Avant-garde green metal outfit, Botanist have just shared their brand new single, “Magnolia,” the latest track to come from their upcoming album. Paleobotany. The full-length is due out on May 17th, via the Prophecy Productions record label. Catch “Magnolia” in the article below and read more from Botanist.
Pre-order Paleobotany here:
http://lnk.spkr.media/botanist-paleobotany
“Magnolias abound in our present day, but they have been around for at least 65 million years, which means before bees came into existence,” mastermind Otrebor explains. “So for procreation, beetles used to do this song’s subject’s bidding instead.”
On their twelfth full-length, Paleobotany, Botanist take us back more than 70 million years to a time when dinosaurs ruled the planet and early forests began to turn to coal. Before the age of giants ended in flames with the apocalyptic impact of the Chicxulub asteroid, some families of plants that still have descendants today also grew much larger.
Paleobotany comes with all the trademark characteristics that set Botanist apart from all other metal acts on this planet. Lyrically, the band from San Francisco, CA revolves around species of plants – in a clean break from the usual genre stereotypes like Satan, dragons, and booze. Their music clearly has its foundation anchored in ‘metal’, but instead of 6-string guitars the Americans use 110-string hammered dulcimers. To the confused horror of traditionalists, Botanist fit these percussion-stringed folk instruments with magnetic pickups and distort them through various perverse means that range from amplifiers via analogue tape to digital manipulation. The resulting sound is as unique as spectacular.
Botanist’s continuing sonic evolution began at an audible Nordic black metal shaped point of entry. The band soon developed a more open, avant-garde style, leading towards a growing complexity. On Paleobotany, the Californians have shed some of the more convoluted progressive elements in favour of more song-oriented arrangements that are still rich in details and surprises, which is enhanced through the album being mixed by renowned Swedish producer Fredrik Nordström (Dimmu Borgir, Opeth, At The Gates) at Studio Fredman.
That Otrebor has along the way welcomed new fellow musicians to Botanist is one of the factors driving these subtle changes. Vocalist Mar, who was discovered by the mastermind in one of his favourite clubs due to him looking the part of a metal musician, has shifted the focus of more catchy clean parts and even not-at-all-simulated throat singing. Percussion-animal Daturus brings hard-hitting intensity to the drums and bass player Tony Thomas contributes his signature ‘proggy’ style – both of the latter also play in Dawn Of Ouroboros.
Paleobotany tracklisting:
01 Aristolochia
02 When Forests Turned to Coal
03 Magnolia
04 Archaeamphora
05 The Impact that Built the Amazon
06 Sigillaria
07 Strychnos Electri
08 Wollemia Nobilis
09 Dioon
10 Royal Protea
More from Botanist:
When composer, lyricist, vocalist, and multi-instrumentalist Otrebor created Botanist in San Francisco in 2009, he already had the specific plant-based lyrical concept firmly in his mind. Its main protagonist, The Botanist, is characterised as a possibly deranged man of science that lives in self-imposed exile to stay far away from humanity’s crimes against Nature. In “The Verdant Realm”, his sanctuary of fantasy and wonder, ‘The Botanist’ surrounds himself with plant life to find solace in the company of the natural world, while he envisions the self-destruction of mankind. Botanist’s lyrics are equally informed by scientific nomenclature as they are inspired by Romantic-era poetry, art, and philosophy.
Botanist broke into the light of the world with a massive sprout in the shape of a double-album I: The Suicide Tree / II: A Rose from the Dead (2011). The debut extended into a tripartite sapling with the addition of III: Doom in Bloom (2012). The project’s sprawling discography blossomed into several directions with two further solo-albums: IV: Mandragora (2013) and VI: Flora (2014).
As Botanist kept switching between solo-albums and band efforts, Otrebor devised a system to tell the two strands apart: Albums bearing Roman numbers are solo-recording by Otrebor. The same applies to the EPs with an Arabic number, i.e. EP1: The Hanging Gardens of Hell / Ode to Joy (Split, 2013), EP2: Hammer of Botany (2015), and EP3: Green Metal / Deterministic Chaos (Split, 2016).
When Otrebor started to run Botanist with an ever changing line-up both in studio and on stage, he adopted the marker “Collective” for the following albums: Collective: The Shape of He to Come (2017) and Collective: Setlist 2017 (2017), with the later consisting of solo material that was re-recorded with the line-up that toured Europe in 2017.
Feeling that this system led to ‘clunky’ titles, the band version of Botanist released the next full-length albums under simple titles without a prefix: Ecosystem (2019), Ecosystem Version B (2020), and Photosynthesis (2020). Ecosystem Version B (2020) is an alternative version of Ecosystem, but with different drums, bass, mix, lyrics, titles, and with the European Tour 2017 singer on vocals.
Botanist are a unique band. Paleobotany expands their dark green sonic range of an avant-garde metal sound into a more accessible and dynamic sonic experience. When quadruped giants walked the earth, plants were already there and they will still be here when mankind has gone back to stardust. Botanist win their musical future by travelling millions of years into the past with Paleobotany.
Current line-up
Otrebor – hammered dulcimer, keyboards
Additional collective line-up (recording/live)
Daturus – drums
Tony Thomas – bass
Mar – vocals
Follow Botanist:
www.botanist.nu
www.facebook.com/verdant.realm.botanist
www.instagram.com/otreborbotanist