Locrian made three New England stops on their current tour making The Alchemy in Providence, RI the first up on the list with support from the Cleveland-based composer High Aura’d and A Monolithic Dome featuring members of Elizabeth Colour Wheel of Boston. I went into the show kind of blind since I had only been asked to review it maybe 48 hours previous and had no previous knowledge of either of the supporting bands.Continue reading
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Locrian to Kick Off Tour New Dates Soon
Post-metal trio, Locrian, are about to begin their first tour in a decade. Kicking off July 19th, the North American run comes in support of their newly released LP, End Terrain (Profound Lore Records). Keep reading below for live listings and more from Locrian.
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Locrian Shares a New Single and Video for “After Extinction” – New Album “End Terrain” Coming Soon
Locrian Shares a New Single and Visualizer “Excarnate Light” – New Album Coming Soon
Locrian shares a new single and video for the track with “Excarnate Light!” Their new concept album End Terrain is due for release on April 5 via Profound Lore Records! Pre-order the album now and watch the clip here.
Locrian Shares a New Single “Chronoscapes” – New Album “End Terrian” Coming Soon
Experimental metal trio Locrian are a prophetic voice of decline and a pioneering force in the world of metal. Locrian’s sonic tapestry weaves elements of black metal, ambient, and experimental music, creating a genre-defying experience that pushes the boundaries of conventional metal norms. Their new album “End Terrain” set for release on April 05, is the proper follow-up to 2015’s “Infinite Dissolution” (Relapse Records) and continues in the vein of Locrian’ distinguishable sonic blueprint brought forth from said release along with such albums as the Relapse Records released “Return To Annihilation” and “The Clearing/The Final Epoch”. 2022 saw the return of Locrian making their return on their Profound Lore debut “New Catastrophism” which saw the trio explore and return back to the more experimental side of their roots. Continue reading
Locrian – Infinite Dissolution
Reaction to Chicago trio Locrian has often been mixed: their melody-infused, Black-edged expression offending as many purists as it delights fans of obsidian innovation. Latest album Infinite Dissolution (Relapse) initially continues that progressive sound with opener ‘Arc of Extinction’ possessing the kind of introductory swell perfected by the likes of Yes and Pink Floyd. The blackened horror soon emerges, however: Terence Hannum’s rasps exploding against the sudden quickening of pace, André Foisy’s Post-black leads “bipping” furiously over a hissing cacophony à la fellow US dark experimentalists Liturgy.
The ensuing ‘Dark Shales’ begins with melancholic twangs, ethereal airs coating muffled tub-thumping, and some emotive soloing from Foisy. Here it becomes clear that Locrian has evolved from its nebulous indecision into a talented outfit, determined to parade all of their influences. ‘…Shales’ truly evokes grey, wash-battered stone beaches yet marries them to an odyssey through space, delicately yet with latent power. The first of the ‘KXL’ trilogy, meanwhile, incorporates industrial sampling into its mournful yet spiky melodies before squalling, ominous feedback reintroduces the band’s edge: a bitterness which infuses the spacier, grandiose parts of the second movement’s eerie, orchestral keys.
Symphonics play a subtle yet important role in Infinite Dissolution’s character. Lush Moogs, at times cosmic, at others Numan-esque, quell the van Eeckhout-style vocal agonies of ‘The Future of Death’. The swelling atmospherics of album centrepiece ‘An Index of Air’ ascend to frostbitten roars and a frenetic gallop, soulful harmonies climaxing the epitome of superior quality, inventive, melodic Black metal.
There are imperfections – it takes time for the pulsing rush of ‘The Great Dying’ to kick in but the heart is eventually piqued; the over-gentle rhythms and electronica of ‘Heavy Water’, meanwhile, are enlivened by the odd venture into harsher territory and more cold, “post” guitar. The main issue here is that the band still fall between two huge stools: still too soft and whimsical for pure Black hearts; whilst possessing too many harsh interludes for fans of melodious Rock.
Infinite Dissolution, however, is arguably the band’s strongest to date: a stirring, inventive work that will undoubtedly win Locrian much admiration.
7.0/10
PAUL QUINN
Album Trailer: Locrian – Infinite Dissolution
Chicago/Baltimore experimental outfit Locrian are streaming a trailer for their new album Infinite Dissolution, out July 24, 2015 via Relapse Records.
Infinite Dissolution Track Listing:
01: Arc of Extinction
02: Dark Shales
03: KXL I
04: The Future of Death
05: An Index of Air
i. Divinations
ii. Air Structures
iii. Watcher of the Clouds
06: KXL II
07: The Great Dying
08: Heavy Water
09: KXL II
LOCRIAN:
André Foisy – Guitars, Electronics, Piano
Terence Hannum – Vocals, Moog Little Phatty, Moog Minitaur, Moog Source, MicroKorg, Arp Avatar, EDP Wasp, Mellotron M400, Samples
Steven Hess – Drums, Percussion, Electronics
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Locrian – Return To Annihilation
Locrian from Chi-town (Chicago, USA) are by no means a typical band, and perhaps they are proud of this. Borrowing the post-black stylings of forward-thinking New Yorkers Krallice, post-rockalyptic instrumentality of Explosions In The Sky, and the droning post-disquietude of Sunno))), they’re certainly not ones for short and punchy tunes. Instead, they opt for the more aethereal end of the metal world, where light rather than darkness takes prevalence, and more introspective topics of mortality, spirituality, and some heartfelt reflection takes the stage (no pun intended with one of the songs being “Panorama of Mirrors”). Understandably, this isn’t everyone’s thing, so from the start they’ve got an obstacle to overcome. In making music that dares to try for the “epic”, is it possible for them correctly capture the essence unlike a teenager remarking the latest technological marvel or a particularly skillful maneuver in a sports match?Continue reading