Quarterly Review: Queens of the Stone Age, Breath, Johan Langquist, Maliciouz, Steve Von Till, Mrs. Frighthouse, Droid & I Am Low, Tar Pit, GRGL, Grusom

Posted in Reviews on October 6th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

the obelisk quarterly review

Day two. Normally this is time for hubristic gibberish about how easy the QR will be, the overconfidence of one whose trees rarely appear as forests. But we persist anyhow, and today looks pretty good from where I’m sitting now, so despite the ‘Day 2 on a Monday’ weirdness, which I’m pretty sure makes no one other than myself even raise an eyebrow, things are rolling and one hopes will continue to be fluid. I wouldn’t say Day 1 came together easily, since it took me like two and a half days to get done, but neither was out unpleasant. Hoping for more of the same here, plus efficiency.

Quarterly Review #11-20:

Queens of the Stone Age, Alive in the Catacombs

Queens of the Stone Age Alive in the Catacombs

Something of an identity crisis in Queens of the Stone Age perhaps that sees the long-running highest commercial export of desert rock shift from the cloying pop of their last two albums to a comparatively stripped down live recording in — you guessed it — catacombs, where apparently the acoustics are pretty sweet. Anybody remember when Tenacious D went into ‘the cave’ on the Tribute EP? No? Didn’t think so. Frontman Josh Homme, who carries the minimal arrangements on vocals largely with ease, and his ever-ace band filmed the whole thing; it’s all sepia, all very artsy, and they do “Kalopsia” and dip back 20 years to finish with “I Never Came” after “Suture Up Your Future,” which is the second inclusion by then from 2007’s Era Vulgaris. All told it’s five songs and 27 minutes, and whether you hear it as a cringe hyperindulgence of unaware self-parody or as an expression of human artistry in organic form surrounded by memento mori probably depends on how deep you run with the band. But they’re not hurting anybody either way.

Queens of the Stone Age website

Matador Records website

Breath, Brahman

breath brahman

Between recording and then remixing/remastering their 2021 debut Primeval Transmissions (review here) and signing to Argonauta Records, Portland meditative duo Breath, comprised of Ian Caton and Steven O’Kelly, expanded the lineup with Lauren Hatch on keys and their second album, Brahman, brings Rob Wrong (Witch Mountain) into the fold on guitar as well as helming the recording. The sense across the eight songs/42 minutes is still of exploring the reaches of consciousness, very post-Om in the foundational basslines and dry vocals, but having Wrong rip out a solo in each break of “Awen” sure doesn’t hurt, and hearing the full band come together around the culmination of “Hy-Brasil,” keys, guitar, bass, drums all-in tonally, is emblematic of their expanding horizons. As for those, “Sages” pushes toward its own vision of psych rock in conversation with the opener, and “Cedars of Lebanon” demonstrates malleability and balance that one hopes portend more to come as the band continues to grow and gel.

Breath Linktr.ee

Argonauta Records website

Johan Langquist The Castle, Johan Langquist The Castle

Johan Langquist the castle logo

Kind of an awkward moniker grammatically for the solo-band fronted by original/once-again/maybe-erstwhile Candlemass vocalist Johan Langquist. Is it possessive? Is he The Castle? I don’t quite understand, but from the operatic complement of Emelie Lindquist‘s backing vocals on opener “Eye of Death” through the litany of compiled singles Johan Langquist The Castle dropped over the course of 2024, there’s no mistaking the classic nature of the doom. “Castle of My Dreams” flows keyboardier on balance, while “Where Are the Heroes” gives riffers shelter in its chug, while “Raw Energy” and “Revolution” toy with the balance between the two sides, with “Freedom” as a classic-metal epic and “Bird of Sadness” as the comedown epilogue. Langquist, absent decades between fronting the first Candlemass LP in 1986 and rejoining the band circa 2011, would seem to be making up for lost time, and the ideas he’s exploring here warrant the investigation. I’m curious where this leads, which I think I’m supposed to be, so right on.

Johan Langquist The Castle on Instagram

I Hate Records website

Maliciouz, Tortoise

Maliciouz Tortoise

From Joshua Tree, California, Maliciouz is the solo-outfit of Michael Muckow, who handles guitar, bass and drums for the molasses-thick instrumentalist proceedings. Tortoise arrives beating you over the head with its tone and metaphor alike; eight songs and 58 minutes of lumbering density wrought with dug-in purpose, harnessing heaviness-of-place as riffs and often melancholic drone metal crash. It’s an art project, but without pretense of being anything other than it is, and Muckow — who makes a point of noting his age (67) in the press material — composes for flow and immersion as each slow march gives way to the next, culminating in the semi-acoustic “The End,” which is no less on-the-nose than calling the album Tortoise to start with. No grand reflections, no sweeping statement. Tortoise lets the riffs do the talking and they say plenty about the grit and expanse Muckow is trying to conjure. Be careful out there. He makes it easy to get lost.

Maliciouz on Bandcamp

Maliciouz on Instagram

Steve Von Till, Alone in a World of Wounds

Steve Von Till Alone in a World of Wounds

The former co-guitarist/vocalist of Neurosis has come a long way since his guy-and-guitar beginnings as a solo artist, and Alone in a World of Wounds reaps the textural fruit of Steve Von Till‘s willful artistic progression in a piece like the leadoff “The Corpse Road” or “Distance,” which caps side A fluidly with the only use of drums on the record, reminiscent of The Keening‘s awareness of sonic weight and atmospheric sidestep. The cello, synth and field recordings build out what would be minimalist arrangements without them and remain early-morning quiet, the piano on the spoken-word-topped “The Dawning of the Day (Insomnia)” and flirtations with lushness on “Horizons Undone” softly shaping the album’s world with the electronics of “Old Bent Pine” ahead of the guitar-based “River of No Return,” which closes with what feels like an updated take on Von Till‘s earlier woodsfolk craft, reminding that ‘heavy’ is just as much existential as it is aural.

Steve Von Till website

Neurot Recordings store

Mrs Frighthouse, Solitude Over Control

Mrs Frighthouse Solitude Over Control

Solitude Over Control is as much a confrontation as an album, and that’s very clearly the intention behind Glasgow’s Mrs Frighthouse for their Lay Bare-issued debut LP, Solitude Over Control. Its 11 songs foster a bleak gamut of industrial sounds, portraying dark and inflicted sexual violence as part of the band’s expression. Slaying rapists, then, and fair enough. Intertwining layers of vocals and experimentalist pieces like “Seagulls (Part 1)” give an avant-garde air to the crush of “DIY Exorcism” and the lurching, abrasive finish of “White Plaster Roses,” soprano vocals and electronic noise externalizing the unsettled in a way that can only really be thought of as ‘extreme’ in a musical sense. “My body has never been mine,” confess the lyrics of “Our Culture Without Autonomy” with horror-style keyboard behind them; there’s a show being put on here, but it’s visceral just the same, and the later “My Body is a Crime Scene” turns the accusation direct: “My body is a crime scene/He did this to me/My body is a crime scene/You did this to me” in a moment that lands powerfully unless you’re a fucking sociopath.

Mrs Frighthouse Linktr.ee

Lay Bare Recordings website

Droid & I Am Low, Eroded Forms/Inertia

DROID Eroded Forms

i am low inertia

A joint release between Majestic Mountain and Copper Feast Records, Eroded Forms/Inertia presents as a double-EP split release between Melbourne, Australia, melodic heavy post-metallic rockers Droid, who dare toward aggression on “Reverence” and the sludgier shouts of “Ruin” after leading off with “Khaki” without giving away the plot such that the blastbeats of “Resonance” still hit as a surprise, and Sweden’s I Am Low, who answer the fullness of tone with careening on “Sweet M16” before the grunge melody of “Greed” makes that song a highlight, “Waves” flows with less emotional baggage and a subtle hook, and “Inertia” wraps as a landing point with duly vibrant crash. Grunge and a hairy kind of fuzz are shared between the bands, but each has their own purpose. I don’t know if it’s a release of convenience to make it a split, but it makes for an engaging showcase, and if you’ve never come across either of them, the best arguments for digging in are right there in the songs.

Droid Linktr.ee

I Am Low on Bandcamp

Copper Feast Records website

Majestic Mountain Records store

Tar Pit, Scrying the Angel Gate

tar pit scrying the angel gate

Portland five-piece doomly flamekeepers Tar Pit begin their second full-length (on Transylvanian) with the 10-minute three-parter “Dagon, Dark Lord Dwelling Beneath,” the longest inclusion (immediate points) at 10:15 and bookended with the title-cut at the record’s end. Between, from the more rocking aspects of “Coven Vespers” to the downtrodden roll of “Blessed King of Longing,” the five-piece remind of doom at the turn of the century, when ‘traditionalism’ in doom metal was something of a defiance against modernity instead of an aesthetic unto itself. More than 20 years, The Gates of Slumber, Reverend Bizarre, and what was then the Church of True Doom would seem to have evolved into Tar Pit‘s Eldritch Doom Syndicate, and that’s nothing to complain about as “Blue Light Cemetery” accounts for Candlemass and Cathedral after the dim-blues of “Jubilee” secures the band’s place in the heavy morose. If you were just getting into doom, this kind of thing might make you want to start a band, and yes, that’s a compliment.

Tar Pit website

Transylvanian Recordings on Bandcamp

GRGL, Horror-Bloated Ouroboros

GRGL Horror-Bloated Ouroboros

Dirt-coated riffing leads the way on GRGL‘s Horror-Bloated Ouroboros six-song EP, as Jake‘s guitar, Hal‘s bass and Nick‘s drumming in the first-names-only Salt Lake City trio align around a chug in the opening “Horror-Bloated Ouroboros (An Overview),” that, despite the dry-throated barks that top it, remains among the more accessible moments of the churning sludge-doom outfit’s 23-minute outing. To wit, “Born Again” and the even more gurgley (hey wait a minute!) “My Skeleton” takes roughly the same elemental formula and slows it the frick down, thereby becoming immediately more tortured. The overarching impression is unipolar — raw, heavy, miserable — and the vocals are part of that, but the dynamic between those first two songs is answered for in the uptick of pace that arrives with “My Pie Hole” and the angularity of the shorter instrumental “Absorption/Secretion,” while the plodding reprise “Born Again (Again)” closes so as to make sure everybody ultimately gets where they need to be, i.e., hammered into the ground. Eat dust shit sludge. Hard to get away from thinking of this as the true sound of our times. Maybe it’s the title.

GRGL on Bandcamp

GRGL on Instagram

Grusom, III

GRUSOM III

It’s a clear and classic style across Grusom‘s aptly-titled third album, III, which arrives some seven years after they were last heard from with 2018’s II (review here), the band who’ve become a low-key staple of the Kozmik Artifactz roster demonstrating in no uncertain terms what’s gotten them there. Vintage-heavy heads will find plenty to dig in the organ-laced flow of “Shadow Crawler,” “Hell Maker,” the later “Fatal Romance” and the more open finale “Mortal Desire,” and while “Le Voyage” has many of the same aspects at work, it shows the Danish six-piece as flexible enough in their approach to convey a range of emotions, ditto the wistful Graveyard-y “Memories” and the interlude “Euphoria,” making sure that among the places III might take a given listener, there’s nothing to remove them from the procession carried along by the band.

Grusom website

Kozmik Artifactz store

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Tar Pit to Release Scrying the Angel Gate Aug. 1

Posted in Whathaveyou on July 15th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

tar pit

The three-and-a-half-minute “Coven Vespers” is the first single to come from Tar Pit‘s new album, Scrying the Angel Gate, and I thought it was going to be streaming yesterday but can’t find it. Nonetheless, it’s a banger, and with an Aug. 1 release impending, it stands to reason why the band sound like they’re in such a to throw elbows. It’s their second LP overall, first since 2018, and has a couple Oregonny guest appearances as it comes across primed to start a cult of the band’s own. Tar Pit align themselves with a fictitious entity, the Eldritch Doom Syndicate, and that’s all good fun, but if you played me “Coven Vespers” and showed me a picture of Southern Californian wilds, I’d probably call it desert rock. Sounds like it’d be mad live, and I think that’s on purpose.

Clearly there’s a darker ideology at work, but in terms of style, Scrying the Angel Gate has more flexibility and dynamic than it seems to want to appear. I don’t know about a battle for all-caps ‘doom metal immortality’ or anything like that, but it’s all part of an aesthetic preach, and it seems like good fun.

Here’s news from the PR wire:

tar pit scrying the angel gate

Tar Pit – Scrying the Angel Gate

Eldritch doom from the dark woods of Portland, Oregon

Sophomore album “Scrying the Angel Gate” out August 1st, 2025 on Transylvanian Recordings

Music video for first single “Coven Vespers” out July 14th

From within the entrails of the eviscerated elder gods bubbles up the true ELDRITCH DOOM of TAR PIT. Vocalist Don Gonzalo, in foul alliance with guitarists Papa Stefano and Poncho Kid, bassist Old Saint John (also of PURIFICATION) and drummer Mack The Professional, summons songs of lament and occult worship.

Since their resurrection in 2017, TAR PIT have cut an enduring path through the Portland, Oregon heavy music scene, playing with international touring acts such as WEEDEATER, TRUCKFIGHTERS, MOTHERSHIP and GOYA. TAR PIT released their first demo in 2017, followed shortly thereafter by their debut album TOMB OF DOOM in 2018, and after a lengthy sojourn in the abyss, return even more powerful with their second full length SCRYING THE ANGEL GATE, out on TRANSYLVANIAN RECORDINGS this summer.

While firmly rooted in the early doom sound of bands like CANDLEMASS, PENTAGRAM, TROUBLE, and the almighty BLACK SABBATH, TAR PIT draws influence from across the musical spectrum, from slowcore to Afro-Cuban jazz (spot the clave rhythm in the title track), to create a more nuanced and dynamic sound. SCRYING THE ANGEL GATE solidifies TAR PIT’s place as one of the region’s most finely tuned purveyors of traditional doom metal, coupling punishing riffs with moments of beauty and foreboding.

Featuring vocal contributions from Fuzz (R.I.P.) and Paul H (LIVSSYKE) and mastered by the one and only THOMAS ANDREW DOYLE (TAD, BROTHERS OF THE SONIC CLOTH) at Ape Witch Studios. SCRYING THE ANGEL GATE is only the opening salvo in TAR PIT’s battle to summon DOOM METAL IMMORTALITY.

Tar Pit – Scrying the Angel Gate

Album out August 1st, 2025
Transylvanian Recordings
Digital, Vinyl (CD & Cassette TBA)
Portland, Oregon
FFO: Candlemass, Pentagram, Electric Wizard, Cathedral

Tracklist:
1. Dagon, Dark Lord Dwelling Beneath (Parts I-III) (10:15)
2. Coven Vespers (3:31)
3. Jubilee (4:55)
4. Blue Light Cemetery (8:10)
5. Blessed King of Longing (5:36)
6. Scrying the Angel Gate (8:49)

Tar Pit is:
Don Gonzalo – Vocals
Papa Stefano – Guitar
Poncho Kid – Guitar
Old Saint John – Bass
Mack The Professional – Drums

https://eldritchdoomsyndicate.com/
https://linktr.ee/tarpitpdx
https://tarpitdoom.bandcamp.com/
https://www.instagram.com/tarpitpdx/
https://www.facebook.com/tarpitdoom

http://www.transylvaniantapes.bandcamp.com
http://www.instagam.com/transylvanianrecordings
http://www.facebook.com/TransylvanianRecordings

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Quarterly Review: Motorpsycho, Severed Satellites, Edena Gardens, Delco Detention, The Gray Goo, Shit Hexis, Oromet, Le Mur, 10-20 Project, Landing

Posted in Reviews on July 21st, 2023 by JJ Koczan

the-obelisk-qr-summer-2020

I’m drinking coffee out of a different mug today. It may not surprise you to learn that I’m particular about that kind of thing. I have two mugs — one from Baltimore, one from Salem, Mass. — that are the same. They are huge, blue and black, and they curve slightly inward at the top. They can hold half of a 10-cup pot of coffee. I use one of them per day for a pot in the morning.

Not today. The Pecan gifted me a Mr. Spock mug — he’s in his dress uniform, so it’s likely based on the TOS episode ‘Journey to Babel,’ where we meet his parents for the first (our time) time — and it’s smaller and lighter in the hand, will require an extra trip up to the kitchen to finish the pot, but I think she’ll be glad to see me use it, and maybe that’ll help her get a decent start to the day in a bit when she comes downstairs.

Today’s the last day for this week of QR, but we dive back in on Monday and Tuesday to close out. Hope you find something you dig, and if I don’t catch you at the closeout post for the week, have a great weekend.

Quarterly Review #41-50:

Motorpsycho, Yay!

MOTORPSYCHO Yay

Long-running and prolific Norwegian prog rockers Motorpsycho have proven time and again their stylistic malleability across their north-of-100-strong catalog of releases, and comprised of 10 tracks running 42 minutes of acoustic-led-but-still-lushly-arranged, melodic and sometimes folkish craft. If you ever needed an argument that Motorpsycho could have been writing simplified, ultra-accessible, soundtrack-to-your-summer fare — and I’m not sure you have — Yay! provides that, with a classic feel in the harmonies of “Sentinels” and “Dank State,” though the lyrics in that last cut and in pieces like the leadoff “Cold & Bored,” the later isolated strummer “Real Again (Norway Shrugs and Stays at Home)” and in the lost-love-themed “Loch Meaninglessness and the Mull of Dull” have a cynical current to their framing contrasts that the outwardly pretty face lent to it by the Paul Simon-style lead vocals from Bent Sæther (also guitar, mandolin, omnichord here and more elsewhere). If the record is a gimme for an audience looking for a more earthbound Motorpsycho, then the arrival of the 7:46 “Hotel Daedalus” is where they give a nod to the heavier heads in their fanbase, with one of several guest spots from Reine Fiske (Dungen, Träden, etc.) and a shift in the balance between electric and acoustic guitar and synth at the foreground. Standout as that is, it’s also consistent with the spirit of Yay! more generally, which is built to be more complex in emotion than it presents on its face, and the work of masters, whether they’re writing longform prog epics or sweet closer “The Rapture,” which paints the change of seasons through an image of unmelted leftover snow “sulking in the shade.” One should expect no less than that kind of reach and attention to expression, and one should never engage Motorpsycho with expectations beyond that.

Motorpsycho on Facebook

Stickman Records store

Det Nordenfjeldske Grammofonselskab site

 

Severed Satellites, Aphelion

Severed Satellites Aphelion

“Apollo,” which was the first single released by Severed Satellites, opens the Baltimore instrumentalists’ first EP, Aphelion, as well, its uptempo blues-informed groove an enticing beginning before “Lost Transmissions” digs further into riffer nod. With five tracks running 27 minutes, Severed Satellites — guitarist Matt Naas, keyboardist Dave Drell, bassist Adam Heinzmann and drummer Chuck Dukehart, the latter two both of heavy rockers Foghound, among others — offer material that’s built out of jamming but that is not itself the jam. Songs, in other words. Recorded by Noel Mueller at Tiny Castle Studio, the EP proves solid through “Lost Transmissions” and the bassier “Hurtling Toward Oblivion” with its ending comedown leading into the coursing keyboard waveform at the start of “Breaking Free From Orbit,” which is the longest inclusion at 7:21 and uses most of that extra time in the intro, building afterward toward a ’70s strutting apex that puts energy ahead of largesse before the keys lead the way out in the two-minute outro “Reaching Aphelion.” Through the variety in the material, Severed Satellites showcase a persona that knows what it’s about and presents that fluidly to the listener with a minimum of indulgence. A rousing start.

Severed Satellites on Facebook

Severed Satellites on Bandcamp

 

Edena Gardens, Live Momentum

edena gardens live momentum

The collaboration between baritone/bass guitarist Martin Rude, drummer Jakob Skøtt, both also of Danish psych-jazz and psych-as-jazz explorers Causa Sui, and guitarist Nicklas Sørensen of molten-but-mellow jammers Papir, Edena Gardens issue their first and perhaps not last live album in Live Momentum, a three-song set taped at Jaiyede Jazz Festival — their first onstage appearance — in 2022 and pressed concurrent to the second Edena Gardens studio full-length, Agar (review here) while still not so far removed from their 2022 self-titled debut (review here). “Veil” from the sophomore LP opens, with a thicker guitar sound and more active delivery from the stage, a heavier presence in the guitar early on, hinting at Link Wray and sounding clear enough that the applause at the end is a surprise. Taken from the self-titled, “Now Here Nowhere” is more soothing and post-rocking in its languidity — also shorter at seven minutes — an active but not overbearing jazz fusion, while side B’s 17-minute “Live Momentum” would seem to be the occasion for the release. Exploratory at the start, it settles into a groove that’s outright bombastic in comparison to the other two tracks, brings down the jam and pushes it out, growing in volume again late for a slow, howling finish. What should be a no-brainer to those who’ve heard the band, Live Momentum portrays a side of Edena Gardens that their ‘proper’ albums — which is also where new listeners should begin — hasn’t yet shown, which is no doubt why it was issued to start with. Only fortunate.

Edena Gardens on Facebook

El Paraiso Records store

 

Delco Detention, Come and Get It!

DELCO DETENTION COME AND GET IT

Following up 2022’s What Lies Beneath (review here) and the intervening covers collection, Cover Ups, and the Crack the Lock EP, prolific Pennsylvania heavy rock outfit Delco Detention, led by the son/father duo of Tyler and Adam Pomerantz return with their Come and Get It! is suitably exclamatory fashion. The nine-track collection is headlined by a guest guitar spot from EarthlessIsaiah Mitchell on “Earthless Delco” near the album’s middle, but stop-bys from familiar parties like Kevin McNamara and Mike DiDonato of The Age of Truth and Jared Collins of Mississippi Bones, among others, assure diversity in the material around the foundation of groovy heavy rock. Clutch remain a strong influence — and the record finishes with a take on “I Have the Body of John Wilkes Booth” — but the fuzzy four minutes of the penultimate “Rock and Roll God” and the swing in opener “Domagoj Simek Told Me Quitters Never Smoke” continue to show the band’s growth in refining their songwriting process and aligning the right performers with the right songs, which they do.

Delco Detention on Facebook

Delco Detention on Bandcamp

 

The Gray Goo, Circus Nightmare

the gray goo circus nightmare

The second full-length from Montana heavy-funk shenanigans purveyors The Gray Goo, Circus Nightmare, sounds like there’s a story to go along with every song, whether it’s the tale of “Nightstocker” no doubt based on a 24-hour grocery store, or the smoke-weed-now anthem “Pipe Hitter” that so purposefully and blatantly takes on Sleep‘s “Dragonaut,” or even the interlude “Cerulean” with its backward wisps of guitar leading into the dreamy-Ween-esque, Beatles-reference-dropping “Cosmic Sea,” or the Primus-informed absurdity of “Alligator Bundee,” which leads off, and the garage punk that caps in “Out of Sight (Out of Mind).” Equal parts brilliant and dopey, “BEP” is a brief delve into surf-toned weirdness while “Wizards of the Mountain” pays off the basement doom of “Pipe Hitter” just before with its raw-captured slowdown, organ included in its post-midpoint creep and “Cumbia de Montana” is perhaps more dub than South American-style mountain jamming — though there’s a flute — but if you want to draw a line and tell me where one ends and another starts, I won’t argue. Bottom line is that after an encouraging start in last year’s 1943 (review here), The Gray Goo are more sure of themselves and more sure of the planet’s ridiculousness. May they long remain so certain and productive. Heavy rock needs more oddballs.

The Gray Goo on Facebook

The Gray Goo on Bandcamp

 

Shit Hexis, Shit Hexis

shit hexis shit hexis

It’s like they packed it with extra nasty. The seven-song/27-minute Shit Hexis is the debut offering from Saarbrücken, Germany’s Shit Hexis, and it stabs, it scathes, it skin-peels and not in the refreshing way. Flaying extreme sludge riffs presented with the cavernous echo and murky purposes of black metal, it is a filthy sound but not completely un-cosmic as “Latrine Odins” feedsback and lumbers through its 92 seconds, or “Erde” drone-plods at terrifying proportion. On paper, Shit Hexis share a mindset with the likes of Come to Grief or even earlier Yatra in bringing together tonal weight with aesthetics born out of the more extreme ends of heavy metal, but their sharp angles, harsh tones and the echoing rasp of “Le Mort Saisit le Vif” are their own. Not that fucking matters, because when you’re this disaffected you probably don’t give a shit about originality either. But as their first release of any kind, even less than a half-hour of exposure seems likely to cause a reaction, and if you’re ever somewhere that you need people not to be, the misanthropic, loathing-born gurgling of “Mkwekm” should do the trick in clearing a room. This, of course, is as the duo of guitarist/vocalist Mo and drummer Pat designed it to be, and so, wretched as it is, their self-titled can only be called a success. But what a vision thereof.

Shit Hexis on Facebook

Bleeding Heart Nihilist Productions website

 

Oromet, Oromet

oromet oromet

That Sacramento, California, two-piece Oromet — guitarist/vocalist/layout specialist Dan Aguilar and drummer/bassist/synthesist/backing vocalist/engineer Patrick Hills — have a pedigree between them that shares time in Occlith accounts for some of the unity of intent on the grandly-unfolding death-doom outfit’s self-titled three-song Transylvanian Recordings debut full-length. Side A is dedicated solely to the opener/longest track (immediate points) “Familiar Spirits” (22:00), which quiets down near the finish to end in a contemplative/reflective drone, and earlier positions Oromet among the likes of Dream Undending or Bell Witch in an increasingly prevalent, yet-untagged mournful subset of death-doom. “Diluvium” (11:31) and “Alpenglow” (10:07) follow suit, the former basking in the beauty in its own darkness and sounding duly astounded as it pounds its way toward a sudden stop to let the residual frequencies swell before carrying into the latter, which is gloriously tortured for its first six minutes and comes apart slowly thereafter, having found a place to dwell in the melodic aftermath. Crushing spiritually even as it reaffirms the validity of that pain, it is an affecting listening experience that can be overwhelming at points, but its extremity never feels superfluous or disconnected from the sorrowful emotionality of the songs themselves.

Oromet on Instagram

Transylvanian Recordings on Bandcamp

 

Le Mur, Keep Your Fear Away From Me

Le Mur Keep Your Fear Away From Me

Each of the four tracks of Le Mur‘s fourth record, Keep Your Fear Away From Me, corresponds to a place in time and point of view. That is, we start in the past with 15-minute leadoff “…The Past Will Be Perfect…” — and please note that the band’s name is also stylized all-caps where album and song titles are all-lowercase — moving through “Today is the Day/The Beauty of Now” (9:27) in the present and “Another Life/Burning the Tree/I See You” (11:19) confirming the subjectivity of one’s experience of self and the world, and closer “…For the Puzzles of the Future.” (12:12) finishing the train of thought by looking at the present from a time to come. Samples peppered throughout add to the otherwise mostly instrumental proceedings, focused on flow and at least semi-improvised, and horns on the opener/longest cut (immediate points) sets a jazzy mindset that holds even as “Another Life/Burning the Tree/I See You” forays through its three-stage journey, starting with a shimmy before growing ever-so-slightly funky in the middle and finishing acoustic, while the (electric) guitar on “…For the Puzzles of the Future.” seems to have saved its letting loose for the final jam, emerging out of the keyboardy intro and sample to top a raucous, fun finish.

Le Mur on Facebook

Aumega Project website

 

10-20 Project, Snakes Go Dark to Soak in the Sun

10-20 project snakes go dark to soak in the sun

Pushing through sax-laced, dug-in space jamming, Tunisia’s 10-20 Project reportedly recorded Snakes Go Dark to Soak in the Sun during the pandemic lockdown, perhaps in a bid just to do anything during July 2020. Removed from that circumstance, the work of the core duo of guitarist Marwen Lazaar and bassist Dhia Eddine Mejrissi as well as a few friends — drummer Manef Zoghlemi, saxophonist Ghassen Abdelghani and Mohammed Barsaoui on didgeridoo — present a three-track suite that oozes between liquid and vaporous states of matter across “Chutney I” (25:06), “Chutney II” (14:32) and “Chutney III” (13:00), which may or may not have actually been carved out of the same extended jam. From the interweaving of the sax alongside the guitar in the mix of the opener through the hand-drumming in the middle cut and “Chutney III” picking up with an active rhythm after the two pieces prior took their time in building quietly, plus some odd vocalizations included for good measure, the 52-minute outing gets its character from the exploratory meld in their arrangements and the loose nature with which they seem to approach composition generally. It is not a challenge to be entranced by Snakes Go Dark to Soak in the Sun, as even 10-20 Project seem to have been during its making.

10-20 Project on Facebook

Echodelick Records store

Worst Bassist Records store

We Here & Now Recordings store

 

Landing, Motionless I-VI

landing motionless i-vi

If one assumes that “Side A” (19:58) and “Side B” (20:01) of Landing‘s are the edited-down versions of what appeared as part of the Connecticut ambient psych troupe’s Bandcamp ‘Subscriber Series Collection 02’ as “Motionless I-III” (29:56) and “Motionless IV-VI” (27:18), then perhaps yes, the Sulatron Records-issued Motionless I-VI has been markedly altered to accommodate the LP format. The (relatively) concise presentation, however, does little to undercut either the floating cosmic acoustics and drones about halfway through the first side or the pastoral flight taken in “Side B” before the last drone seems to devour the concept with especially cinematic drama. Whereas when there are drums in “Side A” the mood is more krautrock or traditional space rock, the second stretch of Motionless I-VI is more radical in its changes while still being gentle in its corner turning from one to the next, as heard with the arrival of the electric guitar that fades in at around six and a half minutes and merrily chugs through the brightly-lit serenity of what might’ve at some point been “Motionless V” and here is soon engulfed in a gradual fade that brings forward the already-mentioned drone. There’s more going on under the surface than at it — and that dimension of mix is crucial to Landing‘s methodology — but Motionless I-VI urges the listener to appreciate each element in its place, and is best heard doing that.

Landing on Facebook

Sulatron Records store

 

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The Obelisk Questionnaire: Andrés Ruiz of False Figure

Posted in Questionnaire on March 27th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

FALSE FIGURE (Photo by Hera Burgess)

The Obelisk Questionnaire is a series of open questions intended to give the answerer an opportunity to explore these ideas and stories from their life as deeply as they choose. Answers can be short or long, and that reveals something in itself, but the most important factor is honesty.

Based on the Proust Questionnaire, the goal over time is to show a diverse range of perspectives as those who take part bring their own points of view to answering the same questions. To see all The Obelisk Questionnaire posts, click here.

Thank you for reading and thanks to all who participate.

The Obelisk Questionnaire: Andrés Ruiz of False Figure

Describe your first musical memory.

When I was born til I was about five or so, my dad and his brothers and friends would play folk music from the Andes. There would be like nine of them in total, playing with various instruments from pan flutes and open ended flutes, small lutes, goat hooves strung together to make a rattle. And all together in harmony I remember it sounding loud and beautiful, tapped into something ethereal for me and left a lasting impression on how music can make you feel. The genre itself is very epic for lack of a better term, in the ’70s and ’80s there was a surge of Andean neo-folk bands that surprisingly got a lot of attention in Japan of all places. That genre still permeated to other parts of the music world, no doubt you have heard Llorando Se Fue originally by Los Kjarkas as it’s been emulated by producers writing pop hits for decades. Alt-rockers Sun City Girls even did their interpretation in The Shining Path.

Describe your best musical memory to date.

I think my best memories come from touring and seeing or staying with old friends. It feels so special to see people you don’t usually get to hang out with on only one night a year, or sometimes even longer. Nights when your shows go well, meet up with old friends and make new ones and leave the next day feeling refreshed are great and make it worth it to me.

When was a time when a firmly held belief was tested?

I can’t think of anything off the top of my head, maybe I’m dense or stubborn or both.

Where do you feel artistic progression leads?

Emancipation, insanity, who knows? I feel like creating art is a process that’s deeply cathartic, you’re reaching deep into your psyche and trying to pull a cohesive thread out of it, just enough of a stable platform that you can build something on it. Sometimes you obsess over details ad nauseam and it wears you down. Other times you go to work and end up frustrated, like you’re digging through a pitch black basement without a light. But the times when the ink meets the paper and you’re in a creative flow state, essentially on autopilot as your eyes or ears salivate at what you’re creating, that’s the really validating stuff. It feels like you finally excised a demon, you’ve broken a threshold and come out a stronger person. You just can’t force it though. It happens when it happens.

How do you define success?

You can’t. There’s no way to summarily account for every net gain or loss from anything you do in life. We just are whether we like it or not. Some people make 150k a year and don’t do shit else besides watching netflix in their nice apartment and are perfectly cool with that. Others break their backs for $18/hr at their jobs and like it (or convinced themselves they do) the conflict comes from when you want to change all that and the reality is that many of us are stuck on the latter side of the spectrum, earning low wages, working dead end jobs. It’s hard to find the balance, the way our society is organized doesn’t allow for that balance. Then again that’s been the story of human nature since recorded history. I think making it into my 30’s in one piece with a place to live and food on the table while still allowing me to play music between jobs is as good as it’s gonna get and that’s okay with me. As long as they let me keep my teeth.

What is something you have seen that you wish you hadn’t?

I wish I wasn’t so numb to seeing human beings dying on the street.

Describe something you haven’t created yet that you’d like to create.

I’d love to facilitate a public space. Common spaces, DIY venues, places with low barriers for access for people to throw shows, throw parties, etc. We have some of that here but the atmosphere is very militant or dry. I think having fun is essential to keep from burning out.

Back to music, I think about learning how to be a better sound engineer and translate the shit I hear in my head to my ears.

What do you believe is the most essential function of art?

Hard to say, I think it depends on every specific artist and even then I think there are many worthy functions and ways to experience art. Art is political, often humanizing very difficult circumstances that are felt by an array of people that may upset the status quo or bolster the plight of a group that’s suffering, Dorothy Lange’s depression photos as an example. I think ultimately you’re looking to evoke a response from someone experiencing your art. You may create a spectacle of yourself, or convey bad emotions through abrasive sounds and while it’s purely cathartic to you to exorcise whatever you’re ailing from, having someone sympathize or even like it is irrelevant. The most successful artists cast the widest nets but sometimes it’s only meant for a few hundred people or dozens, or no one at all as getting it out was its sole purpose.

Something non-musical that you’re looking forward to?

My grandma just got out of surgery, hoping she recovers well and I get to see her while she’s still alive.

http://www.facebook.com/FalseFigure
http://www.instagram.com/falsefigure
http://www.falsefigure.bandcamp.com
http://www.falsefigure.bigcartel.com

http://www.facebook.com/TransylvanianRecordings
http://www.instagam.com/transylvanianrecordings
http://www.transylvaniantapes.bandcamp.com

False Figure, Castigations (2022)

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Ghorot Announce Tour Dates & New Album Recording Plans

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

ghorot

As will happen pretty much every year, the lineup for Crucial Fest in Salt Lake City this August is smokin’, and it includes Boise-based trio Ghorot, who also toured the West Coast last Fall in order to promote their 2021 debut album, Loss of Light (review here). That was a nine-day stretch in the Northwest and this is nine days in the Southwest, so there’s perhaps some indicator of how much touring the band will do on any given run, but one way or the other, like that last tour, they’ve got some good shows with killer acts — Denver with Velnias walks by and waves — and word that they’re getting ready to record their second album, with Andy Patterson no less, is certainly welcome too. One imagines they’re playing new songs on the road, and I’m sure I won’t be the first one to tell you that’s how you do it. Walk right off stage and into the studio.

Safe travels and kick ass to the band. Not a doubt in my mind they’ll trip it up at the shows and then make sure it’s dead in the studio with Patterson at the helm. If you’re not looking forward to that record yet, you probably should be.

The following dates came from the internet. I asked bassist/vocalist Carson Russell for a quote to go with, just something to make it more than a post cut and pasted from social media — they call it “value added content” in a corporate world I’m so, so, so happy I no longer inhabit — and he dropped the notice of the new recording, so there you go. Sometimes it’s good to ask, even if it means you have to wait an extra couple minutes (that were being waited anyway) to put the post up. Lesson probably not learned.

Info:

ghorot tour poster

Ghorot rides through the Southwest US this August!! Where will we see you on our path of destruction?

“Ghorot is bringing the blackened doom-metal punishment to the Southwest US this August,” says bassist/vocalist Carson Russell “We’re thrilled to be hitting a bunch of new cities on our path to Crucial Fest 11 in Salt Lake City. Following the festival, Ghorot will be remaining in SLC to record our sophomore full-length album at The Boar’s Nest with legendary engineer Andy Patterson. PREPARE THYSELF.”

8.18 The Elbow Room Bar with @flawlessvictory775 + the scattering
8.19 Thee Parkside with Slegë + @vindulaband (presented by SubliminalSF)
8.20 The Blue Lagoon with Vultures At Arms Reach + @_dvvell_
8.21 @knucklehead_hwood with TBA (presented by The Elegy Ensemble)
8.22 Til Two Club with Kushtaka + Lvciferian Death Mechanism
8.23 Yucca Tap Room with MutilatedTyrant + Mosara
8.24 Moonlight Lounge with @ritualnoiseabuse + TBA
8.25 Hi-Dive Denver with Velnias + Celestial Wizard
8.26 Crucialfest at Metro Music Hall with Mizmor, Marissa Nadler, The Otolith, and more

SEE YOU BASTARDS ON THE ROAD
Artwork by @neosabbathh

US Label Transylvanian Recordings
EU Label Inverse Records

Ghorot are:
Carson Russell: Bass Guitar, Vocals
Brandon Walker: Drums, Vocals
Chad Remains: Guitars, Amplifiers, Vocals

https://facebook.com/ghorot
https://instagram.com/ghorotdoom
https://ghorot.bandcamp.com

https://youtube.com/channel/UCyyMi4his1tCFb-uwG4QGhA
https://transylvaniantapes.bandcamp.com/

https://inverserecords.bandcamp.com/

Ghorot, Loss of Light (2021)

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Quarterly Review: Messa, Witchpit, Dirty Nips, Ocean to Burn, Mt. Echo, Earl of Hell, Slugg, Mirage, An Evening Redness, Cryptophaser

Posted in Reviews on April 7th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

THE-OBELISK-FALL-2020-QUARTERLY-REVIEW

It’s been a load road, getting from there to here, and here isn’t even there yet if you know what I mean. Alas, Thursday. Day four — 4, IV, I can’t remember how I’ve been writing it out — of the Spring 2022 Quarterly Review, and it’s a doozy. These things are always packed, in fact it’s pretty much the idea, but I still find that even this week as I’m putting out 10 reviews a day — we’ll get to 60 total next Monday — I’m playing catchup with more stuff coming down the pike. It seems more and more like each Quarterly Review I’ve done out of like the last five could’ve been extended a day beyond what it already was.

Alas, Thursday. Overwhelmed? Me too.

Quarterly Review #31-40:

Messa, Close

Messa close

After two LPs through Aural Music, Italy’s Messa arrive via Svart with a crucial third album in Close. The hype surrounding the record has been significant, and Close earns every bit of it across its 10-song/64-minute run, intricately arranged as the Italian four-piece continue to bridge stylistic gaps with an ease born of expansive songcraft and stunning performance, first from vocalist Sara Bianchin (also percussion) and further from guitarist Alberto Piccolo (also oud, mandolin), bassist/synthesist/vocalist Marco Zanin (also various keys and percussion), and drummer Rocco Toaldo (also harsh vocals, percussion), who together create a complete and encompassing vision of doom that borrows periodically from black metal as anything artsy invariably must, but is more notable for its command of itself. That is, Messa — through the entirety of the hour-plus — are nothing but masterful. There’s an old photo of The Beatles watching Jimi Hendrix circa 1967, seeming resigned at being utterly outclassed by the ‘next thing.’ It’s easy to imagine much of doom looking at Messa the same way.

Messa on Facebook

Svart Records website

 

Witchpit, The Weight of Death

witchpit the weight of death

If what goes around comes around, then don’t be surprised when “Fire & Ice” goes circle-mosh near the end and you get punched in the head. Old. School. Southern. Sludge. Metal. Dudes play it big, and mean, and grooving. Think of turn of the century acts like Alabama Thunderpussy and Beaten Back to Pure, maybe earlier Sourvein, but with a big old lumbering update in sound thanks to a Phillip Cope recording job and a ferocity of its own. They’ve got a pedigree that includes Black Skies, Manticore and Black Hand Throne, and though The Weight of Death is their first long-player, they’ve been a band for seven years and their anti-dogmatic culmination in “Mr. Miserum” feels sincere as only it can coming from the land of the Southern Baptist Church. Aggression pervades throughout, but the band aren’t necessarily monochromatic. Sometimes they’re mad, sometimes they’re pissed off. Watch out when they’re pissed off. And am I wrong for feeling nostalgic listening? Can’t be too soon for them to be retro, right? Either way, they hit it hard and that’s just fine. Everybody needs to blow off steam sometime.

Witchpit on Facebook

Heavy Psych Sounds website

 

Dirty Nips, Can O’ Dirty Demo Nipples

Dirty Nips Can o Dirty Demo Nipples

Do I even need to say it, that a band called Dirty Nips offering up a demo called Can O’ Dirty Demo Nipples get up to some pretty cheeky shenanigans therein? I hope not. Still, as the Bristol-via-Poland outfit crunch out the riffs of “The Third Nipple” and harmonica-laced Hank Williams-style country blues on “As I Stumbled” and touch on psychedelic jamming in opener “The Basement” and the later experimental-feeling “Dirty Nips Pt. II,” which just drops to silence in the middle enough to make you wonder if it’s coming back (it is), there’s clearly more going on here than goofball chicanery. “Jechetki” builds on the blues and adds a grunge chug, and closer “Mountain Calling” is — dare I say it? — classy with its blend of acoustic guitar and organ, echoing spoken vocal and engagingly patient realization. They may end up wishing they called themselves something else as time goes on, but as it stands, Dirty Nips‘ demo tape heralds a sonic complexity that makes it that much harder to predict where they might end up, and is all the more satisfying a listen for that.

Dirty Nips on Facebook

Galactic Smokehouse store

 

Ocean to Burn, Vultures

Ocean to Burn Vultures

Though they’re by no means the only band in Sweden to dig into some form of traditionalism in heavy rock, Västerås five-piece Ocean to Burn evoke a decidedly more straight-ahead, Southern-heavy feel throughout the nine songs and 33 minutes of Vultures, their self-released full-length. The throaty grit of vocalist Adam Liifw is a big part of that impression, but in the guitars of Mathilda Haanpää and Fredrik Blomqvist, the tone is more stripped-down than huge-sounding, and the grooves from bassist Pontus Jägervall and drummer Fredrik Hiltunen follow suit. That central purpose suits songs like “Wastelands” and the more strutting “Nay Sayer,” and though they largely stick to their guns style-wise, a bluesier nod on “No Afterlife” early and a breakout in closer “Vulture Road” assure there’s some toying with the balance, even as the tracks all stick to the three- to about four-and-a-half-minute range. They’ve been at it for a while, and seem to revel in the ‘nothin-too-fancy’ attitude of the material, but honestly, they don’t need tricks or novelty to get their point across.

Ocean to Burn on Facebook

Ocean to Burn on Reverbnation

 

Mt. Echo, Electric Empire

Mt Echo Electric Empire

Following an encouraging start in 2019’s Cirrus (review here), Nijmegen instrumentalists Mt. Echo return with the conceptual-feeling Electric Empire, still holding some noise rock crunch in “Automaton” following the opener “Sound & Fury,” but saving its biggest impacts for the angular “50 Fanthoms,” the 10-minute “Flummox” and subsequent “As the Tide Serves,” and on the whole working to bring that side of their approach together with the atmospheric heavy post-rock float of “The End of All Dispute” and the early going of “These Concrete Lungs.” At 10 songs and just under an hour long, Electric Empire has room for world-building, and one of Mt. Echo‘s great strengths is being able to offset patience with urgency and vice versa. By the time they cap with “Torpid,” the trio of Gerben Elburg, Vincent Voogd and Rolf Vonk have worked to further distinguish themselves among their various sans-vocals proggy peers. One hopes they’ll continue on such a path.

Mt. Echo on Facebook

Mt. Echo on Bandcamp

 

Earl of Hell, Get Smoked

Earl of Hell Get Smoked

Vocalist Eric Brock, guitarist/backing vocalist/principal songwriter Lewis Inglis, bassist Dean Gordon and drummer Ryan Wilson are Edinburgh’s Earl of Hell, and their debut EP, Get Smoked, builds on the brash grooves of prior singles “Arryhthmia” (sic) and “Blood Disco,” the latter of which appears as the penultimate of the six included tracks on the 23-minute outing. More stomp-and-swing than punch-you-in-the-face, “I Am the Chill” nonetheless makes its sense of threat clear — it is not about chilling out — as if opener “Hang ’em High” didn’t. Split into two three-song sides each with a shorter track between, it’s in “Parasite” and “Blood Disco” that the band are at their most punk rock, but as the slower “Bitter Fruits” mellows out in opening side B, there’s more to their approach than just full-sprint shove, though don’t tell that to closer “Kill the Witch,” which revels in its call and response with nary a hesitation as it shifts into Spanish-language lyrics. High-octane, punk-informed heavy rock and roll, no pretense of trying to push boundaries; just ripping it up and threaten to burn ladies alive, as one apparently does.

Earl of Hell on Facebook

Slightly Fuzzed Records store

 

Slugg, Yonder

Slugg Yonder

Released on New Year’s Day after being recorded in Dec. 2021 in the trio’s native Rome, “Yonder” serves as the initial public offering and first single from Slugg, and at 9:59, it is more than a vague teaser for the band they might be. The guitar of Jacopo Cautela and the bass of Stephen Drive bring a marked largesse that nonetheless is able to move when called upon to do so by Andrea Giamberardini‘s drumming, and Cautela‘s corresponding vocals are pushed deeper back in the mix to emphasize those tones. Much of the second half of “Yonder” is given to a single, rolling purpose, but the band cleverly turn that into a build as they move forward, leaving behind the gallops of the first few minutes of the song, but making the transition from one side to another smoothly via midsection crashes and ably setting up the ring-out finish that will draw the song to its close. Not without ambition, “Yonder” crushes with a sense of physical catharsis while affecting an atmosphere that is no less broad. They make it easy to hope for more to come along these lines.

Slugg on Facebook

Slugg on Bandcamp

 

Mirage, Telepathic Radio

Mirage Telepathic Radio

Joe Freedman, also of Banshee, first saw Telepathic Radio released as the debut full-length from Mirage in 2021 through Misophonia Records on tape. There are still a few of them left. That version runs 30 songs and 90 minutes. The Cardinal Fuzz/Centripetal Force edition is 50 minutes/20 tracks, but either way you go, get your head ready for dug-in freakness. Like freakness where you open the artwork file for the digital promo and all three versions are the cover of a Rhapsody album. Ostensibly psychedelic, songs play out like snippets from a wandering attention span, trying this weird thing and seeing it through en route to the next. In this way, Telepathic Radio is both broad-ranging and somewhat contained. The recordings are raw, fade in and out and follow their own paths as though recorded over a stretch of time rather than in one studio burst, which seems indeed to be how they were made. Horns, samples, keys, even some guitar, a bit of “TV Party” and “TV Eye” on “TV Screens,” Mirage howls and wails out there on its private wavelength, resolved to be what it is regardless of what one might expect of it. By the time even the 20-track version is done, the thing you can most expect is to have no clue what just happened in your brain. Rad.

Misophonia Records on Bandcamp

Cardinal Fuzz webstore

Centripetal Force Records website

 

An Evening Redness, An Evening Redness

An Evening Redness Self-titled

With its first, self-titled release, An Evening Redness basks in morose Americana atmospheres, slow, patient guitar drones, warm bass and steady rhythms giving way to periodically violent surges. Founded perhaps as a pandemic project for Brandon Elkins of Auditor and Iron Forest, the six-song full-length explores the underlying intensity and threat to person and personhood that a lot of American culture just takes for granted. The name and inspiration for the project are literary — ‘An Evening Redness in the West’ is the subtitle of Cormac McCarthy’s 1985 novel, Blood Meridian — and An Evening Redness, even in the long instrumental stretch of 12-minute opener/longest track (immediate points) “Alkali,” treats the subject matter with duly textured reverence. Elkins isn’t alone here, and the vocals of Bridget Bellavia on the brooding “Mesa Skyline” and the closing pair of “Pariah” and “Black Flame at the Edge of the Desert,” as well as the contributions of other guests in various locales around the world up to and including Elkins‘ native Chicago should not be downplayed in enriching these explorations of space and sound. Bands like Earth and Across Tundras warrant mention as precursors of the form, but An Evening Redness casts its own light in the droning “Winter, 1847” and the harmonica-wailing “The Judge” enough to be wholly distinct from either in portraying the sometimes horrifying bounty of the land and the cruelty of those living in it.

An Evening Redness on Twitter

Transylvanian Recordings on Bandcamp

 

Cryptophaser, XXII

Cryptophaser XXII

Brothers John and Marc Beaudette — who if they aren’t twins are close enough — comprise New Hampshire’s Cryptophaser, and XXII is their first demo, pressed in an edition of 50 purple tapes. Dudes might as well just open my wallet. Fair enough. In what’s a show of chemistry and musical conversation that’s obviously been going on longer than these songs — that is, I highly suspect the maybe-twin brothers who drum and play guitar have been playing together more than a year — they bring an adversarial bent to the conventions of heavy fuzz, and do so with the proverbial gusto, breaking away from monolithic tones in favor of sheer dynamic, and when they shift into the drone in “October 83,” they make themselves a completely different band like it isn’t even a thing. Casual kickass. At 13 minutes, it flows like a full-length and has a full-length’s breadth of ideas (some full-lengths, anyway), and the energy from one moment to the next is infectious, be that next part fast, slow, loud, quiet, or whatever else they want it to be.

Cryptophaser website

Music ADD Records website

 

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An Evening Redness Self-Titled Debut Due Feb. 25

Posted in Whathaveyou on February 9th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

an evening redness (Photo by Nohemi Moran)

If you’re feeling like you want heavy Amercana in literature and Faulkner’s too obvious, probably the place to head next is Cormac McCarthy, and fair enough. An Evening Redness take their moniker from the alternate title of Blood Meridian, or The Evening Redness in the West, which was first published in 1985, and their self-titled debut will be released in just a few weeks through Transylvanian Recordings.

The project, spearheaded by Brandon Elkins of Auditor and Iron ForestA Crown of Amaranth and others, brings together members from the Midwest, the UK and Australia, so one way or another a modern edge is sneaking through, but going by the streaming track “Mesa Skyline,” the intent is clearly geared toward atmosphere and texture in a post-metallic vein, and the first listen they’re giving is encouraging.

Info and whatnot from the PR wire:

An Evening Redness Self-titled

AN EVENING REDNESS: Desert Drone/Doom Outfit To Release Self-Titled Debut February 25th Via Transylvanian Recordings; New Track Streaming + Preorders Available

AN EVENING REDNESS will release their stunning self-titled debut full-length on February 25th via Transylvanian Recordings.

AN EVENING REDNESS is parched desert drone doom and the sound of thunder over the mountains. Evoking the hallucinatory clarity of the alkali plains and the biblical violence of its literary namesake, the collective bursts from obscurity with a fusion of sounds that seem incompatible on paper but prove blindingly innovative in action.

Deeply introspective and evoking hallucinatory darkness, AN EVENING REDNESS’ self-titled debut is the newest release from Brandon Elkins. Composed, arranged, and produced by Elkins, the offering is a masterwork of diverse ambient doom and post-ambient composition, with the minimalism of Earth contrasted with passages that wouldn’t feel out of place on Jesu’s Opiate Sun. An ensemble of musical talents including vocalist Bridget Bellavia (BLKTXXTH, Piggy Black Cross), guest soloist Brendan Sloan (Convulsing), and session drummer Ryan Jewell (Riley Walker and many others) serve to underscore the drama and focused production contained within the album’s six tracks.

What ties the whole album together is an atmosphere that feels spiritually closer to a film score than what you’d expect from a solo record. Notes Elkins, “I wanted to make music that sounds like how Blood Meridian reads. Lonely, high plains insanity, sudden bursts of violence, longing melodies, ambient isolation.” Elkins’ work has always been hard to pin down, but this feels like a culmination of not only the best elements of his many projects – but the compositional mastery that can only come from decades of refined craft. With the intensity of modern doom masters like Bell Witch and the emotional and musical dexterity of Neko Case at peak powers.

In advance of the record’s release, today the band unveils their first single “Mesa Skyline.” Notes Elkins of the track, “‘Mesa Skyline’ begins the tale: a lonesome man sat down next to a withering fire, out among the salt and sage of the Western desert, waiting to die. He sleeps, but instead of the death he longs for, he awakens into a world of biblical violence and a blazing storm of hallucinatory revelation on the horizon.”

An Evening Redness will be released on CD, vinyl, and digital formats. Find preorders at THIS LOCATION: https://transylvaniantapes.bandcamp.com/album/an-evening-redness

An Evening Redness Track Listing:
1. Alkali
2. Mesa Skyline
3. Winter, 1847
4. The Judge
5. Pariah
6. Black Flame At The Edge Of The Desert

http://twitter.com/alkalidweller
http://www.facebook.com/TransylvanianRecordings
http://www.instagam.com/transylvanianrecordings
http://www.transylvaniantapes.bandcamp.com

An Evening Redness, An Evening Redness (2022)

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Ghorot Announce Fall West Coast Tour Supporting Loss of Light

Posted in Whathaveyou on August 17th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

ghorot

Optimists in spite of their sound, it would seem, Boise, Idaho’s Ghorot announce today a stretch of tour dates to take place in October supporting their recently-issued debut album, Loss of Light (review here), meeting up with the likes of Brume and Old Blood along their nine-day course. I mean, hey, could happen, right? I think when you scorch earth as hard as these dudes do, you’ve pretty much disinfected everything anyhow.

Wouldn’t that be fun? If you could cure plague with riffs? Alas.

We head into an unknowable Fall coming out of an unknowable Summer, living in an uncertain present born of fake past looking ahead to a disastrous future. You want me to tell you this tour will happen? Fine, I will. I certainly hope it does, for the band’s sake as well as anyone who might show up — I’ve never seen any of these bands, and I’d like to — but I admit that every time I post a stretch of tour dates at this point there’s that little voice-o’-trauma in my head going, “Yeah, really? You think?”

So I don’t know. I’m not a fucking epidemiologist. How about you check before you go and let’s leave it at that?

From the PR wire:

ghorot western us tour

Ghorot – Fall 2021 Western US Tour Announcement

“We’re thrilled to announce Ghorot will be bringing the blackened-doom punishment to the Western US this October! Joining us for select dates will be San Francisco’s internationally-recognized doom trio BRUME (Magnetic Eye Records) and Los Angeles’ occult rock/acid doom quintet OLD BLOOD (Metal Assault Records). Our debut album Loss of Light (Transylvanian Recordings/Inverse Records) has been receiving killer press around the globe, and we can’t wait to share this filth live and in person with you all!”

Fall 2021 Western US Tour Dates

10.21 THURS Sparks, NV The Elbow Room with Brume
10.22 FRI Sacramento, CA Cafe Colonial with Brume
10.23 SAT Oakland, CA Elbo Room Jack London with Brume
10.24 SUN Eugene, OR Old Nick’s Pub with Old Blood
10.25 MON Portland, OR High Water Mark
10.26 TUES Olympia, WA Cryptatropa Bar with Old Blood
10.27 WED Seattle, WA Substation with Old Blood
10.28 THURS Bellingham, WA Karate Church
10.29 FRI Spokane, ID The Viking
10.30 SAT Moscow, ID Revolver

Ghorot are:
Carson Russell: Bass Guitar, Vocals
Brandon Walker: Drums, Vocals
Chad Remains: Guitars, Amplifiers, Vocals

https://facebook.com/ghorot
https://instagram.com/ghorotdoom
https://ghorot.bandcamp.com
https://youtube.com/channel/UCyyMi4his1tCFb-uwG4QGhA
https://transylvaniantapes.bandcamp.com/
https://inverserecords.bandcamp.com/

Ghorot, Loss of Light (2021)

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