Suncraft Premiere “Charlatan Killer”; Welcome to the Coven Out Nov. 21

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on November 14th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

suncraft welcome to the coven

If a city could have a sound, Suncraft could hardly be more Oslo in my mind. The five-piece next week (Nov. 21) release their second album, Welcome to the Coven, through All Good Clean Records, and it is identifiably Norwegian in its meld of punk, heavy metal, heavy rock, black metal, and so on. There are moments that are a party — plenty of them, actually, between “Love’s Underrated” early and the one-two punch later of “Charlatan Killer” and “High on Silence” — and places where a desert-riffed charge gives over to angrier moods, but the fluidity with which Suncraft are able to inhabit these musical spaces is so prevalent that in listening by the time you get to “Forgotten Goddess,” it’s almost something you take for granted.

In the lyrical framing, pickslides, verse shouts and thrashy thrust, “Ragebait” starts the record with a modern, genre-aware feel and quickly becomes a blast. Of course there are gang vocals. Of course there are blastbeats. But it’s the way Suncraft bring “Ragebait” back down to mid-level intensity afterward that tells you they’re really in control, and as a herald for what’s to follow on the eight songs/39 minutes of the album, “Ragebait” shows them as all the more dangerous front-to-back. Their 2021 debut, Flat Earth Rider (review here), dug into a similar stylistic nuance, finding the places between where one imaginary genre line ends and the next begins, but Welcome to the Coven doesn’t feel coincidental in directly addressing its audience with the title. The message is that Suncraft learned from the first record and are applying those lessons here.

What follows the cymbal-roll intro of “Ragebait” bears that out, whether it’s the friendlier shove of “Love’s Underrated” winking at Queens of the Stone Age — it’s not the last time that happens, with “Charlatan Killer” later and some desert vibes in “Forgotten Goddess” at the finish — or the barking punk of “Greed Battalion” that turns to black metal and back, making the last turn the most satisfying. Suncraft make flexibility a strength, and without pretense — I mean that; the Ruben Willem (Villjuvet) recording sounds brings rare balance of energy and clarity — the band cast their style not as progressive navelgazing, but as a natural outcome of throwing everyone together in a room and seeing how it goes. The songs, in reality, are more complex than this, but it’s the casual air with which Suncraft obliterate genred ideologies that makes Welcome to the Coven so much gosh darn fun.

Suncraft

It would fall flat if the band didn’t have the confidence, performance or sense of craft behind what they do, but the pointedly-metal-as-frick ending of “Welcome to the Coven” — an apex of charge, at least until “High on Silence” a couple songs later — gives over to “Wizards of the Anger Magic,” and I swear I hear Bad Religion in that riff. It’s incongruous, you understand. On paper, that transition shouldn’t work. The reason it does in this instance is that Suncraft at no point set up an expectation of stylistic rigidity. The more they go wherever they want, in other words, the easier it becomes for the listener to follow them as they go. With this in mind, the momentum of Welcome to the Coven becomes all the more prevalent on repeat playthroughs. It’s even better when you know where the twists are going, and worth the effort of an attentive hearing.

As noted, “Charlatan Killer” and “High on Silence” are highlights, and that has both to do with the way their hooks toy with heavy rock, the former elevated by the standout vocal melody — there’s some processing/effects there, used well — and a major-key revelry that dares toward Torche while keeping early-Mastodon heft and the aforementioned QOTSA in the mix as well. They bring the forward drive of “Charlatan Killer” to a roiling culmination and return to the hook to push it over the top, thereby demanding as much volume as you can give, and clearly had keeping the movement going in mind in placing “High on Silence” immediately after. There’s a falsetto-topped rush in the second half, with another divergence into black metal (not out of place) and double-kick meeting a big-rock solo and a last run through of its chorus; Suncraft have a direction, a plan. They seem perfectly happy to make bludgeoning the crap out of you part of it.

They cap with the longest song in “Forgotten Goddess” (6:30), which ignites with a careen that feels notably ‘for the deaf’ while at the same time tonally thicker and more driven in its charge. A short time later, Suncraft will — while sounding like they’re having such a good time it should probably be illegal — be piling on layers until the real last push starts circa 5:40. They drop out and come back loud to bring the closer to a head and drop out, letting a roll on the ride cymbal be the last thing to go, as if in warning that they might crash back in at any second, or perhaps more, to call back to how “Ragebait” started off and give a warning for next time too.

Do not discount their songwriting prowess because they use it to sound like drunken marauders. In fact, that’s part of the plan too.

Enjoy “Charlatan Killer” on the player below, followed by some words from the band and more from the PR wire:

Suncraft on “Charlatan Killer”:

‘Charlatan Killer’ is perhaps the most unusual song on our sophomore album, Welcome to the Coven, featuring falsetto vocals and plenty of unexpected twists and turns. We wrote it as an antidote to imposter syndrome — something our singer, Rasmus, has struggled with in the past. The song playfully imagines a mystical killer of charlatans who’s out to get you and finally expose your deeply fraudulent, true self.

Sonically, ‘Charlatan Killer’ is a fast-paced, eerie, and droning track where we venture further into strange new territory than our usual blend of stoner and Scandi rock. It was recorded, mixed, and mastered by the eminent Ruben Willem, known for his work with Norwegian rock royalty like Kvelertak and The Good the Bad and the Zugly.

Oslo’s loudest troublemakers Suncraft are back with their new album Welcome to the Coven, due out November 21 via All Good Clean Records.

It’s a fast-paced genre party where stoner rock crashes headfirst into garage rock, black metal, and even a bit of pop punk, all wrapped up in fuzz, sarcasm, and serious rock ’n’ roll nonsense.

Produced by Ruben Willem (Kvelertak, The Good The Bad and The Zugly), this one’s heavy, weird, and wildly fun.

Suncraft on Instagram

Suncraft on Facebook

All Good Clean Records website

https://www.instagram.com/allgoodcleanrecords/

All Good Clean Records on Facebook

Tags: , , , , ,

Desertfest Oslo 2024 Makes Second Lineup Announcement

Posted in Whathaveyou on December 4th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

You knew there were going to be a ton of Norwegian bands. Honestly, why have a Desertfest Oslo if you’re not going to celebrate the host country’s generational boom of native acts? The Devil and the Almighty Blues — who just rule live; they’re so good — lead the Norse charge here, but Saint Karloff, Superlynx, Suncraft, Karavan and Håndgemeng have been brought on as well. These join the previously-announced ranks of Kadavar and Monolord, the Brant Bjork Trio and Acid KingBismarck and Full Earth and so on as the lineup begins to take shape for the inaugural Scandinavian edition of Desertfest.

They say there’s more to come, and I believe it. Desertfest Oslo 2024 is May 10 and 11. If you can get there, I’m not sure why you wouldn’t. I’ve been keeping up both with the Desertfest Oslo socials as much as possible as well as those of the Oslo fall fest Høstsabbat, whose behind-the-scenes team are at least in-part involved here.

Oh yeah and Eyehategod are playing. There is that little detail. Ha.

To wit:

Desertfest Oslo 2024 second poster

DESERTFEST OSLO- New band announcement!

Norway has so much talent on offer these days, it would be anything but fair to exclude our own horde of bands on the first Desertfest Oslo.

We are super proud to announce the return of the Tired Old Dogs in The Devil And The Almighty Blues to our domestic live scene. This bunch of legends haven’t played Oslo since 2019, and we simply can’t wait to see their blues-laden excellence on stage again.

The other Norwegian acts following this announcement are all extraordinary examples of the diversity found in our bursting scene:

Karavan bring the filth, Håndgemeng bring the party, Saint Karloff bring the groove and Superlynx bring the laidback jams while Suncraft bring the energy.

Highly recommended every single one of them.

BUT – let’s not forget!

EYEHATEGOD is coming

This true force of nature is bringing their NOLA sludge overseas, and all the way to Oslo next spring.

EHG will leave no mind untouched, or unblown for that matter.

RIFFS!🔥

More announcements to follow shortly!

https://www.facebook.com/desertfestoslo
https://www.instagram.com/desertfest_oslo
https://www.desertfest.no/

Saint Karloff, “Psychedelic Man” official video

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Høstsabbat 2021 Unveils Full Lineup for Oct. 8 & 9

Posted in Whathaveyou on September 14th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

hostsabbat 2021 banner (Artwork by Trine Grimm and Linda K Røed)

Do you want to dream with me for a while, or will it be too much of a downer? It’s okay. This one hits particularly bittersweet for me. I haven’t been to every Høstsabbat, but I’ve been to enough to see how the Oslo-based festival has grown and is growing, and the thought of not being there in a few weeks for this one is that much harder to take as the lineup is revealed today. Imagine the existential payoff of being engulfed in Mars Red Sky‘s melodic wash on the first night and obliterated by Conan the second, or seeing Greenleaf bring the blues of their latest album to life.

I’ve never seen Causa Sui. I’ve never seen Øresund Space Collective. These are bands I think and write about all the time. And newcomers like Slomosa, Jointhugger, Superlynx, Saint Karloff and Kryptograf, Hymn and Kite and Suncraft — these are some of the best up and coming acts the Norwegian heavy underground has to offer. Imagine being able to say you’ve seen Besvärjelsen. The thought of this happening and my not being there makes me genuinely sad.

It’s just a Fredag and a Lørdag, right? I could go! It could happen. It’s not a huge festival. I’ll mask up, of course… After a year and a half of so much bullshit, fear, sadness, ongoing, don’t I have to eventually just accept that this is what life is now and some things are worth the risk? That this is something I need to be the person I am? Who am I without live music?

And there you go. Bitter because I’m forced to reconcile myself to not seeing it. Sweet because I know in my heart these are good, passionate people who make this happen and because I believe in what they do, and even if I can’t/won’t be there to see it, it’s happening. I’m sorry to make this one about me. Really it’s about awesome bands and a righteous bill. If you’re going, enjoy. Live.

Full Høstsabbat 2021 lineup — though I’m hearing rumors about a Torsdag to-do as well — follows here:

Hostsabbat 2021 poster

HØSTSABBAT 2021 FULL LINE-UP ANNOUNCEMENT

In the spirit of optimistic caution and with safety precautions at the forefront of our minds, we step forward in preparation for our stages to resonate with the heavy once again! The riffs will rise from our home at Kulturkirken Jakob and our Norwegian stage at Verkstedet on Friday the 8th and Saturday the 9th of October.

Today we proudly release the full lineup and hope you are as excited as we are to come together again in celebration of the riff and all things heavy.

Daypasses and program will be out on Friday. Until then, get your festival ticket asap!

TICKETS: https://bit.ly/hostsabbat2021

Lineup HØSTSABBAT 2021 – October 8th-9th

– Mars Red Sky (fr)
– Øresund Space Collective (dk)
– Slomosa (no)
– Hymn (no)
– Conan (uk)
– Causa Sui (dk)
– Gøsta Berlings Saga (se)
– Greenleaf (se)
– Saint Karloff (no)
– Besværjelsen (se)
– Kryptograf (no)
– Kite (no)
– Sibiir (no)
– Orkan (se)
– Warp Riders (no)
– Jointhugger (no)
– Draken
– Gunerius & Verdensveven
– Superlynx
– U-Foes
– Shaving the Werewolf
– Suncraft

https://www.facebook.com/hostsabbat/
https://www.instagram.com/hostsabbat/
http://hostsabbat.no/

Høstsabbat 2019 official aftermovie

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

Suncraft Premiere “Bridges to Nowhere”; Flat Earth Rider out Aug. 6

Posted in audiObelisk on July 26th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

suncraft

Norwegian heavy rockers Suncraft release their debut album, Flat Earth Rider, on Aug. 6 through All Good Clean Records. In the vast annals of modern conspiracy theory, those who are committed to the notion of the planet being a disc which one might one day go off the side — ridiculous; reality as a holographic simulation, on the other hand… — are ultimately harmless, at least in comparative terms, and as Suncraft‘s first full-length following behind a few Spotify-able singles likewise content to dig into its own stylistic niche, throw a burly elbow here and there en route to hard-hitting, forward push hooks, but especially early on in “Flat Earth Rider” and “Space Buddha,” the Oslo four-piece seem to be exploring their way through songwriting toward establishing their sound and discovering who they are as a band. The double-guitars of Sigurd Grøtan and Vebjørn Rindal Krogstad lead that charge and boast duly charged leads, while bassist Rasmus Skage Jensen serves vocal duties and drummer Tobias Paulsen patiently awaits the next change requiring a fluid transition, leading the riffs from inside the pocket.

Jensen‘s vocals get into gruffer fare in “Flat Earth Rider,” centerpiece “Lingo Hive Mind,” and here and there throughout “Commie Cannibals and even the more spacious “Adaptation” ahead of the 11-minute closer “Bridges to Nowhere” (premiering below), but the delivery is more dynamic than, say, a cleaner verse and shouted chorus, or vice versa. It might Suncraft Flat Earth Riderbe a line or two with a throatier delivery, then back to a burgeoning melody making a song like “Space Buddha” or “Lingo Hive Mind” less predictable for the single fact that one is less sure where it’s going to turn next, even if the underlying structures are largely straightforward. These clever arrangements, coupled with the ability of the guitars to push the energy of a song forward with a sense of build to which the drums are only suited, help to give Flat Earth Rider its sonic persona, which doesn’t seem to be taking itself too seriously but can bear significant heft when inclined to do so, as in the rolling chorus of “Commie Cannibals” or the early verses of “Bridges to Nowhere,” which opens in its midsection to more complex melodic layering before surging outward and paying off the touches of metallic aggression and progressive heavy rock that have shown themselves across the six-song span to that point.

That span is manageable at 37 minutes and of course vinyl-ready with the atmospheric echo of “Adaptation” signifying a shift to side B even digitally, but that movement becomes important to someone making their way through the entirety, and it feels like another level on which Suncraft‘s potential shines through. The rougher-edged moments bring to mind Orange Goblin from the title-track onward, and “Flat Earth Rider” indeed sets the tone for side A with the hooks of “Space Buddha,” “Lingo Hive Mind” — for which I’d love to read the lyrics; getting a very “guess I’ll go live on the internet” kind of vibe from what I can discern — and the more weighted, longer “Commie Cannibals” acting as a bookend for what’s almost the first of two mini-albums, with “Adaptation” and “Bridges to Nowhere” serving as the second, broader in ambition but holding to a lack of pretense on the whole. All of this rounds out to an affect that makes me less concerned about where Suncraft are going — surely not off the end of the earth — than where they are now.

Their songcraft is obviously in capable hands, and their performance is energetic without losing the thread of its own purpose in being part of the larger album as a whole. If you were looking for an encouraging debut from a relative-newcomer heavy rock band, well, that’s one thing you can tick off your to-do list for today. Cheers. Take the rest of the afternoon off.

Enjoy “Bridges to Nowhere” on the player below, followed by some comment from the band and more info from the PR wire.

Dive in:

Suncraft on “Bridges to Nowhere”:

“Bridges to Nowhere” is the closing track on Suncraft’s debut album, Flat Earth Rider. A ten-minute, ever-changing epic, the song is a journey of a listen, not holding back on anything the band has to offer. Heavy stoner rock riffs, impactful build-ups, thrash-metal-like choruses, riveting guitar solos and intense blast-beats are some of the features to expect. Lyrically, the song is about alienation from a commodity-based society, as seldom knowing where the commodities we buy come from, who made them and why, can make us feel disconnected from others. The song gradually turns from despair to hope and optimism, insisting that a better future is possible.

“Flat Earth Rider” was produced, mixed and mastered by Ruben Willem (The Good The Bad and The Zugly, Okkultokrati, Djevel, etc…) and features six unique tracks that show Suncraft combining elements from groovy stoner rock and riff-based heavy metal.

Since late 2017, this Oslo-based quartet have played their fair share of club shows in the nooks and crannies of Norway, honing the craft of playing explosively energetic concerts. After releasing released their debut EP, “Saigon” in 2019, the live-performances abruptly ended due to Covid-19. Turning the blow of the pandemic into a positive, the boys put all their efforts into writing their debut album, “Flat Earth Rider” and as soon as the world is safe enough, Suncraft will hit the road again and bring their unique flavor of rock n’ roll to a growing audience.

Line-up:
Rasmus Skage Jensen: Bass/Vocal
Tobias Paulsen: Drums
Sigurd Grøtan: Guitar
Vebjørn Rindal Krogstad: Guitar

Suncraft on Facebook

Suncraft on Instagram

Suncraft on Spotify

All Good Clean Records on Facebook

All Good Clean Records website

Tags: , , , , ,