Wednesday, 20 December 2023
DESERT PSYCHLIST'S BEST OF 2023
Tuesday, 19 December 2023
WARCOE - A PLACE FOR DEMONS ... review
Italian three piece Warcoe make no bones about what has influenced their sound, even adding to their Bandcamp page the legend "recommended for fans of: Black Sabbath, Pagan Altar and Pentagram". The band, Carlo (bass); Francesco (drums) and Stefano Fiorelli (guitar/vocals), are not troubled by being dubbed as "sabbathian" or being called "sabbath worshipers" in fact they actually embrace those terms and when you listen to to how close they come on their latest album, "A Place For Demons" (Regain Records/ Morbid and Miserable Records), to capturing that iconic Sabbath sound while still managing to hold on to their own musical identity, who can blame them.
Things kick off with title track "A Place For Demons" a song that shows why this band succeed while so many Sabbath sounding bands fall by the wayside, the vocals most certainly possess an essence of Ozzy-like nasality but the grooves supporting that vocal are unlike anything Iommi, Butler and Ward would have put together, there is a metallic rawness at play here that is far more stoner metal than it is proto-doom. Next track "Pyramid of Despair" is much closer to the tried and tested proto-doom attack of some of early dooms big hitters and its vocal melody is pure Sabbath "Vol.4" in flavour but again there are those subtle shades gleaned from present day metal that give the song it s own signature edge. Just like Sabbath did on many of their albums Warcoe throw in a curveball acoustic piece, this one is called "Rune Dweller" and Desert Psychlist has to admit to enjoying it much more than we did some of Sabbath's more off-piste excursions. "Leaves" is up next and finds the band jamming a groove that leans more towards Pentagram than Sabbath and boasts a vocal with an un Ozzy-like gothic tone. There is a The Sword like feel to following track "Ishkur" albeit with an element of Uncle Acid & The Deadbeats in its vocal melodies while "Boys Become Kings" boasts a melodies and a riffs that'll be going around in your head for days. Penultimate track "Wounds Too Deep To Heal" is a mid-tempo doomic barnburner that carries an essence of that other Sabbath worshipping unit Orchid in its sonic attack and leads us nicely on to the albums final number "Buio" a nine minute plus instrumental riff fest that constantly alternates between a slow chug and a crawl, hardly ever deviating from these two dynamics but still able to retain the listeners attention from its start to its finish
Monday, 18 December 2023
THE BROKEN HEROES .... WHORESHIPER .... review
Thursday, 14 December 2023
WITCHSNAKE ~ DEATHCULT OF THE SNAKE ...... review
Put those pets in another room, remove any expensive nick-nacks you might have scattered around your place of listening and make yourself ready for a full on assault on your senses because Italy's Witchsnake are back with another album, this one even more gnarlier and uncompromising than their filth laden self-titled debut. Those thinking how could that be possible and pointing out that we called "Witchsnake" "a soundtrack for depravity and perversity that sounds like it could have been recorded in the fiery bowels of Hell with the Devil himself sitting at the mixing desk.” are in for a shock when "Deathcult of the Snake" (Regain Records) hits their ear canals as this one makes the bands debut sound like a collection of children's nursery rhymes in comparison.
You will notice a couple of none too subtle changes when listening to "Deathcult of the Snake", the first is in its vocals, those deeply buried, heavily filtered vocals that graced the bands debut are gone and have this time around been replaced by gruffer growlier tones that posses a wrecked by cigarettes and whiskey dynamic not too dissimilar in delivery to those of Motorhead's late speed king Lemmy Kilmister. The second change is related to the first in that whereas the bands debut took much of its influences from Electric Wizard and similar bands this one has its roots so far implanted in Motorhead territory you almost expect a cry of "we are Witchsnake and we play rock'n'roll" to come hurtling out of the speakers. Have no fear though, Witchsnake are not trying to do some sort of copy and paste job or trying to fill that vast hole Motorhead left behind them as this duo plaster their own unique personalities all over the seven songs contained on "Deathcult of the Snake" with tunes like "Outlaw", "Inject The Venom", "Black Star" and "Laughing Among The Ruins" all possessing Witchsnake's trademark scuzzy riffs, Hendrixian solos and thunderous percussion, its not a pretty sound by any means but boy is it a great one!
© 2023 Frazer Jones
Tuesday, 12 December 2023
THE DEATH SPELL ~ THE DEATH SPELL .... review
Sunday, 10 December 2023
MONTE PALOMAR ~ NADIR ..... review
Saturday, 9 December 2023
HOLY GIANT ~ DIVINERS & DIVIDERS ... review
Italian trio Holy Giant describe themselves as "fuzz worshippers" and "earthquake makers" and its a description you won't find Desert Psychlist arguing with anytime soon. Holy Giant, Marco di Pietro (bass, vocals); Massimiliano Rubini (drums) and Francesco Sorana (guitars), make the sort of music the humble fuzz pedal was made to decorate, a mixture of hard driven riff heavy stoner doom and off centred heavy psych that is constantly switching back and forth between heavy and heady and boasts strong gritty vocals that occasionally feature elements of East Asian throat singing. The Bologna based trio have just released their first full length album "Diviners & Dividers", seven songs that fizz with fuzz and are seismic in impact.
First track "Cosmic Pilgrim" introduces itself with palm muted guitar and subtle drumming accompanied by low guttural throat singing, after a brief explosion of heaviness the vocals shift to clean and gritty and tell, with the help of a well chosen snippet of sampled narrative, of a cosmic being adrift in Jupiter's infamous Great Red Spot. The songs groove is mostly proto-doomic in flavour but does regularly dip its toes into more lysergic waters and in doing so gives the song an edginess it might have lacked if it had been a straight down the line doomic rocker. Next up is "Green Foo", more straightforward and rockier than its predecessor it nonetheless boasts some unexpected twist and turns along the way. If the stop start dynamics, swirling guitar motifs and thundering rhythms that inhabit the first section of next song "Asteroid Blues" are not enough to have you drooling then its heavily trippy final section most definitely will, this is a song that even carries its own review in its lyrics "guitar riffs are sick, huge wall of sound, bass lines are so thick they are shaking the ground, green goddess of smoke is our muse, you’ll be blown away by this Asteroid Blues", nuff said! The following "Three Witches" is a doomic delight with a low slow and heavy dynamic that also sees the band throwing a few folkish textures into the mix, especially in the tone and meter of some of its vocals. Title track "Diviners & Dividers" finds Holy Giant flying their psychedelic doom flag high for all to see while imparting to us a tale of conflict between men and gods, a seriously good song! Liquid bass lines and shimmering percussion announce the arrival of "Reincarnation of a Fallen Titan" and then crunchy guitar joins the fray and its upward and onward from there on in, bass riffs and searing guitar solos vying for attention with a grizzled vocal informing us of a journey across a distant land, a doomic travelogue so good you'll be scouring the web to book a ticket. If you are still wondering whether to throw some coins at Holy Giant's debut then final track "Liberation" is the song that should convince you to invest, a huge sprawling tome that alternates between moments of serene psychedelic beauty and moments of crunching dank doominess, a song that lifts you to the heavens one minute only to slam you down to the pits of hell the next, the perfect end to what is a near perfect album.
Thursday, 7 December 2023
MARS RED SKY ~ DAWN OF THE DUSK ... review
In the blurb accompanying "Dawn of the Dusk" on their Bandcamp page Mars Red Sky refer to their music as having a "unique and peculiar flavour" its a sentence that sums up their sound perfectly. Mars Red Sky's peculiarity and uniqueness comes from them being a band who though existing in a scene known for its blustering heaviness play music that is not actually that blustering or overly heavy yet still manages to draws praise from those for whom those dynamics are the golden ticket. There is a feyness and ethereality to the songs Mars Red Sky deliver on "Dawn of the Dusk" that, when set against those moments where the band DO get a little aggressive and gnarly, just seems so right. This especially true of the songs like "Break Even" "Maps of Inferno" (featuring Queen of the Meadow aka Helen Ferguson), "Choir of Ghosts" and "Slow Attack", songs that utilize heaviness and mellowness in a sort of symbiotic way, one element not being able to exist without the other, This symbiosis gives Mars Red Sky's new album an ascending/descending dynamic that evokes a feeling of constant motion throughout, it's breath-taking stuff!
© 2023 Frazer Jones
Wednesday, 6 December 2023
DIXIE GOAT ~ ORDER, CHAOS, LIFE AND DEATH ... review
There was a part of Desert Psychlist that was worried, when Chile's Dixie Goat released their live retrospective "A Decade Of The Goat" last year (2022), that this was the first signs of the band wrapping things up and riding into the sunset. Thankfully with the release of their new album "Order, Chaos, Life and Death" those fears have been allayed and we can rest easy that the band, Nikk (vocals/guitars); KF (bass) and Pipe (drums), are going to be about for a few years more. The new album is as strong. if not stronger, as anything they have released to date so far, which is another bonus.
Wind effects and a tolling bell introduce opening track "Se7en" followed by a low slow and heavy guitar and bass refrain driven by pounding percussion, it's all very Sabbathian up to this point but then in come Nikk's gritty vocal and suddenly the song takes on a whole different hue, still dank and dark but a touch more blues orientated. The Sabbathian elements of the opening track are partially discarded for next track "Lucky Break" and see the band jamming an upbeat heavy rock groove that boasts an easy to sing along to vocal melody, the band only returning to the proto-doom arena in the songs last quarter when Pipe and KF lock in on a thundering slow and heavy rhythmic groove which Nikk furnishes with some tasty dank and bluesy lead work. "Born To Be Dead" finds Dixie Goat going down a more traditional doomic path, a moody and atmospheric tome sporting appropriately downbeat and melancholic lyrical content delivered in measured and mournful tones. If we have one complaint regarding this album it would be that next track "Woman In Black" would of been better served appearing a little lower in the track listing, it is a great song but its vocal meter is so similar in places to it s predecessor that it sometimes feels as though you are listening to the same song. Up next is "He Waits For No One" and this song sees Nikk adding a little distorted gnarliness to his vocal attack, nothing harsh just a touch grittier and growly, the groove surrounding those vocals also boasting a grittier, growlier dynamic as well as some nicely off-kilter dissonance. There is an element of grunginess to next song "The Girl, The Rope And The Serpent" that Desert Psychlist is not sure we have heard Dixie Goat explore before, a slurred element to the guitar tones that had us recalling Alice In Chains, it is an element we really hope they explore further on subsequent releases. Second to last number "Dee Dee" is out and out rocker played hard fast and loud, a properly enjoyable foot to the floor stomper. Final number "Don't Say It's Name" is a chugging loud/quiet/loud opus packed to the gills with all the tropes and cliches we love and cherish in music of this nature, slow reverberating chord patterns, low growling bass lines and deliberately pounding percussion can all be found here along with a vocal that is suitably grave and solemn, its doomic perfection.
Tuesday, 5 December 2023
SATURNA ~ THE RESET .... review
Many argue that "classic rock" has to come from a certain era of time or how can it be described as being "classic", others argue that "classic rock" has become a genre in its own right defined by possessing a certain dynamic and sound. Desert Psychlist has to admit to sitting somewhat on the fence in these discussions since we can see valid points to both arguments. however we do understand why these arguments rage on especially when there are bands like Spain's Saturna in existence. Saturna, Rod Tirado (bass); James Vieco (vocals, guitars); Alexandre Sánchez (guitars, backing vocals) and Enric Verdaguer (drums), would most certainly have fallen into the category of "classic rock" had they been survivors from the late 70's or early 80's, the fact that they are not survivors from those periods but could easily be mistaken as such is because whereas a lot of the present day underground orientated bands live and die on the strength of their riffs Saturna are all about the strength of their songs and the bands latest release "The Reset" (Spinda Records/ Discos Macarras) is chock-a block full of 'em.
Opening track "Your Whimsical Selfishness" comes straight out of the traps melodic and classy sounding like something plucked from an unreleased album by Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow or Uriah Heep, crunching guitar work over a driving rhythmic groove and boasting a vocal melody perfect for those who remember when harsh was a not a description for a vocal style, the song unexpectedly signing off with a gently picked acoustic guitar section. Next we get "The Never Ending Star" a song that mixes prog-like textures with vocal melodies reminiscent of those employed by 80's American rockers Ashbury on their cult album "Endless Skies" and is followed by "Smile" a song that finds Saturna baring their teeth and getting gnarly. "December's Dust" follows and twins acoustic guitars with sweet vocal harmonies to create a sound not too dissimilar to that which was coming out of California in the early to mid 70's while "Into The Sun" finds the band blending 70;s hard rock with elements of 80's melodic rock and jamming on a groove that is an an amalgamation of the two. "A Few Words To Say" is up next and is a strident rocker that has somewhat of a Deep Purple Mk III vibe going on especially in its vocal attack which sits somewhere between Glenn Hughes' soulful wail and David Coverdale's rock god howl. No classic/hard rock album would feel complete without the addition of a heavy torch song or a bluesy ballad and and Saturna deliver both with "The Sign", and "Made of Stone" the former edgy and intense, the latter gentle and flowing. Penultimate number "On Fire" would have, in another age, been a shoe-in for repeated plays on British or American rock radio while final song "A Way To Reset" is a nicely balanced mix of bluesy gentleness and hard rock crunchiness that is just sublime in every department. Those opting to for the digital version of this album get treated with four cover songs, we won't spoil the surprise by revealing what they are here but each are well executed and highly enjoyable versions of "classic" songs.