Valley of the Sun Announce UK & European Tour Dates

Posted in Whathaveyou on February 10th, 2023 by JJ Koczan

VALLEY OF THE SUN

Been waiting for this since Valley of the Sun were announced for Desertfest in London and Berlin, and all the better for the Ohio four-piece that they’ll go further after the latter fest, keeping on with additional club shows supporting last year’s killer The Chariot (review here) album, which offered a ready definition of a band firing on all cylinders.

And of course, before they let out for international waters, Valley of the Sun will support UK harmonizers Church of the Cosmic Skull on a US tour (info here), and that as well is something I’m very much looking forward to. I’m not sure with whom they’ll be playing in Europe and the UK, but I do know that this is hardly the band’s first time over there and there’s no shortage of acts for them to meet up either as local support or doing the whole run, I have no idea.

In any case, these guys staying active post-pandemic is only good news, and as The Chariot wrought their most mature sound to-date, one might rightly think of these tours as a victory lap. The dates for UK and EU are below, venue info in the poster, which you can click to enlarge.

From social media:

valley of the sun uk euro 2023

TOUR ANNOUNCEMENT!!!

We’re heading back to the UK and EU this May to rock off all your beautiful faces!!! Ticket links below:

05/05 UK DESERTFEST LONDON
07/05 UK EDINBURGH
08/05 UK NEWCASTLE
09/05 UK SHEFFIELD
10/05 UK MANCHESTER
11/05 UK NOTTINGHAM TBA
12/05 UK BRISTOL
13/05 UK BOURNEMOUTH
15/05 CH LUZERN
16/05 IT TORINO
17/05 HR ZAGREB TBA
18/05 AT GRAZ TBA
19/05 DE PASSAU
20/05 DE DESERTFEST BERLIN
21/05 DE HANOVER
22/05 DE WIESBADEN TBA
23/05 DE MUNSTER
24/05 BE EEKLO
25/05 NL EINDHOVEN
26/O5 DK ESBJERG
27/05 DE KIEL

VALLEY OF THE SUN are:
Ryan Ferrier – Guitar/Vocals
Lex Vegas – Drums
Chris Sweeney – Bass, Keys
Josh Pilot – Guitar

https://www.facebook.com/valleyofthesun/
https://www.instagram.com/valleyofthesunband/
http://valleyofthesun.bandcamp.com/
http://www.twitter.com/centaur_rodeo

https://www.facebook.com/theripplemusic/
https://www.instagram.com/ripplemusic/
https://ripplemusic.bandcamp.com/
http://www.ripple-music.com/

http://www.fuzzoramarecords.com/
http://www.twitter.com/fuzzorecords
http://www.facebook.com/Fuzzorama

Valley of the Sun, The Chariot (2022)

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Valley of the Sun Announce European Tour

Posted in Whathaveyou on May 18th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

Valley of the Sun

It had been almost a decade — mere months away — since I last saw Valley of the Sun before catching them at the Saint Vitus Bar in Brooklyn for opening pre-party of Desertfest New York 2022 (review here), and among my first thoughts watching them as they tore into a selection of tracks from their new record, The Chariot (review here), and past releases was, ‘god damn, these guys need to get back to Europe.’ They were last there in 2019, touring with Bellringer, no less, and the extensive, many-festivals-inclusive list of dates should serve them well as they promote the album. My reasoning was pretty simple — the lineup that founding guitarist/vocalist Ryan Ferrier has behind him feels ready for bigger stages and as many eyes and ears as they can grab. And Europe is where that happens.

Total Volume Agency booked the shows, and again, it’s by no means the Cincinnati-based four-piece’s first time abroad, but even if you’ve seen them before — maybe it’s been a while, like it had been for me — consider showing up all the more of an imperative for the righteous performance this incarnation of Valley of the Sun brings. It’s not a thing you’ll regret.

The Chariot is out June 17 on Fuzzorama Records and Ripple Music. Dates follow:

valley of the sun the chariot euro tour

We’re excited to get back to Europe! It’s been too long. If we don’t have a show in your town, check out one of the many awesome festivals we’re playing on this tour.

Total Volume presents:
Valley of the Sun European Tour 2022:
25.06 – DE – Wasted! Open Air
01.07 – CY – Strovolos – Down Town Live
02.07 – DE – Blackdoor Music Festival
04.07 – FR – Paris – Supersonic
07.07 – DE – Würzburg – Immerhin
08.07 – PL – Red Smoke Festival
09.07 – IT – Indigest Festival
10.07 – IT – Tuscany – TBA
13.07 – FR – Chambéry – Le Brin du Zinc
14.07 – CH – Zurich – Werk 21
15.07 – DE – Rock auf Dem Berg
16.07 – DE – Halle (Saale) – Rockpool E.v.
17.07 – DE – Berlin – Cassiopeia
21.07 – DE – Hannover – Lux
22.07 – DE – E-Lite-Culture Festival
23.07 – AT – Salzburg – Rockhouse
28.07 – DE – Frankfurt – Zoom
29.07 – DE – Hamburg – Gruespan
30.07 – DE – Rock Im Wald Festival
02.08 – DE – Köln – MTC
04.08 – DE – Münster – Rare Guitar
05.08 – DE – Aquamaria Festival
06.08 – DE – Krach am Bach Open Air
11.08 – CH – Palp Festival – Rocklette
12.08 – FR – Marseille – Rapts Corpus
13.08 – FR – Queyrock Open Air
14.08 – ES – Barcelona – Upload
16.08 – ES – TBA
17.08 – ES – Santander – Rock Beer The New
18.08 – ES – Mos (Pontevedra) – Sala Rebullon
19.08 – PT – Viano do Castelo – Cave Avenida
21.08 – FR – Motocultor Festival

VALLEY OF THE SUN are:
Ryan Ferrier – Guitar/Vocals
Lex Vegas – Drums
Chris Sweeney – Bass, Keys
Josh Pilot – Guitar

https://www.facebook.com/valleyofthesun/
http://valleyofthesun.bandcamp.com/
http://www.twitter.com/centaur_rodeo

https://www.facebook.com/theripplemusic/
https://www.instagram.com/ripplemusic/
https://ripplemusic.bandcamp.com/
http://www.ripple-music.com/

http://www.fuzzoramarecords.com/
http://www.twitter.com/fuzzorecords
http://www.facebook.com/Fuzzorama

Valley of the Sun, “Devil I’ve Become” official video

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Review & Video Premiere: Valley of the Sun, The Chariot

Posted in Bootleg Theater, Reviews on April 18th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

valley of the sun the chariot

[Click play above to stream the premiere of Valley of the Sun’s ‘Devil I’ve Become.’ Album preorders here for North America and here for Europe.]

Ohio heavy rockers Valley of the Sun will release their new album, The Chariot, on June 17 through Ripple Music and Fuzzorama Records. It is the Cincinnati-based four-piece’s second album for Fuzzorama, first for Ripple and fourth overall behind 2019’s Old Gods (review here), and it finds guitarist/vocalist Ryan Ferrier the lone remaining original member of the band with the acquisition of new drummer Lex Vegas. Bassist/keyboardist Chris Sweeney and guitarist Josh Pilot both played on the last record, but at 12 years remove from their debut EP, Two Thousand Ten, their time as a band has always been marked by lineup changes.

What makes their run to-date all the more impressive is their consistency in the character of their songwriting. The Chariot — which may or may not be named after a car; I’m leaning yes — continues a tradition for Valley of the Sun that goes back to their very beginnings in that first EP and 2011’s The Sayings of the Seers (review herediscussed here), which is it brings together a collection of ace tracks, constructed with care and passion both, energetically delivered with a mind toward live energy but a crisp, and all-pro-style recording sound. They begin using the according depth of their production immediately — the literal first seconds of opener “Sweet Sands” — as some particularly Hendrixian wah guitar leads the way into the first smoothly layered hook of the many to come.

Every song has something. That’s not saying The Chariot doesn’t have a flow from one song to the next — the shift from “Headlights” to “As We Decay” argues otherwise on linear formats — but from that initial guitar lick in “Sweet Sands” through the thudding drum part in the break and under the solo of “Images” to the stamping snare and insert-that-when-they-play-the-riff-slower-meme-here slowdown in the initially careening “Devil I’ve Become” (video premiering below), the post-midpoint comedown and build back up of “The Chariot,” the semi-psychedelic guitar at the end of “Headlights” that makes the aforementioned transition to “As We Decay,” which is a ballad complete with what may be slide guitar.

And if you’re listening on vinyl, that song begins side B with no flinch in purpose, with backing from the quieter buildup and Queens of the Stone Age-style backing vocals of “Running Out of Love,” the organ on the messy divorce story “Sunblind,” the flourish of cowbell here and there in the penultimate we’re-going-to-do-DefLeppard-but-heavy “The Flood” and the layered melodies and non-lyric vocals in “Colosseum,” which also rounds out The Chariot with a riff that’s about as signature as it gets for Valley of the Sun.

None of this is to say that the band or Ferrier as the presumed principal songwriter is shooting for novelty. Rather, it is emblematic of the care Valley of the Sun have always put into their work that each successive cut on their fourth album should have to justify its existence to them. Each Valley of the Sun album, from 2014’s Electric Talons of the Thunderhawk (review here) to 2016’s Volume Rock (review here) to Old Gods to The Chariot has been a step forward from the last.

valley of the sun devil ive become

VALLEY OF THE SUN

The same can be heard in the arrangement and treatment on Ferrier‘s vocals, which take full advantage of his range and ability to change up his delivery from one moment to the next, and even in the additional level of crunch brought into sections like the payoff nod groove of “Devil I’ve Become” or in the bridge between verses on “Sunblind” that is just the kind of sonic detail one has come to expect from the band, adding to the adrenaline at just the right time to emphasize movement.

That physicality is a big part of the momentum that The Chariot builds — even the title itself implies going somewhere, and the somewhat escapist lyrics back that up — as “Sweet Sands” and “Images” both roll out at a comfortable pace before they kick into the speedier beginning of “Devil I’ve Become.” At the start of side B, when “As We Decay” goes quiet ahead of the Brant Bjork-strum that begins “Running Out of Love,” the sound is gentler but no less considered, and that applies to side B’s own centerpiece-as-tempo-burst “Sunblind” as well.

All of this drives home the point that Valley of the Sun know what they’re doing. They know the heavy rock band they are and the band they want to be, and when “Colosseum” ends solid, they know that they’re ending the set at the show they just put on. It’s not about leaving in or taking out mistakes in songs — I’m sure there are flubs here and there that the band would have no trouble pointing out if asked; those kinds of things are crucial — but about capturing the electricity in the conversation that is the performance of the players involved, and on The Chariot, balancing that with as lush and far-reaching a production value as Valley of the Sun have ever had. There’s a restlessness behind them — fair, considering the era — but the care that’s taken in presenting this material isn’t to be understated or devalued.

It stands as further evidence that Valley of the Sun are veterans at this point. Their intention to take their favorite classic heavy rock, make it theirs, and give it to their audience could not be plainer. If they’re hiding anything from the listener, they’ve hidden it well, and though on first listen some of what they do might seem easy — they are and always have been an easy band to listen to — or maybe just straightforward on its surface with seven or eight of the 10 songs in the four-minute range, as deep as you want to go in hearing it, The Chariot will meet you there. And better, it’ll bring hooks too. Valley of the Sun know their sound, know that much of their listenership knows their sound, and still keep finding new things to make it do while delivering on the promise of their prior work. It is what you would hope a fourth album to be. It puts the songs first.

Valley of the Sun, The Chariot (2022)

Valley of the Sun on Facebook

Valley of the Sun on Twitter

Valley of the Sun on Bandcamp

Ripple Music on Facebook

Ripple Music on Instagram

Ripple Music on Bandcamp

Ripple Music website

Fuzzorama Records website

Fuzzorama Records on Facebook

Fuzzorama Records on Twitter

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