Quarterly Review: Tortuga, Spidergawd, Morag Tong, Conny Ochs, Ritual King, Oldest Sea, Dim Electrics, Mountain of Misery, Aawks, Kaliyuga Express

Posted in Reviews on November 30th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

The-Obelisk-Quarterly-Review

Generally I think of Thursday as the penultimate day of a given Quarterly Review. This one I was thinking of adding more days to get more stuff in ahead of year-end coverage coming up in December. I don’t know what that would do to my weekend — actually, yes I do — but sometimes it’s worth it. I’m yet undecided. Will let you know tomorrow, or perhaps not. Dork of mystery, I am.

Today is PACKED with cool sounds. If you haven’t found something yet that’s really hit you, it might be your day.

Quarterly Review #31-40:

Tortuga, Iterations

TORTUGA Iterations

From traditionalist proto-doom and keyboard-inflected prog to psychedelic jamming and the Mountain-style start-stop riff on “Lilith,” Poznań, Poland’s Tortuga follow 2020’s Deities (discussed here) with seven tracks and 45 minutes that come across as simple and barebones in the distortion of the guitar and the light reverb on the vocals, but the doom rock doesn’t carry from “Lilith” into “Laspes,” which has more of a ’60s psych crux, a mellow but not unjoyful meander in its first half turning to a massive lumber in the second, all the more elephantine with a solo overtop. They continue throughout to cross the lines between niches — “Quaus” has some dungeon growls, “Epitaph” slogs emotive like Pallbearer, etc. — and offer finely detailed performances in a sound malleable to suit the purposes of their songs. Polish heavy doesn’t screw around. Well, at least not any more than it wants to. Tortuga‘s creative reach becomes part of the character of the album.

Tortuga on Facebook

Napalm Records website

Spidergawd, VII

spidergawd vii

I’m sorry, I gotta ask: What’s the point of anything when Spidergawd can put out a record like VII and it’s business as usual? Like, the world doesn’t stop for a collective “holy shit” moment. Even in the heavy underground, never mind general population. These are the kinds of songs that could save lives if properly employed to do so, and for the Norwegian outfit, it’s just what they do. The careening hooks of “Sands of Time” and “The Tower” at the start, the melodies across the span. The energy. I guess this is dad rock? Shit man, I’m a dad. I’m not this cool. Spidergawd have seven records out and I feel like Metallica should’ve been opening for them at stadiums this past summer, but they remain criminally underrated and perhaps use that as flexibility around their pop-heavy foundation to explore new ideas. The last three songs on VII — “Afterburner,” “Your Heritage” and “…And Nothing But the Truth” — are among the strongest and broadest Spidergawd have ever done, and “Dinosaur” and the classic-metal ripper “Bored to Death” give them due preface. One of the best active heavy rock bands, living up to and surpassing their own high standards.

Spidergawd on Facebook

Stickman Records website

Crispin Glover Records website

Morag Tong, Grieve

Morag Tong Grieve

Rumbling low end and spacious guitar, slow flowing drums and contemplative vocals, and some charred sludge for good measure, mark out the procession of “At First Light” on Morag Tong‘s third album and first for Majestic Mountain Records, the four-song Grieve. Moving from that initial encapsulation through the raw-throat sludge thud of most of “Passages,” they crash out and give over to quiet guitar at about four minutes in and set up the transition to the low-end groove-cool of “A Stem’s Embrace,” a sleepy fluidity hitting its full voluminous crux after three minutes in, crushing from there en route to its noisy finish at just over nine minutes long. That would be the epic finisher of most records, but Morag Tong‘s grievances extend to the 20-minute “No Sun, No Moon,” which at 20 minutes is a full-length’s progression on its own. At very least the entirety of side B, but more than the actual runtime is the theoretical amount of space covered as the four-piece shift from ambient drone through huge plod and resolve the skyless closer with a crushing delve into post-sludge atmospherics. That’s as fitting an end as one could ask for an offering that so brazenly refuses to follow impulses other than its own.

Morag Tong on Facebook

Majestic Mountain Records store

Conny Ochs, Wahn Und Sinn

Conny Ochs Wahn Und Sinn

The nine-song Wahn Und Sinn carries the distinction of being the first full-length from German singer-songwriter Conny Ochs — also known for his work in Ananda Mida and his collaboration with Wino — to be sung in his own language. As a non-German speaker, I won’t pretend that doesn’t change the listening experience, but that’s the idea. Words and melodies in different languages take on corresponding differences in character, and so in addition to appreciating the strings, pianos, acoustic and electric guitars, and, in the case of “Welle,” a bit of static noise in a relatively brief electronic soundscape, hearing Ochs‘ delivery no less emotive for switching languages on the cinematic “Grimassen,” or the lounge drama of “Ding” earlier on, it’s a new side from a veteran figure whose “experimentalism” — and no, I’m not talking about singing in your own language as experimental, I’m talking about Trialogos there — is backburnered in favor of more traditional, still rampantly melancholy pop arrangements. It sounds like someone who’s decided they can do whatever the hell they feel like their songs should making that a reality. Only an asshole would hold not speaking the language against that.

Conny Ochs on Facebook

Exile on Mainstream website/a>

Ritual King, The Infinite Mirror

ritual king the infinite mirror

I’m going to write this review as though I’m speaking directly to Ritual King because, well, I am. Hey guys. Congrats on the record. I can hear a ton going on with it. Some of Elder‘s bright atmospherics and rhythmic twists, some more familiar stoner riffage repurposed to suit a song like “Worlds Divide” after “Flow State” calls Truckfighters to mind, the songs progressive and melodic. The way you keep that nod in reserve for “Landmass?” That’s what I’m talking about. Here’s some advice you didn’t ask for: Keep going. I’m sure you have big plans for next year, and that’s great, and one thing leads to the next. You’re gonna have people for the next however long telling you what you need to do. Do what feels right to you, and keep in mind the decisions that led you to where you are, because you’re right there, headed to the heart of this thing you’re discovering. Two records deep there’s still a lot of potential in your sound, but I think you know a track like “Tethered” is a victory on its own, and that as big as “The Infinite Mirror” gets at the end, the real chance it takes is in the earlier vocal melody. You’re a better band than people know. Just keep going. Thanks.

Ritual King on Facebook

Ripple Music website

Oldest Sea, A Birdsong, A Ghost

oldest sea a birdsong a ghost cropped

Inhabiting the sort of alternately engulfing and minimal spaces generally occupied by the likes of Bell Witch, New Jersey’s Oldest Sea make their full-length debut with A Birdsong, A Ghost and realize a bleakness of mood that is affecting even in its tempo, seeming to slow the world around it to its own crawl. The duo of Samantha Marandola and Andrew Marandola, who brought forth their Strange and Eternal EP (review here) in 2022, find emotive resonance in a death-doom build through the later reaches of “Untracing,” but the subsequent three-minute-piece-for-chorus-and-distorted-drone “Astronomical Twilight” and the similarly barely-there-until-it-very-much-is closer “Metamorphose” mark out either end of the extremes while “The Machines That Made Us Old” echoes Godflesh in its later riffing as Samantha‘s voice works through screams en route to a daringly hopeful drone. Volatile but controlled, it is a debut of note for its patience and vulnerability as well as its deep-impact crash and consuming tone.

Oldest Sea on Facebook

Darkest Records on Bandcamp

Dim Electrics, Dim Electrics

dim electrics dim electrics

Each track on Dim Electrics‘ self-titled five-songer LP becomes a place to rest for a while. No individual piece is lacking activity, but each cut has room for the listener to get inside and either follow the interweaving aural patterns or zone out as they will. Founded by Mahk Rumbae, the Vienna-based project is meditative in the sense of basking in repetition, but flashes like the organ in the middle of “Saint” or the shimmy that takes hold in 18-minute closer “Dream Reaction” assure it doesn’t reside in one place for too much actual realtime, of which it’s easy to lose track when so much krautgazey flow is at hand. Beginning with ambience, “Ways of Seeing” leads the listener deeper into the aural chasm it seems to have opened, and the swirling echoes around take on a life of their own in the ecosystem of some vision of space rock that’s also happening under the ground — past and future merging as in the mellotron techno of “Memory Cage” — which any fool can tell you is where the good mushrooms grow. Dug-in, immersive, engaging if you let it be; Dim Electrics feels somewhat insular in its mind-expansion, but there’s plenty to go around if you can put yourself in the direction it’s headed.

Dim Electrics on Facebook

Sulatron Records webstore

Mountain of Misery, In Roundness

Mountain of Misery In Roundness

A newcomer project from Kamil Ziółkowski, also known for his contributions as part of Polish heavy forerunners Spaceslug, the tone-forward approach of Mountain of Misery might be said to be informed by Ziółkowski‘s other project in opener “Not Away” or the penultimate “Climb by the Sundown,” with their languid vocals and slow-rolling tsunami fuzz in the spirit of heavy psych purveyors Colour Haze and even more to the point Sungrazer, but the howling guitar in the crescendo of closer “The Misery” and the all-out assault of “Hang So Low” distinguish the band all around. “The Rain is My Love” sways in the album’s middle, but it’s in “Circle in Roundness” that the 36-minute LP has its most subdued stretch, letting the spaces filled with fuzz elsewhere remain open as the verse builds atop the for-now-drumless expanse. Whatever familiar aspects persist, Mountain of Misery is its own band, and In Roundness is the exciting beginning of a new creative evolution.

Mountain of Misery on Facebook

Electric Witch Mountain Recordings on Facebook

Aawks, Luna

aawks luna

The featured new single, “The Figure,” finds Barrie, Ontario’s Aawks somewhere between Canadian tonal lords Sons of Otis and the dense heavy psych riffing and melodic vocals of an act like Snail, and if you think I’m about to complain about that, you’ve very clearly never been to this site before. So hi, and welcome. The four-song Luna EP is Aawks‘ second short release of 2023 behind a split with Aiwass (review here), and the trio take on Flock of Seagulls and Pink Floyd for covers of the new wave radio hit “I Ran” and the psychedelic ur-classic “Julia Dream” before a live track, “All is Fine,” rounds out. As someone who’s never seen the band live, the additional crunch falls organic, and brings into relief the diversity Aawks show in and between these four songs, each of which inhabits a place in the emerging whole of the band’s persona. I don’t know if we’ll get there, but sign me up for the Canadian heavy revolution if this is the form it’s going to take.

Aawks on Facebook

Black Throne Productions website

Kaliyuga Express, Warriors & Masters

Kaliyuga Express Warriors and Masters

The collaborative oeuvre of UK doomsperimental guitarist Mike Vest (Bong, Blown Out, Ozo, 11Paranoias, etc.) grows richer as he joins forces with Finnish trio Nolla to produce Kaliyuga ExpressWarriors & Masters, which results in three tracks across two sides of far-out cosmic fuzz, shades of classic kraut and space rocks are wrought with jammy intention; the goal seeming to be the going more than the being gone as Vest and company burn through “Nightmare Dimensions” and the shoegazing “Behind the Veil” — the presence of vocals throughout is a distinguishing feature — hums in high and low frequencies in a repetitive inhale of stellar gases on side A while the 18:58 side B showdown “Endless Black Space” misdirects with a minute of cosmic background noise before unfurling itself across an exoplanet’s vision of cool and returning, wait for it, back to the drone from whence it came. Did you know stars are recycled all the time? Did you know that if you drop acid and peel your face off there’s another face underneath? Your third eye is googly. You can hear voices in the drones. Let me know what they tell you.

Kaliyuga Express on Facebook

Riot Season Records store

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Desertfest London 2024 Makes First Lineup Announcement

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

desertfest LONDON 2024 banner

Getting Masters of Reality over has been a project in the works for Desertfest London since before the pandemic, and it looks like 2024 will be the year. The band burned a few bridges over the last couple years when frontman Chris Goss took a hardline right-wing stance on issues surrounding covid and whatever else (that kind of thing will win fans as well in some cases), but their work remains the stuff of legend and any time there’s a connection to OG-era Californian desert rock — as there is with Goss, who was there in his own band and as producer for Kyuss, etc. — that’s a boon and a good get for Desertfest generally, though even if you’re not a Masters of Reality fan owing to politics or just never having gotten on board, the entire line right under them on the poster is unfuckwithable: GodfleshMonolordAcid King and Ufomammut. Goodness gracious. And the next name is Brant Bjork. Gonna be Desertfest, to be sure.

Warms my cold dead ‘eart to see Stinking Lizaveta and Darsombra confirmed — I’ll put Domkraft in that sentimental-favorite category as well, and check out fellow Swedes Astroqueen doing some more traveling — and I look forward to the grandiose plaudits soon to be bestowed on Warpstormer and Goblinsmoker after their respective appearances, which is something Sergeant Thunderhoof should be able to help them through. With Clouds Taste Satanic traversing the Atlantic again, and others like Pijn and DuskwoodMantarMaserati and Monkey3, there’s a three-day fest’s worth of acts already revealed in this first announcement and probably two or three more three-day fests’ worth of names to come. I’ll tell you outright I’d shit a brick to see this. If you’re gonna be there, know how lucky you are.

From the PR wire:

Desertfest London announces 25 bands for 2024 edition including headliners Masters of Reality plus, Godflesh, Monolord, Acid King, Ufomammut & more

Friday 17th May – Sunday 19th May 2024 | Weekend Tickets now on sale

Desertfest London have unveiled 25 bands for their 12th edition, taking place across multiple venues in Camden next May 17th – 19th.

Following their pandemic induced cancellation in 2020, Desertfest is thrilled to announce desert rock pioneers Masters of Reality for the event. It will be the band’s first UK appearance in almost a decade. Masters of Reality is the brainchild of legendary producer Chris Goss (Welcome to Sky Valley, Rated R, Blues for The Red Sun, Dust, Songs for The Deaf). Their combination of hard-rock blues with a progressive tinge makes no apologies for not sticking within the stylised box listeners would expect, yet simultaneously provides the perfect lesson in the musical ethos and story-telling of the Palm Desert scene – all led by the man who laid its foundations.

Following an unforgettable performance at the New York edition of the Desertfest franchise a few months ago, industrial trailblazers Godflesh will return to London for a masterclass in sonic brutality. UK exclusive performances come in the form of Swedish doom masters Monolord, California stoner metal legends Acid King and the long-awaited return of Italian experimentalists Ufomammut.

Further Desert Rock royalty rolls into Camden Town, as Brant Bjork Trio will treat attendees to a back-catalogue few artists can compete with. Instrumental sound shifters Maserati, hard-hitting duo Mantar, introspective visionaries Cloakroom and heavy-psych rockers Monkey3 will take the concept of genres and set them ablaze.

Elsewhere the likes of Blanket, Domkraft, Pijn, Sugar Horse, Stinking Lizaveta and Darsombra will bring a captivating change of pace to the event. Whilst the stoner rock vibes remain alive and well with Astroqueen, Wet Cactus, Sergeant Thunderhoof and Duskwood.

If that wasn’t enough to get your teeth into, Desertfest rounds of its first announcement with Goblinsmoker, Clouds Taste Satanic, Warpstormer, Sonic Taboo & Wizdoom.

Weekend Tickets for the event are on sale now via www.desertfest.co.uk with much more to still be announced!

Full line-up:
MASTERS OF REALITY | GODFLESH | MONOLORD | ACID KING | UFOMAMMUT | BRANT BJORK TRIO | MASERATI | MANTAR | CLOAKROOM | MONKEY3 | BLANKET | ASTROQUEEN | DOMKRAFT | PIJN | SUGAR HORSE | STINKING LIZAVETA | WET CACTUS | DARSOMBRA | SERGEANT THUNDERHOOF | GOBLINSMOKER | DUSKWOOD | CLOUDS TASTE SATANIC | WARPSTORMER | SONIC TABOO | WIZDOOM

TICKETS ON SALE – www.desertfest.co.uk

http://www.desertscene.co.uk/support
https://www.facebook.com/DesertfestLondon
https://www.instagram.com/desertfest_london/
https://www.desertfest.co.uk/

Godflesh, Live in Boston, Massachusetts, Sept. 15, 2023

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Green Lung Announce 2024 European Touring

Posted in Whathaveyou on November 7th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Green Lung spent some time in continental Europe last month ahead of releasing their third full-length and Nuclear Blast label debut, This Heathen Land (review here). They’ve got shows across England and into Scotland coming up in a few weeks, and with the list of dates below, they’re starting to reveal a bit about their Spring plans as well.

They’ve left a good amount of time here for Spring fests if they’re going to be around Europe at that point, and I wouldn’t be surprised if they showed up on more metal-focused lineups as well, the album having significant crossover potential. But obviously this is all a ways off — not the UK shows this month, but the rest — and there’s time for these shows to take shape and for plenty of others to be sorted. Green Lung are going pro, and might be about to embark on a touring cycle broader than any they’ve done before — I’m holding out that this is the record that brings them to the US — so yes. More to come.

Till then, this from social media:

Green Lung tour

Now that you’ve heard the new songs, it’s time for us to get out there and play them for you! We’re excited to announce that we’ll be back in Europe in March, April and May next year – we’ll be playing our first club shows in Greece, conquering Germany, Denmark, Austria and Switzerland with the mighty Spirit Adrift, and finally making it to Ireland with the mesmerising Lowen. Tickets will be on sale 9am this Wednesday morning (#128121#) (#128652#)

22.03 Thessaloniki GR
23.03 Athens GR
30.03 Köln DE
01.04 Copenhagen DK
02.04 Hannover DE
03.04 Leipzig DE
04.04 Munich DE
05.04 Vienna AT
06.04 Zurich CH
07.04 Aschaffenburg DE
30.04 Colchester UK
15.05 Liverpool UK
16.05 Belfast UK
17.05 Limerick IE
18.05 Dublin IE
19.05 Leeds UK

GREEN LUNG on tour:

https://greenlung.co.uk/#LIVE
22 Nov. Glasgow, UK Cathouse
23 Nov. Manchester, UK Gorilla
24 Nov. Nottingham, UK Rescue Rooms
25 Nov. Sheffield, UK Corporation Sheffield
26 Nov. Bristol, UK Thekla
30 Nov. Wolverhampton, UK KK’s Steel Mill
1 Dec. Norwich, UK Norwich Arts Centre
2 Dec. Southampton, UK The Joiners
10 Dec. London, UK Scala

Green Lung is:
Tom Templar – Vocals
Scott Black – Guitar
Joseph Ghast – Bass
John Wright – Organ
Matt Wiseman – Drums

https://www.facebook.com/greenlungband
https://www.instagram.com/greenlungband/
http://www.greenlung.co.uk/
https://greenlung.bandcamp.com/

https://www.facebook.com/nuclearblastusa
https://www.instagram.com/nuclearblastrecords/
http://shop.nuclearblast.com/en/shop/index.html

Green Lung, “Maxine (Witch Queen)” official video

Green Lung, This Heathen Land (2023)

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Album Review: Green Lung, This Heathen Land

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

green lung this heathen land

The ascent of Green Lung to the forefront of the heavy underground has been swift and uncoincidental. Over the last half-decade, the London-based, organ-inclusive nature-cult five-piece have developed a sound both familiar and distinct as their own, driven by brazen, big-swing hooks unabashedly pop in form and melody, doom and heavy rock riff-led groove and an emergent touring pattern further speaking to the we-want-to-do-this-full-time intention on the part of the band itself. This Heathen Land is the third Green Lung full-length and feels duly like a culmination of the time since they released their preliminary single “Green Man Rising” (review here) in 2017 ahead of their first EP, Free the Witch (review here), the next year, as well as a crucial step into the next phase of their career and a new level of distribution as their label-debut for Nuclear Blast. It is clearly not a moment they’re treating lightly, nor should they.

Now labelmates to the likes of Lucifer and Hangmans Chair (along with scores of others including GraveyardEnslaved, etc.), Green Lung flirt with forest-goth kitsch on This Heathen Land in a manner that refuses not to be both heavy and (mostly) fun. Their sound is immediately identifiable as the spoken intro “Prologue” sets the stage with a description of “a country of lonely tors and desolate moors, of forgotten woods and mysterious standing stones” backed by vintage-ish budget-horror creeper synth before Matt Wiseman‘s drums spring to life with the feedback from Scott Black‘s guitar at the outset of “The Forest Church,” but there are some differences between what Green Lung bring to This Heathen Land and where they were even two years ago on 2021’s Svart-issued Black Harvest (review here) in craft and performance alike, and these are brought all the more into relief by the fact that the new nine-track/42-minute outing was recorded mostly by esteemed and returning producer Wayne Adams (also of Petbrick, JAAW, and others, with a list of albums helmed that has room for both Black Helium and Possessor) at Bear Bites Horse Studios, with mixing by Tom Dalgety and mastering by Robin Schmidt. There is a clear intention toward balancing largesse and the organic aesthetic underpinnings of Green Lung, the elements they derive from classic heavy rock, with the largesse of a modern release on arguably the world’s biggest heavy metal imprint.

This Heathen Land accomplishes this outright, and with the consuming, sweeping momentum built across “The Forest Church,” “Mountain Throne” and “Maxine (Witch Queen),” frontloaded longest-to-shortest after “Prologue” puts you in the place of the record being a BBC documentary on paganism from 1974 as vocalist Tom Templar begins a session of lyrical storytelling corresponding in its has-read-books-of-English-folklore framing to the ambitiousness of both the album’s theme and the breadth of its arrangements, which are dynamic even as Green Lung are undeniably more metal in their presentation than they’ve ever been.

Templar, in “The Forest Church,” the penultimate “Hunters in the Sky,” and elsewhere, can be heard pushing his voice into upper registers and that’s part of it in a classic-metal sense, but in Black‘s gleaming-sword lead tone shredding solos throughout, the punch in Joseph Ghast‘s basslines and the sound and placement of Wiseman‘s drums (Sam Grant is credited with additional drum engineering,), there is a sharpness to Green Lung‘s attack that, while offset by the late-afternoon folk fusion of “Songs of the Stones” — which does bring in an electric guitar later for Black‘s solo — feels very much like the band purposefully stepping up their game to reach as many ears as possible. This has been their modus all along from one release to the next, and they’ve always been songwriters, but in its front-to-back flow and the memorability of the pieces that comprise it, This Heathen Land is a richer manifestation of who they are than they’ve yet had.

green lung

Part of why is because, in both the lumbering breakdown chug of centerpiece “One for Sorrow” and the cheeky keyboard of “Maxine (Witch Queen)” that harnesses a bit of the ethic of Type O Negative‘s “My Girlfriend’s Girlfriend” — minus the sleaze, plus a witch — they’re simply doing more. Neither Black Harvest nor 2019’s Woodland Rites (review here) wanted for complexity in their arrangements, but This Heathen Land shows characteristic progression in the dynamic interplay between Black‘s guitar and Wright‘s organ, as well as in Templar‘s vocal layering and the placement of backing vocals. It’s somehow completely over-the-top — and never more so than in the finale “Oceans of Time,” in which Templar dons the mantle of Gary Oldman in Bram Stoker’s Dracula to deliver the chorus lyric lifted from the movie with a suitably grandiose sweep, call and response, and so on — and just what it needs to be.

And the procession followed by the songs, from “Prologue” into the push through “The Forest Church,” “Mountain Throne” and “Maxine (Witch Queen)” with the ’60s garage bounce of the latter giving over to the anthemic and boldly heavy “One for Sorrow” — chorus singalongs coming soon to any number of UK festivals, surely; I only hope they go into “Hunters in the Sky” immediately after, and that someone gets it on video — followed by the righteous rug-pull shift to acoustics with “Songs of the Stones” and the regrounding of “The Ancient Ways” before “Hunters in the Sky” unveils a speedier gallop they’ve been holding in reserve and “Oceans of Time” slows from that but spreads itself over a vast expanse in its still-relatively-compact six minutes to cap with a veer into the epic that answers the definitive hook in “One for Sorrow” and delves into gothic romance in a way far more celebratory than ironic.

The last lines as they push into the fadeout, snare popping to mark the steps of the run, guitar shredding wildly, vocals calling and responding, are, “I know you feel it, Vina/I feel it too/You’re part of me now, Vina/I’m part of you,” and the point being underscored is that Green Lung are all-in. Other than that Dracula took place partly in London, there isn’t a lot of connection between “Oceans of Time” and This Heathen Land‘s stated themes around British paganism, but the closer works where it is simply because they make it fit. Confidence and songwriting can go a long way.

Some more grainy synth at the outset ties to “Prologue” and other flourishes throughout, and much as they did with “One for Sorrow” at the end of side A, they execute “Oceans of Time” seemingly with the stage in mind. They’re speaking to their audience, the invitation outright at the beginning, “Come. It’s time to explore This Heathen Land,” and everything that follows, one way or another, unites around that idea even as each song serves its own function in adding to and not detracting from the entirety of the album, demonstrating a mastery of their approach that codifies their earlier work, uses the space in its production to offer new ideas and perspectives, and leaves none of its goals unaccomplished. It is a landmark for Green Lung, and will only bring more converts to their leaf-covered altar.

Green Lung, “One for Sorrow” official video

Green Lung, “Maxine (Witch Queen)” official video

Green Lung, This Heathen Land (2023)

Green Lung on Facebook

Green Lung on Instagram

Green Lung website

Green Lung on Bandcamp

Nuclear Blast on Facebook

Nuclear Blast on Instagram

Nuclear Blast website

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Review & Track Premiere: Josiah, rehctaW EP

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on October 30th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

josiah

UK heavy psych fuzz rockers Josiah will release a new EP, titled rehctaW, on Dec. 1 through Interstellar Smoke Records. The band returned last year through Blues Funeral with the full-length We Lay on Cold Stone (review here), following a dearth of activity in the 2010s as founding guitarist/vocalist Mathew Bethancourt explored new spaces in Cherry Choke and began to feel out the experimentalist foundations of the solo-project Mathew’s Hidden Museum, which made its own self-titled debut (review here) earlier this year, also on Interstellar Smoke. With rehctaW — and yes, that’s ‘watcher’ backwards; sit tight, we’ll get there — Bethancourt, newcomer bassist Andy Shardlow and drummer Dan Lockton offer four songs that each have their own basis, style and function in the linear, 21-minute whole but that flow together with a kind of bruised grace in addition to the fuzz and vibe veering into the psychedelic at even its most straightforward moments, like the intro of second cut “By My Left Hand,” which peppers its repeating riff with right-channel wisps of lead guitar from Jack Dickinson (also Stubb), for whom Shardlow took over on bass.

Or the blowout buzz in the guitar of titular opener “rehctaW,” which takes peak-era Queens of the Stone Age bounce and sets it against garage boogie vibes for a swing that’s heavy and fluid in kind, lyrics tossing out references to mind control and machine-induced hypnosis around the kind of hook that, once written, was likely the impetus for the release in the first place. Since his early days roaming the pre-social-media English underground proffering riffs to a then-receding ’90s-generation audience around the turn of the century, and even through his contributions to other outfits, on We Lay on Cold Stone, etc., etc., as a defining feature of his work, Bethancourt has had an ability to lend accessible songs an element of danger through the looseness of their groove. It’s not that Josiah are pushing themselves so hard physically that “rehctaW” or anything else on the EP might come apart — much as “Become” is ‘together’ in any traditional sense to start with — like their hands would fall off or something, but in the internalized classic-heavy influence the band so ably wields, in the way they take a willfully simple idea like garage rock and use it as a vehicle for more complex craft, they’re less predictable than it seems.

Both “rehctaW” and the seven-minute “By My Left Hand” reinforce this, the latter starting gradually before it gets to the chic wub of its verse with Dickinson‘s second guitar distinct from Bethancourt‘s holding down the riff, building up and rolling forward an instrumental procession further bolstered by the piano guest spot from Morgan Sol, who complements the rise in rhythmic tension moving higher on the keyboard until a sudden cut to a lower thud ends a subtly fervent push. “By My Left Hand” further highlights the chemistry of the band as a whole as they sleek into and through a short and dreamy break at the start of that last build, and certainly their willingness to mess with form Josiah rehctaWand the flexibility of their approach are on display in “Become,” which as alluded above departs from structure toward ambient ends. Echoing fills of drums at the start feel loosely ritualized, and when Bethancourt begins singing, his voice is in full incantation mode. The line, “scratch out your eyes and see no more,” arrives early in the piece, and becomes a defining point for the EP as right around 1:20 into the song, Bethancourt repeats the “no more” portion of that lyric in a delivery precisely drawn from a track written during his time in Leicester’s The Kings of Frog Island.

Can you guess the song? Well it’s “The Watcher,” of course, from 2008’s II (discussed here), and that meta-reference — just a tiny easter egg of a thing — brims with purpose no less in light of the context in which rehctaW places it. It is the juncture at which rehctaW reveals its full intention in engaging the scope of Josiah‘s work at this point, supplying on-theme introduction and even a last-second horror-style jump-cut while opening the door to the dark dimension for their reworking of “Black Annis (The Evocation Of),” originally by Cherry Choke. And what’s funny about that is when Bethancourt and Cherry Choke released the song on 2015’s Raising the Waters (review here), sure it was fleshed out with organ and had a similar sneak to its groove, but it was shorter and the character in the evocation’s jam is perfect for being tucked into the closer position on the EP, maintaining the ultra-weird of “Become” in a context of the band’s signature, swirl-prone class-ic heavy rock. Like each of the three songs before it, “Black Annis (The Evocation Of)” represents a different side of who Josiah are — the power trio, in the jam space, maybe freaking out — and after its done, the fading-in vocal echoes come forward just long enough for Bethancourt to once more advise, “Scratch out your eyes and see no more,” tying the closer to “Become” right before and bringing to light the expanses Josiah are able to reach in terms of atmosphere while remaining at their essence a rock and roll band.

Be it in the strange and eerie vocal layering, backward this-and-that, various whispers, shakers, and so on that finish “Become” or the catchy midtempo swing of its title-track, rehctaW draws together elements from the past of Josiah and other Bethancourt-inclusive or -led outfits — and that’s not to minimize the contributions of LocktonShardlow, or even Dickinson or Sol, but Josiah begins and ends at the say-so of its founding principal — and in so doing moves the band forward from where they were even a year ago. And they were plenty weird a year ago too, but the message being sent to the listener on rehctaW is that they’ll continue to push creatively in this state, reignited after nearly a decade’s absence and transitioning from ‘reunion band’ to ‘active band’ as many others have done before them. And where they likely could rest on the laurels of their first three records and do shows in London forever pumping out the same riffs to the same heads each year, that they’re choosing a more challenging (and ideally more fulfilling) creative path is the most essential display of character Josiah could make as a statement of who they are. They’ll do something after this. I have no idea what it’ll be in terms of sound, and that mystery is whole lot of fun.

Bethancourt was kind enough to offer a track-by-track breakdown of the EP to go with the premiere, discussing the folkloric background of “Black Annis” and “Become” — tying into the release’s definitely-NSFW cover art by Sara Koncilja; gorgeously detailed if perhaps wanting subtlety in concept — and the impetus behind “rehctaW” and “By My Left Hand.” You’ll find it after the player below, followed by release particulars for the EP.

Please enjoy:

Josiah, “rehctaW” track premiere

Josiah, Rehctaw EP track-by-track with Mathew Bethancourt:

1. rehctaW

Written and demo’d early January 2023. This track dropped like a fully formed ear worm. rehctaW was the driver for the EP, as it couldn’t wait for an album and almost felt at odds with everything else I’ve been writing lately. Lyrically based on the ideas of the inspiration that is Austin Osman Spare. Among many things AOS believed rehctaW was the symbol of reaching backwards in time to infinite remoteness by the mechanism of intense nostalgia. He also felt otherworld energies flowed through him when he reached this state of bliss. A creative force using the flesh to manifest its intent. Whilst not directly leaning on any AOS texts, rehctaW embodies the idea of a force within and without. The watcher within and without. Who’s really in control of your mind. Are you the one that’s always driving. Why did the Kozmik soup present me this fully formed track, did I write it – or…

2. By My Left Hand

This was originally written and recorded for Mark Lannegan. I wrote 6 tracks during the winter/spring of 20/21 for inclusion on what would have been his latest album, if it wasn’t for his sad and untimely death. I decided to keep it instrumental for the EP as I couldn’t get past the notion of Mark singing over the music. It was written for Mark with love and respect for a great artist. Another track that dropped into my mind fully heard. Like an old familiar friend. By My Left Hand speaks to those who take the other way.

3. Become

The rebirth of an idea under the spell of local Leicester folk legend Black Annis. Designed as the prefix to Black Annis. Become lets her spirit back into the band, back into our lives. Both Dan and I grew up with her legend and now we both live metres away from her bower. We live the folk lore that impregnates all our traditions and rituals. Annis is a bittersweet character that we have once again chosen to evoke. Obviously a woman of great power, hence her subsequent horrific action.

4. Black Annis (the evocation of)

There’s a few Cherry Choke tracks that could quite easily have been Josiah works. I felt we never quite did this song justice on Raising The Waters and the revisiting and ultimate reworking of the track felt right for this EP. It’s something I like the idea of. Revisiting your own work over and over. We will do it again in the future. Something common in jazz and blues but so well utilised in rock. We love the outcome though. There’s a ghost in the machine for sure and it’s thick with the scent of folklore. Sounds can be heard that none of us made. It’s a strange one to listen to.

You may pre-order the exclusive band edition of 75 black/gold hand numbered vinyl & gold CD via Josiah bandcamp store and limited label edition of 225 red/gold vinyl & gold CD via Interstellar Smoke Records from October 31st.

EP Release date: December 1st 2023 via Interstellar Smoke Records
Single streaming date: October 31st 2023

1. rehctaW (4:47)
2. By My Left Hand (7:02)
3. Become (3:31)
4. Black Annis (The Evocation Of) (6:00)

The Makers::
Dan Lockton – Drums
Andy Shardlow – Bass
Mathew Bethancourt – Voice, Guitar & Keys

By My Left Hand features additional musicians Morgan Sol on piano & Jack Dickinson on acid guitar.
Recorded & mixed by Mathew Bethancourt with the assistance of Kev ‘The Druid’ Lloyd at Ivy Road June 2023. Mastered by Satanic Audio.

Cover illustration by Sara Koncilja.

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Troy the Band Set Feb. 2 Release for Debut Album Cataclysm

Posted in Whathaveyou on October 26th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Troy the Band

No public audio yet to share around still more than three months ahead of the Feb. 2 release, but heads up on Troy the Band‘s psych-stoner-doom roll on Cataclysm. The London four-piece made their presence known with 2022’s The Blissful Unknown EP (review here), and answer the promise of that short release with six new tracks of dense aural foam, a sound that’s as must post-now as back-when, a psychedelia that’s able to be loaded with weighted grit or float with a Dead Meadowy lightness, but wherever they go, they’re headed farther out. I’m just listening for the first time, but for the first external band signed by Bonebag Records, the Swedish imprint run by members of Cavern Deep, they seem to have hit on a gem.

Lumbering, drifting, shoving in “IHOD” which stands for who knows what and expansive in its approach throughout, Cataclysm will no doubt have preorders and all that as we get closer to its arrival. I’m not sure if I can personally consider a record ‘most anticipated’ when I’ve heard it, but I’ve started my albums-to-look-forward-to-in-2024 list, and Troy the Band‘s first LP is on it either way. So again, heads up.

The PR wire brought word:

Troy the Band Cataclysm

Troy The Band – “Cataclysm” out February 2nd

Cataclysm, the debut full-length album from London-based Doom-gaze four-piece Troy The Band, will be released on Sweden’s Bonebag Records on February 2nd 2024. Since the release of their debut EP, The Blissful Unknown, Troy The Band have become mainstays in the London heavy music scene, with a list of accolades in 2023 that includes appearances at Desertfest London, Masters of the Riff, and Stoomfest, as well as a craft beer collaboration with East London’s Old Street Brewery.

With Cataclysm the band have taken the most unique elements of their debut EP and forged them into an album that blends elements of Stoner-Doom, Post Rock, Shoegaze and Heavy Psych. Cataclysm is dark, heavy, and identifiably their own.

For this album the band went back to work with Wayne Adams at Bear Bites Horse studio in East London. From the band’s point of view, this was a no-brainer: “We knew we wanted to work with Wayne again on this album. He’s great to work with and he had an important hand in shaping the sound of our EP. We knew he would get what we were trying to do with this album, and we really couldn’t be happier with how it has turned out.”

Each track is built from a sturdy foundation of Sean Durbin’s bass riffs which are then overlaid with Sean Burn’s distinctive guitar playing and Craig Newman’s unique and ethereal vocal style, adding layers of harmonic complexity and tension that is a defining feature of their sound.

The album title is derived from the name the band gave the initial demo of the title track, driven by its musically jarring feel rather than its lyrical content. It was then self-consciously adopted as the album title to reflect their aim of causing a musical upheaval in the heavy music scene. We believe it will.

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Troy the Band, The Blissful Unknown (2022)

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Orange Goblin Announce Japan, Australia & New Zealand Tour Dates

Posted in Whathaveyou on October 17th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

A few weeks ago, London doom rock titans Orange Goblin put word out of their plans to record their 10th full-length next month. That’ll be their first studio outing since 2018’s The Wolf Bites Back (review here), and six years between full-lengths is the longest stretch of their career, that itself coming up on its 30th anniversary, depending on from when you count their start.

The numbers aside — and certainly one might account for an extra year or two between albums considering the years in question — I’m curious to know where Orange Goblin are headed with their first long-player of this bizarre decade. The Wolf Bites Back followed on from 2014’s Back from the Abyss (review here), and both of those aligned the band toward a more straight-ahead and aggressive production style, still definitely riff-based, still definitely Orange Goblin, but a little more toward heavy metal than some of the records preceding.

Am I complaining? Hell no. I’m saying I’m eager to know where that’s leading and what’s in store on the new record, which will also be their first since Harry Armstrong joined on bass. As regards shows, the band has recently put out word that for 2024 they’ll play Switzerland in March 9 for the inaugural Plug Out Festival there, and that they’ll be in Belgium in August for the Alcatraz Festival.

Easy to imagine tours being built around these, so when they did the ‘big things coming’ thing and teased announcing this tour, the only real question was which one it would be. Neither, it turns out. They’re going to Japan, Australia and New Zealand. Go figure.

From socials:

orange goblin japan australia new zealand

**ORANGE GOBLIN ANNOUNCE TOUR OF JAPAN, AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND FOR APRIL 2024**

After many years of being asked, Orange Goblin have announced that they will finally return to Japan and Australia in April 2024, whilst also adding their first ever shows in New Zealand!

These will be the bands first shows in Japan since 1999 and their first in Australia since touring there as part of Soundwave Festival in 2013. We are excited to return and also to visit New Zealand for the very first time EVER!

Catch the band at:
06.04 – Cyclone (Shibuya), Tokyo, JAPAN*
07.04 – Soccer Factory, Osaka, JAPAN
09.04 – Lions Art Factory, Adelaide, AUSTRALIA**
10.04 – The Basement, Canberra, AUSTRALIA**
11.04 – The Zoo, Brisbane, AUSTRALIA**
12.04 – Crowbar, Sydney, AUSTRALIA**
13.04 – The Croxton, Melbourne, AUSTRALIA**
15.04 – Mothership, Auckland, NEW ZEALAND***
16.04 – A Rolling Stone, Christchurch, NEW ZEALAND***
17.04 – Valhalla, Wellington, NEW ZEALAND***

* = Support in Tokyo from Church of Misery
** = Support in Australia from Dr Colossus and Astrodeath
*** = Support in New Zealand from Pieces of Molly

Tickets for all shows go on sale on Thursday 19th October: https://routeonebooking.tourlink.to/orangegoblinjpausnz2024

Poster Artwork: Dominic Sohor Design

Orange Goblin is:
Ben Ward – Vocals
Joe Hoare – Guitar
Harry Armstrong – Bass / Backing vocals
Christopher Turner – Drums

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Orange Goblin, “The Filthy and the Few” live at Bear Stone Festival 2023

Orange Goblin, Rough & Ready, Live & Loud (2020)

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Stonus Announce Mini-Tour in Belgium & France

Posted in Whathaveyou on October 6th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Hey, that’s what it’s all about, right? Getting out there, seeing new things, playing fuzz rock as loud as you can for as many people as there are in whatever place. That’s the dream, right? And then you stay somewhere for the night and get breakfast in the morning, take a few pics for the socials maybe if it isn’t too awkward the next day, and roll out to the next one. Good on yas, Stonus.

Weekenders, man. I wholly support that model of touring. There is precious little that says ‘I do this because I love it’ as much as someone taking an entire weekend of their life — which invariably has any number of other facets to it besides a given band — and going to play shows. Think about it for a minute. What are you willing to do for an entire weekend?

Because you go on tour for like four weeks, well, that’s not a tour anymore, it’s a lifestyle. Probably a smelly one. But to do shows like Stonus are next month, hitting new ground in France and Belgium for the first time, and then just turning around and going home, that takes heart. Commitment. Thanatos. I could go on here. Better perhaps I don’t.

They’re calling it a mini-tour of the EU, which I also love. It’s been a minute, but if you recall their 2021 LP, Séance (review here), they certainly weren’t short on charm then. Some things do not change:

stonus mini tour

STONUS – Mini EU tour Announcement️

“We are super excited to share with you our upcoming European tour dates for this fall and we can’t wait to make some new awesome experiences with you all!!!

Lets get fuzzed up!!!(#127988#)‍☠️(#127988#)‍☠️(#127988#)‍☠️”

15.11 Open Slot
16.11 Kinky Star – Ghent (BE)*
17.11 L’International – Paris (FR)**
19.11 Westill – Nantes (FR)

with:
*High Trail (FREE ENTRANCE)
**Last Quarter, Oda

Tickets at: https://stonusband.com/tour

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Stonus, Séance (2021)

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