Review & Full Album Premiere: Red Sun Atacama, Summerchild

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on March 12th, 2026 by JJ Koczan

Red Sun Atacama Summerchild

Bordeaux, France, heavy psych pushers Red Sun Atacama release their third album, Summerchild, tomorrow, March 13, through Mrs Red Sound. They begin with a clarion of feedback before the rush of “Passenger” starts, brash, urgent, fuzzed and spacious. The message of movement is clear: get up and go if you want any hope of keeping up. As the trio of bassist/vocalist Clément Márquez, guitarist Vincent Hospital and drummer Robin Caillon follow 2022’s Darwin (review here), energy is a priority. That’s fair enough, both coming of that record and considering the band’s approach in general, but they’ve never been short on dynamic and they aren’t in these eight songs/40 minutes either, as the intro to “Weightless” (which in fact offers plenty of heft tonally) touches on some progressive shimmer, prefacing the mellow, near-dub finish given to the proceedings in closing track “Sundown,” brief but purposeful in its atmospherics.

So it’s not unipolar by any means, but if you take it on balance, Summerchild is a strong shove. The screams in “Passenger” and here and there elsewhere give an Oliveri-in-QOTSA impression, but neither are Red Sun Atacama solely aligning themselves to desert rock. Instead, they boogie in “Conveyer” before and after the break in its second half, and thicken the low-end fuzz density in “Weightless” (there’s a bit of float later on, don’t worry) to back the initial thrust of “Passenger” across a side A that’s vibrant and caps with “Commotions” and its drum-gallop that in another context I’d probably liken to High on Fire. Not exactly taking their foot off the gas, or so it seems until the big slowdown at the end of “Weightless,” which seems to meet all the tumult prior — that’s from the listener’s point of view; the band are plenty comfortable working uptempo — like a brick wall of groove to be slammed into. Righteously.

Red Sun Atacama (Photo by Hugues de Castillo)“Graze the Sun” soon enough takes off on the next careen, starting side B with consistency in terms of intent and efficiency, leading to a break and gradual build centered around guitar resonant enough to make me wonder if the song wasn’t titled in honor of Dutch outfit Sungrazer. Whether or not it is, when “Graze the Sun” takes off following that build, it’s in Red Sun Atacama‘s own fashion, and the subsequent title-track continues the thread, with a more terrestrial riff beneath the always-echoing vocals and a semi-return to the desert bolstered by both a ready-shreddy solo and a grooving slowdown at the finish. And if you were gonna twist my arm and force me to pick a highlight, it might be the eight-minute “Ragdoll,” penultimate to “Sundown,” for the manner in which it ties it all together, finds room for intensity and breadth, and, right into its last fadeout, refuses to be anything other than a good time.

Taken in its entirety — and since the whole album is premiering below, yes, that’s how I hope you’ll enjoy it if you’re so inclined as to listen — Summerchild is a reminder that a given record doesn’t have to be slow and ambient to have texture or build a world. In addition to mellowing out generally, “Sundown” also reorients Márquez‘s voice to a less-effects-based delivery, and thereby lets it convey a different kind of emotionalism; using the last moment in order to add to the scope without taking away from “Ragdoll” or anything before it. But the reason it fits is because even at their most tempestuous, Red Sun Atacama remain cognizant of space, of atmosphere, and of the psychedelic aspects of their sound. This gives Summerchild its balance, and is purely a result of their being in command of their songwriting.

As noted, all of Summerchild can be found on the player below in its entirety, and whether you’ve followed the band for their decade-plus or they’re new to you, the barriers to entry are minimal and there’s nothing that’s going to pull you out of it once you’re in, so by all means, partake.

Thanks for reading if you did. PR wire info follows in blue:

Red Sun Atacama on Summerchild:

Summerchild is a journey through the struggle of coping with inner ghosts. Each track is a different state of mind, with different ways of escaping, drifting, resisting, or clawing forward against personal demons. Some tactics hold for a time, others collapse spectacularly, but each one belongs to the same scorched path.

The album offers no clean answers or resolutions, just snapshots of life, like chapters in an unfinished quest for peace. At its heart, Summerchild is all about staying alive: fractured, failing, but still finding a way to ascend.

Album preorder: https://marsredsky.bigcartel.com/products?utf8=%E2%9C%93&search=summerchild

Born in 2014, Bordeaux-based trio RED SUN ATACAMA combine desert rock psychedelia and punk fury. Volcanic and wild, Chilean Atacama Desert mesmerizes the band as much as it inspires them. Their sound is driven by its beyond compare magnetism. Spread through the impetuous fuzz of legends Fu Manchu, Nebula or Mondo Generator, Red Sun Atacama praise the burning sound of the desert and the Holy Groove with irresistible slashing riffs!

Their self-released debut EP ‘Part 1’ came out in 2015, a few years before the band unleashed a bubbling first album entitled ‘Licancabur’ in 2018 via More Fuzz Records. The record definitely established the trio’s unique, raw and insolent style.

In 2022, Red Sun Atacama signed to Mrs Red Sound (French heavy psych trio Mars Red Sky’s own imprint) for the release of their sophomore studio album ‘Darwin’, the same year. Shaped by an overflowing desert rock, stoner and punk energy, and inspired by the Andean magic, ‘Darwin’ received many praises from the specialised press and got the band spotted by booking agencies 3C and Bullet Seed.

On stage, Red Sun Atacama fully manage to share the same hypnotic outburst as on their recordings. They already performed in various European countries alongside international heavyweights such as Uncle Acid And The Dead Beats, Mars Red Sky, Planet of Zeus, Slift. In 2024, they played DesertFest Antwerp (Belgium), Hellfest (France) and toured Europe in support from Dopelord (courtesy of Doomstar Bookings).

Red Sun Atacama’s upcoming album ‘Summerchild’ arrives on March 13th 2026 through Mrs Red Sound.

TRACK LISTING ‘SUMMERCHILD’

1. Passenger
2. ⁠Conveyor
3. Weightless
4. Commotions
5. Graze The Sun
6. Summerchild
7. Ragdoll
8. ⁠Sundown

LINE-UP
Clément Márquez: bass, vocals.
Vincent Hospital: guitar.
Robin Caillon: drums.

Red Sun Atacama, “Commotions” official video

Red Sun Atacama, “Summerchild” official video

Red Sun Atacama on Bandcamp

Red Sun Atacama on Instagram

Red Sun Atacama on Facebook

Mrs Red Sound website

Mrs Red Sound on Bandcamp

Mrs Red Sound on Instagram

Mrs Red Sound on Facebook

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