Archive for September, 2014

Two Minutes With DEAD

Thursday, September 25th, 2014

We spend a couple of minutes with DEAD vocalist/drummer Jem ahead of their support slot for Torche in Melbourne and find out what’s new…

What’s going on in the world of DEAD?
We’re about to release our 3rd album Captains of Industry which we recorded in LA last year with Toshi Kasai. We’ll release it here on our own label WeEmptyRooms and it will be released in the US on Eolian Empire and Europe on Rock Is Hell.

We just released a new song “Dog TV” via a 2×10” compilation record from Rock Is Hell (Austria). Mark D and Seawhores are on it too so I’m hoping we look cool by association.

We’re touring the East coast in Nov/Dec and hopefully we’ll hit up the other states early next year. Some of the dates are with Ithaqua from Japan who are heavy as fuck. Can’t recommend them enough.

Heading into the studio soon to start a collaborative record with BJ Morriszonkle; an exceptionally talented one man band/genius. It’s going to be fairly different for us but basically we’ll be giving him free reign with the songs to add whatever he likes.

Right now we’re writing the next album which we’ll record next year sometime depending on finances. Thinking of running another crowd funding campaign for that one just to see if we can top the hate mail from the last one.

What motivates you to make music?
When I make music I feel good, when I don’t I feel worse and like I need to make music. It’s probably as basic as that. Of course there is a lot that I get out of it but honestly, I don’t need to worry the details too much. Just keep making it and I’m okay.

What have been the high and low points of your musical experiences so far?
Highs: We’ve played with some of our favourite bands overseas, made great friends and discovered awesome new bands on tour. Recording with Toshi last year was a great experience as I grew up admiring his recordings a great deal. He was a lot of fun to work with and really good at his job. Treated us really well and managed what limited time we had really well. We’ve also been lucky enough to work with Neil Thomason at Headgap a number of times. Getting Linda J in to sing on our last album was a feather in the cap.

We’ve toured to a lot of different countries and connecting with people from all walks of life through music is something quite special to us. We’ve never been a buzz band; the media is, for the most part, unaware of us. So people coming to our shows, buying our records and showing their appreciation is not something we take for granted.

This year we had to cancel a US tour due to lack of finances but we still managed to appear at one our favourite music festivals “Whynot?” in Minot, ND, via Skype. So I guess that was a low that got converted into a high. Actually one of the best shows we’ve ever played was a basement show at that festival last year. It was at 3am, our 3rd set of the day … well how can you explain it? Some shows are just extra extra special. It might be a house show, it might be a big venue, or it might the Tote front bar.

Lows: This band has played more shows than any I’ve been in and honestly had a pretty good run. Not too many nightmare stories. The first US tour in 2011 was very taxing; most of the tour was canned a few weeks out and I had to scramble to put it back together, a lot of sleeping in car parks and one night in Cleveland in a room full of cat shit in a house full of ice heads. That was one I could have done without. The cherry on top for that tour was getting bumped off the last show of the tour by Japanther ‘cos they didn’t want their crowd to have to endure our set. They waited until after we loaded in to drop that bomb. I demolished a burrito and a 6-pack of IPA in anger that night.

Actually that’s just the tip of the iceberg now that I think of it. I remember getting a lift overnight to get to Camp A Low Hum in NZ and the security guards would not let us in ‘cos the promoter was asleep and they lost their guest list. So we slept out in the freezing cold with all our music gear for hours waiting for them to let us in. Then we finally got let in to our dorms that afternoon and some acid casualty shat in the shower. Ben from Regurgitator and bloke called Toecutter cleaned it up — fucking legends.

I think most bands would have broken up long ago given some of the shit we’ve endured. But in a way it’s those low moments that often bring you closer together. Not much point in dwelling on them when there is plenty of good stuff to focus on.

It’s just the usual stuff — venues cancelling on you at late notice, driving 10 hours to get paid $30, not knowing where you’re gonna sleep really shits me. Having to explain people why it costs $10 to see 5 or more very good bands and being abused for being a capitalist scumbag. These are all standard gripes, not something we alone have to deal with.

What music are you listening to at the moment?
Been on a Harvey Milk binge for a long time now. Listening to new releases from Noxagt, Hepa-Titus, The Funeral and The Twilight, Rabbits, Hard-Ons, TTTDC, SWHAT, Big Business, Prizehog, Hotel Wrecking City Traders … I spend most of my day listening to music.

If you were stranded on a desert island, which member of the band would get eaten first?
We’re both vegetarian and very resourceful. We’d find a much more sustainable solution than that. I’d be pretty disappointed in ourselves if the best thing we could come up with was to eat the other. Jace is an ethical dude, I just don’t think he could explain to my mum why he ate me. How about that bloke that ate his own dick though? That’s pretty rough.

Here’s an opportunity to bitch about something, whether music related or not. What really pisses you off?
Oh man let’s not open that one up!

It shits me that time spent in this band is about 90% admin and 10% actually playing music. I wish it were a more sustainable pursuit as it’s a very expensive hobby to keep. Musicians are not valued very highly in this country and we play music with pretty limited appeal so the reality is we have to work with that, whinging about it doesn’t achieve much.

You have to keep perspective on this stuff. We’re not being persecuted for our music, we have roofs over our heads, we’re not going hungry — we’re doing much better than most of the world could ever hope for. Everything we do, we do for ourselves so in some ways it’s a miracle anyone else supports it at all.

You’re putting together your perfect gig featuring Australian artists? Who would you get to play and where? Feel free to include acts/DJs/bands/venues that no longer exist.
I’m gonna limit myself to current bands or else it’ll be a nostalgia fest.

I’d have it at The Bridge Hotel in Castlemaine where we live as that place is great and very supportive of original music. BJ Moriszonkle, Wicked City, BRUCE!, Nunchukka Superfly, Lara Sulo, Pissbolt, Sun God Replica, Whitehorse, Bone … it’s gonna turn into a bloody festival at this rate. Nicole Tadpole would DJ and Ray Ahn would provide comic relief between bands.

DEAD join Child in supporting Torche on Saturday October 18 at The Corner in Melbourne. Tickets on sale now through life is noise.

Interview: Boy and Bear

Wednesday, September 24th, 2014

boyandbearBefore Boy & Bear’s triumphant return to Perth, Kershia Wong chats to bassist Dave Symes about the band’s sophomore album, ever-growing popularity and their love of regional Australia. For Boy and Bear bassist Dave Symes, there are two kinds of […]

Photos: 360 at Metro City

Wednesday, September 24th, 2014

5. 360 (12)360 at Metro City, Perth on Friday September 19, 2014. Photos by Karen Lowe.

Photos: Meg Mac at Amplifier

Wednesday, September 24th, 2014

25) Meg Mac, AmplifierMeg Mac at Amplifier Bar, Perth on Saturday September 20, 2014. Photos by Hana Lee-Smith.

Anger Management: Decapitated

Wednesday, September 24th, 2014

Every fortnight, we check in with all things heavy on RTRFM’s Critical Mass show.

Polish tech-death metal masters Decapitated are back again to pulverize eardrums with their latest effort Blood Mantra, the second album in this “comeback era” for the band.

Fellow countrymen Behemoth tend to draw the accolades from the press and the fans, but it’s Decapitated’s resolve and rigidity which earns them a lot of respect. After the death of drummer Vitek Kieltyka and injury to vocalist Covan in a tour bus crash, most bands would fold up and create new projects with the remaining members. Decapitated have stuck to their guns the whole time.

Previous album Carnival Is Forever sent the message that the band is back with a vengeance, and this new album delivers in the same way but with a beefier sound to compliment their fast tempo death metal. They’ve added new drummer Micha? ?ysejko to the mix, picking up right where Krimh left off.

Decapitated are all business with this release with nine tracks of bruising, pummeling, kick-assery, and for me, this is likely to be the best death metal release of 2014.

For fans of Origin, Deeds of Flesh, Severe Torture, Cannibal Corpse and possibly Fine Young Cannibals.

Critical Mass airs every Wednesday from 9PM on RTR FM 92.1.

Craig’s List: Paula Temple

Tuesday, September 23rd, 2014

Every fortnight, RTRFM’s Craig Hollywood will bring us a little taste of what to expect from Tuesday’s Full Frequency…

Paula Temple returns to R&S with her second release Deathvox EP, featuring three tracks as exciting and daring as her superb debut Colonized EP.

‘Deathvox’ is a club shaking, wild and imaginative tour de force, featuring her voice transformed like nothing on earth. ‘Monstro’ presents a half-speed techno industrial explosion fitting for a Nine Inch Nails mosh pit. ‘Ful’ completes the epic journey with synth melodic richness you might expect from Karen Gwyer or Nathan Fake.

Deathvox EP is the work of an inspired mind, citing her recent move to Berlin and working with progressive artists on her label Noise Manifesto as major influences on the craft of this record. Bringing together her love of post-punk, industrial noise and synthesizers, Paula Temple broadens her scope of the techno spectrum and sets her own mark yet again in this uncompromising release.

Deathvox will be released on Belgium’s R&S Records on October 27.

Full Frequency with Craig Hollywood airs every Tuesday from 3PM on RTRFM.

Photos: Lionizer at The Mustang Bar

Monday, September 22nd, 2014

2. Lionizer (6)Lionizer at The Mustang Bar, Perth on Thursday September 18, 2014. Photos by Karen Lowe.

Antennas to Heaven: Vessel

Sunday, September 21st, 2014

Your weekly submersion into new and experimental music.

In 1977, music from Bach, Stravinsky, Blind Willie Johnson and Chuck Berry, among others, was placed aboard the Voyager Spacecraft and sent into orbit in hopes that extraterrestrial life or future humans would obtain a brief snapshot of Earth’s musical milieu.

If that expedition was to be repeated today, Vessel’s Punish, Honey is one record that deserves a seat next to Boards of Canada. Its genre-pushing, dystopian visions are unlike anything you’re likely to hear this year and overall represents a confident step forward for genres of experimental electronics.

Punish, Honey is a weirdly chaotic journey reflected through human and robotic spheres. With the members of Vessel having produced and built many of the instruments on here, the whole affair wouldn’t be out of place on a freakish alien rave party on Mars, albeit one in which the partygoers are all under the influence of some hellish futuristic drug.

Lead single ‘Red Sex’ is hard to pin, with a mechanically industrious beat and a woozy melody that comes off as kinda goofy but at the same time deathly serious, because it’s backed by this thudding rhythmic dirge. It draws comparisons to Fuck Buttons at their danceable best, with a primal edge and the same cracked sounds of the future.

There’s beauty to be had here as well: ‘Drowned in Water and Light’ shatters the dance floor left in the wake of ‘Red Sex’, replacing it with a series of razor-edged drum beats that disorientate and skitter before the bottom drops out, revealing the bare fragments of dub and a humanistic groan of pained melody, recalling label mate Clams Casino and his instrumental druggy comedowns.

If you’ve heard Vessel’s previous albums then you might be a little surprised by Punish, Honey’s increased physicality. But to accomplish this balanced level of base melody and experimental foray is something very few artists ever achieve, and when they do it, the act often contains only the thin veneer of experimentation. So don’t question the new direction; simply embrace it, in all its punishing glory. Just be sure to bring some headphones — this is the kind of music best enjoyed in the confines of your own head.

Sounds Like Hell: Helms Alee

Friday, September 19th, 2014

Between Southern Lord, Profound Lore, Neurot Recordings and Relapse Records, there’s an awesome wave forward-thinking heavy music, but few boast the variety of Sargent House. The LA-based label and management company currently play host to post-rock giants (Russian Circles, And So I Watch You From Afar), metalgaze pariahs (Deafheaven) and apocalyptic ambience (Chelsea Wolfe, Emma Ruth Rundle), alongside a slew of genre-bending, mind-blowing and generally weird rock fare.

Helms Alee fall into that latter category, and on their third record Sleepwalking Sailors, the Seattle trio offer a masterclass in the art of diversity with a sound that straddles the lines between sludge metal, noise and math rock. Vocal duties are split between all three members, resulting in songs like ‘Tumescence’ that shift in tone from boisterous to vulnerable to pensive over the course of a single verse. Guitarist Ben Verellen takes on the majority of the vocal load, oscillating between a heavily-reverbed clean delivery that hangs in the air and an animalistic howl that resembles a call-to-arms.

But it’s the riffs, rhythms and unexpected turns where Sleepwalking Sailors really shines. As good as this year has been for metal and its various offspring with standout releases from YOB, Earth, Pallbearer, Tombs and so many more, I challenge anyone to find a moment in heavy music this year more compelling than the closing 60 seconds of ‘Heavy Worm Burden,’ a song that transforms from a sludge jam into heart-wrenching transcendence as the low end drops out in favour of wailing, bent guitar strings and sublime sermonizing. For fans of Torche and Big Business.

Earth — Primitive and Deadly

Thursday, September 18th, 2014

There are two kinds of “genius” in the music industry, it seems. There are those who make gluttonous oafs in suits (never enough) money. They collude with corporations to persistently break and enter, through relentless self-69ing gimmicks such as free albums accompanied by confusing statements about how free music will kill the children, through obfuscation of the vapid emptiness of their work with shallow titillations and “transgressions,” and populating broadcasts and diatribes about what is “classic” simply because they have provided a successful and sickeningly efficient business model to boardrooms that wouldn’t know timeless music if it skullfucked them with all of the courtesy and tenderness of a daisy-cutter bomb leveling whole suburbs of Baghdad.

Then there are people like Dylan Carson and Earth… the ones who genuinely shape the future of music with everything they play, not because they want to, but because it’s simply in the nature of their honest and sincere expression. It’s also in the nature of such a seraphic beast to ignite such passion in those touched by their work whilst seemingly being passed over for the broader recognition the band deserves (even among circles with supposed more alternative tastes). This is not to say Earth are without their accolades. But if you are uninitiated, immerse yourself in their catalogue and you will be asking why you have not heard of this group before.

Earth are back with Primitive and Deadly, an incredibly diverse and detailed album that merges the distinctive phases of drone, heaviness, and country blues in their work over time into something that is so lofty it could have been recorded via a vast array of radio telescopes in a desert wasteland. The new album may divide those who had become accustomed to Earth’s incarnation as an instrumental group for the last 18 years. Yet, it would take a pretty stodgy, stubborn outlook to not be thoroughly moved by Rabia Shabeen Qazi’s spotlight performance on ‘Through the Zodiacal Light’. Since this song was showcased as the earliest teaser for the new album a few months ago, not unreasonable comparisons have been made of Qazi’s vocals to the wailings of Jex Thoth. Qazi more than matches that duality of Thoth’s languid and the possessed. The song’s marriage of ecstatic relief whilst morosely slipping away is a superb highlight in Earth’s whole catalogue, never mind just the album.

We’ve known this for a while now; and, such a preview ratcheted up the expectations. It turns out that the rest of Primitive and Deadly does not disappoint. Indeed, Earth didn’t get here by any other means than by showing everyone else how it should be done. The way they play and evolve together is as natural and relentless as their namesake, with subtle and stealthy movements of such hypnotic effect cleverly disguising the detailed and explosive creativity coursing volcanically beneath.

The record begins in devastatingly heavy form through ‘Torn By the Fox of the Crescent Moon’.  It’s tempting to call it Swedish melodic death played at 16rpm. Yet Carlson can effortlessly begin playing a riff as though it is pure metal, only to finish his phrasing with an emotive change of gears into desolate blues. Listening to the way this man writes for his instrument, it can be no surprise that he is now admired by icons that preceded him. Rarely is playing so thoughtful and considered something that sounds so effortless and flowing. His jam alongside Brett Netson on ‘Even Hell Has Its Heroes’ is another decisive pointer to this man’s supernal talent.

‘There is A Serpent Coming’ and ‘Rooks Across the Gate’ feature the album’s other guest vocalist, Mark Lanegan. Whilst it’s stating the obvious to observe the different tone he is going to offer to Qazi’s performance, there is certainly the same soulful expression that matches Earth’s playing quite well, albeit in a somewhat more understated way in the overall mix.  ‘Rooks…’ is arguably the high point of the record, if it is at all possible to identify the summit. The best music is full of contradiction. Here is something heavy yet delicate, intoxicating in its beauty whilst lyrically morbid.

Primitive and Deadly is, in a word, magnificent. Amidst such an eruption in recent weeks of amazingly good releases, Earth have reminded everyone that they are bona fide pioneers. Having already achieved a sincerely influential status with their earlier works, this new album shows that they remain at the head of the pack, gods amongst their many beautiful children.