Saturday, 2 February 2019

HEAVY CROSS OF FLOWERS ~ HEAVY CROSS OF FLOWERS ...... review


Portugual's Heavy Cross of Flowers describe their sonic output as "Heavy stoner played by good guys (and a girl)" and "A mix of a tasty Stoner Rock/Metal, Sludge and Doom" a statement hard to argue with when listening to their self-titled debut release "Heavy Cross of Flowers" The band, Beatriz Cruz (drums), Telmo Cruz (guitar/vocals), Paulo Ferreira (bass) and Mário Fonseca (guitar) have been in existence since 2016 and have been gaining converts ever since and are now, with their debut, hoping to reach a wider global audience


Now the albums stark, quite unsettling artwork may not seem the best choice for pulling in potential customers but when you delve into the grooves it contains beneath all thoughts of why and what the fuck are replaced by joyous fist pumps and breathless gasps of "Wow". From the moment the western themed guitar intro of, first track, "Social Dyslexia" is joined by the rest of the band in an explosion of crunching doomic desert groove the albums artwork soon becomes a secondary concern and you just find yourself glorying in the sheer force of the bands musical attack and in the diversity of that attack.. HCoF are not a band to sit on one riff and let it carry them through, this is a band unafraid to throw everything but the kitchen sink into the mix with the listener just as likely to hear elements of Kyuss/QOTSA like desert/stoner grooviness, ("In Memory Of"), as they are crushing stoner doom, ("Dead On Drugs"),, or hardcore punk rock, ("Get Your Shit Together"). The fact that they do this without losing a sense of their own signature sound is not only impressive its also mind blowing!


Wanting something psychedelic, doomic, hardcore, stonerized or acidic then look no further than "Heavy Cross of Flowers" an album that has it all, an album that's all things to all men (and women)
Check it out ….

© 2019 Frazer Jones

Thursday, 31 January 2019

ISLA FORTUNA ~ VERITY ..... review



Cyprus may not be in the same league as Sweden, Poland and Greece in the European underground rock stakes but the tiny East Mediterranean island is nonetheless attempting to divert ears their way. The first band to raise awareness of Cyprus's small but burgeoning underground rock scene to a wider more international audience were Limassol psychonauts Arcadian Child, now following closely in their stead comes another lysergic laced combo, from Larnaca,  a trio going by the name Isla Fortuna who have just recently released their debut album "Verity"


Desert Psychlist supposes some would describe Isla Fortuna as a progressive band with stoner psych tendencies but then that would still not get a handle on their sound, they could just as well be called a stoner/psych band with progressive leanings. The truth is they are both these things and more, a band who can as easily take off on a complex and intricate tangent as they can hammer down a raucous riff or head off on a heavily lysergic jam. Isla Fortuna are that rarity in rock music a band that is as loose as it is tight and as tight as it is loose,  a band unafraid to experiment yet disciplined enough to keep things compact and focused when the groove calls for it. Those grooves are expertly driven by the drums  of Stefanos Eliopoulos, his solid yet fluid percussion shifts from intricate and precise to thunderous and pounding in an instant, the drummer combing with Nicolas Fournaris' big booming bass to lay the foundations upon which guitarist Lykourgos Xenophontos decorates with a mix of simple crunching riffage, complex chord progressions and swirling solos. Bassist Fournaris also supplies the vocals his voice, a unique blend of gothic indie and traditional doomic, adds an extra layer of left of field quirkiness to proceedings and takes the albums, already pretty high level impact, to another plane altogether.


Cyprus might not yet have stamped its mark on the underground rock map, in the same way as some of it's European cousins, but while there are Cypriot musicians of the calibre of Isla Fortuna who are making albums as mind blowingly good as "Verity" then it won't be too long before Cyprus becomes another go to destination for those looking for quality grooves.
Check 'em out …..

© 2019 Frazer Jones

Sunday, 27 January 2019

THE LUNAR EFFECT ~ CALM BEFORE THE CALM ..... review


There has been a lot of debate lately regarding desert/stoner rock and its reliance on 70's hard and classic rock as a main influence with many complaining that its just recycling the same old riffs for a new generation.  Desert Psychlist's take on this is that if something rocks it rocks and it doesn't really matter if its roots are sucking up nutrients from the past or its sending out probes into the future, music is all about enjoyment, if your not enjoying something just turn the damn thing off.
Desert Psychlist guesses those complainers will have a field day with London ,UK quartet The Lunar Effect and their latest release "Calm Before The Calm" (Kozmik Artifactz) as the band, Josh Gosling (vocals), Jon Jefford (guitar), Brett Halsey (bass) and Dan Jefford (drums), make no bones about their 70's influences wearing them as a badge of honour for all to see, sprinkling their hard rock refrains and desert grooves with a little bluesy psychedelic faery dust and grungy/alt.rock aesthetics to give them added interest.


Things begin well for "Calm Before The Calm" with The Lunar Effect kicking things off with "Woman", a lysergic laced slow bluesy torch song that boasts a truly stunning vocal, the frontman's tones sitting somewhere between those of Rival Sons Jay Buchanan and The Parlor Mob's Mark Melicia, a powerful soulful bluesy holler with a touch of grungy swagger that sits perfectly atop the scintilating psychedelic blues grooves beneath it. Now beginning a review with the words "things begin well" might lead you to thinking events are now going to take a rapid downward curve, far from it, by the time you have travelled through the Wolfmother-ish "Stare At The Sun", marvelled at the Doors meets Zeppelin vibes of "Daughter of Mara" and "Deep Blue Sky" and finally arrived breathless at the alternative moody blues of title track "Calm Before The Calm" you soon come to the realisation that this is not only a band who can talk the talk, in regards to hard rock authenticity, they can walk the walk just as convincingly.


The Lunar Effect should not be dismissed as some sort of backward looking, retro chasing groovsters but as a band who, although wearing their classic/hard rock influences on their sleeves, are pushing blues orientated rock music into new and uncharted waters.
Check 'em out ….

© 2019 Frazer Jones

Friday, 25 January 2019

SEEDIUM ~ AWAKE ..... review


Relentlessness in musical terms can be seen as somewhat of a negative, however if handled correctly relentlessness can pay huge dividends but only if those relentless grooves are combined with swelling dynamics and subtle shifts in volume and tempo. Poland's SeediumRegular John (guitar), Elvin Mazu (bass) and Paweł Zychowicz (drums), are a band who know how to use relentlessness to their advantage the trio filling their instrumental grooves with slow, low and dense refrains sprinkled with post-rock and psychedelic textures that hypnotise and mesmerise in equal measure and make their debut release "Awake" an exhilarating and very enthralling listen indeed.


Seedium dismiss the need for vocals in their music by saying "The lack of vocals has its purpose, as we think that words could bring unnecessary narration to the music. We want to encourage our listeners to create their own worlds and stories within" and it is hard to disagree with this statement as the three instrumentals that make up "Awake" create the perfect blank canvas for those with fertile imaginations to paint their own visual and lyrical interpretations upon. Recorded live in the studio so as to capture a truly organic feel "Awake" is a massive tome, not just in it's twenty seven plus minute duration but also in its depth and density, yes there are moments when the band sit a little too long on one groove but those moments are cleverly counterbalanced by the bands use of subtle shifting dynamics and the addition of those post-rock and psychedelic textures, mentioned in this reviews intro, that weave they way in and around the bands massive refrains and give proceedings a heavy lysergic dimension.


Atmospheric, serene and at times brutal "Awake" is a release that defies categorisation but then again how can you categorise something that doesn't fit into any of our convenient boxes.
Check it out …..

© 2019 Frazer Jones

Sunday, 20 January 2019

INNER ALTAR ~ VOL.III ... review


Describing what Missouri's Inner Altar are about musically is not an easy ask, ok they are most definitely a band whose groove is of the doomic variety but calling them just a doom band would be  somewhat of a disservice as there is so much more going on here. If trying to fathom out a description for their sonic output is not made difficult enough for the humble reviewer the band muddy the waters further by opting for exotic pseudonyms rather than their actual birth names. So here is an album called "Vol. III" that is slightly genre confused and is brought to you by Lord RewciferLong Feather, Tunks, Seasnake and Strong Smoke....enjoy!


"Prelude", a serene and tranquil acoustic lullaby with baroque/medieval leanings, opens "Vol. III", it is brief yet beautiful but really doesn't really tell you much about the grooves that are about to explode out of your speakers for the duration of this albums next eight tracks. So what is it that Inner Altar bring to the altar that is radically different from what other bands are doing in the doom scene? Well the answer is that Inner Altar's musical outpourings owe as much to the traditional doom of the 80's as they do the post-punk, gothic rock of the same period, the band treading a wafer thin line between the epic doom of Candlemass and the dark art-school meanderings of the UK's Bauhaus. There has always been a tenuous link between "goth" and its heavier cousin "traditional doom", both explore the darker sonic edges of the musical spectrum and both toy with baroque themes and dark romanticism for their inspiration. Inner Altar  explore that link with "Vol. III" borrowing, on songs with titles like "Undine's Kiss" and "Mother Eternity", a little from one to mix with the other and creating a groove that embodies the dankness and depth of doom as much as it does the cold, stark darkness of goth, the band blending the two dynamics to create a sound that is wholly original and totally their own yet at the same time still vaguely familiar.


Inner Altar have ,with "Vol, III", taken traditional doom into territories it may not have previously visited, this is not a bad thing, genre's need to be challenged so as to evolve and Inner Altar are a band evolving at an alarming rate.
Check 'em out …..

© 2019 Frazer Jones

Thursday, 17 January 2019

YATRA ~ DEATH RITUAL .... review


Desert Psychlist thinks if your a fan of Sleep and are drawn towards the stoneric blackish doom of Sweden's Ordos then its a pretty safe bet that the thick slow to mid-tempo growling grooves of Maryland's Yatra will be, as we say in England,  right up your street. Yatra, Maria Geisbert (bass), Mike Tull (drums) and Dana Helmuth (guitar/vocals), write songs that deal in fantasy and mythology and decorate them in thick droning bass and guitar tones anchored by crushing heavy pounding percussion around which they weave gravel thick, almost spoken, vocal tones, something you can check out for yourselves by taking their debut release "Death Ritual" (Grimoire Records) for a spin.


Desert Psychlist is not going to pretend that the type of vocals performed by Yatra's Dana Helmuth on "Death Ritual" are something we regularly tend to seek out in our grooves but you really could not imagine the devilishly dense and delicious eight grooves that make up the bands new album working without them, Helmuth's deep gravel thick tones are the perfect fit for the thick doomic refrains and pummelling beats that surrounded them and add a pleasing, if somewhat disturbing, sinister edge to proceedings. A big shout out here should go out to the recording and mixing skills of Noel Mueller, the man behind the desk has done a sterling job of giving "Death Ritual" a huge thick dense sound while still retaining the clarity of each individual instrument and of course those vocals. "Death Ritual" is an album strewn with highlights and there is honestly not a weak track to be found on the album but if the push came to the shove and Desert Psychlist had to choose a favourite then it would be to a toss up between the two ebony gems sitting side by side in the albums centre, "Snakes In The Temple" with its wah drenched guitar motifs, and "Smoke Is Rising" a song so heavy it should carry a government health warning,


Yatra's "Death Ritual" is an album that you will either love or hate, there is no sitting on the fence with these guys you either get what they are bringing to the table or you don't, Desert Psychlist is most definitely sitting on the "get" side of the fence but you will have to make your own minds up
Check it out …..

© 2019 Frazer Jones

Monday, 14 January 2019

EARTHDIVER ~ LEAVE SOMETHING WITCHY ..... review


Nowadays artwork is probably one of the most underestimated tools in an artistes arsenal of how to pull in casual browsers to sample their goods, it's a trick that has worked for years, put some killer painting/photo/sketch on your cover, be it a digital download, CD or vinyl, and the casual browser will be drawn to it and in the best scenario make a purchase. This worked to great effect recently when Desert Psychlist was trawling through the various genres of underground rock on Bandcamp and came across an EP by a band called Earthdiver, struck by its cover artwork of two other-worldly olive skinned women set against a background of hazy moonshine and dark foreboding trees we duly checked it out, the album was called "Leave Something Witchy" and its grooves kicked even more than its artwork!


Earthdiver are Matthew Funk (bass), David Hindman (drums) and Eric Stuart (guitar/vocals) a trio hailing from Denver, Colorado who are relatively new kids on the stoner doom block. Despite their lack of experience Earthdiver seem to have wasted no time in gelling as a unit and taking the unprecedented step of recording their first EP before even having played a gig together."Leave Something Witchy" is a raucous three tracker that although a little raw and naïve in places is nevertheless highly enjoyable and promises much for the future. From the insanely heavily fuzzed and distortion drenched title track "Leave Something Witchy" with its sampled narrative, angsty toned garage style vocals and thunderous proto-metal groove, through the strident and galloping "Warrior's Plight" with its wizards and swords lyricism, to the psychotic blend of proto bluster and low slow doomic experimentation that makes up "Genesis/ Lament of the Elder Gods", listeners are treated to a virtual tsunami of groove that although at times comes across slightly untamed and feral is nonetheless, and maybe because of those aspects, essential listening.


Earthdiver maybe the latest in a long line of doomic bands with a heavy stoner bias currently raising their heads above the parapets these days but there is something about their naïve and raw approach that really ticks all Desert Psychlist boxes and makes "Leave Something Witchy" an EP we highly recommend you listen to
Check it out ….

© 2019 Frazer Jones