Friday, 20 December 2024
DESERT SUNS ~ EDGE OF THE SKY .... review
Wednesday, 18 December 2024
GUDGER ~ III .....review
A throbbing effect and gently picked arpeggios introduce first track "Disreality" and are quickly joined by swooning lead work but then the drums enter and its rifforama time from here on in, crunchy chord progressions and punchy rhythms supporting a vocal that is constantly shifting between hardcore like raspiness, stoner grittiness and and classic rock style cleanliness. Second track "Dust and Shadows" leans slightly away from the stoner(ish) drive of the previous track and more towards the type of hard rock played by the likes of UFO and Thin Lizzy, ear-pleasing guitar hooks and strident rhythms supporting a clean, slightly gritted, vocal melody. Gudger slow things down a little with their next two songs "Fever Dream" and "Peaks and Valleys" both songs existing in that hinterland between balladry and lamentation, both powerful and atmospheric. "Dig Deep" finds Gudger flexing their stoner/desert muscles with a song that could easily be mistaken for an unreleased Queens of the Stone Age track if it were not for its occasional harsher vocal attack while "Live It Down" twins classic rock flavoured vocal melodies with stuttering and swaggering up-tempo hard rock grooves. "Vicious Cycle" lives up to its title by delivering circular guitar riffage over low bouncy bass and furious busy drumming and then enhances the results with yet another ear-catching clean/gritty vocal melody. Penultimate number "Long Way Down" boasts a Clutch-like groove but with cleaner, less lay preacher like, vocals. For their last number Gudger opt not to go out with one of their own song but instead go with a cover of Pink Floyd's "Welcome to the Machine", now Desert Psychlist has heard plenty of covers of Floyd songs, some have been very good and some have been just damn awful, this one falls into the former category and it has to be said pretty near to the top of that category.
Gudger's "III" is a solid highly enjoyable rock album, an album that is a touch old school in places and a touch new school in others. Sometimes we get so caught up in trying to discover the next Elder or the next All Them Witches that we forget that rock music does not always have to be cutting edge or genre -defining, that a good vocal combined with some good hearty grooves is still something to be appreciated and applauded, qualities Gudger's "III" has in abundance.
© 2024 Frazer Jones
Tuesday, 17 December 2024
OKKTLI ~ LADO A ... review
It is funny how we have come to associate a certain kind of sound to underground rock bands and artistes from different countries, for example we tend to expect a level of crushing intensity from bands hailing from Poland, Swedish bands we often associate with distortion drenched hard rock mixed with a large dose of fuzzy bluesiness while Chile seems to have cornered the market, in our minds, when it comes to swirling heavy psych. Now we do not know if it is just us but when we think of bands from Mexico we tend to think of bands with an abrasive and gritty edge to their grooves, an uncompromising rawness. Mexico City's Okktli, Alfonso Brito López (vocals & rhythm guitar); Mauricio Hernández (drums); Israel Oñate (bass) and César Gama (lead guitar), however are a band not so easily pigeonholed, yes their music does possess elements of that rawness and grit we have so readily associated with rock music from their home country but there is also a richness of texture and colour to their sound that we do not usually equate with Mexico's underground rock scene, textures and colours that could be found gracing their self-titled debut release "Okktli" but are even more prominent on their latest release "Lado A".
Things begin on the right side of dank and crunchy with opening track "March of Glory" a thrumming and atmospheric instrumental driven by militaristic drumming and basement low bass over which the guitars deliver mid to slow tempo refrains and dark twisting solos it is followed by "The Uprising" a proto-doomic behemoth with bluesy undertones that sports call to arms type lyrical content, Lopez telling a tale of the dead ancestors rising up to claim back their thrones in tones deep luxuriant and powerful against a backdrop of thunderous bass and drum groove enhanced by wailing lead work and crunching rhythm guitar. Next track "I Walk Alone" is a lament come torch song drenched in atmosphere that sees Lopez and Gama initially trading off guitar motifs over a deliciously emotive doomic blues groove expertly delivered by Oñate and Hernández, Lopez's guitar work then dropping out slightly in order to deliver a deliciously smooth lounge lizard like crooned vocal. If the song was to fade out at this point there would be no complaints from Desert Psychlist, nor we should imagine the majority of listeners, but instead of a fade out we get a gear change into proto-doom/metal territory, López's vocal shifting from a croon to a powerful and quite soulful roar beneath which the songs groove moves from bluesy and laid back to insistent and thrusting in response. Final track "Mistress of the Sea" is a shape shifting riff monster that routinely swings back and forth between traditional and proto doom, atmospheric and moody one minute, blustering and bold the next, López altering his vocal attack to accommodate both disciplines.
Saturday, 14 December 2024
DESERT PSYCHLIST'S BEST OF 2024
Another year goes flying by and here we are again with another best of list. Once again we are publishing a list of the 30 albums/EP's that kept us at Desert Psychlist relatively sane and grounded. As we say every year these are our picks and may differ greatly from your own but then you probably realise that already, we also need to tell you that the text accompanying our choices are a mix of snippets of reviews posted on Desert Psychlist's pages and blurbs we have posted on the various artists Bandcamp pages. Right fasten those seatbelts here we go again......
Michele for her love, hard work and support, Vikki, Billy, Sian, Ethan, Austin, Rowan and Amber for just being life affirming, Steve Howe (of Outlaws Of The Sun) and Reek of Stoom (of Howls From The Hollows podcast) for their continued support and late night banter , Joop Konraad (of Stoner Hive) for all his support and regular shout-outs, the ever-growing list of contributors to Retro Rockets (Facebook page) for reminding me that there is still a ton of music from the past still to be heard , the wonderful Leanne Ridgeway (of Riff Relevant) for just being Leanne Ridgway, all the contributors at The Doom Charts who refuse to let a new release pass them by, all the record labels and PR companies for the promos and updates, all the musicians and artists who constantly amaze us with their music, and of course you the readers because without you this site just would not exist.
Friday, 6 December 2024
MEGATON COMMUNION ~ RED SKY WARNING ... review
Wednesday, 4 December 2024
DESERT COLLIDER ~ GENERATION SHIP: ENDLESS DRIFT THROUGH INFINITY .... review
Wednesday, 27 November 2024
MUDLARKER ~ RADIO SILENCE .... review
Aside from Mott The Hoople and three of the original Pretenders Hereford, UK is probably better known for its cattle than it is its rock music but that does not mean that there is a dearth of aspiring rockers to be found in the city. One such Hereford based band hoping to make their mark on the world are Mudlarker, Tom Berrow (vocals); Marc Jones (bass); Elliott Crosby (drums) and Dave Knott (guitar), a band who pitch their grooves somewhere between current era stoner rock and metal and 70's classic rock. Some out there may remember the band from their moderately well received 2023 self-titled release "Mudlarker" but if you are one of those that missed out do not worry because you have the chance to make up for that oversight by giving their follow up "Radio Silence" a spin, a far more dynamically robust musical affair that sees Mudlarker combining their growl with an added element of bite!
Title track "Radio Silence" kicks things off in style with raucous and ragged guitar riffage crunching out over a solid and uncomplicated bass and drum groove all of which is accompanied by strong clean but raw and throaty vocals that tell a sci-fi themed tale of abandonment and isolation, a truly ass-kicking number to start an album with. "Leviathan" follows and starts with wind effects and feedback then erupts into a dark and dank doomic groove that has just the merest hint of bluesiness in its attack that bluesiness further reflected in the meter and tone of its gritty vocal and piercing but tasteful guitar solos, however at the songs mid way mark the song suddenly shifts into proto-doom territory with chugging Sabbath-esque refrains holding sway over up-tempo rhythms, the songs vocal here a little more forceful and insistent. The bluesy aspects of the preceding track are given a slightly bigger platform on next track "Godshead" but gradually move up to more heavier torch-like dynamic as the song evolves while "The Persistence" makes no pretence at being anything other than thunderous and doomic. Up next is "Dreadnaught (impending ruin)" a brief but quite effective semi-instrumental with rumbling rhythmic underbelly over which drone-like guitar effects and a remote mantra like vocal create a feeling of otherworldliness. That mantra-like vocal resurfaces again in "Cruisership" along with a heavily distorted bass line and militaristic drumming, the guitar work here is circular and slurred and works well in that it gives the song a spinning off centred and out of control feel. Mudlarker opt for more traditional four to the floor heavy metal dynamics for the first half of "Reaver" but then slide into low'n'slow stoner doom territory for the second half of the song. Now we did mention, in the opening piece to this review, that Mudlarker count among their influences 70's classic rock and next song "River" is them fully immersed in that genre, bluesy guitar tones, bouncy bass and chunky drumming supporting a soulful clean and powerful vocal, there is not a trace of stoner or doom to found anywhere on this number. For their final song, "Empyrean" Mudlarker go epic, not so much in length more in feel, a sprawling and atmospheric tome with a superb vocal that builds layer by layer until it reaches a peak and then finally fades out on waves of dissonant and droning guitar, a fittingly strong finish to seriously strong album.