Pregnancy
Once again Melbourne/Victoria delivers the goods with a great goregrind band. I'd love to have just one band that plays this style in Canberra. Formed from the bowels of Ballarat band Meth Mouth and featuring drum tart Christoph (Roskopp, Doubled Over, Internal Rot), this five track demo visits the classic goregrind sound of the early 2000s. Highly recommended if you like it gurgly.
Bandcamp
In Solitude
Lots of top 10s for 2013 featured Beastmilk's Climax, which unfortunately I have not been able to get into due to the Joy Division-sounding vocals and its complete lack of rocking elements. In Solitude from Sweden have tried something similar, leaving behind the more classic metal style for a more gothic rock approach. It works for me. The vocalist's range is awesome - he has left behind the slight Mercyful Fate style and at times now reminds me of Garm (Arcturus) or ICS Vortex (Borknagar, Arcturus, Dimmu Borgir) in places.
Sister: YouTube
"To Her Darkness" (video from 2012 release): YouTube
Gig of the Week
This friday night The Levitation Hex hit the Basement, with support from a rejuvinated Dreadnaught (Vic), tech death heads Hadal Maw (Vic) and grinders Wretch, featuring new vocalist Benji (Law of the Tongue).
Playlist: Unkle K
1. Pregnancy - Demo
2. Doomriders - Grand Blood
3. In Solitude - Sister
4. The Shrine - Primitive Blast
5. Iron Monkey - Ruined By Idiots
Playlist: lxp
1. Carousel - Jeweler's Daughter
2. Enforcer - Diamonds
3. Weekend Nachos - Still
4. Lantern - Rock 'N' Roll Rorshach
5. Jesuit - Discography
6. Cosmic Psychos - Blokes You Can Trust (DVD)
Unkle K
Wednesday, 22 January 2014
Tuesday, 31 December 2013
Cacophemisms' 2013 lists
The white noise created by countless year-end lists has faded. Nonetheless, Cacophemisms and some of our friends have a few more contributions to make. 2013 was packed full of great music and it's safe to say that narrowing these picks down was more difficult than most/all of us expected. If you're reading this, hopefully you might find something you want to look into further. We also invite you to help us give a final blast to the din of subjective opinion and add your lists in a comment on this post.
Cheers!
___
lxp
1. Magic Circle - S/T
From the cathartic doom fuelled riffs that break into triumphant NWOBHM inspired flourishes to Q’s thumping drums that lead mightily from the front. From the striking emotional weight of Brendan Radigan’s vocal delivery to the irresistible pull of the recording’s raw, direct, live feel. Magic Circle’s debut album overflows with a special quality that makes you want to relive every moment as soon as it passes by. Months later, as the final lick of closer “Magic Circle/Cloven in Two” fades out, it’s still a struggle not to flip the record over and start again - to have one more scratch at the itch that spread with the first bite inflicted by the galloping verses of “Rapture”.
2. Northless - World Keeps Sinking
With more time to take in the behemoth that is World Keeps Sinking since my review in September, I am no less impressed by it. When the album’s devastating magnitude becomes less intimidating and the songs’ construction becomes more familiar, the details hidden in every corner continue to reveal themselves. It’s the unconventional, sometimes jarring, sometimes uplifting touches that really begin to stand out, keeping the entire album interesting and keeping Northless well ahead of the pack. Brilliant.
3. Agrimonia - Rites of Separation
The first time I heard the intro to “Talion” being savagely torn apart by the explosive verse, I wanted to destroy everything in sight. Agrimonia completely nailed their approach to epic, metallic crust with Rites of Separation, creating an incendiary, dynamic record that is massive in both sound and scope. While the album ebbs and flows, its percussive, driving force imposes a fevered intensity that sears throughout its five howled testimonies to humanity’s dislocation at its own hands.
4. Vhol - S/T
Vhol spew forth an awesomely maniacal blend of thrash, prog, black and power metal, drawing from Voivod, Celtic Frost and even Discharge to create a wonderful, mesmerising racket that defies simple description. Pulsing, tremolo picked basslines and supercharged drumming underpin some stupefying, wildly inventive guitar work. And Yob’s Mike Scheidt tops it all off with his inimitable subterranean growls, scratchy, cavernous vibrato and everything between.
5. Earthless - From the Ages
The latest chapter of Earthless’ psychedelic shred freak-out adventures truly delivers. Containing all the thrills and spills you would expect, From the Ages hangs on to some more straightforward grooves than their other albums do, offering more places to jump on board and enjoy the ride. This is definitely going to remain on high rotation throughout the summer. And the cherry on top: Earthless and The Shrine are playing here in Canberra on New Year’s Day at the Basement.
6. Orchid - The Mouths of Madness
At first, I dismissed Orchid as another pointless Sabbath rip-off. Wrong. Eventually, Through the Devil’s Doorway turned me, and by the time I got through The Mouths of Madness, I was fully converted. Orchid take ownership of what they borrow. You just can’t argue with the stellar songwriting, the perfectly muted heaviness, or the dark but catchy wailing vocal melodies that carry equally well in moments of soaring, classic hard rock glory and blurry-eyed, lava lamp-lit interludes.
7. Phantom Glue - A War of Light Cones
This seems to have slipped by with little recognition, which is a shame because Phantom Glue’s distinctive, hardcore-tinged approach to huge, noisy sludge (with nods to Black Elk and early Mastodon) packs a hefty blow. With A War of Light Cones, the band created a brutal but clever, charismatic, bass-heavy monster with rough, distorted vocals and effective, sparing use of screaming guitar lines and solos. A great album that is well worth checking out if you missed it.
8. Cloud Rat - Moksha
Moksha is an outstanding offering of thrashy, melodic grindcore that isn’t afraid to let its emotions wander into more diverse territory, as in the wistful beginnings of “Infinite Chasm”. But the scathing and the nightmarish dominate, with the ferocious attack of the vocals and drums projecting most of the wrath. The guitar is sometimes buried, but the effect is that its distant melodies actually draw you in closer so Cloud Rat can go straight for your face.
9. The Black Angels - Indigo Meadow
I had never heard the Black Angels before this year, and I’m very glad that a couple of mates alerted me to the band’s haunting psychedelic rock, which conjures Neil Young, the Doors and Black Mountain. I absorbed three of their four albums concurrently - their debut, Passover was the shining light. But even though 2013’s Indigo Meadow is more subdued, it contains some fantastic moments and a compelling, subtly sinister weirdness that keeps me going back.
10. Hydromedusa - The Rats Have My Mind
It’s only a three-song cassette, but I couldn’t leave the latest from Adelaide’s Hydromedusa out of this list. They toned down the Eyehategod influence on this release, focusing more heavily on channelling Buffalo and AC/DC. They also stripped back some of the complexity apparent on their self-titled EP in order to crank out wild, raucous, sludgy rock ‘n’ roll that I really hope to see on stage some time soon.
Honourable mentions:
Agents of Abhorrence - Relief
Czarface (Inspectah Deck/7L & Esoteric) - S/T
Noisem - Agony Defined
SubRosa - More Constant than the Gods
Vista Chino - Peace
Windhand - Soma
___
Unkle K
Need to listen to these more:
Baptists - Bushcraft
All Pigs Must Die - Nothing Violates this Nature
Black Willows - Haze
14:13 - S/T
Anciients - Heart of Oak
Nightslug - Dismal Fucker
Seven Sisters of Sleep - Opium Morals
Grime - Deteriorate
Biipiigwan - Something for Everyone; Nothing for Anyone
Cult of Luna - Vertikal
TV shows:
Game of Thrones
Ray Donovan
Boardwalk Empire
Eastbound and Down
Orange is the New Black
Magic City
Suits
Top of the Lake
The Americans
Vikings
___
DB2K
1. Lycus - Tempest
2. Hatred Surge - Human Overdose
3. Society Nurse - S/T
4. Moss - Horrible Night
5. Usnea - S/T
6. Full of Hell - Rudiments of Mutilation
7. Portal - Vexovoid
8. Bone Sickness - Alone in the Grave
9. Primitive Man - Scorn
10. Abyssal - Novit Enim Dominus Qui Sunt Eius
Agents Of Abhorrence - Relief
Batillus - Concrete Sustain
Bolzer - Aura
Clagg - Gather Your Beasts
Eardelete - Devilogy
Gruesome Stuff Relish - Sempiternal Death Grind
Hail Of Bullets – III: The Rommel Chronicles
Immolation - Kingdom of Conspiracy
Innumerable Forms/Blessed Offal - Split
Vastum - Patricidal Lust
___
JJ (I Exist/BMA "Metalise")
1. Portal - Vexovoid
2. Church of Misery - Thy Kingdom Scum
3. Exhumed - Necrocracy
4. Clagg - Gather Your Beasts
5. Cathedral - The Last Spire
6. Windhand - Soma
7. Kvelertak - Meir
8. Orchid - The Mouths of Madness
9. Solstice - Death’s Crown is Victory
Cheers!
___
lxp
1. Magic Circle - S/T
From the cathartic doom fuelled riffs that break into triumphant NWOBHM inspired flourishes to Q’s thumping drums that lead mightily from the front. From the striking emotional weight of Brendan Radigan’s vocal delivery to the irresistible pull of the recording’s raw, direct, live feel. Magic Circle’s debut album overflows with a special quality that makes you want to relive every moment as soon as it passes by. Months later, as the final lick of closer “Magic Circle/Cloven in Two” fades out, it’s still a struggle not to flip the record over and start again - to have one more scratch at the itch that spread with the first bite inflicted by the galloping verses of “Rapture”.
2. Northless - World Keeps Sinking
With more time to take in the behemoth that is World Keeps Sinking since my review in September, I am no less impressed by it. When the album’s devastating magnitude becomes less intimidating and the songs’ construction becomes more familiar, the details hidden in every corner continue to reveal themselves. It’s the unconventional, sometimes jarring, sometimes uplifting touches that really begin to stand out, keeping the entire album interesting and keeping Northless well ahead of the pack. Brilliant.
3. Agrimonia - Rites of Separation
The first time I heard the intro to “Talion” being savagely torn apart by the explosive verse, I wanted to destroy everything in sight. Agrimonia completely nailed their approach to epic, metallic crust with Rites of Separation, creating an incendiary, dynamic record that is massive in both sound and scope. While the album ebbs and flows, its percussive, driving force imposes a fevered intensity that sears throughout its five howled testimonies to humanity’s dislocation at its own hands.
4. Vhol - S/T
Vhol spew forth an awesomely maniacal blend of thrash, prog, black and power metal, drawing from Voivod, Celtic Frost and even Discharge to create a wonderful, mesmerising racket that defies simple description. Pulsing, tremolo picked basslines and supercharged drumming underpin some stupefying, wildly inventive guitar work. And Yob’s Mike Scheidt tops it all off with his inimitable subterranean growls, scratchy, cavernous vibrato and everything between.
5. Earthless - From the Ages
The latest chapter of Earthless’ psychedelic shred freak-out adventures truly delivers. Containing all the thrills and spills you would expect, From the Ages hangs on to some more straightforward grooves than their other albums do, offering more places to jump on board and enjoy the ride. This is definitely going to remain on high rotation throughout the summer. And the cherry on top: Earthless and The Shrine are playing here in Canberra on New Year’s Day at the Basement.
6. Orchid - The Mouths of Madness
At first, I dismissed Orchid as another pointless Sabbath rip-off. Wrong. Eventually, Through the Devil’s Doorway turned me, and by the time I got through The Mouths of Madness, I was fully converted. Orchid take ownership of what they borrow. You just can’t argue with the stellar songwriting, the perfectly muted heaviness, or the dark but catchy wailing vocal melodies that carry equally well in moments of soaring, classic hard rock glory and blurry-eyed, lava lamp-lit interludes.
7. Phantom Glue - A War of Light Cones
This seems to have slipped by with little recognition, which is a shame because Phantom Glue’s distinctive, hardcore-tinged approach to huge, noisy sludge (with nods to Black Elk and early Mastodon) packs a hefty blow. With A War of Light Cones, the band created a brutal but clever, charismatic, bass-heavy monster with rough, distorted vocals and effective, sparing use of screaming guitar lines and solos. A great album that is well worth checking out if you missed it.
8. Cloud Rat - Moksha
Moksha is an outstanding offering of thrashy, melodic grindcore that isn’t afraid to let its emotions wander into more diverse territory, as in the wistful beginnings of “Infinite Chasm”. But the scathing and the nightmarish dominate, with the ferocious attack of the vocals and drums projecting most of the wrath. The guitar is sometimes buried, but the effect is that its distant melodies actually draw you in closer so Cloud Rat can go straight for your face.
9. The Black Angels - Indigo Meadow
I had never heard the Black Angels before this year, and I’m very glad that a couple of mates alerted me to the band’s haunting psychedelic rock, which conjures Neil Young, the Doors and Black Mountain. I absorbed three of their four albums concurrently - their debut, Passover was the shining light. But even though 2013’s Indigo Meadow is more subdued, it contains some fantastic moments and a compelling, subtly sinister weirdness that keeps me going back.
10. Hydromedusa - The Rats Have My Mind
It’s only a three-song cassette, but I couldn’t leave the latest from Adelaide’s Hydromedusa out of this list. They toned down the Eyehategod influence on this release, focusing more heavily on channelling Buffalo and AC/DC. They also stripped back some of the complexity apparent on their self-titled EP in order to crank out wild, raucous, sludgy rock ‘n’ roll that I really hope to see on stage some time soon.
Honourable mentions:
Agents of Abhorrence - Relief
Czarface (Inspectah Deck/7L & Esoteric) - S/T
Noisem - Agony Defined
SubRosa - More Constant than the Gods
Vista Chino - Peace
Windhand - Soma
___
Unkle K
EPs/7"s:
Flesh Police - Demo 2013
The VeeBees - Meet My Middle Finger/Wife School
Undergang - Som Til Din Ligkiste
Corrupt Moral Altar - Whiskey Sierra
Mansion - We Shall Live
Hoax - S/T
Obliterations - S/T
Slomatics - The Future Past
Laser Flames on the Great Big News - Lambs to the Slaughter
Tethered to a Dying Animal - Impermanent
Mother Brain - Straight to Business (2012)
Drowning Horse - S/T
Weekend Nachos - Still
Jucifer - За Bолгой для нас земли нет
Windhand - Soma
Orchid - The Mouths of Madness
Kylesa - Ultraviolet
Voivod - Target Earth
Year of No Light - Tocsin
Autopsy - The Headless Ritual
Church of Misery - Thy Kingdom Scum
Coffins - The Fleshland
Uncle Acid and the Deadbeats - Mind Control
Magic Circle - S/T
Code Orange Kids - Love is Love/Return to Dust
Darkthrone - The Underground Resistance
Sete Star Sept - Too many 2013 releases to mention
Sete Star Sept - Too many 2013 releases to mention
Portal – Vexovoid
To the Point - Shit You Should Have Bought on Vinyl the First Time Around
Baptists - Bushcraft
All Pigs Must Die - Nothing Violates this Nature
Black Willows - Haze
14:13 - S/T
Anciients - Heart of Oak
Nightslug - Dismal Fucker
Seven Sisters of Sleep - Opium Morals
Grime - Deteriorate
Biipiigwan - Something for Everyone; Nothing for Anyone
Cult of Luna - Vertikal
TV shows:
Game of Thrones
Ray Donovan
Boardwalk Empire
Eastbound and Down
Orange is the New Black
Magic City
Suits
Top of the Lake
The Americans
Vikings
___
DB2K
1. Lycus - Tempest
2. Hatred Surge - Human Overdose
3. Society Nurse - S/T
4. Moss - Horrible Night
5. Usnea - S/T
6. Full of Hell - Rudiments of Mutilation
7. Portal - Vexovoid
8. Bone Sickness - Alone in the Grave
9. Primitive Man - Scorn
10. Abyssal - Novit Enim Dominus Qui Sunt Eius
___
1. Inquisition - Obscure Verses for the Multiverse
2. Krypts - Unending Degradation
3. Dead Can Dance - In Concert
4. Perfume - Level 3
5. Autopsy - The Headless Ritual
6. Obliteration - Black Death Horizon
7. Cultes Des Ghoules - Henbane
8. Lantern - Below
9. Portal - Vexovoid
10. Secret Chiefs 3 - Book Of Souls: Folio A
Honourable Mentions:Agents Of Abhorrence - Relief
Batillus - Concrete Sustain
Bolzer - Aura
Clagg - Gather Your Beasts
Eardelete - Devilogy
Gruesome Stuff Relish - Sempiternal Death Grind
Hail Of Bullets – III: The Rommel Chronicles
Immolation - Kingdom of Conspiracy
Innumerable Forms/Blessed Offal - Split
Vastum - Patricidal Lust
___
JJ (I Exist/BMA "Metalise")
1. Portal - Vexovoid
2. Church of Misery - Thy Kingdom Scum
3. Exhumed - Necrocracy
4. Clagg - Gather Your Beasts
5. Cathedral - The Last Spire
6. Windhand - Soma
7. Kvelertak - Meir
8. Orchid - The Mouths of Madness
9. Solstice - Death’s Crown is Victory
10. Black Sabbath - 13
2. The Body - Christs, Redeemers
3. Horisont - Time Warriors
4. Ulcerate - Vermis
5. Weekend Nachos - Still
6. Tombstoned - S/T
7. ASG - Blood Drive
8. Carcass - Surgical Steel
9. Gorguts - Colored Sands
10. Mountain Witch - Cold River
11. Windhand - Soma
12. Altar of Plagues - Teethed Glory & Injury
13. Gnaw - Horrible Chamber
14. Big Business - Battlefields Forever
15. Inquisition - Obscure Verses for the Multiverse
16. True Widow - Circumambulation
17. Obliteration - Black Death Horizon
18. Church of Misery - Thy Kingdom Scum
19. Dead in The Dirt - The Blind Hole
20. Obits - Beds & Bugs
Monday, 30 December 2013
Earthless/The Shrine, etc...
Canberra's first show of 2014 is set to be a ripper, with Earthless coming back to the Basement on New Year's Day with The Shrine and Looking Glass. It will definitely be worth pushing through the hangover for this one!
Facebook event page
And with no real connection to the above, here are a couple of links I have been sent to some end of year goodies.
First, a heartwarming little story (cheers Dave) about bands such as ACxDC, Nails and Xibalba doing it for the children at Christmas time: LA Weekly.
And finally, footage of the recently reactivated BL'AST!, now featuring Nick Oliveri in their live lineup, playing in Santa Ana, CA a couple of days ago (thanks Altree): YouTube.
lxp
Facebook event page
And with no real connection to the above, here are a couple of links I have been sent to some end of year goodies.
First, a heartwarming little story (cheers Dave) about bands such as ACxDC, Nails and Xibalba doing it for the children at Christmas time: LA Weekly.
And finally, footage of the recently reactivated BL'AST!, now featuring Nick Oliveri in their live lineup, playing in Santa Ana, CA a couple of days ago (thanks Altree): YouTube.
lxp
Thursday, 12 December 2013
Unkle K's Bands of the Week
Undergang
Just when I thought I'd totally lost interest in new death metal, along comes Denmark's Undergang with a filthy three track EP. It sounds like the classic Stockholm buzzsaw guitar sound, but crossed with an even heavier goregrind band. They don't rely on speed, preferring to gurgle along with some of the catchiest headbanging tunes I've heard in ages. Backed up with some brilliant artwork, this is a must get.
Bandcamp
Black Willows
I only discovered this band recently from checking top 10 lists for 2013 on the Doom Forever, Forever Doomed forum. The first track I heard from this Swiss band was "Black Magic", which is a trippy sounding track with gongs and triangles. But as bad as that sounds, it was actually pretty good and it seemed to suck me in to listening to the whole album, which totally changes direction from that song. The rest of the album has more of a psychedelic, heavy, melodic vibe with cool deep, crooning vocals.
Bandcamp
Lecherous Gaze
Lecherous Gaze from Oakland, CA destroyed the Phoenix Bar last Thursday - a great mix of MC5 and Black Flag, with a highly entertaining frontman and one of best guitarists I have had the pleasure of witnessing in a long time. The fact it was a $5 show in the new and improved Phoenix, the support band from Melbourne, Gentlemen, along with Canberra's Hygiene also made for a great night.
Bandcamp
| Lecherous Gaze (photo by Gav) |
Gig of the Week
With the unfortunate cancellation of the Kylesa show last night, that leaves us with the Melvins/Helmet show at the ANU tonight, Thursday 12 December.
Video of the Week
Who Actually Listens to Black Veil Brides?: YouTube
Playlist: Unkle K
1. Undergang - Søm Til Din Ligkiste
2. Black Willows - Haze
3. Lecherous Gaze - On the Skids
4. 14:13 - S/T
5. Windhand - Soma
Playlist: lxp
1. Bloodmoon - Voidbound
2. Lecherous Gaze - On the Skids (I couldn't agree more with Andy's comments about their show at the Phoenix last week - awesome!)
3. Tombstones - Red Skies and Dead Eyes
4. Black Skies - Circadian Meditations
5. I Exist - From Darkness
Unkle K
Wednesday, 27 November 2013
Unkle K's Bands of the Week
Gig of the Week
Kadavar (Germany), Blues Pills (Sweden) and Looking Glass. Thursday 28 November at ANU Bar.
Berlin trio Kadavar (Bandcamp) play 70’s retro rock similar to Witchcraft and Graveyard. Highly recommended. Support comes from Sweden’s Blues Pills and Canberra’s Looking Glass, with the return of Clinton on drums.
Video of the Week
The Psyke Project - "Winter": YouTube
Playlist: lxp
1. Vhol - S/T
2. Windhand - Soma
3. Melvins - Tres Cabrones
4. War Wolf - Crushing the Ways of the Old
5. Golden Bats - I, II, III, IV and V
6. Occultist - Death Sigils
7. Grails - Black Tar Prophecies Vols. 4, 5 & 6
8. Lumbar - The First and Last Days of Unwelcome
9. Noisem - Agony Defined
10. Sun of Man - I
Unkle K
Sunday, 24 November 2013
Upcoming gigs
This Thursday marks the start of an awesome run of shows over the next three weeks that will see Canberra well and truly rock its way into the silly season with all the volume we could ask for. See you there!
Thursday 28 November at ANU Bar
Kadavar, Blues Pills and Looking Glass
Kadavar, Blues Pills and Looking Glass
Saturday 30 November at Magpies City Club
I Exist (launching their new album, From Darkness), The Fighting League, Sumeru and Hygiene
Wednesday 4 December at the Basement
Guitar Wolf, Little Mac and the Monster Men and Bacon Cakes
Thursday 5 December at the Phoenix
Lecherous Gaze, Gentlemen and Hygiene
Wednesday 11 December at ANU Bar
Kylesa, Looking Glass and Rise of Avernus
Thursday 12 December at ANU Bar
Melvins, Helmet and guests
lxp
Thursday, 14 November 2013
Whores - Clean
There is a lot to be said for music that gets straight to the point without fucking around. And that is exactly what Whores do on Clean (Brutal Panda).
The driving first riff of opener "Baby Bird" sets the tone from the outset. There are no long, self indulgent, meandering intros. No prolonged attempts to wring the life out of any of the songs. Just a dangerously infectious succession of heavy, straightforward, pissed off grooves set around breaks that would be miserable downers if the slightly-slower-than-comfortable rhythm section didn't plough through it all so steadily. The huge, rumbling bass and the pounding, meat-and-potatoes drums don't allow the songs, or the listener, to stray. And the way the hook-laden noise rock guitar lines carry the enormous groove immediately and consistently shines.
Christian Lembach's entertaining vocal performance is a real highlight. He snarls, drawls and barks out some great lines drenched in tongue-in-cheek bitterness. His yell tempts its breaking point, and the scratchiness in his voice gives the songs both pointed ferocity and comedy.
Whores are deeply rooted in the Melvins, Unsane and Helmet schools of rock, but they really build on those influences to great effect. The sarcastic swinging rhythm of "I Am Not a Goal Oriented Person", which later churns under a single chord breakdown, a la "In the Meantime", is a great example...and catchy as all hell. Pissed Jeans could be another reference point, but Whores incorporate much more sludge, and the fantastic production of this recording brings all that heaviness to the fore. It seems strange to write this, but the final track, "I Am an Amateur At Everything" almost sounds like the bastard child of Future of the Left and Bongzilla. And it really works.
But enough with the facile comparisons. The point is, if you like no-nonsense noise rock that's heavy on the sludge, then Whores have delivered what you need.
Listen to Clean here.
lxp
The driving first riff of opener "Baby Bird" sets the tone from the outset. There are no long, self indulgent, meandering intros. No prolonged attempts to wring the life out of any of the songs. Just a dangerously infectious succession of heavy, straightforward, pissed off grooves set around breaks that would be miserable downers if the slightly-slower-than-comfortable rhythm section didn't plough through it all so steadily. The huge, rumbling bass and the pounding, meat-and-potatoes drums don't allow the songs, or the listener, to stray. And the way the hook-laden noise rock guitar lines carry the enormous groove immediately and consistently shines.
Christian Lembach's entertaining vocal performance is a real highlight. He snarls, drawls and barks out some great lines drenched in tongue-in-cheek bitterness. His yell tempts its breaking point, and the scratchiness in his voice gives the songs both pointed ferocity and comedy.
Whores are deeply rooted in the Melvins, Unsane and Helmet schools of rock, but they really build on those influences to great effect. The sarcastic swinging rhythm of "I Am Not a Goal Oriented Person", which later churns under a single chord breakdown, a la "In the Meantime", is a great example...and catchy as all hell. Pissed Jeans could be another reference point, but Whores incorporate much more sludge, and the fantastic production of this recording brings all that heaviness to the fore. It seems strange to write this, but the final track, "I Am an Amateur At Everything" almost sounds like the bastard child of Future of the Left and Bongzilla. And it really works.
But enough with the facile comparisons. The point is, if you like no-nonsense noise rock that's heavy on the sludge, then Whores have delivered what you need.
Listen to Clean here.
lxp
Sunday, 10 November 2013
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