Quarterly Review: Deadpeach, SÂVER, Ruben Romano, Kosmodrom, The Endless, Our Maddest Edges, Saint Omen, Samsara Joyride, That Ship Has Sailed, Spiral Guru

Posted in Reviews on February 28th, 2024 by JJ Koczan

The-Obelisk-Quarterly-Review

Welcome to Wednesday of the Quarterly Review. If you’ve been here before — and I do this at least four times a year, so maybe you have and maybe you haven’t — I’m glad you’re back, and if not, I’m glad you’re here at all. These things are always an undertaking, and in a vacuum, I’m pretty sure busting out 10 shorter reviews per day would be a reasonably efficient process. I don’t live in a vacuum. I live vacuuming.

Metaphorically, at least. Looking around the room, it’s pretty obvious ‘vacuum life’ is intermittent.

Today we hit the halfway mark of this standard-operating-procedure QR, and we’ll get to 30 of the 50 releases to be covered by the time Friday is done or die trying, as that’s also the general policy. As always, I hope you find something in this batch of 10 that you dig. Doesn’t have to be any more of a thing than that. Doesn’t need to change your life, just maybe take the moment you’re in and make it a little better.

Quarterly Review #21-30:

Deadpeach, The Cosmic Haze and the Human Race

Deadpeach The Cosmic Haze and the Human Race

A new full-length from Italian cosmic fuzz rockers Deadpeach doesn’t come along every day. Though the four-piece here comprised of guitarist/vocalist Giovanni Giovannini, guitarist Daniele Bartoli, bassist Mrsteveman and drummer Federico Tebaldi trace their beginnings back to 1993, the seven-song/37-minute exploration The Cosmic Haze and the Human Race is just their fourth full-length in that span of 31 years, following behind 2013’s Aurum (review here), though they haven’t been completely absent in that time, with the 2019 unplugged offering Waiting for Federico session (review here), 2022’s Live at Sidro Club, etc. But whether it’s the howling-into-the-void guitar over the methodical toms in the experimental-vibing closer “Loop (Set the Control to Mother Earth),” the mellower intro of “Madras” that leads both to chunky-style chug and the parade of classic-heavy buzz that is “Motor Peach,” what most comes through is the freedom of the band to do what they want in the psychedelic sphere. “Man on the Hill (The Fisherman and the Farmer)” tells its tale with blues rock swing while the subsequent “Cerchio” resolves Beatlesian with bouncy string and horn sounds and is its own realization at the center of the procession before the languid roll of “Monday” (so it goes) picks up its tempo later on. A mostly lo-fi recording still creates an atmosphere, and Deadpeach represent who they are in the weirdo space grunge of “Rust,” toying with influences from a desert that’s surely somewhere on another planet before “Loop (Set the Controls for Mother Earth)” turns repetition into mantra. They might be underrated forever, but Deadpeach only phase into our dimension intermittently and it’s worth appreciating them while they’re here.

Deadpeach on Facebook

Deadpeach website

SÂVER, From Ember and Rust

SAVER From Ember and Rust

In or out of post-metal and the aggressive end of atmospheric sludge, there are few bands currently active who deliver with the visceral force of Oslo’s SÂVER. From Ember and Rust is the second LP from the three-piece of Ole Ulvik Rokseth (guitar), Markus Støle (drums) and Ole Christian Helstad (bass/vocals), and while it signals growth in the synthy meditation worked into “I, Evaporate” after the lead-with-nod opener “Formless,” and the intentionally overwhelming djent chug that pays off the penultimate “The Object,” it is the consuming nature of the 43-minute entirety that is most striking, dynamic in its sprawl and thoughtful in arrangement both within and between its songs — the way the drone starts “Eliminate Distance” and returns to lull the listener momentarily out of consciousness before the bassy start of centerpiece “Ember and Rust” prompts a return ahead of its daring and successful clean vocal foray. That’s a departure, contextually speaking, but noteworthy even as “Primal One” lumbersmashes anything resembling hope to teeny tiny bits, leaving room in its seven minutes to catchy its breath amid grooving proggy chug and bringing back the melodic singing. As much as they revel in the caustic, there’s serenity in the catharsis of “All in Disarray” at the album’s conclusion, and as much as SÂVER are destructive, they’re cognizant of the world they’re building as part of that.

SÂVER on Facebook

Pelagic Records website

Ruben Romano, The Imaginary Soundtrack to the Imaginary Western Twenty Graves Per Mile

Ruben Romano The Imaginary Soundtrack to the Imaginary Western Twenty Graves Per Mile

Departing from the heavy psychedelic blues rock proffered by his main outfit The Freeks, multi-instrumentalist and elsewhere-vocalist Ruben Romano — who also drummed for Fu Manchu and Nebula in their initial incarnations — digs into Western aural themes on his cumbersomely-titled solo debut, The Imaginary Soundtrack to the Imaginary Western Twenty Graves Per Mile. To be clear, there is no movie called Twenty Graves Per Mile (yet), and the twice-over-imaginary nature of the concept lets Romano meander a bit in pieces like “Sweet Dream Cowboy” and “Ode to Fallen Oxen,” the latter of which tops its rambling groove with a line of delay twang, while “Chuck Wagon Sorrow” shimmers with outward simplicity with a sneaky depth to its mix (to wit, the space in “Not Any More”). At 10 songs and 27 minutes, the collection isn’t exactly what you’d call ‘feature length,’ but as it hearkens back to the outset with “Load the Wagon (Reprise)” bookending the opener, it is likewise cohesive in style and creative in arrangement, with Romano bringing in various shakers, mouth harp, effects and so on to create his ‘soundtrack’ with a classic Western feel and the inevitable lysergic current. Not as indie or desert chic as Spindrift, who work from a similar idea, but organic and just-came-in-covered-with-dust folkish just the same. If the movie existed, I’d be interested to know which of these tracks would play in the saloon.

Ruben Romano on Facebook

Ruben Romano on Bandcamp

Kosmodrom, Welcome to Reality

Kosmodrom Welcome to Reality

With the seven-minute “Earth Blues” left off the vinyl for want of room, German heavy psychedelic instrumentalists Kosmodrom put a color filter on existence with Welcome to Reality as much as on the cover, shimmering in “Dazed in Space” with a King Buffalo‘ed resonance such that the later, crunchier fuzz roll of “Evil Knievel” feels like a departure. While the three-piece are no doubt rooted in jams, Welcome to Reality presents finished works, following a clear plot in the 10-minute “Quintfrequenz” and the gradual build across the first couple minutes of “Landstreicher” — an intent that comes more into focus a short while later on “Novembersong” — before “Earth Blues” brings a big, pointed slowdown. They cap with “OM,” which probably isn’t named after the band but can be said to give hints in their direction if you want to count its use of ride cymbal at the core of its own build, and which in its last 40 seconds still manages to find another level of heft apparently kept in reserve all along. Well played. As their first LP since 2018, Welcome to Reality feels a bit like it’s reintroducing the band, and in listening, seems most of all to encourage the listener to look at the world around them in a different, maybe more hopeful way.

Kosmodrom on Facebook

Kosmodrom on Bandcamp

The Endless, The Endless

the endless the endless

Heads experienced in post-metal will be able to pick out elements like the Russian Circles gallop in The Endless‘ “Riven” or the Isis-style break the Edmonton-based instrumental unit veers into on “Shadows/Wolves” at the center of their self-titled debut, but as “The Hadeon Eon” — the title of which references the planet’s earliest and most volatile geological era — subtly invites the listener to consider, this is the band’s first recorded output. Formed in 2019, derailed and reconstructed post-pandemic, the four-piece of guitarists Teddy Palmer and Eddy Keyes, bassist James Palmer and drummer Jarred Muir are coherent in their stylistic intent, but not so committed to genre tenets as to forego the sweeter pleasure of the standalone guitar at the start of the nine-minute “Reflection,” soon enough subsumed though it is by the spacious lurch that follows. There and throughout, the band follow a course somewhere between post-metal and atmospheric sludge, and the punch of low end in “Future Archives,” the volume trades between loud and quiet stretches bring a sense of the ephemeral as well as the ethereal, adding character without sacrificing impact in the contrast. Their lack of pretense will be an asset as they continue to develop.

The Endless on Facebook

The Endless on Bandcamp

Our Maddest Edges, Peculiar Spells

Our Maddest Edges Peculiar Spells

Kudos if you can keep up with the shifts wrought from track to track on Our Maddest Edges‘ apparent first long-player, Peculiar Spells, as the Baltimorean solo-project spearheaded by Jeff Conner sets out on a journey of genuine eclecticism, bringing The Beatles and Queens of the Stone Age stylistically together and also featuring one of the several included duets on “Swirl Cone,” some grunge strum in “Hella Fucky” after the remake-your-life spoken/ambient intro “Thoughts Can Change,” a choral burst at the beginning of the spoken-word-over-jazz “Slugs,” which of course seems to be about screwing, as well as the string-laced acoustic-led sentimentality on “Red Giant,” the Casio beat behind the bright guitar plucks of “Frozen Season,” the full-tone riffs around which “I Ain’t Done” and “St. Lascivious” are built, and the sax included with the boogie of “The Totalitarian Tiptoe,” just for a few examples of the places its 12 component tracks go in their readily-consumable 37-minute runtime. Along with Conner are a reported 17 guests appearing throughout, among them Stefanie Zaenker (ex-Caustic Casanova). Info is sparse on the band and Conner‘s work more broadly, but his history in the punkish Eat Your Neighbors accounts for some of the post-hardcore at root here, and his own vocals (as opposed to those of the seven other singers appearing) seem to come from somewhere similar. Relatively quick listen, but not a minor undertaking.

Jeff Conner on Bandcamp

Saint Omen, Death Unto My Enemy

saint omen death unto my enemy

Rolling out with the ambient intro before beginning its semi-Electric Wizardly slog in “Taken by the Black,” Death Unto My Enemy is the 2023 debut from New York City’s Saint Omen. Issued by Forbidden Place Records, its gritty nod holds together even as “Evolution of the Demon” threatens to fall apart, samples filling out the spaces not occupied by vocals, communicating themes dark, violent, and occult in pieces like the catchy-despite-its-harsher-vocal “Destroyer” or the dark swirl of “Sinners Crawl.” Feeling darker as it moves through its 10 songs, it saves a particular grim experimentalism for closer “Descent,” but by the time Death Unto My Enemy gets there, surely your mind and soul have already been poisoned and reaped, respectively, by “The Seventh Gate,” “The Black Mass” and the penultimate title-track, that deeper down is the only place left to go. So that’s where you go; a humming abyss of anti-noise. Manhattan has never been a epicenter of cultish doom, but Saint Omen‘s abiding death worship and bleakness — looking at you, “Sleepness” — shift between dramaturge and dug-in lumber, and the balance is only intriguing for the rawness with which it is delivered, harsher in its purpose than sound, but still plenty harsh in sound.

Saint Omen on Facebook

Forbidden Place Records store

Samsara Joyride, The Subtle and the Dense

samsara joyride the subtle and the dense

The psychedelic aspects of Samsara Joyride‘s The Subtle and the Dense feel somewhat compartmentalized, but that’s not necessarily a detriment to the songs, as the solo that tops the drearily moderated tempo of “Too Many Preachers” or the pastoral tones that accompany the bluesier spirit of “Who Tells the Story” emphasize. The Austrian outfit’s second full-length, The Subtle and the Dense seems aware of its varied persona, but whether it’s the swaggering stops of “No One is Free” calling to mind Child or the sax and guest vocals that mark such a turn with “Safe and Sound” at the end, Samsara Joyride are firm in their belief that because something is bluesy or classic doesn’t necessarily mean it needs to be simple. From the layer of acoustic guitar worked into opener “I Won’t Sign Pt. 1” — their first album also had a two-parter, the second one follows directly here as track two — to the gang chorus worked in amid the atmospheric reach of “Sliver,” Samsara Joyride communicate a progressive take on traditionalist aesthetics, managing as few in this end of the heavy music realm ever do to avoid burly masculine caricature in the process. For that alone, easily worth the time to listen.

Samsara Joyride on Facebook

Samsara Joyride on Bandcamp

That Ship Has Sailed, Kingdom of Nothing

that ship has sailed kingdom of nothing

Like a check-in from some alternate-universe version of Fu Manchu who stuck closer to their beginnings in punk and hardcore, Californian heavy noise rockers That Ship Has Sailed tap volatility and riffy groove alike through the five songs of their Kingdom of Nothing EP, with an admirable lack of bullshit included within that net-zero assessment amid the physical push of riffs like “One-Legged Dog” or “Iron Eagle II” when the drums go to half-time behind the guitar and bass. It’s not all turn-of-the-century disaffection and ‘members of’ taglines though as “Iron Eagle II” sludges through its finish and “I Am, Yeah” becomes an inadvertent anthem for those who’ve never quite been able to keep their shit together, “Sweet Journey” becomes a melodic highlight while fostering the heaviest crash, and “Ready to Go” hits like a prequel to Nebula‘s trip down the stoner rock highway. Catchy in spite of its outward fuckall (or at least fuckmost), Kingdom of Nothing is more relatable than friendly or accessible, which feels about right. It’s cool guys. I never got my shit together either.

That Ship Has Sailed on Instagram

That Ship Has Sailed on Bandcamp

Spiral Guru, Silenced Voices

Spiral Guru Silenced Voices

The fourth EP in the 10-year history of Brazi’s Spiral Guru, who also released their Void long-player in 2019 and the “The Fantastic Hollow Man” single in 2021, Silenced Voices is distinguished immediately by the vocal command and range of Andrea Ruocco, and I’d suspect that if you’re already familiar with the band, you probably know that. Ruocco‘s voice, in its almost operatic use of breath to reach higher notes, carries some element of melodic metal’s grandeur, but Samuel Pedrosa‘s fuzz riffing and the fluid roll of bassist José Ribeiro and drummer Alexandre H.G. Garcia on the title-track avoid that trap readily, ending up somewhere between blues, psych, and ’70s swing on “Caves and Graves” but kept modern in the atmosphere fostered by Pedrosa‘s lead guitar. Another high-quality South American band ignored by the gringo-dude-dominant underground of Europe and the US? Probably, but I’m guilty too a decade after Spiral Guru‘s start, so all I can say is I’m doing my best out here. This band should probably be on Nuclear Blast by now. Stick around for “The Cabin Man” and you’d best be ready to dance.

Spiral Guru on Facebook

Spiral Guru on Bandcamp

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Friday Full-Length: Various Artists, Escape to Weird Mountain Vol. 9

Posted in Bootleg Theater on January 12th, 2024 by JJ Koczan

various artists escape to weird mountain volume 9

New Year, new label samplers. I’ve seen a few coming out, as one will, as record labels begin to look forward at the year to come, celebrate recent releases and herald their 2024 to be. I’ve found over the last couple years that when I want something weird or different, Forbidden Place Records can reliably intrigue and, even if a given record doesn’t change your life, a rabbit hole to go down isn’t nothing, and the Escape to Weird Mountain Vol. 9 comp. — you’ll note that it’s ‘escape to‘ rather than ‘escape from‘; we’re leaving everything and going to the mountain — has a whopping 19 tracks. If you can’t find something in that for even a momentary distraction, maybe go back to the start and try again.

Let’s go through:

1. RUNT, “The Void” — I think the kids call this style industrial punk. Either way, there are a fair amount of solo dudes-as-bands out there now on either side of the country between RUNT, N8NOFACE, Trace Amount, King Yosef, and so on. The shout reminds of Negative Reaction, and as to “where’s my god now,” he’s in the same place he’s always in: the cheese drawer. Clearly a priority for the label and an immediate ‘something different’ to start. Win.

2. Cani Sciorii, “Ringhia” — Sharply punctuated heavy/noise rock boogie. Reminds a bit of Sandrider in the early going but the vocals take it elsewhere. Brash. Gets trippy in the second half but they bring the sway back around.

3. Tojo Yamamoto, “The Mongolian Stomper” — An apparent homage to Archie Gouldie, who was a professional wrestler, the low start-stop fart-fuzz gets quirky complement by the lead guitar and rough-delivered verses. I don’t know if the song is actually about Gouldie, but there are two old wrestling samples and it ends talking about the stomper, and it’s the tone either way.

4. Death Spa, “Make it Hurt” — Weirdo electronica becomes kind of a thread through Escape to Weird Mountain Vol. 9, as the label has more than dabbled by now in multiple spheres. Death Spa are rawer than RUNT, more intense, with a bridge that sounds Mediterranean and screams to complement that call out the title with an especially pleading sensibility.

5. Molefunken, “Suck Your Thumb” — Starts with a set of ‘na-na-na-na’s that is the hook. Big early Funkadelic vibe here in the gang vocals, ’70s swing, and dance-your-ass-off intent. It’s lo-fi, but it’s a party.

6. Prosthetic Bung, “Breaking the Bung Curse” — Avant vibes and echoing fantasy-epic storytelling captured barebones but with enough echo to give an atmospheric impression either. A bit of hi-hat chicanery behind the vocals, which are mostly spoken and partially decipherable, but which add to the ambience amid all the freak-rock swirl and effects-born chaos. Four weird-ass minutes. Ends with “the end.”

7. Saint Omen, “Destroyer” — Another spoken vocal ties it to the prior bung curse, but Saint Omen are more pointedly riffy, with a hook delivered in harsh vocals after a verse low-rumbled like Mark Lanegan, a sample and a lurching nod with buzzsaw-tone soloing and vibrant crash.

8. Sign of the Sorcerer, “Black Night” — You ain’t gonna hear me complain about the nod. Clearly moving into cult rock territory, “Black Night” is slow, foggy and fuzzed, modern in its ancient cavernousness, and almost cruelly stoned. A record to look for, and not the first so far.

9. Oopsy Dazey, “Regrets” — The grunge sidestep from LáGoon‘s Anthony Gaglia and Jamie Yeats of Wizzerd ticks any ’90s nostalgia box you might have while keeping a foot in the drug-cult spirit. Yeah, it sounds like The Dandy Warhols circa 1996, but it lives in a world where drugs and murder are legal, so look out.

10. Your Gaze, “IDK” — Pretty obviously self-aware, if the name is anything to go by. “IDK” feels like the next stage of post-. Like, it’s post-post-punk. Post-post-heavy, post-Joy Division, with just enough heavy slog underneath all that morose, emotionally-goth float to give it presence when the ‘drums’ speed up at the finish. I promise you it sounds cooler than my description.

11. Land Whales, “Dias de Martes” — Cuba’s Land Whales self-released their Null Days LP in November and were picked up by Forbidden Place no doubt for the strong ’90s alt vibes, not quite retro since the shimmer is so modern, but that way it kind of drifts off at the end then circles back to a fuller hook puts the lie to any lackadaisical positioning.

12. Brunsten, “Gamechanger” — A proggy two and a half minutes with semi-spoken lyrics and a so-British-it’s-British-even-if-it-isn’t vibe, but it turns jet-engine buzz and shoutier in its second half and makes its short-ass runtime count for every second. Builds like this take some bands three times as long.

13. NAQOY (vs. planetDAMAGE), “White Rat” — Low volume, moody, drity techno, heavy in its underpinning but actively not trying to be rock and roll, and so not. The beats are hypnotic in their pulsation and the song establishes itself and remains on a linear course for its four minutes, almost like an aside to another dimension coming out of Brunsten, but sharing an exploratory aspect with a lot of what’s included here.

14. Veuve Scarron, “MMDCN” — Something about the gang chorus here reminds me of some ancient Marilyn Manson hook, and I can’t quite place it. Once the hook takes off circa 1:15, the way it’s both caustic and melodic. The whole spirit in this one is pretty despondent, malevolent, but I’d have to dig further to know if it’s the standard self-loathing or what thematically. There’s nothing else here that sounds like this though, so “dig further” absolutely will happen.

15. Under the Clothesline, “Speed Only” — You’re sitting there thinking “Wow this has really gone on for a long time. When’s the garage rock gonna show up?” Here you go.

16. Dark Shaman, “Horror Night” — Rolling out cultish nod with full, classic doom riffing and a groove that goes from Black to Sabbath in scope, I’m calling this one a victory outright and keeping that bass buzz in the second half shuffle all for myself, thank you very much. I don’t know this band but I like them now, so that’s what a label sampler gets you.

17. Buskas, “Desiderium” — Be it heretofore known that Buskas are not fucking around. “Desiderium” is the longest song on this compilation at 6:46 and it fills that time building into a rumbling assault of distortion and aggression. Vocals are harsh-throated and positioned to cut through the mix, but the nastiness infects even the nod itself, so that even the crash cymbal hits mean. Don’t be surprised when you hear about this band again.

18. Ash Eater, “Any Port in the Storm” — I’m apparently doing a track premiere for this Portland band next week. Timing is everything. Quicker than it seems, their “Any Port in the Storm” shouts in echo and twists itself up mightily without losing its course. At least until it decides to shred itself into oblivion, that is. Fair enough. See you Wednesday, bruhs.

19. Basic Shapes, “A Quiet Place” — Well clearly not. Bringing together electronica and a stark, punkish riff, Basic Shapes underscore the curated feel of Escape to Weird Mountain Vol. 9 by bringing together multiple sides shown across various bands prior. That’s context rather than their artistic intent, but true nonetheless. Basic Shapes‘ obvious bent toward individualism is no less a vital representation.

Well, that’s it. Used to be I’d get label samplers in CD sleeves in parking lots at club shows, or like band demos, or whathaveyou. It’s not quite the same being on Bandcamp — don’t have to pay for parking — but I’ll be curious to see a few years from now which of these bands and who else under the Forbidden Place banner I might be covering more in-depth in a few years’ time. Either way, you could do far worse than being the go-to when someone wants something fresh, and I hope you find something in here you never heard before that you dig, because that’s the point of the whole thing to start with.

Thanks for reading.

After avoiding the cold that ransacked the house for the last two weeks passed back and forth between my wife and daughter, I would seem to have succumbed. Or at least I seem to be succumbing. I’ve been developing a cough over the last 36 hours like it’s a finely-tuned prog metal riff, and have been feeling generally like what an old friend once referred to as a, “bag of bashed assholes.” So be it.

But it was a week. It had ups, it had downs. I’m going to see Elder tonight at Madison Square Garden. That kind of rocks. I think I’ll have a photo pass? I hope I will? But even if not, it’ll be a trip to be in the building when that happens. Will write about it of course blah blah.

Monday is a day off from school, so kid’s home. MLK. Legit. That’ll make writing for Tuesday a challenge, but the week is packed so I’ll need to figure it out. Pyramid, Saturna, Ash Eater, Kungens Man, maybe something next Friday. Then the week after is more of the same. This thing just keeps going.

Have a great and safe weekend. Have fun, watch your head. I’ll be posting on Monday, because what’s a holiday anyhow, and seemingly into perpetuity thereafter. Thank you for reading and being part of it.

FRM.

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