Quarterly Review: Paradise Lost, The Vintage Caravan, Spirit Mother, Nadja, Vibravoid, For Fuck’s Sake, Paralyzed, Friendship Commanders, Dee Calhoun, Automatism

Posted in Reviews on October 9th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

the obelisk quarterly review

Today is Thursday, but it’s day five of the Fall 2025 Quarterly Review because I snuck in that first day last Friday. I cannot convey to you how much that has screwed me up. Turns out when you do one thing precisely one way for like 13 years and then all of a sudden flip it around another way it can be confusing. Stay tuned for more deep-impact life hacks and insights like this.

Or maybe riffs instead. It’s okay. That’s most of what keeps me coming back too.

Quarterly Review #41-50:

Paradise Lost, Ascension

paradise lost ascension

More than 35 years on from their outset, Paradise Lost are an institution. I know they’ve had their stylistic divergences, but since recommitting themselves to their morose take on doom metal more than 15 years ago, they’ve hit a rare echelon of reliability one can only call Kreator-esque. That’s not a sonic comparison, but like the German thrash stalwarts, Paradise Lost have their sound — dark and more malleable in tempo than the thickened tones make it feel across these 10 songs — and within that sphere are able to do basically what they want musically and make it work. Side A’s “Salvation,” the longest inclusion at seven minutes, is a tour de force of the appeal of modern Paradise Lost, and a fitting summary of how encompassing they’ve become while still remaining recognizable as themselves. They even get hooky on “Deceivers,” so yes, still growing, still pushing, still Paradise Lost. A once-a-generation band, even as part of a cohort as they were, and not to be taken for granted.

Paradise Lost website

Nuclear Blast Records store

The Vintage Caravan, Portals

the vintage caravan portals

The sixth full-length from still-younger-than-some-bands-who-haven’t-been-around-as-long Icelandic heavy rockers The Vintage Caravan plays out across 17 tracks and 59 minutes, with groups of songs presumably corresponding to double-vinyl side splits separated by interludes each of which is named “Portal.” So, Portals. The first of them follows “Philosopher,” the lead single which features Mikael Åkerfeldt, who turns out to be one of several guests across the record, but the real headliner is the songwriting. In the big choruses of “Here You Come Again,” “Give and Take,” and others, the band recall a heyday when rock could be heavy and accessible outside its own sphere, while “Electrified” later on builds into a tense boogie hook before “Portal V” transitions to the acoustic-based “My Aurora” and the closer “This Road,” one more uptempo, shred-inclusive, exceptionally well-crafted piece of The Vintage Caravan‘s classic-heavy-informed style, efficient in getting its point across despite allowing itself time to dwell as it does throughout.

The Vintage Caravan website

Napalm Records website

Spirit Mother, Songs From the Basin

Spirit Mother Songs From the Basin

It’s not really a huge surprise that Los Angeles dark heavy psych rockers Spirit Mother would ‘go acoustic’ at some point, given the dynamic they’ve showcased to-date on their definitely-plugged studio albums. The most recent of those, 2024’s righteous, Heavy Psych Sounds-issued Trails (review here), is the source for “Wolves” and “Below,” which feature on this short, stripped-down offering. “Wolves,” which capped the record in memorable fashion, leads off here with its foreboding feeling all the more realized given the state of the world, while “Below” finds violinist SJ pushing into a soft crescendo taking off from Armand Lance‘s guitar and vocals. Recorded live, Songs From the Basin sounds duly organic, and whenever Spirit Mother in any form — that is, the full band or just the duo as they are here — wants to drop a full acoustic set, I’m here for it. Once again, the lesson is once you have well-written songs, you can make them do and be just about whatever you want.

Spirit Mother website

Spirit Mother on Bandcamp

Nadja, Cut

nadja cut

I’m pretty sure the now-Berlin-based experimentalist duo of Aidan Baker and Leah Buckareff are north of 30 full-lengths released since their first one in 2002, and that doesn’t count blurring the lines between one project and another with collaborations or Baker‘s solo work. Prolific as they are, they remain expressive in the hard-drum-machined “It’s Cold When You Cut Me” (15:09), one of the four extended inclusions of Cut, where the sinister undercurrent comes to fruition in the song’s second half of manipulated, noisy drone. “Dark, No Knowledge” (13:26) lays out a distorted landscape and rolls through it, Godflesh in a hand-cranked meat grinder, becoming a swell of apocalyptic noise, while “She Ate His Dreams From the Inside and Spat Out the Frozen Fucking Bones” (15:14) dares to be pretty as it leaves spaces open and fills out later with psychedelic processionmaking, leaving the immediate ritual of “Omenformation” to resonate high before piling on low end frequencies while also freakjazzing and riffing out. The noise swallows all but it turns out there’s salvation in that monster’s stomach, so I’ll take it. One Nadja album may be an inevitable precursor to the next one, but that doesn’t mean they don’t make it a world of its own.

Nadja website

Cruel Nature Recordings on Bandcamp

Vibravoid, Remove the Ties

Vibravoid Remove the Ties

Düsseldorf-bred psych rockers Vibravoid belong in a class of undervalued all their own. As they mark their 35th anniversary, they begin their new studio album Remove the Ties with a mischievous redirect of krautrock-style electronics before the garage-wavey “Neustart” and pop-shimmerier “Power of Dreams” dig further into the heart of the record, letting side A round out with the longer, deeper-reverbed “Follow Me Follow You” and its effects barrage play out atop the steady kick drum tasked with holding it together. But nobody who’s been in a band for 35 years is about to actually be sloppy, and there’s no actual danger of off-the-rails on Remove the TiesBaby Woodrose roamed the earth. Vibravoid were there then too. It’s easy to get around when you’re from a different dimension.

Vibravoid on Bandcamp

Tonzonen website

For Fuck’s Sake, 7-Minute Abs/Lobotomy

for fuck's sake seven minute abs lobotomy

Do you have six minutes for a good pummeling? Of course you do. Brooklynite four-piece For Fuck’s Sake offer two tracks like a digital punker 7″ with 7-Minute Abs/Lobotomy, and they make no attempt to hide the fact of their sights being set on destruction. Their sound, rooted in hardcore and sludge in like measure, counting in with the snare on “7-Minute Abs” and daring to cross the three-minutes-long threshold with the fervent chug and bone-on-bone impact of “Lobotomy,” reminds of nothing so much as earlier 16, but with an unmistakable edge of Northeastern confrontationalism. That is, they’ll fuck you up and they know it, so that’s what they’re setting out to do. Barking, gnashing intensity set a harsh backdrop for what’s an engaging groove so long as you’re pissed off enough to process it (which you should be; look around), and the rawness of their delivery, the unabashed assault of it, comes through as genuine. Also punishing.

For Fuck’s Sake on Bandcamp

For Fuck’s Sake on Instagram

Paralyzed, Rumble & Roar

Paralyzed Rumble and Roar

Classic heavy rock and roll forms the core of Paralyzed‘s approach, with guitarist Michael Binder‘s low, gravelly vocals reminiscent of Jim Morrison at his least hinged, suited to the blues behind second cut “Railroad” and the subsequent march of “Rosie’s Town” on the band’s third LP, Rumble & Roar. To say they — that is, Binder, organist/rhythm guitarist Caterina Böhner, bassist Philipp Engelbrecht and drummer Florian Thiele — make it a party across the nine-song/41-minute outing is perhaps understating the case, but if you’d accuse “Heavy Blues” of being too on the nose, you’re missing the fact that on the nose is the point. There’s no irony here, no sneer to the boogie of “White Paper” or the slow organ-laced fluidity of “The Witch,” just heavy vibes and reaffirmation of the band’s growth as songwriters. I’m not even sure where one would start complaining about such a thing.

Paralyzed on Bandcamp

Ripple Music website

Friendship Commanders, Bear

friendship commanders bear

Delivered as their label-debut for Magnetic Eye Records, the 10-song/40-minute Bear is the fourth full-length from Nashville two-piece Friendship Commanders, with guitarist/vocalist Buick Audra and drummer/bassist/synthesist Jerry Roe having recorded with Kurt Ballou in addition to doing some at home for an affect accordingly tight in craft and heavy in impact. “Melt” pushes toward a ’90s-style reimagining of heavy rock as both commercially viable and empowering, while “X” pairs its tonal crunch with the keyboardy reach of its midsection, poppish but still heavy even unto the snare hits. Pop becomes another tool in their arsenal, whether it’s the layered ascent and push of “New” or the weighted culmination presented with closer “Dead and Discarded Girls,” and the band don’t seem to shy away from being able to compose at the level they are. At the same time, “Dripping Silver” feels fully cognizant of the radness in the riff it’s riding, so there’s a balance to it as well. They sound like professionals.

Friendship Commanders website

Magnetic Eye Records store

Dee Calhoun, Angry Old Man

Dee Calhoun Angry Old Man

Former Iron Man and, as of recently, former Spiral Grave vocalist “Screaming Mad” Dee Calhoun is pissed. The Maryland-based acoustic metal troubadour sounds resolute on Angry Old Man, and while his past solo work could hardly be said to pull punches, he hits a different level of laying it all out there on “Kill a Motherfucker” late in the procession here. As ever, hollow-bodied-resonance is the foundation throughout, but other elements like the harmonica in “Voodoo Queen” and the tolling bell at the outset of “VVitch (A Chant)” (not really a chant) fill out the reaches when Calhoun‘s powerhouse voice — still his primary instrument, though the guitar work has gotten more complex with time as well — recedes to a softer delivery. But when he belts it out — looking at you, “Rise Up to March” — he can shake the ground, and if you have any prior familiarity with his work, you already know he’s unmistakable in that regard. That remains the case here, even as he positions himself the titular Angry Old Man. Ain’t none of us getting any younger, dude.

Dee Calhoun Linktr.ee

Black Doomba Records Linktr.ee

Automatism, Sörmland

automatism sormland

The narrative of the band getting together after a few years, enjoying each other’s company as they wrote and recorded Sörmland — named for where in Sweden they were — becomes real with the mellowprog delve of “Honey Trap” more than the shorter leadoff “Video,” as pastoralia takes centerstage with organic melodies and a casual groove. Unsurprisingly if you know Twin Peaks, “Laura Palmer’s Theme” is darker, but the real reference it’s making seems to be to “Moonlight Sonata” as regards the keys, but “Neon Lights” answers back by being in no hurry whatsoever with sweet intertwining guitar lines and a subtle build to later movement. At 11 minutes, the title-track that caps is the longest inclusion, but fair enough since they have to make room for that tenor sax and all. I wouldn’t know from experience, but Sörmland is what I imagine it would sound like to be emotionally regulated, ever, and anytime Automatism want to get together out in the woods or by some fields or a lake or whathaveyou, I hope someone has the presence of mind to hit record.

Automatism on Bandcamp

Tonzonen website

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Vibravoid to Release Remove the Ties Sept. 26

Posted in Whathaveyou on August 6th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

vibravoid

I mean, I guess depending on how you look at it, not much has changed since Vibravoid released their 2024 album, We Cannot Awake (review here), but the fact that 2025 marks the 35th anniversary of the German psychedelic rock outfit is certainly remarkable. To have survived swimming upstream for decades in terms of trend, and even now that the underground is a vibrant and sustainable thing — as long as we’re not talking about money — they’ve yet to receive a fragment of the credit they’re due. Not that they invented psych or garage rock, but they’ve done just about everything short of tattooing it on their faces.

The single “Neustart” came out a bit ago with the first album announcement. What’s new here is the Sept. 26 release date and (I think?) the preorders. The cover art, as you can see below, rules.

From the PR wire:

Vibravoid Remove the Ties

Neo Psychedelic Rockers VIBRAVOID Announce New Album Remove The Ties. First Single Streaming!

Pre-save the album here: https://vibravoid.ffm.to/removetheties

Physical pre-orders with limited edition vinyl will be available from August 10th on, via Tonzonen Records here: https://www.tonzonen.de/shop

After the album We Cannot Awake (2024), which was highly praised by press and fans, Vibravoid manage to top this masterpiece in their 35th year of existence with their new album Remove The Ties, out September 26, 2025 on Tonzonen Records.

Although the band has for years steered clear of the terms they themselves popularized and which have become inflationary today, such as Psychedelic and Kraut Rock, Remove The Ties is probably the best Neo Psychedelic album of the last 25 years.

With ease and free of any signs of wear and tear, the Düsseldorf band has succeeded in creating a album that, between short pop songs and psychedelic escapades, shows that real neo Kraut Rock is not just the same old copy of Düsseldorf’s Motorik sound.

The first single from new album Remove The Ties is Neustart, check out the music video right below!

Remove The Ties is not only a new masterpiece from an extraordinary band, this album sets new standards for modern psychedelic rock and cements Vibravoid as the most important and influential representatives of their generation. This will probably only be recognized – similar to their debut album “2001” – after 25 years.

Tracklist
1. Computer Dreams
2. Neustart
3. The Power Of Dreams
4. Follow Me Follow You
5. Your Revolution Is Dead
6. Increasing The Pain
7. A State Of Mind
8. Remove The Ties

https://vibravoidofficial.bandcamp.com/
https://facebook.com/vibravoidofficial
https://youtube.com/@VibravoidOfficial
https://open.spotify.com/artist/5qXFseejEDd3JvZqap38os?si=p80o7SP4ReKjHnvYIl9YPw

https://www.tonzonen.de
https://www.facebook.com/Tonzonen/
https://www.instagram.com/tonzonenrecords/

Vibravoid, “Neustart” official video

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Vibravoid Post “Neustart” From New Album Remove the Ties; Celebrating 35th Anniversary

Posted in Whathaveyou on May 30th, 2025 by JJ Koczan

vibravoid

The photo above was taken this past weekend at the Tonzonen Festival, which long-running German garage/psych/acid/more-psych rockers Vibravoid played as part of their ongoing 35th anniversary celebration. Headed off by the single “Neustart,” the band will also have a new album, Remove the Ties, out in September as part of the revelry, and you can see the clip for the fuzz-buzzy track below, and even if it’s not the most complex story you’ve ever seen in a video — flashing lights and a couple well-dressed, dancing young women — those who stick around are rewarded when the freakout hits later on. Just a heads up to give it a chance, is all I’m saying.

I hear a fair amount of space and krautrock in here, which is fair enough game for Vibravoid, but they’ve always been a band aesthetically rooted in the latter half of the 1960s, so I would expect at least some of that anachronism to show up on the new record as well. Look out for other live dates too, as they seem to have stuff booked already for December for the anniversary.

From social media:

vibravoid remove the ties poster

VIBRAVOID – 1990-2025 – 35 YEARS OF MAXIMUM VOID VIBRATION

As children of the hippie era, VIBRAVOID belong to the only generation that, as teenagers in the 1980s, was able to save their parents’ Psychedelic-, Kraut Rock, Fuzz effects, and vinyl records from being thrown away. VIBRAVOID thus occupies a unique position within the German music scene.

Growing up in the tension between Ratinger Hof, Creamcheese and the Art Academy, founded in 1988 as Lightshow Society Düsseldorf and formed in 1990 as VIBRAVOID, the Düsseldorf band is Germany’s longest running active Neo-Psychedelic band, inventors of Neo-Kraut Rock, and an initiator of today’s vinyl boom. Vibravoid is a unique phenomenon. VIBRAVOID stands in the tradition of the first European psychedelic scene, which began in 1966 in the music metropolis of Düsseldorf and would change the world!

Like its predecessors of the first Kraut Rock wave, the VIBRAVOID sound was more popular abroad, with the band playing more often in London, Rome, Athens, and Helsinki than in Hamburg or Munich. The debut album “2001” was released in the first reprint for the Japanese market. Nevertheless, VIBRAVOID also set new impulses in their hometown; in 2000, the “2001” record release party at the Ratinger Hof was the first new rock concert there after 10 years of techno. In 2001 VIBRAVOID organized the first PSYCH FEST of the new millenium.

NEUSTART from the new album REMOVE THE TIES available SEPTEMBER 2025 from TONZOENEN Records.

https://vibravoidofficial.bandcamp.com/
https://facebook.com/vibravoidofficial
https://youtube.com/@VibravoidOfficial
https://open.spotify.com/artist/5qXFseejEDd3JvZqap38os?si=p80o7SP4ReKjHnvYIl9YPw

https://www.tonzonen.de
https://www.facebook.com/Tonzonen/
https://www.instagram.com/tonzonenrecords/

Vibravoid, “Neustart” official video

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