Archive for November, 2014

Anger Management: Old Man Gloom

Wednesday, November 19th, 2014

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

Old Man Troll?

OK, this one is gonna be confusing. Take a seat and listen up.

To some, Old Man Gloom came to prominence with the release of 2012’s NO LP. Mixing heavy sludge, doom, weird ambient collages and a dash of hardcore, the band turned heads with not only their sound but the pedigree of its members. Having Nate Newton (Converge), Caleb Scofield (Cave-In), Jay Randall (Agoraphobic Nosebleed) and ex Hydrahead Records Label boss/Isis frontman Aaron Turner amongst your ranks makes for some high expectations and they have delivered in making their albums and rare live appearances a hot ticket in the underground.

OMG have been a band since 1999, mostly releasing albums on the Tortuga Recordings label (a sub branch of Hydrahead). The albums have generally been a mix of longer droney/fuzzed out pieces (Seminar III: Zozobra) and ambient souncscape collages mixed with sludgy, more conventional ‘songs’ (Seminar III: Zozobra, Meditations in B).

After the release cycle of NO the band began work on new material in December 2013. It was announced in August 2014 that a documentary film would be released in October (Here Is A Gift For You) followed by a new album The Ape of God in November.

Anticipation was high and on November 4 the band posted something slightly throwaway (given the flippant/cryptic nature of the bands status updates), but important to note, on their Facebook page: “7 more days to the APE.
We will always lie to you.”

This was followed by an announcement that preorders for vinyl and CD copies would be available on different labels (Sige Records and Profound Lore). Whilst this is not really out of the ordinary, its also a telling sign of what was to come.

2 promo songs were released for streaming (‘The Lash’ and ‘Predators’) and review copies were sent to various review websites. Some high praise and scores were coming in and it seems like another top shelf release from the band. Some eagle eyed fans noticed that there were two separate versions of the new album for pre-order on Amazon. The band responded that it was probably a mistake and to thank fans for bringing it to their attention.

Then on November 7, a week before the album release proper, the band dropped a bit of a bombshell. You see, The Ape of God is 2 separate albums with different material. One version has 4 longer songs, the other contains 8 songs. Oh and that promo copy they gave to review sites that got leaked and you probably downloaded from a blog: that’s a fake copy.

Remember what they said earlier? “We will always lie to you.”

“Guess what, assholes. The Ape Of God is two entirely different albums. If you downloaded some leaked shit, you don’t have either. You have some bogus version we gave to press, cuz we knew those jerks would leak it (if you reviewed that fake record positively, thank you. We’re just THAT good).
We will always trick you.
We will always trick you.
We will always trick you.”

Well played guys. You trolled us all hard! Possibly one of the most well kept secrets in a long, long time. Arty pretentious wanky waste of time? Well, not really because the band has said that the “fake” version is still some quality stuff. “To be fair we, Old Man Gloom spent a lot of time on the music and putting together the “fake” version of the album. It is still music we believe in and 100% stand behind.”

So it seems that the fake version of this album contains a mix of tracks from both albums and some original material. The tracks that are actually on the official release, such as ‘The Lash’, are edited differently though (proper album version is just under 7 mins, the fake version is chopped down to 2:57).

So after all that, a careful prank/marketing scheme, what do the two albums sound like? Aaron Turner mentioned in an interview that, “With this record specifically, I tried really hard to make a more seamless synthesis of those two worlds. In a lot of the other records, it was split up in a more jarring and kind of cut and paste fashion where it was hard transitions between noise or ambient bits with the songs themselves. In this record, I really wanted to try to figure out how those things can be grafted onto each other or interwoven in a way that was really complementary and made them more of a singular thing rather than these bits that were sort of stitched together.”

That’s pretty spot on — the ambient/electronic parts tend to be smoother and more fitting. The sludgy riffing sounds awesome and very well produced. Vocals are a very Isis/Cult Of Luna-type roar.

At the moment ‘Predators’ is the best summation of their sound. The heavy and the sound-scapey. Old Man Gloom have pulled off the impossible, three times. You mad?

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

Craig’s List: Sterac

Tuesday, November 18th, 2014

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

After a blistering return on a recent Klockworks EP, Dutch techno practitioner Steve Rachmad aka Sterac is back with a cracking new track for Delsin. Originally released on a limited white label run earlier in summer, it now comes backed with remixes by Fachwerk’s Mike Dehnert, VRIL and US twosome Anthony Parasole & Phil Moffa, as well as with some typically textural and boutique artwork by the excellent Boris Tellegen.

The original track is a stripped back bit of dub, deep, rolling techno with icy percussion and subtle synths working to take over your mind and body alike. German Dystopian cohort VRIL, who has also appeared on this label before, turns in a dub mix that is more urgent and is fleshed out with even more dub synths and stern kicks. It’s supple and minimal but will certainly turn plenty of heads in the right club space. New Yorkers Anthony Parasole and Phil Moffa from the The Corner label then remix the track into something with paranoid synth loops, pounding drums and urgent, rave infections the longer it roll on. Finally, the one and only Mike Dehnert repackages the track as a swimming, funky bit of heavyweight techno. His weird hooks, coarse percussion and intense hats make it the most arresting and urgent of the lot.

This release is seriously streamlined, groove driven techno from a group of modern masters, and will be available on 8 December through Delsin.

Full Frequency with Craig Hollywood airs every Tuesday at 3PM (GMT+8) on RTRFM 92.1 in Perth, Australia.

Antennas to Heaven: Grouper

Monday, November 17th, 2014

Your weekly submersion into new and experimental music.

Despite the less than cheerful vibes surrounding the recording of Liz Harris’s latest offering, it’s hard not to gleefully welcome the outcome of her experiences, having allowed Harris’ emotions to filter into such naked vocals and gorgeously unadorned piano ballads.

This context is of course rampant speculation, but with tear-streaked gems like ‘Lighthouse’ and ‘Clearing’, it’s obvious Harris isn’t exactly declaring her unbridled lust for life.

The sounds here are lived in, forever captured in the moment of recording. Crickets chirp in the background and thunder bellows from outside as Harris’ voice flirts between a whisper and a hush with delicate subtlety.

To borrow a well-worn phrase — it’s as if Harris is playing in the same room; a private show for the listener who’s more likely a fly on the wall or a peeping tom watching in on something distinctly private and bracingly raw.

Makee

Friday, November 14th, 2014

Makee is the name given to the hazy beat creations of Dan Cavalli – who in the past was seen drumming in some bygone electronic acts out of Perth like The Transients and Druid Lee Roth. But this is an entirely new transformation.

For the past 10 years or so, Cavalli has been quietly dabbling in music production in his bedroom on “four tracks, samplers, sequencers and reel-to-reel tape… and some dodgy sequencing software” to create a five-track collection of sun-drenched, guitar-driven beats that’ll amiably have you drifting off to a place much more idyllic.

Perhaps hinting at Cavalli’s vast range of influences, this transgresses a whole span of genres, from disco to shoegaze, dreamy pop psychedelia and kosmische musik, all lovingly submerged in some atypical Balearic beats — which thankfully manages to surpass that genre’s cheesy associations.

Eclectic Australian label Hidden Shoal is releasing this one on November 19. In the meantime, get a taste of the opening track ‘bail’ right here:

Makee

Friday, November 14th, 2014

Makee is the name given to the hazy beat creations of Dan Cavalli – who in the past was seen drumming in some bygone electronic acts out of Perth like The Transients and Druid Lee Roth. But this is an entirely new transformation.

For the past 10 years or so, Cavalli has been quietly dabbling in music production in his bedroom on “four tracks, samplers, sequencers and reel-to-reel tape… and some dodgy sequencing software” to create a five-track collection of sun-drenched, guitar-driven beats that’ll amiably have you drifting off to a place much more idyllic.

Perhaps hinting at Cavalli’s vast range of influences, this transgresses a whole span of genres, from disco to shoegaze, dreamy pop psychedelia and kosmische musik, all lovingly submerged in some atypical Balearic beats — which thankfully manages to surpass that genre’s cheesy associations.

Eclectic Australian label Hidden Shoal is releasing this one on November 19. In the meantime, get a taste of the opening track ‘bail’ right here:

Sounds Like Hell: Zorch

Thursday, November 13th, 2014

Sounds Like Hell is an irregular feature on new and old noise rock oddities.

If Brooklyn psych-cultists Akron/Family got together with the dudes from El Ten Eleven and tripped really hard on a ranch somewhere in rural Texas, the resulting collaboration might sound a little something like this. Austin duo Zorch, part of the ever-growing and always excellent Sargent House family, employ drums, an array of synthesizers and a little singing to create kaleidoscopic flourishes of head-spinning noise, forsaking melody and structure in favour of blissful chaos.

It’s hard to simply listen to Zorch. Tracks like ‘Mutwa’ from their 2013 sort-of-eponymous LP demand are so dense that they conjure phantasmic imagery of the decadent light shows, meteor showers or the aurora borealis. If there’s ever a remake of Close Encounters of the Third Kind, these guys are a lock to score the film’s climactic interspecies symphony. For fans of psychedelics and insomnia.

Craig’s List: 10 Years of Perc Trax

Tuesday, November 11th, 2014

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

Starting as an imprint solely for Perc’s own productions, Perc Trax has grown in recognition and confidence each year since its first release in 2004. This year Perc Trax celebrates its tenth year of existence, during which time it has released over seventy vinyl singles and six albums, hosted showcases as far away as New York and Tokyo and recently spawned the Submit and Perc Trax Ltd. sub-­labels.

To celebrate a decade of releasing music Perc Trax looks to the future, releasing tracks from a mix of Perc Trax regulars including Truss, Forward Strategy Group, Sawf and Perc himself and names new to the label such as Clouds, Happa, Kareem, Drvg Cvltvre and Martyn Hare. These new tracks will be released as three separate vinyl EPs and will also form part of a 2xCD album. The first disc containing the new tracks, whilst the second disc is home to Perc’s first commercially available DJ mix.

Slowly Exploding is out now on Perc Trax.

Full Frequency with Craig Hollywood airs every Tuesday at 3PM (GMT+8) on RTRFM 92.1 in Perth, Australia.

Antennas to Heaven: Chord

Monday, November 10th, 2014

Your weekly submersion into new and experimental music.

For the sake of brevity, let’s boil down the overarching theme of “power ambient” group Chord’s aptly titled Progression into a simple exploration of sounds bound by three single-chord compositions. Continued explanation would only serve to further confuse, so let’s just say Chord are aiming for the sort of art/music/avant-garde movement that artists like William Basinski have explored in the past, taking an idea and using it to explore different expanses of sound.

This is the sort of music that may test the patience of its listeners, but to those who enjoy enveloping themselves in sound and giving a large portion of time to actually sitting down and taking those sounds in, Progression can prove a hugely rewarding experience.

The drolly-titled first track ‘E Maj9 9 (descent)’ is all serene hues of incandescent pianos and slow release drones, speckled with the throb of violin. It’s a slow burner for sure, but if ever there was means for music as mediation, or in light of incoming exams like music to calm the soul, this is it.

That being said, there’s enough variety here to elevate things beyond simple background music. On ‘Gm 11 (pelagic)’ rapid-fire tremolo riffs inform the surrounding ambience as the simple repeating motif underlays the rising tension between rumbling buzz saw drone and elegiac piano in a humble matrimony of blissful duplicity.

Sounds Like Hell: Anatomy of Habit

Thursday, November 6th, 2014

Sounds Like Hell is an irregular feature on noise rock.

Anatomy of Habit carry themselves with the same seriousness as Neurosis, which is to say that this is a group of people who do not fuck around when it comes to their craft. When I first saw them supporting Pelican in their native Chicago two years ago, that was what stood out: the religiosity of their musical expression, as though the music was part of a larger, unspoken ritual.

So it’s fitting that ‘Radiate and Recede’, the first of two tracks from their forthcoming LP Ciphers + Axioms, proceeds with like a netherworld hymn. While Neurosis flourish on catharsis and release, Anatomy of Habit prefer to let tension bubble to the point of listener discomfort. Mark Solotoroff’s doesn’t so much sing or speak as he delivers emotionless incantations over snarling guitars and dual percussionists who sound like they’re shattering glass with every beat. This is uneasy listening, equal parts beautiful and distressing, meticulous and psychologically draining, the way challenging art should be.

Anger Management: 1349

Wednesday, November 5th, 2014

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

Norwegian blasters 1349 are back with a new slab of scintillating, head-milling blast beats and riffs under the banner of Massive Cauldron of Chaos.

It’s fair to say that the last couple of albums have been hit and miss for this band, so when the new album found its way into the clutches of the Critical Mass team, there wasn’t quite the same degree of excitement when compared to the Hellfire days.

But right from the outset of this one, it’s all systems go with a style reminiscent of earlier albums with more superior production removing some of that milo tin drum sounds that “plague” (pun intended) some black metal bands.

Fun Fact – 1349 was the year of the black plague in Norway.

The buzzsaw-tuned guitars wind its way through the 8 MCoC tracks with distinction. The thrashy approach to traditional black metal is enhanced with some interesting vocal techniques employed by Ravn with his tried and true raspy style mixing in measured doses with haunting whispers, shrieks and echoed effects, which has taken him to the next level vocal wise.

The songwriting contributions appear to be shared among the members including everyone’s favourite Norwegian drummer Frost. Some of the solo’s sound a little dodgy, but its best moments are the middle section of the album.

For fans of Gorgoroth, Mayhem, early Satyricon, 1927.

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