Review & Track Premiere: Colour Haze, Sacred

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on September 12th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Colour haze sacred

[Click play above to stream Colour Haze’s premiere of ‘Goldmine.’ Sacred is out soon digitally on Elektrohasch Schallplatten with vinyl to follow.]

Even before listening to Colour Haze‘s Sacred, let us assume that there are more than a few things a band has figured out by the time they get around to issuing their 14th full-length. And as regards their sound, what makes Colour Haze who they are as a band, they have. But they’ve also never stopped exploring. Since 1995, each of the Munich-based troupe’s albums has offered a personality of its own, and over time, there has grown to be consistency within that. One expects a certain amount of tonal warmth from founding guitarist/vocalist Stefan Koglek and a low-key clinic put on by not-quite-founding-but-it’s-been-almost-25-years-so-close-enough drummer Manfred Merwald, an edge held over in the songwriting from the jams that bore the songs, and so on.

Since 2017’s In Her Garden (review here), longtime collaborator Jan Faszbender has played more of a role on keys and synth — he ‘officially joined’ in 2018 — and that continues in the seven songs and 41 minutes of Sacred, but for the first time since 1998, the band have a new bassist. Mario Oberpucher, who’s also done front-of-house sound and recording for Colour Haze in the past, makes his first studio appearance here in place of Philipp Rasthofer, who left in 2020. That invariably has an effect on the dynamic of the group as a whole, but as noted, every Colour Haze record offers something different. Sacred — basic tracks recorded live by Willi Dammeier at Clouds Hill in Hamburg; overdubbing, mixing, and mastering by Koglek at his Colour Haze Studio — is more of the same in that particular regard.

In some ways, Sacred might be defined by the directness of some of its songs. Following up on 2019’s We Are (review here), the only single track here that tops seven minutes is “Ideologigi” at 8:59, where on the last album, four of seven did. That doesn’t necessarily make the rest of what surrounds that extended side A stretch more straightforward, just relatively concise. Structures vary throughout as the instrumental “Turquoise” (6:09) leads off with a sunrise unfurling over its first two minutes graceful enough to remind you who Colour Haze are, and a smooth, for-a-walk progression that might just have gotten its name in reference to the title-track of 2006’s Tempel (discussed here), the cover art for which was blue. Faszbender‘s keys add a melody to flesh out around the guitar, and shifts into a spacier synth in the second half of the song even as Oberpucher‘s bass comes forward in the two understated payoffs.

“Goldmine” — which follows and actually is more straightforward — works into its verse quickly and leaves the jam for after, surprising almost with a twist back to the verse later on as the bouncing and careening riff works its way toward the end; Colour Haze are no strangers to songwriting, of course, it’s just a balance adjusted in “Goldmine” toward structure carved around the riffs. The aforementioned “Ideologigi” offers ready contrast of purpose, beginning with a dreamy ambient intro in apparent answer to “Turquoise” just a short time ago and the triumph of a lead that emerges in the song’s first half , and moving into the lyrics that answer the heavy-hippie, anti-materialist viewpoint of “Goldmine,” Koglek dipping perhaps into “Lord of This World”-style Sabbathism as he delivers the lines, “Whatever tale you may call your bible/Even enforce by rifles/Life ignores your rules.”

The entire second half of “Ideologigi” is instrumental and wraps side A, but is not to be discounted as Merwald plays it like low-key Buddy RichKoglek tears into an improv-sounding solo, Faszbender casts the awe in organ lines and Oberpucher is tasked and succeeds in holding it all together; take that, new guy. They circle around a build at about two minutes in, cut to another, cut to another, then twist and crash and tease falling apart until swapping out realities at four minutes in and locking around a final cycle through the verse riff to let you know they’ve been in control all the while.

colour haze (Photo by Gunther Koglek)

Side B leadoff “Avatar,” with its once-again headphone-ready subdued beginning, finds Koglek entering early with quiet and melodic vocal layers before the signature-style shuffling riff — if a guitar lick could also be a whistle, “Avatar” might be one — casually saunters toward a break and return to the not-quite-standalone vocals before its rousing finish. At 3:38, the instrumental “1.5 Degrees” — a climate change policy target/environmental tipping point — is the shortest inclusion, starting out with acoustic guitar, backwards whatnot surrounding, some noise, but gets its point across with what sounds like a metronome in place of an existentialist ticking clock, and the surge of low fuzz that’s maybe the heaviest-sounding tonality Colour Haze have put to tape assures the message of threat isn’t lost.

That part doesn’t last, but it’s clearly meant to grab attention and it does. Where “Avatar” commented on social media lyrically — and that kind of opining on an issue isn’t new for Colour Haze, but the lyrics do seem to be especially pointed this time out — “See the Fools” picks up from “1.5 Degrees” and speaks to divisions between ideologies more generally: “Turn all upside down by lies and made up truths doesn’t cure no pain,” each word almost in a race with the others to be heard first. “See the Fools” (6:54) and “In All You Are” (6:58) are the two longest pieces on Sacred, and both offer fluidity to match the seemingly intended listener immersion. Faszbender weaves synth or mellotron into the crescendo of “See the Fools” around the wistful but somehow hopeful warmth of Koglek‘s guitar, and “In All You Are” brings a joy of a chorus also bolstered by the organ — bolstered by everyone, really; just generally bolstered — and guest vocals by Julia Rutigliano, who brings emphasis to the delivery of the album’s title-line, directed at the listener.

And if that last message, “My dear/You are beloved/You are the love/You are sacred,” is to be the final impression left by the record, it is an in-character sentiment for Colour Haze, but again, distinct in its expression. It has been an eventful few years, and Sacred was obviously not written in a vacuum. It is, however, invariably put through the filter of the group’s and Koglek‘s craft, organically recorded, and presented with love as the believable foundation.

Even as they partially remake their dynamic — I won’t downplay either the change in having Oberpucher on bass or his performance on these tracks — there is much about Sacred that finds Colour Haze playing to their strengths as a rock band, but whether it’s the moments of minimalist ambience leading into or out of songs, the fluidity of their jams, or the apparently willful defiance of where one expects a given song to go, they continue to delight in finding new ways and new ideas to expand the definition of what they do as a unit.

I’m a fan, and I’ve no doubt said as much before, but Colour Haze are a once-in-a-generation band. There is not another out there who does what they do at their level, who has had their influence, or can claim the same kind of commitment to the creativity as an act of searching. It is right that “In All You Are” caps with a sentiment so beautiful since beauty is a thing wholly embraced throughout. As an entirety, is not coincidentally titled.

Colour Haze website

Colour Haze on Facebook

Colour Haze on Instagram

Elektrohasch Schallplatten website

Elektrohasch Schallplatten on Facebook

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The Obelisk Questionnaire: Johannes Stubenrauch (Helge) from Mindcrawler

Posted in Questionnaire on August 31st, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Johannes Stubenrauch (Helge) from Mindcrawler

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: Johannes Stubenrauch (Helge) from Mindcrawler

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

I do not consider myself as a musician. Music for me is a relief and a road to escape the tunnel of analytics I face in my regular job that pays the rent, although I really like my profession.

I guess that is kind of true for the whole band.

We all share a true passion for music albeit coming from more or less different musical backgrounds and interests. However, none of us would consider making music for a living, although I am not sure what would happen if that was actually an option.

So in a nutshell, playing music and in a band for me is just another word for spending time with your friends, sharing the good and the bad moments in life with a group of people formed by a common love for a certain kind of sound, lifestyle and maybe mindset.

I have played music for the larger part of my life and a large part of that in turn was playing music together, not necessarily in a „band“. Playing electric guitar at home gets quite boring after a while. Playing in a band has always been a major goal in life for me so looking for one in my new hometown was a natural decision. I am quite lucky to be in a group with the best guys imaginable now.

Describe your first musical memory.

As many others I was prepared to learn the piano when I was at the age of five or six (with a quite fundamental lack of success) and play strange stuff, the kind one has to play when you’re able to perform better than „twinkle twinkle little star“ but too shabby to do some reasonable classical music.

I tortured myself for a while and somehow convinced my parents to get an acoustic guitar. Acoustic obviously, because I thought I was to learn the „basics first“ before I would get a real one.

Again I tortured myself a little more with some classical guitar (which I sucked at). When I got an electric guitar I then quickly realized that this is basically a different instrument.

Finally, I found out that there is a mighty thing called AC/DC (not talking electro-dynamics here) and down the heavy metal road I went.

Describe your best musical memory to date.

This is insanely hard to answer. When I was a teenager and into death metal, I went to my first real concert ever, i.e. not some local bands playing covers in a beer-tent (these kind of things where you would go to party at Oktoberfest). Where I grew up, this was basically the only place where live-music happened. For some reason, they do not play death metal songs at these happenings – haha.

Anyhow, when Eluveitie (a band I hyped a lot at the time) played „Inis Mona“ at this very concert it was a magical moment for me.

Same thing when I was at the Wacken Festival in Northern Germany for the first time: coming from a place with basically no rock music culture and suddenly there’s a full city of metal heads and music nerds sharing the same passion was a crazy scenario (as well as Iron Maiden live).

Seeing Baroness for the first time and after they had this terrible bus accident was crazy, too. They have been my favorite band for a long time now and I love John Dyer Baizley’s artworks with their strong black outlines and the bright colors.

Watching them perform live without any loss of energy, that was quite an inspiring moment.

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

When I had just started my studies, I was convinced all problems can be solved by logical reasoning and the proper idea. This seems to not be the case.

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

I had a hard time trying to grasp the term „artistic progression“. Art is done by people. People change their attitudes, ideas, feelings and what else over the span of their lifetime. Art — for me — is just a reflection of the artist’s personality in the context of their information about their environment and life. Consequently, I think it is natural that an artist work changes. I never understood why sometimes people demand bands to remain constrained to a certain range of their possible portfolio. I get bored quickly if music sounds too familiar.

Coming back to the question: I think, artistic progression ultimately fully opens the window to the personality of the artist. Whether that is a good or a bad thing is up to the consumer, I guess.

How do you define success?

Enjoying what you do and having good time with your friends.

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

People you love having a serious disease or health issue. Maybe the newer Star Wars movies – haha.

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

Although it is probably quite „un-true“ to the stoner/doom genre, I’d like to setup a show which is planned and produced like for example a Rammstein show. Something where music and visual effects and this kind of stuff really interacts. Something with fire, laser and these LED spots you can grill a steak with. I’d skip the dancing, though.

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

It should not be profit, that is for sure.

For the music I mostly listen to and the music I produce the function is quite simple. It is just a tool to provoke some good emotions like a good movie, a new album from one of your favorite bands or a cool painting from one of the artists from your neighborhood. I think they call that l’art pour l’art.

For me, art is the sugar in life so to say. An art student once told me that this was not art but craftsmanship. Not so sure about it; I think more important and interesting than the artwork itself is the emotion it provokes in the consumer.

Anyhow, I think the most essential function might be provocation and/or un-masking.

When I have read the question, the first things I thought of was this famous Banksy auction where the actual artwork was shredded, Rammstein’s videos or the stuff Brecht did in his „Epic Theater“ (if that is the proper translation, and yes, I am afraid I have mentioned Brecht and Rammstein in the same sentence).

All these things are provoking and unmasking up to a certain point. They depict things in a different way and I like the idea of art forcing people to change their point of view or at least make them start to think and reason. I think that is quite a hard thing to do nowadays and a form of art in its own right.

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

The next Band-BBQ.

http://www.facebook.com/Mindcrawler/
https://www.instagram.com/mindcrawler.band/
https://mindcrawler.bandcamp.com/

http://www.motljud.com/
https://www.soundeffect-records.gr/

Mindcrawler, Lost Orbiter (2020)

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Colour Haze Post Sacred Cover Art; New Album Coming Soon

Posted in Whathaveyou on August 25th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Let’s take a minute and talk about a new Colour Haze record. I feel as certain as ever that this can be acknowledged as a universal good, by which I mean that Colour Haze‘s music — in a way that is very much their own, despite their influence — makes the world a better place in which to live. So ‘the more the merrier’ is the logic I’m following.

Some interesting things to note, though. Sacred, which follows behind the long-running German heavy psych rock forebears’ 2019 long-player, We Are (review here), will be the band’s first with Mario Oberpucher on bass. Oberpucher was confirmed last year as Colour Haze‘s full-time replacement for Philip Rasthofer, who had joined in 1998, and on Sacred, he joins drummer Manfred Merwald, organist/synthesist Jan Faszbender and guitarist/vocalist Stefan Koglek.

I emailed the latter to see if there were details on the release — let alone hearing it for review — to put out, but haven’t heard back yet. Fair enough. The prospect of a new Colour Haze is enticing as there are few if any other acts in the world able to be both so consistent and so forward-reaching. I would imagine that someone unfamiliar might look at their long stretch of years and be intimidated by the question of where to start.

In the past, I’ve suggested 2006’s Tempel (discussed here) before for that role, but the beautiful truth is that from about the turn of the century onward, there’s no wrong way to go. The best suggestion I can make, maybe ever, is for you to listen to Colour Haze. Whether that’s the more stoner rocking stuff circa 1999-2001 or the groundbreaking heavy progressive psychedelic rock they’ve developed since, jammy here, proggier there, still plenty rocking all the while, I’m content to leave those details in your capable hands.

No new music yet, but if we’re lucky that too will be soon along with the Sacred album release, which looks like digital first before vinyl. Fair.

This came from social media instead of an email newsletter, which is a notable change:

Colour haze sacred

The new album “Sacred” is coming out very soon…!

Here is a preview of the wonderful cover art.

(by Sara Koncilja / Yagasara on Instagram)

Some news about the upcoming album:

Stefan is finished with mixing, mastering is happening right now and the songs will be send to the pressing plant next week!

The vinyl release is scheduled for October, CDs are planned as well.

You can preorder in about two to three weeks on Elektrohasch.

HQ digital download will be released sooner (very soon!) and will also be available there – we will keep you posted!

https://www.facebook.com/COLOURHAZE.official/
http://colourhaze.de/

www.elektrohasch.de

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

Colour Haze, Live at Lazy Bones Festival, July 31, 2022

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Keep it Low Festival 2022 Makes First Lineup Annoucement

Posted in Whathaveyou on July 15th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

KEEP IT LOW 2022 BANNER

I have said so many times in the past, but of all the festivals throughout any given ‘normal’ year in the sphere of Sound of Liberation‘s booking itinerary, I always wanted to go to Keep it Low in Munich. Yeah, part of that is because Colour Haze regularly shows up — kind of the house band — and any opportunity you can take advantage of to see them in your life is a thing worth doing, but also the general vibe of the artwork, what seems like kind of a laid back feel and intention. At this point it’s been going on long enough (without me in attendance) that I’m sure a community of familiar faces has been built up, and as the first lineup announcement for Keep it Low 2022 on Oct. 7 & 8 comes out, I’m in the same boat as ever thinking that if this was the complete festival, done, one shot, blamo, then you’d say it was looking to be a killer couple days in Germany.

That Friday lineup is unstoppable, and Saturday is more populated but right behind it with Fu Manchu and Unida at the top of the bill so far and a reunion slot for The Great Escape (feat. members of My Sleeping Karma), as well as US imports like The Heavy EyesHigh Reeper and Hippie Death Cult (waiting for that tour announcement any minute now). Maybe they’ll all go together and call it the Triple-H tour, thereby proving that they too remember pro wrestling in the mid-1990s.

Alright, maybe not. Either way, with more to come, here’s what the fest has to say about its own badass doings:

KEEP IT LOW 2022 poster

KEEP IT LOW – LINE-UP NEWS & SINGLE DAY TICKETS ON SALE

Dear Keepers,

today we’re happy to reveal the first bands for our upcoming Keep it Low festival 2022! Additionally, Single-Day Tickets are now on sale!

Check it out:

FRIDAY 7th OCTOBER

Orange Goblin
UFOMAMMUT
Sasquatch
Naxatras
Slomosa
hellamor

SATURDAY 8th OCTOBER

Fu Manchu
Unida
The Heavy Eyes
HIGH REEPER
Hippie Death Cult
Vvlva
The Great Escape
Mindcrawler
The Kupa Pities
Dead Taste

EVENT
https://www.facebook.com/events/975025036197960/

TICKETS
http://www.sol-tickets.com

We can’t wait to see you all!

Cheers,
Your KIL Crew

https://www.facebook.com/keepitlowfestival/
https://www.keepitlow.de/
https://www.soundofliberation.com/

Orange Goblin, Live at Hellfest 2022

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Sound of Liberation Updates Lineups for 17th Anniversary Parties

Posted in Whathaveyou on February 28th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

sound of liberation 17 years wiesbaden banner

Pick your poison here, it’s all killer. Makes sense when you think about it, too. If you’ve been waiting to have a party for two years, don’t you want to do it up? Thus it is that Sound of Liberation‘s plague-delayed 15th anniversary celebrations have become 17th anniversary celebrations — and frankly, having survived those extra two years is no mean feat either for a booking concern, or, you know, anyone — and the parties will be held June 10-11 in Munich and June 24-25 in Wiesbaden, Germany.

Simply put, the lineups aren’t fucking around. Colour Haze, Fu Manchu, High on Fire, 1000mods, Elder, Ufomammut, My Sleeping Karma, Yawning Man, Monkey3, The Well, Toundra, Villagers of Ionnina City, DVNE, Slomosa, Stoned Jesus, Lucid Void, and more to be announced. That pushes beyond “killer party” and into “this is actually a festival” territory, and after so much delay, I seriously doubt any of the concerned parties have a problem with that.

These will be significant evenings. If you’re going, drink it in.

As posted on socials:

sound of liberation 17 years munich poster

sound of liberation 17 years wiesbaden poster

17 YEARS SOUND OF LIBERATION FESTIVALS 2022

*** New Bands *** Day Splits *** Warm-Up Show ***

Dear friends and fans, we are excited to share a bunch of amazing news for our SOL Birthday Bashes in Munich and Wiesbaden with you.

We added some more outstanding acts to our line-ups and there’s an additional warm-up evening happening in Wiesbaden!

17 years Sound of Liberation • Backstage Munich

We’re stoked to finally share the day-splits with you!

Friday, 10th June 2022
Backstage, Munich (GER)
Line-Up: Colour Haze, High On Fire, Elder, UFOMAMMUT, Villagers of Ioannina City, Toundra, DVNE + more TBA
Tickets: http://www.sol-tickets.com

Saturday, 11th June 2022
Backstage, Munich (GER)
Line-Up: Fu Manchu, 1000mods, MY SLEEPING KARMA – OFFICIAL, Yawning Man (Official), monkey3, The Well + more TBA
Tickets: http://www.sol-tickets.com

Single-Day Tickets & Weekend Tickets are available.

17 years Sound of Liberation • Wiesbaden

Our party does now start a day earlier!

We’re proud to welcome no other than mighty UFOMAMMUT (ITA) and rising stars Slomosa (NOR) (+ one more band TBA) to rip down the Kesselhaus at Schlachthof Wiesbaden on June 24th and warm-up our neck muscles for the following full festival day!

Friday 24th June 2022
Official Festival Warm-Up
Schlachthof, Wiesbaden (GER)
Line-Up: UFOMAMMUT, Slomosa + 1 more band TBA
Tickets: http://www.sol-tickets.com

Saturday 25th June 2022
Schlachthof, Wiesbaden (GER)
Line-Up: 1000mods, Elder, MY SLEEPING KARMA – OFFICIAL, Stoned Jesus, The Well, Lucid Void + more TBA
Tickets: http://www.sol-tickets.com

We can’t wait for June, this is happening for real! Grab your tickets and join us in Munich and / or Wiesbaden

Stunning poster artwork by Malleus ROCK ART LAB

https://www.facebook.com/Soundofliberation/
https://www.instagram.com/soundofliberation/
https://www.soundofliberation.com/

High on Fire, “Speedwolf” live in Los Angeles, Aug. 23, 2021

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Colour Haze Update on Reissues, New Live Album & More

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 25th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Colour Haze (Photo by MarmotA Photography)

Big update from Munich heavy psychedelic forebears Colour Haze, marked by the upcoming release of a new live album recorded by the band as a four-piece in the studio show-style. with no overdubs or whathaveyou. Elektrohasch Schallplatten, the imprint run by founding Colour Haze guitarist/vocalist Stefan Koglek, has been quiet in terms of issuing the work of other groups, but has steadily served as an outlet for the band’s own work in the last few years, and as they move beyond 2020’s We Are (review here), it seems like they’re trying to give that album the due it might otherwise have received on tour.

Fair enough. If you’ve read this site for more than five or six seconds ever, you probably know I’ll take new Colour Haze as it comes. I’m not saying I bought a bootleg of the audio from the livestream below just to own it, but maybe that happened and I’ll still be happy to add Live Vol. 3 – 2020 to the catalog. Note the lack of CDs being pressed. Vinyl has long been the priority for Colour Haze, so it makes sense given delays and funding and the ubiquitous nature of digitalia anyway. I get it. I still also like those little plastic discs.

If you’re not signed up for the band’s newsletter, Koglek sent this along with all the latest whathaveyou:

Colour Haze EP Cover

Dear friends,

All shows until spring are cancelled or postponed – but we‘ll be back : )

Already confirmed live date: Friday, 20. May 2022 @ Scala Kultur, Ludwigsburg (GER)

So many difficulties the past two years…. But things got sorted and sometimes even improved. Some of you could already see on last years shows Mario is doing really good on bass.

We finally found a new home for rehearsing. Thanks to Lee Harvey & The Oswalds! And thanks as well to Godsground who helped us out in between! We recorded new songs for a new album last October and will carry on with a second live-recording session in April.

With Steffen Wünscher I found a new competent and reliable webmaster. For technical reasons we had to install a new website pretty short-term in December. Which we improved now : )

Not to forget I had to change the pressing factory for vinyl. As it turns out now the former manufacturer didn‘t take good care of my tools so new ones have to be made for most records. But I want to make an opportunity of this let down, making use of the studio-possibilities I have today to improve the sound quality of old masters.

And with this we get to the new…

…Releases

Elektrohasch 001-2 Colour Haze – Los Sounds De Krauts DLP

The LPs are scheduled to leave the factory on February 2nd. I will immediately start with shipping. The limited edition is sold out by preorders from my side but I‘m sure you can purchase it at the one or other retailer still.

Elektrohasch 062 – Colour Haze – Live Vol. 3 – 2020 LP / Download Colour Haze Live Vol 3 2020

The lockdown year and no rehearsal room. But we wanted to play – of course! So we moved into the Panorama Studio, Pfaffenhofen a.d.Ilm for a while. Well – and we couldn‘t leave the possibilities of a studio aside. So Stephan Ebertshauser recorded on two evenings the set of the cancelled „We Are“-Tour – live and without overdubs. The best of these recordings – a great new arrangement of „Moon“, „Überall“ in the powerful new version with Jan and „Freude III“ are on the A-side of this LP. On the B-side is the great „Transformation“-version of the Freak Valley Festival streaming concert which didn‘t come quite off in the original stream – digital restaurated and now mixed properly. The last record with Philipp Rasthofer…

The LP will be delivered in April. There is also a handnumbered limited 500 copies edition on red vinyl. I won‘t release a CD for now.

Elektrohasch 003-3 Colour Haze – s/t remaster LP / Download

As first remaster “Colour Haze” will be delivered from the factory in May. It took many hours to transfer the music from the unfortunately damaged original tapes. With care and attention I remastered them all analogue and I think it turned out quite well : )

The plain Download-Version comes in the package of „Colour Haze“ and „2004 Extended Play“ for the single price.

Elektrohasch 004 Colour Haze – 2004 Extended Play LP / Download

Foremost because of limited playing time „Mountain“ and „Flowers“ so far only have been an „extra“ on the „Colour Haze“ CD. On vinyl these songs have only been released on the long sold out split 7“ with Gas Giant and the split 10“ with Hypnos 69.Along with „Amo Te“, so far only released on mentioned 10“ and „Raumschiffkommandant“ – a track made for „The Psychedelic Avengers“ – soundtrack of an imaginarySci-Fi-B-Movie – all these recordings from 2004 are now remastered on this new EP (which has about 35 minutes playing time)The delivery of the LP is scheduled by the factory for June. There is also a handnumbered limited 500 copies edition on colored vinyl. I won‘t release a CD for now.

The plain Download-Version comes in the package of „Colour Haze“ and „2004 Extended Play“for the single price .

Elektrohasch 005-2 Colour Haze – Tempel – remaster LP

The delivery is scheduled for July by the pressing factory.

All The Best
Stefan Koglek

https://www.facebook.com/COLOURHAZE.official/
http://colourhaze.de/
www.elektrohasch.de
https://www.facebook.com/theripplemusic/
ripplemusic.bandcamp.com
http://www.ripple-music.com/

Colour Haze, Live 2020 at sunset

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Quarterly Review: Sergio Ch., Titanosaur, Insect Ark, Never Kenezzard, The Kupa Pities, Warpstormer, Ricardo Jiménez y Antonio Ramírez, Children of the Sün, Desert Clouds, Gondhawa

Posted in Reviews on January 19th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

THE-OBELISK-FALL-2020-QUARTERLY-REVIEW

Getting to the halfway point of a Quarterly Review is always something special. I’m not trying to say it’s a hardship reviewing 50 records in a week — if anything it’s a relief, despite the strain it seems to put on my interpersonal relationships; The Patient Mrs. hates it and I can’t really fault her for that since it does consume a fair amount of my brain while it’s ongoing — but some days it comes down to ‘do I shower or do I write’ and usually writing wins out. I’ll shower later. Probably. Hopefully.

But today we pass halfway through and there’s a lot of killer still to come, so plenty to look forward to either way. The day starts with an old favorite I’ve included here basically as a favor to myself. Let’s go.

Quarterly Review #21-30:

Sergio Ch., La Danza de los Tóxicos

Sergio Ch La Danza de los Tóxicos

Comparatively speaking, La Danza de los Tóxicos is a pretty straightforward solo offering from Soldati/Ararat/ex-Los Natas frontman Sergio Chotsourian, whose ealrier-2021 full-length, Koi (review here), featured both of his children, one rapping and one joining him on vocals for a Nine Inch Nails cover. Perhaps it’s in reaction to that record that this one feels more traditionalist, with Chotsourian (aka Sergio Ch.) still finding 11 minutes to drone out instrumentalist style on closer “Thor Hammer” and to sample Scarface at the start of “Late Train,” but in his guy-and-guitar ethic, a lot of this material sounds like the roots of things to come — Chotsourian has shared songs between projects for years — while keeping a balance between exploratory vibe and traditional structures on pieces like “Skinny Ass,” “La Esquina” and “88.”

Sergio Ch. on Facebook

South American Sludge Records on Bandcamp

 

Titanosaur, Absence of Universe

Titanosaur Absence of Universe

Coated in burl and aggressive presentation as well as the occasional metaphors about stellar phenomena and hints/flourish of Latin rhythm and percussion, Titanosaur‘s fourth long-player, Absence of Universe, sees multi-instrumentalist, producer and vocalist Geoff Saavedra engaging with aggressive tonality and riff construction as well as the various instabilities of the moment in which the album was put together. “Conspiracy” feels somewhat self-explanatory from a lyrical standpoint, and both opener “The Echo Chamber” and “Shut Off the Voices” feel born of the era in their theme, while “So Happy” seems like a more personal perspective on mental health. Whatever a given song’s subject throughout the nine-track/42-minute offering, Saavedra delivers with a heavy rock born out of ’90s metal such that the breakdown in “So Happy” feels natural when it hits, and the rush of finale “Needed Order” seems like an earned expulsion of the tension so much of the record prior has been building, incluing the chugging force of “I Will Live Forever” immediately prior.

Titanosaur on Facebook

The Swamp Records on Bandcamp

 

Insect Ark, Future Fossils

insect ark future fossils

Future Fossils would seem to take its name from the idea of bringing these tracks together in some effort toward conservation, to keep them from getting lost to time or obscurity amid the various other works and incarnations of Insect Ark. The first three songs are synth-only solo pieces by Dana Schechter, recorded in 2018, and the final piece, “Gravitrons,” is a 23-minute live improvisation by Schechter and then-drummer Ashley Spungin recorded in New York in 2016. The sense that these things might someday be “discovered” as one might unearth a fossil is fair enough — the minimalism of “Gypsum Blade” has space enough to hold whatever evocations one might place on it, and while “Anopsian Volta” feels grounded with a line of piano, opener “Oral Thrush” seems more decidedly cinematic. All this of course is grist for the mill of “Gravitrons,’ which is consuming unto itself in its ambience and rife with experimentalist purpose. Going in order to have gone. As ethics go, that one feels particularly worth preserving.

Insect Ark on Facebook

Consouling Sounds website

 

Never Kenezzard, The Long and Grinding Road

Never Kenezzard The Long and Grinding Road

Sludge and grind come together on Denver trio Never Kenezzard‘s The Long and Grinding Road, and through what seems to be some modern metallurgical miracle, the album sounds neither like CarcassSwansong nor Dopethrone. After the pummeling beginning of “Gravity” and “Genie,” the interlude “Praer” and the subequent channel-panning-screamer “Ra” expand an anti-genre take as bent on individuality of sound as they apparently are on clever wordplay. “Demon Wheel” has a genuine heavy rock thrust, and “Slowburn” and the looped clock noise of “11:59:59” provide buffers between the extended cuts “Seven Statues” (11:31) and “The Long and Grinding Road” (14:55) itself, which closes, but by then the three-piece have established a will and a way to go wherever they want and you can follow if you’re up for it. So are you? Probably. There’s some underlying current of Faith No More-style fuckery in the sound, something playful about the way Never Kenezzard push themselves into abrasion. You can tell they’re having fun, and that affects the listening experience throughout the purposefully unmanageable 57 minutes of the album.

Never Kenezzard on Facebook

Never Kenezzard on Bandcamp

 

The Kupa Pities, Godlike Supervision

The Kupa Pities Godlike Supervision

There’s a thread of noise rock that runs throughout Godlike Supervision, the debut full-length from Munich-based four-piece The Kupa Pities, and it brings grit to both the early-Clutch riffing of lead cut “Anthology” and the later, fuzz-overdose “Queen Machine.” It’s not just about aggression, though there’s some of that, but of the band putting their own spin on the established tenets of Kyuss-style desert and Fu Manchu-style heavy rocks. “Black Hole” digs into the punkish roots of the former, while the starts-and-stops of “Dance Baby Dance” and the sheer push of the title-track hint toward the latter, even if they’re a little sharper around the edges than the penultimate “Surfing,” which feels like it was titled after what the band do with their own groove — they seem to ride it in expert fashion. So be it. “Black Hole” works in a bit of atmosphere and “Burning Man” caps with a fair-enough blowout at the finish, ending the album on a note not unfamiliar but indicative of the twists The Kupa Pities are working to bring to their influences.

The Kupa Pities on Facebook

The Kupa Pities on Bandcamp

 

Warpstormer, 1

warpstormer logo

A newcomer trio, London’s Warpstormer brings together guitarist Scott Black (Green Lung), drummer Matthew Folley and bassist/vocalist Richard J. Morgan (ex-Oak), and their aptly-titled first EP, 1, presents four bangers of unrepentantly brash heavy rock and roll, channeling perhaps some of earlier Orange Goblin‘s boozy-wrecking-crew vibes, but on “Ride the Bomb” digging into post-hardcore and metal as well, the abidingly aggro sense undercut by a quiet stretch holding its tension in the drums as well as the drunken quiet start of “Devourer,” which gets plenty bruising by its finish but is slower in procession certainly than were “Here Comes Hell” and “Storm Caller” at the outset. They’re in and out and done in 19 minutes, but as what otherwise might be a demo, 1 gives a look at where Warpstormer are coming from and would seem to herald future incursions to come. I’ll take it. The songs come across as feeling out where the band wants to be in terms of sound, but where they’re headed, they’re headed with due charge.

Warpstormer on Facebook

Warpstormer on Bandcamp

 

Ricardo Jiménez y Antonio Ramírez, Génesis Negro

Ricardo Jiménez y Antonio Ramírez Génesis Negro

Génesis Negro perhaps loses something in the audio-only experience. To wit, while Ricardo Jiménez Gómez is responsible for all the music on the album, it’s the illustrations of Antonio Ramírez Collado, bringing together in Blake-esque style mysticism, anatomy, and ideas born of research into early Christian gnostics, that serve as the root from which that music is sprung. Instrumental in its entirety and including a reprint of the article that ties the visuals and audio together and was apparently the inspiration for exploring the subject to start with, its 43-minute run can obviously offer the listener a deeper dive than just the average collection of verse/chorus songs, and no doubt that’s the intention. Some pieces are minimal enough to barely be there at all, enough to emphasize every strum of a string, and others offer a distorted tonal weight that seems ready to interpret any number of psychedelic spiritual chaos processes. If you want to get weird, Ricardo Jiménez y Antonio Ramírez are way ahead of you. They might also be ahead of themselves, honestly, despite whatever temporal paradox that implies.

Sentencia Records on Facebook

Sentencia Records on Bandcamp

 

Children of the Sün, Roots

Children of the Sün Roots

Tracks like “Leaves,” “Blood Boils Hot,” and “Thunder” still rock out a pretty heavy classic blues rock vibe, but Swedish outfit Children of the Sün — as the title Roots would imply in following-up their 2019 debut, Flowers (review here) — seem to dig deeper into atmospheric expression, emotive melodies and patience of craft in the 13-track/44-minute offering. From the the mellow noodling of “Reflection” at the start, a piano-led foreshadow for “Eden” later on, to the acoustic-till-it-ain’t “Man in the Moon” later on, the spirit of Roots feels somewhere between days gone by and days to come and therefore must be the present, strutting accordingly on “The Soul” and making a pure vocal showcase for Josefina Berglund Ekholm, on which she shines as one has come to expect. There are moments where the vocals feel disconnected from the instrumental portions of the songs, but where they go, they go organically.

Children of the Sün on Facebook

The Sign Records on Facebook

 

Desert Clouds, Planexit

desert clouds planexit

Is that flute on “Planexit,” the opener and longest track (immediate points), on Planexit, the latest outing from London-based grunge-informed heavy rockers Desert Clouds? It could well be, and after the somewhat bleaker progression of the riffs prior, that escape into melody comes across as well-placed. The band are likewise unafraid to pull off atmospheric Nick Cave-style storytelling in “Wheelchair” and more broodingly progressive fare in “Deceivers,” leaving the relatively brief “Revolutionary Lies” to rest somewhere between Southern heavy, early ’90s melodicism and a modern production. Throughout the 45-minute LP, the band swap out various structural ideologies, and while I can’t help be immersed in the groove and bassline of “Deceivers,” the linear build and receding of the penultimate “Pearl Marmalade” feels no less essential to the impact of the record overall. Behold a band who have found their niche and set themselves to the task of refining its parameters. As ever, it works because songwriting and performance are both right on.

Desert Clouds on Facebook

Mandrone Records website

 

Gondhawa, Käampâla

Gondhawa - Käampâla

Comprised of Clement Pineau (drums, kamele n’goni, vocals, percussion), Idriss Besselievre (vocals, guitar, sanxian), Paul Adamczuk (bass/guitar, keyboard) and Margot GuilbertGondhawa bring forth a heavy psychedelic cultural sphere throughout the still-digestible six tracks and 37 minutes of Käampâla, with the French trio’s penchant for including instrumentation from Africa or Asia alongside the more traditional guitar, bass, drums, keys and vocals resulting in a lush but natural feeling psychedelia that seems to be all the more open for their readiness to jam outside whatever box expectation might put them in. The title-track feels like Mideastern prog, while the subsequent “Assid Bubu” shreds out an echoing lead over a slow-roller of a stoner-jam nod. Their willingness to dance is a strength, ultimately, and their inclusion of these arrangement elements, including percussion, comes across as more than dabbling in world music. They’re not the first to look beyond their effects pedals in manifesting psych rock, but there’s not a lot out there that sounds like this.

Gondhawa on Facebook

Stolen Body Records website

 

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Colour Haze Announce September Shows in Germany and Austria

Posted in Whathaveyou on June 30th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

colour haze (photo by JJ Koczan)

The idea here is that Colour Haze never got to tour to support the release of 2020’s We Are (review here), so they’re heading out now to do so. Worth noting that it’s a different band hitting the road than the one that made the album, though, with Mario Oberpucher taking over on bass and organist/synthesist Jan Faszbender seeming to have departed as well. Fair enough. The fact that Colour Haze are getting out to do shows at all is, of course, welcome, though the band has had a number of projects underway recently, including a remix/remaster of Los Sounds de Krauts (review here), writing for another new album and putting together a live record from odds and ends they managed to get out in 2020.

Looking forward to all, of course.

Sound of Liberation sent over the following:

colour haze release tour

Colour Haze 2021 TOUR

Dare we say that… we announce… a tour?!

‘We Are’ was released back in late 2019. Seems like ages ago (and it actually is), but Colour Haze have never been able to tour their latest music since then for reasons we all know.

So we guess it’s about time.

Sound of Liberation + Elektrohasch Records proudly present:
Colour Haze
ALBUM RELEASE TOUR 2021

18.09.21 – Graz | p.p.c.
19.09.21 – Salzburg | Rockhouse Salzburg
20.09.21 – Wien | ARENA WIEN
21.09.21 – Leipzig | WERK2-Kulturfabrik
22.09.21 – Dortmund | Musiktheater Piano
23.09.21 – Dortmund | Musiktheater Piano
04.10.21 – Würzburg | Posthalle Würzburg
05.10.21 – Wiesbaden | Schlachthof Wiesbaden
06.10.21 – Berlin | Festsaal Kreuzberg
07.10.21 – Dresden | Beatpol

If you still hold a ticket from any previously postponed Colour Haze show, please check with your ticket provider if it’s still valid automatically or if there are any actions needed from your side.

We’ll see you on the road

Cheers,
Your SOL Crew

PS: New Colour Haze T-Shirts, tons of Vinyls & CDs are available via SOL Records: https://sol-records.com/collections/colour-haze

COLOUR HAZE is
Stefan Koglek – guitar & vocals
Mario Oberpucher – live sound, sitar, bass
Manfred Merwald – drums

https://www.facebook.com/COLOURHAZE.official/
http://colourhaze.de/
www.elektrohasch.de
https://www.facebook.com/theripplemusic/
ripplemusic.bandcamp.com
http://www.ripple-music.com/

Colour Haze, Live 2020 at sunset

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