Quarterly Review: Megaritual, Red Eye, Temple of the Fuzz Witch & Seum, Uncle Woe, Negative Reaction, Fomies, The Long Wait, Babona, Sutras, Sleeping in Samsara

Posted in Reviews on April 14th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

quarterly-review-winter 2023

Welcome back to the Quarterly Review. Just because it’s a new week, I’ll say again the idea here is to review 10 releases — albums, EPs, the odd single if I feel like there’s enough to say about it — per day across some span of days. In this case, the Quarterly Review goes to 70. Across Monday to Friday last week, 50 new, older and upcoming offerings were written up and today and tomorrow it’s time to wrap it up. I fly out to Roadburn on Wednesday.

Accordingly, you’ll pardon if I spare the “how was your weekend?”-type filler and jump right in instead. Let’s. Go.

Quarterly Review #51-60:

Megaritual, Recursion

megaritual recursion

Last heard from in 2017, exploratory Australian psychedelic solo outfit Megaritual — most often styled all-lowercase: megaritual — returns with the aptly-titled Recursion, as multi-instrumentalist, vocalist and producer Dale Paul Walker taps expansive kosmiche progressivisim across nine songs and 42 minutes. If you told me these tracks, which feel streamlined compared to the longer-form work Walker was doing circa 2017, had been coming together since that time, the depth of the arrangements and the way each cut comes across as its own microcosm within the greater whole bears that out, be it the winding wisps of “Tres Son Multitud” or the swaying echoey bliss of later highlight “The Jantar Mantar.” I don’t know if that’s the case or it isn’t, but the color in this music alone makes it one of the best records I’ve heard in 2025, and I can’t get away from thinking some of the melody and progressive aspects comes from metal like Opeth, so yeah. Basically, it’s all over the place and wonderful. Thanks for reading.

Megaritual on Bandcamp

Echodelick Records website

Psychedelic Salad ReRED EYE IIIcords store

Red Eye, III

RED EYE III

Slab-heavy riffage from Andalusian three-piece Red Eye‘s III spreads itself across a densely-weighted but not monolithic — or at least not un-dynamic or unipolar — eight songs, as a switch between shouted and more melodic vocals early on between the Ufomammut-esque “Sagittarius A*” (named for the black hole at the Milky Way’s center; it follows the subdued intro “Ad Infinitum”) and the subsequent, doomier in a Pallbearer kind of way “See Yourself” gives listeners an almost-immediate sense of variety around the wall-o’-tone lumbering fuzz that unites those two and so much else throughout as guitarist/vocalist Antonio Campos del Pino, bassist/synthesist Antonio Pérez Muriel and drummer/synthesist/vocalist Pablo Terol Rosado veer between more and less aggressive takes. “No Morning After” renews the bash, “Beyond” makes it a party, “Stardust” uses that momentum to push the tempo faster and “Nebula” makes it swing into the Great Far Out before “The Nine Billion Names of God” builds to a flattening crescendo. Intricate in terms of style and crushingly heavy. Easy win.

Red Eye’s Linktr.ee

Discos Macarras Records website

Temple of the Fuzz Witch & Seum, Conjuring

Temple of the Fuzz Witch Seum Conjuring

Even by the respective standards of the bands involved — and considering the output of Detroit grit-doomers Temple of the Fuzz Witch and Montreal sans-guitar scathemakers Seum to this point, it’s a significant standard — Conjuring is some nasty, nasty shit. Presented through Black Throne Productions with manic hand-drawn cover art that reminds of Midwestern pillsludge circa 2008, the 27-minute split outing brings three songs from each outfit, and maybe it’s the complementary way Seum‘s low-end picks up from the grueling, chugging, and finally rolling fare Temple of the Fuzz Witch provide, but both acts come through as resoundingly, willfully, righteously bleak. You know how at the dentist they let you pick your flavor of toothpaste? This is like that except surprise you just had all your teeth pulled. It only took half-an-hour, but now you need to figure out what to do with your dazed, gummy self. Good luck.


Seum on Bandcamp

Temple of the Fuzz Witch on Bandcamp

Black Throne Productions website

Uncle Woe, Folded in Smoke, Soaked and Bound

Uncle Woe Folded in Smoke Soaked and Bound

Uncle Woe offer two eight-minutes-each tracks on the new EP, Folded in Smoke, Soaked and Bound, as project founder/spearhead Rain Fice (in Canada) and collaborator Marc Whitworth (in Australia) bring atmosphere and grace to underlying plod. It’s something of a surprise when “One is Obliged” relatively-speaking solidifies at about five minutes in around vocal soar, which is an effective, emotional moment in a song that seems to be mourning even as it grows broader moving toward the finish. “Of Symptoms and Waves” impresses vocally as well, deep in the mix as the vocals are, but feels more about the darker prog metal-type stretch that unfolds from about the halfway point on. But what’s important to note is these plays on genre are filtered through Uncle Woe‘s own aesthetic vision, and so this short outing becomes both lush and raw for the obvious attention to its sonic details and the overarching melancholy that belongs so much to the band. A well-appreciated check-in.

Uncle Woe on Bandcamp

Uncle Woe’s Linktr.ee

Negative Reaction, Salvaged From the Kuiper Belt

Negative Reaction Salvaged From the Kuiper Belt

I would not attempt to nor belittle the band’s accomplishments by trying to summarize 35 years of Negative Reaction in this space, but as the West-Virginia-by-way-of-Long-Island unit led by its inimitable principal/guitarist/vocalist Ken-E Bones mark this significant occasion, the collection Salvaged From the Kuiper Belt provides 16 decades-spanning tracks covering sundry eras of the band. I haven’t seen a liner, so I don’t even know the number of players involved here, but Bones has been through several incarnations of Negative Reaction at this point, so when “NOD” steamrollers and later pieces like “Mercy Killing” and the four-second highlight “Stick o’ Gum” are more barebones in their punksludge, it makes sense in context. Punk, psych, sludge, raw vocals — these have always been key ingredients to Negative Reaction‘s often-harsh take, and it’s a blend that’s let them endure beyond trend, reason, or human kindness. Congrats to Bones, whom I consider a friend of long-standing, and many more.

Negative Reaction on Bandcamp

Negative Reaction on Facebook

Fomies, Liminality

FOMIES Liminality

Given how many different looks Fomies present on Liminality, and how movement-based so much of it is between the uptempo proto-punk, krauty shuffle and general sense of push — not out of line with the psych of the modern age, but too weird not to be its own spin — it feels like mellower opener “The Onion Man” is its own thing at the front of the album; a mellower lead-in to put the listener in a more preferred mindset (on the band’s part) to enjoy what follows. This is artfully done, as is the aforementioned “what follows,” as the band thoughtfully boogie through the three-part “Colossus,” find a moment for frenetic fuzz via Gary Numan in “Neon Gloom,” make even the two-and-a-half-minute “Happiness Relay” a show of chemistry, finish in a like-minded tonal fullness with “Upheaval,” and engage with decades of motorik worship without losing themselves more than they want to in the going. At 51 minutes, Liminality is somewhat heady, but that’s inherent to the style as well, and the band’s penchant for adventure comes through smoothly alongside all that super-dug-in vibing.

Fomies on Bandcamp

Taxi Gauche Records website

The Long Wait, The Long Wait

The Long Wait The Long Wait

Classic Boston DGAF heavy riff rock, and if you hear a good dose of hardcore in amid the swing and shove, The Long Wait‘s self-titled debut comes by it honestly. The five-piece of vocalist Glen Dudley (Wrecking Crew), guitarist Darryl Shepard (Kind, Milligram, Slapshot, etc.) and Steven Risteen (Slapshot), bassist Jaime Sciarappa (SSD, Slapshot) and drummer Mark McKay (Slapshot) plunder through nine cuts. Certainly elbows are out, but considering where they’re coming from, it’s not an overly aggressive sound. Hardcore dudes have been veering into heavier riffing à la “Uncharted Greed” or “FWM” for the last 35 years, so The Long Wait feels well in line with a tradition that some of these guys helped set in the first place as it revisits songs from 2023’s demo and expands outward from there, searching for and beginning to find its own interpretation of what “bullshit-free” means in terms of the band’s craft.

The Long Wait on Bandcamp

The Long Wait’s Facebook group

Babona, Az Utolsó Választás Kora

Babona Az utolsó választás kora

Since 2020, Miskolc, Hungary-based solo-band Babona have released three EPs, a couple singles and now two full-lengths, with Az Utolsó Választás Kora (‘the age of the last choice’) as the second album from multi-instrumentalist and producer Tamás Rózsa. Those with an appreciation for the particular kind of crunch Eastern Europe brings to heavy rock will find the eight-tracker a delight in the start-stops of “2/3” and the vocals-are-sampled-crying-and-laughing “A Rendszer Rothadása,” which digs into its central riff with suitable verve. The later “Kormányalakítás” hints at psych — something Rózsa has fostered going back to 2020 with Ottlakán, from whom Babona seems to have sprung — and the album isn’t without humor as a crowing rooster snaps the listener out of that song’s trance in the transition to the ambient post-rocker “Frakció,” but when it’s time to get to business, Rózsa caps with “Pártatlan” as a grim, sludgy lumber that holds its foreboding mood even into its own comedown. That’s not the first time Az Utolsó Választás Kora proves deceptively immersive.

Babona on Bandcamp

Babona on Facebook

Sutras, The Crisis of Existence

Sutras The Crisis of Existence

Sit tight, because it’s about to get pretty genre-nerdy. Sutras, the Washington D.C.-based two-piece of Tristan Welch (vocals/guitar) and Frederick Ashworth (drums/bass) play music that is psychedelic and heavy, but with a strong foundation specifically in post-hardcore. Their term for it is ‘Dharma punk,’ which is enough to make me wonder if there’s a krishna-core root here, but either way, The Crisis of Existence feels both emotive and ethereal as the duo bring together airy guitar and rhythmic urgency, raw, sometimes gang-shouted vocals, and arrangements that feel fluid whether it’s the rushing post-punk (yeah, I know: so much ‘post-‘; I told you to sit tight) of “Racing Sundown” or the denser push of “Bloom Watch” or the swing brought to that march in “Working Class Devotion.” They cap the 19-minute EP with posi-vibes in “Being Nobody, Going Nowhere,” which provides one last chance for their head-scratching-on-paper sound to absolutely, totally work, as it does. The real triumph here, fists in the air and all that, is that it sounds organic.

Sutras on Bandcamp

Sutras on Instagram

Sleeping in Samsara, Sleeping in Samsara

Sleeping in Samsara Sleeping in Samsara

The story of Sleeping in Samsara‘s self-titled two-songer as per Christian Peters (formerly Samsara Blues Experiment, currently Fuzz Sagrado, etc.) is that in 2023, My Sleeping Karma drummer Steffen Weigand reached out with an interest in collaborating as part of a solo-project Weigand was developing. Weigand passed away in June 2023, and “Twilight Again” and “Downtime,” with underlying basic tracks from Weigand in drums, keys/synth, and rhythm guitar, and Peters adding lead guitar, vocals, bass in the latter, the songs are unsurprising in their cohesion only when one considers the fluidity wrought by both parties in their respective outfits, and though the loss of Weigand of course lends a bittersweet cast, that this material has seen the light of day at all feels like a tribute to his life and cretive drive.

Fuzz Sagrado website

Electric Magic Records on Bandcamp

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Peacebone Premiere New EP Blame the Bird in Full; Out Tomorrow

Posted in audiObelisk, Reviews on January 30th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

Peacebone photo 1 by Angini Pai

Swiss heavy psychedelic rollers Peacebone will release their new EP, Blame the Bird, tomorrow through Sixteentimes Music, and where their 2021 debut, Metanoïa, had a bit of classic-style shuffle to coincide with its fuzz and 2023’s Warm Paint refined bluesy clarity from the first record’s accomplishments in songwriting, the 18-minute five-tracker premiering in its entirety below leans a different way.

The foundation, in heavy blues and boogie, is important for understanding where Peacebone — the Vevey-based five-piece of vocalist/keyboardist Rebekah Aktinson, guitarists Samuel Lucchini (lead) and Colin Rochat (rhythm), bassist Julien Bonzon and drummer/backing vocalist Simon Bradford (who also mixed and mastered) — are coming from. It accounts for the All Them Witches shimmer in the centerpiece guitar interlude “Whisper of Hope,” and the soul with which Aktinson‘s vocals soar on the subsequent “Break New,” and the wistful sensibility wrought in closer “Hold Me Now.” But Peacebone seem to be purposefully expanding their palette in Blame the Bird — one finds corresponding advice in opener “Don’t Blame the Broken” — to include the psychedelic, as well as elements of folk and progressive/post-rock.

Admittedly, some of this might fall under the heading of “modernizing,” which one could argue thePeacebone Blame the Bird band did across their first two records (it’s not quite so cut and dry in reality), but it’s more about the textures of the material, the space granted to Aktinson‘s vocals in the mix — a standout range met with suitable instrumental sprawl — but the structures have grown more complex and in the detailing, pieces like “Don’t Blame the Broken” and “Hold Me Now” feel as much refined as they do impactful. There’s a poppish air to the melodies, but Blame the Bird remains heavy even as “Never Run Away” stretches out from its chorus into a graceful nod. If it sounds like the 1990s to your ears, that’s not unreasonable, but the reality of the EP as a whole is more forward-thinking.

It can’t answer what might be next for Peacebone, but it does broaden the scope of possibility, and efficiently creates a mood-affecting atmosphere in under 20 minutes’ time. As to whether the twists of “Don’t Blame the Broken” and the meditations in “Whisper of Hope” are the shape of things to come for the band — that is, if their third album will continue in this modus or if Blame the Bird is a standalone expression of style, which time could reveal is the case for the first two records — it’s not something one can really know at this point and I’m glad at not being able to predict. What I’ll say instead is that they sound like a band who’ve figured out a few key things concerning who they are and the kind of material they want to write, and the EP comes across as a fresh perspective on genre accordingly. They’re not changing the face of heavy psych rock with five tunes under five minutes, but if this is the path they’re going to follow from here on, the prospects are significant and the songs offer a feeling of comfort that resonates beyond the lyrics.

The EP streams in full below ahead of the Jan. 31 (again, tomorrow) release. Preorder link and PR wire info follow. You know the drill.

Enjoy:

Pre-order “Blame The Bird” here: https://tinyurl.com/bd63yu85

Following two albums (“Metanoïa” in 2021 and “Warm Paint” in 2023), which leaned more toward classic rock, PEACEBONE broadens its sound on “Blame The Bird”. They embrace a murkier, more winding tone, drawing influence from Californian desert rock, while also offering moments of ethereal, psychedelic clarity influenced by post-rock, and spicing everything up with neo-psychedelic touches. The riffs are massive, the melodies dreamlike, and Rebekah Atkinson’s lyrics are deeply emotional – capturing vulnerability, the courage to face one’s demons, and the boldness to challenge destructive beliefs.

On “Blame The Bird”, the quintet tackles intensely personal themes across five tracks. On “Break New,” for instance, the band explores the anxiety of feeling irreparably broken and the destructive toll this can take on relationships. Yet despite these insecurities, moments of sorrow can be replaced by fleeting waves of euphoria and magic, like on “Never Run Away.” Here, under a summer storm, the mind escapes into a dreamlike world where fish speak and we wander through a pink-tinted city. The EP closes with a song of reconciliation and healing love (“Hold Me Now”).

If there is one word that shapes and defines Peacebone’s sound, it’s experimentation. Since its inception, the Vevey-based modern blues rock band have created a sound of their own, that vacillates from sombre, reverb-soaked ballads to punchy, rhythmic tracks. Dynamic guitar riffs wind their way beneath Rebekah Atkinson’s chocolatey-smooth vocals poured into captivating melodies.

1. Don’t Blame The Broken
2. Never Run Away
3. Whisper Of Hope
4. Break New
5. Hold Me Now

The EP was recorded by Peacebone at Arcane Productions. Mixed and mastered by Simon Bradford at Arcane Productions. Photos by Angini Pai.

PEACEBONE is:
Rebekah Aktinson – Lead Vocals, Keys
Samuel Lucchini – Lead Guitar
Colin Rochat – Rhythm Guitar
Julien Bonzon – Bass
Simon Bradford – Drums, Backing Vocals

Peacebone on Instagram

Peacebone on Facebook

Peacebone on Bandcamp

Peacebone website

Sixteentimes Music on Instagram

Sixteentimes Music on Facebook

Sixteentimes Music on Bandcamp

Sixteentimes Music website

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Quarterly Review: Yatra, Sula Bassana, Garden of Worm, Orthodox, Matus, Shrooms Circle, Goatriders, Arthur Brown, Green Sky Accident, Pure Land Stars

Posted in Reviews on September 19th, 2022 by JJ Koczan

THE-OBELISK-FALL-2020-QUARTERLY-REVIEW

Oh hello. I didn’t see you there. What, this? Oh, this is just me hanging out about to review 100 records in 10 days’ time. Yup, it’s another double-wide Quarterly Review, and I’m telling myself that no, this isn’t just how life is now, that two full weeks of 10 reviews per day isn’t business as usual, but there’s an exceptional amount of music out there right now, and no, this isn’t even close to all of it. But I’m doing my best to keep up and this is what that looks like.

The bottom line is the same as always and I’ll give it to you up front and waste no more time: I hope you enjoy the music here and find something to love.

So let’s go.

Quarterly Review #01-10:

Yatra, Born into Chaos

yatra born into chaos

The partnership between Chesapeake extremists Yatra and producer Noel Mueller continues to bear fruit on the band’s fourth album and first for Prosthetic Records. Their descent from thick, nasty sludge into death metal is complete, and songs like “Terminate by the Sword” and “Terrorizer” have enough force behind them to become signature pieces. The trio of Dana Helmuth (guitar/vocals), Maria Geisbert (bass) and Sean Lafferty (drums, also Grave Bathers) have yet to sound so utterly ferocious, and as each of their offerings has pushed further into the tearing-flesh-like-paper and rot-stenched realms of metal, Born into Chaos brings the maddening intensity of “Wrath of the Warmaster” and the Incantation-worthy chug of closer “Tormentation,” with massive chug, twisting angularity and brain-melting blasts amid the unipolar throatripper screams from Helmuth (reminds at times of Grutle Kjellson from Enslaved), by now a familiar rasp that underscores the various violences taking place within the eight included tracks. I bet they get even meaner next time,. That’s just how Yatra do. But it’ll be a challenge.

Yatra on Facebook

Prosthetic Records store

 

Sula Bassana, Nostalgia

Sula Bassana Nostalgia

Part of the fun of a new Sula Bassana release is not knowing what you’re going to get, and Nostalgia, which is built from material recorded between 2013-’18 and finished between 2019-’21, is full of surprises. The heavy space grunge of lead cut “Real Life,” which along with its side A companion “We Will Make It” actually features vocals from Dave “Sula Bassana” Schmidt himself (!), is the first here but not the last. That song beefs up early Radiohead drudgery, and “We Will Make It” is like what happens when space rock actually gets to space, dark in a way but expansive and gorgeous. Side B is instrumental, but the mellotron in “Nostalgia” — how could a track called “Nostalgia” not have mellotron? — goes a long way in terms of atmosphere, and the 10-minute “Wurmloch” puts its well-schooled krautrockism to use amid melodic drone before the one-man-jam turns into a freakout rager (again: !), and the outright beautiful finisher “Mellotraum” turns modern heavy post-rock on its head, stays cohesive despite all the noise and haze and underscores the mastery Schmidt has developed in his last two decades of aural exploration. One wonders to what this sonic turn might lead timed so close to his departure from Electric Moon and building a Sula live band, but either way, more of this, please. Please.

Sula Bassana on Facebook

Sulatron Records store

 

Garden of Worm, Endless Garden

Garden of Worm Endless Garden

Continuing a streak of working with highly-respected imprints, Finland’s Garden of Worm release their third album, the eight-song/43-minute Endless Garden, through Nasoni Records after two prior LPs through Shadow Kingdom and Svart, respectively. There have been lineup changes since 2015’s Idle Stones (review here), but the band’s classically progressive aspects have never shone through more. The patient unfolding of “White Ship” alone is evidence for this, never mind everything else that surrounds, and though the earlier “Name of Lost Love” and the closer “In the Absence of Memory” nod to vintage doom and the nine-minute penultimate “Sleepy Trees” basks in a raw, mellow Floydian melody, the core of the Tampere outfit remains their unpredictability and the fact that you never quite know where you’re going until you’re there. Looking at you, “Autumn Song,” with that extended flute-or-what-ever-it-is intro before the multi-layered folk-doom vocal kicks in. For over a decade now, Garden of Worm have been a well kept secret, and honestly, that kind of works for the vibe they cast here; like you were walking through the forest and stumbled into another world. Good luck getting back.

Garden of Worm on Facebook

Nasoni Records site

 

Orthodox, Proceed

orthodox proceed

Untethered by genre and as unorthodox as ever, Sevilla, Spain, weirdo doom heroes Orthodox return with Proceed after four years in the ether, and the output is duly dug into its own reality of ritualism born more of creation than horror-worship across the six included songs. “Arendrot” carries some shade from past dronings, and certainly the opener before it is oddball enough, with its angular riffing and later, Iberian-folk-derived solo, but there’s a straigter-forward aspect to Proceed as well, the vocals lending a character of noise rock and less outwardly experimentalist fare. “Rabid God” brings that forward with due intensity before the hi-hat-shimmy-meets-cave-lumber-doom “Starve” and the lurching/ambient doomjazz “The Son, the Sword, the Bread” set up the 10-minute closer “The Long Defeat,” which assures the discomforted that at least at some point when they were kids Orthodox listened to metal. Righteously individual, their work isn’t for everyone, and it’s by no means free of indulgence, but in 42 minutes, Orthodox once again stretch the limits of what doom means in a way that most bands wouldn’t dare even if they wanted to, and if you can’t respect that, then I’ve got nothing for you.

Orthodox on Facebook

Alone Records store

 

Matus, Espejismos II

Matus Espejismos II

Fifty years from now, some brave archivalist soul is going to reissue the entire catalog of Lima, Peru’s Matus and blow minds far and wide. A follow-up to 2013’s Espejismos (review here), Espejismos II brings theremin-laced vintage Sabbath rock vibes across its early movements, going so far as to present “Umbral / Niebla de Neón” in mono, while the minute-and-a-half-long “Los Ojos de Vermargar (Early Version)” is pure fuzz and the organ-laced “Hada Morgana (Early Instrumental Mix)” — that and “Umbra; / Niebla de Neón” appeared in ‘finished versions on 2015’s Claroscuro (review here); “Summerland” dates back to 2010’s M​á​s Allá Del Sol Poniente (review here), so yes, time has lost all meaning — moves into the handclap-and-maybe-farfisa-organ “Canción para Nuada,” one of several remixes with rerecorded drums. “Rocky Black” is an experiment in sound collage, and “Misquamacus” blends acoustic intricacy and distorted threat, while capper “Adiós Afallenau (Version)” returns the theremin for a two-minute walk before letting go to a long stretch of silence and some secret-track-style closing cymbals. The best thing you can do with Matus is just listen. It’s its own thing, it always has been, and the experimental edge brought to classic heavy rock is best taken on with as open a mind as possible. Let it go where it wants to go and the rewards will be plenty. And maybe in another five decades everyone will get it.

Matus on Facebook

Espíritus Inmundos on Facebook

 

Shrooms Circle, The Constant Descent

Shrooms Circle The Constant Descent

Offset by interludes like the classical-minded “Aversion” or the bass-led “Reprobation,” or even the build-up intro “S.Z.,” the ritual doom nod of Swiss five-piece Shrooms Circle‘s The Constant Descent is made all the more vital through the various keys at work across its span, whether it’s organ or mellotron amid the lumbering weight of the riffs. “Perpetual Decay” and its companion interlude “Amorphous” dare a bit of beauty, and that goes far in adding context and scope to the already massive sounding “The Unreachable Spiral” and the subtle vocal layering in “The Constant Descent.” Someone in this band likes early Type O Negative, and that’s just fine. Perhaps most of all, the 11-song/48-minute The Constant Descent is dynamic enough so that no matter where a given song starts, the listener doesn’t immediately know where it’s going to end up, and taking that in combination with the command shown throughout “Demotion,” “Perpetual Decay,” the eight-minute “Core Breakdown” and the another-step-huger finale “Stagnant Tide,” Shrooms Circle‘s second album offers atmosphere and craft not geared toward hooking the audience with catchy songwriting so much as immersing them in the mood and murk in which the band seem to reside. If Coven happened for the first time today, they might sound like this.

Shrooms Circle on Facebook

DHU Records store

 

Goatriders, Traveler

Goatriders Traveler

I’m gonna tell you straight out: Don’t write this shit off because Goatriders is a goofy band name or because the cover art for their second album, Traveler, is #vanlife carrot gnomes listening to a tape player on a hillside (which is awesome, by the way). There’s more going on with the Linköping four-piece than the superficialities make it seem. “Unscathed” imagines what might have happened if Stubb and Hexvssel crossed paths on that same hill, and the album careens back and forth smoothly between longer and shorter pieces across 50 engrossing minutes; nature-worshiping, low-key dooming and subtly genre-melding all the while. Then they go garage on “The Garden,” the album seeming to get rawer in tone as it proceeds toward “Witches Walk” and the a capella finish in “Coven,” which even that they can’t resist blowing out at the end. With the hypnotic tom work and repeat riffing of the instrumental “Elephant Bird” at its center and the shouted culminations of “Goat Head Nebula” and “Unscathed,” the urgent ritualizing of “Snakemother” and the deceptive poise at the outset with “Atomic Sunlight,” Traveler finds truth in its off-kilter presentation. You don’t get Ozium, Majestic Mountain and Evil Noise on board by accident. Familiar as it is and drawing from multiple sides, I’m hard-pressed to think of someone doing exactly what Goatriders do, and that should be taken as a compliment.

Goatriders on Facebook

Majestic Mountain Records store

Evil Noise Recordings store

Ozium Records store

 

Arthur Brown, Long Long Road

Arthur Brown Long Long Road

At the tender age of 80, bizarrist legend Arthur Brown — the god of hellfire, as the cover art immediately reminds — presents Long Long Road to a new generation of listeners. His first album under his own name in a decade — The Crazy World of Arthur Brown released Gypsy Voodoo (can you still say that?) in 2019 — and written and performed in collaboration with multi-instrumentalist Rik Patten, songs like “Going Down” revisit classic pageantry in organ and horns and the righteous lyrical proclamations of the man himself, while “I Like Games” toys with blues vibes in slide acoustic, kick drum thud and harmonica sleazenanigans, while the organ-and-electric “The Blues and Messing Round” studs with class and “Long Long Road” reminds that “The future’s open/The past is due/In this moment/Where everything that comes is new,” a hopeful message before “Once I Had Illusions (Part 2)” picks up where its earlier companion-piece left off in a manner that’s both lush and contemplative, more than a showpiece for Brown‘s storytelling and still somehow that. His legacy will forever be tied to The Crazy World of Arthur Brown‘s late-1960s freakery, but Long Long Road is the work of an undimmed creative spirit and still bolder than 90 percent of rock bands will ever dare to be.

Arthur Brown on Facebook

Magnetic Eye Records store

Prophecy Productions store

 

Green Sky Accident, Daytime TV

Green Sky Accident Daytime TV

Ultimately, whether one ends up calling Green Sky Accident‘s Daytime TV progressive psychedelia, heavier post-rock or some other carved-out microgenre, the reality of the 10-song/50-minute Apollon Records release is intricate enough to justify the designation. Richly melodic and unafraid to shimmer brightly, cuts like “Point of No Return” and the later dancer “Finding Failure” are sweet in mood and free largely of the pretense of indie rock, though “Insert Coin” and the penultimate piano interlude “Lid” are certainly well dug-in, but “Sensible Scenes,” opener “Faded Memories,” closer “While We Lasted” and the ending of “Screams at Night” aren’t lacking either for movement or tonal presence, and that results in an impression more about range underscored by songwriting and melody than any kind of tonal or stylistic showcase. The Bergen, Norway, four-piece are, in other words, on their own trip. And as much float as they bring forth, “In Vain” reimagines heavy metal as a brightly expressive terrestrial entity, a thing to be made and remade according to the band’s own purpose for it, and the title-track similarly balances intensity with a soothing affect. I guess this is what alt rock sounds like in 2022. Could be far worse, and indeed, it presents an ‘other’ vision from the bulk of what surrounds it even in an underground milieu. On a personal level, I can’t decide if I like it, and I kind of like that about it.

Green Sky Accident on Facebook

Apollon Records store

 

Pure Land Stars, Trembling Under the Spectral Bodies

Pure Land Stars Trembling Under the Spectral Bodies

With members of Cali psych-of-all explorers White Manna at their core, Pure Land Stars begin a series called ‘Altered States’ that’s a collaboration between Centripetal Force and Cardinal Fuzz Records, and if you’re thinking that that’s going to mean it’s way far out there, you’re probably not thinking far enough. Kosmiche drones and ambient foreboding in “Flotsam” and “3rd Grace” make the acoustic strum of “Mountains are Mountains” seem like a terrestrial touch-down, while “Chime the Kettle” portrays a semi-industrial nature-worship jazz, and “Jetsam” unfolds like a sunrise but if the sun suddenly came up one day and was blue. “Lavendar Crowd” (sic) turns the experimentalism percussive, but it’s that experimentalism at the project’s core, whether that’s manifest in the nigh-on-cinematic “Dr. Hillarious” (sic) or the engulf-you-now eight-minute closer “Eyes Like a Green Ceiling,” which is about as far from the keyboardy kratrock of “Flotsam” as the guitar effects and improvised sounding soloing of “Jetsam” a few tracks earlier. Cohesive? Sure. But in its own dimension. I don’t know if Pure Land Stars is a ‘band’ or a one-off, but they give ‘Altered States’ a rousing start that more than lives up to the name. Take a breath first. Maybe a drink of water. Then dive in.

Pure Land Stars on Bandcamp

Centripetal Force Records store

Cardinal Fuzz Records store

 

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Shrooms Circle Announce “S.L.E.” Special Halloween 7″

Posted in Whathaveyou on October 11th, 2021 by JJ Koczan

I’m glad this is happening for two reasons. Interesting band, highlighting their work the kind of limited release that’s bound to catch a few new ears. For example, I hadn’t heard Shrooms Circle‘s “S.L.E.” before and it’s a fascinating blend of styles, bringing together classic cultism and ’90s-style goth — that skippy guitar gets me every time — with a well-crafted melody. The song featured on DHU Records‘ DHU Sampler MMXXI Vol. 6 earlier this year, and that leads me to the second reason I’m glad this exists, which is it means the vinyl-centric label is still keeping active despite the delays in pressing times one hears about so often these days.

So it’s a heads up on a record I’ll want to keep an ear out for in 2022, and it’s a label persevering through hardship to do what it does best in offer a cool product to its select market. That’s a win as far as I’m concerned.

To wit:

shrooms circle

Promo 7″ Single By Shrooms Circle Released Halloween

Since it’s taking forever these days to press regular vinyl with production times running anywhere between 8-12 months now, it’s a real hassle to maintain an underground record label which mostly has a small run of pressings, which results in bigger pressings getting cut first. Not to mention the cost of materials rising due to scarcity.

BUT! That doesn’t mean we can’t do other fun stuff in the meantime!

Up next on DHU Records we present the Promo Single S.L.E. by Shrooms Circle on Limited Edition Single Sided Crystal Clear Lathe Cut 7″ w/ a screen print on the Bside!

S.L.E. was presented on the DHU SAMPLER MMXXI last August 2021 and is a promo single for the upcoming second full length which will see the light of day in 2022 (date to be confirmed).

S.L.E. will NOT be on the second full length vinyl release! S.L.E. will be released October 31st Halloween 2021 and will be ready to pre order Friday October 22nd @ 7PM CEST.

Available as follows:

Lathe Cut Edition
Strictly Limited to 66 copies
Single Jacket
Exclusive DHU Halloween Sticker
Bside Screen Print
Artwork & Layout by Shane Horror
Pressed by Royal Mint Records
Comes on Crystal Clear Lathe Cut 7″ vinyl

(PLEASE NOTE: Lathe cut records are cut manually, meaning the drop of the cutting needle is done by hand. They are time consuming to make, which limits the size of the run.)

Shrooms Circle ~ S.L.E.
(Sadistic And Lovely Execution)
(DHU053)

Side A:
A1. S.L.E.
Side B:
Screen Print

Produced and Recorded by Kelen Ob At Flying Beast Studio
Mastered by DC Mastering
Artwork & Layout by Shane Horror

Listen to S.L.E. here:
https://darkhedonisticunionrecords.bandcamp.com/track/shrooms-circle-s-l-e

Shrooms Circle are:
Lord Chevrotine – Drums
Johann – Bass
Kelen Ob – Guitar, Vocals
Teckel – Organ, Mellotron
Odile – Vocals

https://www.facebook.com/shrooms.circle/
http://shroomscircle.bandcamp.com
https://www.facebook.com/DHURecords/
https://www.instagram.com/dhu_records/
https://darkhedonisticunionrecords.bandcamp.com/
darkhedonisticunionrecords.bigcartel.com/

Shrooms Circle, “S.L.E.”

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Shrooms Circle Sign to DHU Records for Asylum LP Release

Posted in Whathaveyou on July 30th, 2019 by JJ Koczan

shrooms circle

Swiss murk-doomers Shrooms Circle have signed to DHU Records to release their debut album, Asylum, on vinyl. Originally issued by the band in 2018, the album is a more than justifiable pickup, with swirling grim psychedelia and a pervasive melodic sensibility that feels born of the likes of Electric Wizard and Windhand will deigning to push deep into its own miseries from its 11-minute opening title-track onward, a slogging march there casting a suitably wretched pall over everything that follows, not that at any point throughout Shrooms Circle are exactly wanting for “wallow.” Spells are cast in dense tones and nodding riffs, a feeling of largesse only going to make them sound that much more overwhelming as they deliver slow-motion punishment throughout “Witches are There!” and the abysmal “Out from the Grave.”

They make a centerpiece of “The Druggist” — as one will — and the organ seems to come out more there and in the subsequent “A House Behind the Hills” than in some of the earlier rollers, as vocalist Odile weaves her voice around the riffs as though directing a tempest to her will. The speedier “Trapped” is suitably claustrophobic and bodes well for future growth in some later harmonies, and closer “The Island” taps into some of the most dirt-caked riffing Asylum has to offer, finishing with organ to lead the procession outward, a final dirge for the long-since dead. It’s not entirely unfamiliar in its overarching approach, but a cool listen nonetheless, especially as their first record.

All the better then that it should get the vinyl exposure from DHU. Not sure on an exact release date, but I know the label keeps busy, so I’d guess maybe Winter 2020? We’ll see. Don’t quote me on that.

From the social medias:

shrooms circle asylum

!!! LISTEN UP !!!

DHU Records is excited to announce the signing of Switzerland’s Hallucinogenic Doom Trip Shrooms Circle to release their debut full length 2018 album Asylum on Limited Edition vinyl!

Worship the Asylum here: shroomscircle.bandcamp.com

More details and info coming soon…

STAY DOOMED STAY HEAVY

Shrooms Circle are:
Scorp – Drums
Johann – Bass
Kelen Ob – Guitar, Vocals
Asknt – Guitar, FX
Teckel – Organ, Mellotron
Odile – Vocals

https://www.facebook.com/shrooms.circle/
http://shroomscircle.bandcamp.com
https://www.facebook.com/DHURecords/
https://www.instagram.com/dhu_records/
https://darkhedonisticunionrecords.bandcamp.com/
darkhedonisticunionrecords.bigcartel.com/

Shrooms Circle, Asylum (2018)

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