Philadelphia avant-garde post-metallers Rosetta are self-releasing their new album Utopiod on September 1st. This is the bands’ first album since 2015’s Quintessential Ephemera (Golden Antennae). The bands have also announced a headline tour, with openers North.Continue reading
Tag Archives: Rosetta
Various Artists – Meantime Redux
Helmet will go down as one of the greatest and most influential bands ever. This fact is undisputed. Coming out of new York City at a time when a generation of bands bred on New York Hardcore values married to the talent of thrash bands (with some general avant-garde weirdness for good measure), Helmet stood out like a sore thumb of weirdness. Continue reading
Exclusive Track Stream: Wang Wen – Sweet Home, Go
Chinese post-rock heroes Wang Wen have partnered up with Ghost Cult today to stream the title track from their new album Sweet Home, Go. You can hear the track below:
Exclusive Stream: Au Revoir – Sinking
New Jersey Post-Rock/Post-Metal upstarts Au Revoir are streaming a new single, exclusively with Ghost Cult. Sinking comes from the bands forthcoming release Veles (Flesh And Bone Records), due out on March 4th. You can stream the track at this link or below:
Written from March to August 2015, Veles showcasesAu Revoir’s diverse, multi-faceted songwriting, and light-shade dynamic intensity. Fans of Red Sparrows, Mogwai, and Rosetta will love this band. Produced by the band, Veles was Engineered and mixed by Scot Moriarty at Backroom Studios in Rockaway NJ , assisted by Zak Hait. Additional engineering by Eric Scholz. Mastered by Dave Harris at Studio B Mastering in Charlotte NC. The band is self-releasing Veles on vinyl/digital formats, with cassette and CD formats to be handled by Flesh and Bone Records.
Pre-orders are available for Veles now at this link:
Veles track listing:
1. The Bottom
2. Drifting
3. Sinking
4. Deluge
Exclusive Stream: Cult Of The Lost Cause – Hessian Crucible
Denver based post-metal merchants Cult Of The Lost Cause have released a new single, ‘Hessian Crucible’, from their new album, Contritions, out next week on Sailor Records. You can hear ‘Hessian Crucible’ exclusively from Ghost Cult at this link or below:
Previously the band released streams for ‘All Those Opposed’ and ‘The Drowned God’. Contritions was recorded at Flatline Audio by acclaimed producer Dave Otero (Cephalic Carnage, Khemmis, Native Daughters). Combining dirge-laden riffs and sly atmospherics, the instrumental band has found a common ground with greats of the genre such as Rosetta, ISIS, Pelican and Russian Circles.
Contritions track listing
1. All Those In Favor
2. All Those Opposed
3. Hessian Crucible
4. The Drop
5. The Cloud Collector
6. The Drowned God
7. Wall of Bones
8. The Gemini
Cult Of The Lost Cause has booked a home town record release show next weekend, at The High Dive on 2/27.
Cult Of The Lost Cause on Facebook
Cult Of The Lost Cause on Bandcamp
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Rosetta – Quintessential Ephemera
I wasn’t part of the clamour surrounding The Anaesthete (Independent release), the band’s previous album; feeling that I couldn’t connect with it and surely, with post-metal, that’s the main objective. Quintessential Ephemera (Golden Antenna/Init/Tokyo Jupiter/War Crime – aye, there really are that many labels involved in the distribution of this fifth full-length from Pennsylvanian Post-men Rosetta.) begins promisingly; the delicate, jangling lead interspersing with icicle-drop keys to give a gentle yet affecting introduction. When Mike Armine’s roar bursts through, along with the pounding drums of ‘(Untitled I)’, the agony is palpable and decorated with the beautiful yet stark chords you’d expect, shimmering exquisitely over BJ McMurtrie’s intricate and creative stickwork. New addition Eric Jernigan of longtime tourmates City of Ships on guitar and vocals makes a large impact. The intermittent use of clean vocals does display an occasional leaning towards Metalcore and Nu Metal, and here a little passion is lost. Those chiming guitars do, however, keep the energy fizzing alongside the progressive rhythms; the breakdown into the easy Shoegaze of ‘(Untitled II)’ – yes, you can see where this is going – reminiscent of state brethren August Burns Red’s quieter moments.
The big debate about Rosetta is whether their ‘emotion’ feels contrived in comparison to the likes of Amber’s ‘Lovesaken’ opus, in which each scream or twisted chord pierced the heart. The explosions of ‘(…II)’s second half finally bring those goosebumps; whilst the more subtle elements of ‘(Untitled III)’ are a pensive yet rhythmic beauty which make way for intelligent, measured yet angry and occasionally pulsating angst. Even the sample-laden ‘(Untitled IV)’ is pure heartfelt expression, while the twisted melancholic crush of ‘(Untitled V)’ allows that shattered organ to slide away on a magic carpet of licks straight from The Edge’s handbook; Armine’s cavernous bellow tearing through the wonderfully drummed, soothing noise of the album’s most inventive, standout track.
Complex yet unbelievably moving, the soundscapes spanning this agonised, bruising album are immense: the resonance of ‘(Untitled VII)’s brooding bombast filling the mind, its delicate verses soothing the disquiet whilst rising, almost elegiac leads duel with those mesmeric drums. The aching void of aptly-named closer ‘Nothing in the Guise of Something’ initially seems a strange choice to close such a huge set; yet is, in turn, the kind of intelligent masterstroke these boys obviously have in abundance. Quintessential Ephemera is a true listening experience and a journey of the soul.
8.5/10
PAUL QUINN
Goatsnake, Subrosa, Royal Thunder, Rosetta, etc Confirmed For Crucial Fest 5
Crucialfest 5 will be held June 18-20, 2015 in Salt Lake City, UT. The confirmed line will include:
Goatsnake
Dead Meadow
Royal Thunder
Rosetta
Mothership
Kowloon Walled City
Giant Squid
Captured! By Robots
Uzala
Norska
Black Pussy
Ides of Gemini
Demon Lung
Castle
Lesbian
Wild Throne
Ghetto Blaster
Eight Bells
Cold Blue Mountain
Throes
With Locals:
Eagle Twin
SubRosa
Cult Leader
Settle Down
Baby Gurl
Worst Friends
Agape
God’s Revolver
Eons
Dethrone the Soverign
Dark Seas
INVDRS
Cicadas
Disforia
Odium Totus
The Wasatch Fault
Turbo Chugg
The Ditch and the Delta
Oxcross
Filth Lords
Die Off
Top Dead Celebrity
Anthems
Stickfigures
D∅NE
Exes
Hard Men
Magda-Vega
Schedule
Thursday June 18th
Area 51 / 4pm / $10 / 18+ Stage
Baby Gurl
Eons
Throes
Cicadas
The Wasatch Fault
Filth Lords
Area 51 / 4pm / +$5 / 21+ Stage
INVDRS
Eight Bells
Ghetto Blaster
Cold Blue Mountain
Hard Men
Area 51 / 9pm / $10 / 21+
Royal Thunder
Wild Throne
Settle Down
Top Dead Celebrity
Friday June 19th
Area 51 / 4pm / $10 / 18+ Stage
Cult Leader
Rosetta
Ides of Gemini
Norska
Dethrone the Soverign
Disforia
Area 51 / 4pm / +$5 / 21+ Stage
The Ditch and the Delta
Castle
Demon Lung
Oxcross
Odium Totus
Urban Lounge / 9pm / $15 / 21+
Dead Meadow
Black Pussy
Dark Seas
D∅ne
Saturday June 20th
Area 51 / 2pm / $15 / 18+ Stage
SubRosa
Kowloon Walled City
Captured! By Robots
Giant Squid
Mothership
Worst Friends
Anthems
Stickfigures
Area 51 / 2pm / +$5 / 21+ Stage
God’s Revolver
Agape
Lesbian
Die Off
Exes
Danger Hailstorm
Magda-Vega
Urban Lounge / 9pm / $20 / 21+
Goatsnake
Eagle Twin
Uzala
Turbo Chugg
CrucialREST – Sunday June 21st
FREE / ALL AGES / FOOD
Kids & Dogs Welcome! No Alcohol Please
Bands and Venue TBA
*Schedule subject to change.
Accomodations
Crucialfest 5 on Facebook
Crucialfest 5 on Twitter
Audio: Rosetta – Untitled V
Philadelphia experimental metallers Rosetta are streaming “Untitled V” off of their latest album Quintessential Ephemera, out June 22, 2015 as a pay-as-you-wish format via Bandcamp here. The band has announced a string of upcoming shows.
Quintessential Ephemera Track Listing:
01: After The Funeral
02: (Untitled I)
03: (Untitled II)
04: (Untitled III)
05: (Untitled IV)
06: (Untitled V)
07: (Untitled VI)
08: (Untitled VII)
09: Nothing in the Guise of Something
Jun 17: Union Transfer – Philadelphia, PA (supporting Dillinger Escape Plan)
Jun 19: Area 51 – Salt Lake City, UT (Crucial Fest 5)
Jun 20: The Walnut Room – Denver, CO
Rosetta on Facebook
Rosetta on Twitter
Rosetta on Tumblr
Ghost Cult Issue #14 is out now!
Farewell To Space – An Interview With Rosetta
Always having carved their own path through music, Philadelphia post metal band Rosetta has taken the plunge to release their latest album, Anaesthete, completely independently (via Bandcamp) first. Ghost Cult saw this brave choice and the musical excellence of this album as a great reason to have a chat with the band about their experience creating the album and releasing it themselves. Guitarist Matt Weed gave us the low down.
Your latest album you’ve produced and released independently how was this experience, and did it go well?
It went very well. We were able to recoup expenses from production, even though the album had the biggest budget of any release we’ve ever done. I think we’ll certainly continue to use this model – it has made the band financially self-sustaining on our own terms.
You worked with City of Ships singer Eric Jernigan on one of the tracks, would you like to tell us something about this collaboration?
He lives not very far from the studio where the album was recorded, so naturally he was around during the sessions hanging out. We initially asked him to play guitar on ‘the weird track’ but he decided he’d rather do vocals. He nailed it, too. We didn’t use any pitch correction or crazy effects on his tracks, just layered them up to get a kind of chorus-y sound. We were surprised and very happy with how it came out.
You decided to release the album digitally on Bandcamp before you release the physical versions, did this strategy pay off you think?
Absolutely. The digital release is our own, so all the revenue from those sales go straight to paying band bills (production costs etc) with no middle-man. It helped us enormously. With physical releases coming out on record labels, that’s great to be able to offer but it’s not a revenue stream for the band. The labels put a lot into those releases, so they are deserve to recoup on that. Having both sides of it like this means that we can be financially sustainable but still offer the cool limited-edition products that collectors are looking for.
Your new album has a unique pacing and placing of songs, can you tell us something about this?
It’s arranged like a hurricane – it has a kind of symmetry to it, with rising and falling chaos, but also a generalized movement from integration to disintegration, or from structure to ruin. Our past albums have been sequenced in a much more intuitive fashion. We just did what felt right. With this one, we put a lot of thought into it and talked about it for a long time. Harmonically, it divides into thirds. Rhythmically it has much more of a cyclonic storm structure.
Are there any songs that have particular meaning for you?
Well they all do, really. But I think that ‘Hodoku/Compassion’ was a big surprise for us. It made me remember the early days when we would just stumble on beautiful sounds by accident. It was something that just came together almost supernaturally during production, with very little planning.
There’s a clear link to Asian culture in song titles, is there a particular reason you chose this?
The titles come from Dave Lowry’s book Sword and Brush, talking about the intersections of martial arts and calligraphy. They have personal meaning for our bass player Dave, who teaches Jiu Jitsu.
Is this theme reflected in the lyrical content, and in what way?
Only in a very oblique way. The song titles were chosen from the book to fit lyrics already written, and to communicate something about each song’s personality and process that goes beyond just their lyrical content – the music is written long before the lyrics, and is therefore in some ways more essential to what the song is.
Your other albums have a more astronomical focus in their themes, is that link to space still there with this new theme? And will the space theme or inspiration return?
We haven’t intentionally pursued space themes in a long time now. They do come up here and there, since Armine typically brings back old lyrical themes from past albums, but the songs and lyrics are more personal now than in the beginning. I don’t think we will move back in that direction.
And finally, if there anything you’d like to express towards our readers in general, any closing words?
More stage dives!
Words: Susanne Maathuis