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XENOGRAFT

Eclectic Prog • Australia


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Xenograft biography
XENOGRAFT is a band from Melbourne, Australia. According to their record label "Xenograft comfortably straddle the borders of math-rock, prog rock and space funk". They describe themselves on their facebook page as post-progressive.

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XENOGRAFT discography


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3.33 | 3 ratings
Exit
2011
3.54 | 3 ratings
Xenograft, Kettlespider, Bear the Mammoth
2013

XENOGRAFT Reviews


Showing last 10 reviews only
 Xenograft, Kettlespider, Bear the Mammoth by XENOGRAFT album cover Singles/EPs/Fan Club/Promo, 2013
3.54 | 3 ratings

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Xenograft, Kettlespider, Bear the Mammoth
Xenograft Eclectic Prog

Review by AtomicCrimsonRush
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator

3 stars Three instrumentals from three excellent Australian bands, Xenograft, Kettlespider and Bear The Mammoth. The cover art is as odd as the music, with a hybrid bear, spider, octopus creature crawling sluggishly on a white background.

Xenograft's 'Victimentia' is really demented mental and jazz outbursts, with spasmodic guitar blasts and odd funky splashes. The music is very aggressive at first and then launches into a slower measured tempo with very speedy lead guitar picking from Carey and Daniel Powell, and James Carman's crashing drums. This is music to wake up to. The saxophone of Nicholas Coulter is outlandishly placed within this cataclysm of sound as a kind of mediator battling for supremacy. Jarrad Will plays a funky bass and Tom Mass's piano solo is wonderful. Luke Tylim fills out the sound with synth, woodblock and cowbell. The end section is a break up of fast jazz fusion percussion and virtuoso sax playing. All in all it is a fabulous instrumental that grinds along nicely in its 5:43 running time.

Kettlespider are more familiar territory, in the Dream Theater style of guitar sounds over layers of keyboards. There is a King Crimson polyrhythm on 'The Transcent' and then it lunges full tilt into a murky distorted metal riff. The synths of Geoffrey Fyfe come to the fore and dominate for a while in the next section and then it moves to a gut wrenching metalcore blast over relentless keyboard motifs. The drums of Simon Wood and bass of Colin Andrews maintain a powerful rhythm. The cadence locks in with the keys and the guitars of Haris Boyd Gerny and Scott Ashburn are battling it out til it fades after almost 6 minutes.

The last track is 'Sea Caesar' from Bear The Mammoth with cool guitar picking, similar to Fripp's style, and it builds with a 4/4 drum rhythm by Chris Lobo, and bass by Stephen Evans. This is a rather pleasant journey, with powerhouse twin guitar licks trading off one another. The atmosphere is more ambient than the previous tracks and it is relaxing music overall. On guitars are Ben Sharpe, and James Kershaw, and they dominate this wonderful piece beautifully.

3 shining stars for 3 shining artists; one to recommend as a taster of the excellent music that these bands offer. Check it out for a heavy musical experience.

 Xenograft, Kettlespider, Bear the Mammoth by XENOGRAFT album cover Singles/EPs/Fan Club/Promo, 2013
3.54 | 3 ratings

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Xenograft, Kettlespider, Bear the Mammoth
Xenograft Eclectic Prog

Review by Conor Fynes
Prog Reviewer

4 stars 'Xenograft, Kettlespider, Bear the Mammoth' - Split (7/10)

One of the most gratifying aspects of exploring music is to be able to see how different bands, styles, and scenes interact with each other. Like a massive, breathing network, no band is an island, and every city is its own musical melting pot. Today, my gaze shifts to the Australian city of Melbourne, home to a band called Kettlespider I had the pleasure of first hearing last year, with their debut album "Avadante". With this recent split release, three of Melbourne's instrumental bands have gotten together under the banner of Anon Islet Records to represent their particular niche of the city's scene. While I already knew what to expect from Kettlespider, all three bands here bring their own impressive and distinct sound, proving that even a specific label like 'instrumental progressive rock' can lend itself to a ton of interpretation. Although the split could have done well without the superfluous 'remix' tracks at the end, there are no weak links on this split, and I think I can now consider myself a fan of two new bands.

Xenograft is by far the strangest thing this three-way has to offer. In contrast with the relative ambiance of Kettlespider and Bear the Mammoth, Xenograft is a frantic, jazz-infused metal attack. Math rock dissonance and playful saxophone licks run wild here, embracing the potential of jazz-metal fusion in a similar manner to the virtuosic German masters in Panzerballett. The second song is the work of Kettlespider, whose debut album "Avadante" had me impressed from the start. It wasn't any surprise to hear more of the same excellence from them this around; while at first they conjure the atmosphere of Rush's classic "Xanadu", it builds into a rhythmic exercise that recalls Robert Fripp's style, all the while making sure that the composition has a tight sense of melody to back it up. Although I was expecting something heavier from a band called Bear the Mammoth, the third track here is the most relaxed of the three by a wide margin, relying on the clever use of delay and shoegazey effects to get the atmosphere across. Otherwise simple guitar work is built up into a gorgeous, soaring sound that washes over the listener. Of the three band efforts, it's difficult to pick a favourite. Xenograft earn the greatest points for musicianship, Kettlespider's offering felt the most powerfully written, and Bear the Mammoth enjoyed the most engaging sense of atmosphere. An excellent sampler, really.

Had the split ended with those three songs, I would have had nothing but good things to say about the three-way. While the prospect of re-imagined electronic renditions of these songs was initially exciting, these remixes do very little for me. Xenograft's mind melting jazz metal is reduced to a sputtering of off-time beats and glitchy electronic effects. Kettlespider's music is turned into a deeply beat-oriented piece, part of which sounds experimental, another part sounds like it could be heard in a club. The remix of Bear the Mammoth's tune isn't an improvement over the original, but it fares the best of the three, retaining much of its original atmosphere and flair. To be fair, they're each worth a listen if only to see the songs from a new perspective, but the idea of a remix here amounts to wasted potential moreso than anything.

Anon Islet Records have released an impressive collaboration here, and in spite of the slightly bitter taste the electronic reduxes leave after the playlist is finished, the originals make it well worth checking out. I can't wait to hear more of what these three bands have to offer!

Thanks to epignosis for the artist addition.

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