Archive for June, 2015

Noiseweek: Black Sabbath, Mogwai, Lanark, Spirit Level

Sunday, June 21st, 2015

The sights, sounds and words of the week in noise.

READ

At Breaking Point: Black Sabbath’s Sabotage Revisited | The Quietus

“It was also almost inevitable that at some point the band would reach a creative crossroads. Iommi wanted to keep experimenting in the studio and investigate new directions, while Ozzy hankered after the early years of knocking it out in a few days and then hitting the road. The spectre of the emerging American FM radio sound also looms over Sabotage as the band’s popularity in the US continued to mushroom (my favourite example of the apparent disconnect between Sabbath’s proto-doom metal and the stadium rock culture they were increasingly living inside is their performance at the California Jam show in 1974 – Ozzy implores the audience, “C’mon, let’s have a party!!” while Iommi stands in front of a giant rainbow grinding out the opening chords to ‘Children of the Grave’). All of which makes for an album that’s reaching out to more mainstream rock tastes (without fatally over-balancing yet) while also trying to pull new rabbits out of the hat – the fact that it’s as enjoyable, and at times genre-defining, as it is shows how imaginative and resilient Sabbath were even under considerable duress.”

Eric Avery Talks Selling Out | The Talkhouse

“In spite of being raised in a household financed by a struggling actor, I didn’t learn anything useful in my young life about the challenges of living on an artist’s unreliable income. In my adolescence, punk rock taught me that you never sell out. Ever. Of course, things like selling out were entirely theoretical at that point. No one was trying to pay me a salary to make music — I couldn’t even yet imagine it. Just a few years later, though, I was able to leave my last day job selling Dr. Martens boots at a small store called NaNa’s. The surprising popularity of my band, Jane’s Addiction, and the money we made in spite of the fuck-all attitude of our decision-making, enabled my youthful, uncompromising artistic worldview to extend far beyond my adolescence. I hadn’t yet found a replacement that incorporated both the creative life and its newly acquired dimension of regular employment. Artist, not yet artisan.”

Looking at 20 Years of Mogwai | Pitchfork

“We tend to believe that art is—or at least should be—an all-encompassing thing: If you’re doing it right, you aren’t doing anything else, and your identity can’t help but be consumed in the process. But Mogwai’s longevity suggests that good art isn’t synonymous with self-destruction or self-delusion; nor is it endangered by normalcy or decency—in fact, it can be built on those things.”

LISTEN

Spirit Level — Wanderer

There’s an intoxicating quality to Spirit Level’s simple repetition. The jangly acoustics almost recall the tinny treble of old video game soundtracks, and I can’t tell if the images of landscapes conjured on my head are of real meadows or waves of pixel green. In any case, this latest taste from Lyndon Blue and Rupert Thomas is perfect zone-out music for lazy Sunday afternoons.

Facemeat — Compliments To Your Band

Like some kind of Mr. Bungle-soundtracked Lynchian nightmare, the first track on Questions for Men induces furrowed brows, indigestion and inexplicable feelings of arousal. Facemeat are the antidote to easy listening. Questions for Men is out August 25 through Art as Catharsis.

WATCH

Lanark — Mojave (Live at Foxhole Studios)

Judging by their recent live shows, Lanark’s new material has taken a sinister shift, forgoing Damian Diggs’ celestial vocal melodies for an alternating synth/guitar assault that moves from comfortably sublime to nervous and unsettling several times a song. Last month, the quintet debuted another new cut at the recently-opened Foxhole Studios, forwhich the pro-shot video has just emerged. There’s a welcome heaviness to the track, and though it’s likely a good half-year before anything’s put to wax, exciting things are ahead for one of Perth’s best-kept secrets.

Anger Management: Voivod/At The Gates

Wednesday, June 17th, 2015

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

Originally released on Record Store Day and set to be first of three Voivod split releases this year (the other two being with Napalm Death and Corrections House), this tasty little treat is a reminder of how creative and innovative Voivod can be within the thrash metal spectrum.

“We Are Connected” is a 7-minute opus that fuses thrash with prog influences and psychedelica. It is still mind boggling how Daniel ‘Chewy’ Mongrain can effortlessly emulate original (the sadly deceased) guitarist Denis ‘Piggy’ D’Amour’s totally unique playing style and sound. It’s thrash metal but it’s also melodic, atonal, heavy, skronky and bizarre. Hopefully this will appear on a new album. This is also the debut of new bassist Dominique “Rocky” Laroche who fits in just fine.

The At The Gates contribution “Language Of The Dead” was originally released last year as a bonus track on certain editions of last years At War With Reality album. It’s a solid if slightly unremarkable track that has a nice solo and some clean guitar near the end. I guess bonus/unreleased tracks are just that, a nice curiosity left off the main album for a reason.

Critical Mass airs every Wednesday from 9PM (GMT+8) on RTR FM 92.1 in Perth, Australia.

Church — Unanswered Hymns

Tuesday, June 16th, 2015

It is an uncommon thrill that a band’s first release brings with it the promise of a great future. What is rarer and verging on the surreal is when a first release clearly shows that a group of artists are already the real deal, deserving of being spoken alongside the greats that inspire them. Whilst it might be preferable to avoid “inflicting” hyperbole upon first steps, once in a long, long while the response to a new project can be so viscerally moving that it seems unavoidable. It takes time and consideration to be sure, to understand that something is more than just a novelty in the context of a vast and lengthy listening experience. When something makes you feel that way you did when you first fell in love with a particular musical style, such esteem becomes undeniable and essential to express.

Church are a doom metal band formed in recent years out of Sacramento, California. They are Eva on vocals, Matt on drums, Ben taking bass duties, and Shann and Chris responsible for guitars (the later contributing some backing vocals to their work and the individual responsible for bringing the band together). After starting live performances in early 2014, Church released their first songs in April 2015, Unanswered Hymns, through Transylvanian Tapes. The cassette version became available just over a week ago and later this year a 180g vinyl edition is planned for release through Battleground Records. The band’s ethos is that the music should “speak for itself”. It must then be said that, from the first moments, their eloquence is astounding. Church sound like they were born to speak this way.

“Dawning” opens Unanswered Hymns at 19 minutes in length. Introduced by a riff that succinctly clarifies where Church reside on the heavy spectrum, it is when the bass and drums join in that the sound sucks all of the breath out of you, immediately elevating the composers above the dense proliferation within the stream. The guitars are so dense, rough, and filthy, but without severing any of the detail and clarity. With the distorted bass and monstrous drumming ominously filling space behind them, Church billow forth as something primal yet musically articulate and succinct. Nothing is lost in going for such power and volume, in reaching for a production that is blissfully suffocating with its weight.

The result is an atmosphere that is immense and precipitous, put together in commanding fashion. With each engaging and meditative movement, “Dawning” relentlessly creates an epic listening experience, climaxing with an oozing tidal wave of aggression like watching all that you hold dear consumed by an inferno in oneiric slow motion. Church clearly understand that the path to great doom is through simplicity and patience, gradually adding details that amplify the drama of a piece to a level of crushing gravitas. The standard is set very high for the songs ahead.

“Stargazer” follows on from the dark and restless trepidation of “Dawning” as a song awash with profound melancholia. It has been written here before: there is something triumphant in the deepest, most heartfelt doom, even when it is at its darkest and most mournful. “Stargazer” exemplifies this. It is grief at its most pure and vulnerable, spoken of to the world from a place where the artist is completely consumed by such feeling… whilst knowing that there is something better, one’s sights fixed firmly upon the light and possibility from the position of complete loss. After the chilling screams and funereal procession of riffs that compose the song’s beginnings, a gorgeous and lachrymose lead wails onwards, so simple and elegant in its sadness, so full of longing for what is beyond the pain of the immediate. “Stargazer” is a reminder that when doom is played with such emotional sincerity there is not much else around in the world of heavy music quite as powerful and satisfying. There are bonus points for the Tom G. Warrior grunt on 7:57. It’s rare that a familiar garnish on a creation is such a perfect touch.

The final track is “Offering”, retaining all the characteristics Church have exhibited on the first two tracks whilst momentarily bringing the tempo up (just ever so slightly). Initially, the song takes things a little more towards a stoner rock direction. Whereas “Dawning” may have been more baleful in its aggression, like gazing into the eyes of a gorgon, “Offering” paces about the room like a wild beast on the verge of erupting in a fit of destructive cruelty. Midway, the riffs transform back into a creeping funereal mantra, building ominously towards denouement. Gradually, the dirge disintegrates into a malevolent altered state of feedback-driven noise, fading into exhausted calm.

Whilst the instrumental aspects of Unanswered Hymns are just dripping with quality, there is no question as to what lifts Church up to the divine. The vocals of Eva Rose on this release are simply spectacular. Her shrieks, backed up by the bellows of guitarist Chris, are like gale force storms of ice upon your skin. The clean lyrical passages, each one of them ethereal and stately masterpieces, are filled with beauty and menace all at once. Every word is sung with such intense feeling and distinctive tone, crowning the music with that sincerity that burns as Church’s soul.

As previously inferred, it has taken some time to get around to writing about Unanswered Hymns. The effect it has is so powerful and personally resonant that one has to take the time to be sure, pinching yourself until you bleed, to wake up from the dream they have created. With considerable reflection, the songs are definitely up there with many of the great doom records heard across decades. Church’s will to create emotion on such an epic scale is irresistible. One becomes overwhelmed and completely lost in the scale of their solemn overtures and the tremendously heavy sound invoked to create them. You could not ask for more from music of this style.

Unanswered Hymns is out now through Transylvanian Tapes.

The Black Captain hosts RTRFM’s Brain Blood Volume this weekend at 1am (+7GMT), Sunday the 21st.

Two Minutes With Hobo Magic

Monday, June 15th, 2015

Hobo Magic deal in grooves: thick, fuzzy and bathed in a smoke of haze. There’s only a smidgen of Sabbath worship built into their self-titled debut and it’s skillfully hidden behind masterful riffage and a supersized rhythm section. Before they support Pallbearer at Crowbar next week, we spent a couple of minutes with the trio to find out what’s new.

Describe your music in five words or less.
Groovin’ spaced-out sonic ride.

What’s going on in the world of Hobo Magic?
A shitload of train hopping and drinking moonshine. Yeaaah, nah. We’ve been vibing out hard playing some rad shows in Brisbane and the Sunshine Coast with killer local and international bands, jamming new tunes for our next album, meeting some gnarly people and working on our first ever Australian tour and release in August which is going to be wild!

What motivates you to make music?
The state of the world today, major issues that most people choose to ignore, music is the perfect way to push a message and speak some truth! We also have such a rad time playing together and vibing with everyone at shows, listening to good music, seeing people have a good time and all share that connection at shows also is the best! There’s loads of inspiration through the bands we play with and that always keeps us wanting to groove harder… Brisbane has such a killer music scene!

What have been the high and low points of your musical experiences so far?
A kinda low but funny point was at one of our first gigs at the Salvos Youth Club in Noosa. We had a group of frustrated teens throw glow sticks at us as we grooved out. We found it hilarious but I guess they just wanted a campfire jingle instead of a Sweet Leaf cover. High points for me have been putting out our first release, playing in Melbourne to so many rad people, supporting Red Fang and Windhand and pretty much every time we play together rules hard!

What music are you listening to at the moment?
Besides the old school Classics, the past few weeks new music I’ve been digging is Bill Withers, loads of Rush, local Brissy groovers Black Deity, Curtis Mayfield, Miles Davis and a new favourite band of mine Danava who tear it up.

If you were stranded on a desert island, which member of the band would get eaten first?
I’d say Carter… unless hes upped his wrestling game.

Here’s an opportunity to bitch about something, whether music related or not. What really pisses you off?
When you get keen on the rider beers but there’s none left, the state of the Abbott Government, the fact that all Australians don’t have the right to get married, mining, dredging in the great barrier reef and when I break a new string at band practice is a killer!

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.
There are so many rad Australian bands past and present so this is a hard question, but right now I’d say Black Deity, AC/DC (Bon Scott era), Buffalo, Hydromedusa, Smoke, Prowler and maybe a cheeky Hobo set at the end, set up by the side of Lake Weyba in Noosa!

Hobo Magic join Lizzard Wizzard in support of Pallbearer on June 21 at Crowbar in Brisbane. Tickets on sale now through lifeisnoise.com.

Noiseweek: We Lost the Sea, Sunn O)), High on Fire and more

Friday, June 12th, 2015

The sights, sounds and words of the week in noise.

NEWS

Sunn O)) have launched a new Bandcamp page to document their live recordings. The collection spans from 2002 up to their most recent UK run last month, with each show going for $5 a pop.

*

Buzz Osborne tore into the latest contribution to the Kurt Cobain mythos at The Talkhouse last week, calling Montage of Heck “90%” bullshit. Now Osborne has elaborated on his critique in an interview with Riff You, questioning why people would ever believe Courtney Love and claiming people’s incredulity towards his position stems from his lack of wealth: “One of the biggest problems I’ve had with this scenario is that I am not really rich. If I was really rich, the respect with that would come…people would believe me more. Because I’m not, they don’t believe me. So be it. That’s 100% the truth. If people think I am gaining something from this, they’re out of their minds.”

READ

High on Fire Talk Aliens, Acid and Why New Album ‘Doesn’t Suck’ | Rolling Stone

“I read a David Icke book, and it kind of woke me up a little bit. It doesn’t mean that I believe everything David Icke has to say, but I definitely don’t disagree with the guy when it comes to certain esoteric aspects of how I perceive the world. There’s too many credible people who have been abducted by aliens. There’s too many things that have been written in ancient scrolls and ancient tablets, things that Zecharia Sitchin brought to light. I’ve been to Peru, I’ve been to Egypt… a civilization builds ziggurats and pyramids that we couldn’t build today, and you’re going to tell me that they used stone-age building materials? It doesn’t make any sense. There’s a lost history of mankind; I find it fascinating, and I tend to sing about it.”

Mark Kozelek and Feminist Guilt: Why I Won’t Boycott Sun Kil Moon | SPIN

“So, what do I do now that Kozelek has directed his infamous ire at a peer? Am I supposed to be surprised? I’m not. I didn’t need a chauvinistic email to reveal it. But are the events of the last week — year, even — supposed to make me cut ties with Red House Painters and Sun Kil Moon indefinitely? Is it my duty to embargo his music as a woman?”

Music Festivals in Your Thirties | The New Yorker

“St. Vincent opens her show with an announcement read by a Siri-like computer voice stating, “Please refrain from capturing your digital experience.”
Twenty-year-old me thinks, “Boo! How am I supposed to enjoy this show if I can’t hold up my phone to record it, thereby blocking everyone’s view, and then never watch it again?!”
Thirty-year-old me thinks, “Sensible and pragmatic. I approve.””

LISTEN

We Lost the Sea — A Gallant Gentleman

The first track from We Lost the Sea’s third album opens like the beginning of a eulogy — somber, reflective and reverent, with gentle guitars that ripple like breaks in still water. But what emerges as the track unfurls is triumphant, as choral harmonies breathe vitality into the song’s earnest tones, and before long this is not a eulogy but a celebration of life and triumph and, quite simply, one of the most moving pieces of post-rock I’ve ever heard. A naive reading would suggest this is a tribute to the band’s late frontman, Chris Torpy — in any case, it’s a remarkable deployment of post-rock’s sensibilities and an exciting preview of what’s to come. Departure Songs is out July 23 through Art as Catharsis.

Goatsound Studios cover Black Flag’s Damaged

Last month, Jason PC Fuller of Melbourne’s Goatsound Studios / The Ruiner gathered together 15 artists to reinterpret Black Flag’s Damaged to benefit Sea Shepherd. That collection is now available on Bandcamp under pay-what-you-want pricing, though aficionados are encouraged to donate as all proceeds go to Sea Shepherd. The collection includes a rare vocal performance from Hotel Wrecking City Traders on “Thirsty and Miserable,” a plodding sludge cover of “Police Story” from The Ruiner, a ball-busting rendition of “Gimmie Gimme Gimmie” thanks to Acid Vain and contributions from The Kill, The Sure Fire Midnights, Watchtower and more.

WATCH

Jerusalem In My Heart — If He Dies, If If If If If If

The next release from Constellation Records is the second record from Jerusalem In My Heart, a transcontinental, multi-lingual collaboration between Radwan Ghazi Moumneh and Charles-André Coderre. Much of the Constellation Records catalogue remains mysterious to me, owing to the diversity and multi-disciplinarian tendencies of its various artists, but there’s a beauty in that mystery in this age of knowledge. The above teaser is unsettling but fascinating and ties into Coddere’s visual art practise, which involves re-photographing images and chemically treating them. If He Dies… is out through Constellation on September 4.

FÓRN — Suffering in the Eternal Void

In an act of ultimate doom, funeral sludge outfit FÓRN played a show in a cave, and yesterday, they released their entombed performance as the official video for Suffering in the Eternal Void. Unsurprisingly, the acoustics in a cave are awful, but the visual document is compelling — how many people can say they’ve played in a fucking cave?

Two Minutes With Looking Glass

Thursday, June 11th, 2015

Before they support doom giants Pallbearer in Sydney, we spend a couple of minutes with Canberra metal stalwarts Looking Glass and find out what’s new.

Describe your music in five words or less.
Cosmic, ephemeral, guitar, bass, drums

What’s going on in the world of Looking Glass?
We’re just finishing up recording our fourth album and working on tunes that might end up being on our fifth.

What motivates you to make music?
Life would be desolate without it.

What have been the high and low points of your musical experiences so far?
Lows — when Clinton moved to Perth for two years.
Highs — heading to NZ three times and supporting Saint Vitus.

What music are you listening to at the moment?
The Birthday Party, Graham Central Station, Goatsnake and Rush.

If you were stranded on a desert island, which member of the band would get eaten first?
Lachlan. He is the least thin and vegan anyway.

Here’s an opportunity to bitch about something, whether music related or not. What really pisses you off?
Josh from I Exist having his guitar stolen by scum from a gig on the Central Coast last week.

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.
The Birthday Party, Hard-Ons, The Easybeats, Tigerflesh at the Terrace Bar, Canberra (RIP).

Looking Glass join Hawkmoth in support of Pallbearer at Hermann’s Bar in Sydney on Saturday, June 20. Tickets on sale now through lifeisnoise.com.

Flyying Colours — ROYGBIV

Wednesday, June 10th, 2015

Melbourne shoegaze band Flyying Colours have received a lot of attention in the UK and Europe recently after the international release of their 2013 self-titled debut EP early last year. Since then, they’ve become the overseas ambassadors for the local shoegaze scene, an unexpected novelty for UK and American critics unfamiliar with the bulk of similarly-inspired music played by a growing number of independent artists in Australia since at least 2010. In 2013, Flyying Colours set themselves apart with their crisp production, pop hooks and pitch-perfect, energetic live shows. With the band returning to Australia at the end of their UK tour, local shows announced, and the national release date of last month’s new album still yet to be confirmed, now seems like the proper time to talk about their new material. Their latest EP, ROYGBIV, named after the colours appearing in the rainbow, is receiving rave reviews from international critics on account of its quality and novelty as a British sound coming from an Australian band. But here in Australia we’re familiar with many acts like Flyying Colours, with local bands like The Laurels, Day Ravies, and Nite Fields all putting their individual spin on the same basic set of stylistic inspirations. Without the sense of novelty experienced by international critics, is the Flyying Colours second EP still going to be worthy of your time?

Opening track ‘I Don’t Want To Let You Down’ is the same driving, My Bloody Valentine-inspired shoegaze as their last EP, but recorded in crisper, higher definition sound. The lo-fi edges of the last release have been smoothed out into bass-driven, radio-friendly dream pop, while still maintaining the grinding, Loveless–inspired guitar riffs that give the band their heavy edges. This sort of sound is still relatively hard to find in local artists, most of whom rely on gothic or post-punk references to generate their darker undertones, though Flyying Colours are adept with those as well. Second track ‘Running Late’ is closer to this more Australian sound, with a Cure-esque guitar riff placed under dual accented vocals, and driven along by urgent, militaristic drumming. This is followed by the ethereal opening strains of ‘Not Today’, where bass and guitar driven high-tempo rock is matched with languid melodic vocals for a pleasingly psychedelic effect. ‘In The End’ begins with a similar combination, taking the same mix of low-energy vocals and high-speed instrumentation, but adding distorted guitars and Disintegration–era Cure riffs to create more of a gothic feeling, and closing track ‘Leaks’ brings these all of these disparate styles together: with a classic mix of psychedelic rock, goth, and shoegaze, pulled into the structure of a pop song. It’s a strong closer that represents all the best aspects of their old and new material, and, like the best finishing tracks, it lingers long after the album is over, making for one of the more memorable tracks on the album.

ROYGBIV doesn’t represent much of a change in style from the Flyying Colours of previous records, but it’s tighter, cleaner and more confident than anything they’ve done before. It also still sounds relatively original, drawing more overt inspiration from British bands like Ride or My Bloody Valentine than any of the other comparable bands coming from Australia at the moment. But it shares a problem with their last release in that still, with a runtime of only 20 minutes, it’s disappointingly brief. Taken together as a single package, the two EPs offer a glimpse of what would have been a breathtaking debut, but without the space to properly explore its many influences, it falls a little short of its potential. Still, even without the novelty it might afford to overseas listeners, this is a really strong release. ROYGBIV stands apart from other new releases from other Australian shoegaze bands, and is strong enough to compete in its own right on the international stage. If you’ve never heard the band before, the new album is as good a place as any to discover them, and if you’re already a fan, it’ll offer five tracks of tantalizing new material even better than the music on their old release. It’s a decent album, but hopefully the next one will be longer.

ROYGBIV is out now through Shelflife Records.

Two Minutes With Merchant

Monday, June 8th, 2015

Before they support doom metal giants Pallbearer in Melbourne, we spend a couple of minutes with Merchant and find out what’s new.

Describe your music in five words or less.
Fumes off the tar pit.

What’s going on in the world of Merchant?
Oh boy we have heaps of stuff coming up! Just last week we were anounced to take part in one of the Melbourne legs of the Pallbearer tour, which is a huge acheivement for us. We definitley look up to those guys an their music alot, so it feels awesome tocnsidered worthy enough to join them in the bill. Otherwise, we have been lining up shows for the rest of the year, which is always exciting. Even more exciting is that after this Pallbearer gig, we will be diving back into the writing, to conjure up some more crushing riffs for all the boys and girls.

What motivates you to make music?
I guess the main thing is spending time working with some of your closest and oldest friends. But other than that, I guess it’s just because we love to play and write! To try and follow in the footsteps of our idols and torch bearers of the scene, both locally and overseas. Personally, I just love playing shows, to see everyone having an awesome time rocking out to your music, it’s a pretty humbling feeling.

What have been the high and low points of your musical experiences so far?
Oh man, there have been plenty of highs and lows. I can really only speak for myself here, but there have been times when I’ve been stuck in bands where trying to make music is like trying to draw blood from a stone. That was probably the lowest point for me musically, we all wanted to write and play, but not making any headway eventually led to commitment and perseverance levels to drop into unfortunate disbandment, but what can you do really? Music has to come naturally, to paraphrase a quote from Mike Sheidt of Yob. If writing is becoming something that you have to force, there is no point trying to write, as it’s not going to be genuine. That being said, there have been heaps of good times too, having the chance to record in a brewery, also playing a fundraiser for the Sea Shepard crew was pretty awesome too. But again, for me, its all about the rush of live performance.

What music are you listening to at the moment?
As much as we all have our similar tastes in music, mostly metal, but our tastes are rather broad at the same time. But for me, I am currently spining some new releases from local bands such as Watchtower and Horsehunter. But, just by going through my iTunes ‘recently added’ there are bands like Torche, Thou, Kogn and the Wounded Kings. But my go-to’s would be Conan, Cough, High on Fire, Sleep, Windhand, Elder, Bongripper, Electric Wizard and Yob, just to name a few.

If you were stranded on a desert island, which member of the band would get eaten first?
I couldn’t say exactly, but it would either be myself or Mirgy. Being that Nick is a builder so he is most useful, Wilson makes beer so he would be next in line for necessity. But then there is me, who works in a guitar factory, and Mirgy who installs fridge systems, so I guess it would be me, as Mirgy can run faster.

Here’s an opportunity to bitch about something, whether music related or not. What really pisses you off?
So we have all worked in bars before, and I think the unanimous decision between us and every single bartender everywhere, is people who put their money in the puddle of beer on the bar top, instead of putting into your open and waiting hand. I mean, how much of a dickhead are you? I’ve been working for 11 hours straight and now I have to grovel for your money. Jeez.

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.
The venue would definitely have to be the Metro/Palace Theater (RIP). The acts would probably be, Horsehunter, Watchtower, Grim Rhythm, Quiet Child and Matt Sonic and the High Times. Sick.

Merchant join Horsehunter in support of Pallbearer at the Northcote Social Club in Melbourne on June 19. Tickets on sale now from lifeisnoise.com.

Noiseweek: New Order, Kathleen Hanna, Chelsea Wolfe, KEN mode and more

Sunday, June 7th, 2015

The sights, sounds and words of the week in noise.

READ

Believe In A Land Of Love: New Order’s Low-Life 30 Years On | The Quietus

“Even as New Order were gearing up for a new phase in their career, the shadow cast by Joy Division still loomed large on the cultural landscape. Indeed, the bleakness of post-industrial Manchester that informed Joy Division’s music soon spread across the UK like a black, ominous cloud thanks to Margaret Thatcher’s administration. 1985 proved to be a watershed year. March 3rd saw the end of the year-long miners’ strike. The bitterest of British industrial disputes, the strike had seen communities torn apart and the increased levels of violence accompanying the dispute were broadcast with a sickening level of regularity on the TV news. Later in the year, both the Broadwater Farm estate in Tottenham and Toxteth in Liverpool were engulfed in terrifying riots. Sandwiched in between on May 29 was the Heysel Stadium disaster that saw 39 people crushed to death following crowd violence – an event that was broadcast live on national television and beamed into homes across the world. More than any other year, 1985 can be seen as the year that the lid was finally closed on the coffin of the optimism and liberalism that had been born in the 1960s. But not only that, the Conservative party jettisoned the idea of one-nation conservatism in favour of competition that led Thatcher to eventually declare that “…there is no such thing as society.””

I interviewed Mark Kozelek. He called me a ‘bitch’ on stage | The Guardian

“But in this life, Kozelek trades in sucker-punches. He impugns online “bitching and whining”, but hides behind one-way email exchanges, balks at the idea of his peers speaking about him and issues tirades (and sometimes, sexual advances) from the cowardly remove of the stage, with the get-out clause that it’s a performance. He can use sexually violent language to reduce female critics to the status of groupies, knowing that while male musicians’ misogynist acts are examined for nuance and defended as traits of “difficult” artists, women and those who call them out are treated as hysterics who don’t understand art. “The world don’t owe us shit, I learned that real fuckin’ young,” he sings on Universal Themes’ Little Rascals. If anything remains to separate Kozelek from his work, it’s that his music preaches that the least we owe one another is decency.”

Feeling Myself: Kathleen Hanna Get Back to Work | Pitchfork

“At the end of the Julie Ruin’s recent set at Barcelona’s Primavera Sound, frontwoman Kathleen Hanna makes for the wings, as if she’s about to let the rest of the band play out the final minutes. It seems like a strange end to her first performance on the continent in a decade, but it’s a feint: She suddenly turns, cartwheels back into the center of the stage, and lands in a perfect split. Within a few hours, a GIF of the moment is circulating online.
Not only is Hanna 46 years old (who among us can truly say they’ve ever been able to do that?), but this time last year, she was in bed, struck down again by a side-effect of Lyme disease. She’s been battling the chronic illness for years—her struggle can be seen up-close in the candid 2013 documentary The Punk Singer—and that latest relapse forced her to cancel what would have been the Julie Ruin’s debut European dates. “There was a period where I could barely do anything except paint watercolors in my journal,” she told me over the phone two weeks before the festival.”

LISTEN

Chelsea Wolfe — Carrion Flowers

Our second taste of Chelsea Wolfe’s forthcoming record is perhaps her most ominous effort to date, replete with a menacing, digitized beat like something out of a disaster film’s trailer. Carrion Flowers is one of several tracks to feature Russian Circles’ Mike Sullivan on guitars, returning the favour from Wolfe’s guest vocal appearance on the closing track of Russian Circles’ Memorial. But here, Sullivan’s trademarks are all dialled back — instead, his guitar is barely distinguishable, woven seamlessly into the simple bit foreboding rhythms that dominate the track. Expect this to be a top contender for album of the year.

KEN mode — I Just Liked Fire

The final preview from Success is KEN mode’s most tributary. Between the rapid-fire industrial guitars, Jesse Matthewson’s rabid bile-spitting and the song’s relentless speed, the Canadian trio are more than comfortable exposing their Jesus Lizard influence, but they do it almost better than anyone else (because, let’s face it, about 90% of noise rock bands are trying to write Shot).

Failure — Mulholland Drive

Failure have a tremendous task ahead of them with The Heart is a Monster, their first album in almost two decades. 1996’s Fantastic Planet was almost perfect, and I’d argue that its final five tracks make up possibly the best 25 minutes of music released in the 1990s. Tracks like Mullholland Drive and the previously released Hot Traveler are interesting, but leave me unconvinced — is it worth diluting a tremendous albeit obscure legacy with a comeback record that’s just OK? Then again, Failure have always been an album band, best enjoyed in large doses; Frogs and Macaque and Blank work so much better when placed in the ebb and flow of a 40-minute collection. Mulholland Drive retreads that familiar Failure territory of low-key balladry that’s steadily transforms with powerful guitars, staccato piano chords, unexpected melodic turns and distant atmospheres. And it’s good, but is it good enough?

WATCH

Chill out with a 20-minute studio set from dream-pop trio Dianas on the latest installment of RTRFM’s The View From Here.

Two Minutes With Warpigs

Thursday, June 4th, 2015

Before they support doom metal giants Pallbearer at their first Melbourne show later this month, we spend a couple of minutes with ambient duo Warpigs and find out what’s new…

Describe your music in five words or less.
Angelic, divine, cut throat blues.

What’s going on in the world of Warpigs?
We’ve just released our first full length, Natural Philosophy, on vinyl. It’s been a long time dream for us to have our music on wax and it feels great to finally have a product we’re not only proud of, but also feel represents so much of what we’re about.

What motivates you to make music?
Each other. A duo is much different from larger bands where there is always some element of compromise in music making. In Warpigs, we’re able to completely be ourselves, to completely create and play from our hearts. It’s a unique experience that allows us to draw from every and any influence.

What have been the high and low points of your musical experiences so far?
Playing live to air on PBS’s Pojama People was a great experience and one we’re truly grateful for. Playing live in general is always a high, the way we write our music allows us to embrace the moment and expand our songs to suit the setting. In this group I don’t think there really have been any low points, though that time Poly broke his foot was pretty shit.

What music are you listening to at the moment?
All sorts of stuff, it’s kind of hard to name anything in particular. Lots of local stuff, lots of bands we’re playing with. Melbourne/Australia has some awesome music.

If you were stranded on a desert island, which member of the band would get eaten first?
Probably Poly, he’s a vegan so he couldn’t eat me anyway.

Here’s an opportunity to bitch about something, whether music related or not. What really pisses you off?
Scenes, seriously wtf?! My 21st was at the Arthouse, the bands playing were Dreadnought, Fuck I’m Dead, Running With Scissors and Alarum. It was awesome. That lineup would never happen these days, and that is shit. There is nothing ‘punk’ about dressing the same as everyone else in the room.

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.
We already did this at our recent vinyl launch at the Gasometer Hotel, just wish it was a warmer night so we could open the ceiling.
The line up was, Magic Mountain Band, Warpigs, Goodbye Enemy Airship and Bonnie Mercer. We would’ve added The Boy Who Spoke Clouds, but we got him to mix the night instead.
There are so many great bands in Australia and we’d be happy playing alongside any of them.

Warpigs join Child in support of Pallbearer on June 17 at the Ding Dong Lounge in Melbourne. Tickets on sale now through lifeisnoise.com.