29.10.12

Initial Recation to Converge's All We Love We Leave Behind

I haven't honestly cared about anything going on in hardcore for many years, except for Converge that is. It's not that I'm behind enough that I still think that hardcore is being dominated by cut and paste Hot Topic clones that were such a shameful blemish on the history of heavy music, I realize that hardcore has made some steps in the right direction over the past few years. It's just, well, why have knockoffs when you can have the real thing? And in this case the real thing does happen to really be that much better than everything else. Sure Trap Them and all the (verb)-er bands are great and I'd be lying if I said I haven't listened to them, but this isn't a Pepsi versus Coke argument. I dare someone to listen to this new Converge full-length and tell me that any other band imitating them isn't wasting their time. I'm also not trying to say that all the Deathwish/Entombed-core bands are ripping them off as some of them definitely have their own identity (I certainly wasn't trying to tear into Trap Them), but each Converge release is so consistently good that it pretty much satisfies any craving for fast, agressive music that I could possibly have. With each album they put out I always catch myself thinking the same thing: "there's no way that they are going to be able to top this one", and yet they are one of the only bands that has not only stayed relevant to their time, but have also continually assured that their legacy will go unblemished by pushing themselves further sonically and as songwriters. I think most Converge fans agree that Jane Doe is the band's magnum opus, but unlike some bands that have the pinnacle that will never be topped, Converge still doesn't dissapoint fans when they unleash another LP. In other words, is All We Love We Leave Behind really better than Axe to Fall, Jane Doe, or any of the other band's legendary releases? It doesn't matter, because each new Converge record is relevant to the time it's released in. You never hear a hardcore/metal fan say "I really wish the new Converge album was as good as Jane Doe" and the reason for that for me personally is that the fire I felt inside when I first heard that album is rekindled with every new Converge release. Sure things have changed and I may never be albe to recapture those feelings, but it's more about consistency than it is topping something.

So how is the new record unique? Well it's still Converge, but I think my initial reaction is picking up on slightly more thrash/punk/doom influence this time around, then again that might be because their last album Axe to Fall featured so many detours and guest spots. This record is more straightforward but still offers variety and has its own unique feel, just the same way all of their other albums do. It's rock and roll but presented in the most descructive and precise way possible, I'd have to say my favorite track so far is "Coral Blue". I'm giving it another listen right now and I can already tell I have a good AOTY contender, and of course I can already tell that my hardcore listening quota will be well satisfied until the next Converge album. Watch the video, the visuals accompany the songs really well.


Corey

3.10.12

New Godspeed You! Black Emporer?

I don't know if I'm just late to the game or if everyone else didn't know that this new album had leaked, but either way the cats out of the bag now. I'm just now listening to it so I haven't had time to let it fully settle in, as if my initial reaction is going to be anything else other than sheer wonder. I don't know if an actual digital copy is leaked or not but even if it was I wouldn't post a link because there is no justifiable reason to not spend money on GSY!BE (or any other artist that you like and claim to support). But anyway, this is awesome as predicted, but I can't say now how it stacks against their previous material. At certain moments they seem to have taken a cue from Grails and are imbueing a sort of Eastern dissonance into their music, but there is still plenty of mind-blowing epicness and innovation as usual.

4.9.12

Local Album Review: Narratives' Hell is Here


 
As it would seem, the "power-violence" hardcore scene in Rock Hill, SC is no joke right now. I'm not sure what this power-violence has to do with the spazz-core of the early 90s that relied on mathy, almost jazz influenced burst of grindcore but I guess I'm the wrong person to ask about all that. What I do know is that many hardcore and metal musicians around this area began attending the Converge/Cursed/Disfear school of blackened hardcore and began expanding into more crusty, desolate sounds from there. I personally think its kind of cool to still be able to imagine a heavy music "scene" in the day and age where everything is available to everyone everywhere in the world through the internet, so its interesting to me that a certain style of music seems to be flourishing in one area in particular. Rock Hill's Narratives aren't as new to this as some of these bands are though, they formed in 2008 with a more Coalesce-influenced approach that they stripped down into a more extreme punk attack. They've had plenty of time to grow and promote themselves, and their first release on a label "Hell is Here" just might be their introduction to the rest of the world.

 

Brevity has always been a big thing with these bands and "Hell is Here" is certainly no exception (this release is a whopping 8 minutes and 29 seconds). If you're familiar with this style of hardcore then you already know that this music's selling point has never been the amount of content that you per release, but Narratives also don't waste any time getting their point across.

 

Most bands in this genre come right out of the gate and pummel you with speed from the very beginning, but Narratives takes the more dramatic downtempo approach in opener "Bearing". The bleak opening chords sound like they were scraped out of the bottom of a gutter and the track does a nice job of building an uneasy tension. This is of course before the full on barrage of "Birth" comes in, a song featuring a steady pounding neanderthal riff played over changing blast beats and Dustin Dickerson's raspy and familiar sounding screams. The song then transfers into a more traditional "D-beat" punk feel, which carries over into the next track "Grief". "Grief" is steady but features some pretty mean riffing while the low end grinds and churns beneath, and the vocals sound venemous and pissed off like they should. The next track "Death" features more dissonant, blackened hardcore riffing over artillery round drums, before the track slows down into an almost doom classic Converge style ending. The final track "Hell" offers more of the same but gives a good picture of the band's full range and what they are capable of. It ended up being my personal favorite because of the uneasy chord changes in the final riff. At 2:28 its the longest track on the EP, and honestly I could have taken more of it.

 

There are certainly strong moments that shine through here and there and show that Narratives know how to throw down in the modern power-violence game, but I can't help but think that with alot of these bands that offering more per song would leave more staying power and a bigger impression. Yes I understand the whole point here is that its punk and it isn't supposed to overstay its welcome, but I'd like to hear more of what these guys could do if they expanded their songwriting from the short bursts of violence that these less than 3 minutes tracks give.
 
Corey

29.8.12

2012...so far

Well if this is indeed the year the curtain draws on our civilization at least we'll have a kickass soundtrack for it. I don't know if all musicians are as paranoid as I am or if we're just lucky, but whatever the case there have already been some awesome new releases this year. So far I've been pretty pleased with the new records from Royal Thunder, Trioscapes, Mewithoutyou, Storm Corrosion, Astra, Baroness, Sigur Ros, Torche, High on Fire, The Mars Volta, and the little I"ve heard of the new Mono. And now I'm hearing that we're also getting new stuff from Converge, Between the Buried and Me, and Neurosis before the year ends? The battle for my best of 2012 list is about to get really serious. Any thoughts on releases that have come out so far this year? I know there have been other good ones that I haven't even gotten the chance to listen to yet, for instance the new Every Time I Die, even though I haven't been able to bring myself to care about anything that band has done over their past couple albums. Time to weigh in.

Corey

28.8.12

Corey's checking in with Sargent House/ORL Records

Sargent House/Rodriguez-Lopez productions have been a great fixture in independant music, giving us records by some truly relevant and unique, slightly off the beaten path artists for somewhere around a decade now. Or at least it seems that way since thats about how long I've been following Omar Rodriguez-Lopez' Gold Standard Labs, which was basically the label that started this entity before it merged with Sargent House. However I haven't really kept up with stuff they've been putting out over the past two years quite as much, no particular reason really. I decided to remedy that when they had a ridiculous digital download sale on bandcamp ($2.99 albums? I'll be there). I got especially excited when I saw Boris on the lineup now, every now and then you'll get some curveballs even though the label(s) is mostly known for math rock, post-rock, prog, indie, and experimental pop. So I thought I would do something different here and give my initial rundown of three albums from this label, yes I realize that at this point these reviews are outdated and all these releases came out last year, but who cares? I'll be covering plenty of 2012 stuff too, in time.


And so I Watch You from Afar - Self Titled

These days when someone says "instrumental rock band" the first things that are likely to come to mind are either some form of atmospheric post-rock/shoegaze or a  possibly Hella or Don Caballero inspired math-rock band. I'm not saying that encompasses all of the instrumental rock currently being made but its at least a healthy percentage of it, and with a name like And So I Watch You from Afar I would have put my bets on "post-rock band that values reverb and delay more than they do their drummer". I would have been quite wrong though as ASIWYFA are a rare commodity indeed, an instrumental rock band that either has their own genre or skims the lines of so many others simultaneously that they make you think that they do. Either way, from what I can tell from listening to their 2011 self-titled full-length, ASIWYFA fit right at home with the rest of the Sargent House lineup in the sense that they glean attributes from math rock, prog, post-rock, and sometimes just quirky indie-rock. These Belfast, Ireland fellows are no stranger to their effects pedals and they don't like to stick to song structures or sounds that are too predictable. One moment they're hopping from triumphant rock (opener Set Guitars to Kill) and another they're channeling noisy almost post-metal aggression (Clench Fists, Grit Teeth...Go!). This is indeed something different but I'll have to give it a while to truly grow on me I think, so far I haven't heard anything from this album that I don't like, but I've still yet to hear anything thats truly blown me away. ASIWYFA gets:

7 out of 10


 
Zechs Marquise - Getting Paid

El Paso band Zechs Marquise have gradually worked their way from out of The Mars Volta's shadow and are coming into their own on their third full-length Getting Paid. Although it is kind of easy to see how they got their in the first place. Drummer Marcel Rodriguez-Lopez is not only The Mars Volta's additional percussionist, but he and Zechs Marquise bassist Marfred Rodriguez-Lopez are also Omar Rodriguez-Lopez's younger brothers. Put this together with the band's psychedelic leanings and the fact that they are one of the few bands that TMV have ever let open for them and you can start to see how they would have a hard time finding their identity. Getting Paid is a bit of a departure from the band's former psych/jam voyages, its still full of deep grooves and fiery guitar work but in the context of more electronics, sequencing, and danceable beats, giving the album more of an urban feel. One of the great things about Getting Paid is that it never stays in the same territory too long, and the array of sounds coaxed out of each instrument seem nearly endless. "Static Lovers" feels a bit more like the Zechs Marquise you may already know, but tracks like "Lock Jaw Night Vision" explore new territory  (there are plenty more that do, trust me). Some favorite moments of mine are the awesome synth solos in the title track, the uneasy sax that crawls into "The Heat, The Drought, The Thirst and the Insanity" and pretty much all of "Crushin' It!". I'm not sure what the album title Getting Paid is meant to represent, but after taking this trip I wouldn't be surprised if it was validate that this album is the soundtrack to the "just-swallowed-your-stash"  low-budget crime movie that only plays in your head when you listen to it. Getting Paid is basically just a great album full of adventurous sounds:

8 out of 10


 
Boris - New Album

Boris have been alot of things throughout their career but "pop" has never really been one of them. They've done drone, doom metal, punk, stoner rock, and some ambient trippy stuff so I don't see why they wouldn't continue to explore genres and I guess they don't see why either. Still, when you're known for being one of Japan's heaviest exports "pop" is not exactly a word that your fans are going to embrace (although I'm sure Boris haven't gotten as much crap as Baroness did for it), fortunately Boris are weird enough to somehow pull this off and still be accepted. Boris released two other albums in 2011, the aptly titled Heavy Rocks, which is a bit more like the Boris that many know, and the straight up J-pop of Attention Please, which most fans probably though was just a random off shoot album that the band would use to get the poppy stuff out of their system. Well it turns out they were just preparing us for New Album, a record that sort of combines the two approaches. This is really just what I would consider J-pop, futuristic synths, polished vocals and all. The thing is that its still catchy and addictive, I can't normally say I'm a big J-pop guy but this album has been my guilty pleasure good-time soundtrack as of late. Without a doubt, energetic opener "Flare" will probably bring to mind images of mechs battling through space, but "Party Boy" has a dancier and less urgent feel. Yes there are still some electric guitars and Boris-isms to be found, one of the album's stronger tracks "Luna" is even oddly heavy with what I would almost describe as an electronic blast beat behind futuristic, reverbed-out vocals and beautiful, ambient synth chords.  "Spoon" is the sublimely feel-good soundtrack to a high speed race through a futuristic neo-Tokyo (is that a thing?) although "Pardon?" is a surprisingly somber track compared to the rest of the album. There's plenty more to talk about here but I think you get where I'm going with this. Boris makes good music and this album is no exception, but with that being said this one will not be for everyone. For instance if you're the kind of person who usually only prefers, say, the Boris that showed up for their collaboration album with Sunno)))). I'm enjoying it though, so I give New Record:

8 out of 10
 
 
Corey

21.8.12

Listen to Yardwork

I'm trying to strengthen my resolve in posting here more often, so I'm going to be doing alot of posts on what I'm listening to these days and also highlighting regional bands that some folks might not know. Today I'm giving some love to Charlotte, NC's Yardwork, who just now put their 2011 LP Brotherer on bandcamp.

http://yardwork.bandcamp.com/

You can listen to the whole LP here, and you should. I'm not exactly an authority on what people regard as "indie rock" so I'm sure theres probably a better descrition of what these guys do, but man they're good at it. They describe themselves as "southeastern minimalist pop prog" which makes enough sense to me. These guys really stand out as both a hard-working and truly unique band in the southeast, they've been known to perform with 9 people on stage (at least in the past) and they're all involved with other countless great Charlotte groups.

11.5.12

Corey's decade list top ten

It is finished! My intention was to have this done last year, and it pretty much was but I have a good excuse. Wedding planning can certainly take up alot of time and I just recently discovered that I had pretty much finished this thing a while back, so I would like to present my picks for my favorite ten albums of the 2000-2009 decade. I'm glad to finally have this done so I can start writing about other things. Thanks for reading.




10. Opeth - Watershed
Roadrunner 2008



While Opeth took a pretty big step forward on their 8th album and Roadrunner debut Ghost Reveries, it wasn't until Watershed that they perfected their new approach. These two albums can be thought of as Opeth painting with a larger canvas, including more instrumentation, an increased studio budget, and a wider pallet of ideas after unleashing their laid-back prog rock side on Damnation. Watershed is as a result, Opeth's most diverse album ever. The album starts off with "Coil", complete with a full woodwind section and a beautiful female guest vocal courtesy of Nathalie Lorichs, its easily one of Opeth's most tranquil and beautiful songs. This is of course, right before the band breaks into one of their most sinister metal tracks ever; "Heir Apparent", far heavier, faster, and more potent than any of Ghost Reverie's metal moments. In a mere two tracks the band has already demonstrated the greatness of their two extremes, but it only gets much better from here. "The Lotus Eater" features some impressive Hammond-style organ dominating and somehow combines blast beats with clean singing and minor key prog exploration. "Burden" is a ballad that rivals, if not bests everything on Damnation, and "Hessian Peel" is an 11 minute lesson on why this band cannot be messed with. This is the kind of masterpiece that it takes a band over 15 years to get to, and with a band as unarguably talented as Opeth, thats saying something.

09. Baroness - The Red Album
Relapse 2007



A truely unique vision is not granted to many, it is to John Dyers Baizley though. A clear moment of truth that could not have been imagined by anyone else before, almost as if it had to happen, but it had to happen at a time when we were all ready for it. The Red Album is a genuine work of art in every sense, and Baizley and company reached toward the most bizarre and beautiful recesses of the mind for lyrics, artwork, and music that came together to form something that words cannot describe, something that just was. If one will try to describe an album such as this though, I guess firsthand experience is as good a method as any, even though I'm sure it will fall short. The instant that I put the Red Album on for the first time stands out clearly in my head, I had bought the album after only hearing a little of Baroness' earlier material and the Red Album's single "Wanderlust". The album had just come out in the fall of 07 and I recall being drawn in mostly by the look of the album's cover more than anything. The volume swells that bring in the opening song "Rays on Pinion" gently give way to a finger-picked melody that takes all the right devilish turns that it took to ensnare me, but that was before the track really exploded. The second that the full band crashes in on John Baizley's first sung triumphant vocal line I felt free, utterly liberated. I wanted to move but I didn't know what to do, and this is all before another great myriad of classic riffs come and decorate the flawless "The Birthing". The melodies are sometimes major key but still slightly twisted in an uneasy way, the vocals are more yelled in melody than they are sung, and guitar effects are employed plentifully, so to say that this isn't your typical hard rock/metal affair would be obvious. There's a bluegrass tinged acoustic guitar instrumental in the form of "Cockroach En Fleur", and there's an epic, almost post-rock buildup in "Grad" thats still somehow manages to be dirty in all the right ways. If Georgia is indeed becoming the next metal mecca then Baroness will be largely to thank for this, this album is a surreal blur of 18th century imagery, mind altering music, and vibrant colors. Baroness are not concerned with being heavy enough, arty enough, melodic enough, or technical enough, and The Red Album shows a band committed to making great music and albums the way they should be: a memorable experience from start to finish


08. Avett Brothers - Emotionalism
Ramseur 2007



Songwriting just seems to come natural for this Conchord, NC trio. After rising from their punk roots, they decided to concentrate their efforts on bluegrass and folk and didn't take long to show that they had a natural knack for it. While 2007's Emotionalism might not be considered a "breakthrough" album as much as 2009's I and Love and You, this record is bar-none their greatest collection of songs. Some spend their lives trying to perfect their craft as songwriters, and then there are albums like this that come along and show that there are indeed groups that have a true god-given talent. Universal and timeless songs, Seth and Adam Avett croon over banjos, pianos, and acoustic guitars and speak a universal language. Sincere, honest songs of love, life, and pain. The Avett Brothers manage to explore different styles of folk music but still stay grounded with a consistent sound, just compare the upbeat strumming of "Pretty Girl from San Diego" to the more traditional bluegrass of "Go to Sleep" . And as always with the Avett Brothers there's plenty to love lyrically on songs like "Salina" where the band laments love in different cities and states. Every last song is a gem, the work of true masters. 


07. Opeth - Blackwater Park
Peaceville 2001



Opeth have struck gold many times before in the art of connecting imagery with sound and lyrics to create a band and experience that actually matters. It almost seems like a name like Blackwater Park had to bring to mind the kind of haunting, dark, and uneasy beauty that lingers on this masterpiece, and this Swedish prog metal band ended up with not only their best album yet, but a standard for others to be judged by forever. A further understanding of melody, smart composition, and uncompromising heaviness made this one of the band's most mature records. As always, Opeth's ability to build songs with such flawless ebb and flow is downright astounding. This is what prog should be (in a modern metal landscape), actual songs, where every note is essential and everything thats begun is ended just the way it should be. I still find it hard to believe that Mikaek Akerfeldt and company claim that they don't know the first lick of music theory and that their songs truly are built from random jamming on lone riffs. Even now "The Drapery Falls" stands out as (in my opinion) one of the most stirring songs written this past decade, with Akerfeldt's guitar never taking the expected route. It could also be argued that his voice was yet to fully mature into what it is now until the acoustic dirge "Harvest". Expanding even further on their sound with an even blend of melodic death metal, progressive rock, folk, and of course little bits of whatever else they want, Opeth are true masters of their craft. 


06. Sigur Rós - Ágeatis Byrjun
Fat Cat, Smekkleysa 2000



Every now and then a band or artist comes along that opens your horizons to what music can truly be if one just lets themselves fully embrace pure creativity and unadulterated feeling. One of my favorite albums of any genre and any time period, Sigur Ros gave their full introduction to the world with their greatest and most varied album to date. The almost oceanic waves of evolving atmospheric textures are almost powerful enough to move mountains on songs like "Svefn-g-Englar" and "Star Alfur", while "Alfosskor Song" is anchored by an almost bluesy organ riff, not something typically seen in the band's more recent material. The album is full of soul-stirring moments to say the least, my favorite being the feedback waves that pierce the ending of "Petur" like a ray of light through a sea of dark clouds. Speaking of "Petur" don't even get me started on the how the slide guitar creeps in with the piano in the opening, bringing to mind what it would have been like if the intro to Dark Side of the Moon had been recorded by seraphs. If you don't own this album then please do yourself a service you will never regret and go out and get it. No one should rob themselves of such meaningful, life-changing music.  A listen to Ageatis Buyrjun could make you look at the world in a whole different way.


05. Madvillian - Madvillainy
Stones Throw 2004



In the annuls of the greatest rap and hip-hop records ever, it will be a downwright blasphemous and unforgivable crime if this work of art is not included and remembered for how spectacular it truly is. When one thinks of the greatest rap albums of all time, albums like Enter the 36 Chambers and The Chronic, one sees the horizons of the genre expanded into something that changed everyone's idea of what hip-hop could be. Madvillian, the partnership between underrated and multi-talented producer/rapper/beatmaker/multi-instrumentalist Madlib and possibly the busiest and most well known underground emcee MF Doom moved things forward for the 21st century, with the former's always unexpected and brilliant loop-digging and one of a kind production and with the latter's unmistakable lyrics and flow. Whether its smooth funk and jazz sampling on tracks like "Bistro" and "Raid" or the almost  classic super-hero reminiscent moments like "All Caps", the peanut butter and chocolate combination of Doom's rhyming and vocal delivery and Madlib's bizarre beatmaking composition turn out to be just what hip-hop needed. As with any Madlib collaboration, part of the fun comes from discovering those moments where you feel a little special from deciphering what his loops are coming from. I had a few of these myself on identifying the Gentle Giant sample from "Strange Ways" and the Frank Zappa sample from "Meat Grinder". The overall experience of the album is surreal, each track completely different and inebriating at the same time. Madvillany is simply an album that no other two musicians could have ever made, and that alone makes it special, because you are truly hearing the voices of two masters that cannot be imitated. 


04. The Mars Volta - De-loused in the Comatorium
Universal/Gold Standard Labs 2003 



"The greatest modern purveyors of progressive rock" might not have been the first thing to come to anyone's mind after listening to Relationship of Command but thats the thing about rock's greatest moments, they're never expected. Turns out that the death of post-punk/emo heros At the Drive In freed its singer and guitarist to explore far beyond the bounds of what modern music had to offer them, and they went way beyond. I still can't imagine how this happened, in a couple of short years two musicians go from making simple, verse/chorus post punk songs to writing an elaborate progressive rock epic. They then assemble a team of stellar musicians and enlist the production aid of Rick Rubin to make an album that would go on to screw with the heads of virtually everyone who would hear it. Inspired by the death of Cedric Bixlar Zavala and Omar Rodriguez-Lopez's close friend Julio Venegas, De-loused in the Comatorium follows a bizarre and other-worldly narrative of someone falling into a drug coma and more or less going into another dimension before taking their own life. Strangely and amazingly enough, the music follows it from the faintly siren like keyboards heard at the beginning of "Son et Lumiere". From there on its nothing but classic songs and moments: the final percussion-propelled buildup of "Drunkship of Lanterns", the dark jazz freeform wandering of "Cicatriz ESP", the somber and heart-stopping "Televators", etc. The songs remain progressive yet catchy, and the band's urgency from their former band carries over into songs that now have far greater posturing. To say that this album took the rock world by surprise would be and understatement, some emo kids hated it while some simply attempted to wrap their heads around it, tens of thousands of others (like myself) kept listening to it again and again only to find that thats actually the only way that the album can be properly enjoyed. The Mars Volta quickly became one of modern music's weirdest and most talked about bands, from the fact that the band's energetic and excessive live shows often strayed from the songs the way we knew them, to Cedric's undecipherable stream-of-conscious lyrics. But a band certainly needed to come along and make this statement right? And once they did they left an unmistakable indention on modern music. 


03. Converge - Jane Doe
Equal Vision 2001



Talk about iconic and impossible to mess with. Even though its only 10 years old, I can't think of a more reverred album amongst fans of any style of extreme music in existance than Converge's barnburner Jane Doe. Even the cover art itself is instantly recognized by anyone with a foot in the underground hardcore/metal scene and its been emblazoned on countless hoodies and t-shirts worldwide ever since.  Jane Doe is one of the most abrasive albums ever made in both sound and nature, Jacob Bannon's searing lyrics about heart-break and conflict clash against the tortured riffing and pummeling of Kurt Ballou, Nate Newton, and the drumming of Ben Koller. The flow of the record is perfect, each song almost running into another wasting no time unleashing hell before you can even recover from the last track. Things slow down when they need to though,  a prime example being "Hell to Pay", or the calm before the storm on "Distance and Meaning". The abrasion was also heightened by Kurt Ballou's sound engineering, giving this album the damaged and blackened sound that thousands of other bands have since strived for. Is there really anything more that can be said about the greatest metalcore album ever? Whether or not its the best of Converge's back catalogue is up for debate (I personally think it ties with When Forever Comes Crashing) but its influence cannot be denied. This is the kind of album that bypasses the part of your brain that will try to think about it rationally, it goes straight to that part pummels, bashes, and destroys things on command. Jane Doe is the only cure for all the rage you've ever carried in your entire life, because it manifests it. And most importantly, its the soundtrack to all of those times when it was you against the world. I'm forever thankful to Converge for the gift they've given the downtrodden with their empowering music. 


02. Mastodon - Blood Mountain
Warner Brothers/Reprise 2006



There are some moments in rock and roll that are just written in the stars. Those predestined tales of when the right people with the right talent go through certain things in life that bring them together in the right place. Four individuals would meet in Atlanta, Georgia at a High on Fire basement show over a decade ago and one of those moments was set into motion. You know Mastodon, they are a band respected by many for never compromising their vision and always doing things their way, most impressively, they've found success by being honest and unapologetic about who they are as artists. The band clicked so well after forming they immediately  started touring and it wasn't long before they began to introduce themselves to the world from there. They signed to Relapse and put out both Remission and Leviathan, two albums that gave the metal world something it desperately needed by cutting out all of the glamour of modern rock and forging their own style from the best parts of Neurosis, High on Fire, The Melvins, Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden, and many 70s progressive rock bands like Yes, Rush, and Genesis. Their uncompromising heaviness and lack of commercial marketability didn't stop them from receiving constant attention from major labels after Leviathan, and Blood Mountain was the step forward that would define them as one of history's essential bands. Blood Mountain was Mastodon's statement that they were getting ready to take over the world, and in my opinion its the perfect balance of everything that makes this band so essential.The opener "The Wolf is Loose" starts with a barrage of furious drum hits that trample you into the dirt before you even know whats going on, but then switches gears with some brilliant duel-harmony rock riffing that makes the song as much Thin Lizzy as it is High on Fire.  "Crystal Skull" may bring about Mastodon's typical brutishness, but the very next track "Sleeping Giant" features a truly haunting lead that forces you into a dark space-rock voyage the like of which this band hadn't yet explored. The twisting and turning riffs of "Capillarian Crest" and "Bladecatcher" are sublime in their perfect balance of dizzying odd meters and pure unadulterated, head-banging groove. Years before the days of "Curl of the Burl" this band had their first heavy rock and roll hit with "Colony of Birchman", featuring Queens of the Stone Age's Josh Homme on guest vocals. They conjure up more dark and contemplative moments on "Hunters of the Sky", with waves of bass synth oscilating violently like many of the album's moments that make abundant use of psychedelic yet organic, life-giving effects. And this is truly the beauty of Blood Mountain, these four guys manage to be as heavy as always while still turning the trippy and thoughtful (and actually managing to do it with real emotion) up several notches on later tracks like "This Mortal Soil" and "Siberian Divide". As for the album's last track "Pendulous Skin"... it ranks up their with songs like Pink Floyd's "Time" as songs I wouldn't mind dying to. Both Troy Sanders and Brent Hinds truly found their voices on this record too, and each instrument played has the personality of a living human being. Sorry radio rock, this time the underdogs won. 


01. The Mars Volta - Frances the Mute
Universal/Gold Standard Labs 2005



As polarizing of a choice as this is for my favorite album of the past decade, it speaks for just how undeniably much I love this album that this is my choice. Guitarist/band-leader Omar Rodriguez-Lopez composed most of Frances the Mute on his own and used an unconventional recording method to go about creating it. He let each individual member of the band hear what they would be playing and let them have some liberties with the parts, but didn't let them hear anything that anyone else would be playing. Meaning each member of the band played their track as if it were the song, they literally played as if their performance was going to the only thing heard. Whether or not this is what made this album such a surreal and unforgettable journey for me I really can't say, but what can be heard here is an ensemble of musicians striving for greatness and transcendence from the norm. In terms of cinematic composing and story telling in music, I think this is record is somewhat overlooked. The opening movement of the record literally feels like coming out of a dream, with faint murmurs of the album's last movement steadily growing louder before you are thrown into the riots of colors of Cygnus...Vismund Cygnus. There's truly no need in me trying to explain why each one of these songs are incredible to me, but since Frances the Mute is more like a unforgettable film than almost any other album I've heard, there are certainly scenes that have left permanent indentions. These scenes were brought to life by a production style that has better suited this band than I think they realize, that and given the cast of musicians aboard, it was almost like The Mars Volta peaked before they were even able to delve into what they were doing. The band slowly but surely joining in with Omar's layering guitar solo leading into the last triumphant chorus of Cygnus.. and the subsequent chaos and aftermath in which Cedric wails as if from another world. The dramatic final chorus of the band's minor-key masterpiece hit "The Widow". The dark, sultry splashes of Latin rhythm in the eternally grooving "L'via, L'viaquez", before Jon Frusciante's guitar literally explodes in electric fireworks. The opening horn line announcing the entrance of the first movement of "Miranda, that Ghost Just isn't Holy Anymore" And oh, the last half of this album...Don't even get me started on the multi-part mini epic that makes up the band's magnum opus "Cassandra Gemini". The sheer range of instruments heard and lofty concepts indulged in may seem like overkill to some, but I think such an album deserves a cast fully devoting to bring as much life into these movements as possible. There are few albums that have left impressions like the one this album did, I suppose if I were to make a list of my favorites of all time this one would be in the top five (and maybe even one or more on this list you've been reading) not of course topping masterpieces like Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon, but still having an important place. Only time will tell if I continue to feel this way, 2005 wasn't even ten years ago after all, but in terms of what I heard from 2000-2009, this was king for me.

15.3.12

All Hail Ex-lives

No doubt this is my favorite album thus far in 2012. I don't see a change in opinion on the horizon.

I'll be honest, I'm far too lazy to try to critique this track by track. Plus, I haven't found anything bad to say yet and I'm lacking in positive adjectives.
I heard 'Underwater Bimbos from Outerspace' first, well I saw the video. I was immediately forced to start a circle pit in my kitchen with my two dogs and two cats. Shit got real real. I broke a dish. If you can imagine the feeling Amelia Earhart had as she vanished into the abyss, that is only about half of how frightened I felt. "I want to be dead with my friends. " That's the opening line of the song and surely the most talked about lyric that I've read so far.
You know what? Fuck it. My review will never match up to Patton Oswalt's. In summation, I think I have begun having heart palpitations since I heard this record. It makes me sick, literally.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y1gi_aOe334&ob=av3e

http://www.everytimeidie.net

17.2.12

Trioscapes

Just saw Trioscapes at Ground Zero (Spartanburg, SC). I am now a member of the church of Trioscapes. Bought the tape and shirt and got a free digital download. If you haven't heard them, well, what the fuck? Shit is level 7. Get down on it.

-DHAGZ

17.1.12

Corey's year in music 2011

2011 year in music:

I'm not doing a list because at this point I'm sure everyone is as tired of reading them as I am of making them. Instead here is my take on various things that I listened to this year as well as other musical highlights from 2011.

Windmills by the Ocean - II

The breakup of Isis was one that I had a particularly hard time dealing with, but I suppose if one is going to look for a replacement then a band containing a former member probably isn't the worst place to start. Indeed, I'm sure that on paper a post-metal band that combines shoegaze and ambient electronic influence probably doesn't sound that different from a certain legendary Boston band, but Windmills by the Ocean are actually pretty different. WbtO were also around when Isis was together, this is their second album and I was pleasantly surprised with it. Tracks like "Pagan Sun" feature churning guitar roars and beds of electronic ambience with dreamy, reverbed vocals that sound Jesu influenced to say the least, but then tracks like "Azure" and "Occul" are stunning in their unexpected beauty. "Azure" features a delicate, siren song-like vocal over swirling white noise until 70s style synths dance in right at an intense chord change that makes one of the most compelling songs I've heard all year. Its stoned, dreamy beauty that should not be missed.

This Will Destroy You - Tunnel Blanket

This Will Destroy You proved that there were competant at the instrumental post-rock game with Young Mountain, but either they got bored of what they were doing or maybe they realized all those Explosions in the Sky comparisons were well warranted. They knew they were going to have to step things up and they made a big change with Tunnel Blanket, an album of warm, ethereal soundscapes thats actually kind of ballsy. The opening track "Little Smoke" lures you in with delicate murmurs before you're hit quite hard with a wall of ambient, distorted guitar. The song's progression is beautiful, unexpected, and repetitive, a formula you'll be pretty used to as you listen more. Its all the more awesome on pieces like "Communal Blood" which feature epic minimal percussion to accentuate the waves of suspended, mind-drowning sound. To go from making friendly, melodic instrumental rock to an album of ambient drone took some courage, but Tunnel Blanket yields alot of enjoyment with time. Great for meditation too. 





Mogwai - Hardcore Will Never Die but You Will
As long as Mogwai are still active then modern music will have something good going for it. One of the greatest post-rock bands not only because they helped invent it but also because they always give a healthy dose of variety; Mogwai always express a great range of emotion without seeming trite or cliche'. You get triumphant cinematic rock with "White Noise", heavy, haunting, fuzzed-out goodness on "Rano Pano", and even dancier, more electronic-based moments on tracks like "Mexican Grand Prix" and thats just a few tracks. Each song has its own unique personality but the album works great as a whole too. "Hardcore" is yet another solid testament to why Mogwai will always be one of the best at what they do.


Tyler the Creator - Goblin
This one took some time to grow on me, and even then I've gone back and forth on how I really feel about it. I guess the main reason I'm writing about this album is that it was certainly a trending topic this year, and to a degree this album actually deserves its hype which is a rarity. I'm not saying what Odd Future does is high art, sure they and their ringleader Tyler's lyrics can sometimes be tasteless, childish, and existent only for sheer shock value, but the fact that they've gotten where they have doing whatever they want regardless of what the public thinks is pretty admirable by itself. Most modern rap is as self-indulgent and self-gloryifing as anything could possibly get, but here's a collective full of talented rejects that aren't trying to get you to like them at all, its actually quite the opposite. Tyler is as self-depreciating as he is relentless, and this album certainly shows off his talent as an emcee (I especially like his vocal delivery). Frank Ocean does the impossible by making me like modern R&B on tracks like "She" and "Fish". Overall, Tyler and company made a splash with this one. 


Scale the Summit - The Collective
Most instrumental bands either concentrate on cinematic, shoegaze-y compositions that don't need vocals or they are the kind of band that are so adept at boggling minds with instrumental skill that vocals would only slow things down and take attention away from the shred. While Scale the Summit certainly lean toward the showy nature of prog, they still don't really fit into either of these categories. These well-hyped young dudes may not have hit anything that would be described as atmospheric or "post-metal" on their third LP The Collective, but they have certainly written the best and most textural album of their careers yet. There is still plenty of jaw-dropping musicianship (the opening track "Colossal" features a bass solo which should tell you something) but the quartet's ability to write smart, memorable, and beautiful instrumental metal songs is certainly getting sharper. The song "Whales" never contains a dull moment and constantly keeps you guessing, even with sublime fusion-like volume swells at the end. The Cynic influence is strong here, but no one said that was ever a bad thing. 


Bibio - Mind Bokeh
I have been utterly obsessed with Bibio ever since I discovered his one of a kind "folktronica", a genre that he may or may not have made up to describe his combining of low-fi folk with analog electronics and loops. 2009's Ambivalence Avenue took a decidedly more urban turn, featuring soulful rhythm tracks and J Dilla style beats, but still kept the mesmerizing beauty intact. Mind Bokeh continues moving in more danceable directions, which I imagine will either delight or disappoint you greatly. Even though I can't possibly see myself arguing with the excellence that was his former material, there's something essential about Mind Bokeh as well. Songs like "Pretentious" and "Light Sleep" offer hints of vintage soul with electronic glitchiness for pure feel-good weirdness, while some moments like "Take off Your Shirt" are surprising in their modern danceability. Every track on Mind Bokeh is different in its own brilliant way, and this was easily one of my favorite albums that came out all year. You certainly won't need anything else for a pot-addled summer evening party. 


Mastodon - The Hunter
I had to take some time to come to terms with this one but its a grower. I've been a fan of Atlanta GA's Mastodon for some time, and I didn't exactly want them to strip away the lofty, sometimes dark concepts and prog posturing that have helped form all of their former albums, but once they did they were still able to make an album full of great songs. The Hunter is the sound of a one of the heaviest and most original bands in modern music somehow finding success, and just having fun with it. While some songs find them at their most radio friendly (Curl of the Burl) others such as "Black Tongue" feature classic Mastodon riffs (and heaviness), and there's plenty of completely new ground on tracks like "Creature Lives" that show a side of this band we've never seen before. I'm a bigger fan of Matt Bayles' style of production but The Hunter still sounds great, and should not be passed up or dismissed. Hopefully their recent popularity will keep introducing kids to the greatness of the Melvins and Black Sabbath and rock radio can be reborn. 


Opeth - Heritage
Opeth are a band that will always have a secure spot on any year end list that I do, because they never do anything that doesn't blow me away. Heritage is still a good deal different from any of their past albums, this time the prog-metal legends took away the production and usual epicness out of the equation to concentrate on a classic prog-rock record reminiscent of Jethro Tull and Camel. The production is the biggest thing you're likely to notice first, its refreshing to hear just how organic and analogue that Heritage is with the affinity that modern metal bands have for overproducing everything until you're no longer listening to real instruments. The sinister, winding riffs of songs like "Devil's Orchard" are all Opeth though, and the keyboard/organ/mellotrone work will especially delight old-school prog fans like myself. Best soundtrack of the year for a stroll through a Tolkien-esque fantasy land. 

Primus - Green Naugahyde
How long have we been waiting for this? I was excited about the return of Primus but uncertain about which Primus would show up to the studio. Would we have the funk-metal of Frizzle Fry? the weirder and less liked later eras of albums like Antipop? It turns out Primus' new album Green Naugahyde contains a little of everything that made this band so unique and essential. While I'm not saying that this album will be remembered as one of their best necessarily, its still a great return for Claypool and company. As usual Claypool's bass is sitting way up front, he displays some funky lines on songs like "Tragedys a Comin" along with a myriad of odd effects. His vocals also sound distorted and distant, this along with the usual creepy guitar dissonance of Larry Lalonde throw a dash of late-Primus weirdness with the album's early Primus feel. While it isn't the cool almost jam phase of their farewell dvd Hallucinogenetics, its still a great return, and an album worthy of being called Primus. 


Grails - New Politics
Maybe its because I just started associating myself with the acid trip voyages of Grails a couple of years ago so I haven't had much of a chance to fully immerse myself in this band's disography yet. Or maybe its because New Politics is an extremely well-realized and put together album, but I've been pretty blown away with how good that this band's latest release is. New Politics listens more like a well-scored movie soundtrack than it does a typical atmospheric or psychedelic rock album. The album displays both great production and a wide range of instrumentation, including a healthy dose of eastern instruments. There's some old-school krautrock influence here, but really what Grails does is hard to define, its simply great music.

Other mentions/thoughts

Tom Waits - Bad as Me
A new full-length LP from Tom Waits is never anything to complain about, but with that being said I wasn't entirely blown away by his latest when compared to his other recent output. Of course by "recent" I mean the albums that he's done over about the past ten years or so, Mule Variations, Real Gone, etc. Bad as Me seems to capture Tom wanting to get back to the gravelly crooning of his earlier work as the album contains everything from his normal rough juke-joints to noir reminiscent ballads. There's not as much of the creepy backwoods blues Tom Waits that I usually love to hear, but as usual there's still plenty of variety. Not one of his best, but Bad as Me still shows a good look at Tom past and present.

Russian Circles - Empros
The latest from Russian Circles is probably one of the most critically acclaimed releases they've done in some time, and Empros certainly catches your attention quickly. Most post-metal bands begin leaning toward the last part of that hyphenation later in their careers and it would seem Russian Circles are no exception; Empros is easily the most aggressive thing this band has ever done. This three piece display yet again, their uncanny knack for telling a story without words, the way they work together to fill in the spaces and keep the song moving with only three members is quite impressive. The drumming is always tasteful and essential, Brian Cook's bass tone is monstrous at the least, and the layering of guitar effects to maintain mood is always clever. However I still can't bring myself to call this RC's best, at only six songs it feels incomplete (even though most of those six tracks are over seven minutes long) for some reason. I wouldn't call it one of the best albums of the year but its still another great release from this talented instrumental trio. Oh and the last track has vocals, tempting me far too much to make the comparison that this album is to Russian Circles what 2009's What We All Come to Need was to Pelican.

Shows:
Didn't go to many this year for lack of money. I missed some great ones like Omar Rodriguez-Lopez, Primus, The Flaming Lips, Parliament, Black Moth Super Rainbow, etc. But heres some good stuff I did get to witness.

Yes at the Fillmore in Charlotte
Show of the year. My longtime prog obsession owes alot to Yes. Other than Pink Floyd and Rush they were the first true prog rock band I heard, and they remain one of my favorites to this day. Jon Anderson may not have been on vocals but I can honestly say the guy in his place did a pretty admirable job. I was a little disappointed with the Fillmore's sound at first but they had things mixed pretty well by the time "Yours is No Disgrace" was played. The set was incredible, songs from Relayer were played and I got to hear the ultimate prog epic "Close to the Edge" which was one of the musical highlights of my year. Steve Howe did a beautiful guitar only rendition of "To be Over", and I also got to hear "I've Seen all Good People", "Long Distance Runaround", "Starship Trooper", and many other great songs from their discography. I could have dealt with some more Fragile but other than that I can't complain. Chris Squire did an extended bass jam from "The Fish" which gave me the biggest bass nerd moment I've ever had. Stellar experience from a band truly not of this world.

Clutch at the Handlebar in Greenville
As it turns out, Clutch are just as tight, powerful, and groovy live as you would expect. There wasn't a head that I saw that wasn't nodding, almost everyone sang to every word of every song and as to be expected, many just continued drinking. Condensing back down to their classic four-piece lineup, it made sense that the set contained mostly songs from the middle of the band's discography. Songs from Pure Rock Fury and Blast Tyrant were well received, but surprisingly the band only played two songs from their new album Strange Cousins from the West (those being 50,000 Unstoppable Watts and Freakanomics). The band's tight rhythms and huge riffs were indeed better in a live setting, and Neil Fallon's soulful vocals had an even more commanding presence. This show was a display of classic Clutch instead of the expanded hammond organ-style jam band that we heard on Beale St. to Oblivion in 2007, as a matter of fact they didn't play a single track from that particular album which was dissapointing. If anything, it was an observance of the almighty riff but with more fun, like if Black Sabbath had lightened up and listened to more Allman Brothers. Highlights for me were "Cypress Grove" and the Robot Hive/Exodus hit "Burning Beard". All in all, a pretty satisfying night of rock for only $20, and I have a feeling that those who were there and actually remembered it the next day are certainly agreeing.

Ocoai at Earshot records in Greenville
I was lucky enough to play this one with (young) American Landscape. An absolutely huge sound from a Johnson City, TN instrumental band that conjures up metalgaze, doom, prog, and pure rock. These guys pretty much tore Earshot down and those in attendance were either blown away or just didn't know how to react at all.

East North at the Irish Pub in Greenville
Those outside of the Greenville area might not know this band which is a shame, they are head and shoulders above any other band around here by far. East North's cinematic post-rock is always air-tight and dynamic live, this evening they displayed some new material that showed a greater emotional range than they previously covered. I've seen this band a good deal, but this was truly an awesome set.

The Body and Braveyoung at the Get Down in Asheville
NC post-rock band Braveyoung and doom metal duo The Body sounded like an unlikely collaboration at first, but not only is their album great but the two of them performing together is an experience not to be missed. Braveyoung's hall-reverb moans and overwhelming crescendos sounded amazing even in the dive bar that is the Get Down, and when they joined forces with The Body they unleashed some pretty devastating albeit beautiful noise. I'm talking wall of amps roaring at you noise. It was an honor to open this show. Oh and its worth mentioning that The Body's vocalist screams without a mic...and is heard somehow! Once you hear them you'll realize how un-human of a feat that is.

Things I'm looking forward to in 2012:

New Converge, Baroness, Mars Volta, and probably many more upcoming releases that I don't know about yet.
The possiblity of At the Drive-in and Refused maybe doing some shows other than Coachella....
Maybe seeing Roger Water's The Wall in Charlotte this summer?
Another Isis release even though they broke up
Getting to experience a little touring for the first time (knock on wood)