Quarterly Review: Magnatar, Wild Rocket, Trace Amount, Lammping, Limousine Beach, 40 Watt Sun, Decasia, Giant Mammoth, Pyre Fyre, Kamru

Posted in Reviews on June 28th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

THE-OBELISK-FALL-2020-QUARTERLY-REVIEW

Here begins day two of 10. I don’t know at what point it occurred to me to load up the Quarterly Review with killer stuff to make it, you know, more pleasant than having it only be records I feel like I should be writing about, but I’m intensely glad I did.

Seems like a no brainer, right? But the internet is dumb, and it’s so easy to get caught up in what you see on social media, who’s hyping what, and the whole thing is driven by this sad, cloying FOMO that I despise even as I participate. If you’re ever in a situation to let go of something so toxic, even just a little bit and even just in your own head — which is where it all exists anyhow — do it. And if you take nothing else from this 100-album Quarterly Review besides that advice, it won’t be a loss.

Quarterly Review #11-20:

Magnatar, Crushed

magnatar crushed

Can’t say they don’t deliver. The eight-song/38-minute Crushed is the debut long-player from Manchester, New Hampshire’s Magnatar, and it plays to the more directly aggressive side of post-metallic riffing. There are telltale quiet stretches, to be sure, but the extremity of shouts and screams in opener “Dead Swan” and in the second half of “Crown of Thorns” — the way that intensity becomes part of the build of the song as a whole — is well beyond the usual throaty fare. There’s atmosphere to balance, but even the 1:26 “Old” bends into harsh static, and the subsequent “Personal Contamination Through Mutual Unconsciousness” bounces djent and post-hardcore impulses off each other before ending up in a mega-doom slog, the lyric “Eat shit and die” a particular standout. So it goes into “Dragged Across the Surface of the Sun,” which is more even, but on the side of being pissed off, and “Loving You Was Killing Me” with its vastly more open spaces, clean vocals and stretch of near-silence before a more intense solo-topped finish. That leaves “Crushed” and “Event Horizon” to round out, and the latter is so heavy it’s barely music and that’s obviously the idea.

Magnatar on Facebook

Seeing Red Records on Bandcamp

 

Wild Rocket, Formless Abyss

wild rocket formless abyss

Three longform cosmic rock excursions comprise Wild Rocket‘s Formless Abyss — “Formless Abyss” (10:40), “Interplanetary Vibrations” (11:36) and “Future Echoes” (19:41) — so lock in your harness and be ready for when the g-forces hit. If the Dubliners have tarried in following-up 2017’s Disassociation Mechanics (review here), one can only cite the temporal screwing around taking place in “Interplanetary Vibrations” as a cause — it would be easy to lose a year or two in its depths — never mind “Future Echoes,” which meets the background-radiation drone of the two inclusions prior with a ritualized heft and slow-unfurling wash of distortion that is like a clarion to Sagan-headed weirdos. A dark-matter nebula. You think you’re freaked out now? Wild Rocket speak their own language of sound, in their own time, and Formless Abyss — while not entirely without structure — has breadth enough to make even the sunshine a distant memory.

Wild Rocket on Facebook

Riot Season Records website

 

Trace Amount, Anti Body Language

Trace Amount Anti Body Language

An awaited debut full-length from Brooklyn multimedia artist/producer Brandon Gallagher, Trace Amount‘s Anti Body Language sees release through Greg Puciato‘s Federal Prisoner imprint and collects a solid 35 minutes of noise-laced harsh industrial worldbreaking. Decay anthems. A methodical assault begins with “Anxious Awakenings” and moving through “Anti Body Language” and “Eventually it Will Kill Us All,” the feeling of Gallagher acknowledging the era in which the record arrives is palpable, but more palpable are the weighted beats, the guttural shouts and layers of disaffected moans. “Digitized Exile” plays out like the ugliest outtake from Pretty Hate Machine — a compliment — and after the suitably tense “No Reality,” the six-minute “Tone and Tenor” — with a guest appearance from Kanga — offers a fuller take on drone and industrial metal, filling some of the spaces purposefully left open elsewhere. That leaves the penultimate “Pixelated Premonitions” as the ultimate blowout and “Suspect” (with a guest spot from Statiqbloom; a longtime fixture of NY industrialism) to noise-wash it all away, like city acid rain melting the pavement. New York always smells like piss in summer.

Trace Amount on Instagram

Federal Prisoner store

 

Lammping, Desert on the Keel

Lammping Desert on the Keel

This band just keeps getting better, and yes, I mean that. Toronto’s Lammping begin an informal, casual-style series of singles with “Desert on the Keel,” the sub-four-minutes of which are dedicated to a surprisingly peaceful kind of heavy psychedelia. Multiple songwriters at work? Yes. Rhythm guitarist Matt Aldred comes to the fore here with vocals mellow to suit the languid style of the guitar, which with Jay Anderson‘s drums still giving a push beneath reminds of Quest for Fire‘s more active moments, but would still fit alongside the tidy hooks with which Lammping populate their records. Mikhail Galkin, principal songwriter for the band, donates a delightfully gonna-make-some-noise-here organ solo in the post-midsection jam before “Desert on the Keel” turns righteously back to the verse, Colm Hinds‘ bass McCartneying the bop for good measure, and in a package so welcome it can only be called a gift, Lammping demonstrate multiple new avenues of growth for their craft and project. I told you. They keep getting better. For more, dig into 2022’s Stars We Lost EP (review here). You won’t regret it.

Lammping on Instagram

Lammping on Bandcamp

 

Limousine Beach, Limousine Beach

Limousine Beach Limousine Beach

Immediate three-part harmonies in the chorus of opener “Stealin’ Wine” set the tone for Limousine Beach‘s self-titled debut, as the new band fronted by guitarist/vocalist David Wheeler (OutsideInside, Carousel) and bringing together a five-piece with members of Fist Fight in the Parking Lot, Cruces and others melds ’70s-derived sounds with a modern production sheen, so that the Thin Lizzy-style twin leads of “Airboat” hit with suitable brightness and the arena-ready vibe in “Willodene” sets up the proto-metal of “Black Market Buss Pass” and the should-be-a-single-if-it-wasn’t “Hear You Calling.” Swagger is a staple of Wheeler‘s work, and though the longest song on Limousine Beach is still under four minutes, there’s plenty of room in tracks like “What if I’m Lying,” the AC/DC-esque “Evan Got a Job” and the sprint “Movin’ On” (premiered here) for such things, and the self-awareness in “We’re All Gonna Get Signed” adds to the charm. Closing out the 13 songs and 31 minutes, “Night is Falling” is dizzying, and leads to “Doo Doo,” the tight-twisting “Tiny Hunter” and the feedback and quick finish of “Outro,” which is nonetheless longer than the song before it. Go figure. Go rock. One of 2022’s best debut albums. Good luck keeping up.

Limousine Beach on Facebook

Tee Pee Records website

 

40 Watt Sun, Perfect Light

40 watt sun perfect light

Perfect Light is the closest Patrick Walker (also Warning) has yet come to a solo album with 40 Watt Sun, and any way one approaches it, is a marked departure from 2016’s Wider Than the Sky (review here, sharing a continued penchant for extended tracks but transposing the emotional weight that typifies Walker‘s songwriting and vocals onto pieces led by acoustic guitar and piano. Emma Ruth Rundle sits in on opener “Reveal,” which is one of the few drumless inclusions on the 67-minute outing, but primarily the record is a showcase for Walker‘s voice and fluid, ultra-subdued and mostly-unplugged guitar notes, which float across “Behind My Eyes” and the dare-some-distortion “Raise Me Up” later on, shades of the doom that was residing in the resolution that is, the latter unflinching in its longing purpose. Not a minor undertaking either on paper or in the listening experience, it is the boldest declaration of intent and progression in Walker’s storied career to-date, leaving heavy genre tropes behind in favor of something that seems even more individual.

40 Watt Sun on Facebook

Cappio Records website

Svart Records website

 

Decasia, An Endless Feast for Hyenas

Decasia An Endless Feast for Hyenas

Snagged by Heavy Psych Sounds in the early going of 2022, French rockers Decasia debut on the label with An Endless Feast for Hyenas, a 10-track follow-up to 2017’s The Lord is Gone EP (review here), making the most of the occasion of their first full-length to portray inventive vocal arrangements coinciding with classic-sounding fuzz in “Hrosshvelli’s Ode” and the spacier “Cloud Sultan” — think vocalized Earthless — the easy-rolling viber “Skeleton Void” and “Laniakea Falls.” “Ilion” holds up some scorch at the beginning, “Hyenas at the Gates” goes ambient at the end, and interludes “Altostratus” and “Soft Was the Night” assure a moment to breathe without loss of momentum, holding up proof of a thoughtful construction even as Decasia demonstrate a growth underway and a sonic persona long in development that holds no shortage of potential for continued progress. By no means is An Endless Feast for Hyenas the highest-profile release from this label this year, but think of it as an investment in things to come as well as delivery for right now.

Decasia on Facebook

Heavy Psych Sounds on Bandcamp

 

Giant Mammoth, Holy Sounds

Giant Mammoth Holy Sounds

The abiding shove of “Circle” and the more swinging “Abracadabra” begin Giant Mammoth‘s second full-length, Holy Sounds, with a style that wonders what if Lowrider and Valley of the Sun got together in a spirit of mutual celebration and densely-packed fuzz. Longer pieces “The Colour is Blue” and “Burning Man” and the lightly-proggier finale “Teisko” space out more, and the two-minute “Dust” is abidingly mellow, but wherever the Tampere, Finland, three-piece go, they remain in part defined by the heft of “Abracadabra” and the opener before it, with “Unholy” serving as an anchor for side A after “Burning Man” and “Wasteland” bringing a careening return to earth between “The Colour is Blue” and the close-out in “Teisko.” Like the prior-noted influences, Giant Mammoth are a stronger act for the dynamics of their material and the manner in which the songs interact with each other as the eight-track/38-minute LP plays out across its two sides, the second able to be more expansive for the groundwork laid in the first. They’re young-ish and they sound it (that’s not a slag), and the transition from duo to three-piece made between their first record and this one suits them and bodes well in its fuller tonality.

Giant Mammoth on Facebook

Giant Mammoth on Bandcamp

 

Pyre Fyre, Rinky Dink City / Slow Cookin’

Pyre Fyre Rinky Dink City Slow Cookin

New Jersey trio Pyre Fyre may or may not be paying homage to their hometown of Bayonne with “Rinky Dink City,” but their punk-born fuzzy sludge rock reminds of none so much as New Orleans’ Suplecs circa 2000’s Wrestlin’ With My Ladyfriend, both the title-tracks dug into raw lower- and high-end buzztone shenanigans, big on groove and completely void of pretense. Able to have fun and still offer some substance behind the chicanery. I don’t know if you’d call it party rock — does anyone party on the East Coast or are we too sad because the weather sucks? probably, I’m just not invited — but if you were having a hangout and Pyre Fyre showed up with “Slow Cookin’,” for sure you’d let them have the two and a half minutes it takes them (less actually) to get their point across. In terms of style and songwriting, production and performance, this is a band that ask next to nothing of the listener in terms of investment are able to effect a mood in the positive without being either cloyingly poppish or leaving a saccharine aftertaste. I guess this is how the Garden State gets high. Fucking a.

Pyre Fyre on Instagram

Pyre Fyre on Bandcamp

 

Kamru, Kosmic Attunement to the Malevolent Rites of the Universe

Kamru Kosmic Attunement to the Malevolent Rites of the Universe

Issued on April 20, the cumbersomely-titled Kosmic Attunement to the Malevolent Rites of the Universe is the debut outing from Denver-based two-piece Kamru, comprised of Jason Kleim and Ashwin Prasad. With six songs each hovering on either side of seven minutes long, the duo tap into a classic stoner-doom feel, and one could point to this or that riff and say The Sword or liken their tone worship and makeup to Telekinetic Yeti, but that’s missing the point. The point is in the atmosphere that is conjured by “Penumbral Litany” and the familiar proto-metallurgy of the subsequent “Hexxer,” prominent vocals echoing with a sense of command rare for a first offering of any kind, let alone a full-length. In the more willfully grueling “Cenotaph” there’s doomly reach, and as “Winter Rites” marches the album to its inevitable end — one imagines blood splattered on a fresh Rocky Mountain snowfall — the band’s take on established parameters of aesthetic sounds like it’s trying to do precisely what it wants. I’m saying watch out for it to get picked up for a vinyl release by some label or other if that hasn’t happened yet.

Kamru on Facebook

Kamru on Bandcamp

 

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The Atomic Bitchwax Announce Summer UK & European Tour Dates

Posted in Whathaveyou on June 2nd, 2022 by JJ Koczan

New Jersey stalwarts The Atomic Bitchwax soon head abroad for a run of dates this month that will go from Freak Valley in Germany to Hellfest in France, and the trio have now announced that less than a month after that, they’ll be back for another stretch of UK and European dates between July and August, playing at Stoned From the Underground and in club shows with King BuffaloNebula and Pentagram on their way toward SonicBlast in Portugal.

Having recently seen this band and looking forward to doing so again at Freak Valley, I can tell you outright that they absolutely bowled me over. It had been a few years, and The Atomic Bitchwax got on stage and just destroyed. Like a straight line to kickass drawn with precision at top speed. I won’t deny anyone their favorite era of the band, but they played like an act on fire and they had a blast doing it. It was astonishing.

That’s probably enough for now. Dates follow as seen on social media:

The Atomic Bitchwax tour

Its on!
Summer Tour 2022!!!!!
UK-Europe

13.07.22 DE Osnabrück Bastard Club
14.07.22 DE Erfurt Stoned from the Underground
15.07.22 DE Wiesloch R´n P
16.07.22 DE Idar Oberstein Rock Im Daal
17.07.22 NL Deventer Burgerweeshuis + King Buffalo
18.07.22 DE Hamburg Knust
20.07.22 UK Milton Keynes The Craufurd Arms + Nebula
22.07.22 UK Birmingham Asylum
23.07.22 UK London Underworld
24.07.22 UK Bristol Exchange+Nebula
25.07.22 IRL Dublin Grand Social+Nebula
26.07.22 IRL Cork Crane Lane Theatre
27.07.22 UK Belfast Voodoo+Nebula
28.07.22 UK Huddersfield The Parish+Nebula
29.07.22 UK Manchester Breadshed
30.07.22 UK Edinburgh Bannermanns
31.07.22 UK Durham Dominion Festival
03.08.22 ITA Milano Magnolia+Pentagram
04.08.22 ITA Fortunago Birrificio Stuvenagh
05.08.22 ITA Roma Traffic Club+Pentagram
06.08.22 ITA Livorno+Pentagram
08.08.22 AT Vienna Arena+Pentagram
10.08.22 DE Düsseldorf Pitcher
11.08.22 NL Nijmegen Merleijn
13.08.22 POR Moledo Sonic Blast Festival

Previously announced June tour:
Sound of Liberation proudly presents:
The Atomic Bitchwax – Live 2022
16.06. (DE) Nephten – FREAK VALLEY FESTIVAL
17.06. (DE) Stuttgart – Goldmark’s
18.06. (DE) Passau – Tabakfabrik Passau
19.06. (DE) Dresden, Chemiefabrik Dresden (Chemo)
21.06. (AT) Salzburg, Rockhouse Salzburg
22.06. (DE) Nürnberg, MUZclub
23.06. (DE) Berlin, Wild At Heart
24.06. (DE) Wiesbaden, 17 years Sound of Liberation • Wiesbaden
26.06. (FR) Clisson, Hellfest Open Air Festival

The Atomic Bitchwax are:
Chris Kosnik – Bass
Bob Pantella – Drums
Garrett Sweeny – Guitar

http://www.theatomicbitchwax.com/
https://www.facebook.com/The-Atomic-Bitchwax-86002001659/

http://teepeerecords.com/
https://www.facebook.com/teepeerecords/

The Atomic Bitchwax, Scorpio (2020)

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The Atomic Bitchwax Announce European Shows

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

the atomic bitchwax

Although they and I both hail from my beloved Garden State of New Jersey, it’s been long years since I last saw The Atomic Bitchwax, and since they’ll be headlining the pre-show next Thursday night at the Saint Vitus Bar in Brooklyn with support from Freedom Hawk, Valley of the Sun and Druids, I can only say that I’m looking forward to it in a special, special way. I would say the same of seeing them at Freak Valley in Germany as well on the newly announced run of European shows that will take them from that fest to Hellfest in France, but, well, next Thursday is first. I can look forward to Freak Valley after that. And I will.

The Neptunian trio continue to support their Scorpio (review here) album on Tee Pee Records, which had the misfortune of being released in Summer 2020. They’ve been out since then in the US, but these dates — and Freak Valley specifically — will mark their first shows abroad since before the pandemic. They have hinted at more dates to come for July and August, though whether that’s in the States or not, I don’t know at this time.

Whenever, wherever you get the opportunity to see them, it is worth taking advantage. Even outside of the fact that they’ve been a band for more than 20 years and nothing lasts forever, it’s a show you’re going to want to talk about afterward.

Dates follow courtesy of Sound of Liberation on Facebook:

the atomic bitchwax euro june 2022

THE ATOMIC BITCHWAX – JUNE 2022

Friends, we’re stoked to bring New Jersey’s most powerful power trio The Atomic Bitchwax over the pond this summer!

Get hyped for balls-to-the-wall rock’n’roll, smashing 60s & 70s riff rock and proto-metal. The Atomic Bitchwax deliver a unique „thunder boogie“ and finest celebration of the riff, we can’t wait!

Sound of Liberation proudly presents:
The Atomic Bitchwax – Live 2022
16.06. (DE) Nephten – FREAK VALLEY FESTIVAL
17.06. (DE) Stuttgart – Goldmark’s
18.06. (DE) Passau – Tabakfabrik Passau
19.06. (DE) Dresden, Chemiefabrik Dresden (Chemo)
21.06. (AT) Salzburg, Rockhouse Salzburg
22.06. (DE) Nürnberg, MUZclub
23.06. (DE) Berlin, Wild At Heart
24.06. (DE) Wiesbaden, 17 years Sound of Liberation • Wiesbaden
26.06. (FR) Clisson, Hellfest Open Air Festival

See you there!
Your SOL Crew

The Atomic Bitchwax are:
Chris Kosnik – Bass
Bob Pantella – Drums
Garrett Sweeny – Guitar

http://www.theatomicbitchwax.com/
https://www.facebook.com/The-Atomic-Bitchwax-86002001659/

http://teepeerecords.com/
https://www.facebook.com/teepeerecords/

The Atomic Bitchwax, Scorpio (2020)

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Quarterly Review: Ruby the Hatchet, Wyatt E., Famyne, Humanotone, Madmess, Eaters of the Soil, NYOS, Endtime, Bloodshot Buffalo, Oh Hiroshima

Posted in Reviews on April 6th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

THE-OBELISK-FALL-2020-QUARTERLY-REVIEW

Day Three of the Spring 2022 Quarterly Review — commence! As you well know because I’m quite certain you’re the type of person to sit around and think about these things and I’m in no way the only human who gives enough of a crap to notice, today we hit the halfway point of this particular QR, not in the middle, but at the end, as today will culminate with review number 30 of the total 60 to come by the end of the day next Monday. Is it cheating to get a full weekend to do the last installment? Depends entirely on the weekend. In any case, starting tomorrow we go downhill, numerically, not in terms of the quality of what’s covered.

Until then.

Quarterly Review #21-30:

Ruby the Hatchet, Live at Earthquaker

ruby the hatchet live at earthquaker

While on tour with Kadavar in late-2019, New Jersey heavy psych rockers Ruby the Hatchet swung through Earthquaker Devices in Ohio and put these three songs to tape. In addition to being the band’s first release for Magnetic Eye Records, the EP serves these years after the fact as a still-foreshadowing glimpse at their next full-length, the follow-up to 2017’s Planetary Space Child (review here), which but for plague probably would be on its third pressing by now. At least it would be if the rolling riffs and organ shimmer of “1,000 Years” and the bluesier what-I’ll-just-assume-is-an-homage-to-the-band-of-the-same-name “Primitive Man” are anything to go by. Paired with Ruby the Hatchet‘s take on Uriah Heep‘s “Easy Livin’,” the new songs herald the awaited album in a way that seems to justify their having been kept in-pocket for just the right moment. I’m glad that moment is now, and I also kind of feel like Ruby the Hatchet need to start recording more shows and putting out their own soundboard bootlegs. This is clearly mixed, pro-mastered and all that, but still. They make every second of these 14 minutes count.

Ruby the Hatchet links

Magnetic Eye Records store

 

Wyatt E., āl bēlūti dārû

Wyatt E al beluti daru

Anonymous Belgian outfit Wyatt E. return five years after their debut with āl bēlūti dārû, comprising two tracks of all-in Mesopotamian-themed drone ritualizing. The robed outfit top 18 minutes with “Mušhuššu” and “Šarru Rabu” both, and their intention toward immersing the audience in a whole-side experience isn’t misplaced as their arrangements branch beyond genre typicality in service of the Middle Easternism around which much of what they do is based. More than cinematically wrought, the two pieces here are striking in moving from the crescendos of their respective builds into richly conjured explorations, the former of saz and other instruments, the latter of percussion and voice. Likewise, with two drumkits, they want nothing for rhythmic urgency, despite the open structures of the actual material. One wonders at the Orientalism on display throughout as potentially a kind of minstrelsy, particularly with the hooded unknown figures casting themselves as decidedly ‘other’ from a European mainstream, but the same anonymity guards against the notion since it’s unclear just who these people are. I’m not sure I’m all the way on board, but they effectively convey spectacle without losing artistic presence. And if you spend the rest of your day reading about the Akkadian Empire, I’m sure worse things have happened.

Wyatt E. on Facebook

Stolen Body Records website

 

Famyne, II: The Ground Below

Famyne ii the ground below

My impression of Canterbury, UK, doomers Famyne‘s 2016 self-titled debut (review here) were of a band burgeoning in atmosphere anchored by strong songwriting and melodic vocals with periodic likeness to Alice in Chains and The Wounded Kings. Arriving through Svart Records, the eight-song/45-minute II: The Ground Below doesn’t do much to detract from that core impression, but the ambient “A Submarine” and the mean chug in the back half of the later “The Ai” take them to new places and demonstrate the individualization of genre tropes underway in their sound. “Once More” taps a more NWOBHM style, while “Babylon” touches on Candlemassian grandiosity, and “Gone” fluidly begins to transition from the crush of opening duo “Defeated” and “Solid Earth” before “A Submarine” takes hold, which is only further evidence they know what they’re doing.

LINK

LINK

 

Humanotone, A Flourishing Fall in a Grain of Sand

Humanotone A Flourishing Fall in a Grain of Sand

Evidently a number of years in the making from front-to-back, Humanotone‘s second full-length, A Flourishing Fall in a Grain of Sand, finds the solo-project spearheaded by Jorge Cisternas Monsalves, aka Jorge Cist, working once more completely on his own save for some saxophone on 12-minute closer “Even Though.” Given the lush, progressive, and thoughtful execution of progressive heavy rock the Chile-based Cist manifests throughout cuts like “Light Antilogies” and “Ephemeral” prior — taking lessons from Elder‘s Dead Roots Stirring and applying them well for his own purposes — it wouldn’t have been surprising if he picked up the sax himself, frankly. He proves visionary throughout the proceedings one way or the other, and atop a bed of his own drumming is able to cast deep landscapes of keys and guitar and bass in “A Flourishing Fall” and a build and payoff in “Scrolls for the Blind” before the 3:45 “Beyond the Machine” goes straightforward in a way that feels like a gift ahead of the closer, while still retaining its proggy vibe vocally, melodically and rhythmically. There’s been some word-of-mouth hype around this one. Not unwarranted.

Humanotone on Facebook

Humanotone on Bandcamp

 

Madmess, Rebirth

madmess rebirth

Big on vibe, crunches when it wants, spaces out with broader jams, takes its time, flows as it will but still hits with an impact — yeah, there’s no shortage of things to like about MadmessHassle Records-issued second full-length, Rebirth. If you, yourself, have been born-again semi-instrumentalist psych-prog, then no doubt you’ll relate to the careening and twisting path that the five mostly-extended tracks take, unfolding with a focus on liquefied echo on “Albatross” before the companioning “Mind Collapse” introduces the vocals that will show up again on closer “Stargazer” (not a Rainbow cover). Between those two, the title-cut and “Shapeshifter” back-to-back build on some of the mellower stretches prior at least before locking into their own heavier parts, but by then you’re long since hypnotized anyway, and the drift that serves to transition into “Stargazer” is only pushing further out as it goes. I’m not sure who in the Portugese trio (if anyone) is the vocalist, but the voice suits the songs well, even if they’re plainly comfortable going without, and reasonably so.

Madmess on Facebook

Hassle Records website

 

Eaters of the Soil, EP II

Eaters of the Soil EP II

Mostly instrumental, the aptly-titled EP II — the second short release from Utrecht, the Netherlands, trombone-inclusive experimentalist doomers Eaters of the Soil — runs four tracks and 35 minutes and, early on, uses spoken samples from this or that serial killer about putting plastic bags over women’s heads to suffocate them. Through “V – Point of Capture” and even into “VI – Untouched, Unspoken To” (the Roman numeral numbering system continued from their pandemic-minded 2021 first EP), a somewhat slowed down version of whoever it is goes on about killing women and this and that. The second half of the release with “VII – Burrowing, Feasting” and “VIII – Subcurrent,” are both dark enough to be considered affected by the same atmosphere — “VI – Untouched, Unspoken To” has a bit of float to it, so it’s not all grim — churning, meandering and freaking out in at-least-partially improv-jazz style, but Eaters of the Soil cast a grim vision of humanity and that impression stays resonant even as “VIII – Subcurrent” lumbers into its wash of a finish. Is extreme jazz a thing? Turns out maybe.

Eaters of the Soil on Facebook

Forbidden Place Records website

 

NYOS, Celebration

nyos celebration

With its just-slightly-off-beat drum loop, “Light” seems to build into a wash until even the song can’t take anymore and needs to drop out. It’s not the first take on NYOS‘ second offering for Pelagic Records, Celebration — that would be the improvised opener “First Take” — but it and the serene hum that emerges in the subsequent “Something Good” and even the shimming almost steel-drum sounds of “Tucano” demonstrate the Finland-based instrumentalist duo’s stated intentions toward dance music. The later “Gold Vulcan,” the first single, gets into some noisier fare as if to remind that guitarist Tom Brooke (also recording) and drummer Tuomas Kainulainen are coming from a harder-hitting place, but in the also-improv “Cloudberry” just before and particularly the willfully gorgeous “Rosario” (Dawson?) after, the intentions are gentler and more welcoming, and that continues into the final drone stretch and far, far back drumming that consumes most of closer “Surface” before it ultimately explodes in resonant light, reinforcing the notion of joy inherent in the album’s title, feeling like a grand finale to an aural fireworks display.

NYOS on Facebook

Pelagic Records store

 

Endtime, Impending Doom

Endtime Impending Doom

Making their debut on Heavy Psych Sounds with Impending Doom, Sweden’s Endtime are not shy about their influence from horror cinema. Their sound blends sludge and classic doom together such that opener “Harbinger of Disease” comes through like Mike IX Williams of Eyehategod stepping in to front Cathedral, and his harsh wails echo out a tolling (for thee, make no mistake) bell to foretell the harsh terrors soon to unfold. “ICBM” kills quick and lets its church organ mourn later, and the centerpiece “They Live” (a classic) adjusts the balance such that the cinematic, post-Uncle Acid vibe comes to the front still with the barking vocals overtop; a blend I can’t think of anyone else pulling off as well as Endtime do. The longer “Cities on Fire with the Burning Flesh of Men” follows and is more purely about the crunch at least until the sitar shows up — a nice curve to throw — ahead of its severe closing section, and closer “Living Graves” wraps the 28-minute LP by pushing the organ forward again and dissolving into a wash of noise before the feed seems to cut out like channel 11 just stopped broadcasting in the middle of the night. Hey man, I was watching that. Not quite revolutionary, but onto something. Impending, if you will.

Endtime on Facebook

Heavy Psych Sounds website

 

Bloodshot Buffalo, Light EP

BLOODSHOT BUFFALO LIGHT EP

By my count, Bloodshot Buffalo — the solo-project of Santa Rosa, California’s Sheafer McOmber — has put out no fewer than four full-lengths since 2019. Accordingly, the two-song Light EP is most likely a stopgap en route to the next one, but “Light” and “Don’t Follow Me” make an enticing sampler of the band’s wares all the same, digging into an energetic heavy progressive rock like a less-low-end-focused Forming the Void in the title-track as McOmber carefully weaves in a multi-layered guitar solo panning channels from one to the other and “Don’t Follow Me” reaffirms the groove on which that happens while sorting out its own languid flow. The shorter of the two, “Don’t Follow Me” doesn’t feature the same kind of midsection break as “Light” itself, and once it heads out, it doesn’t come back, unlike “Light,” which returns to the hook at the finish. Some structural play as enticement to dig further into the Bloodshot Buffalo catalog while waiting for the seemingly inevitable next thing. This being my first exposure to McOmber‘s work, I hope to do exactly that.

Bloodshot Buffalo on Facebook

Bloodshot Buffalo on Bandcamp

 

Oh Hiroshima, Myriad

oh hiroshima myriad

Swedish now-duo Oh Hiroshima present their fourth album, Myriad, as a collection of weighted, spacious and emotive contemplations. Their heavy post-rock is stylized to be patient and broad-reaching, and in pieces like “All Things Pass” and “Veil of Certainty” early on, they find a niche for themselves between harder-hitting atmospheric material marked out by droning horn arrangements and more straight-ahead melodic verses, the ambience open enough to pull the focus away from underlying structures. It’s an immersive-if-somewhat-familiar modern take, but the two-piece of guitarist/bassist/vocalist Jakob Hemström and drummer Oskar Nilsson stem into moodier vibes on “Tundra” and closer “Hidden Chamber” takes a less effects-centered, more organic-sounding approach, emphasizing the strings for its build while staying earthbound in the drums, bass and guitars beneath. Some will pass Myriad up entirely, others will worship its depth. Either way, the pair seem like they’ll keep moving forward in their well-crafted, considered approach.

Oh Hiroshima on Facebook

Napalm Records website

 

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Sunrot Sign to Prosthetic Records; Release 21% Single

Posted in Whathaveyou on February 16th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

This shit was apparently recorded like 20 minutes from my house, over in Rockaway. Kind of surprised I couldn’t hear the riffs on the wind, to be honest with you. I’ve never been cool enough to know what’s going on around me. The band released their lone-to-date full-length, Sunnata — not to be confused with the Polish band of the same name — in 2017 and are looking to follow it up with a sophomore outing as they sign on to Prosthetic Records, joining Yatra, Body Void and a host of others on the imprint who meld together varying notions of heavy extremity.

Sunrot‘s new single, “21%” is out to mark the occasion, and in addition to having the band’s first clean vocals — bound to happen sooner or later; it’s a vicious, admirable scream they accompany — it also comes with the B-side “The Garden (Feat. ErosLovesYou),” which messes around with some drum-and-bass tendencies. Good fun, in any case.

The PR wire brought details of doings, background on the band, and confirmation of the forthcoming.

Here’s to Morris County, NJ:

sunrot

Sunrot sign to Prosthetic Records; New single, ‘21%’, available via Bandcamp

Prosthetic Records is proud to announce the signing of New Jersey based post-sludge-metal band SUNROT. To mark the occasion, SUNROT have released a brand new single, available exclusively via Bandcamp, titled 21%. The single has an accompanying noise track as a B-side, which was created in collaboration with ErosLovesYou. Work is underway for a full length album which will be released under the Prosthetic banner in due course.

The track features clean vocals – a first for SUNROT – and represents the closure of one chapter of the band and the start of a new one. Vocalist Lex Santiago comments:

“21% was written a few years ago and has been played live – but we never got around to recording as it’s a bit experimental for us – and never saw it fitting on a previous release. We definitely tapped into some softer textures and tones and got vulnerable with it and it’s refreshing to us to try new stuff while still keeping true to ourselves

“The song uses the story of Icarus as a metaphor for a bipolar cycle of depression, mania, and psychosis. The depression being banishment to the labyrinth, the mania being flying through the sky with wax and feather wings, and the psychosis being the moment he flew too close to the sun and burned up the wings and fell. I experienced this cycle myself in 2018, including hospitalisations which left me feeling like I was never going to be able to get out of institutions and the cycle of pain and terror I was in. It was a long road out of that and this song was really healing to finally put the words to it.

“We really are just a bunch of goofballs with big hearts, that’s why we wanted to release it on Valentine’s Day! Let’s be honest, it’s a day that sucks for most of us so we wanted to remind anyone listening that we love you and will be your Valentine this year if you don’t have one.”

The digital single will be released on other digital platforms at a later date, joining the rest of the SUNROT discography, which includes the 2017 album Sunnata, which has been on heavy rotation at Prosthetic Records HQ.

Prosthetic’s Becky Laverty said: “We’ve been fans of Sunrot for a few years now, and when our paths crossed we started to discuss the possibility of working together. Their blend of sludge, noise and post metal coupled with their enthusiasm and passion for creativity makes them a really special band.”

Lex adds: “We are so excited to be working with Prosthetic and to be on their roster of fantastic bands and among great friends! We’ve had so many great folks give us amazing opportunities to get us to this point, and signing with a label who believes in us and the art we make feels great! Thank you Becky, Steve, EJ, and the rest of the Prosthetic team for welcoming us aboard!

Stay tuned for more SUNROT news in the coming months.

SUNROT is:
Christopher Eustaquio (he/him) – guitar
Rob Gonzalez (he/him) – guitar
Lex Santiago (hey/they) – vocals & noise
Alex Dobrowolski (they/them) – drums
Ross Bradley (he/him) – bass

http://www.facebook.com/sunrotmusic
https://www.instagram.com/sunrot.music/
https://sunrot.bandcamp.com/
http://facebook.com/prostheticrecords
http://prostheticrecords.bandcamp.com/
https://shop.prostheticrecords.com/

Sunrot, 21% (2022)

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Ruby the Hatchet to Release Live at Earthquaker EP

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

It was late in 2019 that Ruby the Hatchet — who are from New Jersey, but, like, the Philly part of New Jersey, which is about two hours and an entire country away from the part of New Jersey that I live in — hit the road alongside Berlin’s Kadavar, and apparently that trip involved a stopover at Earthquaker Devices HQ, where the band live-recorded two originals and their take on Uriah Heep‘s “Easy Livin’,” which as I recall was a regular feature of their set at the time. Their new EP, aptly-titled Live at Earthquaker, presents the three tracks from that session and will be out April 22.

Two things to know. First, the two not-covers are new songs! Sweet. Bit of a preview for the band’s eagerly-awaited next full-length. Second, the arrival of this EP more than two months from now probably means that said full-length — which will also be their first for Magnetic Eye Records — probably isn’t coming until later in the summer or early fall. Sure, Live at Earthquaker could be on oddly-timed stopgap for a yet-unannounced May release, but it strikes me as more likely they’ll roll it out in good time to coincide with whatever their next tour will be. Europe for Fall festival season? Split West and East Coast runs? Whatever it might be, the fact that they’ve to-this-point taken their time to put out a new album says to me they’re looking to make the most of it. As well they should.

Of course, this comes with the usual disclaimer that I don’t know shit about shit. The album that will follow Live at Earthquaker might be in the can, at the press, boxed and shipped back by now. Nothing’s official until it’s announced and even then subject to change. Universe of infinite possibilities and all that.

But hey, new Ruby the Hatchet. If you need a reason to follow them on Bandcamp, that’s where I got this info from, so that should suffice:

ruby the hatchet live at earthquaker

Ruby the Hatchet – Live at Earthquaker

With sultry, honey-smoked vocals, lush yet crisp guitars and spirit of rock ‘n roll organ heroics, it takes just a few seconds for luxuriant opening track ‘1000 Years’ from RUBY THE HATCHET’s hot-blooded new EP “Live at Earthquaker” to firmly sink its hooks into ears and hearts.

An unpolished, organic energy courses through the veins of “Live at Earthquaker”, which was recorded live at the EarthQuaker Devices headquarters in Akron, Ohio during the band’s US tour with KADAVAR. The three-track set features early versions of two brand-new songs that will reappear in fully produced recordings on the riff-rockers’ new studio album that has been announced for 2022, with the cherry on top being the physical format debut of RUBY THE HATCHET’s raucous rendition of URIAH HEEP’s 70s anthem ‘Easy Livin’’.

As a captivating glimpse of great things to come, “Live at Earthquaker” sets the stage for the band’s much-anticipated return with both a new album and tours coming in 2022.

Releases April 22, 2022.

1. 1,000 Years
2. Primitive Man
3. Easy Livin’

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

Ruby the Hatchet, “Easy Livin'” official video

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The Atomic Bitchwax and Valley of the Sun Announce Tour Dates

Posted in Whathaveyou on February 10th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Tee Pee Records mainstays The Atomic Bitchwax and recent Ripple Music signees Valley of the Sun are set to tour together for a 15-date run next month. It’s the kind of stint that, for either band, one would hardly blink at three years ago, but in the context of our times, feels a bit more like boldly going on a touring route where just because they’ve gone there before doesn’t mean the planet hasn’t changed. I’m sorry. Trying to shoehorn a Star Trek reference in here in light of the Talosians on the poster and I’ll admit it’s a long road, getting from there to here.

I haven’t seen anything in a while, but Valley of the Sun in even longer than that. The Atomic Bitchwax played a sick-as-hell show in Brooklyn last week, but when the day came, I just couldn’t. It’s more me now than plague numbers. Knowing that doesn’t seem to make it any easier.

Dates and ticket links were posted on social media. Looks like a good run, stopping by SXSW and all.

Dig it:

THE ATOMIC BITCHWAX VALLEY OF THE SUN TOUR

TOUR ANNOUNCEMENT!!! Here comes Bitchwax!

March 2022

03/05/2022 Canton OH @ Buzzbin https://tinyurl.com/2p95ttrj

03/06/2022 Pittsburgh PA @ Mr Smalls Funhouse (on sale 2/10)

03/07/2022 Detroit MI @ Smalls https://tinyurl.com/ypjvw5z5

03/08/2022 Chicago IL @ Chop Shop https://tinyurl.com/4abrnpbx

03/09/2022 Memphis TN @ Hi Tone https://tinyurl.com/mtxbbmsu

03/10/2022 Little Rock AR @ Whitewater (on sale 2/10)

03/12/2022 Austin TX @ Independence Brewing Co. / Gravitoid Fest https://tinyurl.com/yckuyzrw

03/13/2022 Houston TX @ Warehouse Live (on sale 2/10)

03/15/2022 Atlanta GA @ Masquerade https://tinyurl.com/4m2f65z5

03/16/2022 Knoxville TN @ Brickyard https://tinyurl.com/2p9de45f

03/17/2022 Piedmont SC @ Tribbles https://tinyurl.com/szsartmh

03/18/2022 Wilmington NC @ Reggies https://tinyurl.com/yckkm3dx

03/19/2022 Charlottesville VA @ Champion Brewing Co. (on sale 2/10)

03/20/2022 Washington DC @ Hill Country Live https://tinyurl.com/yckmm59a

The Atomic Bitchwax are:
Chris Kosnik – Bass
Bob Pantella – Drums
Garrett Sweeny – Guitar

Valley of the Sun are:
Ryan Ferrier – Guitar/Vocals
Lex Vegas – Drums
Chris Sweeney – Bass, Keys
Josh Pilot – Guitar

http://www.theatomicbitchwax.com/
https://www.facebook.com/The-Atomic-Bitchwax-86002001659/
http://teepeerecords.com/
https://www.facebook.com/teepeerecords/

https://www.facebook.com/valleyofthesun/
http://valleyofthesun.bandcamp.com/
http://www.twitter.com/centaur_rodeo
https://www.facebook.com/theripplemusic/
https://www.instagram.com/ripplemusic/
https://ripplemusic.bandcamp.com/
http://www.ripple-music.com/
http://www.fuzzoramarecords.com/
http://www.twitter.com/fuzzorecords
http://www.facebook.com/Fuzzorama

Valley of the Sun, Old Gods (2019)

The Atomic Bitchwax, Scorpio (2019)

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The Obelisk Questionnaire: Tim Cronin of The Ribeye Brothers

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

tim cronin

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: Tim Cronin of The Ribeye Brothers

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

I sing in The Ribeye Brothers a garage rock band. I started in my mid/late 20s in a couple of bands that didn’t really do much, most notably Dog of Mystery with John McBain and later Dave Wyndorf which morphed into Monster Magnet. I initially drummed and sang. It started out being noisy repetitive heavy psych jams with the rhythm being pretty basic, as I was/am a non-drummer I was fine with simple heavy “cave man-esque” drums. Vocals were an afterthought, mainly drowned by the music.

As the band progressed, the song structures became more complex and my musical shortcomings were emphasized. Dave was becoming more comfortable singing and playing guitar and had the right “swagger” for the songs. I had/have what might be charitably described as “anti-swagger.” So after a brief uncomfortable tenure (two singles, two EPs) I ended up doing lights and liquid projections for Magnet where I was a better fit. I then started Daisy Cutter with Jim and Reg Hogan where I was happy being part of a two-drummer lineup. In ’97, Jon Kleiman (drummer for Magnet, guitarist for Ribeyes) and I started writing songs and that’s where I’m at now.

Describe your first musical memory.

When I was a little kid on a drive with my parents in our Datsun station wagon, “Do You Know the Way to San Jose” by Dionne Warwick came on and something clicked. I know I’ve heard songs/music before that but that’s the one that stuck.

Describe your best musical memory to date.

Seeing Mudhoney at the Court Tavern in New Brunswick opening for Das Damen, like a fucking bomb went off.

When I was in Monster Magnet and the first time we played CBGB’s.

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

Probably one of the early European tours Magnet did. It really opened my eyes about America’s place in the world and how it’s perceived. I was part of a mainly European crew playing foreign venues and it was eye-opening.

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

Hopefully to more progression which could go in any direction. Revisiting previous work with different eyes is also progression.

How do you define success?

Doing something that is challenging and even if it’s generally considered a failure, you get something out of it. More realistically, being able to pay your bills by doing something that’s artistically fulfilling.

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

Besides a couple of dead bodies (traffic accidents), some shitty movies and the Trump presidency, not much.

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

I have no idea until I actually do it.

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

Think outside yourself, show the world in a different way.

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

Always the New York Mets.

https://www.facebook.com/TheRibeyeBrothers
https://www.instagram.com/ribeyebrothersband/
https://theribeyebrothers.bandcamp.com/

The Ribeye Brothers, “Eyes of Santa”

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