Sunday, 22 December 2024

A View From The Back Of The Room: Alcest (Live Review By Nat Sabbath)

Alcest, Svalbard & Doodseskader, Manchester Academy, 12.12.24

On a cold winter evening in December, Manchester Academy 2 opened its doors to a night of sonic exploration and emotional resonance. With a line-up spanning diverse genres and themes, this gig proved to be an unforgettable experience for every music lover in attendance.

The night began with Belgian two-piece drum and bass noise machine Doodseskader (7), who delivered a performance that can only be described as a sonic assault on the senses. With their minimalist setup, they defied expectations, creating a colossal wall of sound. 

Opening with Pastel Prison, their set was a perfect introduction to their unique blend of industrial sludge and noise-infused rap. Tracks like The Sheer Horror Of The Human Condition and It’s Not An Addiction If You Don’t Feel Like Quitting were visceral, drenched in raw emotion and relentless energy. 

Closing with the blistering FLF, Doodseskader left the audience stunned, their intensity setting the tone for the night. For a support act, they managed to command attention like seasoned headliners.

The second act, Bristol-based quartet Svalbard (9), brought a heartfelt and electrifying set that resonated deeply with the crowd. It was a special night for the band, as it also marked their drummer’s birthday, which added a celebratory atmosphere to the emotional undertones of their music. 

Opening with the hauntingly beautiful Eternal Spirits, Svalbard guided the audience through a set-list that tackled themes of depression, resilience, and self-empowerment. Tracks like Open Wound and Defiance were met with fervent applause, the room pulsating with energy. 

Vocalist Serena Cherry’s passionate performance was the beating heart of the set, blending ferocity and vulnerability in equal measure. By the time they closed with Faking It, Svalbard had the entire room in their grasp. This was a performance that not only showcased their technical skill but also created a sense of collective catharsis; a moment shared and cherished by everyone present.

Finally, the highly anticipated Alcest (10) took to the stage, met with deafening cheers from an eager crowd. The French pioneers of black-gaze delivered a masterclass in emotional intensity and musical precision. 

Opening with L’Envol, Alcest immediately transported the audience into a dreamlike realm, where lush melodies and soaring vocals intertwined seamlessly. The set-list was a journey through their discography, featuring highlights like Écailles De Lune - Part 2 and Souvenirs D’un Autre Monde

Each track was executed with remarkable precision, but it was the emotional weight behind their performance that truly captivated the audience. Neige’s vocals, ethereal yet powerful, carried an almost spiritual quality, and the band’s tight instrumentation amplified the impact of every crescendo. 

One of the standout elements of the night was the stunning stage design. The lighting was synchronized perfectly with the music, casting shadows and colours that mirrored the mood of each song. Alcest’s performance wasn’t just a concert; it was an immersive experience. A perfect blend of sound and vision. 

They closed the night with L’Adieu, a fittingly emotional farewell that left the crowd in awe, many visibly moved. For fans of Alcest, this performance was a dream come true; for newcomers, it was an unforgettable introduction to their world.

This gig was more than just a line-up of performances; it was a journey through sound, emotion, and artistry. Doodseskader’s raw energy, Svalbard’s heartfelt intensity, and Alcest’s transcendent beauty combined to create a night that will linger in the hearts of everyone who experienced it. 

This was live music at its best: a celebration of creativity, vulnerability, and connection. If you missed it, you missed something truly special.

Saturday, 21 December 2024

A View From The Back Of The Room: Fury (Live Review By Tony Gaskin)

Fury & The Black Hounds, The Billesley Rock Club, 07.12.24

We recently popped along to our “local”, The Billesley Rock Club, a favourite haunt of ours tucked away in a leafy suburb of Brum that puts on gigs most Fridays and Saturdays that covers a wide range of rock genres by original and tribute bands. 

It’s a really friendly, laid back venue with great sound and lights in a decent sized room above the Billesley pub. Run by the fabulous Nancy and Bear you’re always guaranteed a warm welcome and a great night! Go check out their upcoming gigs at https://www.billesleyrockclub.com/

Tonight we’re here for two outstanding local rock bands that are firm favourites with us and full disclosure, great friends as well! Headlining are perennial visitors Fury with support from Black Country hard rockers The Black Hounds (9).

As I said, The Black Hounds are no strangers to us, so we knew what to expect, but this was their first time here at BRC and new to a lot of the crowd, but judging by the reception they received, I’m sure they’ll be back here in the future.

From their very early roots leaning heavily on a classic rock style, they’ve evolved and refined their sound to be much heavier. Songs like Gallows and Tyrant are pounding riff laden songs that show off their great songwriting abilities, but it’s the title track off their latest album All Kingdoms Fall that encapsulates everything that The Black Hounds are about. 

Heavy , epic and songs that grip you. If you like your rock to be at the heavy end then check them out, all their releases are available on the usual platforms.

You know when someone says “this band should be bigger”, well I’ve lost count the amount of times I’ve heard people say that about Fury (10)

Main man and power force behind the band, Julian, is an incredible all round performer, musician and songwriter and would most definitely love to be “bigger”, but he’s also very down to earth and realistic and knows that the music biz is a fickle mistress. This hasn’t stopped him from continuously writing, recording and performing for many years, because he simply loves doing it.

The sheer range of songs and styles that Fury brings to a show is a testament to those song writing skills, and this current, very settled line-up is probably the best I’ve seen from Fury. 

They can literally turn their hand to anything and the set is full of rock bangers that go from straight up hard rock to cheesy power metal. Throw in some epic prog and even some soft ballads and you have an evening of fun and variety. There's magic on the stage and they just bring the party whenever they play.

If you’ve not been to a Fury show yet, then I highly recommend it.

They should be and deserve to be bigger!

Friday, 20 December 2024

Reviews: White Tower, Yovel, Nothing Thrives, Arysithian Blade (Reviews By Matt Bladen)

White Tower - Night Hunters (Steel Gallery Records)

Speed/power/thrash metal band White Tower come from Thessaloniki and name themselves after the White Tower in that famous city. Night Hunters is their second album and a significant increase from their debut, it's more mature, bolder, brasher and heavier, influenced by Megadeth as much as it is Maiden, Anthrax as it does Accept. Night Hunters features lighting quick riffs, chugging mid tempos tracks and great vocals.

It's classic heavy metal and it surprised me how much better White Tower sound on this record in comparison to their debut and EP, they've got the viciousness of Overkill, Kreator and Helstar the screeching vocals of Gago Karapetian are wild and varied from those early days of thrash metal alongside the NWOBHM/speed metal scene.

Theodoros Trohidis drumming is a blitzkrieg of percussion in union with Nick Vekis' bass and Orestis Koulas' rhythm guitar bring the gallop to Banshee and a meaty chug on Warmonger while on the NWOTHM-like Tear Up The Night Nikos Patronopoulos gets to shred like a madman. Night Hunters then is a classic thrash/speed/heavy metal record that caught me by surprise with how good it is. 8/10

Yovel - The Great Silence (Self Released)

Yovel are an extreme metal band who follow a very strong and right on agenda of being proudly Anti-Capitalist, Anti-Corruption and Anti-Oppression, using their mantra of "Better Days Will Come/By Any Means Necessary" they have another five expansive tracks of atmospheric black metal which rages with the fires of revolution and resilience.

Their new record is called The Great Silence and it is "of the oppressed, for the oppressed", this mysterious band have made sure to tell anyone as much as possible that fair pay was given to everyone who worked on it and no GenAI programmes were used, it's honest music coming from human beings with soul. Interspersed with spoken word passes that preach their message or from new reports that back up why their beliefs are so important.

The haunting Corpses On Leave drifts from riffy mid-pace into acoustics while Better Days Will Come builds from post rock ambience into triumphant, defiant black metal all blastbeats and trem picking in the mid section of this 11 minute epic. The Great Silence is more intelligent black metal that tries to be the antithesis of what can be quite a problematic scene. 8/10

Nothing Thrives - Tales Of Disgrace (Ouga Booga And The Mighty Oug Recordings)
 

Dirty, snotty rock n roll from the streets of Athens, Nothing Thrives and their debut album Tales Of Disgrace are a band who take no prisoners, signed to the independent label that recently spearheaded the new record from 1000mods, the band who Nothing Thrives opened for at their recent album launch party. Nothing Thrives have a similar snarl but instead of stoner vibes, this is punk n roll inspiring comparisons to Motorhead and Turbonegro (Title Track) but also The Ramones (Out Of Here), The Stooges or MC5. 

So it’s got garage rock fuzz, punk rock gang vocal and flashes of solos come towards the end of four on the floor ragers such as Riot. Tales Of Disgrace is a record of raw, live energy from start to finish, even when they slow a little with the swaggering Danzig-like Medicine and the Motorhead-esque Down The Well there’s always some fierce skater punk on Troublemaker Shooting or the punk metal fire of Shallow. Righteous dudes shredding punk n roll riffs, it’s grimy and grizzled dragged from the urban sprawl of Greece’s capital. 7/10

Arysithian Blade - Iriath (Steel Gallery Records)

Formed by some veterans of the Greek metal scene Arysithian Blade are band who are heavily influenced by the William J Tsamis' projects Warlord and Lordian Guard where the US style of power metal was met with a Greek sensibility for "arcane epic metal". The band are singer Chris Papadakis, guitarist and programmer (drums) Giannis Aktypis and bassist Petros Vasiliadis and while I should like this by Crescent Of The Two Moons I was a little bored, the music is quite similar to countless other bands and the vocals were quite one dimensional sitting in the high pitched shrieks and never really doing much else. I usually love epic metal with all its chest beating machismo but I found this blade a bit dull. 5/10

Reviews: Mörk Gryning, KillerKorp, Magic Kingdom, Sequester (Reviews By Mark Young, Zak Skane, Simon Black & Rich Piva)

Mörk Gryning - Fasornas Tid (Season Of Mist) [Mark Young]

As I sit in the comforting glow of a Christmas display, amongst tinsel and Mariah Carey giving it large, I'm drawn back to Fasornas Tid and what is a frankly savage blast of freezing cold black metal. The de rigueur intro piece is stamped on by The Seer, which attacks straight from the off and announces that while they might reflect current trends of bringing a touch of melody into their sound, searing guitars and epic arrangements are the order of the day. The Seer starts exactly how you want it to with blasting drums, trem picked guitar and an almighty scream that sets a high vocal bar for Draakh Kimera.

I hope they forgive me for this, but it has an almost jaunty build to it but don’t let that put you off. Its energetic and is a statement of intent of what is to follow with some blinding riff-work and even when some cleans pop up, they work within the context. It flies along at pace, background keys giving it just enough atmosphere without distracting from the visceral attack. 

Tornet is another straight for the throat blast, foot down and is a storming one-two with The Seer. I’ve said before I’m not massive on black metal, but if its good I’ll like it, whatever the genre (well, maybe not folk) and if it makes you want to play it then that is another plus point. And this I like. Make that three for three as the title track comes in, riding on some maniac drumming from C-G it pelts along until they decide it’s time to back off a little. That cracking sense of melody is front and centre on this one. 

Before The Crows Have Their Feast is sublime, absolutely sublime and is my favourite track, just a perfect mix of melody, atmosphere and a furious attack whilst Savage Messiah brings a controlled tempo that allows for more muscular guitars and a grand feel. The lead break that comes in mid-way is excellent too, measured so well and like everything else purpose built for what it needs to do.

An Ancient Ancestor Of The Autumn Moon with C of Avslut contributing (Also on Tornet) sees them reset and reach into that bag labelled ‘Grand Arrangements’. The keys play a bigger role on this, making for an expansive sound and one that feels warmer than the songs that preceded. But by Crom, it’s another stormer in an album of stormers. Black Angel is next and is possibly the most throw-away track here. There is nothing wrong with it at all, it’s just that I have been spoiled by the tracks that preceded it.

Barren Paths is a latter album instrumental/interlude, with some gorgeous playing on it and leads us into the final act. The Serpent’s Kiss is first up and continues with that brilliant mix of aggression and melodic touches. I know that in getting to this point there are two instrumentals/intro’s so basically this is the 8th proper track, and they are still hitting that high bar of quality. 

I mentioned that Black Angel was ok (in the context of the album) but let me be frank, both are very good songs and I think that there are a lot of bands who would love to be able to write songs like this. Det Svarta (vocals from Goth Gorgon) brings a colder touch with it, and a more stripped back approach that is very 90’s and of course quite speedy.

The final track is Age Of Fire and represents the sound of a band that is quite literally on fire with this album. Ending it in the same way as they started with an arrangement that perfectly balances the need for melody, brutality and atmosphere Mörk Gryning show that they can do it all, and do it very, very well. 10/10

KillerKorp – Vices (Self Released) [Zak Skane]


Formed in 2018 the five piece British act consists of Ben Lyddiatt (vocals), Jakey Day (lead guitar), Jon-Luke Bloomfield (rhythm guitar), Daniel Lyddiatt (bass), and Sonny Wright (drums). Since then KillerHorp has paved ways in the under ground live scene with their high octane live performance gaining them shows with UK heavy weights such as Raised By Owls, Celestial Sanctuary and Beyond Extinction. Through out their seven years the band they’ve released their debut E.P in 2019 Vile and their stand alone singles The End in 2020 and their 2021 Death Day. Now in the end of 2024 of the band have released their new E.P Vices.

To start this E.P Vices greets us with some eerie sounding horror samples before we are sonically assaulted with some blast beats, and some thunderous sounding riffs that come with some black metal eeriness whilst still having this punchy attack. Through out this track it also features this organic production, which really highlights the raw emotion that the vocalist is launching from each word whilst the drums bring in this tight but humanistic delivery. 

The second track Last Grasp brings in some classic Hatebreed style bouncing riffs, whilst the vocalist brings in some hints Jamie Jasta influences with it’s optimistic lyrics whilst also being accompanied with some classic death metal vibes. Even with the rustic production Sonny's blast beats really sound concise and edge cutting. 

Scathed opens up with the a classic cranked snare count in which is then followed up with some angry discord riffs that reminisce on the classic 2010s metalcore sound from which Emmure and Every Time I Die did in the mid 2000’s whilst also bringing in some classic tempo drops sections that get the groves down and dirty. Their eerie closer Weak brings in flanger effected guitars that bring in spooky sounding arpeggios that add to the creepy energy that the vocalist is channelling which crescendos into heavy sections. Through out this whole track we are getting Korn on steroids with it’s emotional driven vocals whilst bringing in a modern metalcore approached of the likes of Knocked Loose and Cane Hill.

Through out start to end, the five piece British bruisers have slightly strayed away from their death metal approach and gone for a more groovy direction whilst also showing no signs of the band mellowing out. Even with the rustic production, all it’s has done is sharpen their edges bringing in some classic Korn energy that reminisces on the Ross Robinson era of production. 

The eerie sections in their opening track Vices to their closer Weak really see the vocalist challenging old school Jonathan Davies vibes whilst also bringing in some frantic aggressive vocals that only Spites’ vocalist Darius can muster in relation to the heavier tracks on the album. Jak and Jays guitar work brings in bludgeoning deathcore style riffs on tracks such as Vices with it’s slamming power chords followed by the chunky hardcore riffs on Last Grasp to it’s eerie arpeggios on it’s closing track Weak ensuring that the band have covered all heavy areas in this short run time. 

For fans of Korn, Spite and old cool Emmure. 8/10

Magic Kingdom - Blaze Of Rage (Massacre Records) [Simon Black]

Belgium’s Magic Kingdom have been gently releasing this kind of Power Metal material since 1999, and remarkably have until this pointed resisted the temptation to release a dreaded concept album. Now don’t get me wrong, I like a lot of Power Metal acts, but the genre is littered with many acts who repetitiously crank out overwrought sword and sorcery concept pieces with stories within endless multi-album arcs that no-one is going to bother to unpick, because frankly regardless of the skill of the musicians, there’s nothing stand out there to lure more casual listeners in enough to listen to overlong records end to end, never mind go back and unpick the story. Sadly, the Euro Power scene is rife with this, particularly the nearer you get to the Mediterranean…

First off, this record captures my attention by immediately demonstrating that there is no small amount of instrumental prowess amongst Magic Kingdom’s alumni, with the kind of well weaved keyboard and guitar parts that are less Neo-Classical and more Progressive, but with moments of wonderful shred which is a massive thumbs up for a start. Secondly stylistically, although it touches the Neo-classical and Symphonic, it bounces around the sub-genres as well, taking in Speed Metal, bits of Thrash complete with growl vocals and good old fashioned Trad Metal. This variety means despite the lengthy one hour and five minutes run time, it doesn’t get repetitious, although to be fair I would have preferred a punchier forty to fifty minutes, because inevitably there is more than a little bit of padding in here.

Vocalist Michael Vescera is into his sophomore run with this outfit, and like the instrumentalist can switch styles at will. The downside is sometimes he’s quite a way back in the mix, and you need a strong charismatic front presence to carry this sort of material off, but on the upside is this feels like a cohesive band working well together. Overall, I struggled to find any standout moments of ‘everyone’ hit appeal that kick down the doors to new listeners, but this is a band with a lot of skill and warmth that carries off well, if not perhaps enough to want to unpick that story arc… 6/10

Sequester - Cosmic Considerations (Self Released) [Rich Piva]

Sequester is the one-man prog/psych/grunge/metal/folk/everything else project of Canadian singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Ryan Boc, who really hits just about every genre on his latest outing, Cosmic Considerations. He also plays a whole bunch of instruments and shows how multi-talent he is on the seven tracks that makes up the new record.

This is the eighth release from Boc as Sequester and one that stays pretty firmly in the psych prog territory of the genres listed above. I really dig the opener, the catchy, synth and guitar combo platter of Universal Cycle. I like the spacy atmosphere, and while this one is heavy on the synths and less on the guitar, it still really works for me. Boc does a good job with his vocal layering on this one and throughout the album. The Hill is up next, and it is more of a space ballad that heads into an almost love-song era Chicago song, which also strangely works for me. 

Venus By Tuesday starts off like a Guided By Voices song until it morphs more towards a lo-fi Hawkwind type deal, very heavy on the synths once again, but once again is pretty cool. The guitar makes more of an appearance here, but generally is too muted for my taste. I think you could turn the volume up on the guitar parts and still get the same vibe. 

Egg is the perfect example of this as well where you have a nice riff that would have made this one more dynamic by bringing the guitar more forward in the mix. It is a great track though and fits perfectly in the album sequence. This one goes full on heavy prog in a good way. Into Perspective has an 80s vibe to it, once again in a good way, while Heartbeat stays in the decade but offers a Abacab Genesis type feel. 

The closer, Pillars Of Eternity, is a synth driven nine-minute instrumental that shows off Boc’s multi-instrumental range. The one issue I have with one-man projects is when it sounds like it is a one-man project, and the tracks on Cosmic Considerations sound like one guy played all the parts and it was then constructed in the lab. It is a bit distracting while listening, but doesn’t take away from how good the songs are and how talented Boc is. 

The new Sequester record is a fun listen and Cosmic Considerations should be considered for your listening pleasure. 7/10

Reviews: Neckbreakker, Subway To Sally, Dom Martin, Marcus Trummer (Reviews By Matt Bladen)

Neckbreakker – Within The Viscera (Nuclear Blast)

Neckbreakker, spelt with two K’s to separate it from the pro wrestling move of the same name, have just the same amount of impact and flash as that lauded finish used by Rick Rude. This of course is bullshit as the band name is just an anglicised version of the Danish spelling Nakkeknaekker, though Rude’s move is still classic. I digress as this Neckbreakker play death metal, gory, bone breaking death metal, the sort of death metal that grabs you by the throat and throttles you in submission. This sort of reaction being the correct one for a death metal album.

Inspired by the Scandi DM and US DM scenes. It’s brutality to the maximum, the vein of frenzied hardcore sitting behind the maelstrom of blastbeats. This fusion of extremity is done very well by Neckbreakker, one moment they’ve got an Entombed grind on the brilliant Nephilim, then another break down at the climax of Shackled To A Corpse. The next minute it’s a Cannibal Corpse battery (Absorption) or movements into and it all feels raw and rough edged but there’s modern production values to make sure it batters you with a full sound of their rampant death metal.

From the whirling ferocity of Horizon Of Spikes you know what to expect from these youngsters, the opening part of the track beats you around the head savagely and then like anything with hardcore edge, the tone shifts and it’s a breakdown to close. It’s not long before the violence is unleashed again with Putrefied Body Fluid, this second track adding a bit more of the American scene with plenty of lead guitar breaks and solos, a whirlwind of mechanical modernity especially in the bass playing, that razorsharp modernism coming too on Purgatory Rites, the guitars sounding like their fighting each other against the punishing rhythm section and constant shifts.

As the year comes to a close you may miss this record as you think about AOTY and things but with youth on their side and clear vision of what they want to be, Within The Viscera is a monstrous debut from Neckbreakker. It will make some peoples year end list as a Rude Awakening. 8/10

Subway To Sally - Post Mortem (Napalm Records)

“The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated” – Mark Twain

Seemingly the same can be said about German folk metal band Subway To Sally, their 2023 record Himmelfahrt was behind closed doors intended to be their last, 14 albums and out, however due to the infectious nature of that record, the corpse still kept kicking, a re think was had and 20,000 volts put through the neck bolts to reanimate the corpse. 

So this is Subway To Sally Post Mortem, album number 15, over 30 years in the business and still alive (said in the style of Igor).They head into their afterlife with a new record that is perhaps darker than their predecessor, that one was intended to be a celebration to see out their career, this one deals with many socio-political issues, showing them as a band who have their finger on the pulse and one who can play folk metal without resorting to the tropes of the genre, exploring the links between Nero, Oppenheimer, Putin and Prometheus. 

Melodic, driven by traditional instruments such as flutes, bagpipes, violin, hurdy gurdy on Herz In Der Rinde or but tinged with melancholy on Kummerkind and Eisheilige Nacht. There’s also a lot more metallic moments, cranking up the amps for Nero, the victorious Unter Dem Banner and the triumphant Stahl Auf Stahl which features Warkings. It’s an album that dissects the past and how these things can influence the present, conducting a Post Mortem on our modern era through historical moments and the heaviest music the band have produced, sung as normal in their native German, with the exception of the chorus for Stahl Auf Stahl.

Post Mortem revives Subway To Sally not as a slow moving zombie but with a fresh outlook on the world and their music. 7/10

Dom Martin – Buried Alive (Forty Below Records)


Belfast born bluesman Dom Martin treats his fans and newcomers alike to a double live album through Forty Below Records. Drawing songs from all three of his studio albums the UK blues hall of fame inductee wants to show what you missed if you didn’t catch him on his last tour, or if you did remind you of that evening when one of the most authentic songwriters and players around hit the town. 

Despite being on this side of the pond, Martin’s musical influences stems from small town USA, blue collar Americana when the blues, country and bluegrass matters, slide guitars are all the rage and the vocals have the whiskey hued smokiness that Martin has in spades. 

Beginning with Daylight I Will Find, the live recording does a lot to show you how talented Martin is as a singer and performer, there were a few times the hairs on the back of my neck stood up, mainly on the atmospheric Government, which is only the second song of the ‘electric’ portion of this record, both sides have been recorded live but the first half is electric, the chugging Howlin’, the searing rock of Unhinged or the slide driven 12 Gauge expressing those blues guitar chops the best. 

The second half of the album though is the ‘acoustic’ portion of the record, filled with nods to SRV and ZZ Top it’s some top quality blues rock. But for me Dom Martin is at his best when he’s at the acoustic part of the show, his rugged vocals and layered approach to the ‘acoustic’ tracks really take you back to the early blues artists such as Robert Johnson, Bo Didley, Howlin’ Wolf et al. 

There’s some repetition but this only because some of the songs are merged together. Buried Alive is a bit like Zeppelin III merging electric and acoustic well keeping one foot in the traditional but in the modern era. Buried Alive has made a fan out of me. 8/10

Marcus Trummer – From The Start (Gypsy Soul Records)


Closing out 2024 with a bit of the blues, this record only just reached us but when it’s 10 tracks of slinky, soulful blues then there’s always time to get it playing. Canadian singer/guitarist/songwriter Marcus Strummer’s new album From The Start is a must for anyone that loves a bit of ‘true blues’ swaggering breezy guitar lines, soulful vocals, Hammond organ and a brass section inspired by the New Orleans sound. 

From The Start is debut record and was produced by The Commoners’ guitarist Ross Hayes Citrullo and Renan Yildizdogan who has produced records for The Commoners and Bywater Call. Together they give this debut a warm, rich feel of the late 60’s early 70’s sound it’s emulating. 

The Commoners link goes deeper as both Miles Evans Branagh and Adam Cannon provide keys/piano and drums, they join Silas Trummer (drums) and Stacey Shopowitz (bass) and a horn section comprised of Tom Moffett (trumpert) and Andrew Moljgun (sax), the keys and brass delivering authenticity throughout but especially on the smoky Hard Time or Waiting For A Change

It’s Marcus’ record, he’s been nominated for many awards in his native Canada and it’s easy to see why, much like John Mayer he’s got old bones, his vocals come from the classic soul era while his guitar playing is deft and emotive made for songs about love, loss and redemption. Now this isn’t blues rock, there aren’t many moments where there’s a big rock n roll blow out, Trummer’s music is slow burning and understated with plenty of soul, a dash of funk and gospel reverence. 

In recent years the blues has become a place for young artists and Marcus Trummer carries this burden of the blues brilliantly with his debut record. 8/10

Wednesday, 18 December 2024

The Spotlight: Interview With Rain City Drive By SJ

Interview with Rain City Drive’s Matt & Zachery; conducted before their Manchester show

SJ: I'd read online, but you all met in Manchester.

Matt: True, yeah, that's why we kind half-heartedly refer to it as our hometown. These guys were all in a band called Slaves, with Jonny Craig once upon a time and Johnny flew home last minute, but on the tour, they didn't have a singer and through mutual friends they found me we didn't know each other. I got on a plane like last very last minute like the next day or something and met them. I'm here and we met under a bridge in Manchester.

Matt: So that's so when it came time to kind of do our own thing with the band and start Rain City Drive. That's where the idea of calling it Rain City ‘something’ came from, I was looking up stuff up about Manchester and it's a rainy city, which I know a lot of places claimed, but that's where it comes from.

SJ: I can imagine and you've come today as well, the best season. I didn't have this question written but it's something I thought of because when it's cold, I tend to find that my fingers get really stiff. Do you find it hard playing instruments when it's cold?

Zachery: Absolutely. Like my joints, get so stiff and just like it, it hurts a bit until you finally start warming up a little bit. But for the most part, yeah, I just like to try to just keep hands in pockets the whole time and I'm just like keep the blood flow and keep fingers and hands moving and trying to fight through it, I guess but definitely playing in the cold is not ideal.

SJ: So, you’re the one fighting over the radiator and the heat then?

Zachery: I will throw hands for a warm hand.

SJ: Does Manchester hold a special place in your heart?

Matt: Yeah, for sure, I think it's a cool reminder of how we all came together, and people usually like it if you say that it's a hometown show. The crowds usually pretty good here anyways, but maybe we'd have to just really lean into that kind thing and just have a big Manchester flag behind us.

SJ: Absolutely. I'd love that. So, I found out about you guys when I was doom scrolling on Instagram and I came across the song Medicate Me, which, of course you did with Dayseeker. How did that song come into existence? What's the story there?

Zachery: The instrumental was kind of started through, well, I was at a bachelor party with my friends, and they were all going skiing one day and I came up with the song and I didn't want to go skiing, so I stayed back and started writing the instrumental for it. Then we worked with a buddy of ours and wrote top line with him on it and tried to kind of come together with one of his songs, which we kind of smooched both together. We ended up kind of reworking it a bunch more after that.

Matt:
It was like at a pretty good place, but we never really had a solid second verse, and we had that show that was open. So, when it kind of came together to have Rory to do the feature, he wrote a great verse in the studio, we were in with Dan Braunstein and him, and Dayseeker did a lot of work together, so Rory came down studio and did a second verse. Then I just kind of kind of rehashed what we do in the first verse for the outro, and it felt pretty smooth.

Zachery: At one point in time, I remember we're trying to get him to scream but he was very precious and considerate of our sound. He wanted to protect how we sound sonically and to go about things a bit more on the poppy side and he just knew exactly what we needed.

SJ: I like that, I think that shows a lot of respect as a musician to consider that.

Zachery: Oh yea, he’s a pure talent. He's awesome for sure.

SJ: With Things Are Different Now how did you know what direction you wanted to take? And when did it start to take shape?

Matt: I think like early phase of this record was pretty exploratory and like I don't think we had a super narrow focus in terms of what direction we wanted to go early on. There was kind of seeds of maybe wanting to go a little bit heavier, at least for us, things like the Sacrifice and the Over Me breakdown and Medicate Me, so that was kind of cool. I feel like for self-title (Rain City Drive), maybe we were trying to spread our wings and make sure we're writing things that were pretty catchy and accessible and this time for some reason, it just felt fun to lean into the rock thing a litter more. I feel like we always try to do songs that are accessible and still within a hard rock lane and this time it felt the most effortless. There wasn't that much of a preconceived plan.

Zachery:
Kind of just kind of go with the flow, see where it needs to go and shape it up from there.

Matt: Yeah, the songs kind of reveal themselves and sonically, we are always just trying to do something new and exciting.

Zachery: Yeah, I do remember at point in time we had the conversation where, we do want to go heavier and simultaneously more pop at the same time, because I feel like we were kind of towing the line a little bit. This time we're kind of a bit more, okay, this is this part, this is going to be the poppy part etc. There's definitely a bit more confidence in diving into those soundscapes.

Matt: I think it works so too, just because I can't do harsh vocals so I'm just going to do my thing and try to do pretty pop leaning stuff and you know, we can you can do that over pretty heavy tracks, you can have cleans over breakdowns and stuff. We always trying to do stuff with like a little bit more group, I thought that's the one that I can think of personally, I knew I wanted to do more of a kind of bounce, like an Over Me tempo, I wanted something that was kind of bouncy and doesn't feel stiff. Feels kind of like a party kind of vibe. I think for me, lyrically, it just depends on what's going on in my life, but I'm always trying to break away from feeling like I have to be like in a sad place, and so that's why Medicate Me is really fun because it's sort of like a fun, sexy song that's not the same as like a Talk To A Friend. Which I love but I don't want to feel that way just to make music.

SJ: That's really interesting. Have you seen the film, Almost Famous? You know there's a bit right at the end when he says, “Do have to be sad to write sad song, you have to be in love to write a love song?” and that kind of leans into what you were saying Matt, do you have to mentally be in that place to be able to write that type of music?

Matt: I don't think so, but it's just, it's hard. Maybe there's certain people that are better at writing formulaically and not having come across that way. I think I can write a generic song, but it'll probably sound generic somewhat, and I think the stuff that feels most authentic is because it’s coming from a real place. You're always going to be sad from time to time and that's going to be there, but just for me it's about expanding the brand of the band sonically and lyrically.

SJ: Yeah, that makes sense and it's what resonates with the audience as well. Leaning into that little bit more, creativity, inspiration, motivation, are all key parts of any form of art. What do you do to get out of those phases where you're not feeling inspired or motivated?

Zachery: I think you kind of have to lean into it and take breaks when necessary. Unless you're in a pressures where you’ve got to create a diamond here or something where you have to do. For the most part, if you're not feeling it, I don't think forcing yourself, and just kind of being frustrated with is really going to achieve a goal necessarily.

Matt: Yeah, there's definitely been times in studio for us where you're under a deadline, you just have to push through and find a solution, but this last record was really cool because we'd did 99% of the writing of the basic song structure and vocals before we went into the studio which took a lot of pressure off. Instead of you know, writing songs in the vocal booth when I'm supposed to be tracking them, that's way trickier. But yea, I think what Zac said a lot of times the answer is to step away and do anything but music and live your life. Somebody once said “Live like a song writer, write like a person” do you know what I mean?

SJ: Alternatively, when you're in that mindset, where you are focused, you're making changes to tracks, how do you know when a track is complete and when to stop?

Zachery: For me, it's when you're running out of problems to fix if that makes any sense? You listen to it and be like, oh, this needs something more here, or this melody needs to change or something's not sitting right, what do we need to do to fix it? And for me, I feel that it's when you're no longer being like I'm like it's taking my ear away from the song when it just kind of feels and flows naturally.

Matt: Yeah, I feel like vocally, I just always know when it's finished. Like objectively and critically and a lot of times I pretend that I'm like a sceptic outsider and if I think ‘this is going to suck’ and then if I'm forced to keep working on it but if I’m like ‘this actually pretty cool’ then it’s in a good place, if you know what I mean.

Zachery: Do you ever feel like when you have somebody new in the room, listening to a song for the first time, do you never get this like kind of new insight on the song where it feels like you're listening to it for the first time?

Matt: Yeah, without really, maybe trying for it exactly. Yeah, I think that's in super valid.

SJ: That's really interesting. I'd never thought of it that way, because I'm a painter and sometimes I find that when I'm creating something and somebody else is looking at it, I'm looking at it through their eyes for the first time, but I've never considered that before.

Matt: Maybe just puts you in an actual mode of a listener, whereas when you're just listening by yourself and you're alone, it's like you kind of have your hands-on the clay still where you’re thinking, yeah, I can change it if I want. You can’t be playing it for somebody and be like ‘let me just change that bit’ you know?

SJ: So, you'd mentioned in a previous interview that Sacrifice was supposed to be the album opener for ‘Things Are Different Now’ and it's now classed, in your words, as a bonus track at the end. Was there a track on this album that almost didn't make it?

Matt: Hmm, well, there's 2 that didn't make it that we'll be on the Deluxe, right? They’re both fun songs, but I think it just made a stronger album without them. I think if you believe in the format of the album at all makes sense to try to be like well, this is our statement when you start playing with album order and flow and stuff, it's like, yeah, you know, I think singles like win the game. You know and I guess they have for a long time to certainly understand age, because of how music's released, but um, there are people that are still going to be like what do you think about the album? and so like thinking about that as like an art form you want to make sure the albums as strong as it can be so two didn't make it, but they will be heard at some point.

SJ: What are the names of those songs?

Matt: Rip Cord and The Way It Was.

SJ: Do you have any ideas to what direction your future material may go? You mentioned earlier about leaning into the heavier side as well. Do you think that's going to be a direction you're going to go?

Matt:
Potentially.

Zachery: Yeah, I mean, I don't want to leave anything kind of unturned. I just want to explore and see kind of where it goes. Sometimes songs just need something and whether it be something heavier or something poppy, or just a stark difference between a verse and a chorus - like 2 totally different moods, but yeah, I don't know, instrumentally, at least nothing is out of bounds.

Matt: Yeah, I think that makes sense. When we did To Better Days, we were trying to keep fans of Slaves on board with and so, we kind of mindful of like not having too big of a departure. Which it wasn't a big deal, I think we made the record how we would have made anyways, but it was something to be mindful of and that I think with self-titled [Rain City Drive] it was something to be mindful of because it was the first album that was initially released under Rain City Drive. So, we wanted people to know that it wasn't completely different band and then for some reason on this record, I feel like, not that we have to, but we can have a big departure if we want. So, I'm hoping that we could just this next album, surely, surely, we earned the right to do something a little different if we want. Not that I'm not saying that we will. I just I don't like when that comes up in conversations because I see it in the reviews, I mean for the past couple records there's sometimes people who are like, yeah, it's good, but it's kind of like what we expect from them, you know? So, I think might be said that I think we've earned the right to…

Zachery: Kind of explore it…

Matt: Even if we don't, I don't like to push back.

Zachery: I also think Medicate Me kind of gave us the freedom to kind of branch off at that because it's not necessarily a super typical RCD sound.

Matt: Definitely no. Not musically, not lyrically, not tonal, yeah.

Zachery: I feel like that kind of opened the gates for us to explore it a little bit more. Let's see where this can take us a bit more.

Matt: Yeah, I feel like in the past, we were maybe trying to mix in the wrong kinds of pop with our heavier sound and it's like a harder sell, but if you're pulling from like that, almost kind of like creepy Billie Eilish, kind of world, it's a little more seamless. I look forward to the next album where everybody's like we need another Medicate Me and it's like no, we don't. I don’t know what the next thing is, but I'd rather that than we need another Talk To Friend, because I'm very proud of both songs and I don't think we could have done them better.

SJ: I agree they're perfect the way they are.

Matt: Yeah, thank you.

SJ: So, you'll be coming back for Slam Dunk.

Matt: Yeah, I know about that. I’ve been hearing about this festival for a long time and that we should do it, so I'm glad it’s happening.

SJ: Absolutely Slam Dunk’s amazing. You've predominantly sold out this tour which begs the question. Do you have any plans headline in your own UK European tour, and will you be coming to Wales?

Matt: Oh man, I don't know about Wales, it’s never even been brought up sadly. Do bands usually come to Wales?

Zachery: Yes, we played it a while ago.

Matt: As Slaves?

Zachery: Yea, as Slaves.

Matt: Then, I guess it's not off the table, I'd like to go just because I haven't been so, I think look out for a potential RCD headliner, late 2025.

SJ: I do have one fun question, with you guys’ touring, staying in these old venues and hotels, do you have any ghostly or unexplained experiences?

Matt: No and I wouldn't allow such things, because I'm very scared of ghosts. I won't watch a scary movie with ghosts, everybody that knows me knows that's my one rule. I don't f*** with ghosts. There was one time in the States. We stayed in an Airbnb, we stayed in this old, converted church and like the way we had the room setup, I had a room to myself at first and there's just creepy the old family photos and stuff everywhere and I picked another room where I could have people around me. I'm like, yeah, I'm not f****** sleeping alone in here.

SJ: Well, that was the last question, but is there anything that you want people to know that I haven't directly asked about, if you have any shout outs or anything to look forward to?

Matt: I think we're going to be touring a good bit off of Things Are Different Now and I'm excited that we're going to south-central and south-central America and Mexico for the first time at the middle of the year, really excited for that and I think this record has some legs and we'll be touring on it for a little bit before we get back in the studio. Soaking it all into write whatever the next thing is um.

Zachery: Yeah, let us know what songs you like the most as that definitely helps inform the next releases, the next albums and everything.

A View From The Back Of The Room: Dayseeker/Rain City Drive (Live Review By SJ)

Dayseeker, Rain City Drive & Heart Of Gold - Albert Hall, Manchester, 10.12.24

I arrived early to Albert Hall to interview Matt and Zachery from Rain City Drive before the gig (more on this later!). So, my first impression of Albert Hall, although quiet at the moment, is that it's beautiful and it filled me with excitement for the gig later. There was a decorated Christmas tree on the right side of the stage and stained-glass windows framing the walls of the upper story. For this sold-out show, I could envision how crowded this venue was going to be later.

I hadn't heard of Heart Of Gold (5) before, albeit I appreciate discovering new bands via support acts. Heart Of Gold were instantly met with cheers when they walked on stage and the head bobbing started as soon as they kicked it off with Stranger (To Your Love). The singer exclaimed that they feel the love in Manchester as every song from their recent release Human Nature, was written in Ezra & Grill coffee shop in the Northern Quarter. During the last song, the crowd put their phone lights on and swayed to See Through. Overall, they displayed a more mellow vibe compared to Dayseeker and Rain City Drive but still provided energy, especially from the bassist.

Rain City Drive (9) are my #2 most played artist of 2025, so this was a momentous occasion for me to finally see them live and they didn't disappoint. As soon as the crowd caught sight of them getting ready for the stage, they were roaring. Matt's clear vocals "I thought the ending was the worst of all." from their song Frozen illuminated the venue. I got goose bumps. A perfect way to hype the crowd up from the start. RCD performed a mixture of old songs from To Better Days and Rain City Drive and newer ones from Things Are Different Now.

One of the stand outs for me was when Rory (of Dayseeker) came on stage to perform Medicate Me. The crowd erupted, people who were sat down stood up and it was a stellar live performance. This is the song where I personally discovered both RCD and Dayseeker. Thematically, the lights cascaded in blue throughout the set, except for songs from To Better Days, where it shrouded the stage in orange/red. Visually, I understood why but my photos didn't come out great (but that could be my old phone camera). I would have loved to have heard Concrete Closure as its one of my favourites from their recent album. RCD put on an unforgettable polished stage that I will treasure.

The lights dimmed and the background visual effects blasted on illuminated the crowd in blue and pink. Rory’s "Always told me to keep you close. The feeling's fading when you're a ghost" from Dreamstate filled the venue. Mosh pits started immediately, and everyone stood up it was time for Dayseeker (9). Rory’s sparkly black shoes were like disco balls on the stage reflecting light. Throughout their set, it felt like an emotional journey, going from upbeat songs to slower sad songs - but that’s why we love Dayseeker. "I wrote this after my dad died and I felt I never had the capability to find happiness and move on from a big loss..." before bellowing Homesick. The lights faded and a spotlight shone on Rory alone with the keyboard and the mosh pits morphed into sways ending with Rory turning around and forming a heart with his hands whilst "In memory of..." came up on the screen.

Rory later expressed that he lives with "Anxiety on a daily basis" and having to "put on a good poker face. During the process of making Paper Heart, I had a few moments where I cracked." Matt from RCD joined Dayseeker on stage duetting 'I'm not made of stone and I'm not a machine', they beautifully sang together. The emotional songs continued to cascade with Rory wished his dad was still alive to see what the band has turned into. They also reflected on the tour itself and how it felt surreal as this is the first time they've toured the UK in 10 years and back then they were performing to crowds of 30-40 people. Rory shed a tear or two singing the cover of My Immortal and ended the set on Sleep Talk "Now I can see that I should have left you alone. The worst is yet to come.”

A View From The Back Of The Room: Eyehategod & Goatwhore (Live Review By Matt Bladen)

Eyehategod, Goatwhore & Silverburn, Hangar 18 Music Venue, 10.12.24

What better way to get into the festive spirit than with two of NOLA's loudest bands? Hangar 18 played host to these New Orleans based heavy acts and with a crushing local support in tow it promised to be a good night.

Before Silverburn (7) began the room began to fill, surprising for a Wednesday night, even more surprising for those us now reaching 'veteran' gig going status that it was full of students and young people. Two of them (18+) having polished off a little bottle of JD Honey on the way to the venue. Jolly good work lads!

I did mention that perhaps it was "for the memes" (I'll explain later) but it was great to see a packed house from the opening band, Swansea always does themselves proud in this respect. Those who came early got to experience the auditory aggression that is Silverburn.

I saw their first show as this band in The Bunkhouse and from there they've gone from strength to strength, with higher profile gigs and festival appearances, while the material and setlist is now well known they always seem to bring a new edge to the way it's performed, mechanical precision driven by creative soul.

Well received in their native city, the band members are all veterans of the scene, Silverburn continue to impress but I'd suggest they need to add a new tune or two to the set going forward to mix it up in 2025.

Silverburn also have a great merch game due to frontman Jimbob Issac's artistic pedigree however they had very stiff competition from Goatwhore (10). This is where I noted the memes thing earlier, I've seen so so many, mainly women and girls, wearing Goatwhore shirts at gigs and festivals. Now it's not up to anyone to challenge them if they've even heard of the band (if you do you're a dick) but there does seem to be something about having this bands name inscribed on you that always gives them plenty of merch sales and thus a crowd of people wanting to check out the band so proudly adorned on them.

It helps of course that Goatwhore are absolutely brilliant live, ferocious pagan blackened thrash metal that keeps you focused on frontman L. Ben Falgoust II at all times. He's a mammoth of a man with leather gauntlet and the wild performance style of Orange Goblin's Ben Ward. Their heathen music gets you involved, the crowd jumping, headbanging and shouting along as Goatwhore savage you. There's rarely any let up, tracks from their most recent record Angels Hung From The Arches Of Heaven taking the bulk of the eleven song set but they ran the gamut of their discography much to the crowd's delight.

Someone after the show described it as perfect and it was very hard to argue, my main reasoning for coming to this show was that I had never seen either of the main bands before and it was Goatwhore that stole the show, I very much look forward to seeing them again as soon as possible (and yes I bought a shirt)

The last band of the evening were NOLA sludge legends Eyehategod (7), with that incredible set from Goatwhore ringing in our ears, I anticipated a similar level of excitement from one of the loudest bands in the NOLA scene. They are up there with Crowbar in terms of influence, inspired by Discharge, early CoC and various extreme and hardcore bands, Eyehategod are legends of the scene. Unfortunately they seemed a bit disjointed in Swansea, complaints from the stage about the sound (I heard no issue), the lights (I saw no issue) plagued the first part of their set as frontman Mike Williams made a few snide remarks during the long silent pauses while they tried to sort things out.

That being said when they were playing it was exactly what I expected, crushing distortion and tortured vocals, aural torture at it's very best. The similarity of the songs and the breaks in the set meant that perhaps I, and a few more in the crowd weren't as invested as they could have been but Eyehategod played to their strengths towards the close of the set bludgeoning Swansea before heading off stage and returning for and encore to close the night. Eyehategod of course have earned their headliner status over  along career but there was a few times when I did think they dost protest too much. 

Still all told a brilliant evening of heavy music with a packed Swansea crowd who again turned up to support their scene. 

Tuesday, 17 December 2024

A View From The Back Of The Room: While She Sleeps (Live Review By Toki Ward)

While She Sleeps, Currents, Thrown & Resolve, O2 Victoria Warehouse Manchester, 07.12.2024 

Despite the horrendous weather and early doors at 6:00PM, Resolve (7) played to a very respectable turn out. The French four piece lead the charge with a tight groove and some tight breakdowns. With electronic elements to help lift the band's sound, they’re a good way to start the evening and get us all moving.

Next are Swedish hardcore titans Thrown (8) and they’re in the awkward position of keeping the energy up which they do with ease. And despite a bit of a heavy bass tone the band is balanced extremely nicely. You can really hear the detail in the drums, along with well balanced heavy riffs. Finally, some nicely mixed heavy vocals make for a very tight overall sound. Lastly the band's slightly muted stage outfits work well and don’t distract from an amazing light show.

Last up, before the main event are Currents (7) and they are able to keep a now fairly full Victoria Warehouse going. This band has some great riffs and overall groove to match, building from a nice mid tempo vibe. They even manage to get in some cheeky Gojira like pick scrapes and slides into their riffs, Living In Tragedy being a particular favourite. Finally, they bring things back to the mid tempo groove with anthem Remember Me that lands with the crowd extremely well and Guide Us Home closes out a great main support act.

With the new album Self Hell being a great but different direction of the band, it was interesting to see what While She Sleeps (9) were going to bring to the table tonight, with me being a long term fan of the band since their third EP, 2010's The North Stands for Nothing.

Coming on to Self Hell opener Peace Of Mind that blends seamlessly into Leave Me Alone, it’s when kicking into more well known material such as Anti-Social or the amazing intro’ riff to You Are All You Need that the crowd really gives Sleeps all their energy, and too right! The high energy is kept up with the heavy down beat of The Guilty Party and when going back to new material, Rainbows it sounds like it was always in the band's set as it’s played with such ease.

Lead guitarist Sean Long is now a master of whammy solos and this proves it in spades. Not forgetting rhythm guitarist Mat Welsh and bassist Aaran Mckenzie bringing great riffs under the solos and making the stage space very much their own. Finally drummer Adam Savage is able to keep a solid groove for the whole band to play to. The band look so comfortable on stage together, having the same line up since 2009.

A personal live favorite from the band for me has always been Systematic and thankfully the opening synth line and guitar riff sound absolutely massive. With Malevolence not supporting on this leg of the tour, this means that it’s up to Currents vocalist Brian Wille to do backing vocals for Down, which they do a very respectable job with

Hurricane starts to get us wonderfully on the home stretch and after a fantastic rendition of Enlightenment, crowd favourite Silence Speaks features Resolve vocalist Anthony Diliberto stepping into the shoes of Bring Me The Horizon’s Oli Sykes, of which he is more than capable. Speaking of vocals, frontman Loz looks very much in his element throughout the entire set.

Very much looking and sounding like he was always meant to be on stage. Splitting the vocals between himself, Sean and Mat for the most part means that he can really push it when he needs to. To The Flowers sounds so wide and definitely would fit a festival atmosphere. And honestly with the last two albums it feels like the band are aiming for some well deserved bigger crowds.

Finishing with fan anthem Sleeps Society to bring things to an epic close, a very happy and grateful Loz reminds the crowd that While She Sleeps exists because of them. And I think that’s what this band has always been about, community and fan support. Overall, a fantastic set and well worth braving the weather for.

Sunday, 15 December 2024

Reviews: After Lapse, Illusion Force, DELLA NOVA, Trouble County (Reviews By Matt Bladen)

After Lapse - Pathways (Frontiers Music Srl)

Spanish prog metal band After Lapse have already released one record on the Italian label and they look to follow up their debut with Pathways. This second album keeps the strong influence of bands such as Dream Theater the debut had alongside some more modern prog metal elements too.

Pathways though gets going with so The Shadow People which incorporates so much of the Dream Theater style you half expect James LaBrie to start singing from the “S.O.S” Morse Code intro, the stop start riff and melodic chorus it’s all very Dream Theater, on Dying Star too there’s that emotive quality to DT’s music Rubén Miranda’s voice putting a lower European gruffness on the fragility of LaBrie’s.

After Lapse aren’t a one trick pony, they add some of the epic sounds of Haken on Dust To Dust, a modern sounding prog track where the guitars and keys interplay, guitarists Miguel Ángel Rueda and Iván Marín adding the djenty riffs to the oscillating synths of Pablo Sancha. What you’ll notice about After Lapse’s music, is that it’s very percussive, driven by the drumming and synths both use counter rhythms and repetition to carry the tracks.

This is perhaps because drummer Roberto Cappa and keyboardist Pablo Sancha are the founding members, the drumming and the keys play a major role, especially on the funky Dirty Loop’s like Thanks, But No Thanks, where Javier Palacios bass comes to prominence too.

With Pathways After Lapse express more of their influences, from the epic prog rock of Walking By The Wire, the djenty Wounds Of The Past and the atmospheric Turn Into Light. Pathways has you investing a bit more time and consideration into who After Lapse are as a band. 8/10

Illusion Force - Halfana (Frontiers Music Srl)

Japanese power metal band Illusion Force are massively influenced by the lighting fast power metal that is integral to the shred obsessed Japanese scene. 

Famously brought to the West by DragonForce, this 'extreme' power metal sound is rife across this third album. Halfana is their debut for Frontiers though, previously releasing two albums through Japanese label King Records, they have a large amount of touring behind them so the virtuosity on this record has been honed on stage and in the studio.

Musically if you like DragonForce or a faster Helloween or Stratovarius (who's guitarist Matias Kupiainen mixed the record) then you'll love the hour of Illusion Force's warp speed shredding and fretboard trickery fed by blast beats and most importantly some excellent vocals that will certainly open them up to a Western audience, singer Jinn having a bluesy tone that sits well in the crazy shred metal, adding a 80's metal style. 

Featuring a 4 part suite in the middle of the record unless you love this style of music it's not going to change your mind but Illusion Force have a big following in their home country and will gain more fans with this new record. 7/10 

DELLA NOVA - Della Nova (Self Released)

There's a drum solo on this record, a bloody drum solo! There's also a LOT of info about DELLA NOVA, that's how it's written all caps, the band clearly having something to shout about. Born as project during lockdown for frontman/guitarist/songwriter Alex Bowmer who recorded in the converted church/warehouse where he lives. This debut album has been a long time coming and is inspired totally by Alex's experiences and musical influences.

The trio on the recording is rounded out by long-time collaborator Joe Chauncy on bass and drummer Karl Hall, who happens to be Alex's cousin and has since left the band replaced by Adam Szabo. It was mixed/mastered by Ben Jeffes another long term friend of Alex. So clearly Alex is a man with connections and a lot of luck, his own recording studio, talented musician friends and family, so this album is a ten then yeah?

Well no as the music DELLA NOVA have produced is actually quite generic for my taste. There's talk of Royal Blood, QOTSA and AIC, and while the first one is true, I'd have to pitch this record as heavier Brit Pop, the influence of the Madchester scene is quite pronounced in the vocals while the music swaps E for lithium, using crunchy 8 string guitar riffs for a 'heavy' sound for me it's a bit too constructed and a bit too safe.

Della Nova (the album) is a decent debut but that's about it, DELLA NOVA (the band) are an indie band trying to tap into the heavy rock market. 5/10

Trouble County - Blacken The Sky (Epitronic)

From Portsmouth via California and Seattle, NWOCR crew Trouble County release their debut album. If we're making comparisons then track such as Desperado reminds me of Alice In Chains and Awake of Black Label Society, while the opener 12 Gauge has some Allman swagger. Trouble County aim their music at the darker side of southern rock, incorporating grunge, the 80's Sunset Strip and an outlaw country ethos.

The vocals have a Weiland/Rose-esque sneer on Buckcherry sleaziness of You Again, while over on Gotta Try there's a gospel approach against the ever present distorted riffs and powerful drumming. Songs about drinking, getting high and generally being a ner'do well are mixed with a environmental message. A lot of this album brought to mind Velvet Revolver, a band I absolutely loved (it's the best band Slash and Duff have been in).

While Trouble County don't quite reach the same heights as that band did. With Blacken The Sky they have delivered a strong debut album crafted through live show refining. 7/10

A View From The Back Of The Room: Gun (Live Review By Debby Myatt & Tony Gaskin)

Gun, Kira Mac & Collateral at KK’s Steel Mill, Wolverhampton, 05.12.24

Tonight’s offering on a grim, grey night in Wolverhampton is a triple header of Brit Rock spanning a generation.

Up first are a band we’re very familiar with, Collateral (8). They owned this stage a couple of months back at the NWOCR Fest and although they are on first and only have 30 mins, they play as if they are headliners. A big portion of the crowd are, like us, well acquainted with the lads and the room is pretty full for them with lots of Collateral t-shirts on view. A sign that the band have been growing exponentially these last 12 months or so, especially since the release of their new album Should’ve Known Better. Not much we can say that we haven’t already said about this band, they are exciting, vibrant and continue to impress and gain new fans whenever they play.

Kira Mac (8) are new to me, despite being Planet Rock favourites and at the forefront of the latest wave of brilliant young rock bands that we are lucky to have in this country. Dynamic and full of energy, this band pull no punches with their lively set full of catchy songs that’s made them such a favourite on the radio. Vocalist Rhiannon is an imposing figure on stage and exudes an aura of sheer brilliance. Her bluesy vocal style is the key to this hard rocking outfit, that leans heavily on Americana roots rock. It’s that little spark of magic that makes them stand out. 

They open up with One Way Ticket and Dead Man Calling a swift one/two that pulls you in and they waste no time in blasting through their short set before closing out with new tracks Falling and Climbing. 2025 looks like it will be a big year for Kira Mac, they kick it off with a headline appearance at Planet Rock’s Winters End festival at the end of January and fingers crossed we’ll be getting a new album and tour announced soon!

35 years on from their debut single and the Gizzi Bros are still going strong. Dante is still loving life as the man that’s front and centre, with brother Jools by his side, Gun (9) are as vibrant and powerful as ever and they are busy promoting the new album Hombres which has been critically acclaimed and their best selling release since 1994’s Swagger. And no surprise really with every track a banger in their usual style of rock that is easy to listen to, very radio friendly and even able to cross genres into catching the attention of non-rock fans. Stand-out tracks are All Fired Up and Falling which both get an airing tonight. 

As well as the new songs we’re treated to plethora of classics from their long career - Inside Out, Taking On The World, Vicious Heart all get the crowd singing along, and of course there was their classic cover of the Cameo song Word Up, but the emotional highlight was hearing their debut hit Better Days. It’s still a belter 35 years on and sounds as fresh as ever. The obligatory encore was back to 1989 and the aforementioned Taking On The World plus Shame On You before ending the night with a party classic, a cover of the Beastie Boys Fight For Your Right (To Party). Gun have shown tonight that they are still a force to reckon with, can still write great songs and can still entertain big crowds, not a single blank was fired tonight, they blew us away.

Friday, 13 December 2024

Reviews: Helloween, Orbiter, Caressing Misery, Weapon Of Pride (Reviews By Simon Black & Rich Piva)

Helloween - Live At Budokan (Reigning Phoenix Music) [Simon Black]

Helloween have the virtue of being the first band I ever saw live at a festival waaayyyy back in 1988, where I promptly fell in love with them, but they really dropped from my radar in the years following the collapse of that original line-up early in the 90’s. Like many fans from that period, it’s taken the splicing of the three distinct incarnations of the band back into one to reignite my love of their music – the whole being so much greater than the sum of its parts.

The Pumpkins United reunion was captured with a the Live In Madrid album recorded a few years back, and a Blu-Ray snapshotting bits of the global tour, but that really was a reunion Greatest Hits package. However, that led release of a full-length new self-titled studio album in 2022, for which this double live album is a superb memento of. Our estimated princeps Matt and I had the pleasure of catching Helloween on this new album tour as the world was emerging from Covid back in May 2022, and what I can remember of that night was spectacular. The lack of memory can be blamed of the bizarre craft beer pub we found in a backstreet near Brixton Academy, but the band left an indelible performance on my memory nonetheless, and suddenly I was that delighted eighteen-year-old again (only with added arthritis).

For those who have been living in a hole in recent years, the reunion of this Euro Power Metal legend brought singers Michael Kiske and Andi Deris duetting the vocal lines, with founder Kai Hansen stepping up to the mike to medley the Walls Of Jericho material from the days before they had a dedicated singer. The new album went further, showed how confident they had become, borrowed a page or eight from the collaborative opera Avantasia project (which inspired the reunion in the first place) and saw all three of them splitting the vocal lines across the new material.

It works really well. Despite all being quite high register and ranged singers, they are also very, very different and having the powerhouse guitar playing of Kai Hansen in the mix is always going to work. Especially live, because like Iron Maiden retaining Ganick Gers in the mix when they rebooted, having three strong guitar players means all the tricks that you can mix into the arrangements in the studio can be done live without all that cheating with click-tracks. Well, you still need those to time big stage productions like these guys are now delivering, but you get the point…

This live performance at Tokyo’s legendary Bukokan is a milestone for the band and splices a generous handful of tracks from the recent opus and lots, and lots of content from the rest of their extensive discography. Obviously for old farts like me, hearing Kiske bringing back Keeper Of The Seven Keys era material will always send a chill down the spine, not least because his vocals are impeccably still in that original register, but the spread of material over the years is fairly evenly distributed. Deris also gives him a good run for his money, and has as much of a range, so those two compelling frontmen splitting the work is nothing short of epic. They could have taken the simple route of alternating the front spot, with each singer taking the lead on the songs from their respective eras, but they don’t - they share the load, with each bringing new nuance and dimension to the others material and hammering the message home that this combined gestalt is Helloween now.

Did we need another live double album this close to the last one? Possibly not, but the band have just signed a new album deal with Nuclear Blast splinter label Reigning Phoenix, and that means new material next year, and in the meantime, this warms up the palette nicely. At over two hours of run time, it’s great value for money, and despite the overlap of material from the previous live release, I’m more than happy to have a snapshot of the tour, because live these boys really can do no wrong. 10/10

Orbiter - Distorted Folklore (Salvaged Records) [Rich Piva]

There are few bands out there using the Orbiter name. The one we will be discussing today is the American band from Gainesville, FL, home of the college, cows, and Hot Water Music. The Florida Orbiter put out the excellent EP, Head Wounds, back in 2022 and are now back with their second full length, Distorted Folklore. Yeah, I hear some of the standard influences from these guys (Sabbath is mentioned in their bio, but…) but what really gets me are the Torche and Hum vibes emanating from the nine songs on Distorted Folklore. So of course, with that you get big, soaring post rock, post metal, heavy and atmospheric goodness that should attract a much bigger fan base.

Safe As Houses is the opener and is more like Hum or Failure that the more metal side of the band, and they pull it off perfectly. A band like Astronoid comes to mind too when I listen to these guys, or maybe even the Cave In stuff from Jupiter and beyond. The sound is big and the vocals make the sound even bigger. The awesome really kicks in on Time Rips, where you will hear where I get the Torche stuff from. This song is killer and the vocals are next level cool. I love how the heavy guitar and riffs are always there but sometimes you have to really pay attention to how great the guitar work is, like on Lightning Miles, that distracts you with its big, open feel and sprawling vocals. 

Every turn of Distorted Folklore brings me back to the 90s/early 00s post rock stylings of Hum and Failure, and this is a wonderful thing. Timeworn is such a perfect example of this. Same with a song like Coil, which brings a very cool bassline too. The most 90s of the batch is the much more chill and sparser I'll see you on the backside of water…but it is no less awesome and works as a great atmospheric bridge between all of the huge sounds on Distorted Folklore. The sound and comparison I keep coming back to is Hum, and that is alright by me, when you have tracks like Cicada Hymn and Svalbard.

You will not hear me complain when bands are influenced by the ones I mentioned related to Orbiter. If you dig that sound and get as excited as I do when Hum and Failure are mentioned then you are going to really dig Distorted Folklore. 8/10

Caressing Misery - Lost And Serene (The Circle Music) [Simon Black]

Caressing Misery are a side project formed by guitarist Zac Campbell and vocalist Julian Aust’s deep love of old school 80’s and 90’s Gothic Rock – a style of music that went underground even back then and has stayed deeply so ever since. There used to be whole labels catering to this sort of material, such as the wonderful and sadly defunct Nightbreed from my hometown of Nottingham, but this is the first time in a long time something new from the genre has landed on my review platter in a long time.

The height of the movement seemed to be the late 80’s, almost as a counterpoint to the colourful excesses of everything else that was going on in the decade when you couldn’t move for black lace and crimping irons but started to fade when the 90’s shifted musical direction. I’m not sure that was a bad thing at the time, because even the genre’s nod to more extreme styles of music when it went Darkwave rapidly got repetitive, and the challenge remained the risk of everything struggling to sound original. Even it’s close cousin the doom movement felt the wind of change, with bands like Paradise Lost sounding more like Depeche Mode for a while, so it’s a refreshing change all these years later to hear an act that both absolutely traces its influences back to the very roots of Goth, whilst sounding fresh and modern.

The opening bars of Swansong Of The Night immediately evoke Andrew Eldritch stylistically, but as the album progresses it’s clear that despite sticking in the baritone register, that Julian Aust has a lot more range in his pipes, adding far more subtlety, mood and emotive depth to the lyrics and within two songs I’m not interested in comparisons with the influences than I am listening to the product. These two are the heart of the project, and apart from a couple of guest appearances on a couple of tracks all the music is handled by Campbell, although it’s his fluid and moving guitar work which really makes this work.

It’s moody, moving and mellifluous despite the darkness, and if I have a negative it’s that the tone does not vary too much. A Thousand Seasons does take the tempo up a bit, but the challenge always remains that this is a genre of music that rarely shifted its tone and style, which is part of the reason it died out. The fact that it sounds contemporary, rather than a straight retro tribute is why it works though, and a couple of plays in I can tell I am hooked. 8/10

Weapon Of Pride - Beneath The Surface (Wormholedeath Records) [Rich Piva]

Stoner thrash from the Arizona desert? Sure, I’ll bite. Weapon Of Pride certainly bring some desert/stoner influences on their new record, Beneath The Surface, but what dominates is some serious 80s thrash love lurking under the sand that wants to leap up and engulf you during the 46 minutes or so of their new record.

The opener, Axeman, rips, but I think listeners will need to get used to the vocals a bit. Staying in the 80s thrash discussion, it is kind of like having to get used to the guy who sings for Megadeth to truly understand the genius of those early records. There is a high-pitched punk snarl to the thrash influenced vocals that may be jarring at first but really work once it sinks in and clicks. These guys are not afraid to shred, like on the solo for this opening track. Speaking of shredding and Megadeth, how about Priestess? This track is way more thrash than anything stoner, and I am just fine with that. I could have done without the horns on Carni, which is probably my least favourite track on the record, but I get it as it relates to the 80s thrash vibe you get from the whole album, and there is no denying the solo rips up the place. 

On their website the band mentions they are for fans of The Sword, The Atomic Bitchwax, and Fu Manchu. I would counter with Megadeth, Overkill, Scatterbrain (the more straight-ahead songs), and Destruction when listening to songs like Wrath and Awaken. I really dig the track Siren, which is a slower paced thrasher that incorporates some killer traditional metal stylings and like ten different vocal styles. I also really like how the bongos and bass interlude of Floating leads to Shredder, which does just that. Temptation has a nice groove too it while the closer, Into The Storm doubled down on the heavy with a nice southern style metal crunch to go along with the thrash love.

Yes, the record is probably ten minutes too long and yes, the vocals take some getting used to and yes, this is way more thrash than stoner, but when Beneath The Surface is good, it shreds and rips you up with no end in sight. Weapon Of Pride brings us a fun record for fans of 80s thrash who dig the stoner stuff too and can argue the positive point of view for Mustaine’s vocals. 7/10

Thursday, 12 December 2024

Reviews: Electric Wizard, Blue Oyster Cult, An Axis Of Perdition, Dwelled (Reviews By Joe Guatieri, Rich Piva, Mark Young & GC)

Electric Wizard - Black Magic Rituals & Perversions Vol. 1 (Spinefarm Records) [Joe Guatieri]

2020… The fear of the unknown was a genuine reality but in the fields of Dorset in rural England, in the middle of nowhere stands the always and forever with that castle. This pandemic was time for self reflection for it changed us all but how did it change the Electric Wizard? 

Well as it turns out Jus, Liz, Haz and Simon were all isolating together and they reached into the legendary Doom Metal bands past to bring them into the present. Performing songs from the bands catalogue from years gone by and rediscovering who they are, dark dwelling, heavy, pot smoking fiends with a need for captivity.

This is an Electric Wizard ‘alive’ album as the band are only performing for themselves whilst looking into the mirror back at their own reflection. It defines that notion of falling off of your horse, dusting yourself off and then getting back on the saddle, only to ride again.

No sound technician and no stage manager, the band turned around and looked at each other, with their instruments in hand and stepping on a single smoke machine pedal in the corner of the room. The room fills with this known comfort as a mutual thought connects these four minds from this point onwards, “Ah shit, here we go again”. 

Electric Wizard then launches into Dopethrone and as by magic, the ear-piercing high notes knock pictures and ornaments off the shelving and low notes sink everything into the floor, forming a forever falling hole in the ground. This feels right…

Later we go through many portals till we find The Chosen Few. Three portals align our vision, a point to the middle signifies Electric Wizard’s direction as we step through the pink radiating clouds, we disappear in an instant. 

The second we open our eyes again we find ourselves on motorcycles flying high through the sky, approaching giant angles in the sky. Think of Kenny’s death experience in the South Park movie, that’s where we’re at… Perverse? Yes! A sin? Maybe…Little boy you’re going to hell.

Finally we have reached the un-promised land, a place fuelled by hate, revenge and a taste for blood, Funeralopolis… Those first few notes capture me in a trance very single time, to me they identify what a Heavy Metal band is, patient but waiting for destruction, much like a Shark hunting for its prey until it’s time to strike. 

When the fireworks launch at 1:04, you know that you’ve exploded into a million pieces. To sum up this legendary song, it takes Doom Metal and Punk, two things that shouldn’t be together and makes them work effortlessly, it’s like Tom and Jerry, they need each other not only to survive but thrive, it’s the thrill of the chase.

Black Magic Rituals & Perversions Vol. 1 presents an outer body experience being captured onto tape. You’re there in Dorset, isolating with Jus, Liz Haz and Simon and they’re performing, not because they love it but because they need it. This past year, I was lucky enough to see Electric Wizard live at ArcTanGent Festival and that for me was a dream come true and they surpassed my expectations. 

Everyone was saying to me that they were very hit and miss live but I was like man, this is ELECTRIC FUCKING WIZARD we’re going on about here… This live album matched my feelings after seeing the band live in the flesh, I felt free and I wanted to go to bed immediately to sit with this feeling for it could flee at any moment. 10/10

Blue Oyster Cult - 50th Anniversary Live: Third Night (Frontiers Music Srl) [Rich Piva]

I could make this review very simple and just say if you liked the first two nights of the three-night residency of the legends Blue Oyster Cult playing their first three records end to end, one each night, with a hits and rarities set as the second half of the show from back in September 2022, you will really enjoy the recording of night three, which is the band playing their best record in full, Secret Treaties

For a band celebrating their 50th (or so) anniversary they still certainly sound amazing live and rip it up for two-plus hours of end-to-end BOC greatness. Not bad for a bunch of 70-80 or so year olds, or really anybody playing live these days.

As I mentioned, you get Secret Treaties, and 10-10 album with zero skips, in full, so that alone is worth the price of admission. You get the hits that are required in any set, with great versions of Burnin’ For You, Reaper, and Godzilla

But you also get gems like the opener to Cultösaurus Erectus, Black Blade, and the live ripper, Buck’s Boogie. You also get a couple of deeper cuts from Agents Of Fortune, Sinful Love and Tenderloin, which all sound great. It is another excellent and varied set to go along with the other two nights.

Blue Oyster Cult are underrated rock and roll heroes that everyone should dig into, because there is so much goodness to go around over the 50 plus years they have been doing it. This is a fun conclusion to the live series that fans of the band and newbies would both enjoy. 8/10

An Axis Of Perdition - Apertures (Apocalyptic Witchcraft Recordings) [Mark Young]

This is something else. There are a lot of bands who proclaim that their sound is unique and that the latest release further separates them from the herd. Apertures is a release that makes good on every single promise. 

It is unsettling with some nightmarish sounds that stay with you after the final track has completed. This doesn’t go down ‘the every song at hyper speed route’ of black metal you might be used to, it’s also not a blast fest (although they are there), it’s just different. 

The music here is the result of a band writing what they believe to be their truth. It just so happens that their truth could be used as the backdrop to a horror film and with that in mind, Corrupted Pulse represents the start of this journey, an electronic collision of noise that just wants to unsettle you. 

Until Metempsychosis comes in on its heels and starts off in what you could describe in a traditional manner, but not with a barrage but with a mesmeric arrangement that has so much going on you will have to listen multiple times to really get to grips with this. It continually builds, adding more layers here, removing where redundant but keeps pushing forward. 

Now, if you have ready my reviews this year you may have noticed that I’m not keen on instrumental breaks or interludes. On here Corrupted Pulse didn’t act in the same way that others could do and so it meant something and wasn’t there just to fill time. 

However, they follow Metempsychosis with The Undercity Awaits, which is another soundscape that is designed in the same manner as Corrupted Pulse. Moving on, Chant Of The Worshipful Prey comes in with a build that is just odd. Its heavily laden with background sounds, discordant guitar lines that repeat and just an overall feeling that if you dig this, then great. 

If you don’t, bye. It just meanders its way from start to finish, infuriatingly without seemingly going anywhere but at the same time getting its hooks into you so that you stay with it till the end. Sewer Of Lethe is somewhere you probably don’t want to go, and a The Undercity Awaits acts as a bridge to The Truth Is There to Tear Apart. Taking audible cues, it is another slow and measured effort that brings in those guitar lines that cannot stay in one place for any great length of time. 

This is as far away from what I considered black metal to be as possible. It should be applauded for being so unique but at the same time I just wanted it to go all out. The constant song then interludes then song pattern also doesn’t help but as you make your way through you discover that these are an essential part of the album.

Unimaginable Depths then followed by Private Acts Of Abnegation which has to be said is a stunning track. By now they have got the atmospherics running but doesn’t overshadow a fantastic riff. The whole thing is wonderous really, squalling background effects and that unhurried approach that amplifies the effect the song has on you. 

And then they hit you with Flesh Underfoot and I Am Odium; Flesh Underfoot is eerie, and I Am Odium is last act, and what a song it is. It is massive, covered in an oppressive cloak partly due to their use of background sounds. You have to check out the drumming on this, it is first class. The avoidance of using heavy guitar is remarkable and yet it is still heavy, you just have to dig deep and let it flow over you. Incredible stuff.

Reading this back, I think you can say that I loved half of it and didn’t care for the other half. I’m being unfair to be honest. The album is built so that the respective interludes have a job to do in linking each song and are so well thought out that I can forgive them for being there. Without them, the album would not work as well as it does as you would have a collection of great songs but with no context or flow between them. Its brave, exciting, maddening and completely unique. 10/10

Dwelled - Suffering Heritage (Self Released) [GC]

On first glance absolutely everything about Suffering Heritage, the debut EP form Dwelled loudly screams that they are UK based, the cover artwork, band name and font, song titles, literally everything is what you would expect it to look like it all reminds me of old UKHC bands, and I am all for that, but does it sound like it should?

Starting with Spineless might be a bit of a bit of way to throw you off as it starts with a big nasty drop that the descends into some chaotic noisy insanity that merges into a deathcore beatdown which throws into some blasting death metal also and while it’s all done well, it feels like they are maybe trying too much all at once? 

Ripped Apart does get a bit more regimented and follows a less chaotic path but still has some unpredictability involved which while offering a nice twist on the more straightforward metalcore sound does make you kind of sit and think what is actually going on but when they chuck in the beatdowns everything improves 100% these guys know how and when to add the heavy to songs to devastating effect! 

Echoes then goes full death metal and mixes the deathcore sound in without the 2 sounds clashing they bounce off each other perfectly and create an ungodly heavy track. Otherside proceeds to then flatten you with more breath-taking heaviness, it’s a song full of big chunky riffs mixed with squealing noisy guitars and the gutturals on this song are on point and it feels like they have settled on a sound now which helps to show direction and gives you something to focus on.

Suffer is just brilliant and actually reminds me of a host of mid 00’s UKHC bands all of which were fucking fantastic, it perfectly unleashes a dark and brooding feel that when mixed with the savage and relentless nature of the track is exactly what I want to hear and makes me want to get up and throw thigs around the room. Rivers Of Regret finishes with a final flourish and is yet another intensely punishing and relentlessly heavy 3 minutes of nicely executed deathcore and it’s a nice way to round everything off.

I must be honest and say that Suffering Heritage started off on a bit of a mixed note and I wasn’t sure where it was going but, after the initial bump it just got better and better as it went on! You can tell Dwelled have something special up their sleeves and just wanted to test the water with this EP, if their future releases are anywhere near as good as this the UK has another special talent on its hands. 8/10

Reviews: Powell-Payne, The Sabians, Mudlarker, Dear Deceased (Reviews By Matt Bladen & Rich Piva)

Powell-Payne - Voilà (Frontiers Music Srl) [Matt Bladen]

Some Welsh AOR now from a band formed by Mark "Penfold" Powell (ex-Psycho Kiss drummer) and the ex-vocalist of Airrace, Adam Payne. Both now veterans of the melodic rock/AOR scenes they have combined their talents to form this new band signing to Frontiers Music in the process.

Formed in 2022 as a way to pay tribute to lost love ones the initial singles spawned into something biggest as Mark and Adam brought in Aydan Watkins (guitar) and Alex Anderson (bass) to complete the four piece. With an album of songs and a full band they'll be looking to tour soon but the album itself? Well it's proper AOR, owing much to Journey, Toto, Dare or Foreigner alongside the more modern influences of the Scandi scene on Staring At The Sun.

Better Days gets the albums started, it's boisterous beginning with a huge hook, a sign of things to come as Powell's steady drum beats give No Escape propulsion the synths shimmer in the background against guitar stabs as Voices adds the rock to melodic rock, the guitars are particularly impressive here. With the music and production highly polished, Payne's vocals carry the emotion of songs such as The Storm.

For anyone that heard him in Airrace, Serpentine or around these parts Tidal, you'll know what a great singer he is, elements of Steve Perry and Joe Elliott both prominent, be it on the country balladry of Questions (very Bon Jovi), the anthemic Taking Back Yesterday or the closing mega ballad All For Love, he carries the huge choruses as Powell's drums carries the beating heart. Voilà arrives as a real presentation of AOR skill and veteran ability. As if the 80's never left Powell-Payne throw it back with style. 8/10

The Sabians – Shiver (Ripple Music: Beneath The Desert Floor Vol. 6) [Rich Piva]

When Todd from Ripple Music told me about the Beneath the Desert Floor series he was doing, where the Ripple executive team (Todd, with maybe some input from some Ripple fanatics) chose some forgotten, lost, and/or out of print heavy records from the 1990s or early 2000s to bring back to the world via some sweet Ripple represses, including on their amazing vinyl offerings, I was super pumped and thought maybe we can get two or three cool records in 2024 as part of the series. 

Well, here we are talking about volume six (and later volume seven), with classics from Fireball Ministry, Glitter Wizard, Rollerball, White Witch Canyon, and The Awesome Machine already in hand and back to blowing the listening public away. I mean Fireball Ministry for crying out loud! For the next two releases we go a bit more obscure, with volume six from The Sabians, a San Francisco Bay area band with members from bands you may have heard of before.

Let’s start with Shiver, from The Sabians. The Sabians included guitarist Justin Marler (who left the band originally to enlist in a Russian Orthodox monastery but came back to the band seven years later) and drummer Chris Hakius from the legendary Sleep (Hakius is in Om too). Mr. Pike even played a role in The Sabians, helping them secure some rehearsal space to get the band going. This is record two from The Sabians, originally released in 2003. Please do not think this sounds anything like Sleep, because it doesn’t, at all. 

It sounds like late 90’s early 2000s post hardcore, or early heavy emo (hear me out), and it is excellent. This sounds more like something that would have been on Revelation Records, No Idea Records, or Doghouse Records, not anything stoner or doom related. Think a more edgy, louder, and less produced Sunny Day Real Estate. Bands like Threadbare and Falling Forward come to mind too. The singer sounds so much like a guy who as a kid sang in a hardcore band but needed to chill in his next band a bit, but not take any of the emotion out of his music or singing.

The song One By One is the perfect example of this, and it rules. There is a sparseness to the heavy here and the production is not lo-fi but also did not seem important to the band, which is exactly how I like it. Cold Black River is another standout, mixing some grunge vibes with the post hardcore stuff with excellent results. Numb is another great track that should have stood firmly next to other bands having success with this style back in the day.

Imagine if the Foo Fighters decided to go in a much rawer direction after The Colour And The Shape instead of mostly sucking for the rest of their career. This is what the track Sweet Misery reminds me of. Bullet is my other favourite track on Shiver, which is more of the post hardcore goodness, right in my wheelhouse, even though most of what I write about and listen to these days is all about monster riffs. The closer (before the bonus track), Broken Circle is killer too, reminding me of later period Krishna-core champions, Shelter. Just great stuff. 8/10

Mudlarker - Radio Silence (Self Released) [Matt Bladen]

My my my. As the year ends we have ANOTHER big riffing psych/stoner/doom record from Albion’s shores. Hereford based band Mudlarker bring us their second album Radio Silence, a shifting, heavy riffing record which has influences from Orange Goblin, Desert Storm, Sergeant Thunderhoof and even Conan (on the ear bleeding Leviathan). Heavyweight stoner riffs driven by Dave Knott’s fuzzy, phased, distorted guitars and Marc Jones’ booming bass, the latter sitting right up in the mix for maximum organ movement.

The way they incorporate classic 70’s rock into tracks such as the grooving Cruisership, the chuggy title track or the grungy River, makes for not just plenty of Sabbath worship but Zeppelin and Hawkwind too as so often a dirty stoner riff will take off into the psychedelic stratosphere Elliot Crosby’s drumming manoeuvring this rocket of riffs through galaxies. Inspired by sci-fi Radio Silence has a loneliness too it, conjuring images of that lone explorer trapped in the vastness of space forever, a track such as Empyrean, creating a dissonance as the white noise moves into the sounds of the ocean.

Throughout Radio Silence the transitions between big stoner riffs and psychedelic moments are seamless, making the songs have a bit of length but the expansive playing and the gritty voice of Tom Berrow is just as effective on the woozy Godhand as they are on the doomy The Persistence or the swaggering Reaver . I loved Radio Silence, it's got grime, sleaze and most of all riffs, loads of them. Just as 2024 comes to an end the stoner scene is still burning. 9/10

Dear Deceased – Dead Deceased (Ripple Music: Beneath The Desert Floor Vol. 7) [Rich Piva]

Continuing my reviews of the new Ripple music Beneath The Desert Floor series, a record from Dear Deceased, a Sabbath and grunge inspired San Jose band from the 90s that dissolved right before they were to sign to a label and whose masters from their debut record stayed locked away, until now. Listening to this record it is a crime it never saw the light of day until now. 

I mentioned Sabbath earlier, but the band’s influences were all over the place, as you can tell from the eight tracks on the self-titled record. I assume the band was named after the Skin Yard song, especially given how much these guys sound like the band and their successor, Gruntruck, which is so freaking awesome. My next thought goes to Corrosion Of Conformity, if you need good starting reference points. This is especially true on the killer opener, Traffic. Maybe the COC related Righteous Fool too. Either way, it is excellent. 

The eight tracks are heavy and dark goodness, like the early Soundgarden vibes of Better Than Life, for example, where the Skin Yard/Gruntruck vibes are aplenty too. Same with the next one, River. So good. Early Sub Pop grunge is what I hear all over a track like The Open. The vocals have so much of a Ben McMillan (RIP) thing going on, like on the song Wide Eyed. Tracks like Loaded and Beez brings me back to Righteous Fool while the closer, the ten-minute Deeper is all of this stuff combined for an epic grungy/stoner closer. 

Ripple Music just gets it. Todd just understands what the fans of the label and other heavy music fans want to hear. Cheers to Todd for bringing two more lost records back to life. I can’t wait for what 2025 brings for the Beneath The Desert Floor series. 9/10