Review & Full Album Stream: Temple Fang, Live at Freak Valley

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on April 4th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

temple fang live at freak valley

[Click play above to stream Temple Fang’s Live at Freak Valley in its entirety. Album is out on CD April 21 through Stickman Records with preorders available here and through Electric Spark/Right on Mountain on LP with preorders available here.]

Temple Fang were smack in the middle of the fourth and final day of 2022’s Freak Valley Festival, Saturday, June 18. Their set (review here) was the centerpiece of the lineup, and by the time they went on, the assembled masses had long since been sun-baked and ear-blasted in a celebration of heavy vibe unto itself. The narrative — blessings and peace upon it — goes that just before being introduced by Volker Fröhmer, whose robust “liebe freunden” greets bands and fans alike in announcing each act to hit the stage and is a part of the ritual itself and features on many of the Live at Freak Valley-type releases but is absent here, the Amsterdam four-piece scrapped the setlist they were going to play.

Maybe it was material from their 2021 studio debut, Fang Temple (review here), or the then-unreleased Jerusalem/The Bridge EP (review here) that came out at the end of last year, but either way, they put it aside in favor of “Grace,” a yet-unrecorded single piece that would comprise the entirety of their set. Recorded by Niek Manders, the Stickman-backed Live at Freak Valley presents “Grace” in in full breadth, feeling likewise bold and searching in its approach as its circa-45-minute run holds sway in a series of builds and crashes, meditative and consuming in a way that live music, especially outside on a sunny day, can’t always be. By no means alone in this regard for that long weekend, it was nonetheless a beautiful, affirming moment to be alive.

Comprised of guitarist/vocalist Jevin de Groot, bassist/vocalist Dennis Duijnhouwer, guitarist/keyboardist Ivy van der Veer (who also sings a little here) and drummer Egon LoosveldtTemple Fang have — including Live at Freak Valley — now issued four live albums in the last three years, starting with 2020’s Live at Merleyn (review here) that was their first release. Put in a ratio to studio recordings, that’s four-to-one, at least as regards LPs; though I’ll gladly argue that Jerusalem/The Bridge wanted nothing for substance, so if it’s four-to-two, fine. Still, let that math — which gets even murkier when one considers the live-recorded basic tracks of Fang Temple — stand as testament to their ethic as a group and, amid the other narrative surrounding Live at Freak Valley, serve as a demonstration of their priorities.

At least thus far into their tenure and as much as has been possible over the last few years, they’re a live band. That they’d even be comfortable enough to step out on a stage and play a 45-minute-long song to a crowd that’s never heard it before supports the argument, let alone that they would consider releasing it afterward or that “Grace” unfolds in such a patient manner, fluidly shifting in volume and dynamic before its sweeping final movement, a multi-tiered apex with a subtly doomed riff at its foundation that turns to space rock and airy comedown lead work before another soloing tonal-wash crescendo. I don’t know if it was the first time Temple Fang had broken out “Grace” at a show, but standing in front of the stage and watching it happen at Freak Valley, it certainly felt like a landmark for them, which this release seals it as being.

Would it be too on-the-nose to call “Grace” graceful? Probably. But while the nature of from-stage recordings is such that the sundry little bumps and flubs along the way that go almost universally unnoticed by the crowd (and can define an evening for the band in question, whoever it might be) become part of the finished product, and that’s invariably the case here as well, the slow rise of effects noise and cymbals that begins it and shifts within two minutes to anticipatory howls of guitar set as fitting a scene as one could hope for what follows, in range as well as methodical delivery. Loosveldt‘s drums enter after the third minute with Duijnhouwer‘s bass, one guitar softly noodling, the other holding to undulating swells of manipulated feedback as they immerse the audience  in the song-in-progress seemingly before it’s even started.

temple fang live at freak valley gatefold

The first verse is Duijnhouwer‘s, and like the rest of “Grace,” it is rolled out gently, complemented by dual-channel echoing guitar solos from one lyrical stanza to the next, de Groot joining on vocals to deliver what no one knew then was the title of the song in a next-stage kind of arrival that more fully reveals the build that’s been taking place all the while beneath the entrancing sounds on the surface, consciousness buried but by no means absent from the proceedings, just sort of placed to the side in favor of the invitation to the crowd to get lost early and stay that way for the duration. Bass and drums hold steady as the guitar drops the scorch to allow the next verse to begin. Nine minutes have passed, whatever time used to mean, and they get back to what’s now revealed itself as the chorus, and at 10:30, a vocal culmination is met by a heavy surge, winding soloing from de Groot underscoring that first build’s payoff stretch.

It is, as noted, not the last. A jazzy flow distinguishes the next movement of “Grace,” making a Pink Floyd comparison feel both lazy and necessary as it re-coalesces and moves into more angular guitar on either side of the 18-minute mark, and though they hit into some improv-sounding urgency about five-to-six minutes later, they emerge unscathed from the freakout — Loosveldt at the foundation, as ever — as they pass 26 minutes into the track, and from there set up the massive ending noted above, fully hypnotic in going to ground and engrossing in the construction from there, the sense of destination apparent even as the journey there continues as from about 30 minutes on, Temple Fang are fully dug into this procession to be realized from there out, the weight of the lumber a few minutes later nod-rolling until more active guitar kicks in for the outward launch and carries through the (spoiler alert) false peak before they actually get to the top of that (right on) mountain, ending with a brief bit of serenity as they look out from it and see how far they’ve come before a noisy finish reinforces the point.

In releasing “Grace” on Live at Freak Valley, Temple Fang give the moment its due ceremony. The video of the set (filmed by Rockpalast) has been available for some time, but the capture of the song pressed on plastic feels especially crucial in light of the scope of the piece itself, and for those who were there, should be considered nothing less than essential. No brainer. Likewise, if you’ve followed Temple Fang to this juncture, “Grace” comes through as a significant forward step in a hopefully continuing progression of chemistry and craft, and while the single-song-album may be an endgame for many longform acts — one recalls de Groot and Duijnhouwer‘s decade-ago cosmic doom project Mühr offering the 47-minute one-tracker LP, Messiah (discussed here; review here), as their final outing in 2013; this isn’t that in sound or purpose, but it’s a relevant example given the personnel — Temple Fang seem to have found a place from which they can keep exploring, regardless of how long whatever they do next might end up being or not.

So maybe it wasn’t the set they had planned on playing, but Temple Fang‘s will to follow their instinct and bring “Grace” to life in front of the Freak Valley crowd more than earns this preservation. It was one in a weekend of righteous performances, but something special that comes through on Live at Freak Valley as shared between artists, art, and audience that now can stand even longer.

Temple Fang, Live at Freak Valley Festival 2022

Temple Fang on Facebook

Temple Fang on Instagram

Temple Fang on Bandcamp

Electric Spark Records on Facebook

Electric Spark Records on Instagram

Electric Spark Records website

Right on Mountain on Facebook

Stickman Records on Facebook

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Stickman Records website

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Review & Video Premiere: Iron Jinn, Iron Jinn

Posted in Bootleg Theater, Reviews on April 3rd, 2023 by JJ Koczan

iron jinn iron jinn

Based in The Netherlands, Iron Jinn release their self-titled debut album April 21 through Stickman Records, celebrating with a release show at Roadburn Festival on April 22. The venerable Tilburg fest is a fitting showcase for the band, who’ll present their nine-song/60-minute 2LP cycle after having made their live debut at Roadburn 2018 (review here), working then under the moniker Iron Chin and entrancing a packed 013 Green Room with material it had never heard before. With the collaboration between guitarist/vocalists Wout Kemkens (Shaking Godspeed) and Oeds Beydals (Death Alley, Gewapend Beton, Molassess, The Devil’s Blood) at its foundation and the lineup solidified with Birth of Joy‘s Bob Hogenelst on drums and Gerben Bielderman (Pronk, Pauw, Helm Op, Figgie, etc.) on bass, the album sprinkles moments of clarity amid headed-way-down plunges into atmospheric ethereality, seeking to and succeeding in immersing listeners in a sprawl of dark and progressive heavy rock with the stated goal of evoking the feel of dreams.

It is ostensibly psychedelic, but an is-it-real psychedelia of the unconscious more than an effects wash, and in moments like the winding build to the crescendo of “Blood Moon Horizon” tucked away before closer “Cage Rage” with its extended drone finish or the dual-vocal melody of “Ego Loka” rounding out the three-song leadoff salvo with particularly Swansy vibes after “Winding World” first sounds the alarm at the very beginning of the record — howling lead guitar with frenetic strums behind; Beydals and Kemkens announcing the band’s arrival — before the string sounds swap channels, the effigies are burnt and the mellowing resolution feels like a gift after and before “Soft Healers” plunges once again into foreboding creep groove, jazzy intensity and a feel like being transported to someplace else as (I think?) the keys emulate horns to set up a stretch of electronic low-end beneath the meditative doom drums and second cynical verse — “break through the fourth wall and ‘burn the green room” feels like it’s dropping references — lead to a wobbly weirdo guitar solo emblematic of the manner in which Iron Jinn as a whole is too cohesive to be experimental at least in the we-tried-a-thing-and-recorded-it sense, but remains deep in its exploratory sensibility, notably in the guitars and synth, which makes it fortunate that Bielderman and Hogenelst are there to provide a grounding presence.

I haven’t seen a tracklisting for the 2LP version, and perhaps unsurprisingly for something with so much flux and fluidity, there are multiple ways it can be parsed, whether it’s the first three songs on side A or just the pairing of the seven-minutes-each “Winding World” and “Soft Healers,” which on their own do a lot of the necessary scene-setting for what follows, even as “Ego Loka” offers reinforcement of their vaporous motives. Stylistically, Iron Jinn is much the same, and whether one wants to approach it as a work of dark prog, heavy psychedelia edging on the stratospheric, a new branch on the cultish family tree of The Devil’s Blood or the something-else that it ultimately is, what you put into listening is what you’re going to get out. “Truth is Your Dagger” picks up to establish new momentum coming out of “Ego Loka,” unfurling its somehow-drifting angularity on either side of a midsection break held together by Hogenelst that leads into a surge topped by a triumphant delivery of the title-line by Kemkens and Beydals in unison; the encouragement to break out of one’s own conceptions that the concluding lyric “stab your truth” seems to be — and fair enough — the ethic seems to be conveyed by the example of the music itself as much as the words. Whatever else Iron Jinn might be at this point and however one might want to categorize this initial offering, it is markedly individual.

That is to say, if you want to sit with it and parse out where centerpiece  “Lick It or Kick It” — lyric video premiering below; the single’s been out for a week or so — comes by its grim ambience, vague threat and theatricality (also glockenspiel, maybe), controlled bombast and abiding tension that seems unreleased even through the fuzzed payoff it gets, amplifier hum carrying into the willful play on Devin Townsend doing ’60s psych that “Relic” posits itself as being, you can do that. I won’t say you’re wrong, and the rewards of closer listening throughout Iron Jinn‘s Iron Jinn are abundant, from the arrangements of synth to the manner in which the guitars work off each other from the outset on, to the subtle energetic push of the vocals coming together and the tent of Weird under which the entire cosmic circus is held, to the chiming notes in “Bread and Games” that seems to push as far into amorphousness as they’ll go until the aforementioned drone epilogue of “Cage Rage” still to come, viewing the world around them with due terror and refusing to capitulate to the demands of genre. But whether you’re with them or not, Iron Jinn are going to that place right where the brain meets the stem, the moment right before you’re actually asleep when you have that last conscious thought, whatever it might be. They’ll take you if you’re willing to go, and I’d bet that if you asked, they already know not everyone is going to be willing.

IRON JINN (Photo by Louise te Poele)

As “Bread and Games” gives over not-quite-patiently to the here-we-go spacey intro of “Blood Moon Horizon,” and the eventual breakout that everything seems to have been moving toward that’s still preface to the linear build across the first six-plus minutes of “Cage Rage” — a fitting title to encapsulate the jaw-clenching tension throughout — the real accomplishment of Iron Jinn becomes somewhat clearer. The reason it works is because none of the four-piece are playing against each other. Beydals and KemkensHogenelst and Bielderman, drawn together by the smoothness in the production sound by Sebastiaan van Bijlevelt — let alone the scope of the mix — are united in their purpose. Even when Hogenelst sits out “Ego Loka” and “Bread and Games,” and even in the comings and goings around that long final contemplation, the impression is that Iron Jinn are trying this thing and following where it has led them. You wouldn’t be wrong to say it’s a record born out of and for strange times, but the ambition here is even broader than the hour-long stretch of the 2LP. They sound like a band frustrated with conceptions of style driving themselves to create something new, like a sculptor whose medium just happens to be fog, or the first chapter of a book the plot of which is only starting to reveal itself.

Maybe that’s the case, and if so, I won’t predict where Iron Jinn are headed in terms of sound, or why, or how long it might take them to get there, if ‘there’ is even an endgame and the goal is not the going in the first place. What I’ll say instead is that I hope they keep moving. In following Beydals‘ work over the last decade, as a player and songwriter he seems to have been a reluctant focal point, searching for an outlet wherein his expressive intent can flourish, untethered. And it could well be that Iron Jinn, that the creative partnership with Kemkens is the vehicle through which that will happen, but it will be years more before we know, and in a universe of infinite possibility the band could break up before the record’s even out and an asteroid could smash into the ocean and set all the oxygen in Earth’s air on fire, so no, no speculation. But there’s potential and promise at this point, and Iron Jinn builds on past successes — by no means just for Beydals — while carving out their own path, not with arrogance, but with artistic certainty and an awareness of and (if understated) excitement for what they might yet achieve.

In addition to the Roadburn release show, Iron Jinn have slots lined up at Desertfest London, Sonic Whip, Bridge Festival and Void Fest, as well as club dates and gigs supporting and performing with the venerable Alain Johannes in September. You’ll find those dates, the preorder link, and more info under the premiere of the “Lick It or Kick It” lyric video below, courtesy of the PR wire.

Hope you enjoy:

Iron Jinn, “Lick it or Kick It” lyric video

The third song from our upcoming debut album, preorder the record at https://www.stickman-records.com/shop/iron-jinn-iron-jinn/

Iron Jinn are Oeds Beydals (The Devils Blood/Molassess/Death Alley), Wout Kemkens (Shaking Godspeed/De Niemanders), Bob Hogenelst (Birth of Joy/Molassess) and Gerben Bielderman (Pauw).

‘Iron Jinn’ tracklisting
1. Winding World
2. Soft Healers
3. Ego Loka
4. Truth Is Your Dagger
5. Lick It Or Kick it
6. Relic
7. Bread And Games
8. Blood Moon Horizon
9. Cage Rage

Credits
Written by Iron Jinn
Recorded and mixed at Galloway Studio by Sebastiaan van Bijlevelt
Mastered by Pieter Kloos
Video concept and styling Louise Te Poele
Camera, animation and editing Daan van der Pluijm
Handwriting by William van Giessen
Released by Stickman Records

The release party takes place at Roadburn Festival Saturday April 22nd. Other shows we can announce at this point are:

14.04.2023 – Live At The Farm, Varsseveld Gelders Goed
05.05.2023 – London (UK), Desertfest London
06.05.2023 – Nijmegen (NL), Sonic Whip
12.05.2023 – Eindhoven (NL), Bridge Festival Eindhoven
27.05.2023 – Den Haag (NL), Sniester
12.08.2023 – Void Fest, Waldmünchen (DE)
08.09.2023 – Zwolle – Hedon Zwolle w/ Alain Johannes
09.09.2023 – Leiden – Gebr de Nobel w/ Alain Johannes
10.09.2023 10.09.2023 – Heerlen – @de nieuwe nor w/ Alain Johannes

Iron Jinn are:
Oeds Beydals
Gerben Bielderman
Bob Holgenelst
Wout Kemkens

Iron Jinn, “Winding World” lyric video

Iron Jinn, “Soft Healers”

Iron Jinn on Instagram

Iron Jinn on Facebook

Iron Jinn on Bandcamp

Stickman Records on Facebook

Stickman Records on Instagram

Stickman Records website

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Elder Announce Fall Tour Dates in Europe and the UK

Posted in Whathaveyou on March 13th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Elder have just unveiled their tour plans for this autumn, playing Lazy Bones Fest in Hamburg but thus far bypassing most of the continental Fall festival season, though of course there’s always time for more to be announced. They’ll be joined for some of the Euro portion of the run by Steak (from the UK) and in the UK by Slomosa (from Norway) as they continue to support 2022’s Innate Passage (review here), following the previously announced US tour set for this May into June.

I don’t imagine I need to tell you if you’re reading this just how in-their-own-league Elder remain, even as their influence on the next generation of heavy rock ripples outward, or how Innate Passage pushed their heavy prog rock to new expressive heights while getting both heavier and more melodic — all sides growth and production to match — but it is fun to mention. I’ll posit them as one of the most essential acts under the umbrella of heavy music, and I’ll keep it simple and just say if you can see them, see them, wherever you live.

Dates follow as per social media:
Elder fall uk eu

ELDER * EU/UK TOUR *

We are hitting the road again this fall in support of our latest record “Innate Passage” with stops around Europe and the UK!

Joining us on the trip are our friends Slomosa and Steak (select dates each, please mind the symbols).

Tickets will be on sale from this Wednesday, March 15th at https://beholdtheelder.com/tour.html

See you soon!

27.10.23 – DE – Erfurt | Bandhaus†
28.10.23 – DE – Hamburg | Lazy Bones Fest *
29..1023 – DK – Copenhagen | Pumpehuset*
31.10.23 – NL – Amersfoort | Fluor*
01.11.23 – DE – Oberhausen | Kulttempel*
02.11.23 – NL – Nijmegen | Doornroosje*
03.11.23 – BE – Leuven | Het Depot*
04.11.23 – FR – Paris | La Maroquinerie*
05.11.23 – FR – Lille | The Black Lab*
06.11.23 – UK – Bristol | The Fleece*
08.11.23 – UK – Brighton | Patterns*
09.11.23 – UK – London | Electric Ballroom*
10.11.23 – UK – Glasgow | Slay*
11.11.23 – UK – Leeds | Brundenell Social Club*
12.11.23 – UK – Manchester | Gorilla*
14.11.23 – DE – Frankfurt | Nachtleben†
15.11.23 – CH – Dudingen | Bad Bonn†
16.11.23 – DE – Munich | Hansa 39†
17.11.23 – DE – Dresden | Chemiefabrik†
18.11.23 – DE – Berlin | Hole 44†

* = with Slomosa
† = with Steak

Previously announced US tour dates:

5/3 Buffalo, NY @ Mohawk
5/4 Cleveland, OH @ Grog Shop
5/5 Indianapolis, IN @ Black Circle
5/6 Rock Island, IL @ Wake Brewing
5/7 Kansas City, MO @ The Record Bar
5/9 Denver, CO @ The Bluebird Theater
5/10 Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge
5/11 Las Vegas, NV @ The Usual Place
5/12 Los Angeles, CA @ Lodge Room
5/13 Santa Ana, CA @ The Constellation Room
5/14 San Diego, CA @ Brick By Brick
5/16 San Francisco, CA @ Great American Music Hall
5/17 Fresno, CA @ Strummer’s
5/18 Sacramento, CA @ Harlow’s
5/20 Seattle, WA @ Substation
5/21 Vancouver, BC @ Modified Ghost Festival
5/23 Calgary, AB @ Palomino
5/24 Edmonton, AB @ Starlite Room
5/26 Winnipeg, MB @ The Park Theatre
5/27 Fargo, ND @ The Aquarium
5/28 Minneapolis, MN @ Fine Line
5/29 Milwaukee, WI @ X-Ray Arcade
5/30 Grand Rapids, MI @ Pyramid Scheme
5/31 Toronto, ON @ Lee’s Palace
6/1 Montréal, QC @ Les Foufounes Électriques
6/2 Providence, RI @ Alchemy
6/3 Hamden, CT @ Space Ballroom

Elder is:
Nick DiSalvo – Guitars, Vocals
Mike Risberg – Guitars, Keys
Jack Donovan – Bass
Georg Edert – Drums

http://facebook.com/elderofficial
https://www.instagram.com/elderband/
https://beholdtheelder.bandcamp.com/

https://www.instagram.com/armageddonshop/
https://armageddonshop.bigcartel.com/
http://armageddonshop.com

http://www.stickman-records.com/
http://stickmanrecords.bandcamp.com/
https://www.facebook.com/Stickman-Records-1522369868033940/

Elder, Innate Passage (2022)

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Weite: Members of Elder, High Fighter, Delving & Lawns Form New Band; Signed to Stickman Records

Posted in Whathaveyou on March 8th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

The story seems pretty straightforward here. Dudes got together and made a record. Turned out they liked the record they made, so they decided to be a band. Maybe they’ll play some shows? There you go. That’s the bio at this point for Weite — in English: “width” or “vast” — which is a new project featuring Nick DiSalvo and Mike Risberg of Elder alongside Ben Lubin of Lawns and Ingwer Boysen of Hamburg-based riff-core bashers High Fighter.

I’ll assume the pedigree is explanation enough for how they wound up with Stickman Records getting behind the album in question, Assemblage — same label puts out Elder and the one-to-date release from DiSalvo‘s Delving side-project — and while there isn’t much to go on here, they do say it’s a July release and there’s a video the band posted on Instagram that has at least some snippets to tell you where they’re coming from. Also always nice to see the inside of Big Snuff Studio, where Richard Behrens holds court and has helped many, many acts make many, many killer records. I’m on board for adding one more to that list if you are.

More to come, I hope. The PR wire brings preliminaries:

Weite

Members of ELDER, HIGH FIGHTER, DELVING & LAWNS announce new band WEITE!

Debut album coming in the summer of 2023 on Stickman Records!

Nicholas DiSalvo (Elder, Delving) and Michael Risberg (Elder) alongside colleagues Ingwer Boysen (High Fighter) and Ben Lubin (Lawns), have announced a new band, Weite!

Weite was initially conceived as a one-off winter project by Boysen, who contacted DiSalvo and Risberg with the idea to write and record a record within a week. Having played together in DiSalvo’s live band for his project Delving, a certain musical chemistry was already apparent. The three recruited Berlin-based English guitarist Lubin to round out the quartet and proceeded to bunker in for a week of intense songwriting.

Sharing their diverse musical interests and swapping instruments frequently, a body of songs was quickly created that channeled a collective love for 60’s and 70’s psychedelic music, krautrock, jazz and listening to one motorik beat for 20 minutes straight. The troupe set off to record in a short session at Big Snuff Studio with frequent collaborator Richard Behrens and within a few days “Assemblage” was born. Recording live, Behrens captured the essence of the session, at times mellow and times intense, with the five together then embellishing the raw recordings with a hearty dollop of experimental overdubs.

After many banal discussions and almost a year after the project was finished, Weite was officially born as the group decided to continue the project as a proper band. “We didn’t intend to start a band, but it kinda happened“, the band comments on their first social media post. “It turned out pretty cool, too cool to let it be a one-off, so we decided to keep it going. WEITE was officially born; the word means “expanse” “vastness” or “width”, a few adjectives we’d use to describe our sound.“
A making of video for “Assemblage” is now available on Weite’s Instagram page.

Stay tuned and expect shows in 2023 celebrating the official release of “Assemblage”, slated for a July-release through Stickman Records, with more music to come in the future!

www.instagram.com/_weite

https://www.stickman-records.com/
https://www.facebook.com/Stickman-Records-1522369868033940

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by WEITE (@_weite)

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Slomosa Sign to Stickman Records; Second Album Recorded

Posted in Whathaveyou on February 24th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Just what do Slomosa have up their sleeves for a second album, I wonder. Their self-titled debut (review here) came out in 2020 on Apollon Records and made a splash and basically as soon as they could be they were on the road for it. I think they played every European festival last year except the three I was lucky enough to go to — which has had the sad effect of making me probably even more eager to see them live — and that album continues to spread via word of mouth even as the Bergen, Norway, four-piece are confirmed for more gigs. And now they’ve signed to Stickman Records; a home for heavy that matters.

So what’s it gonna be with Slomosa? Are they the forerunners of a new generation of heavy rock? Are they the vanguard? I don’t know, but I think the next album is going to tell us an awful lot one way or the other. And I think this signing is big enough news that I’m posting about it on Friday even after I already closed out the week. So yeah, I’m at least open to the idea that they’re the real deal and are going to be leaders of that next-gen of heavy that’s so badly needed, make an impact and be influential. That potential is there. It’s exciting to think it could happen.

This is why you sign up for record label newsletters:

slomosa

SLOMOSA Sophomore LP to be released on Stickman – new single coming soon

We are proud to announce that SLOMOSA and Stickman are joining forces for the band’s upcoming second full-length, which they recently recorded at Polyfon Studio in their hometown of Bergen, Norway. A single from the album will be released in the coming months, so stay tuned!

Since their sudden appearance on the scene with the self-titled debut album “Slomosa” in 2020, the band has hit the ground running with relentless tours alongside bands such as Orange Goblin, Sasquatch and Stöner.

Singer/guitarist Benjamin Berdous says of the upcoming record:

“The feel good vibes of our first album were apparent in the music, even though the lyrical themes were more serious and angry, but also in some sense comforting for me personally. Since then more of life has happened and things have gotten more serious, and as always this reflects on the music. It’s still important to me that we continue to offer something fresh in an at times homogeneous genre. Catchy vocal hooks and heavy guitar riffs is our recipe, and we don’t plan to mix up our diets!”

www.facebook.com/slomosaband
https://www.instagram.com/slomosa
http://slomosa1.bandcamp.com/
https://soundcloud.com/slomosa
https://sptfy.com/4Qaf

https://www.stickman-records.com/
https://www.facebook.com/Stickman-Records-1522369868033940

Slomosa, Slomosa (2020)

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Weedpecker Announce April & May Tour Dates

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 25th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Weedpecker‘s page on Facebook got hacked. First of all, that that happens to anyone in 2023 is emblematic of how much the tech model of “continuous improvement” — executed most often in a situation where something done mostly right the first time is gradually made worse over a period of however long until eventually it’s so awful everyone moves onto something else — is bullshit. The band issued their righteously proggy IV: The Stream of Forgotten Thoughts (review here) album through Stickman Records in late 2021 and are not letting the social media woes get in their way as they announce a Spring 2023 tour to support the album that will include slots at Heavy Psych Sounds Fest in Bologna, Italy, a stop at Echoes of Erebus in Wien, and a swing through the UK that’s got them dropping by Desertfest London 2023 on May 7, adding to the already epic lineup there.

I honestly don’t know if giving them a follow on Facebook helps their cause or not — I’m waiting for my turn to be hacked; everybody seems to get there — but the band asked people to share the dates and doing so seems reasonable enough. There are a couple shows open — unless that’s another fest already confirmed but not yet announced — and of course, if you happen to have a venue handy for them to play, can provide a meal and so on, I’m sure they’d love to hear from you, whichever platform you might use to get in touch.

Tour looks like this:

Weedpecker tour

“Hello everyone, we are happy to announce Weedpecker’s spring tour. We can’t wait to see you all! As some of you may know, our FB page was hacked 2 weeks ago and we still have no access to it. Every share, likes and comments would help us a lot to spread the message. Thank you all for your help and support.”

28.04 Brno Kabinet Muz CZ
29.04 Vienna Echoes of Erebus Fest AT
30.04 Bologna Heavy Psych Sounds Fest IT
01.05 Basel Hirscheneck CH
02.05 TBC
03.05 TBC
04.05 Manchester Rebellion UK
05.05 Glasgow Ivory Blacks UK
07.05 Desertfest London UK
08.05 Nantes Decadanse FR
09.05 Gent Trefpunt BE
10.05 Tilburg Little Devil NL
11.05 Rotterdam Baroeg NL
12.05 Cologne MTC DE
13.05 Jena Klub Kuba DE
14.05 Dresden Club Novitas DE

Weedpecker is:
Walczak (Tankograd, ex-Dopelord) – drums
Wyro – guitar/vox
Seru (BelzebonG) – keyboards
Piotr Kuks – bass

https://www.facebook.com/Weedpecker-349871488424872/
https://weedpecker.bandcamp.com/
http://weedpecker.bigcartel.com/
http://weedpecker.8merch.com/

https://www.stickman-records.com/
https://www.facebook.com/Stickman-Records-1522369868033940

Weedpecker, IV: The Stream of Forgotten Thoughts (2021)

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Iron Jinn Announce Debut Album Release Show at Roadburn 2023; New Single Posted

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 19th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Listen to the two singles back to back and you can hear some of the differing sides of Iron Jinn‘s makeup coming forward, between psychedelia and some more urgent push. The Amsterdam-based four-piece, which boasts Oeds Beydals on guitar — see also Death AlleyMolassessThe Devil’s Blood, etc. — will release their self-titled debut full-length through Stickman Records this April, playing a release show at, where else?, Roadburn Festival, where Beydals and Wout Kemkens (also Birth of Joy) first came together, then under the moniker of Iron Chin, in 2018.

Neat, right? New song, release show, things happening. Cool. You’ll also note the part below at the end where it mentions ever so casually that members of Iron Jinn (all or some, I don’t know) will pull double-duty this coming Fall, touring with and playing in the backing band for Alain Johannes. That is a show I would like very much to see. Johannes has promised a career-spanning set, if such a thing is even possible in a single night, and I feel like only good things can come from these two parties meeting and working together over a stretch of dates.

The PR wire takes it from there:

iron jinn

IRON JINN (feat. members of The Devil’s Blood, Death Alley & more!) announce Roadburn record release & share new single “Winding World”!

Years after debuting at Roadburn 2018 as a European counterpoint for the San Diego-Takeover, Iron Jinn, featuring members of The Devil’s Blood, Death Alley, Shaking Godspeed and Birth Of Joy, comes full circle with a release party at Roadburn 2023!

Iron Jinn will be released on April 21, 2023 coinciding with the band’s appearance at the festival. A limited Roadburn edition of the vinyl will be available exclusively there and in the Stickman Records webshop.

You can get a taste of their woozy rock’n’roll on debut single Soft Healers, and get swept along with the tide on Winding World – their brand new track released today to coincide with this very announcement. Listen to Winding World now!

Says guitarist/singer Wout Kemkens of the new single:
”Winding World is like a sonic action painting to me; the parade of seemingly unrelated images/happenings that pass by during the song is an ode to the fact that everything is constantly changing, which is maddening, but beautiful. I always loved Louis Armstrong’s ‘Wonderful World’ and for me ‘Winding World’ feels related, but as a hectic 21st century version. A stroll in this particular moment of time, and really feeling and seeing what is happening, such a day.”

Ever since we came off stage at Roadburn 2018 as the one off Iron Chin project, I always wondered what would happen if Wout Kemkens and I would share writing duties equally and develop an actual band,” Oeds says, “By circumstances beyond our control we suddenly had the time to make it happen and Iron Jinn quickly developed a mind of its own. To be able to present it where the first seeds were sown makes it all the more special.

The Amsterdam-based band has also announced a slew of live dates celebrating the record, as well as an upcoming tour with Alain Johannes (Queens of the Stone Age, Them Crooked Vultures). Not only will Iron Jinn be directly supporting Johannes on the tour, but also playing in his live band. Dates have not been made public yet, but the tour is slated for September/October of this year. Find more info HERE: https://alainjohannes.eu/alain-johannes-european-tour-2023/

https://www.instagram.com/iron_jinn=-
https://www.facebook.com/ironjinn

https://www.facebook.com/Stickman-Records-1522369868033940/
https://www.instagram.com/stickmanrecords/
https://www.stickman-records.com/

Iron Jinn, “Winding World” lyric video

Iron Jinn, “Soft Healers”

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Elder Announce Tour Dates with Ruby the Hatchet and Howling Giant

Posted in Whathaveyou on January 17th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

Elder, Ruby the Hatchet and Howling Giant is one god damned good show, and that is the sum total of what I have to say about it. Elder and Ruby the Hatchet coming off killer records and maybe Howling Giant too by then? I don’t know anything but they’re about due. I wouldn’t argue if that news came in.

The run is a full month and hits both coasts, in between, and Canada. I don’t feel like I need to argue on favor of this. If you’re not on board with Elder or Ruby the Hatchet at this point, and you’re somehow bothering to read this at all (thanks for that), it’s probably not because you haven’t heard them. Or of them. And if you don’t know Howling Giant, it ain’t my fault. One way or the other, they are going to make a lot of friends on this tour.

It is one good damned good show. More likely a bunch of them. Dates follow:

Elder tour horizontal

We’re hitting the road this spring in the US and Canada with our friends Ruby the Hatchet and Howling Giant!

Tickets will go on sale January 20th at 10AM EST.

Links at our website: www.beholdtheelder.com

5/3 Buffalo, NY @ Mohawk
5/4 Cleveland, OH @ Grog Shop
5/5 Indianapolis, IN @ Black Circle
5/6 Rock Island, IL @ Wake Brewing
5/7 Kansas City, MO @ The Record Bar
5/9 Denver, CO @ The Bluebird Theater
5/10 Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge
5/11 Las Vegas, NV @ The Usual Place
5/12 Los Angeles, CA @ Lodge Room
5/13 Santa Ana, CA @ The Constellation Room
5/14 San Diego, CA @ Brick By Brick
5/16 San Francisco, CA @ Great American Music Hall
5/17 Fresno, CA @ Strummer’s
5/18 Sacramento, CA @ Harlow’s
5/20 Seattle, WA @ Substation
5/21 Vancouver, BC @ Modified Ghost Festival
5/23 Calgary, AB @ Palomino
5/24 Edmonton, AB @ Starlite Room
5/26 Winnipeg, MB @ The Park Theatre
5/27 Fargo, ND @ The Aquarium
5/28 Minneapolis, MN @ Fine Line
5/29 Milwaukee, WI @ X-Ray Arcade
5/30 Grand Rapids, MI @ Pyramid Scheme
5/31 Toronto, ON @ Lee’s Palace
6/1 Montréal, QC @ Les Foufounes Électriques
6/2 Providence, RI @ Alchemy
6/3 Hamden, CT @ Space Ballroom

Elder is:
Nick DiSalvo – Guitars, Vocals
Mike Risberg – Guitars, Keys
Jack Donovan – Bass
Georg Edert – Drums

http://facebook.com/elderofficial
https://www.instagram.com/elderband/
https://beholdtheelder.bandcamp.com/

https://www.instagram.com/armageddonshop/
https://armageddonshop.bigcartel.com/
http://armageddonshop.com

http://www.stickman-records.com/
http://stickmanrecords.bandcamp.com/
https://www.facebook.com/Stickman-Records-1522369868033940/

Elder, Innate Passage (2022)

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