Uncle Acid And The Deadbeats – The Night Creeper


uncle acid night creeper album cover 2015

Uncle Acid & the Deadbeats release their latest album, The Night Creeper, via Rise Above Records in plenty of time for Halloween. I mention this because those psychedelic, doom-y tunes got me wrapped up in reading about Night of the Living Dead while listening to them. ‘Tis the season, after all.

‘Melody Lane’ kicks off with keyboards that I would normally despise, but find myself tolerating in this case. Even with the keys, this still manages to be one of the heavier songs on the album. The guitar solo that starts at about 4:27 is one of only a few on the album. The solo paired with a little more energy overall makes this song stand out to me more than others.

Title track ‘The Night Creeper’ is a great song that commands your attention and forces you to headbang and/or contemplate your entire existence. I have been under the weather lately so I took the latter path. As expected, the song is on the sinister side of things and excellently instills a sense of despair in the listener. I also find it oddly comforting, like a more grown up way to feed your inner goth kid and bring peace to that teenage angst from so long ago.

At just over nine minutes long, ‘Slow Death’ is a beautiful and relaxing piece. The slow tempo, minimal vocals, and sounds of falling rain make it sound like something right out of the sixties. It’s the kind of song that you can throw on at the end of a long day and just let fuzz consume your mind. Listen to it a few times and I think you’ll see exactly what I mean.

The Night Creeper is an album worthy of a place in your doom collection. It’s got all of the darkness and foreboding of regular doom but without putting you (me) to sleep. Keep your eyes peeled for Uncle Acid & the Deadbeats currently on tour with Ruby the Hatchet. See you in Boston!

7.0/10

ALEIDA LA LLAVE


The Sword – High Country


the Sword High Country album cover 2015

Three years following the release of their last album, Apocryphon (Razor & Tie), The Sword return with High Country (Razor & Tie). I always go into things wondering if we’re going to get another Warp Riders (Kemado) record as that was how I was first exposed to the band. So, no, this isn’t Warp Riders II, but it’s pretty rad.

‘Seriously Mysterious’ is my favorite song off of the new album and I lost count of just how many times I played it while working on this review. It stands out from the rest of the album, with the intro ‘Unicorn Farm’ being the only other thing that somewhat matches it. Although not as complex as some of the other songs on High Country, ‘Seriously Mysterious’ is extremely catchy and will make you move. It and its more sinister sounding counterpart, ‘Ghost Eye’, are likely to make an appearance alongside songs like Steve Miller Band’s ‘Abracadabra’ and Stevie Wonder’s ‘Superstitious’ on a few Halloween party play lists this year. If your play list looks like that, I better be invited.

Fuzz-filled and riff laden, ‘Buzzards’ is another favorite selection from the second half of High Country. It is just simply a great song with a hypnotic chorus that draws you right in. I might even argue that this would have made a great choice for a song to close out the record on a more energetic note. I’d also recommend it for any upcoming road trips you may have.

High Country is a solid record overall but, as you can see, the second half of the album is where it really comes alive for me. Songs are a little meatier, a little groovier, and really help round things out, even if they tip the scales a bit more in one direction.

7.5/10

ALEIDA LA LLAVE


Sweet Cobra – Earth


Sweet Cobra Earth Album Review

With their long awaited follow up to 2010’s Mercy (Good Fight Music), Earth (Magic Bullet Records) puts Sweet Cobra back in the spotlight and in front of me for the first time. The internet told me they were “post-hardcore.” What does that mean? I don’t speak English so I have no idea, let’s find out!

‘Future Ghosts’ wound up catching my attention more than the opening track, ‘Far Too Temp.’ This song is more consistently upbeat and easy to start headbanging and stomping around to. It’s there to grab you and make you listen and move. I anticipate this track being included in their set list specifically for this purpose.

‘Complaints’ is on the shorter side and reminds me of 80’s pop/rock songs with its keyboards. Even Botchy Vasquez’s voice sounds like a slightly rougher, more masculine Robert Smith in this piece. Maybe this is what The Cure would sound like if they were a touch heavier. Compared to the rest of the album, it’s a bit odd which makes it stand out and is exactly why I enjoy it.

The opening drums for ‘Jealous of Drugs’ remind me of a far less intense version of Mastodon’s ‘Crystal Skull’. This track starts off slow and starts to pick up a bit about two minutes in where it turns into some catchy rock and roll. While it never comes close to reaching the heaviness referenced previously, there is still something beautiful about it.

Earth is a fun album overall although I would have liked it to be a bit more cohesive. Things are kind of all over the place in the sense that you could pick out almost any track and have it stand on its own. That says a lot about the quality of the music, however, I always look for some kind of flow as an album plays, save for the intro to nearly every song being very similar, and that didn’t seem as strong as it could have been in this release.

7/10

ALEIDA LA LLAVE


Fogg – High Testament


fogg high testament

High Testament (Tee Pee/Under the Gun Records) is the latest release from Texas fuzz trio, Fogg. They’re a little softer than anticipated but that’s not a bad thing if you’re into that sort of thing. Personally, I like to be moved by what I listen to.

The song ‘Seasons’ is easily my favorite track off the of the album as it’s heavier than the rest, particularly once you hit the 4:05 mark and it turns into something that actually resembles a stoner anthem. That’s when the band just lets the instruments do the talking for them and you start getting the fuzzed out riffs and groovy bass lines that I love.

‘Mountain’ follows suit with a touch of something a little more sinister sounding. The organ really fits in well with this song and adds extra depth and life to the song when the vocals just aren’t enough. That’s not to say that Brandon Hoffman is inadequate in any way, I would just prefer a voice that is less light and fluffy, and a lot more emotion.

If you’re looking for a decidedly chill record, this is a good pick. It’s quiet and soothing, possibly too much, in my opinion. I prefer things to have a little more energy, but when these boys do kick things into high gear, they do it well. It would have been nice to hear more of that rock and roll sound with less of the whole flower child vibe to break up how monotonous the album can be.

6.0/10

ALEIDA LA LLAVE


Morass of Molasses – So Flows Our Fate


a0954416189_10

Anyone with their ear to the ground may have heard the faint rumblings of Reading based Morass of Molasses. Since their conception in 2013 the band have been working hard touring the UK up to the release of their début EP So Flows Our Fate (Wicked Boy). Moving from a live sound to recorded, there is always a danger that a band will lose some of their signature sound, however, as their name suggests, this stoner trio have turned up the fuzz for a thick wall of noise that is anything other than a sweet treat.

A lone guitar introduces us into the EP as we are dragged into opening track ‘Rotten Teeth.’ Starting as it means to continue, ‘Rotten Teeth’ may be one of the heavier tracks on this EP but contains what becomes a signature sound for the band, big instrumentals dropping down to slow quiet passages with a clean sound. Formed of just one guitar, bass and drums, the sound is surprising full for such a sparse line-up. While the sound may have benefited from additional parts, it certainly isn’t screaming for anything extra.

While it isn’t full of complex rhythms, it does have some charm in its simplicity, tuning itself back to the basic formula of catchy riffs, solid grooves and restrained vocal performance. Morass of Molasses have placed their sound right back in the roots of what stoner always should be: monolithic riffing, a great fuzz tone and, at its heart, solid groove.

 

7.0/10

Morass of Molasses on Facebook

 

CAITLIN SMITH


Cave Dwellers – John Fitterer of Crowned by Fire


crowned-by-fire-photo02

 

California metal crew Crowned By Fire breaks the mold of many bands from the LA scene with a raw blend of stoner-rock grooves, and firey blues. Veterans of the scene, they have a “not our first rodeo” approach to metal that fans of Black Sabbath, Black Label Society, Down, Fireball Ministry, Lord Dying and the early records of Soil will flock to. Recorded at Zakk Wylde’s Vatican Studios, their new EP Space Music for Cave People (Chrome Mountain) throws the kitchen sink at you in terms of fuzzed-out, badass tracks and killer solos. The band is just starting to tour outside of California now, and has promised more big things in the future. Ghost Cult caught up with front man John Fitterer to get the scoop on the new EP, covering the greats and rubbing shoulders with some metal gods on a the regular basis. You know, no big whoop.


Your band has been around for almost a decade, but the new EP Space Music for Cave People feels like a real coming out party for the band with a lot of “wow” moments. How did it all come together?

I think the EP has a lot of diversity because of how and even more so when the songs came together. This is almost entirely a B-Side album.

There is definitely a lot of groove-based stuff going on in your music and slower songs really stand out. Is there a Crowned by Fire go-to tempo?

Maybe? ha! It seems even our more upbeat/faster songs like I Spit On Your Curse, I Am The Crime and Shake The Bag off our album Prone To Destroy still have the same tempo as our slower songs, just more fills between the tempo, so maybe we do, If anything it’s the tempo of Sabbath…

CD 4 pg Insert

What is “space music for cave people”?

I was living up in Cherry Valley in Riverside County on 42 acres of property in a ranch style house built in 1908. At night I would sometimes walk into the blackness of the surrounding fields with my German Shepherd Elsa, a folding chair, a cocktail and just sit, look at the sky and listen to the wildlife, mostly Elsa chasing rabbits in the dark. I only had one visible neighbor and I couldn’t even see him at night. Anyway, I guess I had this sort of vision looking over all the city lights from the hilltop that we humans are still just cave dwelling folk but our caves are constructed of wood, drywall, concrete, metal, stone and that most of us are driven by the identity of music from the past and present propelling us into the future. It inspired me to write a simple song to tip my hat to the gods of thunder (rock n’ roll) and thank them for throwing me into the mix in some way shape or form.


Along with the throwback feel of the tracks, it’s cool to see a band with a song named after itself again. Do you think little things like that send a certain message to the listener about the band?

In this case yeah, Justin hit me up to sing for a band he was in because they were replacing the singer, I thought the music was really heavy and had the potential to be something special. The stuff they were doing was more balls out Slayer/Pantera-ish which showed they had chops and I was really impressed by the looseness of the guitars. I wasn’t sure if we were going to mesh at the time mainly because I was listening to a lot of stuff that was slower and darker (Goatsnake, Neurosis, Celtic Frost, Venom, Sabbath, Vitus, Cathedral, Satyricon, Bolt Thrower) and I really didn’t want to sing to fast songs.

The very first time me and Justin (Manning) jammed together in the Summer of 2006, he broke out this heavy swampy blues metal riff and I immediately started singing this thing I’d written called Crowned By Fire. The riff and lyrics came together so organically we were blown away. We both decided that this was a beast of it’s own origin and to start this band from the ground up. Never once did we play a note of the songs previously written. A month or so later we agreed that Crowned By Fire was the best name for the band.

How did you get Tommy Victor to guest on ‘Buried Away’?

Justin first met Tommy when he was working at Schecter Guitar Research. Tommy was (is?) endorsed by Schecter. CBF played a Schecter party in Hollywood that Tommy was at, he said he dug the set and we gave him a shirt and cd and whatever else we could throw at him, ha! Later Tommy asked Justin to tech for him for a few Danzig gigs. Next thing you know he’s up at Zakks per our request to do some vocals on the new EP, the rest is history. Tommy is fucking awesome and killed it in the studio, -total pro and stand up dude!

crowned-by-fire-photo01
You are very versatile vocally, more than a typical rock or metal guy. I even heard some Leonard Cohen stuff in that ballad. What are some of the not-so obvious influences of the band?

I can really only speak for myself on this, yes I’m a huge Leonard Cohen fan, I probably own 95 percent of his catalog. I was thinking I was going for more of a Michael Gira (Swans) or Scott Kelly (from Neurosis on his Blood and Time) thing there, but it was probably all three. My relationships are complicated.

As far as my influences, 60’ psychedelic rock, 70’s classic rock and FM radio, 80’s & 90’s punk/goth and underground metal, some of the decades overlap in genre but you get the picture, I believe all of the influences live and breath through me vocally.

What is Zakk Wylde’s studio (Vatican Studios) like to record in and did he have any advice for you guys?

Kinda. There were 2 actual surreal moments I experienced while recording at the Black Vatican. One was hanging in Vatican kitchen with Tommy Victor and drinking Valhalla Java Coffee while writing down a verse of my lyrics to our song Buried Away for Tommy to sing on, then watching him perform the part while Zakk frequented the room with words of sarcastic encouragement. The next was a complete Spinal Tap moment as I walked into the Vatican to lay down vocal tracks with Adam Klumpp and find Zakk throwing down about 10 takes of the lead guitar on the song Space Music For Cave People. He was schooling Justin on playing a blues lead over the tune. Fucked up thing, both mine and Justin’s iPhones were frozen in limbo uploading new IOS software (in a cell phone dead zone) in the hills of the infamous BLS compound, so none of this was documented at all, and worse yet, no thumbs up to use the boss’s lead on the album, ha!!

 

Is it a little daunting to record a cover of such a well-known song as ‘Burning for You’ by B. O.C.?

I don’t think so, we talked about doing it a certain way and did it that way. I like it when a band does a cover and you know it’s “that” band doing the cover. I’m sure we’ll occasionally catch some shit about hacking the song or whatever, so what! Scott Hill from FU Manchu once told me that some dude was giving him crap about switching the word “bus” to “Camaro” in their killer sludged out version of BOC’s Godzilla, funny shit. Sometimes people just need to lighten up. Most bands that I truly like, well they can do no wrong for the most part, they aren’t always 10’s and that’s ok with me. One of my favorite cover albums is Six Feet Under’s Graveyard Classics 2, where they cover AC/DC’s Back In Black LP in it’s entirety, total brutal genius.

Sidenote… no cowbell? Bogus! Lol!

I actually wanted cowbell on the song Crowned By Fire, I still do, ha! The first time we attempted to record it in 2006, we sent Justin in the drum room with a cowbell in hand and every time we went to record it we almost died laughing. He looked like a drunk bullfrog hitting an oil can with a flyswatter in there, it really brought out the hillbilly in him. Since then it was unfortunately never revisited..

 

Is it tough cracking the LA scene with this kind of old-school metal band these days?

No. I actually think it’s brought us more respect with the promoters because they seem to see the genuineness in what we do. We’re almost falling into the “fad” of things now, it feels like anyway. In 2006, when we started, the majority of the bands out there were playing all this technical skinny pants eyeliner metal, now you rarely see any of that shit, and actually a lot of those bands now look like they rolled out of the same smelly van as us, which is a bit disheartening.

Your video was directed by Matt Zane who is known for his distinct visual style. What was it like working with him?

Matt’s a total pro when it comes to directing, he was to the point and extremely articulate in his vision of what we could and should pull off with the resources at hand.

 

What kind of touring and gigs do you have lined-up in the near future?


In the near future, as far as shows, we’ll be at The Rail Club in Fort Worth on Friday August 15th at Ride For Dime Texas with Texas Hippie Coalition, Malone’s in Santa Ana, CA on Friday August 22nd with Gypsyhawk, Saturday August 30th at The Viper Room in Hollywood with our friends All Hail The Yeti and Lords of Ruin. We’ll probably be hitting the northern west coast this spring (SF, Santa Cruz & such).

We’re working with Black Radar Management in the UK and hope to be making plans to get to Europe sooner than later!

 

Crowned By Fire on Facebook

 

KEITH (KEEFY) CHACHKES


Red Fang – The Shrine – Lord Dying: Live at Effenaar, Eindhoven NL


RedfangEuro2014-420px

 

This time we traveled to Eindhoven in the south of the Netherlands for a blasting show with Red Fang, The Shrine and Lord Dying. All three bands I got very stoked about, as soon I saw the flyer I knew I had to review this and share this epic moments with the audience. The weather was nice, and after sitting in the sun for a while we hopped into the venue. Three bands on a European tour, the day before they were in Belgium. Now they are all ours! Lets see what they have to give to us.

Lord Dying03

First on stage was the foggy and swampy band Lord Dying, after bringing out their first album Summon the Faithless I was already totally excited to see this band perform. I was not disappointed. They give a blasting and amazingly energetic show that blew my mind. You not often see a band that clearly has defined influences, but are absolutely doing their own thing. Their music is very heavy, but definitely in the louder register, it just shouts headbanging all over the place. Good groovy riffs intertwine with well placed solo’s, a deep bass ,and some good old-fashioned feedback. The venue was already getting pretty full with bearded men and women (?) and beer was richly flowing. It was a good opener but I wouldn’t mind at all if they would play a little bit longer or had another spot on the bill. Maybe next time. It was way to early when this band was done playing. I was left wanting more.

The Shrine05

The Shrine was the second band and you can describe them as Motörhead if they would play stoner with a little hint of some old-school punk feeling. The music gives you a happy vibe and are not dragging at all, a downside of this sound is that it began to nag in my head after a few songs, but hey. As soon they start to play they immediately pulled the throttle and smashed a squishy, but swinging vibe in your face. The Shrine gives you strong and simple lyrics that are pretty easy to sing along with, what makes it kind of enjoyable. I have to give the bass player a +1 for the Rickenbacker by the way, it is not that often you see one. The Shrine is a pleasant band to listen to, but it is a bit simple. I wouldn’t mind seeing them again, but I think this band will have a better vibe in a smaller venue.

Red Fang01

And for the moment we were all be waiting for, Red Fang. We all know the album Whales and Leeches they came out with recently, and this definitely is the best material the band has made to date. I wasn’t the only one who thought about seeing this band tonight. The venue was pretty full at this time and you know you are doing good when the audience is completely smashed and are only shouting for more. Well, this exactly thing was happening at Red Fang. These bearded Portlanders are totally grooving all over the place and unstoppable. You can describe this band in very few words: awesome riffing and a huge feeling of groove. They really showed this time that they can totally enchant the audience and make them move all over the place. You could feel the heat and energy coming at you all over the place, a good thing if you ask me, since it is getting harder and harder to enjoy the Dutch audience. And for the seal on this review a little tip for the next time you are going to see Red Fang: hold on to your beards, things are going to get messed up!

 Red Fang06

 

[slideshow_deploy id=’6057′]

Red Fang on Facebook

The Shrine on Facebook

Lord Dying on Facebook

 

Words by Kaat Van Doremalen

Photos by Susanne A. Maathuis