Quarterly Review: Enslaved, Milana & Bisonte, Leeds Point, Ocultum, Cruel Curses, Green Hog, Adliga, Buffalo Tombs, BroodMother, King Bastard

Posted in Reviews on December 13th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

THE-OBELISK-FALL-2020-QUARTERLY-REVIEW

Doing things a little differently this time. Yes, it’s still 10 records per day for a total of 50 between today and Friday, but with the utter glut — glutter! — of releases coming out and recently released, I’m doubling up on the Winter Quarterly Review and will be putting together another week of 50 records for January, after the holidays and all the year-end hullabaloo. So it’s 50 now and 50 later. I’ve never done it that way before, and I reserve the right to completely change my mind after this week, but as of right this second, that’s where I’m at. Talk to me again on Friday.

I guess we’d better get started, either way.

Quarterly Review #1-10:

Enslaved, Caravans to the Outer Worlds

enslaved caravans to the outer worlds

With a relatively brief 18-minute excursion that pushes yet-deeper into their particular brand of progressive extreme metal, Norway’s Enslaved continue to walk the increasingly melodic and decreasingly genre-dependent path in following-up 2020’s Utgard (review here). Their affinity for krautrock experimentalism is well established but has never been so forwardly presented as on “Intermezzo I – Lönnlig. Gudlig.,” and the thrust of the opening title-track sets Caravan to the Outer Worlds off with a due sense of motion later complemented by the keyboard-heavy “Ruun II – The Epitaph,” an apparent 15-years-later sequel to the title-cut from 2006’s Ruun (discussed here). Rounding out with “Intermezzo II – The Navigator,” with its almost-motorik space-but-still-somehow-Norwegian-space rock vibe, Enslaved‘s short offering for 2021 demonstrates plainly that they can be whatever and do whatever the hell they want. 30 years from their beginning, they keep growing. Such bands are likewise rare and precious.

Enslaved on Facebook

Nuclear Blast website

 

Bisonte & Milana, Mallorca Stoner Vol. 1 Split

bisonte milana mallorca stoner vol 1

It’s not quite what-you-see-is-what-you-get, but the Discos Macarras split Mallorca Stoner Vol. 1 that brings together two tracks each from Spanish outfits Bisonte — also written Bis·nte — and Milana certainly lays out its mission in representing the Mediterranean island’s heavy underground, and Bisonte aren’t through the nine-minute doomer “Unbalanced” before I’m curious just how many volumes the label might be able to put together from Mallorcan acts. Nonetheless, Bisonte‘s wizardly march on “Involuntary Act” flows organically around its downtrodden vibe, and in the more psychedelic “White Buffalo” and burl-lumbering “Forest Tale,” Milana work even quicker to acquit themselves well with an underlying current of noise. However much of a scene there may or may not be in Mallorca, Mallorca Stoner Vol. 1 is a welcome means through which to begin exploring both these acts more and others with whom they might share local stages. One will await Vol. 2 with interest.

Bisonte on Facebook

Milana on Instagram

Discos Macarras website

 

Leeds Point, Mother of Eternity

Leeds Point Mother of Eternity

New York’s Leeds Point seem on a doomed course with their Mother of Eternity EP on the opener “High Strangeness,” but they shake it up late with some cowbell boogie, and “The Summoning” further deepens the plot with layered in acoustics and a more lush melody as the trio builds out from their basic guitar-bass-drums configuration. Likewise, the shorter “Long Way Down” is a more straight-ahead ’70s rocker, and the closing title-track meets its initial prog rock melody first with driving riffs and later with more angularity and harsher barking vocals… before bringing it all back around at the end. With Eternal Black out of commission, NYC needs someone to champion traditional doom, but that’s not who these Long Islanders are. Their sound — set forth on their debut full-length some seven years ago; their most recent prior outing was 2019’s Equinox Blues (review here) — is more purposefully diverse. If they’re championing anything here, it’s their individuality. And that suits them.

Leeds Point on Facebook

Leeds Point on Bandcamp

 

Ocultum, Residue

ocultum residue

The second full-length from Santiago, Chile’s Ocultum, Residue, was first issued by the band independently in 2019. Picked up for a vinyl release through Interstellar Smoke Records, the four-song/49-minute long-player (bong)rips into filthy-fuzz doom and scabbed-over sludge, the lumbering coming in one longform nod after another in “The Acid Road” and “Residue” itself — which might be the most densely-toned inclusion of the bunch, but it hardly matters when the 16-minute “Ascending With the Fumes of the Dead” and the 12-minute “Reflections on Repulsiveness” and you’re either on board with Ocultum‘s periodically-deathly-always-fucked style by then or you’ve probably been so grossed out that you’ve gone and gotten yourself a job, decided you were never really so misanthropic to start with, and that what you thought was the inner scum of your existential makeup was just you needing to have lunch or take a shower or some shit. Meanwhile, Ocultum are over here shrooming up and worshiping decay. Different league entirely. Even the quietest moments of Residue are heavy. There’s just no escape from it.

Ocultum on Facebook

Interstellar Smoke Records store

 

Cruel Curses, Fables, Folklore & Other Assorted Fever Dreams

Cruel Curses Fables Folklore and Other Assorted Fever Dreams

If Tampa, Florida, heavy progressive rockers Cruel Curses decided to approach their third full-length, Fables, Folklore & Other Assorted Fever Dreams, with the goal of writing the entire album as a single-song, well, they did that. Though cumbersome in its title, “Fables, Folklore & Other Assorted Fever Dreams” is 36 minutes of linear-charted fare, twisting through parts both hard-hitting and airy, acoustic and electric and probably what could’ve been different songs if otherwise broken up in some places. Does it really matter? Nah. The finished piece, which is a departure from the four-piece and an impressive achievement in itself, makes its point with prog’s affection for funk propelling as many of its parts as metal’s more aggressive shred. Yet, Fables, Folklore & Other Assorted Fever Dreams does not merely trade between quiet and loud parts so much as fluidly bring the listener along its ebbs and flows, and though not without its element of self-indulgence, the album earns its swagger.

Cruel Curses on Facebook

Cruel Curses on Bandcamp

 

Green Hog Band, Devil’s Luck

green hog devils luck

Give me the raw swing, echoing gurgles and unabashed fuzz of Green Hog‘s “Luck of the Devil” any day of the week. The Brooklynite trio released their Dogs From Hell full-length last year and follow it with the also-sung-entirely-in-Russian sophomore outing, not without its sense of ambience in “Dark Territory” and “Desert King,” the biker-in-space instrumental capper “Ric Moto,” but perhaps even more about the impact of its crashes than the spaces being created. Whatever definition of the word you might want to apply, Devil’s Luck is fucking heavy. And grim, to boot. Still, one could only call “Long Smoke” some kind of stoner rock, even if it is an especially crusty take thereupon, and the novelty of gurgled-out vocals sung in another language, complemented by samples in classic sludgy fashion, isn’t to be understated. If my man’s voice can hold out for a whole set, these guys must put on a killer show.

Green Hog on Facebook

The Swamp Records on Bandcamp

 

Adliga, Vobrazy

Adliga Vobrazy

There are a few different plot threads one might follow along as Vobrazy weaves through its six component tracks, but the debut full-length from Belarusian five-piece bring their varied fare together around a central idea of progressive, metallic doom. Sometimes that manifests as a post-metallic chug as one hears in “Apošni raz,” which leads off, or it can be the growls and black-metal-squibblies-gone-airy of the early going in “Žyvy.” Such shifting arrangements in vocals (in Belarusian) between guitarist Uladzimir Burylau and singer Kate Sidelova add to the unpredictable nature of the band, but there’s no question that melody wins the day, and given how Vobrazy plays out across its 41 minutes, one gets the feeling that the extremity of “Naščadkam” and the more-patient-before-they-hit-the-payoff closer “Bol na sercy” do not coexist by happenstance. The band — completed by guitarist Ignat Pomazkov, bassist Roman Petrashkevich and drummer Artem Voronko — are not light on ambition, aesthetically-speaking, but I like the fact that I have zero guess what their next record will sound like.

Adliga on Facebook

Adliga on Bandcamp

 

Buffalo Tombs, Two

Buffalo Tombs Two

While not barebones by any means, with solos aplenty and variety in their tempos readily established between the first two cuts “Slow Wisdom Coming” and “Hot Girl Summer,” there’s still something about Buffalo Tombs‘ aptly-titled second long-player, Two, that comes across as wholly unpretentious, not trying to overstate its own argument or draw the audience away from the riffs and grooves central to its purpose. Wholesome, if not always humble. The six-songer is done in under half an hour, so if you wanted to call it an EP, you could, but even as Eric Stuart brings in a bit of synth for “Dream Breather” and “The Beheading of John the Baptist” in its later percussion-meet-drift-out finish, the Denver instrumentalists maintain a straightforward underpinning, with Stuart‘s guitar/keys/bass met with Joshua Lafferty‘s basslines and Patrick Haga‘s drumming in easily-digested-but-not-earth-shattering fashion, the low end hitting a particular note of righteousness in rolling out “Al Khidr” without being too showy in doing so. I’d be interested to hear them explore their psychedelic side further, but there’s plenty of vibe here in the meantime.

Buffalo Tombs on Facebook

Buffalo Tombs on Bandcamp

 

BroodMother, The Third Eye

BroodMother The Third Eye

Though understated in the fullness of its production, BroodMother‘s The Third Eye EP leaves little doubt as to where the Worcester, UK, five-piece are coming from after having issued their first album, Sin, Myth, Power, in 2019. Jay Clark, who produced that outing, drums on and mixed this one, and its four songs readily serve as a sampler for an audience to be introduced to the band’s take on heavy rock and roll. “Spiritual Shakedown” and “Killing for Company” are midtempo riffers, with the latter touching slightly on Acrimony-style hookmaking and chug, while “(The Ballad of) Anti-Matter Man” gets trippy in its intro and shuffles into an apex in its second half before finishing mellow, and closer “The Trick of the Journey” hints toward ’90s crunch but marries it to a bluesier stretch of lead solo guitar. Still, it’s rock and roll, however you want to cut it — straight-up but not lifeless — and BroodMother proudly carry its banner.

BroodMother on Facebook

BroodMother on Bandcamp

 

King Bastard, It Came From the Void

King Bastard - It Came From The Void art HD

From the almost-if-not-entirely-instrumental unfolding of “From Hell to Horizon” and “Kelper-452B” to the black metal vocals on “Psychosis (In a Vacuum),” the harsh sax of “Black Hole Viscera” and the drone-laden 10-minute finisher “Succumb to the Void,” the debut full-length from Stony Brook, New York’s King Bastard, It Came From the Void, seems wilfully bent toward disorienting those who’d dare to take it on. The breadth and spaciousness of its “From Hell to Horizon” isn’t to be understated — neither the percussion chill in its midsection — but the weight that corresponds there and in “Kelper-452B” and through “Bury the Survivors/Ashes to Ashes,” with its Aliens samples and dug-in-its-own-head proggy chaos is no less a factor in making the album as striking a first impression as it is. Jammy, heavy psych, black metal, doom, sludge — you could call King Bastard any of these and not be wrong, but it’s in how fluidly they unite them that their potential shines through.

King Bastard on Facebook

King Bastard links

 

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Enslaved Announce ‘The Otherworldly Big Band Experience’ Stream for Dec. 21

Posted in Whathaveyou on December 1st, 2021 by JJ Koczan

enslaved the otherworldly big band experience

Enslaved‘s new EP, Caravans to the Outer Worlds, leads off the next Quarterly Review, which starts Dec. 13. To support the release, the band have newly announced a collaboration with psych-proggers Shaman Elephant and the video-arts specialists Kolibri Media for what’s been dubbed ‘The Otherworldly Big Band Experience.’ Will it be Enslaved‘s Sgt. Pepper’s moment? Probably depends on the set they play, but if anyone was going to do that for black metal-rooted music, it would be Enslaved. I’m not even sure who the competition is at this point, not that I was ever an expert.

Dec. 21 is the air date for the stream, and of course you’ll recall that earlier this year, the long-running Norwegian outfit put together a box set of their prior streams as the 2020 Cinematic Tour DVD/CD and DVD/LP offering for fans (eternal gratitude to Mike H.). No clue of they’ll do something similar here, but wouldn’t it kind of be a waste to not? Shit, if you’ve got Iver Sandøy in the band, record everything.

Info came down the PR wire:

enslaved the otherworldly big band experience poster

ENSLAVED ANNOUNCE “THE OTHERWORLDLY BIG BAND EXPERIENCE” STREAMED EVENT ON DECEMBER 21ST

NEW EP “CARAVANS TO THE OUTER WORLDS IS OUT NOW

May those of Sense and Earth gather for the new dawn…

Enslaved’s new EP Caravans To The Outer Worlds was released unto the universe last month. It is a tale of departure, about leaving behind a barren and desolate world, traveling boldly into the future. It signaled the end of an era for the psychedelic Norwegians, hinting at new pastures.

In celebration of the EP’s release, tied in with the upcoming Winter Solstice (a Pagan holy day marking the symbolic death and rebirth of the Sun), Enslaved are proud to announce an extraordinary streaming event. ‘The Otherworldly Big Band Experience’ will take place on Tuesday December 21st. Fellow psychedelic Norwegian prog band Shaman Elephant will be joining Enslaved onstage.

The Otherworldly Big Band Experience
Tuesday December 21st @ 12:00PM PT / 3:00PM ET
Tickets are now on sale now via https://enslavedstore.com/collections/big-band-stream
The stream will be available to watch until the end of December 24th
Stream FAQ + support info is HERE: https://enslavedstore.com/pages/faq-support

Enslaved’s Ivar Bjørnson gave some insight, “Soon, the sun will turn – once again marking the transition from one year to another and the onset of brighter days ahead. We are many who wish to see this coming Winter Solstice mark a lasting turning away from dark days behind us. We have kept it up all along; virtual tours, rehearsing, writing, and releasing an album and an EP. You heard us when we said, “this will not stop us!” – the Enslaved Community has grown stronger through the crisis. Now we will close this cycle with a grandiose virtual concert, and hope for you to join us from all over the world.

“The Otherworldly Big Band Experience” is about wanting to show even more of what ENSLAVED is: ENSLAVED is also an idea. It is a live band that is teeth-grittingly metal, has rock’n’roll in its DNA, while maintaining and expanding on its position as a groundbreaking progressive metal act. All while exploring the boundaries of Norse Mythology and Rune-lore, Psychology and History.

We have recruited both an extension to the line-up with the young and talented Bergen prog rock band, Shaman Elephant. We have worked together with some of the most talented moviemakers and visual wizards around – also young and from Bergen: Kolibri Media. Add the Enslaved live crew to the mix and you have got magic, no less.

We have aspired to create a concert film that reflects this expanded representation of ENSLAVED and cannot wait to show you all. It is bigger than any project we have done before, and it is unlike anything else you have seen in this kind of music. You will see and hear songs that have never been performed before. Songs you might have heard will sound and look like you haven’t seen and heard before. There is new material, and material as old as the band. One constant binds it all together: it is ENSLAVED.”

Enslaved is:
Ivar Bjørnson – guitar
Grutle Kjellson – vocals/bass
Ice Dale – guitar
Håkon Vinje – keys/vocals
Iver Sandøy – drums

http://www.facebook.com/enslaved
https://www.instagram.com/enslavedofficial
http://www.enslaved.no/
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http://instagram.com/nuclearblastusa

Enslaved, ‘The Otherworldly Big Band Experience’ teaser

Enslaved, “Caravans to the Outer Worlds” official video

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Earthless Announce New LP Night Parade of One Hundred Demons out Jan. 28

Posted in Whathaveyou on November 10th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

Well, here’s that album reveal to follow up on the European tour announcement from this morning. Two Earthless news posts in one day? Must be a good day.

I maintain my position from earlier that this moment is a crucial one for Earthless as a band, all the more so now that the Jan. 28 release date for Night Parade of One Hundred Demons has been made official. You’ll note that the outing is comprised only of two songs, which is enough to lead me to think that they’re pulling back from the more straightforward, traditional verse/chorus (with vocals, no less) songcraft that showed up for parts of 2018’s Black Heaven (review here), though I suppose it could well be that one track is 35 minutes long and the other five. They’d have to get creative with vinyl editing, but stranger things have happened, though from what I can see of the preorder page, the vinyl edition is three sides with an etched side D. So I guess they’ve already done that “get creative” bit.

For the sake of completeness, I’ve included the West Coast and UK/Euro tour dates here as well. No, I don’t really think I’ll get to go write a book about the tour, but it was fun to daydream this morning.

Fresh off the PR wire:

earthless night parade of one hundred demons

EARTHLESS ANNOUNCE NEW ALBUM ‘NIGHT PARADE OF ONE HUNDRED DEMONS’

Out January 28, 2022 via Nuclear Blast

San Diego Psych Rock Power Trio (Isaiah Mitchell, Mike Eginton & Mario Rubalcaba) Share 3-Minute Excerpt of Epic 20-minute Track
“Death To The Red Sun”

Winter West Coast Tour: LA, Pappy & Harriet’s, Seattle & More

Earthless returns with their new album Night Parade of One Hundred Demons on January 28 via Nuclear Blast, along with a winter tour kicking off January 27th at Los Angeles’ The Echo. The latest from the San Diego-based psych rock power trio — Isaiah Mitchell (guitar & vocals), Mike Eginton (bass) and Mario Rubalcaba (drums) — was was recorded with Rubalcaba’s childhood friend Ben Moore, who’s worked with everyone from Diamanda Galas and Burt Bacharach to Ceremony and Hot Snakes. Their sixth album is comprised of two monster songs: the 41-minute title track and the 20-minute “Death To The Red Sun.” Hear a 3-minute excerpt of “Death To The Red Sun” HERE and pre-order the album HERE: https://media.nuclearblast.de/shoplanding/2021/Earthless/remasteredreissues.html

The album and its title were inspired by an ancient Japanese legend in which a horde of demons, ghosts and other terrifying ghouls descend upon sleeping villages at night, once a year. Known as Hyakki Yagyō, or the “Night Parade of One Hundred Demons,” one version of the tale states that anyone who witnesses this otherworldly procession will die instantly—or be carried off by the creatures of the night. As a result, the villagers hide in their homes, lest they become victims of these supernatural invaders. “My son and I came across the ‘Night Parade of One Hundred Demons’ in a book of traditional Japanese ghost stories,” bassist Mike Eginton explains. “I like the idea of people hiding and being able to hear the madness but not see it. It’s the fear of the unknown.”

Given the record’s inspiration, it should come as no surprise that Night Parade Of One Hundred Demons strikes a more sinister tone than the rest of the band’s catalogue. “It definitely has a darker, almost evil kind of vibe compared to stuff we’ve done in the past,” Rubalcaba says. “There’s more paranoia and noise, and some of Isaiah’s whammy-bar stuff kind of reminds me of these Jeff Hanneman moments in Reign In Blood, where it just seems like everything is going to hell. It’s pretty fun.”

When Eginton wasn’t tracking his bass parts, he worked on the album’s incredible sleeve art. “He really dedicated himself to the project,” Rubalcaba says. “He’d be drawing in the studio with, like, a coal-miner’s lamp on his head while we were doing overdubs. He really knocked it out of the park.” “I basically wanted to draw my interpretation of the folk story,” Eginton explains. “I started researching the different Yōkai—the demons—and really got into it. It was really cool reading about where they came from and what their interactions with humans were. Then I tried to create what I imagined the event might look like. I didn’t get a hundred in there, but I got quite a few.”

Their latest is a return to the epic instrumentals Earthless made their unmistakable name on, whereas 2018’s Black Heaven featured shorter songs and vocals from guitarist Isaiah Mitchell on much of the album—an unprecedented move for the trio. Black Heaven was recorded while Mitchell was living in the Bay Area, which made it difficult for the band to get together and work on the type of long instrumental pieces they’re known for. But, in March 2020 — specifically, the night the pandemic lockdown kicked in — Mitchell moved back to San Diego from the Bay Area. Bad timing, perhaps—or maybe perfect timing.

“With Isaiah here, we were able to get together once or twice a week to work on these jams,” Rubalcaba says. “We got back to our original songwriting process of just playing and building off each other little by little. And we actually had the time to do that, which was creatively inspiring.” Plus, they were all on the same page about not wanting to do another record with vocals. “Black Heaven was outside our comfort zone. I think it was a good record, but it was challenging to write songs in a more traditional verse-chorus-verse format. This one was more enjoyable.”

All told, Night Parade Of One Hundred Demons isn’t just a return to the band’s traditional format—it’s a return to their very beginnings. “This album actually has the very first Earthless riff in it,” Eginton reveals. “We just recorded it 20 years after we wrote it. But we’re really happy with how this record came out. We feel it might be our finest to date.”

‘NIGHT PARADE OF ONE HUNDRED DEMONS’ TRACK LISTING

01 – Night Parade Of One Hundred Demons
02 – Death To The Red Sun

Album Pre-Order: https://nblast.de/EarthlessNightParade

EARTHLESS Jan./Feb. US Tour Dates:
Jan 27 – Los Angeles, CA – Echo
Jan 28 – San Diego, CA – Casbah
Jan 29 – Pioneertown, CA – Pappy & Harriet’s
Jan 30 – Berkeley, CA – Cornerstone
Feb 1 – Portland, OR – Mississippi Studios
Feb 2 – Seattle, WA – Chop Suey
Feb 4 – Salt Lake City, UT – Metro Music Hall
Feb 5 – Denver, CO – HQ
Feb 6 – Albuquerque, NM – Launchpad
Feb 8 – Phoenix, AZ – Rebel Lounge

Route One Booking in cooperation with Sound of Liberation proudly present:

EARTHLESS + special guest MAIDA VALE
28.04 – Manchester (UK) / Gorilla
30.04 – London (UK) / Desertfest London
01.05 – Bristol (UK) / Thekla Bristol
02.05 – Dublin (IE) / Whelan’s
03.05 – Glasgow (UK) / Stereo
04.05 – Birmingham (UK) / Mama Roux’s
05.05 – Brighton (UK) / Chalk Venue Brighton
06.05 – Hasselt (BE) / Nox Tumultum @ Muziekodroom
07.05 – Nijmegen (NL) / Sonic Whip
08.05 – Cologne (DE) / Club Volta
09.05 – Wiesbaden (DE) / Schlachthof Wiesbaden
10.05 – Rouen (FR) / Le 106
11.05 – Paris (FR) / La Maroquinerie
12.05 – Lyon (FR) / CCO
13.05 – Bordeaux (FR) / Krakatoa
14.05 – Madrid (ES) / Kristonfest
15.05 – Porto (PT) / Hard Club
17.05 – Montpellier (FR) / Victoire 2
19.05 – Monthey (CH) / Pont Rouge Monthey
20.05 – München (DE) / Feierwerk
21.05 – Berlin (DE) / Bi Nuu*
22.05- Leipzig (DE) / UT Connewitz
*EARTHLESS only

Tickets go on sale this Friday 12th November 10am UK / 11am CET. Don’t miss out on it and join this monster of a live experience!

EARTHLESS Lineup:
Isaiah Mitchell – Guitar & Vocals
Mike Eginton – Bass
Mario Rubalcaba – Drums

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Earthless, Night Parade of One Hundred Demons, “Death to the Red Sun” teaser

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Earthless Announce European Tour with Maida Vale

Posted in Whathaveyou on November 10th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

earthless

Dear Earthless, Route One Booking, Sound of Liberation, Nuclear Blast and all concerned management parties,

Take me with you. I don’t do this kind of thing often, but let’s face it, Earthless are the single most pivotal heavy rock/psych band in the world right now. As stakes go, they’re high here. An entire international underground community — a subculture — is waiting with bated breath for the announcement of Earthless‘ next full-length, and I find myself in much the same state. This tour represents the band’s first tour of Europe since the world locked down for the Covid-19 pandemic, and it is my sincere wish to document it in book form.

I don’t eat much, especially in front of Europeans. I don’t take up too much space. I’m quiet and I’m not interested in bothering anybody or glomming onto a band in some kind of fan-worship thing. That’s not who I am. I’m perfectly happy to be the guy taking notes on his laptop in some corner somewhere, shooting some pictures every now and again of the scenery, the show, whathaveyou. From this material, I’d like to craft a book that describes this pivotal moment for the band as well as their audience, perhaps the sense of release, of a return to something like a normalcy that doesn’t forget the trauma we as a species have just lived through, but finds a path forward nonetheless.

All I’d need is a place to be and wifi. I can help move gear or whatever it takes. But especially as this tour includes stops at Desertfest London and Kristonfest, and may in fact coincide with that awaited new record from one of this generation’s most influential acts, I hope you’ll consider this serious offer to, in some way, capture and preserve the experience of it in the tradition of rock and roll literature.

Thank you for your time and consideration,
JJ Koczan

Dates from Sound of Liberation and the band’s prior West Coast tour announcement:

earthless european tour

EARTHLESS + MAIDAVALE EU & UK TOUR 2022

Friends, are you ready for the ultimate psych package!? Okay, let’s be real. You HAVE to see this live if you get the chance to!

Earthless’ immersive live jams are beyond comparison and their excessive riffing matches just perfectly with MaidaVale’s outstanding bluesy heavy psychedelic approach.

EARTHLESS Jan./Feb. US Tour Dates:
Jan 27 – Los Angeles, CA – Echo
Jan 28 – San Diego, CA – Casbah
Jan 29 – Pioneertown, CA – Pappy & Harriet’s
Jan 30 – Berkeley, CA – Cornerstone
Feb 1 – Portland, OR – Mississippi Studios
Feb 2 – Seattle, WA – Chop Suey
Feb 4 – Salt Lake City, UT – Metro Music Hall
Feb 5 – Denver, CO – HQ
Feb 6 – Albuquerque, NM – Launchpad
Feb 8 – Phoenix, AZ – Rebel Lounge

Route One Booking in cooperation with Sound of Liberation proudly present:

EARTHLESS + special guest MAIDA VALE
28.04 – Manchester (UK) / Gorilla
30.04 – London (UK) / Desertfest London
01.05 – Bristol (UK) / Thekla Bristol
02.05 – Dublin (IE) / Whelan’s
03.05 – Glasgow (UK) / Stereo
04.05 – Birmingham (UK) / Mama Roux’s
05.05 – Brighton (UK) / Chalk Venue Brighton
06.05 – Hasselt (BE) / Nox Tumultum @ Muziekodroom
07.05 – Nijmegen (NL) / Sonic Whip
08.05 – Cologne (DE) / Club Volta
09.05 – Wiesbaden (DE) / Schlachthof Wiesbaden
10.05 – Rouen (FR) / Le 106
11.05 – Paris (FR) / La Maroquinerie
12.05 – Lyon (FR) / CCO
13.05 – Bordeaux (FR) / Krakatoa
14.05 – Madrid (ES) / Kristonfest
15.05 – Porto (PT) / Hard Club
17.05 – Montpellier (FR) / Victoire 2
19.05 – Monthey (CH) / Pont Rouge Monthey
20.05 – München (DE) / Feierwerk
21.05 – Berlin (DE) / Bi Nuu*
22.05- Leipzig (DE) / UT Connewitz
*EARTHLESS only

Tickets go on sale this Friday 12th November 10am UK / 11am CET. Don’t miss out on it and join this monster of a live experience!

The trio recently completed work on their 6th album that’s due out in 2022.

EARTHLESS Lineup:
Isaiah Mitchell – Guitar & Vocals
Mike Eginton – Bass
Mario Rubalcaba – Drums

https://www.facebook.com/earthlessrips
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Earthless, “Sonic Prayer” snippet from Live in the Mojave Desert

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Earthless Announce Jan./Feb. Tour Dates

Posted in Whathaveyou on October 25th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

earthless

It doesn’t seem crazy to think that this West Coast tour might either precede or coincide with the release of the next Earthless album, though one should note as well that it comes just a couple weeks after Nuclear Blast will reissue the band’s first three records, aka the Tee Pee era and then some. Those LPs are landmarks, and Earthless have an influence emanating from their home base in San Diego and spanning across continents to prove it, but the band’s primary impact has always been live, so as much as one looks forward to them following up 2018’s Black Heaven (review here), the fact that they’re set to embark on their first tour in over two years — madness, yes — is only good news as well.

So this is the West Coast. East Coast to follow? Europe? Hell if I know. But if this is the band testing the waters, it seems like a fair look at the shape of touring to come at least for the next few years. More short runs rather than full-month stretches, hit spots, then go back home, rather than tempt fate as regards plague contraction. At least that makes sense to me, but I’m a guy saying this who thus far has failed to leave the house and return to an indoor show. Sad.

From the PR wire:

earthless winter tour 2022

EARTHLESS ANNOUNCES WINTER 2022 US TOUR

San Diego’s heavy psych rock trio EARTHLESS have announced their long-awaited return to stages will take place this coming winter. Their first excursion in over 2 years kicks off January 27th in Los Angeles and will wrap up on February 8th in Phoenix. Tickets go on sale Friday, October 22nd at https://www.earthlessofficial.com/tour-dates.

EARTHLESS Tour Dates:
Jan 27 – Los Angeles, CA – Echo
Jan 28 – San Diego, CA – Casbah
Jan 29 – Pioneertown, CA – Pappy & Harriet’s
Jan 30 – Berkeley, CA – Cornerstone
Feb 1 – Portland, OR – Mississippi Studios
Feb 2 – Seattle, WA – Chop Suey
Feb 4 – Salt Lake City, UT – Metro Music Hall
Feb 5 – Denver, CO – HQ
Feb 6 – Albuquerque, NM – Launchpad
Feb 8 – Phoenix, AZ – Rebel Lounge

As fans eagerly await news of their forthcoming, highly-anticipated 6th album, EARTHLESS recently revealed plans to reissue their first 3 albums, “Sonic Prayer,” “Rhythms from a Cosmic Sky” and “From the Ages” via Nuclear Blast on January 14th. The remastered versions will be available digitally and on limited edition vinyl, cassette and CD.

Pre-order the reissues here: www.nuclearblast.com/earthless-remastered

The trio recently completed work on their 6th album that’s due out in 2022.

EARTHLESS Lineup:
Isaiah Mitchell – Guitar & Vocals
Mike Eginton – Bass
Mario Rubalcaba – Drums

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Earthless, “Sonic Prayer” snippet from Live in the Mojave Desert

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Quarterly Review: Carcass, LLNN, Smiling, Sail, Holy Death Trio, Fuzz Sagrado, Wolves in Haze, Shi, Churchburn, Sonolith

Posted in Reviews on October 1st, 2021 by JJ Koczan

the-obelisk-fall-2016-quarterly-review

Welcome to Friday. I’m glad to have come this far in the Quarterly Review, and even knowing that there are two days left to go — next Monday and Tuesday, bringing us to a total of 70 for the entire thing — I feel some measure of accomplishment at doing this full week, 10 reviews a day, for the total of 50 we’ll hit after this batch. It has mostly been smooth sailing as regards the writing. It’s the rest of existence that seems intent to derail.

But these are stories for another time. For now, there’s 10 more records to dive into, so you’ll pardon me if I do precisely that.

Quarterly Review #41-50:

Carcass, Torn Arteries

carcass torn arteries

The original progenitors of goregrind return in gleeful fashion with their first full-length since 2013’s Surgical Steel. They’ve toured steadily over the intervening years, and Torn Arteries would seem to arrive timed to a return to the road, though it also follows the 2020 EP, Despicable, so make of that what you will. One way or the other, the 10-track/50-minute offering is at very least everything one could reasonably ask a Carcass record to be in 2021. That’s the least you can say of it. Point of fact, it’s probably much more. Driven by Bill Steer‘s riffs and solos — which would be worth the price of admission alone — as well as the inimitable rasp of bassist Jeff Walker, Carcass sound likewise vital and brutal, delighting in the force of “Kelly’s Meat Emporium” and the unmitigated thrash of “The Scythe’s Remorseless Swing,” while scalpel-slicing their way through “Eleanor Rigor Mortis” and the 10-minute “Flesh Ripping Sonic Torment Limited,” which, yes, starts out with acoustic guitar. Because of course it does. After serving as pioneers of extreme metal, Carcass need to prove nothing, but they do anyway. And bonus! Per Wiberg shows up for a guest spot.

Carcass on Facebook

Nuclear Blast Records website

 

LLNN, Unmaker

LLNN Unmaker

Some concerned citizen needs to file assault charges against Copenhagen crushers LLNN for the sheer violence wrought on their third full-length, Unmaker. Comprised of 10 songs all with single-word titles, the Pelagic Records release uses synth and tonal ultra-heft of guitar and bass to retell Blade Runner but starring Godzilla across 39 minutes. Okay so maybe that’s not what the lyrics are about, but you’d never know it from the harsh screams that pervade most of the outing — guitarist Christian Bonnesen has a rare ability to make extreme vocals sound emotional; his performance here puts the record on another level — which renders words largely indecipherable. Still, it is their combination of whiplash-headbang-inducing, bludgeoning-like-machines-hitting-each-other, air-moving weight and keyboard-driven explorations evocative enough that LLNN are releasing them on their own as a companion-piece that makes Unmaker the complete, enveloping work it is.

LLNN on Facebook

Pelagic Records on Bandcamp

 

Smiling, Devour

Smiling Devour

I’m not sure it’s fair to call something that was apparently recorded five years ago forward thinking, but Smiling‘s melding of post-punk urgency, violin flourish, the odd bit of riot-style aggression, psychedelia and poppy melodic quirk in varying degrees and at various points throughout the debut album, Devour, is that anyway. Fronted by guitarist/songwriter Annie Shaw, Smiling makes a cut like even the two-minute “Other Lives” feel dynamic in its build toward a swelling-rumble finish, immediately shifting into the dreamier psych-buzz of “Forgetful Sam” and the melancholy-in-the-sunshine “Do What You Want.” Yeah, it goes like that. It also goes like the rager title-track though, so watch out. The earlier “Lighthouse” swings like Dandy Warhols, but the closing trilogy of “FPS,” “Take Your Time” and “Duvall Gardens” — also the three longest songs included — showcase a more experimentalist side, adding context and depth to the proceedings. So yeah, forward thinking. Time is all made up anyway.

Smiling website

Rebel Waves Records webstore

 

Sail, Flood

Sail Flood

The track itself, “Flood,” runs all of three minutes and 18 seconds, and I do mean it runs. The Taunton, UK, four-piece of guitarist/vocalists Charlie Dowzell and Tim Kazer, bassist/harsh-vocalist Kynan Scott and drummer Tom Coles offer it as a standalone piece and the track earns that level of respect with its controlled careening, the shouted verses giving way to a memorable clean-sung chorus with zero sense of trickery or pretense in its intention. That is to say, “Flood” wants to get stuck in your head and it will probably do precisely that. Also included in the two-songer digital outing — that’s Flood, the release, as opposed to “Flood,” the song — is “Flood (Young Bros Remix),” which extends the piece to 4:43 and reimagines it as more sinister, semi-industrial fare, but even in doing so and doing it well, it can’t quite get away from the rhythm of that hook. Some things are just inescapable.

Sail on Facebook

Sail on Bandcamp

 

Holy Death Trio, Introducing…

Holy Death Trio Introducing

Austin’s Holy Death Trio have the distinction of being the first band signed as part of the collaboration between Ripple Music and Rob “Blasko” Nicholson (bassist for Ozzy Osbourne, etc.), and Introducing…, the three-piece’s debut, is enough of a party to answer any questions why. Gritty, Motörheadular riffs permeate from post-intro leadoff “White Betty” — also some Ram Jam there, I guess — underscored by Sabbathian semi-doomers like “Black Wave” and the near-grim psychedelia of closer “Witch Doctor” while totaling an ultra-manageable 33 minutes primed toward audience engagement in a “wow I bet this is a lot of fun live” kind of way. It would not seem to be a coincidence that the centerpiece of the tracklist is called “Get Down,” as the bulk of what surrounds seems to be a call to do precisely that, and if the bluesy shuffle of that track doesn’t get the job done, something else is almost bound to.

Holy Death Trio on Facebook

Ripple Music website

 

Fuzz Sagrado, Fuzz Sagrado

fuzz sagrado self titled

Having put Samsara Blues Experiment to rest following the release earlier this year of the swansong End of Forever (review here), relocated-to-Brazil guitarist/vocalist Christian Peters (interview here) debuts the instrumental solo-project Fuzz Sagrado with a three-song self-titled EP, handling all instruments himself including drum programming. “Duck Dharma,” “Two Face” and “Pato’s Blues” take on a style not entirely separate from his former outfit, but feel stripped down in more than just the lack of singing, bringing together a more concise vision of heavy psychedelic rock, further distinguished by the use of Mellotron, Minimoog and Hammond alongside the guitar, bass and drum sounds, complementing the boogie in “Pato’s Blues” even as it surges into its final minute. Where Peters will ultimately take the project remains to be seen, but he’s got his own label to put it out and reportedly a glut of material to work with, so right on.

Fuzz Sagrado on Facebook

Electric Magic Records on Bandcamp

 

Wolves in Haze, Chaos Reigns

wolves in haze chaos reigns

It’s 10PM, do you know where your head is? Wolves in Haze might. The Gothenburg-based three-piece of vocalist/guitarist Manne Olander, guitarist Olle Hansson and drummer/bassist/co-producer Kalle Lilja set about removing that very thing with their second record, Chaos Reigns, working at Welfare Sounds with Lilja and Per Stålberg at the helm in a seeming homage to Sunlight Studios as reinvented in a heavy rock context. Still, “In Fire” and “The Night Stalker” are plainly sinister in their riffs — the latter turning to a chorus and back into a gallop in a way that reminds pointedly of At the Gates, never mind the vocals that follow — and “Into the Grave” is as much bite as bark. They’re not without letup, as “Mr. Destroyer” explores moodier atmospherics, but even the lumbering finish of the title-track that ends the album is violent in intent. They call it Chaos Reigns, but they know exactly what the fuck they’re doing.

Wolves in Haze on Facebook

Majestic Mountain Records store

Tvåtakt Records store

 

Shi, Basement Wizard

shi basement wizard

They work a bit of NWOBHM guitar harmony into the solos on “Rehash” and “At Wit’s End,” and the centerpiece “Interlude” is a willful play toward strum-and-whistle Morricone-ism, but for the most part, Louisville’s Shi are hell-bent on destructive sludge, with the rasp of guitarist Bael — joined in the effort by guitarist Jayce, bassist Zach and drummer Tyler — setting a Weedeater-style impression early on “Best Laid Plans” and letting the rest unfold as it will, with “Lawn Care for Adults” and “We’ll Bang, OK?” and the chugging fuckery of the title-track sticking largely to the course the riffs lay out. They make it mean, which is exactly the way it should be made, and even the sub-two-minute “Trough Guzzler” finds its way into a nasty-as-hell mire. Sludge heads will want to take note. Anyone else will probably wonder what smells like rotting.

Shi on Facebook

Shi on Bandcamp

 

Churchburn, Genocidal Rite

churchburn genocidal rite

Oh, that’s just disgusting. Come on now. Be reasonable, Churchburn. This third LP from the Providence, Rhode Island, extremists brings them into alignment with Translation Loss Records and though it’s just five songs — plus the intro “Toll of Annihilation” — and 33 minutes long, that’s plenty of time for guitarist/vocalist Dave Suzuki and company to pull you down a hole of blistering, vitriolic terrors. Where does the death end and the doom begin? Who gives a shit? Suzuki, bassist/vocalist Derek Muniz, guitarist Timmy St. Amour and drummer Ray McCaffrey take a duly mournful respite with “Unmendable Absence,” but after that, the onslaught of “Scarred” and the finale “Sin of Angels” — with Incantation‘s John McEntee sitting in on vocals — is monstrous and stupefyingly heavy. You’ll be too busy picking up teeth to worry about where the lines of one microgenre ends and another begins.

Churchburn on Facebook

Translation Loss Records webstore

 

Sonolith, Voidscapes

Sonolith Voidscapes

Have riffs, will plod. Voidscapes, the three-song second EP from Las Vegas’ Sonolith lets the listener know quickly where it’s coming from, speaking a language (without actually speaking, mind you) that tells tales of amplifier and tonal worship, the act of rolling a massive groove like that central to nine-minute opener “Deep Space Leviathan” as much about the trance induced in the band as the nod resultant for the listener. Close your eyes, follow it out. They complement with the shorter “Pyrrhic Victory,” which moves from a subdued and spacey opening line into post-High on Fire chug and gallop, effectively layering solos over the midsection and final payoff, and “Star Worshipers,” which slows down again and howls out its lead to touch on Electric Wizard without being so overt about it. At about three minutes in, Sonolith kick the tempo a bit, but it’s the more languid groove that wins the day, and the concluding sample about traveling the universe could hardly be more appropriate. Asks nothing, delivers 21 minutes of riffs. If I ever complain about that, I’m done.

Sonolith on Facebook

Sonolith on Bandcamp

 

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Khemmis Announce Deceiver out Nov. 19; “Living Pyre” Video Posted

Posted in Whathaveyou on September 13th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

khemmis (Photo by Jason Sinn)

A Nov. 19 release date has been set for the fourth album from Denver, Colorado, doom metallers Khemmis. Titled Deceiver in the band’s tradition of one-word record names, the upcoming LP boasts six tracks and follows behind 2020’s Doomed Heavy Metal EP (review here), leading off with the new single and video “Living Pyre.” The album will be their first since 2018’s Desolation (review here), and if I’m not mistaken, also the first since signing to Nuclear Blast for worldwide release, that mega-imprint having handled their European affairs while North America was still under the banner of 20 Buck Spin. Don’t quote me on that, because the music industry is complex and it’s very, very early as I write this, but it’s a point of interest one way or the other.

So’s the single, while we’re here. The trio sound huge, and the melodies soar, and then everything gets all rippy-killy and that’s fun too. If you’re still reading this and you know what Khemmis do, I doubt you’ll come out of “Living Pyre” complaining. Hell, you’ve probably already heard it.

Dig:

khemmis deceiver

KHEMMIS TO RELEASE NEW ALBUM, “DECEIVER,” ON NOV 19TH

WATCH THE VIDEO FOR FIRST SINGLE “LIVING PYRE” NOW!

Doomed heavy metal outfit KHEMMIS will make their long-awaited return this fall with the release of their fourth full-length album, “Deceiver.” Set to be released on November 19th from Nuclear Blast, their first record in over three years is their darkest release to date. Today, the band has revealed a music video for the first single, “Living Pyre.” Watch now at the link below.

KHEMMIS has also announced their return to the stage for a show on December 11th in Brooklyn, NY at Saint Vitus Bar. Tickets are onsale now at https://link.dice.fm/6CRdddVVpjb.

“Living Pyre” signifies far more than just the beginning of another musical endeavor for the band; it is a substantial benchmark for emotional struggle and growth.

Guitarist/vocalist Ben Hutcherson comments:

“When it comes to my own mental health, when I’m in a bad place, I can’t access the part of me that creates art. After reaching that understanding of myself, the bulk of this song came out in one sitting. I was feeling stable. I was feeling hopeful–even though so much outside in the world was not exactly inspiring. All of us needed a reason to feel a glimmer of hope.”

Describing the thematic elements of the new record, vocalist/guitarist Phil Pendergast says:

“Thematically, all of the songs are about the many ways that we are tricked into believing these stories about ourselves–that we are broken, that we are not good enough, that our genetics determine our fate. This title is the label that we put on our minds as a force that tricks us into believing these stories. The record’s lyrical trajectory is similar to Dante’s descent into an Inferno of his own making. It is our darkest album to date.”

Hutcherson adds:

“While our minds and hearts are responsible for this kind of deception, so too is the world around us. There is this dialectic between the two that produces suffering. Anyone who has struggled with mental health or suffered any sort of trauma will tell you that there were times that the mind is its own beast that has to be wrangled. In that sense, we become the deceivers ourselves; we believe we deserve to be the vessel for this pain and this suffering that is being inflicted on us both externally and internally.”

Pre-order “Deceiver” now at http://www.nuclearblast.com/khemmis-deceiver

“Deceiver” Tracklisting:
1. Avernal Gate
2. House of Cadmus
3. Living Pyre
4. Shroud of Lethe
5. Obsidian Crown
6. The Astral Road

KHEMMIS is:
Ben Hutcherson (Guitar & Vocals)
Phil Pendergast (Vocals & Guitar)
Zach Coleman (Drums)

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Khemmis, “Living Pyre” official video

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Video Interview: Enslaved’s Ivar Bjørnson, on a Boat, Talks Touring Cinematically and More

Posted in Bootleg Theater, Features on August 13th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

enslaved

Norwegian progressive black metal progenitors Enslaved just last week announced their new EP, Caravans to the Outer Worlds, would be released this Fall on Nuclear Blast. Well, at the time, I had already conducted this interview with founding guitarist Ivar Bjørnson, and though I asked about new material, there was never a mention of what will be the direct follow-up to 2020’s Utgard (review here). I guess we learned that the dude can keep a secret.

Further evidence? I brought up the fact that he was supposed to curate at the outdoor fest Fire in the Mountains in 2020 in amid the gorgeous scenery of Wyoming, and asked if he’d heard anything about resuming that post. He didn’t say no — which I took as yes anyway — but confirmation came down the PR wire this week that, indeed, Bjørnson will curate the 2022 edition of Fire in the Mountains. Not that you need an excuse to experience the landscape of Wyoming for yourself, but that’d be one if you did. So enslaved cinematic tour 2020again, (not sarcastic) kudos to Bjørnson on keeping the secret. With a 30-year career behind him, no wonder dude’s a professional.

Even further evidence of that? He did this entire interview from a sailing ship. Apparently as part of a thing for Norwegian television, he was invited to take a sailing trip around Bergen, and yeah, he’s out there, on a boat, the whole time. Because of course. The waves look smooth — it was the connection that was choppy — but still, did the whole interview, live from the deck of the boat. Pro-shop. It seemed like a beautiful, if breezy, day on the water.

So let’s say there’s been a bunch of Enslaved news lately, and that’s before you even get to the fact that they’ve announced tour dates in Europe for early next year. Plus, they’re still not at all far removed from the release of their Cinematic Tour 2020 box set, which was the impetus behind my wanting to do the interview in the first place, to talk about the streaming shows, the production value, playing older songs and doing 2003’s Below the Lights in full with new band members Håkon Vinje (keys/vocals) and Iver Sandøy (drums/vocals), as well as bringing Utgard to life in that context. Even with the secrets kept, there was plenty, plenty, plenty to talk about.

Please enjoy:

Enslaved, Interview with Ivar Bjørnson, Aug. 4, 2021

Enslaved will release Caravans to the Outer Worlds on Oct. 1. The Cinematic Tour 2020 box set is out now. More info at the links. Special thanks to Mike H. for the inspiration to chase down this interview.

Enslaved, “Homebound (Cinematic Tour 2020)” official video

Enslaved, “Caravans to the Outer Worlds” official video

Enslaved, Utgard (2020)

Enslaved on Facebook

Enslaved on Instagram

Enslaved website

Nuclear Blast on Facebook

Nuclear Blast on Instagram

Nuclear Blast website

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