Quarterly Review: Elder, Hibernaut, The Oil Barons, Temple of Love, The Gray Goo, Sergio Ch., Spectral Fields, Pink Fuzz, The Dukes of Hades, Worse

Posted in Reviews on October 13th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

the obelisk quarterly review

Last day o’ the QR, and that’s always fun, but looking at the calendar and looking at my desktop, I might try to knuckle down for a follow-up edition next month. I know I traditionally do one in December, which is so, so, so stupid, even with the relative dearth of press releases around the holidays, because there’s so much else going on. But maybe in November, before the Thanksgiving holiday. I only have one thing maybe-slated for November now, so now would be the time to slate it. Check back Nov. 10? Roll it out on my sister’s birthday? Maybe.

For now though, one more batch of 10 to round out the 70 total releases covered here, and as ever, I’ve basically packed the final day with stuff I already know I like. That’s nothing against anything on any of the other days, but if you’re a regular around here, you probably already know that I load up the finish to make it easier on myself. Not that any day here was really hard to get through, but for everything else in life that isn’t sitting in front of the laptop and writing about music.

Thanks as always for reading. I hope you found something you dig in this QR. Back to normal tomorrow.

Quarterly Review #61-70:

Elder, Liminality/Dream State Return

elder liminality dream state return

Progressive heavy rock spearheads Elder surprise-dropped Liminality/Dream State Return, their first two-songer EP since 2012’s Spires Burn/Release (review here), a couple weeks ago. It’s their first studio outing since 2022’s Innate Passage (review here), and while one might be tempted to read into the melodic wash of “Liminality” (13:10) and the way its vocals become part of the song’s atmosphere, balanced for nuance and texture in the mix, and the keyboardier take on “Dream State Return,” the material was reportedly sourced from pieces of material left over from their last couple albums, rather than written new. Nonetheless, the way these parts are fleshed out underscores just how special a band Elder is, since basically they can take a progression they’ve had laying around for however long and turn into something so majestic. This, in combination with their work ethic, has made them the best band of their generation. They remain such.

Elder on Bandcamp

Stickman Records website

Hibernaut, Obsidian Eye

Hibernaut Obsidian Eye

Following 2023’s Ingress (review here), brash Salt Lake City four-piece Hibernaut — guitarist/vocalist Dave Jones (Oxcross, Dwellers, ex-SubRosa), lead guitarist Matt Miller, bassist Josh Dupree and drummer Zach Hatsis (Dwellers, ex-SubRosa) — begin to step further out from their influences with their second album, the six-track/47-minute Obsidian EyeHigh on Fire remain a central point of inspiration, but you know how that band really kind of announced who they were with Blessed Black Wings and set themselves on their own path? There’s some of that happening in the grooves of “Pestiferous,” “Revenants” and others here, and while the galloping double-kick and dirt-coated declarations might ring familiar, Hibernaut are beginning to put their own stamp on their craft, and one remains curious how that will continue to manifest their persona in their sound. High on Fire never had a song like “Beset,” and that wah on “Engorge Behemoth” has just an edge of Sabbath-via-Electric Wizard, so there’s more here than marauding if you want to hear it.

Hibernaut website

Olde Magick Records on Bandcamp

The Oil Barons, Grandiose

the oil barons grandiose

Titled as though they intended to preempt criticism of their own self-indulgence — a kinder-self-talk version might have been called ‘Expansive’ — the second album from L.A.’s The Oil Barons, Grandiose, is working with an expanded definition of heavy either way. Part desert rock, it’s also Western Americana enough to open with a take on Morricone and while they’re for sure laying it on thick with the gang-chanted version of “John Brown’s Body” worked in between the organ sway of “Gloria” and the nine-minute lap-steel-inclusive expanse of “Shinola.” The later heavy instrumental reacher “Quetzalacatenango” (16:39) and their beefing up of the Grateful Dead regular “Morning Dew” as “Morning Doom” (13:49) are longer, but there’s more going on here than track length, as the melodic twang-pop of “Vivienne” and the light-barroom-swing-into-harmonies-into-riffs of the subsequent “Death Hangs” demonstrate. Top it all off with a purported narrative and Grandiose lives up to its name, but also to its intention.

The Oil Barons on Bandcamp

The Oil Barons on Instagram

Temple of Love, Songs of Love and Despair

Temple of Love Songs of Love and Despair

The first Temple of Love full-length, Songs of Love and Despair, feels very much like a willful callout to classic goth rock. The core, partnered founding duo of vocalist Suzy Bravo (Witchcryer) and guitarist/vocalist Steve Colca (ex-Destroyer of Light), as well as the rhythm section of bassist Joseph Maniscalco and drummer Patrick Pascucci (Duel) begin with a string of catchy, uptempo numbers dark in atmosphere with an unmistakable sheen on the guitar tone and by the time the centerpiece instrumental “Paradise Lost” takes hold with a heavier shift leading into the second half of the album, with “Devil” as an obvious focal point, you’re hooked. The vocal trades on “Save Yourself” and the rocker “Joke’s on You,” with Colca growling a bit, distinguish them as modern, but they’re firm in their purpose unto the string sounds that cap “If We Could Fly,” and clearly aesthetic is part of the mission. They didn’t name themselves after a Sisters of Mercy LP by mistake.

Temple of Love website

Temple of Love on Bandcamp

The Gray Goo, Cabin Fever Dreams

the gray goo cabin fever dreams

From garage-style heavy and psychedelic jamming, modern space boogie to denser, doomier roll and a stylistically-offbeat quirk that feels ever more intentional, Montana-based trio The Gray Goo are dug into this mini-gamut of style on their third album, Cabin Fever Dreams, with guitarist/vocalist Max Gargasz (who also recorded/produced) giving space in the mix (by Robert Parker) for the melody in Matt Carper‘s bass to come through on 10-minute opener/longest track (immediate points) “Intrepid Traveler,” beginning a thread of nuance that emphasizes just how flexible the band’s sound is. Even amid the fuzz and chugging resolution of “Isolation” and the jammed-but-with-a-plan “Floodgates,” there’s a sense of looking beyond genre to internalized individualism, the latter carrying into the marching semi-nerd-rapped title-track, which breaks to let the weirdness persist before coming back around with a shuffle to close, while “Manic” (with Colton Sea on guest vocals) roughs up proto-punk until it hits a midsection of Sabbath blues and gets a little more shove from there. “Manic” brings this to a culmination and some chanting gives over the minimal psych experiment “Someone’s at the Door,” which closes. They’ve let go of some — not all, but some — of their earlier funk, but The Gray Goo remain delightfully on their own wavelength. Someone in this band likes Ween, and they’re better for it.

The Gray Goo Linktr.ee

The Gray Goo on Bandcamp

Sergio Ch., Shiva Shakti Drama

sergio ch shiva shakti drama

A decade after his first solo release, the declarative 1974 (review here), former Los Natas guitarist/vocalist Sergio Ch. (né Chotsourian, also of Ararat, Soldati, numerous other projects and collaborations) has only broadened his palette around a central approach to avant folk and intimate experimentalism. “Las Riendas” has been around for a while, unless I’m wrong (always possible) and “Tufi Meme 94” is an unearthed four-track demo of the Los Natas song of the same name, but it’s in the repetitions and slow, fuzz-infused evolution of “Tear Drop,” the vocally-focused “Stairway” and the somehow-ceremonial “Centinelas Bajo el Sol” that Shiva Shakti Drama lays out its most ethereal reaches. The album was reportedly put together following an injury to Chotsourian‘s ear, during a recovery period after his “left ear blew up during a Soldati rehearsal.” So there’s healing to be had in “Little Hands” and the buzzing lead of “Violet,” as well as exploration.

Sergio Chotsourian on Instagram

South American Sludge Records on Bandcamp

Spectral Fields, Spectral Fields IV

spectral fields iv

Spectral Fields is the duo of Jason Simon (Dead Meadow) and and Caleb Dravier (Jungle Gym Records), and with IV they present a two-part title-piece “IV A” (20:04) and “IV B” (23:12), with each extended track taking on its own atmosphere. The hand percussion behind “IV A” is evocative of quiet desert Americana, like clopping horseshoes, while “IV B” runs more sci-fi in its keyboard and synthy beat behind the central, malleable-and-less-still-than-it-seems overarching drone. The guitar on “IV A” works with a similar river’s-surface-style deceptive stillness. Immersion isn’t inevitable, and the challenge here is to dwell alongside the band in the material if you can, with the reward for doing so being carried across the gradually-shifting expanse that Simon and Dravier lay out. It’s not a project for everybody, but Spectral Fields shine with meditative purpose and ethereal presence alike.

Jason Simon on Bandcamp

Not Not Fun Records website

Pink Fuzz, Resolution

Pink Fuzz Resolution

The second full-length, Resolution, from Denver-based harmony-prone heavy rockers Pink Fuzz owes much of its impact to tempo and melody — which I think makes it music. The brother/sister duo of John Demitro (guitar) and bassist LuLu Demitro bass share vocal duties and trade lead spots to add variety across the taut, no-time-for-bullshit 10 songs as drummer Forrest Raup lends shove to the buzzing desert riffage of “Coming for Me,” while the title-track shreds into a ’90s-style ticky-ticky-tock of a groove and “Am I Happy?” moves from its standalone-voice beginning to a gorgeously executed build and roll, bolstered by the Alain Johannes mix bringing up the lead guitar alongside LuLu’s voice, but rooted in the performance captured rather than the after-the-fact balancing of elements. “No Sympathy” and “Worst Enemy” stick closer to a Queens of the Stone Age influence, but the desert is a starting point, not the end of their reach. It’d be fair to call them songwriting-based if they didn’t also kick so much ass as players.

Pink Fuzz Linktr.ee

Permanent Teeth Records on Bandcamp

The Dukes of Hades, Oracle of the Dead

The Dukes of Hades Oracle of the Dead

Having the tone is one thing and making it move is another, but Dorset, UK, two-piece The Dukes of Hades bring forth their debut EP, Oracle of the Dead with a pointed sense of push, more so once they’re on the other side of rolling-into-the-slowdown opener “Seeds of Oblivion,” in “Last Rites,” “Pigs” and “Constant Grief,” where the tempo is higher and the bruises are delivered by the measure. Even Gareth Brunsdon‘s snare on “Constant Grief” comes across thick, never mind the buzzing riffs of Steve Lynch, whose guttural vocals top the procession. They save their most fervent shove for the two-minute finale “Death Defying Heights,” but the eight-minute penultimate “Tomahawk” sees them work in more of a middle-paced range while executing trades in volume and even letting go to silence as they hit minute six soon to burst back to life, so they’re already messing with the formula a bit even as they write out what that formula might be. That’s just one of the hopeful portents on this gritty and impressive first outing.

The Dukes of Hades on Bandcamp

The Dukes of Hades on Instagram

Worse, Misandrist

worse misandrist

A noise-infused trio from Vancouver — or maybe it’s just that their logo reminds me of Whores. — the three-piece Worse issued their latest single “Misandrist” in memory of Ozzy, following on from the also-one-songer “Mackinaw” from earlier in the year. The newer cut is more lumbering and establishes a larger tonal presence by virtue of its instrumentalist take, while drummer Matt Wood brought party-time shouts to “Mackinaw,” which of course emphasized and complemented the central riff in a different way. Out front of the stage, guitarist Shane Clark and bassist Frank Dingle offer rumble and spacious distortion, the effect seeming to build up with each new, lurching round as they dirge to the fading ringout. Sludgy in form, the affect presents itself like a half-speed High on Fire, which if you’ve got to end up somewhere, is a more than decent place for “Misandrist” to be. If you’re still reading this, yes, I’m talking about myself as well as the band. They’ve got one LP out. I’d take another anytime they’ve got it ready.

Worse on Bandcamp

http://www.instagram.com/worseband/

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Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol Announce US Tour & Big Dumb Fest 3 Lineup

Posted in Whathaveyou on May 5th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

rickshaw billie's burger patrol

Okay, so, in 10 days, Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol will have traveled from their hometown in Austin, Texas, to embark on their first European tour, making stops at Obsidian Dust, Sonic Whip, Desertfest LondonDesertfest Berlin and Mystic Festival, in addition to copious club shows covering much of the continent. Upon returning home, a week later the trio will host their own all-dayer, in Austin, Big Dumb Fest 3, which they’re also playing.

Four days after that, they’re in New York supporting Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs at Le Poisson Rouge, which is a show the city will talk about for the rest of this year at least, and taking off on a round of East Coast touring that will bring them to the end of June. In July they’re at Unhinged Fest in Denver, and then in August they follow-up the Eastern run by doing a full West Coast jaunt.

Just a band working their ass off. Nothing to see here.

Except for the show, which as I understand it is quite a thing to see indeed.

From the PR wire:

big dumb fest 3 poster sq

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol announce BIG DUMB FEST 2025 and US tour with THE SWORD

EU & UK tour starts May 15th

Austin trio Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol announce their 3rd annual hometown BIG DUMB FEST today, as well as US tour dates supporting the reunited The Sword. The festival is curated by the band, who hand picked the entire 7 band lineup (with RBBP headlining the event) and collection of food vendors. BIG DUMB FEST 3 takes place Saturday, June 14th at Mohawk Austin. (Assets)

The Sword dates start in August, and cover the Western US. RBBP returns to the East Coast in June supporting Pigs x 7. The band also launches their first EU & UK tour in May. Please see all dates below. Tickets for all shows are available now HERE: https://taplink.cc/rickshawbillie

BIG DUMB FEST 2025 – Austin, TX – Saturday, June 14th – Mohawk Austin – 6pm

Bands: Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol * Gus Baldwin & The Sketch * The Grasshopper Lies Heavy * Glime * Gran Moreno * Subpar Snatch * Bat Lips *

Food: Bad Larry’s Burger Club – Grandpa’s Glizzys – Sucio Boy Burgers

BIG DUMB RIFFS is available on digital, LP and cassette, released May 10th, 2024. Order/stream the album on all formats HERE: https://taplink.cc/rickshawbillie

RICKSHAW BILLIE’S BURGER PATROL EU/UK LIVE 2025:
15/05 Brussels, BE – Obsidian Dust Festival
16/05 Nijmegen, NL – Sonic Whip Festival
17/05 Wolverhampton, UK – Dive
18/05 London, UK – DesertFest London
20/05 Paris, FR – Mécanique Ondulatoire
21/05 Lille, FR – Le Bulle Café
22/05 Bochum, DE – Die Trompete
23/05 Berlin, DE – DesertFest Berlin
24/05 Lübeck, DE – Treibsand
25/05 Stockholm, SE – Bar Brooklyn
27/05 Malmö, SE – Plan B
28/05 Dresden, DE – Chemiefabrik
29/05 Traunstein, DE – Cafe Festung
30/05 Bolzano, IT – Zoona
31/05 Ljubljana, SI – Menza Pri Koritu
01/06 Zagreb, HR – Vintage Industrial Bar
02/06 Vienna, AT – Arena
03/06 Budapest, HU – Szimpla
05/06 Gdansk, PL – Mystic Festival
06/06 Brno, CZ – Kabinet MUZ
07/06 Prague, CZ – Bike Jesus

RICKSHAW BILLIE’S BURGER PATROL – US LIVE 2025:
06/14 Austin, TX – Mohawk – BIG DUMB FEST 2025
06/18 NY, NY – Le Poisson Rouge*
06/19 Philadelphia, PA – Underground Arts*
06/20 Washington, DC – 9:30 Club*
06/21 Pittsburgh, PA – Thunderbird*
06/23 Cleveland, OH – Grog Shop*
06/24 Detroit, MI – Magic Bag*
06/25 Chicago, IL – Lincoln Hall*
06/27 Toronto, ON – The Concert Hall*
06/28 Montreal, QC – Bar Le Ritz*
06/29 Boston, MA – Brighton Music Hall*
07/26 Denver, CO – Unhinged Fest
08/17 Phoenix, AZ – Crescent Ballroom +
08/18 Albuquerque, NM – Sister Bar +
08/19 Denver, CO – Gothic Theater +
08/20 Salt Lake City, UT – Metro Music Hall +
08/22 Spokane, WA – Knitting Factory +
08/23 Seattle, WA – Neumo’s +
08/24 Portland, OR – Hawthorne Theater +
08/25 Boise, ID – Knitting Factory +
08/27 San Francisco, CA – Great American Music Hall +
08/28 Pioneertown, CA – Pappy & Harriet’s +
08/29 San Diego, CA – Belly Up Tavern +
08/30 Los Angeles, CA – The Bellwether +

* w/ Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs Pigs
+ w/ The Sword

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol:
Leo Lydon: eight-string guitar/vocals
Aaron Metzdorf: bass
Sean St.Germain: drums

https://www.facebook.com/rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol
https://www.instagram.com/rickshawbillieandtheboys
https://rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol.bandcamp.com/
http://www.rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol.com/
https://taplink.cc/rickshawbillie

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol, “Whip it Around” official video

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol, Big Dumb Riffs (2024)

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Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol Post “Clowntown” Video

Posted in Bootleg Theater on March 17th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

rickshaw billie's burger patrol

Have you made your plan to see Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol this year? If not, the band offer a new video for “Clowntown” as a 98-second reminder. The Austin, Texas, trio have done no shortage of touring, including the East Coast, but as they herald their 2024 album, Big Dumb Riffs (review here), the imperative is there. They were at SXSW this weekend — has SXSW come back around to being cool again yet? if not, it surely will, not that anyone would say so if it did — for two gigs and are about to set out on a West Coast run that will take them into April for two dates with The Sword.

Later this summer, they’ll be at Unhinged Fest in Denver, but before that is the European tour that includes Obsidian Dust, Sonic Whip, Desertfest London, Desertfest Berlin and Mystic Festival in Poland, as well as copious club shows tying the fest stops together. As many of those as there are — fest stops — I was hoping the band would also join the lineup for Desertfest Oslo, which would allow me to answer the initial question of this post in the positive. But even without a Norwegian pop-in at the outset (date-wise, it would’ve been the start of the tour), it’s a badass run and I’ve no doubt the band will come out of it exhausted with a bunch of new friends.

You’ve got time for this video, so don’t pretend you don’t. It’s a minute and a half long. It took you longer to read to this point than it will take you to watch the clip, which maybe I should take as a clue to shut the fuck up and let you do that. By all means, enjoy. Dates and such follow from the PR wire, and the album stream’s at the bottom of the post:

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol, “Clowntown” official video

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol drop “Clowntown” video, Western US tour starts March 19, EU & UK tour May 15

Austin trio Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol share the official video for “Clowntown”. The track is the opening tune to their breakout album Big Dumb Riffs. Watch and share “Clowntown” HERE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vA8AurTKf7g

RBBP launch Western U.S. tour dates on March 19th, followed by their first ever EU and UK shows, kicking off on May 15th. Please see all dates below. Tickets for all shows are available now HERE: https://taplink.cc/rickshawbillie

BIG DUMB RIFFS is available on digital, LP and cassette, released May 10th, 2024. Order/stream the album on all formats HERE: https://taplink.cc/rickshawbillie

RICKSHAW BILLIE’S BURGER PATROL – US LIVE 2025:
03/19 Phoenix, AZ – Linger Longer Lounge
03/20 San Diego, CA – Whistle Stop
03/21 Los Angeles, CA – Zebulon
03/22 Oakland, CA – Thee Stork Club
03/24 Portland, OR – Show Bar
03/25 Seattle, WA – Barboza
03/27 Salt Lake City, UT – Urban Lounge
03/28 Fort Collins, CO – The Coast
03/29 Denver, CO – Bluebird Theatre
03/30 Colorado Springs, CO – Vultures
04/10 Dallas, TX – Granada Theater (w/ The Sword)
04/11 San Antonio, TX – Paper Tiger (w/ The Sword)
07/26 Denver, CO – Unhinged Fest

RICKSHAW BILLIE’S BURGER PATROL EU/UK LIVE 2025:
15/05 Brussels, BE – Obsidian Dust Festival
16/05 Nijmegen, NL – Sonic Whip Festival
17/05 Wolverhampton, UK – Dive
18/05 London, UK – DesertFest London
20/05 Paris, FR – Mécanique Ondulatoire
21/05 Lille, FR – Le Bulle Café
22/05 Bochum, DE – Die Trompete
23/05 Berlin, DE – DesertFest Berlin
24/05 Lübeck, DE – Treibsand
25/05 Stockholm, SE – Bar Brooklyn
27/05 Malmö, SE – Plan B
28/05 Dresden, DE – Chemiefabrik
29/05 Traunstein, DE – Cafe Festung
31/05 Ljubljana, SI – Menza Pri Koritu
01/06 Zagreb, HR – Vintage Industrial Bar
02/06 Vienna, AT – Arena
03/06 Budapest, HU – Szimpla
05/06 Gdansk, PL – Mystic Festival
06/06 Brno, CZ – Kabinet MUZ
07/06 Prague, CZ – Bike Jesus

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol:
Leo Lydon: eight-string guitar/vocals
Aaron Metzdorf: bass
Sean St.Germain: drums

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol, “Whip it Around” official video

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol, Big Dumb Riffs (2024)

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol on Facebook

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol on Instagram

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol on Bandcamp

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol website

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol links

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Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol Announce European Tour

Posted in Whathaveyou on February 14th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

Currently in the Midwest as they finish up shows this weekend on a tour that brought them back toward the Eastern Seaboard supporting their 2024 album, Big Dumb Riffs (review here), Austin trio Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol will embark on their first-ever stint in Europe and the UK this June. By then, they’ll already have their March tour of the West Coast — their umpteenth, I believe — under their collective belt, and they were out this past Fall with King Buffalo, so the voyage abroad could hardly come at a better time, momentum-wise. You’d almost think these things were planned out in advance.

The PR wire brought dates and ticket/album order links. I don’t know if the video for “Whip it Around” has been posted here yet, but that’s definitely a worthy way to spend a literal minute of your day. Among the slew of Eurofests they’re playing, I was hoping they’d get added to Desertfest Oslo, which I’ll hopefully be attending in May, but apparently no dice as yet. Will keep my fingers accordingly crossed, as this is a band I feel like I need to see.

The dates:

rickshaw billie's burger patrol europe 2025

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol announce full EU & UK tour dates in May, Western US tour in March

Austin trio Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol announce the complete dates of their upcoming first ever EU and UK tour today, kicking off on May 15th. Please see all dates below. Tickets for all shows are available now HERE: https://taplink.cc/rickshawbillie

The band is currently on the road for the last week of their East Coast tour with Lip Critic supporting. Following shortly after SXSW, the band embarks on Western US headlining dates.

BIG DUMB RIFFS is available on digital, LP and cassette, released May 10th, 2024. Order/stream the album on all formats HERE: https://taplink.cc/rickshawbillie

RICKSHAW BILLIE’S BURGER PATROL – LIVE 2025:
02/13 Hamtramck, MI – Small’s (w/ Lip Critic)
02/14 Chicago, IL – Empty Bottle (w/ Lip Critic)
02/15 Milwaukee, WI – Cactus Club (w/ Lip Critic)
02/16 Minneapolis, MN – Zhora Darling (w/ Lip Critic)

03/19 Phoenix, AZ – Linger Longer Lounge
03/20 San Diego, CA – Whistle Stop
03/21 Los Angeles, CA – Zebulon
03/22 Oakland, CA – Thee Stork Club
03/24 Portland, OR – Show Bar
03/25 Seattle, WA – Barboza
03/27 Salt Lake City, UT – Urban Lounge
03/28 Fort Collins, CO – The Coast
03/29 Denver, CO – Bluebird Theatre
03/30 Colorado Springs, CO – Vultures
04/10 Dallas, TX – Granada Theater (w/ The Sword)
04/11 San Antonio, TX – Paper Tiger (w/ The Sword)

RICKSHAW BILLIE’S BURGER PATROL EU/UK 2025:
15/05 Brussels, BE – Obsidian Dust Festival
16/05 Nijmegen, NL – Sonic Whip Festival
17/05 Wolverhampton, UK – Dive
18/05 London, UK – DesertFest London
20/05 Paris, FR – Mécanique Ondulatoire
21/05 Lille, FR – Le Bulle Café
22/05 Bochum, DE – Die Trompete
23/05 Berlin, DE – DesertFest Berlin
24/05 Lübeck, DE – Treibsand
25/05 Stockholm, SE – Bar Brooklyn
27/05 Malmö, SE – Plan B
28/05 Dresden, DE – Chemiefabrik
29/05 Traunstein, DE – Cafe Festung
31/05 Ljubljana, SI – Menza Pri Koritu
01/06 Zagreb, HR – Vintage Industrial Bar
02/06 Vienna, AT – Arena
03/06 Budapest, HU – Szimpla
05/06 Gdansk, PL – Mystic Festival
06/06 Brno, CZ – Kabinet MUZ
07/06 Prague, CZ – Bike Jesus

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol:
Leo Lydon: eight-string guitar/vocals
Aaron Metzdorf: bass
Sean St.Germain: drums

https://www.facebook.com/rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol
https://www.instagram.com/rickshawbillieandtheboys
https://rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol.bandcamp.com/
http://www.rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol.com/
https://taplink.cc/rickshawbillie

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol, “Whip it Around” official video

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol, Big Dumb Riffs (2024)

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Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol Announce Fall Tour Dates

Posted in Whathaveyou on August 2nd, 2024 by JJ Koczan

It looks like they’ll be Texas-bound at the time, but I gotta say, I wouldn’t mind if Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol showed up on the bill for Desertfest New York either. They’ve been through NYC, which is where I’d be likeliest to catch them, so having not done so is more on me than the band at this point, but yeah. Probably something I should correct, and with their 2024 album, Big Dumb Riffs (review here), as the cause they’re heralding, so much the better.

This round of touring will bring them neither so far north nor so far east in the US, but wherever you are, the arguments for keeping an eye out are manifold, and it’s all the more worth doing so since they tour enough they’re bound to show up on your block sooner or later. Or I guess you could go to Austin City Limits or Levitation in their hometown if you’re feeling fancy/have cash to spend. Point I guess is it’s time I saw this band. If you already have, I’d love to know how that went.

Tour dates and such from the PR wire, and the album stream so you can get a dose:

rickshaw billie's burger patrol

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol add Fall US dates to Austin City Limits ACL Fest & Levitation

Austin trio Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol announce additional Fall 2024 US tour dates ahead of their performances at Austin City Limits’ prestigious ACL Fest and Levitation 2024 with The Sword and Pentagram. The band continues domestic dates supporting their new album BIG DUMB RIFFS through the end of the year. See current shows below. Tickets are available HERE: https://taplink.cc/rickshawbillie

The band has also recently joined the roster of Doomstar Bookings for EU & UK touring beginning in Spring 2025.

Hot on the heels of their breakout 5th studio release Doom Wop (2023), Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol returns with Big Dumb Riffs: A whole new variant of the fuzzed out, overdriven, melodic, groovy music they have been making since 2016. While Big Dumb Riffs is decidedly more aggressive and rhythmic, it still retains the overtly melodic feel of Doom Wop. But Leo Lydon’s vocals are considerably more angry and negative (song titles like “1-800-EAT-SHIT” and “Body Bag” should be a clue.)

RICKSHAW BILLIE’S BURGER PATROL LIVE 2024:
08/02 Austin, TX – Sagebrush
09/14 Martindale, TX – Duett’s
09/21 Denton, TX – Dan’s Silver Leaf – Burnouts Custom Motorcycle Show
09/26 New Orleans, LA – Siberia
09/27 Birmingham, AL – WorkPlay Canteen
09/28 Asheville, NC – Static Age
09/29 Raleigh, NC – Kings Barcade
10/01 Columbus, OH – The Summit
10/02 Cincinnati, OH – MOTR Pub
10/03 Indianapolis, IN – Black Circle
10/04 Davenport, IA – Raccoon Motel
10/05 Whitewater, WI – Strange LaGrange
10/06 Louisville, KY – Portal
10/07 Chattanooga, TN – JJ’s Bohemia
10/09 Little Rock, AR – Whitewater Tavern
10/13 Austin, TX – Austin City Limits’ ACL Fest
11/03 Austin, TX – Stubb’s – w/ The Sword, Pentagram

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol:
Leo Lydon: eight-string guitar/vocals
Aaron Metzdorf: bass
Sean St.Germain: drums

https://www.facebook.com/rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol
https://www.instagram.com/rickshawbillieandtheboys
https://rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol.bandcamp.com/
http://www.rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol.com/
https://taplink.cc/rickshawbillie

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol, Big Dumb Riffs (2024)

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Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol to Tour Europe in Spring 2025; Playing Austin City Limits & Levitation This Fall

Posted in Whathaveyou on July 11th, 2024 by JJ Koczan

What you can glean from Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol signing with Doomstar Bookings and heralding tour plans for the first half of next year is (1:) that will probably include a slew of festival slots and (2:) their earlier-2024 fifth album, Big Dumb Riffs (review here) and the past couple years of hard touring have helped spread the word of their particular take on heavy, combining taut songcraft, a willful drive toward directness, and a heaping dose of shenanigans for a take that feels like it’s been in development for about eight years because, well, it has.

I look forward to seeing where 2025 takes them, and in the meantime they’ll apparently have another US tour for the last quarter of this year — I guess around their hometown appearances at Levitation and Austin City Limits so whatever angle you’re looking from, there’s more to come.

The PR wire dives in on where they’re at and headed:

rickshaw billie's burger patrol

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol join Doomstar roster for EU & UK touring

More US dates September-December 2024

Austin trio Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol today announce they have joined the roster of Doomstar Bookings for EU & UK touring beginning in Spring 2025. Meanwhile, the band continues domestic dates this Fall supporting their new album BIG DUMB RIFFS from September through December. All tour dates will be announced soon. See current shows, including Austin City Limits’ prestigious ACL Fest and Levitation 2024 with The Sword and Pentagram.

BIG DUMB RIFFS is available on digital, LP and cassette, released May 10th, 2024. Order/stream the album on all formats HERE: https://taplink.cc/rickshawbillie

The band-curated second annual Rickshaw Billie’s BIG DUMB FEST in Austin, TX on June 1st SOLD OUT at Mohawk Austin. This follows a string of sold out dates throughout Texas, Denver, Los Angeles, Brooklyn and more.

“Our catalog has never been short on big dumb riffs, but the idea on this record was to really turn the screw,” says RBBP bassist Aaron Metzdorf. On Big Dumb Riffs, that screw is cranked incredibly tight.

“We just wanted ‘the part’: The opening of Pantera’s ‘Primal Concrete Sledge’, the breakdown in Primus’ ‘Pudding Time’ — the shit that makes you move and lose your mind. Just that part the whole time.”

Across 11 concise, taut songs — most clocking in around 2 minutes or less — Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol demonstrates their skillful ability to blend the merciless low end of Leo Lydon’s 8-string guitar, Aaron Metzdorf’s masterful chordwork on the bass, and Sean St.Germain’s driving drumming.

Hot on the heels of their breakout 5th studio release Doom Wop (2023), Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol returns with Big Dumb Riffs: A whole new variant of the fuzzed out, overdriven, melodic, groovy music they have been making since 2016. While Big Dumb Riffs is decidedly more aggressive and rhythmic, it still retains the overtly melodic feel of Doom Wop. But Leo Lydon’s vocals are considerably more angry and negative (song titles like “1-800-EAT-SHIT” and “Body Bag” should be a clue.)

“The whole writing process was, ‘what if we just played two notes the whole song’,” Metzdorf says. “‘What if we tuned down to almost unusable string tension?’, ‘what if we write a record that will make everyone say ‘wow that is dumb’? Leo and I really move around on stage a lot. Being a dingus is crucial to the groove. All these riffs were designed to allow us to act bigger and dumber on stage.”

Big Dumb Riffs is available on Limited Edition transparent orange vinyl LP, cassette, download and streaming, released on March 22, 2024. Orders are available HERE: https://rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol.bigcartel.com/

RICKSHAW BILLIE’S BURGER PATROL LIVE 2024:
10/13 Austin, TX – Austin City Limits’ ACL Fest
11/03 Austin, TX – Stubb’s – w/ The Sword, Pentagram

https://www.facebook.com/rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol
https://www.instagram.com/rickshawbillieandtheboys
https://rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol.bandcamp.com/
http://www.rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol.com/
https://taplink.cc/rickshawbillie

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol, Big Dumb Riffs (2024)

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Album Review: Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol, Big Dumb Riffs

Posted in Reviews on March 19th, 2024 by JJ Koczan

rickshaw billie's burger patrol big dumb riffs 2

It’s hard to argue with a song called ‘1800EATSHIT.’ Even harder when it’s so damn catchy. Yeah, it’s a little counterintuitive to think of a record called Big Dumb Riffs as refined, but with their third LP, Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol are so clear in their intention and they deliver on it thoroughly enough to make it undeniable. Issued through their own Permanent Teeth Records, the album strips down the Austin, Texas, three-piece’s approach, honing in on tonal character, structure, attitude and, as “1-800-EAT-SHIT” assures, a solid amount of fuckery. Yes, they already their own beer.

The record takes place across 11 songs that span just 23 minutes, and could just as easily position itself as an exploration of the intersectionality between the masculine and the dumbassed writ through lunkheaded hardcore chug, nü-metallic palm-mute dissonance and the Primusian bounce that inspired it — looking at “Papa Pop It” for the latter and “Brat” for the former — stoner riff idolatry and hooks strong enough to hold them up despite the weight of tone emanating from Leo Lydon‘s eight-string guitar and Aaron Metzdorf‘s bass. Both of these dwell in a monolithic low-end space, but with such short songs and make-it-a-party tempos made all the more propulsive through Sean St. Germain‘s drumming, the momentum that opener “Clowntown” sets forth in its initial cycles of tense, head-down chug and subsequent sprint-out is unrelenting through the duration despite slamming into a wall of Even Heavier® brand mega-chug in the metalcore-style breakdown of “Peanut Butter Snack Sticks” on side A.

One thing to understand: Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol know what they’re doing here, and they’re doing it consciously. The short runtime, which is less than many EPs in a heavy underground that often prides itself on longform construction, becomes an advantage. On Big Dumb Riffs, the longest inclusion is closer “In a Jar” at 3:39 and seven of the 11 songs are under two minutes long. They get in, hit hard, make their point, get out. They are not lazy, as the sneering ’90s-style circle-mosher “Whip it Around” clearly demonstrates across its devastatingly efficient 55 seconds, leant a sense of freedom by dropping the pretense of being about anything other than the physicality being conveyed, which is all the more effective since it’s about headbanging, itself a physical act.

Light on flourish by nature and aesthetic choice, they offer a sneering, sometimes-aggressive stance through Lydon‘s vocals and lyrics like, “Stop being a bitch, like your mother,” in “Papa Pop It” or just the screamier backing lines shouting the title later in the penultimate “Blue Collar Man,” which answers both the meaner-sounding distortion of “Peanut Butter Snack Sticks” and the Claypoolish underpinnings noted above following the gets-up-and-runs “Bastard Initiated,” where they foster a similar clenched-teeth tension to that of “Clowntown,” working quickly in a no-bullshit-and-playing-at-being-all-bullshit manner that those who picked up what Rob Crow put down with Goblin Cock should find refreshing. Three dudes in the band means a total of six middle fingers. They all seem to be up here, however busy their hands might otherwise be at any given moment.

As much as Big Dumb Riffs is what it tells you it’s about — i.e., riffs, big, dumb — and as much as Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol have put into making it a fun listen, which is absolutely is, there are also some fairly dark themes. I haven’t actually seen a lyric sheet, so pardon if the quotes aren’t exact (I’m happy to correct whatever needs it), but “Body Bag” is the rolling centerpiece that kicks in after “Whip it Around,” and it and “Papa Pop It” both seem to be about suicide on some level. The verse in “Body Bag” tells the story of a protagonist who takes their own life after “Trying to be mama’s little twinkle in her eye,” and, “His father didn’t want him in the first place but he came in first place,” opening to its catharsis in the stuttered, “Ma-ma-ma-ma-mama, I’m about to have a heart attack” and concluding with, “I loved you but you didn’t say it back,” as the backing vocals join in for “You’d better put him in a body bag,” and they ride the chug through a last chorus around that line for another minute or so.

Outwardly poppier (go figure) and likewise grim in substance, “Papa Pop It” is framed as an imperative: “Papa pop it/Papa pull it/Do it,” and what’s happening there is someone telling, almost daring, their father to kill himself. Between these, the ultra-catchy fuck-you of “1-800-Eat-Shit” — which will no doubt be a sing-along on however many tours the band does for the record — as well as the pointedly-mom-voiced “You love it!” that oozes mockery next to a line about nostalgia being a sack of shit, the taunt in the repeated “Whatchu gonna do about that?”s of “Brat,” and the fact that “In a Jar” despite its turn toward patience and more peaceful, semi-doomgaze-comedown feel, is about murder, the vocals delivering the lines “Keep my hands…/Wrapped around your throat,” like wistful post-punk before rolling into the chorus that makes it plain with, “I’m gonna fucking kill you,” without departing the subdued-in-context last-minute drawl. “Blue Collar Man” encapsulates working class disillusion in the single lyric, “But it wasn’t the plan for the blue collar man” — daring to have a point and make it — and both “Clowntown” and “Bastard Initiated” execute their willful arrogance with a decidedly negative bent.

And I’m not sure who or what “El Sapo” (“the toad”) is about, but its 49 seconds of mute-chug and concluding gang shout come across like homage after the fact. What one might take from all of this is that while Big Dumb Riffs directs itself toward truth in advertising, there’s complexity in how it goes about that, and while its songs are short, they want nothing for persona or narrative. That St. GermainMetzdorf and Lydon accomplish this side-by-side with their stated goal of simplifying their sound even from where they were on 2022’s Doom Wop (review here) isn’t to be understated — it makes that act of breaking a thing down to its most essential parts a creative progression — and whether you take it on with that in mind or you put it on just to blow your speakers and pummel your brain with its chunky-style depth of frequency, fair enough. It feels like Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol have arrived at the point they’ve been working toward for the last seven years, harnessing primal rhythm and uniting around a single sonic purpose with a deceptively multifaceted confrontationalism. Fuck around and find… yourself?

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol, Big Dumb Riffs (2024)

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol on Facebook

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol on Instagram

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol on Bandcamp

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol website

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol links

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Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol Set March 22 Release for Big Dumb Riffs; “Body Bag” Posted; Tour Dates Announced

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 9th, 2024 by JJ Koczan

Rickshaw Billie's Burger Patrol

Up to right about now, my official position™ on Austin’s Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol has been ‘they’re probably a live band.’ All the videos of there’s that I’ve seen, all the photos on their socials, and so on, would seem to back this up, but Fall 2022’s Doom Wop (review here) had charm in its songwriting beyond the ‘this would be cool on stage’ impression it made — though it certainly also made one.

The forthcoming Big Dumb Riffs, which is out March 22 through the band’s own Permanent Teeth Records, hones that sense of craft to an even finer point, their low-end-celebrant ethic spreading across 11 heavy-in-momentum-and-tone tracks that are varied, consistent in quality, cheeky in its self-awareness, but with more intelligence behind it than the somewhat-ironic title or the accordingly willfully dopey nü-metal play in “Whip it Around” might imply, though when you’ve got a track like “1800EATSHIT” — so catchy it’s pop, heavy enough to turn off squares, and goofy enough to be the good time that the ultra-Claypool bounce of the subsequent “Papa Pop It” reinforces despite a somewhat grim lyric — the band kind of becomes undeniable.

As the PR wire notes, Primus is a big factor, and hey, I dig that a lot, and from Floor to Hum to Rob Crow‘s Goblin Cock in “Clowntown” and the fuck-yes nod of “Peanut Butter Snack Sticks,” the Austin trio sound like the real deal here, and fair enough for the work they’ve done to this point in their tenure. Some punk, some metal, mosh riffs, headbang riffs, nod riffs, slow riffs, fast riffs, up riffs, down riffs, one riff, two riffs, red riffs, blue riffs, a whole lot of tone and a twist ending; there’s a lot more to dig into than it might at first seem, and as I make my way through again, my second impression of Big Dumb Riffs is bolstered by the songs’ already-familiar feel, so yeah, they’re not making it a challenge to get on board.

Fair enough. First single is “Body Bag,” which should give you an idea, and if they’re new to you, Doom Wop will work to get you further introduced and it’s at the bottom of this post as well. A video or two and plenty more tour dates than even the West Coast run you see below don’t seem like unreasonable expectations to have here, so I’ll hope to have more to come before Big Dumb Riffs is out, but so far, it moves in a way that brings you with it really well. They’ve crisscrossed the US a few times at this point (and also founded their own festival, the Big Dumb Fest). My question is whether this will be the record that takes them to Europe, as that would seem a logical next step.

Until then, the PR wire has this:

big dumb riffs

“Our catalog has never been short on big dumb riffs, but the idea on this record was to really turn the screw,” says RBBP bassist Aaron Metzdorf. On Big Dumb Riffs, that screw is cranked incredibly tight.

“We just wanted ‘the part’: The opening of Pantera’s ‘Primal Concrete Sledge’, the breakdown in Primus’ ‘Pudding Time’ — the shit that makes you move and lose your mind. Just that part the whole time.”

Across 11 concise, taut songs — most clocking in around 2 minutes or less — Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol demonstrates their skillful ability to blend the merciless low end of Leo Lydon’s 8-string guitar, Aaron Metzdorf’s masterful chordwork on the bass, and Sean St.Germain’s driving drumming.

Hot on the heels of their breakout 5th studio release Doom Wop (2023), Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol returns with Big Dumb Riffs: A whole new variant of the fuzzed out, overdriven, melodic, groovy music they have been making since 2016. While Big Dumb Riffs is decidedly more aggressive and rhythmic, it still retains the overtly melodic feel of Doom Wop. But Leo Lydon’s vocals are considerably more angry and negative (song titles like “1-800-EAT-SHIT” and “Body Bag” should be a clue.)

“The whole writing process was, ‘what if we just played two notes the whole song’,” Metzdorf says. “‘What if we tuned down to almost unusable string tension?’, ‘what if we write a record that will make everyone say ‘wow that is dumb’? Leo and I really move around on stage a lot. Being a dingus is crucial to the groove. All these riffs were designed to allow us to act bigger and dumber on stage.”

Big Dumb Riffs will be available for streaming and download on March 22, 2024. LP to follow in late Spring.

RICKSHAW BILLIE’S BURGER PATROL LIVE 2024:
02/03 Austin, TX – Sagebrush
03/09 Houston, TX – Moontower Sudworks
03/22 Austin, TX – St Elmo Brew – album release show
03/23 Dallas, TX – Double Wide
03/27 Phoenix, AZ – Linger Longer
03/28 Los Angeles, CA – Resident
03/29 San Francisco, CA – Kilowatt
03/30 Sacramento, CA – Cafe Colonial
04/02 Seattle, WA – The Funhouse
04/03 Portland, OR – Mano Oculta
04/05 Salt Lake City, UT – Quarters DLC
04/06 Denver, CO – Hi-Dive

https://www.facebook.com/rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol
https://www.instagram.com/rickshawbillieandtheboys
https://rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol.bandcamp.com/
http://www.rickshawbilliesburgerpatrol.com/
https://taplink.cc/rickshawbillie

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol, Big Dumb Riffs (2024)

Rickshaw Billie’s Burger Patrol, Doom Wop (2022)

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