Archive for May, 2015

Noiseweek: Hope Drone, Neurosis, Swans and KU?KA

Saturday, May 30th, 2015

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

NEWS

Every Tuesday is now Record Store Day, sort of, thanks to the American Association of Independent Music. Participating retailers will now devote the second day of the working week to specialty vinyl releases, new vinyl pre-releases ahead of other formats, reissues and special pressings.

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Alex Griffin — who you might know as a life is noise contributor, Tiny Mix Tapes writer, Ermine Coat player or just a general top bloke — has launched his own zine talking about all things musical over at Bonzerzine. He’s kicked it off with a review of Perth outfit Verge Collection and an interview with the fine folk of Shit Narnia. Dig it.

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In jealousy-inducing festival news, Riot Fest has revealed the bulk of the line-up for the 2015 iteration which takes place in Chicago, Denver and Toronto over three weekends in August and September. Iggy Pop and Motorhead get top billing at multiple stops, while the festival’s biggest leg in Chicago appearances from Faith No More, Drive Like Jehu, L7, Echo & The Bunnymen, Death, Indian Handcrafts and a slew of yet-to-be-announced acts. You can check the full line-up at riotfest.org.

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Seoul is now host to a tremendous public vinyl library with over 10,000 records. The venture is the latest in a series of library projects by credit company HyundaiCard and follows on from their Design and Travel Libraries. The Music Library also carries over 3,000 books and every issue of Rolling Stone from the last half-century. You can check out the website here. [via FACT]

READ

Why Swans Whipped Sheet Metal and Licked CBGB’s Floor to Make ‘Filth’ | Rolling Stone

“Although the band’s initial release, 1982’s Swans EP, built off of the city’s dying no-wave scene, the ensemble came into its own with its debut full-length, Filth, the following year. Full of lumbering rhythms created by two bassists, two drummers, one guitar, a whipped metal table and some suffocating tape loops, the record is primal art rock at its most vitriolic, anticipating industrial, sludge and noise-rock in one fell thump. More threatening, Gira intermittently snarls imperatives about power – “Flex your muscles!” “Take control and keep it!” “Don’t talk until you’re spoken to!” – in a way that made Henry Rollins sound like Olivia Newton-John at the time, as the band dismantled rock to its most threadbare essentials.”

Feurio!!!! The Strange World Of Einstürzende Neubauten | The Quietus

“There are many legendary bands who name is a shibboleth for a certain kind of taste or knowing insiderism, but whose recorded output is less adequately attended to than it deserves to be. High on that list of bands are avant-noise German collective Einstürzende Neubauten, a band from West Berlin born from the apocalyptic Cold War paranoia that gripped that city for decades, whose music is famous for the explosive din produced its unusual and repurposed instrumentation. Over their three and a half decades of operation this has included jackhammers, sheet metal and fire, an instrumentation perfectly suited to the broken terrain of a city smashed into submission and never properly rebuilt.”

LISTEN

KU?KA — Flux 98

Is Laura Jane Lowther synesthetic? The intensely lush textures that fill every space of Lowther and company’s songs are so rich in sensory detail that it feels like she’s almost translating the taste of colour into soundwaves. Flux 98 is the third single from her forthcoming EP, Unconditional, and channels sounds from above the clouds and below the ocean’s surface, awash in high-end synths and Lowther’s distinctive heightened falsetto. Unconditional is out August 14 through Midnight Feature.

Hope Drone — Every End Is Fated In Its Beginning

Australia’s Hope Drone — who you may have heard are now signed to Relapse fucking Records — have released the first taste of their forthcoming long-player, Cloak of Ash, which is due out July 14. The 9-and-a-half minute track is brimming with the ecstatic dread, marrying ferocious black metal intensity with hazy ambience over a daunting two-chord refrain. Expect big things.

WATCH

Neurosis — Times of Grace at Maryland Death Fest

MDF is consistently one of the strongest heavy festivals of the year. If you’ve been following the LIN Facebook, you probably saw our commander-in-chief’s live updates from the front lines with YOB, Conan, Ufomammut, Melt Banana, Full of Hell, Inter Arma and a metric fuckton of metal’s finest. Professional live footage has been hard to come by, but this crowd clip from Neurosis’ set is nothing to sneeze at. Even from 100 feet back on video, Neurosis is a stunning and exhausting behemoth of a band.

Sam Prekop — A Geometric

Like a degraded VHS tape playing old Windows Media Player visualisations, the video from Sam Prekop’s A Geometric is an analog-to-digital mindfuck of colours and shapes. There’s something vital lost in our HD aesthetic, and the lo-fi strobing geometry from video artist Nick Ciontea is a perfect match for Prekop’s pulsating and oscillating synths. A Geometric is taken from The Republic which is out now on Thrill Jockey.

Algiers — Algiers

Wednesday, May 27th, 2015

Modern post-punk is a lot of things, but it’s rarely been a source for social commentary. Recent albums from Gang of Four and The Pop Group made simple social criticisms in-line with their traditionally political material, and new releases fro Mourn or Sleater-Kinney added a feminist perspective to an otherwise masculine musical scene. But these bands are the exception in the modern incarnation of the genre, which is still predominantly white, mostly male, inward-focussed and largely apolitical. It’s nothing to do with the sound, or even necessarily the politics of the performers. It’s more about their focus and their privilege. Post-punk, as a genre, differentiated itself from punk primarily by focussing on subjects other than politics: dissonance, aesthetics, and musical experimentation. As time went on, the political undertones inherited from old-school punk have mostly died away, and the white men responsible for keeping the dream alive have focussed on these factors to the detriment of everything else. Think about the use of Nazi imagery by Danish post-punks Iceage or Joy Division drawing their name from the concentration camps in Nazi Germany. Post-punks are never really white supremacists, most of them are left-wing, highly educated people, but they draw from the same imagery as white supremacist groups to generate their mood and atmosphere. And when mostly young, white men are attracted to the scene, these images are unremarked upon, merely a part of the subculture. This, coupled with the lack of any kind of contradiction from the lyrics, leads some critics to make the obvious associations with a fascist ideology. Algiers are immediately different, and it’s not just because of the sonic inspiration from gospel and soul readily apparent from the first seconds of their upcoming album. Politics are important to the band.

Even the Algiers website shows this right away, posting up traditional post-punk with social criticism and actual Marxist theory: a well-defined, unique, and undeniably post-punk aesthetic. ‘Remains’ begins with a cold, monotonic synth line and the rhythmic stomp of drums and clapping hands, followed by a chorus of hums and a blues-inspired vocal line that drives forward into a cinematic cacophony that sounds like a deep-south revival church singing through a nuclear apocalypse. The mix of southern blues and post-punk bears a family resemblance to The Gun Club or The Flesh Eaters, but it’s so much more than that, taking on something of the atheist-friendly spiritualism of Swans in its sonorous, religious sense of power. Following that is the atonal, tribal throbbing of ‘Claudette’, which grinds along with its melodic vocals pitched atop a wall of broken-sounding guitars and mechanical synths, before finishing in deconstructed pop, and the next track, ‘And When You Fall’ starts with a sonar beat and lo-fi electronic drumming, adding a walking bassline, fuzzy-sounding computerized synths and passionate, politically-motivated lyrics. “When it all falls down, you’ll know exactly who we are,” Franklin James Fisher shouts, and a chorus of angry voices sing out in reply. It’s a singular and powerful experience, like a lecture breaking out into a riot. But Algiers aren’t just a band or a political statement; they’re a manifesto for the genre they belong to, and their combination of atypical musical influences and radically unapologetic left-wing politics with the angularity and nihilism of post-punk expresses its unexplored potential for social change and future innovation.

Rather than relying exclusively on dissonant guitar effects or clichéd and offensive Nazi iconography, Algiers draw their energy and frightening sense of power from real-life social inequality, apathy, and the challenges of change. This strong political position is reflected most clearly in tracks like the flawless ‘Irony. Utility. Pretext.’, the passionate ‘Black Eunuch’ or the damning confessional ‘Blood’. The lyrics to all these songs are posted on their Youtube videos, because unlike a lot of other artists in their genre, the lyrics matter: “For all your love of soma, all my blood’s in vain, you say your history’s over, all my blood’s in vain, your television coma, all my blood’s in vain, it’s gone too far to change,” Franklin sings in ‘Blood’, using dystopian classic Brave New World to make a powerful case that our addiction to media and lack of interest in the future makes a mockery of all the social movements of the past that shaped the world we live in today. It’s a thoughtful piece of social commentary delivered with raw power and total conviction in a modern genre where personal expression is usually married with political ignorance or apathy, and it still manages to follow all of the sonic and emotional conventions of the genre it belongs to. It’s a breathtaking achievement, and the most original-sounding debut of the year.

Without attempting to commandeer the personal experiences that the album clearly represents, this feels like a generation-defining sort of a release. Like Joy Division’s Unknown Pleasures, or The Sex Pistols’ Never Mind The Bullocks. Something new has happened here that goes beyond the current wave of post-punk revival and into something else, a revolutionary, intellectual, and profoundly original musical creation that not only highlights the creativity and diversity of modern underground music, but also its potential to discover new sounds and landmarks we never could have thought about before. Algiers are a breath of fresh air, and whoever you are, you need to hear this album. It’s one of the strongest new releases of the decade. If change is not impossible, this band will change the world.

Algiers — Algiers

Wednesday, May 27th, 2015

Modern post-punk is a lot of things, but it’s rarely been a source for social commentary. Recent albums from Gang of Four and The Pop Group made simple social criticisms in-line with their traditionally political material, and new releases fro Mourn or Sleater-Kinney added a feminist perspective to an otherwise masculine musical scene. But these bands are the exception in the modern incarnation of the genre, which is still predominantly white, mostly male, inward-focussed and largely apolitical. It’s nothing to do with the sound, or even necessarily the politics of the performers. It’s more about their focus and their privilege. Post-punk, as a genre, differentiated itself from punk primarily by focussing on subjects other than politics: dissonance, aesthetics, and musical experimentation. As time went on, the political undertones inherited from old-school punk have mostly died away, and the white men responsible for keeping the dream alive have focussed on these factors to the detriment of everything else. Think about the use of Nazi imagery by Danish post-punks Iceage or Joy Division drawing their name from the concentration camps in Nazi Germany. Post-punks are never really white supremacists, most of them are left-wing, highly educated people, but they draw from the same imagery as white supremacist groups to generate their mood and atmosphere. And when mostly young, white men are attracted to the scene, these images are unremarked upon, merely a part of the subculture. This, coupled with the lack of any kind of contradiction from the lyrics, leads some critics to make the obvious associations with a fascist ideology. Algiers are immediately different, and it’s not just because of the sonic inspiration from gospel and soul readily apparent from the first seconds of their upcoming album. Politics are important to the band.

Even the Algiers website shows this right away, posting up traditional post-punk with social criticism and actual Marxist theory: a well-defined, unique, and undeniably post-punk aesthetic. ‘Remains’ begins with a cold, monotonic synth line and the rhythmic stomp of drums and clapping hands, followed by a chorus of hums and a blues-inspired vocal line that drives forward into a cinematic cacophony that sounds like a deep-south revival church singing through a nuclear apocalypse. The mix of southern blues and post-punk bears a family resemblance to The Gun Club or The Flesh Eaters, but it’s so much more than that, taking on something of the atheist-friendly spiritualism of Swans in its sonorous, religious sense of power. Following that is the atonal, tribal throbbing of ‘Claudette’, which grinds along with its melodic vocals pitched atop a wall of broken-sounding guitars and mechanical synths, before finishing in deconstructed pop, and the next track, ‘And When You Fall’ starts with a sonar beat and lo-fi electronic drumming, adding a walking bassline, fuzzy-sounding computerized synths and passionate, politically-motivated lyrics. “When it all falls down, you’ll know exactly who we are,” Franklin James Fisher shouts, and a chorus of angry voices sing out in reply. It’s a singular and powerful experience, like a lecture breaking out into a riot. But Algiers aren’t just a band or a political statement; they’re a manifesto for the genre they belong to, and their combination of atypical musical influences and radically unapologetic left-wing politics with the angularity and nihilism of post-punk expresses its unexplored potential for social change and future innovation.

Rather than relying exclusively on dissonant guitar effects or clichéd and offensive Nazi iconography, Algiers draw their energy and frightening sense of power from real-life social inequality, apathy, and the challenges of change. This strong political position is reflected most clearly in tracks like the flawless ‘Irony. Utility. Pretext.’, the passionate ‘Black Eunuch’ or the damning confessional ‘Blood’. The lyrics to all these songs are posted on their Youtube videos, because unlike a lot of other artists in their genre, the lyrics matter: “For all your love of soma, all my blood’s in vain, you say your history’s over, all my blood’s in vain, your television coma, all my blood’s in vain, it’s gone too far to change,” Franklin sings in ‘Blood’, using dystopian classic Brave New World to make a powerful case that our addiction to media and lack of interest in the future makes a mockery of all the social movements of the past that shaped the world we live in today. It’s a thoughtful piece of social commentary delivered with raw power and total conviction in a modern genre where personal expression is usually married with political ignorance or apathy, and it still manages to follow all of the sonic and emotional conventions of the genre it belongs to. It’s a breathtaking achievement, and the most original-sounding debut of the year.

Without attempting to commandeer the personal experiences that the album clearly represents, this feels like a generation-defining sort of a release. Like Joy Division’s Unknown Pleasures, or The Sex Pistols’ Never Mind The Bullocks. Something new has happened here that goes beyond the current wave of post-punk revival and into something else, a revolutionary, intellectual, and profoundly original musical creation that not only highlights the creativity and diversity of modern underground music, but also its potential to discover new sounds and landmarks we never could have thought about before. Algiers are a breath of fresh air, and whoever you are, you need to hear this album. It’s one of the strongest new releases of the decade. If change is not impossible, this band will change the world.

Noiseweek: KEN mode, Old Baby, Earth and EMA

Sunday, May 24th, 2015

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

READ

Fuck The Police: A Musical Sentiment From NWA To Ferguson | The Quietus

““This is non-violent protest music”. So said Ice Cube recently in an interview announcing a forthcoming biopic of his former group N.W.A. His claim is rather timely. “Fuck the Police”, the musical refrain popularised 1988 by “the world’s most dangerous group”, is having something of a moment. Occasioned by collective anger at American law enforcement’s proclivity for murdering Black men at the rate of once every 28 hours, the song — or rather, songs — deserve inquiry.
Dismissal of Ice Cube’s claim is likely. N.W.A. are better known for lyrics depicting misogyny, homophobia and violence without which many of their songs would be, if not altogether silent, at least palpably shorter. There’s also a tendency to reduce ‘Fuck The Police’ to cliché progressivist demands for free speech, as both Ice Cube and the schlocky narrative of the N.W.A. film imply (imagine Ice Cube as the Jim Morrison/Val Kilmer character).
But as jaunty parody backed by James Brown’s ubiquitous ‘Funky Drummer’ break, N.W.A.’s ‘Fuck The Police’ registered a changing lived reality for a substantial portion of America at the hands of a brutal form of policing and the prison industry it feeds. In doing so, it laid out a set of affects that would echo across the better part of nearly three decades of hip-hop.”

Ian Curtis: 35 Years To The Day Of His Death, Why The Enigmatic Joy Division Frontman Remains British Indie’s Greatest Unknown Pleasure | NME

“He was certainly adept at living a double life, and not just from Deborah, who he was unfaithful to for long periods of time with Belgian journalist Annik Honore. With the benefit of hindsight, we can see Ian’s inner turmoil exert itself through his lyrics and manic performances, but away from the stage, his welling melancholy was well-hidden from the bandmates he didn’t want to alarm or disappoint. Even as he was planning to kill himself, he convincingly feigned enthusiasm for Joy Division’s upcoming American tour, so much so that drummer Stephen Morris has admitted that, “Looking back, I wish I’d helped him more. I think that all the time… But we were having such a good time, and you’re very selfish when you’re young. Epilepsy wasn’t understood then. People would just say, ‘He’s a bit of a loony — he has fits.’”

Young Hearts, Run Free: On Camp & Australia’s Eurovision Entry | The Quietus

“If Susan Sontag asserts that camp is “its love of the unnatural: of artifice and exaggeration”, then this year’s Eurovision entry might do some good. It’s almost an oxymoron, but Australia just needs to chill. We get it, we’re the romantic, rugged country with a masculine veneer, but please, just for three minutes, can we not be weirded out by the inherently excessive, camp spectacle that is Eurovision?”

LISTEN

KEN mode — Management Control

KEN mode are at a fascinating turning point in their career. Everything about the Steve Albini-produced Success sounds like the band at their most fresh, raw and vital. The marked shift in aesthetic — from metallic hardcore to Shellac-influenced, straight-up noise rock — has probably raised a few eyebrows, and on Facebook, the Winnipeg trio sound almost desperate that their ambitious reinvention pays off. If the four tracks released so far are any indication, Success should pay off — whereas “Blessed” and “These Tight Jeans” flirted with self-indulgence, “Management Control” and album closer “Dead Actors” represent the band at their most deliberate, channeling the Albini influence through a measured brand of fury that few can replicate. Success is out through Seasons of Mist and June 16 and is available for pre-order on Bandcamp.

Old Baby — New Music

With little fanfare and not even a proper title, Old Baby have released one of my favourite records of the year. The Louisville, Kentucky, outfit — which boasts members of Slint, Young Widows, alongside many of that city’s unsung heroes — have traded in the doomy flirtations of their 2013 debut, Love Hangover for a diverse, psych-tinged desert blues odyssey. There are some odd turns — the quintet sink into an effortless funk groove on “Necessary” before returning to uncomfortable meditations on “Visions” and “Comedown.” And there’s a beautifully off-kilter vibe that permeates throughout the entire record, from the tripped-out, Egyptian-influenced geometry of the cover art to the sinister melodies in the backgrounds of each song and the deadpan invocations of vocalists Jonathan Glen Wood and Evan Patterson. This is music for road trips to parts unknown.

WATCH

Earth Live from the Islington Assembly Hall in London

Watch a professionally-shot set from the drone trio’s latest British outing.

Under the Influence: Krautrock

Part three of Noisey’s music documentary series looks into the context and history of krautrock, featuring interviews with members of Can, Neu! and modern-standard bearers in every genre of contemporary music.

EMA on Coastal Frequencies

Live and interview footage with Erika M. Anderson from her latest record.

A Minute With The Pissedcolas

Thursday, May 21st, 2015

Before they support Boris at the final show of their Australian tour, we spend a minute with The Pissedcolas and find out what’s new…

Describe your music in five words or less.
Pisco poured into cola can?.

What’s going on in the world of The Pissedcolas?
All: We are currently waiting for Francisco Perez, a Chilean artist, to send us the artwork for our new release entitled Glue Gun, so we can finally send the finished tracks off to the pressing plant. We have been having heaps of fun playing shows with our friends to raise the money to independently release the LP. In our spare time we like to jam and then play basketball and hang out with Evie the dog.

What motivates you to make music?
All: All of our personalities combined. We are all pretty determined to create, so it works well.

What have been the high and low points of your musical experiences so far?
Cam: Highest time was too high to remember… I felt the lowest frequencies at the last Perth Boris concert.
Megs: All high points with the pissedcolas.

What music are you listening to at the moment?
All: Pink Floyd, Om, Can, Hawkwind, Ty Segall.
?Fabian: Heaps of music from bandcamp, It’s such a good platform in the 21st century. Also heaps of Shit Narnia and heavy shit?.

If you were stranded on a desert island, which member of the band would get eaten first?
Cam: Hopefully Meg, you know… not in a malicious way. And hopefully all of us at the same time.
Megs: I was gonna say Alex but I changed my mind to Cam due to his answer.

Here’s an opportunity to bitch about something, whether music related or not. What really pisses you off?
Negativity, such a downer man.

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.
Buffalo, Hydromedusa, Coloured Balls & Rowland S Howard at Dadas.

The Pissedcolas join Mt. Mountain in support of the final show of Boris’ at The Rosemount Hotel on Monday, June 1. Tickets on sale now through lifeisnoise.com.

Anger Management: Sepultura

Wednesday, May 20th, 2015

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

I remember in 1996 seeing videos on MTV and Rage of Sepultura out in the jungles of Brazil playing metal with painted faces, raw attitude and emotion. These guys were everywhere back in the day. Roots was the album that seemed to create a lot of interest in them from mainstream media, they sounded and looked rejuvenated. Recording the album with the Xavante tribe in the Mato Grosso rainforests of Brazil, it features guest musicians such as Carlinho Brown, Jonathan Davis of Korn and Mike Patton on the track “Lookaway”, so the haters were tarring it as a failed attempt to bring nu metal to thrash. Sepultura were experimenting with more a groove metal sound on Chaos A.D. prior to Roots anyway, so they already set that precedent.

Gloria Cavalera managed a pool hall, and started putting on bands playing with makeshift stages built around pool tables. Poison and Sacred Reich started off there, and later when the place got shut down, Gloria was approached by Sacred Reich to manage them. She toured with them around Europe and there was a lot of talk (mainly from Monte Connor of Roadrunner) for her to manage Sepultura and keep the family strong and together instead of being seperated by world tours. It all went horribly wrong on the Monsters of Rock tour in 1996, when Gloria’s son Dana Wells died in a car crash while Sepultura were away on tour. Drama ensued, the whole thing blew up and Gloria quit the band along with with Max Cavalera.

Max was no longer comfortable in the band he created. Max claims Andreas Kisser was taking over, or taking the band hostage in its dealings with Gloria. Andreas Kisser claims Gloria was fired from the band and Max left with her, so it’s he said, he said, she said, enough said.

Roots ended up being the final release with its more well-known and loved lineup. Sepultura have gone on with Derrick Green and put out more and more albums, while Max has moved on with Soulfly, Cavalera Conspiracy etc, none reaching the heights Sepultura did back in the day.

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

Arcturus — The Arcturian Sign

Tuesday, May 19th, 2015

The exact date is lost; but, there is one day back in 1996 that will always live in memory until it decays beyond recognition. Going out to check the mail at my house on Stirling Street, I found a single envelope, which contained a promotional CD. It came from a label I had not had prior contact with, Ancient Lore Creations. It would turn out that this label was linked to Misanthropy Records, who had been releasing Burzum’s records, run by Tiziana Stupia whom I was regularly in touch with at the time. I had never heard of the band, called Arcturus. The leaflet that came with the disc advised that this was their first full-length studio album, Aspera Hiems Symfonia. Ulver’s Garm was on vocals, with Mayhem’s Hellhammer on drums. That was intriguing, to say the least. I put the disc in my player. The next six minutes and forty-six seconds after that blew my brains out. It took some time before I was even able to hear the second song. To that date, it was the most amazing record I had heard come out of Norway. Behind the Mirror’s listener poll for that year (which, at the time, was certainly no small thing) had four songs from the album in the ten best songs of the year. It was an explosive musical event. Yet, it was barely imaginable even then how amazing and unique amongst European extreme metal the following albums would turn out to be.

La Masquerade Infernale and The Sham Mirrors are regarded as two of the very best avant garde metal albums ever made. The technical ability of the band was astonishing, displaying musicianship that was virtually derisive of Arcturus’ peers. The demented jester character of Garm personified in his distinctive vocal delivery placed Arcturus firmly in experimental territory, preventing the blazing lead breaks and virtuoso instrumentation from bogging the band down in a prog singularity trapping them in the niche of tech nerdism. Songs like “Ad Astra”, “The Chaos Path”, “Kinetic”, and “Radical Cut” were the peak of metal at their time, even if ‘the market’ may have not said so. “Ad Astra” was almost certainly the first black metal song played on RTRFM’s Out To Lunch, which in 1997 was an astonishing concept.

After The Sham Mirrors, Garm left Arcturus, with his musical direction well and truly having departed metal for good at that point. With that, 2005’s Sideshow Symphonies was inevitably Arcturus’ most divisive album. Simen “ICS Vortex” Hestnæs’ vocal performance was outstanding; however, he was always bound to be subjected to ferociously resistant criticism when stepping into the shoes of such an enormous creative personality. Despite its quality, the album did, in all honesty, lack the more bizarre elements of Arcturus’ 2nd and 3rd albums. At a concert in Melbourne, Vortex greeted the audience with the words “Welcome to the last Arcturus concert, ever!” Not long after that, the band confirmed that this was true, with the band breaking up.

Around 2011, the net began to buzz with rumours that Arcturus were reuniting. By September of that year, it was a reality, at least in the live performance sense. Three years later, the band announced that they were recording new material. The news was greeted with a mix of skepticism and people absolutely losing their fucking minds.

So, nearly ten years after their previous album, Arcturus are finally back with Arcturian, out through the German label Prophecy. Reunions are often a lottery, with nostalgia often clouding the judgment of even the best musicians. In Arcturus’ case, they have judged their position very well.

Arcturian begins with the fan base wholly wrong-footed, much like the secret track at the beginning of La Masquerade Infernale or Hallucinogen’s In Dub album. A passage of nu-skool breaks shows that Arcturus have lost none of their warped sense of humor and capacity to toy with their audience, magnified in this context by their full awareness of the trepidation over a reunion and the debate over their last album. Within half a minute they have exploded into their unmistakable sound. In metal, it is a matter of great difficulty to sound unlike any other. When you hear Arcturus, you know exactly who it is. “The Arcturian Sign” announces that this new album shall be no different.

So, with it having been over a decade since Garm left Arcturus, one would hope people are well and truly over the expectation that the band should sound like Garm is still the vocalist. It’s metal; so, we all know this will never be the case. You can’t make everyone happy. Vortex really steps out and well and truly makes the role his own on this new album. Like a deranged drunkard space pirate, he traverses an enormous range of styles, shifting in and out of deftly executed prog vox into berserk intoxicated off-key wailing and then ferocious black metal insanity.

There is a rawness and wild nature to the sound of Arcturian, perhaps not as rigid and polished as the first four albums. I have read that the recordings are of live performance in the studio, avoiding the tricks of digital sterilization that can often leave so many metal records sounding mechanical and devoid of anything organic. This may unsettle those determined in their preference of the pronounced sheen of previous albums. Alongside the vocal delivery of Vortex, it feels a wholly apt decision to go for something more alive and less processed.

Across Arcturian, there is a kaleidoscopic sound in the songs not present since the band’s second album. With the band having formed out of the mind of keyboard player and principal composer Steinar Sverd Johnsen, electronics have always played a big part in the band’s sound and remain ever present with greater stylistic diversity. Those wonderful strings that first appeared on “Ad Astra” provide, as ever, some of the great highlights of the record, such as in the cases of “Crashland”, “Pale”, and “Bane”. And, as always, the musicianship is of a level as though everyone else is just playing a game. These guys are heroes without the usually associated deluge of fromáge.

What Arcturus has managed to do with Arcturian is make, by far, their best album in nearly 20 years. It should be taken as a good sign that this is a band that causes arguments amongst metalheads, and this album will be no different. It is a testament to their uniqueness, established so long before American darlings were heralded as taken the genre to “new levels”. Arcturian shows the star will continue to burn brightly for some time still. Welcome back!

Arcturian is out now through Prophecy.

Two Minutes With Crypt

Monday, May 18th, 2015

We spend a couple of minutes with Crypt before they support Boris in Adelaide and find out what’s new…

Describe your music in five words or less.
Whiskey-soaked doom, occult rock ‘n’ roll.

What’s going on in the world of Crypt?
Heaps at the moment. We launched our debut EP at the beginning of the year and have been touring that. We played a couple shows in Melbourne last month and we’re headed to Brisbane at the end of May. We played with Space Bong and Horsehunter on the Adelaide leg of the Bonghunter tour, and we are fucking excited to be supporting California’s The Shrine, and also Japan’s Boris, which we are all big fans of! And somewhere in between all that we have a pile of songs we are trying to get finished for our 12-inch we have planned for early 2016.

What motivates you to make music?
Money and girls and drugs in no particular order… Actually, most of the band have partners, so I guess just the money and drugs!

What have been the high and low points of your musical experiences so far?
Lows? I don’t think we’ve been a band long enough to experience actual lows. It’s been pretty fun so far, maybe more frustrating than low is with six of us and most of us having multiple bands and projects it’s extremely hard and frustrating to bring it all together. its a lot of hard work. But having said that when the six of us are firing it’s fucking brutal! The live show is where it’s at for us and a definite high so far was our EP launch in January… middle of summer but we had some bullshit 30-year storm and it was pissing with rain, but well over 200 people came out which is huge for a local lineup in Adelaide. Worldsend hotel is a semi-outdoor venue so it was basically rock ‘n’ roll dance party in the rain. We worked pretty hard leading up to that night so the party went well into daylight! Good night!

What music are you listening to at the moment?
The soundtrack to our Melbourne tour was AC/DC and Turbonegro. Nothing like peak hour on the ring route into Melbs screaming she shook me all night long! So that has been drilled into our heads, but also Church of Misery , Midnight Ghost Train, Howling Wolf, Bongripper and Sleep,

If you were stranded on a desert island, which member of the band would get eaten first?
I know the diet of half the guys ain’t pretty — they are all smoked and pickled so whoever lands in the pan won’t be gourmet. Me and Steve are too old… tough meat. King sits in a recording studio all day so he would at least be tender, Tyson is way too pretty to be eaten and I’d feel bad. So that leaves Watson and Gully, who have been mates since school so I wouldn’t wanna separate them, so probably fry the two of em up together

Here’s an opportunity to bitch about something, whether music related or not. What really pisses you off?
Ugh, this is supposed to be two minutes, so I won’t even touch our current government situation, ’cause we are fucking doomed. What pisses me off? How about the commercialization of the phrase ‘DIY’. Some bands, artists, whatever like to tack that on for credibility, but are in actual fact full of shit. There is a whole culture of genuine DIY people, getting it done with out the mainstream even knowing.

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’s an small independent Adelaide festival called Scumfest. It’s put on in the old Queen’s Theatre which is this big run down warehouse sorta situation, with the theatre facade still intact. The atmosphere is is fucking amazing. Normally like 20 bands or something, art, screen printing, half pipe, food, booze. It’s a 12 hour party. So I guess if I could hijack that and and magic back some old bands… Bon Scott era ACDC in a warehouse? So fucking good! Um, awesome Aboriginal band from the 80s called No Fixed Address, Rose Tattoo, Cold Chisel. Man trying to think now… us, Crypt of course, Schifosi, Hydromedusa, Drowning Horse, The Jerks, Horsehunter, Whitehorse. If we can make it like a week long festival gig maybe we can fit in all the bands I’d wanna see!

Crypt join Last Days of Kali in support of Japanese noisemakers Boris at Fowler’s Live in Adelaide on Sunday, May 31. Tickets on sale now through lifeisnoise.com.

Noiseweek: 13th Floor Elevators, High on Fire, Methyl Ethyl and Todd Tobias

Friday, May 15th, 2015

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

NEWS

The Bakery held its final show on Saturday, celebrating its last day with a ridiculously stacked 14-hour extravaganza. (How fucking good were The Wednesday Society? My god.) It’s a huge loss for Perth music and it’ll be a long time before another space emerges to fill the void, but there’s some good venue news on the Western front (for once). Plans are in motion for a new music space in Wolf Lane in a room that formerly housed a manufacturing base for fashion retailer Pierucci. You can follow updates on The Sewing Room — which has just lodged its plans with the City of Perth — on Facebook.

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Pitchfork and others are reporting that prolific D.C. noise rock duo Royal Trux are set to return for LA festival Berserkertown in August. So far it’s the only date for the two-piece who broke up in 2001

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In yet more reunion news, Blabbermouth is reporting that Phil Anselmo’s Superjoint Ritual are set to tour the US, according to a recent interview from drummer José Manuel Gonzales. The thrash outfit broke up in 2004 before reuniting for a one-off performance at Housecore Horror Film Festival in October last year. Anselmo had previously insisted that the show would be the band’s only time sharing the stage together — despite insisting years prior that a reunion was an impossibility — adding further proof that every single goddamn band in the world members who are breathing and at least half a dozen fans will reunite at some point. Superjoint Ritual are set to play Hellfest in June.

READ

Ask Andrew W.K.: ‘How Do I Become A Successful Musician?’ | The Village Voice

“The traditional modern concept of success — being the measurement of monetary income as the primary indicator of effort and mastery in a certain field — is essentially a scam, a con, and a lie. To equate success with an amount of money earned, or an amount of fame achieved, is at best an unfortunate miscomprehension of the very nature of success. At worst, it’s a malicious distortion.”

Saluting Ronnie James Dio, metal’s uncool godfather | The A.V. Club

“The album that finally resulted from the lineup turmoil—Butler also left during the sessions, though he returned before recording finished—was Heaven & Hell. Dio’s presence as a lyricist and driving songwriting force revitalized the rest of Black Sabbath. Iommi’s riffs and solos, previously rooted almost entirely in the blues, began to incorporate the neoclassicism that Dio learned from Blackmore in Rainbow. The songs began to shift between high-tempo (for Sabbath) blasts and moody, atmospheric passages. And, of course, Dio’s fantasy lyrics were a departure from Butler’s tales of war, women, and drugs. Despite the album’s commercial success, the change in direction led to an exodus of old fans. The Dio era is still a point of contention among Sabbath fans, though a string of successful reunion tours from 2007 to 2009 under the name Heaven & Hell renewed interest in his records with the band.”

How to take a picture of rock ‘n’ roll | i-D

“Back in the pre-Instagram days, folks were in it for the love (not the likes). Iconic music photographers such as Glen E Friedman, Henry Diltz, and London DJ/punk documentarian Don Letts — whose 1978 The Punk Rock Movie shot on Super 8 footage featured all the key players in the UK punk movement (The Clash, The Slits, The Sex Pistols) — were capturing a piece of history. In LA, the show From Pop to the Pit is currently showing electric, rarely seen archival portraits of the bands that shaped the city’s music scene from 1978–1989 shot for the now defunct Herald-Examiner. These camera-wielding renegades were in pursuit of those vulnerable and fuck-all moments that happen backstage, in the pit, and in an infested alley behind a venue. From hazy-days with Diltz, Woodstock’s official photographer who spent the 60s with Joni Mitchell and the Laurel Canyon Folk Scene, to stage-diving with Edward Colver, the gritty punk photog who chronicled the birth of American hardcore and snapped early portraits of Bad Religion and Minor Threat, nostalgic images have shaped our understanding of a formative time.”

LISTEN

High on Fire — The Black Plot

The new High on Fire sounds just like High on Fire, which is just fine, because High on Fire sounding like High on Fire is better than most other things. Pike makes his guitar sound like an actual screaming banshee at the beginning of the bridge. Honestly, listen to that moment around 3:53 and tell me that doesn’t sound like the horrid scream of some harbinger. The cut is from their forthcoming 7th LP, Luminiferous, a concept record about the social engineering of the nebulous Elite, which is out June 23.

Methyl Ethyl — Twilight Driving

On every song, Methyl Ethyl exist on some kind of utopian celestial plane where the sun never sets and the the whole world is a coastline. Twilight Driving harbours an ever-so-slight sinister undercurrent in its verses, as if the whole veneer could shatter at any moment.

Todd Tobias — Suvarnabhumi

Something lurks beneath the lush melancholia of this first track from Todd Tobias’ forthcoming Tristes Tropiques. The imagery in my head is organic yet machinic, like a Vangelis-scored nature documentary. Tristes Tropiques is out June 9.

WATCH

The 13th Floor Elevators — You’re Gonna Miss Me (Live at Austin Psych Fest Levitation)

The last time this band played together, LBJ was president, the Stooges had existed for only a year and Matt Pike wasn’t even born. The psychadelic stalwarts’ first show since 1968 closed Austin Psych Fest Levitation marked 50 years since their formation in the Texas capitol and closed the proceedings of the ridiculously stacked festival that boasted Earth, Lightning Bolt, Primal Scream, Thee Oh Sees, Nothing, A Place to Bury Strangers and Chelsea Wolfe. 47 years between shows. Think about that.

Two Minutes With Narrow Lands

Thursday, May 14th, 2015

There’s difficult listening and then there’s Narrow Lands. From the opening note on their 2013 long-player, Popular Music That Will Live Forever, the Sydney outfit stake their claim on a furious brand of industrial-strength aural brutalism that recalls the best of Shellac, early-Earth and Boris.

Fitting then that they’ll be opening proceedings for the second of Boris’ two Sydney shows on Friday, May 29. We spent a couple of minutes with frontman Alan Power to find out what’s new.

Describe your music in five words or less.
Toxic sludge with occasional choruses

What’s going on in the world of Narrow Lands?
We recorded an EP late last year which was then accidentally shipped (literally, on a boat) to England when our bass player moved overseas. So we just got that back and we’re in the process of deciding whether it’s shit or not. And also we are freaking out about supporting Boris.

What motivates you to make music?
Pretty even mix of the horrors of everyday life + a desperate and childish desire to impress people.

What have been the high and low points of your musical experiences so far?
Low point probably the whole first 3 years of the band where we weren’t very good.

High point probably YIL/NL, where we teamed up as a 7-piece with fellow Sydney noise-punks Yes I’m Leaving and somehow played a coherent(ish) gig without exploding the PA at Black Wire.

What music are you listening to at the moment?
Low Life.

If you were stranded on a desert island, which member of the band would get eaten first?
Probably me, Alan. Mutiny. I’ve been a tyrannical frontman these years, they’d turn on me pretty quick. Plus I’m diabetic, so I’d be the first to die anyway without my insulin. They wouldn’t even have to make the decision. Too easy.

Here’s an opportunity to bitch about something, whether music related or not. What really pisses you off?
Hard to pick just one, but I’m gonna go with zxcvawergbr gret78675u6 @#4!!!#$ (that’s my brain exploding trying to focus all hate on one thing). Probably the way this country treats asylum seekers, and the way most of the population is apparently fine with it.

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.
Jeez, ok. I’m going with Mere Women, Low Life, Zeahorse, No Art (RIP), Tanned Christ, Nun, Yes I’m Leaving, Danyl Jesu, Total Control ’cause they hardly ever play and I’ve never seen em, Burlap, Forces, Multiple Man, Snakeface, Bone, Making, and for the token nostalgia band maybe ‘90s era Dirty Three so we could see Warren without his beard. Beardless Warren could be the MC as well. This would be held at the Lane Cove West Bowlo ’cause it’s about 150 metres from my house.


Narrow Lands join We Lost The Sea in support of Japanese noise titans Boris at the Newtown Social in Sydney on Friday, May 29. That show has sold out, but tickets for the Thursday, May 28 show at Newtown Social — along with the rest of the Australian tour — are on sale now through lifeisnoise.com.