Tuesday 29 October 2013

Pigs - Gaffe EP

(Solar Flare Records, 2013)

Starting up almost exactly where they left off on their debut album – 2012’s fantastic You Ruin EverythingPigs have graced us with this stop-gap tour EP, bridging time between now and the release of their anticipated second album. Given the band’s pedigree it’s not surprising that the debut album was a) a blood-stained love letter to all things angry, spiteful and angular that came out of the nineties and b) excellent, but there’s always a hint of worry when a much-loved band, no matter how good, release something new.
 
One pounding kick drum and fuzzy bass note into opener “Gaffe” and all fears have been allayed that Pigs would mess with such a magical formula as was laid down on the debut. Tortured electric guitars twist and howl dissonantly over a hotbed of hard-hitting drums and restless fuzzy basslines, while Dave Curran’s vocal chords unthread before our ears. The anarchic bounce and sing-along quality to the chorus of “Elo Kiddies” betrays the sound of a band that grew up on classic Kiss and Alice Cooper records, and they seem to be having fun with the idea of “classic rock” being given a noise rock spin. The sleazy punch-drunk lurch of “If I’m in Luck” brings the EP to a close in muscular fashion – discordant guitars riding huge lumbering bass riffs and clattering drums for seven punishing minutes.
 
Everything about Pigs’ debut album, from the spiteful title to the Steve Albini-like production, was the epitome of late eighties, early nineties alternative/noise rock, and without being derivative, the same can be said for Gaffe. Fans of the debut will find much to love about Gaffe, but it would also serve as a great bite-sized introduction to those who are unfamiliar with Pigs’ unique brand of chaos. If you like Unsane, Killdozer and/or the Melvins, I can’t think of a better way to invest a quarter of an hour of your time.

[Originally published by the Sleeping Shaman, 27/10/2013]
http://www.thesleepingshaman.com/reviews/album-reviews/p/pigs-gaffe-10inch-2013/

Monday 21 October 2013

Elliott Smith - A Lost Interview


 
A part of me would like to pretend that I’d been down with Elliott Smith from the first hush tones of Roman Candle’s eponymous opener in which Elliott sings “I want to hurt him/ I want to give him pain/ I’m a Roman candle/ My head is full of flames,” but I would have been a very angsty seven year old, had that been the case. Alas, as is far too-often the case with these kinds of things, it was news of the troubled musician’s death at the tender age of thirty-four back in 2003 that really made me investigate his music properly.
Many people, myself included, probably first heard the delicate intonations of Elliott Smith’s music in the soundtrack for the 1998 Academy Award winner Good Will Hunting, which featured three tracks from his third album Either/Or, along with his Oscar nominated OST contribution, “Miss Misery.” This nomination, along with his surreal appearance at the ceremony, performing the song in a white tuxedo (sandwiched between performances of schmaltzy Hollywood fodder, including Celine Dion’s eventual winner “My Heart Will Go On”) garnered him the attention of major label Dreamworks who issued his next two albums, XO and what would be the final album released during his lifetime, Figure 8. This major label backing allowed Elliott to flesh-out his music from the intimate nature of the early recordings into the multi-coloured bombast of the latter albums, taking cues from bands he loved, such as the Beatles, and applying their experiments with kaleidoscopic studio production to his own compositions.

 
Although his music always hinted at or commented on forms of addiction, illicit or otherwise, it was during his final years in LA that his own drug use began to raise concerns and affect his work, in the studio and on stage. During Smith’s sporadic live appearances in 2001 and 2002 fans occasionally had to remind Smith of the lyrics (and sometimes even the chords) to his own songs and many people - including Flaming Lips frontman Wayne Coyne during an infamous incident in which Smith was beaten by Police officers – commented on how Elliott’s dishevelled appearance hinted at troubles with addiction. Smith had been due to contribute a cover of The Beatles’ “Hey Jude” for Wes Anderson’s The Royal Tenenbaums but he failed to meet the deadline so a substitute was used (although Smith’s “Needle in the Hay” was used prominently in a suicide scene), and a whole album’s worth of recordings with producer Jon Brion were scrapped when the latter confronted Smith on his drug addiction.
However in 2003 Smith had completed stints at rehab and appeared to be on the path of recovery, putting the finishing touches on what would become his posthumous album From a Basement on the Hill. He was also working on music for the soundtrack to indie film Thumbsucker and in August he released a limited edition vinyl single, “Pretty (Ugly Before)” (which would later appear on the rarities collection New Moon).


 

 On October 21st 2003, ten years ago today, Elliott Smith died from two stab wounds to the chest, fairly assumed to be self-inflicted. A suicide note of sorts, scribbled on a post-it note read: "I'm so sorry—love, Elliott. God forgive me.”
The fact that it was approaching ten years since Elliott Smith had passed away occurred to me serendipitously quite recently (in fact, it was a week ago today) when a conversation about music with a colleague at work led him to inform me that his brother, music journalist Jake Kennedy, had been one of the last European journalists to interview Elliott Smith for a UK publication, and certainly that he was the last one to speak to him after his last ever UK gig at The Forum in London on October 5th 2000. My interest piqued, I asked my colleague for a link to read the review to find that it was not available online, having previously only been available in the printed article for Record Collector magazine. I therefore thought it would be interesting to interview Jake about this ‘lost’ interview, before publishing the interview in full at the end of the page. As Jake makes clear, Elliott Smith was not in the best of moods, so he did well to coax answers out of the man who “would rather have been anywhere else.” I am, however, very honoured to be able to commemorate Elliott Smith in some small way by bringing this interview (something of an exclusive for me) to light and would like to conclude by saying thanks to Jake for agreeing to this email interview and for allowing me to publish his interview in full. RIP Elliott Smith – thank you for the beautiful music.

My Interview with Jake Kennedy


Jake Kennedy and his cat Bill
Can you give me a little bit of context on the interview? 

Yes – it was for a world tour for Figure 8. I was working as a staff writer for the magazine Record Collector in London – a monthly title that was, at that time, still printed in black and white. It was very much an ‘old school’ magazine, used to covering articles on The Beatles and Stones. But the editor, Andy Davis, was a friend and was amenable to my ideas - usually about less well known artists (to our general readership) and for smaller, one- or two-page articles in a section called Short Takes. I would suggest things, as all the in-house editorial team would, and he would say yes or no. Thankfully, in the case of Elliott Smith, he said yes.
In actual fact, I was initially expecting to interview Elliott that summer when he played at ULU, but it never transpired. The PR guy at the time was the usual “don’t worry, next time, next time,” but I really didn’t think it would happen.
SoI forgot about it, but then he came to the UK to tour in autumn, the last date of which was The Forum on October 5th (also his last UK gig ever, I believe). So, by a process of elimination, that must’ve been the day I interviewed him as I was the last person that day, and he was flying back the next. The PR guy got back to me a week or so before and said “are you still up for interviewing Elliott?” and I remember becoming very nervous, as his music meant a great deal to me. I usually get nervous before interviews, I compare them to rollercoasters – you’re glad afterwards, but beforehand you overthink them, fear the worst and want to cancel. Luckily I didn’t.
I guess because of what transpired in Elliott’s life, that interview, of all of the people I’ve spoken to in music, remains the most potent, the most charged for me, rightly or wrongly.

Were you an Elliott Smith fan at the time, or was the interview just another assignment for you?

I was a big fan yeah. I got into him when Either/Or came out, at university, when I guess a lot of the UK did. By the time of XO I was obsessed and had done the archaeology on him and checked out Heatmiser, older things like that. So this probably didn’t help my nerves beforehand. I remember thinking when the first interview opportunity was cancelled, “phew, I don’t need to make an idiot of myself in front of one of my heroes now.”


 
What was the tone of the interview? (The way it reads he seems to go between just about bearing it to occasionally opening up) Was Elliott easy to speak to?

I got the sense, most of the time in the interview, that he would rather have been anywhere else than there. It took place in a north London hotel – something like a Holiday Inn maybe? And it was in the lobby, where they serve the food. We were at a dining table. You could still smoke indoors at that time and Elliott smoked throughout the interview. He was about an hour late and came down from his room in the same way a teenager comes down from his bedroom when they don’t really want to. He only had on a black tshirt, no jacket or anything. I remember thinking he looked disheveled. But, looking back on photos of him, he always kinda looked a little disheveled so I didn’t think anything more of it and I wouldn’t want to read too much into that. I remember I had a notebook with my questions in, which made me feel amateurish. We were face to face, next to a window which he kept looking out of. There were some newspapers on the table which had stories about the new Tate Modern which had just opened – which is why I asked him about Rothko.
But on the whole, no, you’re right, he did not really want to engage. And genuinely, sweetly, when I felt he was engaging, it was as if he was doing it solely for me, to make my life easier, like “OK, let’s get through this.” But even at the lighter moments towards the end, the tone of his voice sounded crestfallen, like the Q&A was a bit inconvenient for him, that it was embarrassing even.
That said, he was in no way evasive of any answers, and I think, if he’d really wanted to, he could’ve avoided some questions, or ignored them, or even called it all off. My guess is, as I was the last interview of the day, that leg of the tour, that he might have been answering annoying, stupid journalist questions all day.

You have mentioned that the interview was edited and abbreviated upon publication. Has the interview ever been published in its entirety? Is there an audio recording of the interview?

The interview has only ever been printed once, in Record Collector. I do have the tape, but in this day and age, who has a tape player? I remember it was about one whole side of the tape, and on the other is an interview from around that time I did with Jon Spencer. But what you see here is the full version – apart from one question where I asked, in desperation, if Elliott had any pets (someone walked by with a dog outside). He said he didn’t but that he’d like some, but was touring too much to look after one.


 
A lot has been written about Elliott Smith since he passed away, including biographies and an XO addition to the 33 1/3 series. Have you ever been approached to contribute to anything like that as the last European journalist to interview Elliott?

I haven’t no. I keep a pretty low profile and Record Collector is/was a fairly small magazine. I doubt many people read the interview. I don’t think it’s even listed on the Sweet Adeline site [TM: Sweet Adeline is probably the biggest Elliott Smith fansite and gets many Elliott Smith exclusives].

Has this reputation (“the last European journalist to interview Elliott”) had any noticeable impact on your journalistic career?

Well, can I just say, this was a total fluke. And there were plenty of interviews with foreign journalists in the preceding years – I distinctly remember the Under The Radar magazine interview with Elliott as being particularly great. They visited him in LA and stuff.
But you know, if I’d got the interview I was originally going to do with Elliott a few months before, or if he had me scheduled in earlier that day, or who knows, the day before, then pop! I would only have been “one of the last European journalists to interview Elliott smith.” And, of course, anyone who interviewed him after me might have been European, but just based in the US, or wherever.


 
What was your response when you heard that Elliott had passed away, and in such tragic circumstances?

Well, you know, I only met the guy once. Which in no way gives me any sort of right to pretend I was fucked up about it or super sad – but, that said, I do remember it feeling distinctly more close to home than say, when Kurt Cobain died, or whoever, because I had interviewed the guy and seen first hand how down he was.
Obviously I don’t know why he was down when I met him - maybe because he was meeting me! – but that sadness seemed to add on to the shock of him being dead. The way he died too, that seemed so sort of Shakespearian to me – a knife through the heart. It’s a dark thing to say, but it seemed the perfect fucking way for him to go, if you want to buy into the mythology of Elliott, which I know a lot of his friends and family have gone on record as saying they don’t.

Did you even realise that you were the last European journalist to interview Elliott, or did someone else inform you?

Umm, well again, it was really only circumstance that made that the case. I sort of worked it our for myself. It had a romantic feel to it. The reality was a lot less glamourous, but that’s the print industry for you… 

What do you think of Elliott Smith’s legacy in the decade since he passed away? Can you hear his influence in new bands coming out today?

I think when you like the music of someone as much as I did/do Elliott, then it’s hard to listen straightfaced to any band who claims that music as a key influence. There are bands that were around when Elliott was around who have gone on to change their sounds – Wilco, Jim O’Rourke, Beck, Cat Power even – who I think would admit to having been influenced subsequently. Also, I read a fair few interviews with younger female artists who consider him a key figure, which is cool. And recently, Nicky from Manic Street Preachers has been singing his praises, which I respected, I wouldn’t of expected that from him.
A lot of what Elliott achieved came from fusing different artists’ stuff – obviously the Beatles, Elvis Costello, etc, etc. So when you hear someone who sounds a bit like that, you tend to return to source, rather than saying “ooh, so and so does The Beatles like Elliott Smith did them.”
 

What makes Elliott’s music so enduring?

I’m currently reading that book, Torment Saint, that’s just come out about him, and quite a few of the references are about how Elliott always loved the ‘change’, the passages between chords, or from verse to chorus or back again. I think that’s a big part of it for me, and when you couple it with the lyrics, you get that sweet spot, the perfect combo. In ‘Son Of Sam’, there’s a big sweeping change to yet another minor chord at the end where he sings “I may talk in my sleep tonight cos I don’t know who I am/I’m a little like you? More like son of sam” which gets me every time. He’s comparing himself to a serial killer in an effort to convey how little a girl really knows him – so glorious, such enduring passive aggressive venom.

How do you feel reading the interview back today?

Ha, well, I gave it my best shot. I don’t think anyone else could’ve got better results, given the raw material, at that time, on that day. I was young (22), meeting a hero. I had dreams of screwing up my notebook and taking Elliott around the Mark Rothko room at the new Tate, or of maybe getting a pie and a pint, but the reality of it - and rock journalism on the whole - was an hour in the dining room of a chain hotel on a wet afternoon. Which I guess was perfect enough.

 Thanks Jake. And now the interview in question:

Jake Kenney’s Interview with Elliott Smith, October 5th 2000 – “In the dining room of a chain hotel”

You released “Figure 8” followed by “Son of Sam”, shouldn’t albums follow singles?
“I didn’t choose to do that. If I had my way I wouldn’t bother to release a single at all. It’s the label’s decision, I didn’t ask, you know. I’m really not very... into singles. What’s the point?”

 
Do you hate doing press too?
“I don’t hate it. The last few interviews that I’ve done were actually fine. I’ve gotten used to certain things and I don’t get mad about questions that irritate me. If it hits on one of those things I just...”
 
Like a contentious issue?
“Just things that have been thoroughly covered.”

 
It reminds me of when you were playing at ULU, because you were asking the audience what they wanted, and naturally they wanted old songs. Do you not enjoy playing them so much?
“I like playing old songs, I like playing brand new songs. If it’s an old song that I don’t play very much then it can seem kinda cool again. I enjoyed that show, I like playing in London.”
 
Is “Son Of Sam” about someone who realises their partner doesn’t know them at all?
“It could be. That one’s particularly impressionistic and I don’t have any particular interpretation of it.”
 
Do you write as yourself?
“Not usually. Or not entirely, you know? There’s a couple of songs on the last few records that are straightforward, but most of them are more like... they’re not unreal, but they’re not exactly a diary. I’ve compared it to writing down a dream that you had over and over. That’s still the closest thing I can get.”
 
Do you ever try and reflect that in the production?
“Yes, but only to the extent that I have any conscious desire for the production. I play a part in it, but the last two records have been two producers and me and we’re all pretty much equally involved, although they do way more of the technical stuff. Choosing compressors and microphones. But the way it’s mixed involves me.”
 
What about artwork?
“That’s pretty much all my decision.”
 
So does everyone want to talk about the Beatles to you?
“Oh, people want to talk about the Beatles anywhere. I really like them, but I also like a lot of other things. But if you say one thing in an interview then it seems as if that’s the only thing you ever listened to.”
 
Tell me about LA then.
“I’ve been living there for almost a year. It’s alright. I don’t live in Hollywood so it’s not that kind of LA that people think of who’ve never lived there. It’s very unlike London. London is very central. With LA you can be there and still not be able to see the downtown area. It’s pretty green, there’s a lot of neighbourhoods and only two or three storey buildings. They kind of stretch out sideways.”
 
You mention traffic a lot on “Figure 8”.
“I’ve moved to LA from New York, but I don’t have much stuff so it was easy. Traffic’s just a good metaphor for lots of things. It’s noisy and it moves so it applies to all kinds of situations.”
 
Are you famous?
“I don’t know, you tell me. It’s all comparative. Compared to some of my friends who play in bands that don’t have a record deal I might seem famous, but in comparison to I don’t know who, too many people, I’m not famous at all.”
 

 
Do you find yourself fascinated by older musical styles, like waltz and ragtime?
“Sometimes. I’m interested in every style. Except whatever’s really popular, because that’s been fully covered. Whatever is selling millions of copies automatically attracts more and more people to do that, so a bunch of people are doing the same thing. I’m not saying that’s bad, I don’t feel the need to dive into that teaming ocean, you know.”
 
Do you have contemporaries then?
“Yeah, Sam Combes from Quasi, that’s about it.”
 
So you get lumped with the wrong crowd then?
“Uh huh. Sometimes I just get put in with, well... anyone who’s not in a band. Anyone who’s a singer-songwriter. Which is funny because in the past couple of years my records sound more like a band than a singer-songwriter. But because it has my name on the front and not the name of a band I get put in with... well, I get a lot of people saying I’m influenced by Simon and Garfunkel, which is far from true.”
 
So you’re not a solo artist?
“Yeah, but I’m in a band, and it doesn’t mean I’m trying to fly the flag for a long tradition of singer-songwriters. I’m coming from growing up listening to The Beatles and Stevie Wonder. He did it all on his own. But it doesn’t sound like one person. He was a great drummer for example, that was really inspiring to me when I was a kid. I wanted to be in a band. My band broke up, so now I emulate one.”
 
Did you play out much?
“I was in a band when I was in my early twenties. We made three records, we went on tour. It wasn’t fun though, because we didn’t really want to play the same kind of music as each other. But they’re all doing different things now.”
 
Are you multi-instrumental?
“Yeah, I play almost everything. Not like Stevie Wonder, but well enough to do my own songs justice. If I didn’t like the sound of something I’d do it myself.”
 
What sort of music don’t you like the sound of?
“I still haven’t found anything to like about jazz-fusion yet. Other than that I think all styles of music are really good. There’s cool examples of everything.”
 
Do you read much?
“Yeah, I read a lot. Lately I’ve been reading contemporary fiction. There’s a Portugese author called Jose Saramargo, and I read some things on Hinduism and now I’m reading a history of medieval Europe. I was reading the Tibetan Book Of The Dead and I had to put it down for a while. It was kind of dissolving my sense of self. It wouldn’t be bad, but since I was on tour I needed to keep some sense of identity.”
 
What’s the biggest mistake people make about you?
“I just don’t like it when people don’t even listen to the record they’re coming to interview me about and they just ask me “Why are you so sad?” as if a record is a journal. As if there’s no fictional quality to it at all. You wouldn’t do that with a movie.”

 
Do you also deny the charges of ‘folk singer’?
“Yeah, totally.”
 
Your records are funny.
“I think so too. And I thought there was a lot of humour in Morrissey’s records as well. It’s not that there wasn’t any real feeling in them, the two just co-existed. They can be moving and comical at the same time. I thought that was great. And I remember at high school people were like, “Oh Morrissey’s so depressing” and it’s just, you don’t fucking get it do you?"
 
He never really sang in a traditional way either.
“Well, good for him.”
 
Have you got a hardcore album in you?
“Ha, maybe. When we recorded “Either/Or” for a time I wanted to make it one side of acoustic songs and one side of full-on metal versions, but I didn’t wind up doing that. My old band was kind of post-punk or something. Or just high volume. I like playing like that.”
 
Is it different coming off stage with a band to just coming off alone?
“Well I have people to talk to. Someone else will say it was fun, or that they couldn’t hear themselves at all.”
 
Are you the boss?
“I don’t wanna be the boss. We’re already playing all of my songs, that’s enough for me."
 
What makes you laugh?
“Interviews sometimes.”


 
So you’re confident about your voice and your playing?
“In some ways. I’m definitely not the shy person that some of the press makes me out to be. I’m not like a megalomaniac who thinks he’s god’s gift to singing or something. There’s lots of people who can sing better than me."
 
Do you still get time to sing and play in your spare time?
“I still do it a lot. But it feels like people are watching me more. That’s the only real downside to the whole thing.”
 
What was it that first made you pick up a guitar?
“My dad bought me one when I was 12, and I was trying to learn how to play Angus Young, AC/DC, but it doesn’t sound the same on a nylon acoustic.”
 
Where do you stand on the “Good Will Hunting” is shit argument?
“I think that it depends on where you’re coming from. If you’re going to approach pretty big budget Hollywood movies and compare them to art films then they might not come out so favourably, but I think what he was trying to do was play a bigger game and not get stuck in a little corner making Gus Van Zandt movies for the rest of his life. I think it was a brave move. I think it turned out pretty well. But soundtracking that was a one-time kinda thing.”
 
Do you read your own press?
“Not any more, no. I did up until about a year ago. Most of it seemed pretty positive, but it’s like looking at yourself in a circus mirror. Passing by is kind of amusing but if you’re standing in front of it day in and day out then eventually you start to believe that’s what you really look like. I’d rather stick with my own definition of my life. Whatever that is...”
 
Is it getting easier?
“No it’s getting harder. But it’s not a big deal. It’s not like a big crushing weight. It’s just something to watch out for more and more. And it might disappear you know. Maybe next year or the year after that or five years from now there won’t be any attention and it won’t matter. Problem solved.”

 
You must be learning then.
“Yeah, and it’s not, umm, it’s very positive and lucky. On most counts.”
 
Do you get praise from strange places?
“Yeah, I think it’s cool when people who are seen in magazines to be belonging to some style can show their appreciation for other styles. I don’t know anyone who only likes one kind of music. I like lots of different kinds of music, I think if people read music magazines they get to thinking that everyone’s in their own corner, as if all these different styles were competitive.”
 
Is this a job?
“Technically, yes. I used to work in a bakery. I did political theory and philosophy at college, and I went to the bakery when I got out. Eventually it closed. I started doing odd-job construction work. So this is not the same at all. It’s far from what I thought would be going on.”
 
Do you feel lucky?
“Extremely.”
Do you like Mark Rothko?
“Yeah, he’s one of my favourites. I know some people don’t like him, they say it’s just a field of colour, but that’s what’s so cool about it. They just hum. It’s like this kind of static thing. It’s the same thing I like about Nico’s records. Some people find it too static or maybe depressing, but it doesn’t make me feel like that. It’s a vibrant, elemental thing. It’s not a fancy thing.”
 
Do you feel like that?
“Well, I seem to get a lot of attention considering I haven’t had a hit single and I probably won’t. It doesn’t really bother me though because when I’m recording I don’t think about that. I’m still really into the long form of albums, even though CDs make it so it’s one continuous thing.”
 
Are you going to keep going?
“Yeah, sure, as long as I can. I hope so.”
 
Anything to add in your defence?
“No, nothing I can think of.”



Friday 4 October 2013

Queen Elephantine - Scarab

(Cosmic Eye Records/Heart & Crossbone Records, 2013)

“I became, and the becoming became. I became by becoming the form of Khepra, god of transformations, who came into being in the First Time. Through me all transformations were enacted.”
 
To all of the doom bands who attempt to evoke a hazy, druggy vibe with their music with overt references to illicit substances, horror films and various other unspeakable activities, may I present you with the exquisite opium doom of Queen Elephantine’s masterpiece, Scarab. This is how you intoxicate your audience without force-feeding them played-out dopesick rhetoric and weed-puns. By some strange alchemy of simple elements, the Rhode Island band have struck upon drone gold on their fourth album, following on the heels of fellow trance masters like Om and Bong.
 
Formed in 2006 and having undergone several line-up changes, Queen Elephantine may be as well known for their own albums as they are for split releases with the likes of Elder, Sons of Otis, and with the UK’s own Alunah. But for this latest release core founding member Indrayudh Shome has assembled the strongest ensemble yet to deliver the band’s most focussed and inspired collection of ragas; deep, guttural bass, wily overdriven electric guitar, slide, droning tanpura and – best of all – two drumsets, all coming together to form a breathing, swaying entity to inhabit the listener with lulling rhythms and hypnotic insectoid drones.
 
The album’s evocative title is equalled by the music therein, and listening to these four songs, one can’t help but conjure up mental images of dusty catacombs, navigated by torch-light – the relief of everything illuminated by fire nulled by the threat of that which remains shrouded in darkness in such an ancient place. It is this sense of tension – building, and then being released – which makes Scarab such a compelling and hypnotic listen. The ebb and flow of murky notes (as in the intro of “Crone”) feel like the creeping steps of some unseen, malevolent force and the band seem to be delighting in creating this heavy atmosphere, relishing the notes that are being played as much as those that are not . This sense of claustrophobia and space, light and dark is reflected in some of the album’s few lyrics too: “the saints have been here/ But in bliss and not in shame/ Bathed in wine, and not in sand/ Glimmering, glistening, suffering.”
 
Unusually for a doom release, the band also avoids falling into any generic pentatonic scale or conventional groove, even for a minute. On Scarab, the sense of the unknown or otherness (at least to these Western ears) transcends even Om’s own masterpiece Advaitic Songs which at least implemented more recognisable Indian and Middle Eastern instrumentation and melodies. Instead Queen Elephantine remain locked in an unusual, Middle Eastern or Egyptian scale which adds to the mysterious, exotic appeal of the music.
 
Listening through some of Queen Elephantine’s previous releases, you can hear the band falling into the traps which often befall drone bands –trying to do too much or too little, over too long or short a period of time. Scarab proves to be the perfect storm of instrumentation, musicians and sensibilities; the vision is singular, and the results are spectacular. An air of mysticism hangs heavy over Scarab, each note carefully considered, as if filtered through the millenia to reach us with a now indecipherable message. Across these four tracks, Queen Elephantine weave a majestic, downtrodden, mystical form of drone doom unlike anything I have heard for a while. In short, Scarab is the sound of Om becoming ominous.

[Originally published by the Sleeping Shaman, 04/10/2013]
http://www.thesleepingshaman.com/reviews/album-reviews/q/queen-elephantine-scarab-2013-cd-lp-dd-2013/

Dead Meadow - Warble Womb

(Xemu Records, 2013)

Dead Meadow have come a long way since recording their eponymous debut album inexpensively in their practice space back in 1999; besides releasing a number of studio and live albums, they’ve toured the world, recorded a session for John Peel and gone through a few line-up changes, and yet hearing their latest album Warble Womb, their first with original drummer Mark Laughlin in twelve years, you get the sense that in all that time they’ve merely been refining the cosmic energy of that first psychedelic recording. Beneath all the Big Muff fuzz of ‘Sleepy Silver Door’ was the same sense of melody and songwriting that is at the heart of everything on Warble Womb, and it now seems that the need for extended instrumental jam passages is reserved for live performances, because Warble Womb is a startlingly to-the-point and tuneful record.
It’s an assured album too. Not that Dead Meadow have ever sounded particularly unsure of themselves, but returning to the formative trio and self-recording once again ‘on their own time and on their own dime’ seems to have suited the band, and allowed them to expand on musical ideas and textures that they had hinted at before. For example, Jason Simon continues to riff off his Eastern influences throughout the solos on the album, and particularly on the instrumental track ‘Warble Womb I’. Not surprisingly though, these are some of the less inspiring or memorable moments on Warble Womb.
Instead, the creeping prominence of acoustic guitars is what most informs Warble Womb’s sound and some of its best songs; even when a song doesn’t feature acoustic guitar you get a sense that it may well have been written on one. ‘One More Toll Taker’ is a pretty, intimate song not unlike those found on Simon’s recent solo album, but even the initial bombast of lead single ‘1000 Dreams’ gives way to a chord – rather than riff – led verse. On some songs you can hear the evolution from demos to their recorded versions more literally, as on ‘Mr Chesty’ which begins with Simon unaccompanied on acoustic guitar before fading out only to be rejoined by his band mates for a more bombastic rendition.
That’s not to say that the psychedelic exploration and interplay between guitar and bass – previously so essential to Dead Meadow’s sound – has been lost for good; far from it. ‘Rains In The Desert’ and ‘In the Thicket’ are classic Dead Meadows wig-outs and psych-outs respectively and there’s plenty of exemplary guitar work throughout. The band even express their love of dub on ‘Copper Is Restless (‘til it Turns to Gold)’ and ‘Warble Womb II’ to keep Warble Womb from becoming too predictable or one dimensional.
Comparisons could be made between Warble Womb and Baroness’ Yellow & Green, another album by a band who traded their earlier penchant for a more all-out aural assault for a more melodic and (arguably) more interesting rebirth. But this is not a rebirth in any true sense, just a consolidation of everything the band has learned and come to love about making music together. In a sense it’s a shame that this album comes to us as the seasonal changes of autumn set in because this is a summer record at heart. But if any album is going to keep us warm during the winter months, it’s this one.
[Originally published by the Sleeping Shaman, 02/10/2013]

Ortega - The Serpent Stirs

(Narshardaa Records/Tartarus Records, 2013)

Originally released late last year as a limited edition cassette on rising Dutch DIY tape label Tartarus Records, this single/EP from Ortega (who are themselves a rising Dutch doom band) is now being issued on vinyl, courtesy of Narshardaa Records. The band, who have made quite a name for themselves in their native Holland and across mainland Europe by regularly touring and off the back of their previous releases A Flame Never Rises on Its Own and 1634 have now released their most ambitious work yet with “The Serpent Stirs” – a 19 minute epic that brings together the slovenly pace of doom, the muddy guitars of sludge and some progressive, psychedelic lead guitar work, decorated with Richard Postma’s torturous howl.
 
In terms of length this would probably be classified as an EP although by virtue of the fact that “The Serpent Stirs” is one lumbering sea-monster of a tune this could also be classified as their latest “single.” Whatever it is, it’s a majestic work – progressive, elegantly constructed and ultimately Ouroboros-like in its circularity. Like the ominous serpents that grace the vinyl jacket, the twin guitars of Postma and Alex Loots intertwine and weave, alternately pensive and ferocious whilst Postma chews the scenery and spews it out in the venomous fashion we’ve come to expect from the frontman. All the while, the dynamic rhythm section, drummer Sven Jurgens’ and bass player Frank de Boer, manage to keep the track sounding grounded and hefty, whilst also creating a sense of space in a track where it feels like you might eventually suffocate by dramatically pausing or missing occasional beats. The song brings to mind the likes of Neurosis, Yob, Tool and even some of Boris’ slower, moodier compositions.
 
When I say that the song is Ouroboros-like, it’s not just a way of ham-fisting another snake pun into this review – I mean that the song manages to come full circle on itself, starting and ending on a similar note whilst having covered a fair amount of ground in between. With “The Serpent Stirs”, Ortega have raised their already-high standards and released their most impressive work in the process.
 
[Originally published by the Sleeping Shaman, 14/08/2013]

Interview with Aaron Harris of Palms, Isis

Palms is the union of Chino Moreno (Deftones) and three members of the now (sadly) defunct ISIS. Their debut album, recently released on Mike Patton’s Ipecac Recordings, plays like a waking dream, combining lush layers of chiming guitars and a restless rhythm section with Moreno’s unmistakable croon. Rightly considered to be one of the most highly anticipated albums of the summer, the album has just entered the Billboard 200 at Number 55 as the band is preparing to play their first shows as a live band. Tom McKibbin spoke to Palms’ drummer Aaron Harris to discuss the band’s origins, the writing process, recording techniques, and what the future holds for the band.


 
Hey Aaron, thank you for taking the time to answer some questions for us. I’ll jump straight into it…
 
No problem
 
I’ve read an interview in which Chino stated that he was a fan of ISIS, and I assume that this admiration was mutual. How did your paths come to cross?

We’ve been Deftones fans for years. I’ve turned so many people on to Deftones who thought they sounded like something else. They often get lumped into something that they’re not. I’ve always admired their songwriting, the players, and Chino’s voice. He has a sound that’s immediately recognizable. I love his dynamics and knew he’d be great for the music we were writing for Palms. Chino and I bonded over runs and hikes here in LA. We shared a lot of the same interests and would bounce ideas and music we were listening to back and forth. He had asked about Palms and what we were writing. He wanted to hear some. I sent him some demos and he sent one back with a vocal demo over it. It grew from there.
 
So how has the writing process worked on the album? Do you all get together in a room or is it a case of sending ideas back and forth over the internet?
 
We get together in our practice space. It’s very important to us to all be there working off of each other when we write. We record a lot, and demo things. We listen back and make changes. We worked that way in ISIS too.
 
From what I’ve read, the album seems to have been recorded in a somewhat fractured way, with your drums being recorded in one session at a home studio, and the vocals being recorded in a similar fashion. Was this a conscious decision and, if so, do you think it has lent a relaxed feeling to the album?
 
I recorded the drums at my friend Joe Barresi’s studio. We had a lot of fun with it. He had just gotten his 2″ tape machine repaired and he has a lot of really unique mic pres and microphones so we decided to use a lot of stuff that you wouldn’t normally see in a studio. Like Sphere and brown Helios mic pres. It was a lot of fun and we got some great sounds. I recorded the guitars and bass at our rehearsal spot. That was nice because we were able to pick away at it and work on getting cool sounds without being under and strict time restraints. I tracked the vocals at my home studio, and on the road with Deftones. That was really fun tracking vocals in hotel rooms and in backstage rooms. I think it really added to the vibe. I don’t think the record would have been possible if we had to book time at a studio every time we wanted to track. I think me being able to track this record and be flexible was really crucial to it coming together, and of course I was happy to do it and psyched that those guys trusted me play that role.

 
When I listen to the album I sense a great deal of sadness being released. Chino is able to relate a sense of nostalgia with his voice that is really poignant. Do you feel that this album has been a conduit for release for you guys?
 
I think it’s really interesting the way that people hear this record. Some people walk away with a sad and lonely vibe. Others say they feel very happy and relaxed. For instance “Antarctic Handshake” starts off with a very sad and lonely vibe to it. The first time I really listened to what Chino was singing I was crushed. But the song ends on a very hopeful vibe. We really strive to create music that provokes a feeling. To me if you can do that you know that you’ve got something special. It’s also the kind of music we enjoy listening to. Music is really powerful that way.
 
Although the album is quite melodic and relaxed as I mentioned before, there is also a restless, circular energy to the songs that create a sense of being lost in a purgatory (“Shortwave Radio” being the prime example). Do you agree with this interpretation? The end of that song is one of the most palpable, powerful moments I’ve heard on a record for a while.
 
Thanks man. Like I was saying before I think that these songs can bring up a variety of feelings for the listener, and can reflect the mood of the listener. I love when I find a record that can do that. A song that one day makes you feel really good can also on another day make you feel really contemplative. I’m happy to hear that these songs are having an impact on people. To me that’s the biggest compliment.
 
Would you agree that Palms’ songs are about moods and textures? The swathes of reverb and delay on the guitars for example seem to be quite impressionistic?
 
Absolutely. Texture is a good description. I remember when I was mixing this record having a hard time finding where everything fit. I tried going for a big ISIS type sound, but it just wasn’t working. I realized that this record has a lot of texture and vibe to it, and once I figured out how all the pieces fit together it all started to make sense to me sonically.

 
How are you feeling about playing these songs live on your upcoming tour? Is it a daunting prospect having never done it before?
 
Rehearsals have been sounding really great. Chino wasn’t able to play guitar on the record, so having him on guitar live has really added some new elements to the songs. We’re excited to play live!
 
How has the response to the album been? Was it what you expected it to be?
 
It seems to be really good. I’ve seen a lot of really positive feedback and that really makes us happy because we put a lot of work into this and believe in it. There was a certain amount of pressure on this record given the names involved, so we were a little scared of how it would be perceived because we knew that we sounded different than what most people were expecting. That said I don’t think it’s a huge departure from any of our past releases. It’s been really nice to hear that people are enjoying it and making connections with it. I especially like hearing that it’s providing peeps a soundtrack to their summer.
 
Yeah, there’s definitely a summer feel to the album. Is Palms going to become a relatively regular project or is it a one-off for the time being?
 
There will be more for sure. We’ve already started writing some new stuff.
 
Cool. So, after you’ve played the initial US dates do you have any plans to come to the UK or are you taking it one step at a time?
 
We hope to and I think in time we definitely will.
 
Excellent! Thanks for taking the time for this interview Aaron. Any final words?
 
Thank you as well. I appreciate the support and interest. It’s nice to be able to create music and have people be interested, so thanks again.

[Originally published by the Sleeping Shaman, 09/07/2013]
http://www.thesleepingshaman.com/interviews/g-q/palms-tom-interviews-drummer-arron-harris/

Palms - S/T


(Ipecac Records, 2013)

Isis and Deftones have both had an influence of modern rock music in their own ways and to differing degrees. For his part as frontman of Deftones, Chino Moreno was a genuine breath of fresh air during the mid to late 1990s when the band would often get lumped in with the nu-metal acts that they eventually came to transcend. Offering both an ear shattering scream and, more vitally, a smooth, melodic croon that belied the influence of 80s new wave acts like the Cure and Depeche Mode, Moreno has long been one of the more intriguing and daring frontmen in the masculine world of metal. His voice was always pretty core to the Deftones’ scream-core mass appeal – commercially viable enough to grant them chart success and expressive enough to gain them the respect of their musical peers and musos the world over.
 
Perhaps this, along with Moreno’s admiration for Isis, is the link that unites Moreno with three of the original four members of the post-metal innovators, whose own influence on metal, particularly in the underground scene, is also significant. Their partnership may initially come as a bit of a left-field surprise, but it also quickly makes perfect sense, to the point that I could already imagine what Palms would sound like before hearing them based on the proposition alone. In a recent interview with Decibel magazine, bassist Jeff Caxide noted that the material on Palms’ debut album is comprised of the kind of stuff “that I would never have presented to Isis. I don’t want to call this ‘pop music,’ but it’s more in that vein than anything I’ve ever done.” Cue the melodic vocal stylings of Moreno whose work with Deftones and Team Sleep has always put as much emphasis on melody as anything else.
 
Like Baroness’ recent left-turn towards a lighter touch on their polarising double-album Yellow & Green, it’s possible that Palms could divide opinion among fans of Deftones’ and Isis’ heavier work, but this collaboration brings together some of each bands’ finest attributes. “Patagonia” and “Shortwave Radio” are what I imagined and hoped the band would sound like – Isis-like waves of shimmering, chiming guitars paired with Moreno’s damaged, nostalgic voice. Caxide’s bass playing is a particular strength throughout, often drenching his bass parts with delay and reverb that marry with Bryant Clifford’s equally melodic guitar parts to hypnotic effect. Indeed, the extended outro on “Shortwave Radio” is an album highlight, particularly with Moreno’s increasingly desperate cries of “Ascending into heaven/ While staring into Hell/ You’re staring into heaven/ descending into Hell.” It’s one of the album’s heaviest moments, aurally and emotionally.
 
A criticism that could get lumped at the album could be also considered one of its strengths – some may consider the album wishy-washy or samey. It’s true that some of the songs tend to flash over you on the first few listens, and on a six track album that’s worrying. But repeated listens reveal layers of melody and rhythm that slowly creep in to your consciousness. Closing couplet “Tropics” and “Antarctic Handshake” are both perfect examples of this phenomenon; initially they seem to meld into one another and pass over you without event, but they contain some of the densest layers of sound and melody on the entire record and finish it off in suitably dream-like fashion.
 
This is an album that plays like a waking dream – on the one hand it feels restless and trapped in a perpetual cycle of longing and nostalgia, but there’s also a strong sense of serenity and resignation. For fans of Deftones and/or Isis, give Palms a chance and you’ll be in their grip.

[Originally published by the Sleeping Shaman, 20/06/2013]
http://www.thesleepingshaman.com/reviews/album-reviews/p/palms-st-cd-lp-dd-2013/