Quarterly Review: Gaupa, Orango, Onségen Ensemble, Gypsy Wizard Queen, Blake Hornsby, Turbid North, Modern Stars, Trillion Ton Beryllium Ships, Borehead, Monolithe

Posted in Reviews on January 13th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

quarterly-review-winter 2023

So here we are. On the verge of two weeks, 100 records later. My message here is the same as ever: I’m tired and I hope you found something worthwhile. A lot of this was catchup for me — still is, see Gaupa below — but maybe something slipped through the cracks for you in 2022 that got a look here, or maybe not and you’re not even seeing this and it doesn’t matter anyway and what even is music, etc., etc. I don’t know.

A couple bands were stoked along the way. That’s fun, I guess. Mostly I’ve been trying to keep in mind that I’m doing this for myself, because, yeah, there’s probably no other way I was going to get to cover these 100 albums, and I feel like the site is stronger for having done so, at least mostly. I guess shrug and move on. Next week is back to normal reviews, premieres and all that. I think March we’ll do this again, maybe try to keep it to five or six days. Two 100-record QRs in a row has been a lot.

But again, thanks if you’ve kept up at all. I’m gonna soak my head in these and then cover it with a pillow for a couple days to keep the riffs out. Just kidding, I’ll be up tomorrow morning writing. Like a sucker.

Winter 2023 Quarterly Review #91-100:

Gaupa, Myriad

Gaupa Myriad

Beginning with the hooky “Exoskeleton” and “Diametrical Enchantress,” Myriad is the second full-length from Sweden’s Gaupa (their first for Nuclear Blast), and a bringing together of terrestrial and ethereal heavy elements. Even at its most raucous, Gaupa‘s material floats, and even at its most floating, there is a plan at work, a story unfolding, and an underlying structure to support them. From the minimalist start of “Moloken” to the boogie rampage of “My Sister is a Very Angry Man,” the Swedefolk of “Sömnen,” the tension and explosions of “RA,” with the theatrical-but-can-also-really-sing, soulful vocals of Emma Näslund at the forefront, a proggy and atmospheric cut like “Elden” — which becomes an intense battery by the time it hits its apex; I’ve heard that about aging — retains a distinct human presence, and the guitar work of Daniel Nygren and David Rosberg, Erik Sävström‘s bass and Jimmy Hurtig‘s drums are sharp in their turns and warm in their tones, creating a fluidity that carries the five-piece to the heavy immersion of “Mammon,” where Näslund seems to find another, almost Bjork-ish level of command in her voice before, at 5:27 into the song’s 7:36, the band behind her kicks into the heaviest roll of the album; a shove by the time they’re done. Can’t ask for more. Some records just have everything.

Gaupa on Facebook

Nuclear Blast Records store

 

Orango, Mohican

orango mohican

Six albums in, let’s just all take a minute to be glad Orango are still at it. The Oslo-based harmonybringers are wildly undervalued, now over 20 years into their tenure, and their eighth album, Mohican (which I’m not sure is appropriate to take as an album title unless you’re, say, a member of the Stockbridge-Munsee Community) is a pleasure cruise through classic heavy rock styles. From opener/longest track (immediate points) “The Creek” twisting through harder riffing and more melodic range than most acts have in their entire career, through the memorable swagger in the organ-laced “Fryin’,” the stadium-ready “Running Out of Reasons,” the later boogie of “War Camp” and shuffle in “Dust & Dirt” (presumably titled for what’s kicked up by said shuffle) and the softer-delivered complementary pair “Cold Wind” and “Ain’t No Road” ending each side of the LP with a mellow but still engaging wistfulness, nobody does the smooth sounds of the ’70s better, and Mohican is a triumph in showcasing what they do, songs like “Bring You Back Home” and the bluesier “Wild River Song” gorgeous and lush in their arrangements while holding onto a corresponding human sensibility, ever organic. There is little to do with Orango except be wowed and, again, be thankful they’ve got another collection of songs to bask in and singalong to. It’s cool if you’re off-key; nobody’s judging.

Orango on Facebook

Stickman Records website

 

Onségen Ensemble, Realms

Onségen Ensemble Realms

You never really know when a flute, a choir, or a digeridoo might show up, and that’s part of the fun with Onségen Ensemble‘s six-track Realms LP, which goes full-Morricone in “Naked Sky” only after digging into the ambient prog of “The Sleeping Lion” and en route to the cinematic keys and half-speed King Crimson riffing of “Abysmal Sun,” which becomes a righteous melodic wash. The Finnish natives’ fourth LP, its vinyl pressing was crowdfunded through Bandcamp for independent release, and while the guitar in “Collapsing Star” calls back to “Naked Sky” and the later declarations roll out grandiose crashes, the horns of “The Ground of Being” set up a minimalist midsection only to return in even more choral form, and “I’m Here No Matter What” resolves in both epic keys/voices and a clear, hard-strummed guitar riff, the name Realms feels not at all coincidental. This is worldbuilding, setting a full three-dimensional sphere in which these six pieces flow together to make the 40-minute entirety of the album. The outright care put into making them, the sense of purpose, and the individualized success of the results, shouldn’t be understated. Onségen Ensemble are becoming, and so have become, a treasure of heavy, enveloping progressive sounds, and without coming across as contrived, Realms has a painterly sensibility that resonates joy.

Onségen Ensemble on Facebook

Onségen Ensemble on Bandcamp

 

Gypsy Wizard Queen, Gypsy Wizard Queen

Gypsy Wizard Queen self-titled

Chad Heille (ex-Egypt, currently also El Supremo) drums in this Fargo, North Dakota, three-piece completed by guitarist/vocalist/engineer Chris Ellingson and bassist/vocalist Mitch Martin, and the heavy bluesy groove they emit as they unfurl “Witch Lung,” their self-titled debut’s 10-minute opener and longest track (immediate points), is likewise righteous and hypnotic. Even as “Paranoid Humanoid” kicks into its chorus on Heille‘s steady thud and a winding lead from Ellingson, one wouldn’t call their pace hurried, and while I’d like to shake everyone in the band’s hand for having come up with the song title “Yeti Davis Eyes” — wow; nicely done — the wandering jam itself is even more satisfying, arriving along its instrumental course at a purely stoner rock janga-janga before it’s finished and turns over to the final two tracks, “The Good Ride” and “Stoned Age,” both shorter, with the former also following an instrumental path, classically informed but modern in its surge, and the latter seeming to find all the gallop and shove that was held back from elsewhere and loosing it in one showstopping six-minute burst. I’d watch this live set, happily. Reminds a bit of Geezer on paper but has its own identity. Their sound isn’t necessarily innovative or trying to be, but their debut nonetheless establishes a heavy dynamic, shows their chemistry across a varied collection of songs, and offers a take on genre that’s welcome in the present and raises optimism for what they’ll do from here. It’s easy to dig, and I dig it.

Gypsy Wizard Queen on Facebook

Gypsy Wizard Queen on Bandcamp

 

Blake Hornsby, A Collection of Traditional Folk Songs & Tunes Vol. 1

blake hornsby A Collection of Traditional Folk Songs & Tunes Vol 1

It’s not quite as stark a contrast as one might think to hear Asheville, North Carolina’s Blake Hornsby go from banjo instrumentalism to more lush, sitar-infused arrangements for the final three songs on his A Collection of Traditional Folk Songs & Tunes Vol. 1, as bridging sounds across continents would seem to come organically to his style of folk. And while perhaps “Old Joe Clark” wasn’t written as a raga to start with, it certainly works as one here, answering the barebones runs of “John Brown’s Dream” with a fluidity that carries into the more meditative “Cruel Sister” and a drone-laced 13-minute take on the Appalachian traditional song “House Carpenter” (also done in various forms by Pentangle, Joan Baez, Myrkur, and a slew of others), obscure like a George Harrison home-recorded experiment circa Sgt. Pepper but sincere in its expression and cross-cultural scope. Thinking of the eight-tracker as an LP with two sides — one mostly if not entirely banjo tunes between one and two minutes long, the other an outward-expanding journey using side A as its foundation — might help, but the key word here is ‘collection,’ and part of Hornsby‘s art is bringing these pieces into his oeuvre, which he does regardless of the form they actually take. That is a credit to him and so is this album.

Blake Hornsby on Facebook

Ramble Records store

 

Turbid North, The Decline

Turbid North The Decline

Oof that’s heavy. Produced by guitarist/vocalist Nick Forkel, who’s joined in the band by bassist Chris O’Toole (also Unearth) and drummer John “Jono” Garrett (also Mos Generator), Turbid North‘s The Decline is just as likely to be grind as doom at any given moment, as “Life Over Death” emphasizes before “Patients” goes full-on into brutality, and is the band’s fourth full-length and first since 2015. The 2023 release brings together 10 songs for 43 minutes that seem to grow more aggressive as they go, with “Eternal Dying” and “The Oppressor” serving as the opening statement with a lumber that will be held largely but not completely in check until the chugging, slamming plod of closer “Time” — which still manages to rage at its apex — while the likes of “Slaves,” “Drown in Agony” and “The Old Ones” dive into more extreme metallic fare. No complaints, except maybe for the bruises, but as “The Road” sneaks a stoner rock riff in early and some cleaner shouts in late amid Mastodonny noodling, there’s a playfulness that hints toward the trio enjoying themselves while doling out such punishment, and that gives added context and humanity to the likes of “A Dying Earth,” which is severe both in its ambient and more outright violent stretches. Not for everybody, but if you’re pissed off and feel like your brain’s on fire, they have your back with ready and waiting catharsis. Sometimes you just want to punch yourself in the face.

Turbid North on Facebook

Turbid North on Bandcamp

 

Modern Stars, Space Trips for the Masses

Modern Stars Space Trips for the Masses

A third full-length in as many years from Roman four-piece Modern Stars — vocalist/guitarist/synthesist Andrea Merolle (also sitar and mandolin), vocalist Barbara Margani, bassist/mixer Filippo Strang and drummer Andrea SperdutiSpace Trips for the Masses is maybe less directly space rock in its makeup than one might think. The band’s heavy psychedelia is hardly earthbound, but more ambience than fiery thrust or motorik, and Merolle‘s vocals have a distinctly Mark Lanegan-esque smokiness to which Margani adds bolstering backing presence on the deceptively urbane “No Fuss,” after the opening drift of “Starlight” — loosely post-rock, but too active to be that entirely either, and that’s a compliment — and the echoing “Monkey Blues” first draw the listener in. Margani provides the only voice on centerpiece “My Messiah Left Me Behind,” but that shift is just one example of Modern Stars‘ clear intent to offer something different on every song, be it the shimmer of “Everyday” or the keyboard sounds filling the open spaces early in the eight-minute “Drowning,” which later takes up a march punctuated by, drums and tambourine, devolving on a long synth/noise-topped fade into the six-minute liquid cohesion that is “Ninna Nanna,” a capstone summary of the fascinating sprawl Modern Stars have crafted. One could live here a while, in this ‘space.’

Modern Stars on Facebook

Little Cloud Records store

 

Trillion Ton Beryllium Ships, Destination Ceres Station: Reefersleep EP

trillion ton beryllium ships destination ceres station reefersleep

Those who’ve been following the progression of Nebraska’s Trillion Ton Beryllium Ships will find Destination Ceres Station: Reefersleep — their second offering in 2022 behind the sophomore full-length Consensus Trance (review here) — accordingly dense in tone and steady in roll as the three-piece of Jeremy Warner, Karlin Warner and Justin Kamal offer two more tracks that would seem to have been recorded in the full-length session. As “Destination Ceres Station: Reefersleep” open-spaces and chugs across an instrumental-save-for-samples 12:31 and the subsequent “Ice Hauler” lumbers noddily to its 10:52 with vocals incorporated, the extended length of each track gives the listener plenty to groove on, classically stonerized in the post-Sleep tradition, but becoming increasingly individual. These two songs, with the title-track hypnotizing so that the start of the first verse in “Ice Hauler” is something of a surprise, pair well, and Trillion Ton Beryllium Ships add a taste of slow-boogie to lead them out in the slow fade of the latter, highlighting the riff worship at the heart of their increasingly confident approach. One continues to look forward to what’s to come from them, feeling somewhat greedy for doing so given the substance they’ve already delivered.

Trillion Ton Beryllium Ships on Facebook

Trillion Ton Beryllium Ships on Bandcamp

 

Borehead, 0002

Borehead 0002

The current of feedback or drone noise beneath the rolling motion of Borehead‘s “Phantasm (A Prequel)” — before the sample brings the change into the solo section; anybody know the name of that rabbit? — is indeed a precursor to the textured, open-spaced heavy progressive instrumentalism London trio have on offer with their aptly-titled second EP, 0002. Produced by Wayne Adams at the London-underground go-to Bear Bites Horse Studio, the three-song outing is led by riffs on that opener, patient in its execution and best consumed at high volume so that the intricacy of the bass in “Lost in Waters Deep,” the gentle ghost snare hits in the jazzy first-half break of “Mariana’s Lament” after the ticking clock and birdsong intro, and the start-stop declarative riff that lands so heavy before they quickly turn to the next solo, or, yes, those hidden melodies in “Phantasm (A Prequel)” aren’t lost. These aspects add identity to coincide with the richness of tone and the semi-psychedelic outreach of 0002‘s overarching allure, definitely in-genre, but in a way that seems contingent largely on the band’s interests not taking them elsewhere over time, or at least expanding in multiple directions on what’s happening here. Because there’s a pull in these songs, and I think it’s the band being active in their own development, though four years from their first EP and with nothing else to go on, it’s hard to know where they’ll head or how they’ll get there based on these three tracks. Somehow that makes it more exciting.

Borehead on Facebook

Borehead on Bandcamp

 

Monolithe, Kosmodrom

Monolithe Kosmodrom

With song titles and lyrical themes based around Soviet space exploration, Kosmodrom is the ninth full-length from Parisian death-doomers Monolithe. The band are 20 years removed from their debut album, have never had a real break, and offer up 67 minutes’ worth of gorgeously textured, infinitely patient and serenely immersive death, crossing into synth and sampling as they move toward and through the 26-minute finale “Kosmonavt,” something of a victory lap for the album itself, even if sympathy for anything Russian is at a low at this point in Europe, given the invasion of Ukraine. That’s not Monolithe‘s fault, however, and really at this point there’s maybe less to say about it than there would’ve been last year, but the reason I wanted to write about Kosmodrom, and about Monolithe particularly isn’t just that they’re good at what they do, but because they’ve been going so long, they’re still finding ways to keep themselves interested in their project, and their work remains at an as-high-if-not-higher level than it was when I first heard the 50-minute single-song Monolithe II in 2005. They’ve never been huge, never had the hype machine behind them, and they keep doing what they do anyway, because fuck it, it’s art and if you’re not doing it for yourself, what’s the point? In addition to the adventure each of the five songs on Kosmodrom represents, some moments soaring, some dug so low as to be subterranean, both lush, weighted and beautiful, their ethic and the path they’ve walked deserves nothing but respect, so here’s me giving it.

Monolithe on Facebook

Monolithe on Bandcamp

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

King Buffalo Announce Spring 2023 European Tour

Posted in Whathaveyou on December 22nd, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Rochester’s King Buffalo would be well within their rights to spend the entirety of 2023 on the road continuing to support this year’s Regenerator (review here), but I wouldn’t necessarily put it past the three-piece to have something new at least announced if not out by the time they embark on this European tour in Spring, even with previously announced US dates preceding this winter. Is that me being greedy? Yeah, at least a bit, but with a string of EPs and LPs behind them at this point, King Buffalo have never been ones to let momentum slip. I don’t know anything, I’m just speculating, but they’ve shown already in the last few years that they’re not screwing around in terms of productivity. Or progression, for that matter.

Note the festival appearances amid the Euro days, Sonic Whip, Desertfest London, Soulstone Gathering, Desertfest Berlin, Freak Valley, Copenhell and Hellfest. One does not expect these will be the only festival dates the band play in 2023. A Fall return to Europe or another stint in North America? Australia and New Zealand? Have to figure these dudes are welcome just about everywhere at this point.

From the PR wire:

King Buffalo euro tour 2023

KING BUFFALO – JUST ANNOUNCED 2023 EUROPEAN TOUR DATES!

More dates will be coming soon…

04.5. (DE) Aschaffenburg @ Colos Saal
05.5. (NL) Nijmegen @ Sonic Whip
06.5. (BE) Izegem @ Headbanger’s Ball
07.5. (UK) London @ Desertfest
09.5. (FR) Wasquehal @ The Black Lab
10.5. (FR) TBA
11.5. (FR) Paris @ Glazart
12.5. (CH) Aaarau @ Kiff
13.5. (DE) Ludwigsburg @ Scala
15.5. (IT) Milano @ Legend Club
16.5. (AT) Innsbruck @ p.m.k.
17.5. (AT) Vienna @ Arena
18.5. (PL) Krakow @ Soulstone Gathering
19.5. (DE) Berlin @ Desertfest
20.5. (DE) Hannover @ Faust
22.5. (SE) Malmö @ Plan B
23.5. (SE) TBA
24.5. (SE) Gothenburg @ The Abyss
25.5. (NO) Oslo @ Parkteatret
26.5. (NO) TBA
27.5. (NO) TBA
09.6. (DE) Netphen @ Freak Valley
15.6. (DK) Copenhagen @ Copenhell
17.6. (FR) Clisson @ Hellfest

NORTH AMERICAN TOUR DATES ON SALE NOW!

1/13 Cleveland @ Grog Shop
1/14 Indianapolis, IN @ Hi-Fi
1/15 St. Louis, MO @ Off Broadway
1/17 Iowa City, IA @ Gabe’s
1/18 Milwaukee, WI @ Colectivo
1/19 Ann Arbor, MI @ Blind Pig
1/20 Pittsburgh, PA @ Cafe Club
1/21 Pittsburgh, PA @ Cafe Club
2/16 Brattleboro, VT @ Stone Church
2/17 Albany, NY @ Empire Live
2/18 Lancaster, PA @ Tellus 360
2/19 Richmond, VA @ Richmond Music Hall
2/21 Charlotte, NC @ Snug Harbor
2/23 Orlando, FL @ Will’s Pub
2/24 Miami, FL @ Gramps
2/25 Tampa, FL @ Crowbar
2/26 St. Augustine, FL @ Cafe 11
2/28 Athens, GA @ Hendershots
3/1 Asheville, NC @ Asheville Music Hall
3/2 Knoxville, TN @ Pilot Light
3/3 Huntington, WV @ The Loud

Buy Tickets: https://kingbuffalo.com/tour

We’re so excited to finally release the 3rd record of the “plague trilogy”. It’s some of the coolest stuff we’ve ever done and we’re stoked to be playing these songs live for the first time!

Please come out and support if we are in your area and spread the word. We look forward to seeing you all soon!

King Buffalo is:
Sean McVay – Guitar, Vocals, & Synth
Dan Reynolds – Bass & Synth
Scott Donaldson – Drums

kingbuffalo.com
facebook.com/kingbuffaloband
instagram.com/kingbuffaloband
kingbuffalo.bandcamp.com

stickman-records.com
facebook.com/Stickman-Records-1522369868033940

King Buffalo, Regenerator (2022)

Tags: , , , , ,

Album Review: Elder, Innate Passage

Posted in Reviews on November 17th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Elder INNATE PASSAGE

There are very few creative constraints on Elder at this point. Sixteen years after their founding, now with their sixth full-length, Innate Passage — on Armageddon Shop in the US, Stickman Records in Europe — the band prove once again that they are beholden to nothing so much as their own forward drive. In 2020, the mostly-Berlin-based four-piece released Omens (review here), which continued what’s been a genre-shaping turn toward heavy progressive rock from the band’s more riff-mountainous beginnings, and after the sidestep that was 2021’s full-length collaboration with Kadavar (review here), the five songs and 53 minutes of Innate Passage feel utterly free and realized.

It is a step forward from Omens as one would hope, and the heaviest-sounding record since 2015’s  third album Lore (review here), seemed to set them on this sonic path — 2017’s Reflections of a Floating World (review here) likewise expanded on what that record put forth, but moved away somewhat from sheer heft — seeming to revel in its harder-landing moments of distortion as much in the shimmering, noodly guitar explorations of guitarist/vocalist/keyboardist Nick DiSalvo as recorded by Linda Dag at Clouds Hill Studio, who is as suitable a fit as producer for their sound as I’ve heard. Drummer Georg Edert, who made his first appearance on Omens, feels more integrated into the band, which can be heard as he propels the solo-topped sweep in the apex of second cut “Endless Return” after already handling the stark turns in the mathier midsection of opener “Catastasis.”

Guitarist/keyboardist Mike Risberg and bassist Jack Donovan have a hand in pushing both of those parts (and many others) over the top as well, and particularly in relation to their past work, Innate Passage feels mature but not at all staid. Whether it’s the jazzy Opethian pastoralia in “Catastasis,” complete with mellotron, or the massive chugging crescendo that caps 14-minute penultimate track “Merged in Dreams/Ne Plus Ultra,” Elder are poised, confident, still reaching forward toward new growth.

There are definable aspects of their style that are readily present, be it DiSalvo‘s linear writing style, their experimentation with different keyboard/synth sounds — Fabio Cuomo (Eremite) guests on keys for wide-open-feeling closer “The Purpose” — or Adrian Dexter‘s cover art, and experienced listeners should delight at the aural weight that propels them.

As songwriters, Elder have always been a band who seek. Innate Passage expresses this with unremitting beauty and dynamic craft. To call it one of 2022’s best albums is underselling it.

It is part of the larger story of Elder‘s evolution as writ out across their various LPs and EPs, side-projects like DiSalvo‘s Delving solo outfit, and general oeuvre, and in that, it represents not just the newest but the most accomplished work they’ve done yet. To compare to recent output, it has a broader reach than Lore, than Reflections or Omens, but it could not exist without those records having been made. Its songs are righteous passages one into the next, arranged and mixed with care and purpose alike, so that the vocals in the midsection of centerpiece “Coalescence” are as much a part of an adrenaline spike as the heavier endings of the two songs prior (“Catastasis” and “Endless Return”) or the for-the-whole-album crescendo that follows in “Merged in Dreams/Ne Plus Ultra,” which would seem to take at least the second part of its title from the central riff of its instrumentalist back end.

Elder (Photo by Maren Michaelis)

There’s no other way to say it: these are hands down the best vocal performances DiSalvo has ever had on an Elder release. Guest harmonies from Behrang Alavi of Samavayo (who had DiSalvo sit in on their most recent album as well; it’s nice to have friends) on “Catastasis” bolster the coming-back from the aforementioned break, sweetly meandering guitar leading into a gorgeous wash of melody at 7:58 into the opener’s 10:52. And Alavi sits in on “Endless Return” as well, further reinforcing DiSalvo‘s own progression as a singer, which like that of the band’s songwriting can be charted across their releases going back to 2008’s self-titled debut (discussed here) and its their-first-landmark follow-up 2011’s Dead Roots Stirring (review here).

That Elder would come across as particularly lush throughout Innate Passage isn’t necessarily a surprise given where they’ve been sound-wise, but it is a thrill, and it seems the more toys (keyboards, effects, etc.) they get, the more fun they have with them. So be it. That impulse speaks again to the notion of seeking, and the lyrics seem to be asking questions as well as trying to parse out various existential quandaries even as the instrumental passages explore new places and new methods, the patience with which the beginning of “Merged in Dreams/Ne Plus Ultra” launches on bass and drums before the guitars first enter emblematic of the band’s ability to finely tune their own atmospherics, making that song and the entirety of Innate Passage all the more encompassing.

If Omens was indeed a sign of things to come, then let the title of this album speak to the sense of movement inherent in Elder‘s music. In its later moments, Innate Passage underscores its place as the to-date culmination of their progression, whether that comes through in the layered vocals in the midsection of “Merged in Dreams/Ne Plus Ultra” or the manner in which they build from silence to that song’s rousing finish, tension in the guitar and synth heralding the wash that’s soon enough to emerge, or the direct bleed into “The Purpose,” which brings vitality — and low end — to airy post-rock psychedelics in its verse and shifting with particular smoothness from one measure to the next until, after giving the groove they mount its due proliferation, the closer departs after the seven-minute mark to an epilogue of thoughtful standalone guitar that’s an echo of what first enters over the bed of keys in “Catastasis” without actually being a reprise; a finish that is classy but not overstated, reinforcing both the cyclical nature of, well, everything, and basking in a last opportunity to reach for previously uncovered ground. Once again, they seek.

That Elder are at the forefront of their generation of heavy acts isn’t up for debate, and their now-years-old maturity continues to flourish as their influence expands. Innate Passage pushes them further between the microgenres of prog and expansive heavy, clear-headed psychedelia-infused rock and roll, reinforcing their place as spearheads while positioning them all the more as distinct unto themselves. The material is epic while seeming to look inward, and like few bands can, Elder create stunning spaces and worlds for their listeners to inhabit. I’ll readily admit to being a fan of the band, and I’m not sure I’ve ever been so glad to be one. Whatever they may do next, this is a triumph and should be appreciated as such.

(Photo by Maren Michaelis)

Elder, Innate Passage (2022)

Elder on Facebook

Elder on Instagram

Elder on Bandcamp

Armageddon Shop website

Stickman Records website

Tags: , , , , , , ,

King Buffalo Announce Winter Tour Dates

Posted in Whathaveyou on November 7th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

king buffalo

By the time they embark in January on this newly-announced stretch of Midwestern and East Coastern touring, Rochester, New York, heavy psychedelic forerunners King Buffalo will have already on doubt reaped a slew of album-of-the-year-type praise for their work on their latest long-player, Regenerator (review here), and who would argue? Jerks, maybe. But those jerks are jerks, so whatever.

Regenerator, the third installment in the band’s pandemic-era trilogy behind 2021’s Acheron (review here) and The Burden of Restlessness (review here), is a culmination of everything the band have done to-date, and it has been widely hailed as a landmark for a group whose influence is already beginning to be felt in the work of others. No, that is not likely to stop as they continue to go town-to-town spreading their own take on prog-informed heavy psych, or as they move into 2023 with the inevitable announcement of European tour dates to follow-up on recent confirmations of performances at Desertfest Berlin and Freak Valley Festival. Let’s see… DF Berlin happens May 19-21, and Freak Valley happens June 8-10, so if they start at the one and end at the other, that’s the better part of a month on the road abroad. No guarantee it won’t be more than that by the time the tour is announced, and I have no doubt there are more fests as a part of it as well. This is a band everybody (rightly) wants a piece of right now, and that’s something they’ve earned no matter how you want to look at it.

They’re out with REZN and The Swell Fellas, at least for some shows, and still wrapping their Fall run in the meantime:

king buffalo winter 2023 tour

KING BUFFALO – 2023 TOUR DATES ON SALE NOW!

**JUST ANNOUNCED**
1/13 Cleveland @ Grog Shop
1/14 Indianapolis, IN @ Hi-Fi
1/15 St. Louis, MO @ Off Broadway
1/17 Iowa City, IA @ Gabe’s
1/18 Milwaukee, WI @ Colectivo
1/19 Ann Arbor, MI @ Blind Pig
1/20 Pittsburgh, PA @ Cafe Club
1/21 Pittsburgh, PA @ Cafe Club
2/16 Brattleboro, VT @ Stone Church
2/17 Albany, NY @ Empire Live
2/18 Lancaster, PA @ Tellus 360
2/19 Richmond, VA @ Richmond Music Hall
2/21 Charlotte, NC @ Snug Harbor
2/23 Orlando, FL @ Will’s Pub
2/24 Miami, FL @ Gramps
2/25 Tampa, FL @ Crowbar
2/26 St. Augustine, FL @ Cafe 11
2/28 Athens, GA @ Hendershots
3/1 Asheville, NC @ Asheville Music Hall
3/3 Huntington, WV @ The Loud
Buy Tickets!

We’re on Tour RIGHT NOW! Come see us on our last shows of the year.

11/7 Portland, OR @ Douglas Fir Lounge
11/8 Boise, ID @ The Olympic
11/9 Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge
11/11 Denver, CO @ Gothic Theatre
11/12 Fort Collins, CO @ Aggie Theatre
11/14 Omaha, NE @ Slowdown Front Room
11/15 Minneapolis, MN @ Fine Line
11/16 Madison, WI @ High Noon
11/17 Chicago, IL @ Sleeping Village
11/18 Chicago, IL @ Sleeping Village
11/19 Grand Rapids, MI @ The Stache
12/10 Boston, MA @ Brighton Music Hall

We’ve announced our return to Freak Valley Festival and Desertfest Berlin in 2023! More to be announced soon.

King Buffalo is:
Sean McVay – Guitar, Vocals, & Synth
Dan Reynolds – Bass & Synth
Scott Donaldson – Drums

kingbuffalo.com
facebook.com/kingbuffaloband
instagram.com/kingbuffaloband
kingbuffalo.bandcamp.com

stickman-records.com
facebook.com/Stickman-Records-1522369868033940

King Buffalo, Regenerator (2022)

;

Tags: , , , , ,

Iron Jinn Announce Self-Titled Debut on Stickman Records; First Single Streaming

Posted in Whathaveyou on September 30th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

April 2023 release date for a band from the Netherlands with Oeds Beydals on guitar? That tells me Iron Jinn are at least looking to have a release party at Roadburn Festival next year. That’s supposition on my part, mind you, not insider info or anything like that, but I was fortunate enough to be there when a somewhat different incarnation of what’s become Iron Jinn played Roadburn 2018 (review here), and I recall it being righteously all over the place.

The lineup of the band has changed in the ensuing four years — and the name; they were Iron Chin at the time, which I assumed derived from Beydals‘ then-chops-heavy facial hair; I guess once you fill the beard in it makes less sense — but the first single from Iron Jinn‘s self-titled debut is “Soft Healers” and is streaming now at the bottom of this post. You will find it atmospherically rich and, well, righteously all over the place throughout its seven minutes.

More to come on this one, but the point is the music, so if you want to jump to that as you read, no one’s going to hold it against you. From the PR wire:

IRON JINN (Photo by Louise te Poele)

IRON JINN Signs With Stickman Records; Debut Album Coming April 2023 – First Single Out Now!

Stickman Records, label home for high class bands such as Elder, Motorpsycho, King Buffalo, Weedpecker and many more, is proud to announce a new signing: Iron Jinn from Amsterdam. Iron Jinn are Oeds Beydals (The Devil’s Blood, Death Alley), Wout Kemkens (Shaking Godspeed, De Niemanders), Bob Hogenelst (Birth of Joy) and Gerben Bielderman (Pauw). Their self-titled debut is a frantic album that follows the logic of a dream: none. The nine songs are the result of a chaotic accumulation of modern world impressions, information and conversations that are forcefully pushed through a human funnel: the minds of Oeds and Wout.

Iron Jinn sounds downright exciting. The voices of Wout and Oeds reverberate passionately over mesmerizing grooves and pure melodies and harmonies. A rare combination in contemporary (rock) music. Guitarists/songwriters Oeds and Wout crossed paths for several years whilst playing in Death Alley and Shaking Godspeed. Finding common ground in challenging the status quo in heavy rock music, their first real get-together birthed a festival: the all-nighter Last Night On Earth. For their second collaboration they took to the Roadburn 2018 stage and performed new original material as Iron Jinn (then spelled ‘Iron Chin’). After their Roadburn live debut they kept on writing, teamed up with longtime friend and powerhouse drummer Bob and commenced the recordings for this debut album in the spring of 2021. After that Gerben was added to the band’s line-up.

Soft Healers is the new single from the album, and it’s now streaming HERE: https://bfan.link/soft-healers

Wout Kemkens explains: “When we wrote Soft Healers, the nasty throbbing sensation of the music drove me towards the old Dutch saying, ‘soft healers cause stinking wounds’. The song also deals literally with the physical side of thoughts and actions: matter over mind, a reversal of the popular modern world catchphrase. Humans can be great tricksters, but it’s hard to outsmart some realities, I guess. You cannot always place will above matter, something we love to do.”

Rolf Gustavus (Stickman Records): ‘As a rule, we at Stickman Records don’t just sign bands out of the blue, but rules are made to be broken. We are always looking for that indefinable quality in the bands we work with, a unique spark that we feel sets our label apart from the pack. When we heard the first song “Winding World” we already knew this was a special record and a rare band that would fit our roster perfectly.’

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, “Soft Healers”

Tags: , , , , ,

Quarterly Review: Motorpsycho, Abrams, All India Radio, Nighdrator, Seven Rivers of Fire, Motherslug, Cheater Pipe, Old Million Eye, Zoltar, Ascia

Posted in Reviews on September 29th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

THE-OBELISK-FALL-2020-QUARTERLY-REVIEW

Welcome to the penultimate day of the Fall 2022 Quarterly Review, and yes, I will make just about any excuse to use the word “penultimate.” Sometimes you have a favorite thing, okay? The journey continues today, down, out, up and around, through and across 10 records from various styles and backgrounds. I hope you dig it and check back tomorrow for the last day. Here we go.

Quarterly Review #81-90:

Motorpsycho, Ancient Astronauts

motorpsycho ancient astronauts

There is no denying Motorpsycho. I’ve tried. Can’t be done. I don’t know how many records the Norwegian progressive rockers have put out by now, and honestly I wonder if even the band members themselves could give an accurate count. And who would be able to fact check? Ancient Astronauts continues the strong streak that the Trondheim trio of Tomas Järmyr, Bent Sæther, and Hans “Snah” Ryan have had going for at least the last six years — 2021’s Kingdom of Oblivion (review here) was also part of it — comprising four songs across a single 43-minute LP, with side B consumed entirely by the 22-minute finale “Chariot of the Sun/To Phaeton on the Occasion of Sunrise (Theme From an Imaginary Movie).” After the 12-minute King Crimsony build from silence to sustained freakout in “Mona Lisa Azazel” — preceded by the soundscape “The Flower of Awareness” (2:14) and the relatively straightforward, welcome-bidding “The Ladder” (6:41) — the closer indeed unfurls in two discernible sections, the first a linear stretch increasing in volume and tension as it moves forward, loosely experimental in the background but for sure a prog jam by its 11th minute that ends groovy at about its 15th, and the second a synthesizer-led arrangement that, to no surprise, is duly cinematic. Motorpsycho have been a band for more than 30 years established their place in the fabric of the universe, and are there to dwell hopefully for a long(er) time to come. Not all of the hundred-plus releases they’ve done have been genius, but they are so reliably themselves in sound it feels silly to write about them. Just listen and be happy they’re there.

Motorpsycho on Facebook

Stickman Records store

 

Abrams, In the Dark

Abrams In the Dark

Did you think Abrams would somehow not deliver quality-crafted heavy rock, straightforward in structure, ’00s punk undercurrent, plus metal, plus melody? Their first offering through Small Stone is In the Dark, the follow-up to 2020’s Modern Ways (review here), and it finds guitarist/vocalist Zachary Amster joined by on guitar by Patrick Alberts (Call of the Void), making the band a four-piece for the first time with bassist/vocalist Taylor Iversen and drummer Ryan DeWitt completing the lineup. One can hear new textures and depth in songs like “Better Living” after the raucous opening salvo of “Like Hell” and “Death Tripper,” and longer pieces like “Body Pillow,” the title-track and the what-if-BlizzardofOzz-was-really-space-rock “Black Tar Mountain,” which reach for new spaces atmospherically and in terms of progressive melody — looking at you, “Fever Dreams” — while maintaining the level of songwriting one anticipates from Abrams four records in. They’ve been undervalued for a while now. Can their metal-heavy-rock-punk-prog-that’s-also-kind-of-pop gain some of the recognition it deserves? It only depends on getting ears to hear it.

Abrams on Facebook

Small Stone Records on Bandcamp

 

All India Radio, The Generator of All Infinity

All India Radio The Generator of All Infinity

Australia-based electronic prog outfit All India Radio — the solo ambient/atmospheric endeavor of composer and Martin Kennedy — has been releasing music for over 20 years, and is the kind of thing you may have heard without realizing it, soundtracking television and whatnot. The Generator of All Infinity is reportedly the final release in a trilogy cycle, completely instrumental and based largely on short ambient movements that move between each other like, well, a soundtrack, with some more band-minded ideas expressed in “The New Age” — never underestimate the value of live bass in electronic music — and an array of samples, differing organs, drones, psychedelic soundscapes, and a decent bit of ’80s sci-fi intensity on “Beginning Part 2,” which succeeds in making the wait for its underlying beat excruciating even though the whole piece is just four minutes long. There are live and sampled drums throughout, shades of New Wave, krautrock and a genuine feeling of culmination in the title-track’s organ-laced crescendo wash, but it’s a deep current of drone that ends on “Doomsday Machine” that makes me think whatever narrative Kennedy has been telling is somewhat grim in theme. Fair enough. The Generator of All Infinity will be too heady for some (most), but if you can go with it, it’s evocative enough to maybe be your own soundtrack.

All India Radio on Facebook

All India Radio on Bandcamp

 

Nighdrator, Nighdrator

Nighdrator Nighdrator

Mississippi-based heavygaze rockers Nighdrator released the single “The Mariner” as a standalone late in 2020 as just the duo of vocalist/producer Emma Fruit and multi-instrumentalist JS Curley. They’ve built out more of a band on their self-titled debut EP, put to tape through Sailing Stone Records and bringing back “Mariner” (dropped the ‘The’) between “Scarlet Tendons” and the more synth-heavy wash of “The Poet.” The last two minutes of the latter are given to noise, drone and silence, but what unfurls before that is an experimentalist-leaning take on heavier post-rock, taking the comparatively grounded exploratory jangle of “Scarlet Tendons” — which picks up from the brief intro “Crest/Trough” depending on which format you’re hearing — and turning its effects-laced atmosphere into a foundation in itself. Given the urgency that remains in the strum of “Mariner,” I wouldn’t expect Nighdrator to go completely in one direction or another after this, but the point is they set up multiple opportunities for creative growth while signaling an immediate intention toward individuality and doing more than the My-Bloody-Valentine-but-heavy that has become the standard for the style. There’s some of that here, but Nighdrator seem not to want to limit themselves, and that is admirable even in results that might turn out to be formative in the longer term.

Nighdrator on Bandcamp

Sailing Stone Records store

 

Seven Rivers of Fire, Sanctuary

Seven Rivers of Fire Sanctuary

William Graham Randles, who is the lone figure behind all the plucked acoustic guitar strings throughout Seven Rivers of Fire‘s three-song full-length, Sanctuary, makes it easy to believe the birdsong that occurs throughout “Union” (16:30 opener and longest track; immediate points), “Al Tirah” (9:00) and “Bloom” (7:30) was happening while the recording was taking place and that the footsteps at the end are actually going somewhere. This is not Randles‘ first full-length release of 2022 and not his last — he releases the new Way of the Pilgrim tomorrow, as it happens — but it does bring a graceful 33 minutes of guitar-based contemplation, conversing with the natural world via the aforementioned birdsong as well as its own strums and runs, swells and recessions of activity giving the feeling of his playing in the sunshine, if not under a tree then certainly near one or, at worst, someplace with an open window and decent ventilation; the air feels fresh. “Al Tirah” offers a long commencement drone and running water, while “Bloom” — which begins with footsteps out — is more playfully folkish, but the heart throughout Sanctuary is palpable and in celebration of the organic, perhaps of the surroundings but also in its own making. A moment of serenity, far-away escapism, and realization.

Seven Rivers of Fire on Facebook

Aural Canyon Music on Bandcamp

 

Motherslug, Blood Moon Blues

Motherslug Blood Moon Blues

Half a decade on from The Electric Dunes of Titan (review here), Melbourne sludge rock bruisers Motherslug return with Blood Moon Blues, a willfully unmanageable 58-minute, let’s-make-up-for-lost-time collection that’s got room enough for “Hordes” to put its harsh vocals way forward in the mix over a psychedelic doom sprawl while also coexisting with the druggy desert punkers “Crank” and “Push the Venom” and the crawling death in the culmination of “You (A Love Song)” — which it may well be — later on. With acoustic stretches bookending in “Misery” and the more fully a song “Misery (Slight Return),” there’s no want for cohesion, but from naked Kyussism of “Breathe” and the hard Southern-heavy-informed riffs of “Evil” — yes I’m hearing early Alabama Thunderpussy there — to the way in which “Deep in the Hole” uses similar ground as a launchpad for its spacious solo section, there’s an abiding brashness to their approach that feels consistent with their past work. Not every bands sees the ways in which microgenres intersect, let alone manages to set their course along the lines between, drawing from different sides in varied quantities as they go, but Motherslug do so while sounding almost casual about it for their lack of pretense. Accordingly, the lengthy runtime of Blood Moon Blues feels earned in a way that’s not always the case with records that pass the single-LP limit of circa 45 minutes, there’s blues a-plenty and Motherslug brought enough riffs for the whole class, so dig in, everybody.

Motherslug on Facebook

Motherslug on Bandcamp

 

Cheater Pipe, Planetarium Module

Cheater Pipe Planetarium Module

Keep an ear out because you’re going to be hearing more of this kind of thing in the next few years. On their third album, Planetarium Module, Cheater Pipe blend Oliveri-style punk with early-aughts sludge tones and sampling, and as we move to about 20 years beyond acts like Rebreather and -(16)- and a slew of others including a bunch from Cheater Pipe‘s home state of Louisiana, yeah, there will be more acts adapting this particular stoner sludge space. Much to their credit, Cheater Pipe not only execute that style ably — Emissions sludge — on “Fog Line Shuffle,” “Cookie Jar” or “White Freight Liner Blues” and the metal-as-punk “Hollow Leg Hobnobber,” they bring Floor-style melody to “Yaw” and expand the palette even further in the second half of the tracklist, with “Mansfield Bar” pushing the melody further, “Flight of the Buckmoth” and closer “Rare Sunday” turning to acoustic guitar and “The Sad Saga of Hans Cholo” between them lending atmospheric breadth to the whole. They succeed at this while packing 11 songs into 34 minutes and coming across generally like they long ago ran out of fucks to give about things like what style they’re playing to or what’s ‘their sound.’ Invariably they think of these things — nobody writes a song and then never thinks about it again, even when they tell you otherwise — but the spirit here is middle-fingers-up, and that suits their sound best anyway.

Cheater Pipe on Facebook

Cheater Pipe on Bandcamp

 

Old Million Eye, The Air’s Chrysalis Chime

Old Million Eye The Air's Chrysalis Chime

The largely solo endeavor of Brian Lucas of Dire Wolves and a merry slew of others, Old Million Eye‘s latest full-length work arrives via Cardinal Fuzz and Feeding Tube with mellow psychedelic experimentalism and folk at its core. The Air’s Chrysalis Chime boasts seven pieces in 43 minutes and each one establishes its own world to some degree based around an underlying drone; the fluidity in “Louthian Wood” reminiscent of windchimes and accordion without actually being either of those things — think George Harrison at the end of “Long Long Long,” but it keeps going — and “Tanglier Mirror” casts out a wash of synthesizer melody that would threaten to swallow the vocals entirely would they not floating up so high. It’s a vibe based around patience in craft, but not at all staid, and “White Toads” throws some distorted volume the listener’s way not so much as a lifeline for rockers as another tool to be used when called for. The last cosmic synthesizer on “Ruby River,” the album’s nine-minute finale, holds as residual at the end, which feels fair as Lucas‘ voice — the human element of its presence is not to be understated as songs resonate like an even-farther-out, keyboard-leaning mid-period Ben Chasny — has disappeared into the ether of his own making. We should all be so lucky.

Old Million Eye on Bandcamp

Cardinal Fuzz Records store

Feeding Tube Records store

 

Zoltar, Bury

Zoltar Bury

“Bury” is the newest single from Swedish heavy rockers Zoltar, who, yes, take their moniker from the genie machine in the movie Big (they’re not the only ones either). It follows behind two songs released last year in “Asphalt Alpha” and “Dirt Vortex.” Those tracks were rawer in overall production sound, but there’s still plenty of edge in “Bury,” up to and including in the vocals, which are throatier here than on either of the two prior singles, though still melodic enough so that when the electric piano-style keys start up at about two and a half minutes into the song, the goth-punk nod isn’t out of place. It’s a relatively straight-ahead hook with riffing made that much meatier through the tones on the recording, and a subtle wink in the direction of Slayer‘s “Dead Skin Mask” in its chorus. Nothing to complain about there or more generally about the track, as the three-piece seem to be working toward some kind of proper release — they did press up a CD of Bury as a standalone, so kudos to them on the physicality — be it an EP or album. Wherever they end up, if these songs make the trip or are dropped on the way, it’s a look at a band’s earliest moves as a group and how quickly that collaboration can change and find its footing. Zoltar — who did not have feet in the movie — may just be doing that here.

Zoltar on Facebook

Zoltar store

 

Ascia, III

Ascia III

Sardinia’s Fabrizio Monni (also of Black Capricorn) has unleashed a beast in Ascia, and with III, he knows it more than ever. The follow-up to Volume II (review here) and Volume I (review here) — both released late last year — is more realized in terms of songcraft, and it would seem Monni‘s resigned himself to being a frontman of his own solo-project, which is probably the way to go since he’s obviously the most qualified, and in songs like “The Last Ride,” he expands on the post-High on Fire crash-and-bash with more of a nodding central groove, while “Samothrace” finds a place for itself between marauder shove and more direct heavy rock riffery. Each time out, Monni seems to have more of an idea of what he wants Ascia to be, and whether there’s a IV to come after this or he’s ready to move onto something else in terms of release structure — i.e., a debut album — the progression he’s undertaken over the last year-plus is plain to hear in these songs and how far they’ve come in so short a time.

Ascia on Bandcamp

The Swamp Records on Bandcamp

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Elder Announce Innate Passage Album Details; Tour Starts Thursday

Posted in Whathaveyou on September 20th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Elder (Photo by Maren Michaelis)

Fun fact: every time I post a bio I wrote for a release, I use the same phrase so that if I need to, I can go back and search the site with that phrase in quotes and find them immediately. The phrase?

Wait for it…

“Bio I wrote.”

I hope you’ve enjoyed this special exclusive look behind the scenes at the inner workings of the cement brick that at some point took residence where my brain used to be.

Said bio begins with the “It’s…” below — obviously I had the title there but it was replaced for flow — and ends after the quote from Nick DiSalvo. I was compensated — rather against my will — for writing it and while it’s promotional text being used for those purposes, I would like to emphasize particularly in this case that I mean every word I wrote. Even among a catalog of landmarks, Innate Passage is a landmark. An album-of-their-career kind of record, and a legit payoff for their progression to-date. If it was just about anyone else, I would say they’ll never be able to top it. I make no such promise as regards Elder.

Album details from the PR wire, along with the bio I wrote:

Elder INNATE PASSAGE

ELDER Announces New Album Innate Passage!

European Tour Dates With PALLBEARER To Kick Off This Week!

Prog- and psych rock masters, Elder, have announced their brand new album, Innate Passage, for a November 25th release via Stickman Records in Europe and through Armageddon in North America.

It‘s the band’s sixth full-length, and finds the mostly-Berlin-based band in the post-pandemic era as veterans at the forefront of a league of progressive and heavy groups working in large part under their influence; a stately presence as reliably forward-thinking as they are unpredictable in sound. They are among the most important acts of their mostly-still-emerging generation. Genuine leaders in style and expressive intention. Innate Passage is further proof why.

In Spring 2020, Elder released their fifth album, Omens, and with it established a claim on their most prog-leaning interpretation of sprawling heavy rock and roll. Two years later, Innate Passage builds on many similar concepts, but outdoes its predecessor on every level of performance, weight of its impact, interplay between founder Nick DiSalvo and Mike Risberg’s guitars and keys, the now-settled-in drumming of Georg Edert – who made his debut on Omens – and bassist Jack Donovan’s tonal warmth underscoring the shimmer of DiSalvo’s leads. Alongside DiSalvo, Innate Passage also features a guest singer performance for the first time in Behrang Alavi of Samavayo.

Elder’s upcoming album is a culmination of everything they’ve done before, and that’s reason to celebrate, but more, it is that after more than 15 years, they’re still pushing forward to places where neither they nor anyone they’ve influenced have yet gone.

Says DiSalvo: “This record channels the surreal world we live in from a fantastical point of view, not super-literally, and how we as humans processed that; everyone on their own passage through time and space and whatever version of reality they chose for themselves. The phrase ‘Innate Passage’ appeared to me when writing the record. Passage and transition are necessary in the human condition and this process is intrinsic to us. All the growth and introspection we underwent in the past few years totally made this apparent to me more so than any other experiences in life so far.”

Innate Passage track listing:
01. Catastasis
02. Endless Return
03. Coalescence
04. Merged In Dreams – Ne Plus Ultra
05. The Purpose

After Elder just returned from an extensive North American tour, the band is currently gearing up to embark on a European tour with PALLBEARER, kicking off this week in Berlin, Germany! Make sure to catch this high class tour line-up live at the following dates:

22.09.2022 – DE – Berlin, SO36
23.09.2022 – DE – Leipzig, UT Connewitz
24.09.2022 – CZ – Prague, Futurum Music Bar
25.09.2022 – PL – Warsaw, Proxima
26.09.2022 – AT – Vienna, Arena s
27.09.2022 – HU – Budapest, Analog Music Hall
28.09.2022 – SI – Ljubljana, Orto Bar
30.09.2022 – DE – Munich, Feierwerk
01.10.2022 – CH – Pratteln, Up In Smoke Festival
02.10.2022 – IT – Milan, Circolo Magnolia
03.10.2022 – FR – Grenoble, L’Amperage
06.10.2022 – ESP – Barcelona, AMFest
08.10.2022 – PT – Porto, Amplifest
09.10.2022 – ESP – Madrid, Okkult Session 3
11.10.2022 – FR – Toulouse, Le Rex
12.10.2022 – FR – Montpellier, Rockstore
13.10.2022 – FR – Nantes, Le Ferrailleur
14.10.2022 – FR – Paris, Petit Bain
15.10.2022 – BE – Antwerp, Desertfest
16.10.2022 – NL – Tilburg, 013
18.10.2022 – DK – Aarhus, VoxHall
19.10.2022 – NO – Oslo, Parkteatret
20.10.2022 – NO – Drammen, Union Scene
21.10.2022 – NO – Stavanger, Folken
22.10.2022 – NO – Bergen, Kulturhuset
25.10.2022 – SE – Stockholm, Slaktkyrkan
26.10.2022 – SE – Gothenburg, Pustervik
28.10.2022 – DK – Copenhagen, Pumpehuset
29.10.2022 – DE – Hamburg, Logo
30.10.2022 – BE – Ghent, Desertfest
31.10.2022 – DE – Dortmund, Junkyard
02.11.2022 – UK – Brighton, Chalk
03.11.2022 – UK – Bristol, The Fleece
04.11.2022 – UK – London, Earth
05.11.2022 – UK – Manchester, Damnation Festival

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, Omens (2020)

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Elder Announce New Album Innate Passage Out Nov. 25

Posted in Whathaveyou on September 16th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Elder just finished a massive round of US touring that followed-up a European run that was of similar scope. They’re about to take off as well next week on their next tour, keeping company in Europe with Pallbearer and Irist for festivals and more. Today they announce a Nov. 25 release date for their sixth record, Innate Passage, which I’ve heard (wrote a kind of mini-bio for it that I’ll post at some point, probably) and can tell you with zero bullshit might just be the best thing they’ve ever done. Another level. Another bold step forward. It’ll be out through Stickman Records and Armageddon Shop as the follow-up to 2020’s Omens (review here).

More to come.

Elder INNATE PASSAGE

ELDER – INNATE PASSAGE

Our 6th full-length album will be released November 25th on Stickman Records (EU) and Armageddon Shop (US).

Details and music to follow in the coming weeks. Excited to share our latest work with you all.

Artwork by Adrian Dexter.

EU FALL TOUR with PALLBEARER

22.09.2022 – DE – Berlin, SO36
23.09.2022 – DE – Leipzig, UT Connewitz
24.09.2022 – CZ – Prague, Futurum Music Bar
25.09.2022 – PL – Warsaw, Proxima
26.09.2022 – AT – Vienna, Arena
27.09.2022 – HU – Budapest, Analog Music Hall
28.09.2022 – SI – Ljubljana, Orto Bar
30.09.2022 – DE – Munich, Feierwerk
01.10.2022 – CH – Pratteln, Up In Smoke Festival
02.10.2022 – IT – Milan, Circolo Magnolia
03.10.2022 – FR – Grenoble, L’Amperage
06.10.2022 – ESP – Barcelona, AMFest
08.10.2022 – PT – Porto, Amplifest
09.10.2022 – ESP – Madrid, Okkult Session 3
11.10.2022 – FR – Toulouse, Le Rex
12.10.2022 – FR – Montpellier, Rockstore
13.10.2022 – FR – Nantes, Le Ferrailleur
14.10.2022 – FR – Paris, Petit Bain
15.10.2022 – BE – Antwerp, Desertfest
16.10.2022 – NL – Tilburg, 013
18.10.2022 – DK – Aarhus, VoxHall
19.10.2022 – NO – Oslo, Parkteatret
20.10.2022 – NO – Drammen, Union Scene
21.10.2022 – NO – Stavanger, Folken
22.10.2022 – NO – Bergen, Kulturhuset
25.10.2022 – SE – Stockholm, Slaktkyrkan
26.10.2022 – SE – Gothenburg, Pustervik
28.10.2022 – DK – Copenhagen, Pumpehuset
29.10.2022 – DE – Hamburg, Logo
30.10.2022 – BE – Ghent, Desertfest
31.10.2022 – DE – Dortmund, Junkyard
02.11.2022 – UK – Brighton, Chalk
03.11.2022 – UK – Bristol, The Fleece
04.11.2022 – UK – London, Earth
05.11.2022 – UK – Manchester, Damnation Festival

Elder is Nick DiSalvo (guitar, vocals, keyboards), Jack Donvan (bass), Michael Risberg (guitars, keyboards) and 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, Omens (2020)

Tags: , , , , , , ,