Austria's Lazer, Tanja "Aunty" Peinsipp (vocals); Lukas Schmidt (lead guitar); Lukas Klingseisen (rhythm guitar); Moritz Holy ( bass/backing vocals) and Dale St. Jules (drums), jam grooves that sit mostly at the lithe and languid end of the psychedelic rock spectrum but that have a tendency to shift from time to time into heavier and gnarlier territories, the band one minute gently massaging their listeners ears with lilting guitar arpeggios, shimmering percussion and funky bass passages and the next tearing those same ears to shreds with crushing refrains, thunderous drumming and growling low end. What is even more impressive is that those see-sawing dynamics are also mirrored in the bands vocals which can sway between honeyed jazzy bluesiness and demonic sludgy harshness. The band have just released "Live At Beardy Mountain" a live in the studio recording that serves as the perfect listening material for those who like psychedelic rock that occasionally bares its teeth.
Opening number "Underwater" begins with liquid-like eastern guitar motifs accompanied by a low key vocal, slowly those guitars and vocals are joined by the bass and drums in a groove that wends and winds between loose and lysergic and tight and blustering with the vocalist accommodating those shifts with tones that are bluesy and soulful in the songs more languid passages and throat shredding in the songs more intense and heavier sections. Next song "Can't Run Away" sways between being seductive and moody and full on and feisty, vocalist Peinsipp once again switching her vocals between lush and lethal over a musical backdrop that follows a similar fey and fractious blueprint. Third track "Can't Speak" is at its root bluesy and lysergic but because of its occasional descents into more doomic waters, and of course the vocalists penchant for sliding into harsher vocal territories, the song feels a whole lot heavier than it actually is. Final song "Go On" starts off quite quaint and dare we say "pretty" but as we have already found out "pretty" is not Lazer's default setting and it's not long before Peinsipp starts mixing up her ethereal tones with elements of hardcore harshness, Schmidt and Klingseisen start injecting some crunch and squeal into their guitar tones, St Jules' drums begin to get a little more thunderous and Holy's bass lines take on an air of growliness, its powerful stuff, a unique mix of melody and gnarliness we at Desert Psychlist are not sure many bands other than Lazer could pull off!