Thursday, 25 April 2024
SUNFACE - CLOUD CASTLES .... review
Wednesday, 24 April 2024
RED MESA ~ PARTIAL DISTORTIONS .... review
"Óðr" kicks off "Partial Distortions" and immediately clears up any confusion anyone might have had about the "blackened" element the band describe in their liner notes, its guitar tones are thick sludgy and downright nasty, its bass lines are dialled to low and grizzly and its drums are thunderous, loud and busy, add to this a mix of of clean gritty and growled vocal tones and you are talking one hell of an opening statement. Ok its a given that a good opener is a hook to reel you in but we all have albums in our collections where things have gone quickly downhill after the first number, this is not one of those albums. If you thought "Óðr" hit hard then be prepared for life changing injuries with "The Assertion" a doom laden barnburner in possession of a myriad of dank musical layers that also owes a debt of gratitude to Barry Manilow for its opening line. Red Mesa's default desert rock sound is the dominant force on next song "Dying In The Cold Sun" its guitar tones, circular and expansive, give the song a feeling of vastness but a feeling countered by its larynx tearing vocals which are delivered intense raw and throaty. "12 Volt Shaman" sees Red Mesa still residing in desert territory but toying with elements of urban hip hop/rap in some of the songs vocal and musical stylings while "Desert March", an instrumental, finds Red Mesa creating a soundtrack for a modern day western where cowboys ride into the sunset on Harley Davidson's. Final number "Witching Hour" delivers everything you would expect a song bearing such a title would deliver, dense crunchy distorted guitar refrains, languid circular droning motifs, dark sinister lyricism and vocals that border on the edge of pained, the song serving as the perfect curtain closer to a very, VERY powerful album.
Tuesday, 23 April 2024
IRONxLUNG ~ RIFFSTANBUL ...review
Monday, 22 April 2024
TYPHUZZ ~ TYPHUZZ .... review
Friday, 19 April 2024
DVNE ~ VOIDKIND ... review
Tuesday, 16 April 2024
CASTLE RAT ~ INTO THE REALM ..... review
Sunday, 14 April 2024
IRON BLANKET ~ ASTRAL WANDERER ... review
Check 'em out .....
Saturday, 13 April 2024
LUCIFER GIANT ~ LUCIFER GIANT .... review
Friday, 12 April 2024
HEAVY TEMPLE ~ GARDEN OF HEATHENS ...... review
Monday, 8 April 2024
LOUD ~ SUPER HEAVY DOOM .... review
Saturday, 6 April 2024
ACID MAMMOTH ~ SUPERSONIC MEGAFAUNA COLLISION .... review
Acid Mammoth, Chris Babalis Jr (vocals/guitars); Chris Babalis Sr. (guitars); Dimosthenis Varikos (bass) and Marios Louvaris (drums) have risen from promising new kids on the block to being one of those bands whose albums are pre-ordered well in advance of their release date but it has not been an overnight thing, they have worked hard to get where they are today. The band was formed by schoolfriends Babalis Jr. and Varikos and were soon joined by Babalis Jr's father Babalis Sr. and Louvaris, the band then set about honing their chops on their local scene before going on to fund and self-release their first album "Acid Mammoth". After garnering positive reactions from all the right quarters with their debut they then signed to Heavy Psych Sounds Records who along with releasing their next albums "Under Acid Hoof" and "Caravan" also paired them with heavy Italian doomsters 1782 for "Vol.2" of their "Doom Sessions" series while also re-releasing their debut album. The band have since toured Europe and have also graced the stages of Desertfest (London & Antwerp) as well as SonicBlast and are now releasing, again via Heavy Psych Sounds Records, their latest album "Supersonic Megafauna Collision", an album packed to the rafters with all the quality doom and hard rock we have come to expect from these guys plus a few unexpected twists and turns.
Friday, 5 April 2024
UNDER THE SUN ~ THE BELL OF DOOM ..... review
Thursday, 4 April 2024
LUGGY TON ~ HOLEY TROLLER ... review
Once again Desert Psychlist has been seduced into checking something out simply due to its artwork, its an old habit formed in our youth when perusing the shelves of record stores that did not allow buyers to check out a release before purchase, a time when the only way to discover new music was to take a gamble based solely on an albums cover art. The album in question is Luggy Ton's "Holey Troller", the artwork of which depicts a partially buried skeletal head with glowing eyes staring skywards against a monochrome rural backdrop. Quite why we were drawn to this albums artwork remains uncertain but what we found when hitting play literally blew our minds.
There are a LOT of tracks to be found on "Holey Troller" so do not expect us to analyse every single one of those tracks, instead we will endeavour to give you a general feel of what to expect when pushing play on this little gem of an album. To be fair opening song "I Can Smell The Future", a hazy somewhat dreamy instrumental, is not truly representative of Luggy Ton's overall musical attack, a truer representation comes in the shape of its follow up "Cruised On Down" a deliciously retro flavoured rocker that melds the early psych of Randy California's Spirit with the accessible proto-metal of early 70's pioneers Bang and boasts a clean vocal that's part early stoner, part 90's pop punk. Next track "Leave It Blank" is probably the one many will leave this album remembering the most, its infectious blues meets country rock groove supports a vocal rant that comes over like a lyrical cross between The Who's "Won't Get Fooled Again" and Joe Walsh's "Life's Been Good". And that's about the way it goes for the rest of the album, short but effective groove heavy tunes inspired and influenced by the pioneers of psychedelic rock and proto-metal and spliced with elements of country rock, the blues and hard rock, you can call it retro or you can call it vintage we prefer to just call it brilliant!
© 2024 Frazer Jones