Orange Goblin – Healing Through Fire (Re-issue)


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Healing Through Fire (Candlelight), the sixth studio album from British Metal (don’t call them stoner!) stalwarts Orange Goblin, saw the quartet in good form kicking out raunchy Sabbath-ian jams. Taking inspiration from both the great plague and great fire of London, the band kicked out more powerful metal but also displayed The Goblin’s new found knack for more accessible songwriting riddled with tasty Zeppelin grooves.

 

Man mountain frontman Ben Ward is on form lyrically, with nods to At The Gates (The line terminal spirit disease turns up on ‘Vagrant Stump’) and criticising the financial hierarchy referring to the “Rats of Fleet Street” on ‘The Ale House Braves’. The album contains much in the way of expected heavy metal thunder but is unafraid to take a welcome break with the charming instrumental diversion of ‘Mort Lake (Deadwater)’ showcasing some classy acoustic guitar, while the black hearted southern twang of ‘The Beginner’s Guide To Suicide’ employs some great blues slide and harmonica which complements its downbeat verse riff exquisitely.

 

OG aren’t known for experimental tendencies or genre defining exploits, preferring to stick to writing banging tunes like live staple ‘They Come Back (Harvest Of Skulls)’ about plague ridden residents of London returning from the grave to feed upon the living. While not a concept album as such Healing Through Fire demonstrated Orange Goblin’s ability to follow the heavy metal tradition of storytelling through their lyrics in the way great like Maiden and Priest have always done.

 

The lack of bonus tracks save for a live run through of ‘They Come Back…’ is a minor gripe but as re-issues go this is a timely reminder of one of the finest albums in the canon of a great British band. Perhaps second only to their Time Travelling Blues opus Healing… is such a good record it took the group five years before they could produce the follow-up.

 

If it is post, prog, neo-folk, doom metal you want then you’d best look elsewhere, but great heavy music? Step right this way sir!

 

 

8 / 10

Orange Goblin on Facebook

ROSS BAKER

 


Unnatural Selection – Aaron “Boon” Gustafson and Mike Hannay of Anciients


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Anciients just learned that their North American tour with Sepultura was canceled as they were on their way to the first stop in Los Angeles. These Canadian metallers were looking forward to another tour in front of new audiences they had not played for yet.

 

Sadly, the tour did not happen and the Anciients members found themselves without a tour. Bassist Aaron “Boon” Gustafson explains the situation: “I think it was supposed to start tomorrow. Unfortunately there were visa problems. It was a bummer. Now we’re headed home.”

 

There was a week in between the Scale the Summit and Tesseract tour, before the Sepultura tour, and those were really good. We did Holy Grail and that was good too. We had taken time off work and merch we had ordered, and it was a last minute call. It would have been great exposure for us, and play at a bunch of venues and with a bunch of bands…it’s unfortunate but things like this happen?”

 

Despite the hiccup within their schedule, they did not led this get them down and they moved on and proceeded to the next phase, as they always do. Gustafson said the tour with Scale the Summit and Tesseract were well and was an enjoyable experience for the band.

 

It was cool. We’re not exactly in the same vein as Tesseract or Scale The Summit. To be honest with you, I hadn’t really listened to either of those bands before we went, and when I did listen to them, I thought how are we going to fit into this. TesseracT have some insane musicians in that band and they have some heavy parts, but it’s also very poppy and catchy vocal melodies and not a lot of heavy singing. It was ‘how are we fitting into this bill?’ It turned out to be very awesome and the fans who were there for them really dug us. After touring with Lamb of God and The Death To All Tours, we had gained some fans down in the States too. A lot of people came up to us and said they came to see us. It was a really pleasant surprise. Nothing negative from the fans of the other bands – everyone was into it and it went off without a hitch. It was a really fun tour. Those guys from both bands are super good dudes and we made a lot of new friends.”

 

Anciients spawned from Spread Eagle, a veteran Vancouver rock n roll band who was slowly finding what they were doing a bit unchallenging and wanting a bit more. “Me and Kenny [Cook, singer/guitarist] and Chris [Dyck, guitarist] – we played in a band called Spread Eagle in Vancouver for something like eight years. It was rock n’roll, sorta Motorhead, Turbonegro style band. We did that for ages and it had run its course. We played the same venues and played to the same people all the time, so we ended that. Kenny had a bunch of riffs and we decided to develop that. We got heavier and a bit more artistic, and take things a bit more seriously and try to make it more a career out of it. We wanted to make heavier and more progressive music and here we are today,” explained Gustafson.

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Since 2011, Anciients has been building their own sound fusing riff rock and a heavier, technically driven style that they can call their own. While many audiences take a moment to absorb what they are playing, they found themselves winning over audiences regardless of who they are playing for. “A lot of our influences range anywhere from 70s classic rock and 70s progressive stuff,” says drummer Mike Hannay. “A lot of us listen to a lot of metal. The rock n roll thing we were listening to a lot of Turbonegro and stuff like that. A lot of death metal and black metal and it was a natural progression….let’s just write heavy music. It sort of just came out. You can see the classic rock influence in a lot of it as well. At the time we made a conscious decision to write heavier music. We all liked metal so let’s play some metal and let’s make it epic and big and doomy and powerful.”


But the fact that Anciients fused an epic sounding metal style with a sludgy rock `n roll edge is what audiences took a liking to what they do. “I think we liked both styles and put them together, which was unnatural at the time. It came off sludgy and cool, within progressive music. But after the song came together, we noticed it ourselves how those styles were same, we thought it worked well and it sounded great. We should try to do this sludgy rock n roll thing. It was kind of unnatural, but it was fully embraced once we felt it was a good melding of genres,” said Hannay.

 

 

Their 2013 debut CD, Heart of Oak (Season of Mist), features a wide array of tunes with lyrics focusing on a nature theme. “Chris writes most of the lyrics. If you were to look at where we live, basically how could not be influenced by where we live – epic mountains and the Pacific Ocean and forests everywhere. It’s basically our surroundings. We’re basically influenced by our surroundings. It’s a beautiful place and I think that’s where a lot of the lyrics came from,” said Gustafson.

 

Like I said, Chris writes all the lyrics but I think it comes down to where we grew up and live to this day, and made an area with lots of nature.”

 

Chris reads a lot of history too. I think some of the lyrics came from Sumerian themes and ancient cultures or religions and stuff like that,” added Hannay. One thing Anciients benefited from was being part of a strong Vancouver metal scene that helped shape their sound and gaining a lot of local support along the way.

 

It’s a very tight knit metal community in Vancouver. All of the bands you hear of from Vancouver are our friends. Like Three Inches of Blood and Bison BC and a lot of the bands who are touring and doing stuff. They’re all buddies of ours. Chris our guitar player actually works for a production company and puts on a lot of the shows. It’s what you do on any given night of the week. You go to a metal show. You see all of your buddies. It’s a tight knit community. Everyone is very supportive of each other. There’s no bitching or jealousy. Everyone’s a super good bros [with each other]. It can’t work any way other than our favor. Everyone’s very supportive of us. Everyone comes out to our shows when we play and buys our t-shirts,” said Gustafson.

 

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While much of the attention has been on Anciients playing on the progressive or death metal tours, they have done their share of riff rock shows as well. Doing shows with dirty rock bands is something Anciients is no stranger to.

 

It’s funny that you ask that,” says Gustafson. “Just last night we played with Orange Goblin and they’re a dirty rock n roll band. It went off great. The guys in the band watched our whole set. They dug it and came up to us after and told us how much they liked our music. They all got t-shirts and our records. The guitar player rocked our shirt on stage. We seem to fit in with that crowd really well. We have a wide spread sound. You open yourself up and you can play with different crowds. We’ll go play these crowds. We’ll go play to a bunch of death metal kids at the Death shows. We played for the Lamb of God crowds. There’s something in our music for everyone, and we can play for most crowds.”

 

Most people in Vancouver receive us very well. As far as the bands we’ve toured with, none of them have been sludgy like we are, but they’re super successful at what they do. More of our local shows are the only ones so far we’ve played with sludgy bands, with the exception last night with Orange Goblin. Fans of that music dig us but that’s alright!,” says Hannay.

 

Anciients has also done their share of odd bills as well, but still finding new ways of winning over fans in the unlikeliest of ways. “We played with a band the other night called Shat. It was very overweight dudes in diapers, dildos on their heads…and that was some strange shit! People were just there to get wasted and sing along to these cheesy, corny hard rock songs. But they were good at what they did. We were like ‘ how did we get on this show?’ We played and people dug it. If you’re a fan of music, either a fan or a musician, there’s something in our music you can dig,” said Gustafson.

 

Early on we played with Chris Jericho’s band Fozzy,” added Hannay. “It was Tesseract, Scale The Summit, us and Fozzy. So you had all the prog and metal kids would come up, and then go to the back of the venue for Fozzy while all the wrestling fans would come up and chant ‘Fozzy!’ Then Fozzy was over, then the metal kids would come back up. That was another weird one. The Fozzy fans liked us, but they looked like moms and dads, or they lived in their parents’ basements and watch wrestling all day.”

 

 Anciients on Facebook

 

REI NISHIMOTO

 

 


Red Fang – Live AT The Troubadour Los Angeles, CA USA


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Rock ‘n roll is definitely alive inside of The Troubadour and the energy is definitely at a high as the crowd eagerly awaits the return of Oregon rockers Red Fang. The packed crowd is ready for a high energy show and they definitely got that.

Opening with ‘Malverde’ (off their last record Murder the Mountains), Red Fang set the pace with their riff driven rock n roll sound and rarely allowing the tempo to relax along the way. The riffs come a flowing throughout each song, while their punk esque demeanor to their sound adds a different flavor that makes them desirable and somewhat dangerous sounding.

 

Guitarist Bryan Giles and bassist Aaron Beam traded lead vocal duties throughout their set, each giving a different feel to each tune while the crowd screamed along to each song. Much of their set list consisted of songs from Murder The Mountains while including songs from their newest album Whales and Leeches. Songs like ‘Crows in Swine’ and ‘1516’ hit the crowd hard, but they still managed to absorb the blow without any setbacks. They took in each song as if they were regulars in their set for years.

 

Their other guitarist, David Sullivan, quietly worked in his guitar magic, occasionally adding his tasteful riffage, while drummer John Sherman bashed away in stride. They also brought out guest keyboardist Roger Manning for a one time appearance on ‘Blood Like Cream’. The latter part of their set list ended with three songs from their self titled release. ‘Sharks and ‘Prehistoric Dog’, and the surprise encore tune ‘Good To Die’ left the crowd with a lot more rock than they originally bargained for.

 

Red Fang definitely lives up to their hype alongside the current wave of dirty riff-driven rock bands such as Baroness, Torche, Mastodon, and Clutch, while carrying the flag with pride. Oregon should be proud and music fan should take notice if you haven’t already.

 

 

Red Fang on Facebook

 

Rei Nishimoto

 

 

 


Coming Into Their Own – An Interview With Goya


1276795_608858279170962_1971244100_o (1)Continuing our series from the Second Annual Southwest Terror Fest- “The Year Of The Snake”,  Ryan Clark caught up with Jeff Owens of Goya in an exclusive interview for Ghost Cult . The front man of the doom merchants discussed the bands’ new release 777, the local scene, and the value of making great records that stand the test of time.

What are your thoughts on the heavy music scene in Arizona? If you could change one thing about it for the better, what would that be?

We’ve got lots of good bands and good people involved in the shows here in Arizona. We simply need more people to come to more shows. Sometimes on bills with a couple of local openers and some touring bands, no one shows up for the locals and arrives just in time to see the touring acts. So, more participation is vital.

 

How would you describe Goya’s sound and what are your future plans?

We’re heavily influenced by Electric Wizard, Black Sabbath, and Sleep. We stick to the formula but are coming into our own thing as well. Our new drummer, Nick, has really helped with the overall sound. We have an upcoming vinyl release titled 777, Laney Oleniczak did the artwork for the thirty copies of the limited edition for it, and this will be her first full length LP cover.

 

 

Do you think events like Southwest Terror Fest are great opportunities to expose new people to the underground scene?

Absolutely, 100%. Maryland Deathfest has expanded over the year, Obscene Extreme started small and blew up. As long as people are keeping at it and supporting it! It’s nice to have an event like Terror Fest in your own backyard.

 

Which of the two is more important: Live performance or a recording? Or is it somewhere in the middle?

The recording is the most important, though live performance is still vital. A recording is the thing people will hear everyday. Listen to The Doors. Unless you are old enough to have seen them live, all you have is the recording of such awesome music. So records are the lasting impression. Especially solid and organic albums that hold up well with repeated listens. You need to hone your live performance skills none the less, though. Reaching people live is important and leads them to your recording if they haven’t heard you on the internet yet or by way of a friend.

 

Goya on Facebook 

Ryan Clark


Summoning The Faithless – An Interview With Lord Dying


Lord DyingOut of Portland comes Lord Dying, an up and coming doom band that possess both promise and musical ability. Vocalist and guitarist Eric Olson gives Ghost Cult the low down on the band, their signing to Relapse and working with Sanford Parker.Continue reading


Ramesses – Misanthropic Alchemy


Ramesses-Misanthropic-Alchemy-Reissue-ArtworkRamesses is a British doom/sludge trio consisting of guitarist Tim Bagshaw (ex-Electric Wizard), drummer Mark Greening (Electric Wizard) and vocalist/bassist Adam Richardson (ex-Lord of Putrefaction). Unfortunately Ramesses has been put on hold. Bagshaw moved to the US to form Serpentine Path with the guys from Unearthly Trance, and Greening rejoined Electric Wizard, leaving Richardson out in the cold. Thankfully Ritual Productions decided to reissue debut full length Misanthropic Alchemy for those who just can’t get enough. This exhausting 2-disc set spans over two dominating hours and includes MA on the first disc. The second is made up of the We Will Lead You To Glorious Times EP, the Tomb EP and Glorious Dead’ from the split with Unearthly Trance.Continue reading


High On Fire – Spitting Fire Live Vol. 1 & 2


HighOnFireSpittingFireLiveVol1albumcoverartworkpackshotThrashHits-500x500What’s the purpose of live albums? Fillers while ardent fans await the next studio release? “Contractual obligation”? Money spinners? Memento for those in attendance? Homework for those that weren’t? Fifteen years and six albums in and High On Fire are releasing another live album – recorded in late 2012 – this time in not one but two parts, no, sorry, “volumes”. Featuring career-spanning material, the combined track listing is a pretty good representation of the band at their best, and so is the performance. As on the band’s studio releases, Kensel’s drumming is tight, his sledgehammer-heavy beats spitting sweat from the speakers, Matz’s low register rumble is all a-thunder, Pike’s guitar spews out angry riffs and reverbed-into-the-cosmos lead breaks, and his gargled growl is gargantuan.Continue reading


Desert Storm – Horizontal Life


Desert-Storm-Horizontal-Life-ArtworkDesert Storm‘s latest record, the alcohol soaked Horizontal Life is a slice of dirty rock n roll, served with plenty of chutzpah and a side order of filthy riff making. You do have to pinch yourself that they hail from Oxford, England rather than the putrid, fetid swamps of Louisiana.Continue reading


Orange Goblin & Bliksem Live @ ECI Cultuurfabriek Roermond, The Netherlands


Bliksem ECI Roermond 19-06-2013Orange Goblin are a band that really know how to start a party. After 16 years, they do not show any kind of fatigue. On the evening of one of the most hot and muggy days in Holland, it was a relief to enter the venue—which has air conditioning. The first thing I noticed was the small amount of people in the venue; surprising, for I expected the venue to be crowded. Nevertheless, it turned out to be a very personal and energetic show.Continue reading