re not alone. Their 2022 debut, Heavy on the Cosmic (review here), had a take that seems like fuzzy dream-pop in comparison to “Celestial Magick” and the screamy sludge that populates On Through the Sky Maze, their second LP. The nine-song 48-minute full-length is the first to feature bassist/vocalist Ryan “Grime Pup” Mailman alongside guitarist/vocalist Kris Dzierzbicki, guitarist Roberto Paraíso, and drummer Randylin Babic, and songs like “Lost Dwellers” or the mellow-spacier “Drifting Upward,” with no harsh vocals, seem to hit more directly, in addition to arriving in a different context with the “blegh”s of “Wandering Supergiants” and “Caerdoia,” and so on. In the end, Mailman‘s rasp becomes one more tool in Aawks‘ songwriting shed, and the band have more breadth and are less predictable for it. Call that a win, even before you get to the record being good.

Aawks website

Black Throne Productions website

Moon Destroys, She Walks by Moonlight

Moon Destroys She Walks by Moonlight

The shimmering, floating guitar in “Echoes (The Empress)” tells part of the story in the deep-running The Cure influence, and the somewhat moody vocals of Charlie Suárez echo that emotional foundation, which is coupled in that song and throughout Moon Destroys‘ debut album, She Walks by Moonlight, with a willful progressivism in the songwriting, attention to detail in the arrangements, melodies, even the mix. Comprised of Suárez, guitarist Juan Montoya (ex-Torche), bassist Arnold Nese and drummer/producer Evan Diprima (Royal Thunder), the band are able to set a wash in place that’s not deceptively heavy in “The Nearness of June” (an earlier demo track) because it’s beating you over the head with tone, but still has more to offer than just its own heft. “Only” sounds like heavied-up proto-emo, while the roll of “Set Them Free” is massive in terms of both its riff and its big feelings. If you’re willing to let it grow on you, She Walks by Moonlight can be a space to occupy.

Moon Destroys website

Limited Fanfare website

Astral Magic, In Space We Trust

Astral Magic In Space We Trust

In Space We Trust is one of four-so-far full-lengths that Santtu Laakso — multi-instrumentalist, vocalist, composer and producer — has out between Astral Magic and related collaborations and projects. It’s not a pace of releasing one can keep up with, but if you need a check-in from the generation ship that is Astral Magic, chances are Laakso is out there on some voyage or other between classic space rock and clearheaded prog, spanning galaxies. The eight-song/42-minute In Space We Trust pairs him with lead guitarist Jonathan Segel (Øresund Space Collective, etc.), and one should not be surprised at the cosmic nature of the resulting music. The pair get into some sci-fi atmospherics in “Ancient Pilots” and “Alien Emperor,” but the synth and guitar are leading the way across the galaxy and the vibe across the board is more Voyager and less Nostromo, so yes, smooth solar-sailing the whole way through.

Astral Magic on Bandcamp

Astral Magic on Facebook

Lammping x Bloodshot Bill, Never Never

IMGbloodshoot bill lammping never never

The dreamy guitar, semi-rapped vocal, and dub backbeat give the opening title-track of Never Never a decidedly ’90s cast, but it’s not the summary of what Toronto’s Lammping have to offer in their collaboration with weirdo-rockabilly solo artist Bloodshot Bill, bringing together their urbane, grounded psych and studiocraft, samples, etc., with the singer/guitarist’s low, sometimes bluesy delivery across seven songs totaling 15 minutes, peppering the vibe-on-vibes of “Never Never,” “One and Own” and “Won’t Back Down” — the longest inclusion at 3:23 — with ramble and flow alike, with experimental jawns like “Coconut,” “0 and 1” or “Anything is Possible” and the closer “Nitey Nite,” all under two minutes long and each going their own way with the casual cool one has come to expect from Lammping, quietly staking out their own wavelength while still sounding like something from a half-remembered soundtrack to a radder version of your life. This is one of four releases Lammping will reportedly have over the next year or so. Way on board for whatever’s coming next.

Lammping on Instagram

We Are Busy Bodies on Bandcamp

Fuzz Sagrado, Strange Daze

fuzz sagrado strange daze

After the disbanding of Samsara Blues Experiment in 2021, guitarist/vocalist Christian Peters — who had already by then moved from Germany to Brazil — unveiled Fuzz Sagrado with EPs in July and October of that year. Fuzz Sagrado‘s 2021 self-titled (review here) and Vida Pura EPs are included on Strange Daze, a new compilation of tracks unified through a remaster by John McBain, showcasing the early outreach of keyboard and guitar that served as the foundation for the project. As Peters readies a live band for an eventual return to the stage, Strange Daze demonstrates how multifaceted the growth has been in terms of songwriting and still feels exploratory in hindsight as it did when the material was first released. Also included is the jammy “Arapongas,” which wasn’t on either EP but was recorded around the same time. Something of a curio or a fan-piece, but I ain’t arguing.

Fuzz Sagrado website

Electric Magic Records website

When the Deadbolt Breaks, In the Glow of the Vatican Fire

when the deadbolt breaks in the glow of the vatican fire

A couple different modes on When the Deadbolt BreaksIn the Glow of the Vatican Fire, which is the long-running Connecticut malevolent doomers’ umpteenth album, running 63 minutes and eight songs. Some of those are longer pieces, like opener “The Scythe Will Come” (12:24), “The Chaos of Water” (14:02), “The Deep Well” (10:42) and “Red Sparrow” (10:57), but interspersed with these are a succession of shorter tracks, and the breakdown between them isn’t just that the short songs are fast and the long songs are slow. Certainly the ripping early portions (and the later, more minimalist spaciousness) of “The Chaos of Water” argue against this, and the dynamic turns out to be correspondingly complex to suit the abiding murk of mood, as founding guitarist/vocalist Aaron Lewis and co-singer Cherilynne provide foreboding croon to suit the lo-fi, creeping, distorted terrors of the music surrounding. This is When the Deadbolt Breaks absolutely in their element; bleak, churn-chaotic, expressive, immersive. They’re able to put you where they want you whether you want to go or not.

When the Deadbolt Breaks on Bandcamp

When the Deadbolt Breaks on Instagram

A/lpaca, Laughter

alpaca laughter

It may have sat on the shelf for two years since recording finished in 2023, but don’t worry, it’s still from the future. Laughter is the second-on-Sulatron full-length from Italian experimentalists A/lpaca, and it sees them push deeper into electronic elements and ambiences, keeping some of the krautrock elements of their 2021’s Make it Better, but with songs that are shorter on average and that stand ready to convey a sense of quirk in the keyboard elements or the Devo verses of the title-track, which isn’t without its aspect of shove. Does it get weird? You bet your ass it does. “Bianca’s Videotape,” “Who’s in Love Daddy?,” the post-punk synthery meeting doomed fuzz on “Empty Chairs,” the list goes on. Actually, it’s just the tracklisting and it’s all pretty freaked out, so as long as you know going in that the band are working from their own standard of weirdoism, making the jump into the keyboardy gorge of “Kyrie” or the new wave-y “Don’t Talk” should be no problem. If you heard the last record, yeah, this is different. Seems like the next one will probably be different again too. Not everyone wants to do the same thing all the time.

A/lpaca on Bandcamp

Sulatron Records store

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Lammping to Begin Four-Album Cycle June 27 With Never Never

Posted in Whathaveyou on May 19th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

Lammping (Photo by Adrian Cvitkovic)

Toronto’s Lammping are setting forth on a four-album cycle of releases to come in the next, I don’t know, year and a half?, with Never Never, a collaboration with Montreal rockabilly solo artist Bloodshot Bill. It’s not Lammping‘s first outside-genre collaboration and it’s not the last of the cycle. They’ve got a hip-hop record coming too, plus a regular ol’ Lammping record presumably to assuage the listener contingent less down with all that dub, though really, if that’s the case, you probably didn’t get on board with Lammping in the first place.

Dub comes in here too, duh, as well as classic hip-hop, psych guitar and nuanced hypercool, an urbane sound but not placeable to anything other than sound collage or Lammping‘s own expanding vibe. They know (and I know) this isn’t going to be for everyone, but it’s 15 solid minutes of potentially stepping partway out of your comfort zone as a listener, and it’s cool besides. I feel like maybe you can handle it. If you need me to be your dad and tell you it’ll be okay, it’ll be okay.

From the PR wire:

LAMMPING Announces Never Never – First of a Four-Album Sonic Voyage

New Album Never Never Releases June 27, 2025

Pre-Order Link: https://lammping.bandcamp.com/album/never-never

Toronto’s shape-shifting psych project LAMMPING will release Never Never – the first in a four-part album series – on June 27 via We Are Busy Bodies. Lammping started as a heavy psych band, but things shifted when producer Mikhail Galkin returned to the kind of hip-hop production he was doing in his teens. Remixing records for Badge Époque Ensemble and Uh Huh under the Lammping name cracked the project wide open-what began as a one-off stylistic swerve became a long-term permission to make anything, in any genre. Now, whether it’s boom-bap, fuzzed-out folk, beat tape interludes, or full psych freakouts, it all fits. This upcoming cycle is their most ambitious yet: four LPs released over 12-18 months, each one exploring a different corner of their increasingly unpredictable universe.

The series kicks off with Never Never, a collaborative LP with rockabilly wildman Bloodshot Bill. The record blends psych-rock textures with ‘90s-style boom-bap, turning lo-fi samples and breakbeat drumming into cinematic, genre-dissolving cuts. “Never Never” (the lead single) and the follow-up “Won’t Back Down” showcase Lammping’s ability to reshape a voice like Bill’s into something strange and mesmerizing. Think LL Cool J meets Spacemen 3 – if they were trapped in a twilight zone rerun.

“I always loved Bill’s voice—it’s harsh, elastic, and super expressive,” says Lammping’s Mikhail Galkin. “We just hit the studio one day and one song turned into three. From there, the album built itself around those sessions.”

The second album, currently in production, brings together longtime Toronto collaborators Drew Smith (Dr. Ew, The Bicycles) and Chris Cummings (Marker Starling). The result is something Galkin describes as “CSNY harmonies over early-’90s hip-hop drums, fuzzed-out guitars, and synth textures.” What began as a pretty, melodic record soon took a heavier turn: “It’s like a heavy-psyched out yacht rock album – if the yacht was slowly sinking.”

The third LP will be a return to the full Lammping band-a stylistic microcosm that threads together acoustic folk, beat interludes, blown-out psych riffs, and off-kilter bops. Tracks range from soul-sampled boom-bap in the style of Madlib to poppier moments reminiscent of Real Estate or QOTSA. “I’ve always loved albums like Paul’s Boutique or Prince Paul’s De La stuff-where you throw everything at the wall but it still somehow works.”

The fourth and final album will land as a full hip-hop collaboration with rapper Theo 3, a Toronto underground legend and longtime collaborator of Galkin’s from his DJ Alibi days. It features Lammping flipping their own recordings, alongside obscure Soviet records from Galkin’s production roots. The goal? A surrealist homage to golden era Toronto hip-hop—filtered through Lammping’s psychedelic lens.

Together, the series represents a full-circle moment for Lammping, who began as a heavy psych band before veering boldly into sample-based production and remix culture. Their 2022 and 2023 remix projects (for Badge Époque Ensemble and Uh Huh) confused early fans but in hindsight, those left turns became permission to go anywhere.

“Once people got hip, they stopped being surprised—we could do anything and it still felt like us,” Galkin says. “Now people expect the left turns.”

This project is funded in part by FACTOR, the Government of Canada and Canada’s private radio broadcasters.

Pre-Order Link: https://lammping.bandcamp.com/album/never-never

Lammping is a Toronto-based psych project led by composer/producer Mikhail Galkin and drummer Jay Anderson. Galkin has a diverse background, having produced for hip-hop legends like J-Live, Boldy James, and People Under The Stairs, as well as releasing a critically acclaimed solo album as DJ Alibi and working as a film/tv composer. Anderson is a seasoned figure in the Toronto indie scene, playing in bands such as Badge Epoque Ensemble, Biblical, ROY and many others.

The two first connected after seeing each other perform in different projects and bonding over their shared love for ’90s New York hip-hop, skate videos, DIY culture, Beach Boy harmonies and everything in between. The project was born from their desire to create music without limitations – driven by a spirit of exploration, embracing all kinds of genres, sounds, and influences under the Lammping umbrella. The result is a uniquely eclectic project where anything goes, as long as it feels true to their creative instincts. The live version of the band is a 5-piece, with Toronto musicians Colm Hinds, Scott Hannigan and Matt Aldred lending their talents on vocals, guitar and bass.

https://www.instagram.com/lammping
https://lammping.bandcamp.com/
https://open.spotify.com/artist/1ZrzRmbuxvCeFSpEbFpbXZ

Lammping, Never Never (2025)

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