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Topic ClosedThe Mind Expansion Thread - Psych/Space Rock

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avestin View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 13 2010 at 20:39
Next in line are the fascinating sounds by Spanish band Lüger who released a s/t album this year.

Listen here and you can DOWNLOAD THE ALBUM FOR FREE HERE



3.48 | 3 ratings
Lüger
2010




Two reviews in PA:

Lüger
Lüger Psychedelic/Space Rock

Review by SaltyJon
Collaborator Zeuhl RIO/Avant Team

4 stars I've had this album for a while now, ever since the band released it as a free download. I've listened to it a good amount of times since getting it, and I'm really impressed with what they've done here. This album is Lüger's debut, and it's a very good debut at that. The album is strongly influenced by some of the Krautrock greats (Neu!, Faust and Can especially come to mind). The album has a good thick sound to it. Sometimes it gets to have a good dirty sound, sometimes it sounds cleaner, sometimes it's somewhere in the middle. There isn't anything really bad about the album, but it does have a couple drawbacks; sometimes, the vocals get nearly completely buried underneath the instrumentals, and sometimes the instrumental sound is just a bit too muddy for my taste. Nothing too major, though. Several of the tracks here are excellent, and the rest all fall in the "good to great" range. My favorites would have to be "Swastika Sweetheart", "Why Should I Care?", "Portrait of a Distant Look", and to a slightly lesser degree "La Fin Absolue du Monde".

If you're a fan of psychedelic/space rock or Krautrock (or both!) you should definitely check this one out. It's a solid debut by a band who will hopefully keep making more strong albums. Four stars!


Lüger
Lüger Psychedelic/Space Rock

Review by snobb
Special Collaborator Jazz Rock/Fusion & Post Rock

3 stars Spanish psyche/space band named under German pistol Parabellum (from 1908), English/German/French songs names and krautrock influence? Their debut album's opener disappointed a bit - vintage electronic space soundscapes, almost boring.

Then things go better. Compositions are full of energy (and electronic sounds), with repetitive constructions, but modern enough not to be mixed with Can works. But main influence is Primal Scream with Swastika Eyes (Luger has their Swastika Sweetheart on this album) and Kowalski. Explosive mix of indie, electronica sound and krautrock. With some amount of psychedelic/space.

When compared with Primal Scream, they have a bit less electronic and some bigger accent on German vintage krautrock sound. But successfully mixing it into quite freshly sounding music. Interesting debut album for Primal Scream fans and indie-electronic-psyche lovers. Free album download from band's site.





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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 13 2010 at 22:36
Hey, I've heard this one already. Tongue
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 15 2010 at 18:46
Continuing with another Tee Pee (psych label I already mentioned here in this thread) new band, called Quest for Fire; a foursome from Toronto. You can listen to them here.
They've just released their s/t, their first for Tee Pee
View All Photos | Album Cover by Andre Ethier | Quest For Fire
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 15 2010 at 18:54
4.00 Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection
(1 ratings)
WR = 3.3799
For Sardines Space Is No Problem
The Movements
 
I have been trying to find an easy-to-get copy of this for literally ALL YEAR!  Any help?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 15 2010 at 18:59
Originally posted by The Truth The Truth wrote:

4.00 Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection
(1 ratings)
WR = 3.3799
For Sardines Space Is No Problem
The Movements
 
I have been trying to find an easy-to-get copy of this for literally ALL YEAR!  Any help?


Available at Wayside:
http://www.waysidemusic.com/Music-Products/Movements---For-Sardines-Space-is-no-Problem__SULATRON0903.aspx
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 15 2010 at 19:01
Originally posted by avestin avestin wrote:

Originally posted by The Truth The Truth wrote:

4.00 Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection
(1 ratings)
WR = 3.3799
For Sardines Space Is No Problem
The Movements
 
I have been trying to find an easy-to-get copy of this for literally ALL YEAR!  Any help?


Available at Wayside:
http://www.waysidemusic.com/Music-Products/Movements---For-Sardines-Space-is-no-Problem__SULATRON0903.aspx
 
Thanks man, I must have really been looking in the wrong places.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 16 2010 at 14:49
So after Quest For Fire, here's a band that is on PA, and who's making psych/stoner rock/metal quite well.
Samsara Blues Experiment from Germany.

Earlier this year they released their debut full-length, Long Distance Trip - and what a trip it is!!

PA bio:
"SAMSARA BLUES EXPERIMENT are a Berlin based band, founded in Summer 2007 by leadguitarist/singer Christian Peters. They went through several changes in the first period but are in constant line-up since September 2008 featuring Hans Eiselt (guitar), drummer Thomas Vedder and Richard Behrens (bass). As the band name implies three elemental aspects are to notice - the blues as the fundament where it all comes from, the inclusion of spiritual influences accompanied by Indian/raga music and the experimental approach to mix up varied elements in a convincing manner.

The band's songs are dominated by a playful dual guitar work as well as a passionate blend of heavy psych, stoner and space rock. This is provided with several nuances and transitions in between - quite retro styled, jamming, even sometimes worked out with a repetitive hypnotic touch in the tradition of krautrock. The band produced two appetizer EP's and intensively toured Europe as well as the US-Westcoast in order to reach for the appropriate condition to record a full album.

World In Sound released the long awaited debut 'Long Distance Trip' in March 2010 which finally offers the band's potential. SAMSARA BLUES EXPERIMENT are a demanded live band in the meanwhile and participate at many European festivals, Roadburn, Yellowstock and Burg Herzberg to name a few.
"

More info here: http://www.samsarablues.de.vu/


Samsara Blues Experiment Long Distance Trip album coverWith naked women on the cover, this has to be good, right?

Two PA reviews:

Long Distance Trip
Samsara Blues Experiment Psychedelic/Space Rock

Review by Marty McFly
Collaborator Crossover Team/E&O team

4 stars I've been getting myself into Heavy Psychedelia music lately, thanks to Norway's Motorpsycho. "Samsara Blues Experiment".

Singata Mystic Queen sets the mood that will be consistent through majority of this album. Heavy, Psychedelic journey through the motions of slow headbanging (full of air guitar practising by volunteers) I would say.

During For the Lost Souls, Christian Peters stars to sing. And this is quite disadvantage for me, his voice is far from being nice. Of course, high pitched vocals would be even worse, but I these songs are more fitted to be instrumental only. I also at first thought he is singing in German, but nah, it's English, only with extremely strong accent (one of the strongest I ever heard, but it can be caused by music too). Fortunately, he doesn't sing in all tracks. There is something in his vocal style that fits here well when you think about it a little bit, harsh vocals to harsh music. But instrumental songs / parts of songs are better. Actually, it's more about any vocal intrusion that about his vocals. Because I think it's valuable, I have to state that the more I listen to this music, the less I dislike these vocals.

Wheel of Life serves as some kind of "eye of the storm", calm before last (long distance) trip in form of Double Freedom that absolutely stuns with its guitar solos, atmosphere and overall composition (e.g. how it works so good and flows so easily).

4(+), one more thing I don't like much is instrument sitar. I never learned to appreciate this one, but that's me, not you.



Long Distance Trip
Samsara Blues Experiment Psychedelic/Space Rock

Review by Rivertree
Special Collaborator Psych/Space Team & Band Submissions

4 stars SAMSARA BLUES EXPERIMENT from Berlin are promising newcomer on the heavy psych stage. The name is well conceived pointing to the band's essentials. Hence you can easily smell the blues roots. Samsara is derived from Sanskrit which more or less means 'eternally wandering'. And indeed they offer a convincing alteration here when comprising space rock, psychedelia with eastern flavour - and of course stoner/heavy psych as for the fundamental aspect. Finally you can state an experimental approach when musicians try to blend different rock styles to something refreshing and unique.

The quartet worked on some fine-tuning when intensively touring in Europe and USA before they produced this debut album. A significant trademark is Christian Peters' and Hans Eiselt's well-matching guitar work. This will be immediately confirmed when starting with Singata Mystic Queen - an early song, first published on a promo EP in 2008, but now revised and certainly improved with the result of a better interaction and equality of both guitarists - that's my impression at least. It's a midtempo jamming heavy psych track. Soaring spacey and riffing guitar impressions are swirling around each other. This is provided in a rather relaxed way - heavier propulsive excursions are rare here. Decent organ/synth and sitar goodies care for more variety and richness.

Army Of Ignorance is played straightforward rocking featuring a slight doom factor in the vein of the good old Black Sabbath. For The Lost Souls contrasts when starting as a cosmic trip which begins to groove more and more - certainly a challenge for space rock fans - playful melancholic, wah-wah and delay modified guitars - I like it! According to the 'eternally wandering' motto it all turns into something uptempo rocking then. Moving into the Center Of The Sun they let me feel like reaping black tomatoes together with the Oresund Space Collective. The album's center of gravity for what it's worth. And now at the latest I should mention the band's solid rhythm section. Powerful - and once again they fall into heavier streams in between.

A long distance trip also requires some laid-back moments - and so campfire romanticism comes up when listening to Wheel Of Life based on melancholic double acoustic guitar combined with the sound of the sea - nice change. The extended improv Double Freedom closes the album, multiple guitar appearance including sitar. Charming here - crushing there with much stoner and even some hypnotic krautrock appeal. Later gliding into another fine grooving section this forces a lively imagination how impressing the band's live performances must be.

'Long Distance Trip' provides heavy psych, decorated though with several proper space rock excursions. Even when holding a high proportion of jamming this is carefully produced - recommended - a really enjoyable one.





Edited by avestin - September 16 2010 at 14:50
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 18 2010 at 21:51
On with the show, next in line is a Japanese band that has just been added to PA and whom I've only learned about two weeks ago: Leningrad Blues Machine

Here's their PA bio:

"In 1987, a guitarist TABATA had searched aggressively his original way for rock music after leaving from Boredoms. He had repeated lots of sessions with various players in studio, and could seize the opportunity to form LENINGRAD BLUES MACHINE in Kyoto. Around 1990s they had changed the members or hibernated over and over, but never had any official releases.

In 2002, they migrated from Kyoto to Tokyo and built themselves up firmly with current members - TABATA (guitar), WATANABE (drums), and SHIMAJI (bass). Their colourful psychedelia mixed with jazz and funk essence could make them musically tighter and more versatile. Eventually LENINGRAD BLUES MACHINE released their first studio-recorded album 'Yajé' in 2004, among lots of gigs and sessions
."



4.00 | 1 ratings
Yaje
2004

Yaje
Leningrad Blues Machine Psychedelic/Space Rock

Review by DamoXt7942
Special Collaborator Psych/Space Team (Jap. Psych Specialist)

— First review of this album —
4 stars Not only psychedelic rock but eclectically mixed kaleidoscopic launcher, with jazz, funk, blues ...

LENINGRAD BLUES MACHINE have got advanced continuously methinks. I've heard they might have got started as a "pseudo" psychedelic jam band simply according to gigs in their early time, but in 2002 they could confirm the members and attitude for psychedelic progressive rock strictly I suppose. This album "Yajé" was their first full-studio-recorded one, that could alter the studio into the psychedelic progressive heaven. No need for us to say such difficult phrases, but alright only to listen to and enjoy this brilliant heavenly creation.

Anyway, whatever I say, please drop the CD player lens onto the disc. They open their musically versatile art curtain completely from the beginning ... wow, that's it! Our ears can touch directly their complexity and progressiveness around sounds and noises created with their talent of jazzy, funky, bluesy psychedelia. The rhythm section can be surely immersed into jazz rock / fusion, and Tabata's guitar solo can be whacked out deeply in his hallucinated mind. Though their voices are more freaked as if they should absorb themselves into mind-expanding substances, their play can be totally exploitable out. They, in this album, are hoppin', steppin', and jumpin' by making full use of instruments and ... yeah tremblin' air ... all around the heaven.

Here's a great stuff, that cannot be mentioned only with psychedelic rock manner. Recommended. 







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Direct Link To This Post Posted: September 28 2010 at 17:47
Next on our journey are Austrian psych/stoner-rockers, Sahara Surfers who released back in June their debut album, Spacetrip on a Paper Plane.
Apparently the band has posted on their myspace links to blog which offer their album for download.
Read and hear more here.









http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_y7R0QQMAvow/TBcHE5wZN0I/AAAAAAAABCw/3WYkkFpRcMY/s1600/Sahara%2BSurfers_Cover.jpg
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 09 2010 at 07:38
Next in line is a band that in PA is listed as Cross-over but which will appeal to psych-rock fans. The band is Black Mountain from Vancouver, Canada.

Here is their PA bio:

"Canadian outfit BLACK MOUNTAIN was formed in 2004 by Stephen McBean (vocals, guitar), Amber Webber (vocals), Jeremy Schmidt (keyboards), Matthew Camirand (bass) and Joshua Wells (drums). While legend has it that they have come out of a hippie-inspired community knowns as Black Mountain Army, the reality is that this is more of a loosely connected network of friends and aquaintances. Perhaps tighter knit than many others, but still pretty far from the communes of the 60's.

Three of the band's members work for an organization handling basic living requirements for drug addicts, chronically poor and mentally ill people, which has given them as well as the band a somewhat different point of view on certain topics compared to many others.

As far as their musical ventures go, their first creative output was the EP Druganaut issued in 2004, followed by their full length debut album Black Mountain in 2005. In 2007 the inclusion of their song Stay Free for the soundtrack of the movie Spiderman 3 raised their public profile considerably, and they also issued the EP b*****ds of Light the same year, initially as a tour only 12 EP.

In 2008 their sophomore full length effort In the Future followed.
"


Links:
Facebook
Myspace

They have 3 albums out, the last of which, Wilderness Heart was released last September.

However, the album I like most so far is their second album, which received mixed reaction here in PA and I'll let you read the reviews. But go listen and decide for yourselves:


3.11 | 9 ratings
In the Future
2008



Guldbamsen 4 stars Slow, slumbering psychedelic rock n´ roll caterpillar

This band pushes all the right buttons for me. Rocking guitars mainly riff driven (for all you aficionados who needs splintering unbelievable high soaring solos, this is not the place...), thumbing walking bass, slow creepy-crawley organs, tight 50-60´s drumming tied together with the twin vocals of what sounds like Grace Slick in her prime with Jefferson Airplane together with Jack White of The White Stripes.

Recalling a scorchingly hot summers day last August, dazing on the beach just north of Copenhagen in what most people here in Denmark call the "Whiskey-belt", because of the abundance of folks who have cars of gold, exotic pythons as guard dogs, sneeze in their money and live in larger than life castles, that would make for great viewing in the sort of MTV cribs television. -Anyway, we had with us a huge stereo chuck full of - well let´s just say alternative music attacking the beach side with tunes very unfamiliar from the drum n´ bass that usually dominates the airwaves. This album got about 6 or 7 spins, and it was like a great sorting machine - collecting long haired freaks from the darkest corners of the beach, as well as a handful of "rock chicks" that jump at anything showcasing a female voice (you know who you are Björk fans)... Whenever "Tyrants" got played, the loud cries and otherwise disturbing chit chat from the sands around us quieted down, and you could feel how they got swept away by the music. It starts out crushingly loud like a herd of wild buffaloes - changing suddenly into laid back soft singing transforming the song completely, and to those of us who know our rock n´ roll history will pick up the tiny acoustic ode to "Stairway to Heaven" that follows. The song crashes into some of the most beautiful female vocals, that I promise you - once heard, you will never forget it. Kind of reminds me of "War Pigs" live, when the crowd sings "Uuuuuuhh Uuuuuhhh" along with the guitar at the end. An instant hit for sure... Another favourite of mine is "Bright Lights" that really shows the psychedelic side of Black Mountain´s music, and clocking in at about 17 minutes this should arouse even the most rusty wine gummy prog boner... (-Even if they use a couple of those min on ambient noise)

This is not an album with great virtuosos and faster than light time changing signatures of any kind. It is however an honest album with heart and soul, that at times rips through the dull and enclosing jail bars of everyday life. A must for old school psychedelic mice, Zeppelin balloon people, proggy beavers and the likes who enjoy their beach music slow and brooding like a caterpillar up your misses thigh...



AmbianceMan 2 stars I bought this album on a whim at the used CD store as I always pick up one or two I've seen listed in progarchives but never heard. This is one I wish I would have left at the store. I would describe it as "retro minimalist Deep Purple" with smatterings of other groups. I feel all the instrumentation and vocals are less than inspiring at this point. The keyboards run the gamut throughout the album, from mellotron to organ to synth...and back again. Guitars aren't varied much and the beats and grooves by the drums and bass leave much to be desired. I feel the vocals are the weakest part of the record. There are two vocalists: one male and one female. They generally sing in different spots, with probably 65% of the vocals done by the male. The female I am guessing is one of the other members' girlfriend due to her lackluster vocals. She tries too hard for the Stevie Nicks vibrato, and wavers quite a bit without any power.

The album begins with two weak songs, followed by two longer songs (8 and 6 minutes respectively). Then it just kind of meanders to song 9 which is a 16 minute track that at 6 minutes I thought "can I listen to this for 10 more minutes?" Then it ends with the "Stevie Nicks wannabe" vocals on track 10.

All this being said, I don't think that they are without potential. However, the feeling I got throughout listening was that it all seemed disconnected. Maybe it was the mix? Whatever they were striving for, I just didn't "get it". I had to put something else on right away to get it out of my head

I'll give it 2 stars, with better vocals 3.



UMUR
4 stars In the Future is the second full-length studio album by Canadian hard rock/ psychadelic rock act Black Mountain. I recently reviewed the self-titled debut full-length studio album by the band and while that album is a pretty solid hard rock/ psychadelic rock affair, it didn´t exactly make my blood boil. So I didn´t have great expectations to In the Future. My fears that this album would sound pretty much like the debut ( not that it´s a bad album by any means) was unfounded though. In the Future is like a 100% improvement over the debut, and we´re talking about a big surprise for me here.

The sound on In the Future is very retro late sixties/ early seventies hard rock/ psychadelic rock styled. Lots of vintage keyboards, hard rocking guitars and a tight rythm section. I´m thinking a mix of Pink Floyd, Black Sabbath ( the more hard rock part of their seventies material) and Jefferson Airplane. The latter mostly because of the use of both male and female vocals and the kind of stoned delivery. In the Future succeeds very much in having a great balance all the way through the 57:15 minute long playing time. There are hard rocking tracks like Stormy High and Evil Ways, psychadelic pop/ rock tunes like Angels and Stay Free, the two female vocal led and dark tracks Queens Will Play and Night Walks, the short David Bowie like Wild Wind, the two almost progressive tracks Tyrants and Wucan and of course the centerpiece of the album the 16:41 minute long Bright Lights. The latter is an outstanding track and I recommend starting with that one. If you´re not impressed by that, chances are you probably won´t enjoy the rest either.

The production is organic and greatly enjoyable.

In the Future has simply blown me away and I find the album highly recommendable. To those, who like me, have only listened to the debut and haven´t bothered to check out In the Future yet, I say you should get started and make your way to the nearest music pusher and purchase this album right away. What a great find and my 4 star rating is fully deserved.



seventhsojourn
3 stars In The Future (2008) is the second album by Canadian 5-piece psychedelic/hard rock band Black Mountain. The album is a 10-song set containing some grindingly heavy, and at times complex, songs. In addition to the plentiful guitar riffs there's a shed-load of classic keyboards here, with two of the band credited with playing the Mellotron. By the way, three members of the band work for the Insite organisation, which provides a safe injection location for people with drug and mental health problems in Vancouver. So, respect to them for that.

The first track, Stormy High, consists of a pulverizing rhythm and an unforgettable Tony Iommi-inspired guitar riff. This in fact received the Bucky Award for 'Best Hook of 2008' from CBC Radio 3. With all due respect to the good people of Canada, the significance of this award is lost on a guy from Scotland (well, it's lost on me anyway) but I guess it's a nice achievement. It is definitely a great riff though. Angels is altogether more laid back, although the drums are still pretty loud, and there's some nice Mellotron (strings and flute) here. Black Mountain has drawn comparisons with Jefferson Airplane, I suppose in part due to the combination of male and female vocals. I don't know the Jefferson's well enough to comment on that (something I'll have to rectify!), but I wasn't initially impressed with some of the lethargic, stoned-out vocals on this. However I'm getting to like them the more I listen, and they do suit the music surprisingly well. Track 3, Tyrants, is the first of the more complex pieces on the album. It begins with thunderous bass/drums and ominous- sounding Mellotron that essay in subdued vocal and acoustic sections. The powerhouse drumming then returns along with some blistering guitar work from Stephen McBean (with that name, he must surely be Scottish!) and finally a reprise of the acoustic section. Darn it's good.

The near raga Wucan features synthesizer and Mellotron against a trance-like rhythm, with guitar flaring up intermittently. Stay Free is a largely acoustic ballad that was featured in the Spiderman III soundtrack. Female vocalist Amber Webber sings alone on a couple of songs, the first of these being Queens Will Play. This song also contains more guitar in the style of Tony Iommi, this time sounding subdued but edgy. The underlying tension is finally released in the closing few seconds of the track once the drums are let loose. Evil Ways (not the Santana song) features more forceful drumming and guitar soloing but is my least favourite track, while the brief Wild Wind is a sing-along ballad featuring fuzzed-out guitar. That brings us to the centrepiece of the album, the near 17-minutes Bright Lights. Back in the day, a track this length would have been exceptional whereas nowadays it's hardly worthy of note. Bright Lights is densely structured with extended instrumental excursions involving bruising bass and snarling guitar... actually, I'm not going to try to navigate the reader through every twist and turn of this song. My suggestion would be for the reader to just buy the album and listen for them self. Night Walks is the final track and the second to feature Amber Webber going solo. It's an ambient and reassuring way to finish the album.

I haven't heard Black Mountain's debut as yet, so I can't comment on how the band has progressed. However from the evidence of this, the notoriously 'difficult' sophomore album, they're definitely heading in the right direction. This is somewhere between good and excellent, so I'll give it 3 stars.



Peter
2 stars Ever the good Canadian, I bought IN THE FUTURE, by Vancouver nouveau-hippy, psychedelic stoner outfit Black Mountain after it was praised here on PA, and spotlighted in a Toronto record store as new music which would appeal to Led Zeppelin/Deep Purple fans. I'm a long-term fan of both of those seminal seventies heavies, so how do I find IN THE FUTURE? Well, it could certainly be classified as what used to be known as "hard rock," but I find it to be uninspired and overly derivative musically, and lyrically lame. I wanted to like this album, but I'm no longer 12, and it ain't 1972. I went on the old "demons and wizards" trip the first time round, and in more convincing company -- I don't care to fake it now. If I need a fix of hard-rock nostalgia, my Zep, Purple, Rainbow, Uriah Heep and Alice Cooper albums always await.

When bands seek to re-create the spirit, texture and feel of earlier exemplars of a musical form, they enter some tricky territory. They may well lure some younger listeners, and might even get the attention of older fans who yearn for the glory days of their long- gone youth, but they also risk sounding like second-rate imitators -- even plagiarists -- of those who invented the form. Regrettably for this 70s survivor, the latter case applies here. The man has definitely left the silver mountain.

Yeah, you get the shade of Jon Lord's organ, you get pounding drums, big guitars, and the recorder sound from Zep's "Stairway" plus "artful" acoustic accents, but you'll know all along that as with New Coke, it's just not the real thing. None of the riffs are particularly killer, and the singers (one male, one female) are a particularly weak link, sounding half-asleep, half stoned. You'll find no Plant-ian, Gillan-esque or Byronic vocal pyrotechnics here! My biggest complaint, though, is with the overwhelmingly lame, school-boyish lyrics. Cringe-worthy, painfully clichéd lines such as "you've got to change your evil ways"(now where have I heard that before -- Santana, perhaps?), "you will die by the sword," "ride the wild wind... fight the demons at your door" and "blood sprawls across the walls" might wow the schoolyard set, but they make me snort in disbelief. (I'm not convinced that blood, as a liquid, even can "sprawl.") Still, like, hey man, isn't the image of gore-covered walls a real deep and cool one? Well, frankly, no -- it's not. I outgrew Dungeons & Drag-ons, and I've had a surfeit of short half-baked songs which go nowhere, along with over-long songs which end in abrupt "we don't know how to end this" fadeouts. Repeatedly chanting "bright light/light bright" might be great fun over a bowl of BC bud, but poetic or profound it ain't. Hard rock, alright -- hard to get into.

The ironically titled IN THE FUTURE (where it's all been done before -- and better, it seems) is sixty misbegotten, misspent minutes of empty, pretentious, unmemorable bombast. All bong smoke-on-the-water and mirrors, Black Mountain are akin to a dwarf shouting from the shoulders of a giant's statue, or a big wind breaking across the mouth of a long-drained bottle: full of sound and fury, yet signifying nothing. Save your shekels for retirement, seniors. If you need something hard, blasting LZ4 or MACHINE HEAD in the Golden Years Sunset Rest Home will win you more points with that sexy seventy-something across the hall, anyway.

1.5 stars -- generously rounded up because the groovy cover art reminds me of my old Rubik's Cube.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 18 2010 at 20:18
The new TITAN album, Sweet Dreams is smoking!!!

http://shop.relapse.com/dbimages/sleeves/sweetdreams_362.jpg

It's streaming here:
http://stereogum.com/542552/stream-titan-sweet-dreams/franchises/haunting-the-chapel/






Edited by avestin - October 18 2010 at 20:19
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 19 2010 at 05:23
Wow, thanks Assaf. I was curious about this band because various people keep asking me if I heard their new album, and I didn't know where to find it. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 24 2010 at 20:39
Next we feature a a Swedish psychedelic rock band called My Brother The Wind.

Here's their PA bio:
"Swedish outfit MY BROTHER THE WIND consists of Nicklas Barker (of Anekdoten fame), Mathias Danielsson (Makajodama, formerly of Gösta Berlings Saga), Ronny Eriksson (Magnolia) and Tomas Eriksson. The foursome were not too familiar with each other when their debut effort was recorded at a concert held in May 2009. The venue for the occasion was Drop Out in the Swedish city of Åmål, the latter a small place that made it's name in the history books following the Swedish motion picture f**king Åmål, a movie about teenagers living in a place where nothing ever happens.

It's safe to state that something indeed has happened in the city by now though, and the recording of 'Twilight in the Crystal Cabinet' is certainly one event worth noting. In the spirit of improvisation the album as such was actually finished the day after the concert, and have awaited release ever since. And in the summer of 2010 Swedish label Transubstans Records finalized this adventure by releasing the album
. "

Listen to them here.




Reviews of their 2010 debut album:


4.00 | 6 ratings
Twilight In The Crystal Cabinet
2010

Review by Mellotron Storm
Prog Reviewer

4 stars Certainly the attraction to this band for me is Nicklas Barker the great lead guitarist/vocalist/mellotron player etc. for ANEKDOTEN. We also get a second lead guitarist here in Mathias Danielsson(MAKAJODAMA) along with drummer Tomas Eriksson and bass player Ronny Eriksson.Four Swedes who offer up some great trippy Psychedelic jams much in the style of fellow Swedes THE SPACIOUS MIND.The liner notes say : "The sounds you hear are exactly as these four relative strangers delivered them.Unrehearsed and improvised with no overdubs.Recorded in two hours from the soul,through the fingers,directly to tape".The cover art photo was taken by none other than Anna Sofi Dahlberg(ANEKDOTEN). "Karmagrinder" is such a good title but they have some other good ones too.Love this opening tune that is laid back to open and dreamy.It starts to slowly build 1 1/2 minutes with drums joining the guitars then bass 3 minutes in.The guitars get louder as they jam.The guitars are so good here,very psychedelic.Sounds echo late. "Electric Universe" is the one track i can't get too into.It's uptempo with the guitars playing different parts as bass and drums throb.I just prefer the more trippy,spacey jams that's all. "Twilight In The Crystal Cabinet" has this laid back guitar throughout and it's quite spacey.Great sound. "Precious Sanity" seems a little out of place as it's dissonant and bombastic.Crazy but short. "The Mournful Howl Of Dawn" picks up before a minute.Again the guitars sound so good.A very melodic tune. "Death And Beyond" is my favourite.A guitar intro as the drums and bass join in.The guitar sounds incredible 4 1/2 minutes in.So emotional.Great sound 6 1/2 minutes in as the drums pound and the bass digs deep.The guitar is ripping it up 8 minutes in.It settles before 13 minutes. I shouldn't be surprised that my two psychedelic friends Uwe(Rivertree) and Eetu beat me to this review,and i can only agree to their words.A solid 4 stars.


Review by Eetu Pellonpää
Special Collaborator Psychedelic Prog Specialist Team

4 stars "Twilight in The Crystal Cabinet" album was recorded without preliminary rehearsals by the guitar players Nicklas Barker and Mathias Danielson, and accompanied with Ronny and Tomas Eriksson in the rhythm section. This quartet delivers some really nice spontaneous instrumental vintage rock music, which is quite balanced and focused to reveal the inner world, where the listeners can reflect their own emotions. In these abstract innovations it is pleasant to listen how the musical themes emerge and start to progress in the evolution defined by the enthusiasm and talents of the players involved. The devotion of creating coherent musical entities from the appearing collective ideas creates a flow of joyful discoveries and very powerful personal psychological responses. For me only the sound of Nicklas Barker's guitar was familiar earlier, and one association from of this record's sound was the final sequence of Morte Macabre's "Symphonic Holocaust" jam. There are also tonal textures resembling King Crimson's Muir-era concerts present in a short & bold blast out, which though sadly ends quite suddenly. Overall feeling is quite relaxed, which has probably been beneficial for the improvisation session itself. Also the music is not very dark, containing hopefulness in its mystical mantras and straightforward rock riffs. The longer sessions here bring deliverance for those pilgrims who search elevation from aural poetry, which is denying the choice of calculated arrangements and predefined goals. Music fans more keen on melodic beautifulness won't be dissatisfied either, if the lack of clear arrangements and structures is not too much to bear. But most certainly, tender and honest psychedelic romanticism is revealed for those listeners who are open to free rock playing, and for them I would recommend this record most warmly!



Review by Starless

4 stars This 6 track album was recorded on analogue tape over the course of 2 hours of improvised jamming by Nicklas Barker, the guitarist from the mighty Anekdoten, along with Mathias Danielson (Makajodama) - Guitar, and Ronny Eriksson - Bass, Tomas Eriksson - Drums.

Some of it reminds me of Man at their most spaced out, 70s Hawkwind, Amon Duul 2, T2 and Bevis Frond also come to mind as does King Crimson (on the aptly titled Precious Sanity). The title track is a gossamer thin wafer of music - a thing of almost ethereal beauty. Shame it's the shortest track on the album.

The final track Death And Beyond takes off into the outer limits with some mighty fine soloing. A really nice piece of wigged out space rock for the freaks.

2010 is turning out to be a good year for improvised space rock what with this and the 30 minute plus epic by Frogg Cafe "At The Table Of The Leptons" on the download album On The Lillypadd. Buy both, turn out the lights and trip off into the far reaches of the universe!



Review by Rivertree
Special Collaborator Psych/Space Team & Band Submissions

4 stars This blows me away - highly energetic jams provided with psychedelic respectively spacey ingredients and some periods of rest in between. 'Twilight In The Crystal Cabinet' was recorded on a vintage tape machine during not more than 2 hours in May 2009 and mixed within another 2 hours. A rough diamond if you will because truly spontaneous and not reworked. At least since one starts to listen he/she will know that this four musicians involved here are not beginners on the stage - first of all to name both guitarists Nicklas Barker, delegated by the recommended Anekdoten, and Mathias Danielson, formerly of Gösta Berlings Saga.

Anyhow - the album lives from the fantastic intuition of all musicians, also comprising Ronny Eriksson (Magnolia) on bass and drummer Tomas Eriksson. Something magical in fact if you consider that they never had worked together before when starting this recordings - the vision behind that project was to meet and play an album totally out of the blue. So let me first notice the short eclectic Precious Sanity which probably is the most prolific proof. In any case this song steps out of line here most likely when speaking about a jamming approach at least.

Okay, now coming to the starting point, on Karmagrinder they immediately augment the sound to something you can call rage of enthusiasm. Wow ... it's really impressing how this escalates to a point of culmination by and by and then glides into a free formed meandering improv afterwards. When listening to the uptempo Electric Universe you first may think of a new Anekdoten song coming up due to this heaviness where the melancholic relaxed title song is cosmic/ambient tinged. Nice one!

The more spacey coloured The Mournful Howl Of Dawn and Death And Beyond appear surprisingly melodic and can convince due to a wonderful interplay of both guitars. In the light of this excellent performance you easily can pardon some little recording quality errors here and there. 'Twilight In The Crystal Cabinet' was released by Swedish Transubstans Records - a recommended snapshot if you're interested in inspired psych/space jams.






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Direct Link To This Post Posted: October 25 2010 at 07:22
Nice thread! I recommend Coma Stereo, a fine young band:

not rated
Binary Endings

not rated
Transgalaktika

and, of older ones, Amber Route. They're bordering electronic and space rock.

not rated
Snail Headed Victrolas

not rated
Ghost Tracks



As for the pure psychedelia goes, this is the hypersuperultraquintessential psychedelic rock:


 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 01 2010 at 12:04
Thanks Moris, I'll look into them.


Now on to the next featured band, SEVEN THAT SPELLS.

Niko 'Brain' Potočnjak, from Tigrova Mast, is the man behind this psychedelic rock outfit from Croatia.
Here's their PA bio (written by Moris):

It seems there's a some sort of connection between Croatia and Japan when it comes to prog rock. SEVEN THAT SPELLS were formed in Zagreb, Croatia formed in 2003. The core of the band is Niko 'Brain' Potočnjak, the guitarist, the producer (and also a member of TIGROVA MAST). The band's psychedelic style is clearly influenced with ACID MOTHERS TEMPLE, they even collaborated with Makoto Kawabata (and Tsuyama Atsushi), recorded an album together, and toured in Japan. On a side note, a similar story happened to another band from Zagreb, TENA NOVAK (of which, incidentally or not, Hrvoje Niksić on keyboards shared the line-up), and they toured With Damo Suzuki... However, they started in 2003 as a trio - Tomislav Kalousek was on bass and Stjepan Jureković on drums. They did their debut (which was remastered in '05) and showed their musical potential to the audience. In '05 they signed for the Russian RAIG label, a well known one among the Russian avant/prog circles. The second album 'My Mommy Wants To Kiss Your Mamma'was released with Hrvoje Niksić reinforcing the band on synthesizers. The first notable change in band's line-up happened in 2006, when Tvrtko Dujmović took a role of a bassist, Igor Potočnjak (any relation with Niko?) swapped place with Niksić, and Mario Peretić took the drummer's seat. They released 'It Came From The Planet Of Love' that year (also for Russian RAIG).

The key moment happened in between '06 and '07, when SEVEN THAT SPELLS met the members of ACID MOTHERS TEMPLE; to sum it up, they released two albums in cooperation, and were touring in Japan. 'The Men From Dystopia' was released for a new label, Beta-lactam Ring Records in '07, again in significantly different (and larger) line-up: Stjepan Jureković (drums), Lidija Dokuzović (vocals), Tvrtko Dujmović (bass), Tsuyama Atsushi (vocals), Kawabata Makoto (electric sitar, tambura, hurdy-gurdy) and of course Niko Potočnjak (guitar, synth). Needles to say, the band widened their sonic palette (comprising vocals for the first time on an album) - but remained faithful to their psychedelic and spacey attributes. The year of 2008 saw two releases; the first one (DVD edition!), a bit of an oddity, with band stripped down to Narantxa (bass), Bruno Motik (drums) and Niko Potočnjak (guitar, synth) but for the first time with a saxophone added (Lovro Zlopasa). Later that year, Kawabata Makoto joined the STS crowd again, this time on guitars. Three drummers participated (Bruno Motik, Milan Bukejlović, Damir Simunović); Lidija Dokuzović and Tvrtko Dujmović were back in business (on vocals and bass respectively), while Niko widened his usual duties with (guitar, synth) with electric organ.

Highly prolific band, they will certainly say much more in the future, and HIGHLY RECOMMENDED if you have any preferences towards psychedelia in all the possible aspects of that form - from slow drones and spacey atmospheres, to the bursting guitar hook. Niko himself described his band as a 'a commune of psychedelic likeminds exploring the multifaceted cosmos of freak out music and naked women in high hopes of achieving Buddha's blessing'. Go figure.


Discography:
not rated
The Blowout
2003
not rated
My Mommy Wants To Kill Your Mamma
2005
not rated
It Came From The Planet Of Love
2006

3.00 | 1 ratings
The Men From Dystopia
2007

4.00 | 3 ratings
Black Om Rising
2008

4.00 | 1 ratings
Cosmoerotic Dialogue With Lucifer [with Kawabata Makoto]
2008
not rated
Future Retro Spasm
2010

not rated
You Must Do This on Stage Vol. 1
2009



Listen to the music here:
http://seventhatspells.bandcamp.com/

Links:
http://7thatspells.com/
http://www.myspace.com/seventhatspells
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Seven-That-Spells/70690093536





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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 17 2010 at 13:33
Next featured band is Anta from England who recently released their album, The Tree That Bears The Equine Fruit.

Here's their bio from their website:
" Formed in the south west of England over many shifting, sporadic and frequently dormant line-ups, over several years, ANTA finally established themselves as a cohesive and active band in early 2010. With two sound engineers and two illustrators completing the line-up of drums, bass, synths and guitar, and featuring members of Rose Kemp and Geisha, ANTA began work on their debut self-produced instrumental monster-prog-rock album “The Tree That Bears The Equine Fruit” after a string of successful live shows."

You can stream their album on their Bandcamp here.

The Tree That Bears The Equine Fruit Cover Art

More links:
http://www.myspace.com/antarock
http://www.facebook.com/antarock



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 18 2010 at 11:18
Next featured band is Mugstar from Liverpool.

Here's their PA bio:
MUGSTAR was founded in Liverpool around 1996 by Steve Ashton (drums), Adrian Shaw (guitar) and Martin Ward (bass), replaced in 1997 by Chris Stevens. Later joined by Neil Murphy (guitar) this was the first gigging line-up. Pete Smyth (guitar) substituted Adrian Shaw and now the band was stable until 2000 when bass player Jason Stoll came in for Chris Stevens.

Several singles, split recordings and two regular albums were produced during the recent years. The eponymous debut was digitally released at the end of 2006 on Sea Records and the vinyl version on Critical MASS Records one year later.

Their current effort '... Sun, Broken ...' (2010) is offered by US label Important Records. Musically the band hover between heavy psych, post and krautrock. Swelling walls of guitars backed by hypnotic rhythms are educing a stirring tension-filled mood. You will detect diverse influences from Acid Mothers Temple, NEU!, Hawkwind, Sonic Youth to name a few.


Mugstar
2006
... Sun, Broken ...
2010
Lime
2010


Listen here.



Edited by avestin - November 18 2010 at 11:19
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 19 2010 at 07:19
Here's a psych/hard-rock that may very well appeal to folks who like the things posted so far:


The Devil's Blood, a hard/psych rock band from the Netherlands have released their debut, The Time of No Time Evermore, in 2009. Their music seems to connect two planes; that of the sublime and otherworldly, through the vocals and that of raw power, through their heavy sound. 
Read a good review of the album here.

Enjoy three songs by the band below. Two songs from their album and one from their EP, Come, Reap.







...


Edited by avestin - November 19 2010 at 07:19
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 19 2010 at 18:07
Hi,
 
I'm gonna have some fun this weekend checking out some new stuff ... I really need some more of the mind expanding krautrock like thing ...  so tired of the "prog" mentality!
Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 31 2010 at 08:43
Last post for this year:
Tangle Edge from Norway have been around a long time now and in 2009 their first and third albums were reissued and apparently they have a new album out on vinyl (Dropouts)


Their PA bio:
"TANGLE EDGE is a norwegian music group that plays a kind of music that is purely instrumental and mixes improvisation with written parts. Stylistic they combine rock with elements of jazz, etnic and classical music. Though their style is very personal and unique blend, they have by their audience been categorized as differently as progressive rock, krautrock, free- jazz, space rock, canterbury rock, psychedelia, jazz- rock and experimental rock. 

The band was founded around 1980 by Ronald Nygård (guitars and keyboards) and Hasse Horrigmoe (bass guitar and 12-string acoustic guitar). The current lineup including Kjell Oluf Johansen on drums, has been operating since 1988. Since 1989 they have released four CD's, and toured England, Russia, Italy, Denmark, Sweden and Norway.
"

You can found those aforementioned reissues for 8$ herehere and here and here

4.00 | 3 ratings
In Search Of A New Dawn
1989

3.67 | 3 ratings
Eulogy
1993




Here's a review of their first album.

In Search Of A New Dawn
Tangle Edge Psychedelic/Space Rock

Review by ClemofNazareth 
Special Collaborator Prog Folk Researcher

4 stars This is one of those albums that is loved primarily by other musicians. Like a lot of raga and jazz music, these songs are full of instruments with odd tunings, obscure and finger-contorting guitar chords, and time signatures that don’t often include even numbers. Really entertaining and challenging for some young turk with a guitar and time on his hands who is willing to sit down and figure out what these guys are doing from a technical perspective.

Me, I’m just a neophyte with an acoustic guitar and a tab book trying to keep my fingers from bleeding vibrations from one string to the next. This stuff is way beyond me. But that’s okay too, because in the end music is all about what appeals to your ears and your soul, and whether you can actually appreciate the virtuosity of the artists is really secondary.

This is an interesting debut album from a band that’s been around for nearly three decades but who doesn’t seem to have a very strong following, at least not internationally. I get the impression they are a well-kept secret among their discerning fans.

This album was originally released on vinyl in 1989, actually twice, with one pressing being on a pink label and the other on a green one. The artwork is quite complex and detailed, and I assume the original vinyl was housed in a gatefold from the looks of it. The influences in both the artwork and the music housed in it are middle-Eastern, Indic/far-Eastern, and far northern Europe (Nordic, Russian). I doubt if you’ll find one of these if you don’t already have one. On the other hand, the record was also released on CD in 1994 and that version is a bit more accessible although you’ll still have to look around a bit. The 1994 issue is also a remix with a couple additional musicians added to the duo who recorded the original tracks. Since I’ve never seen or heard the vinyl I can say what’s different, but the mixing and production of the CD is exceptional.

These are all compositions blending raga-like arrangements, slightly psychedelic guitar and sitar, eastern instrumentation, and trance rhythms. Hardcore psych thirty years after the stuff was in vogue. But these guys do what they do very well, and all of them are seriously accomplished musicians with totally mastery over the instruments.

Most of the tracks are shorter than one would expect for this type of music, and the record has the feel of a sampler or EP throughout most of it. But the closing, fourteen-minute near-raga “Solorgy” shows that the band has serious intentions and the ability to generate both complex and substantive art. The psych guitar set against a persistent and hypnotic tabla and hand drums is seductive and mesmerizing, while the occasional forays into screaming speed-demon guitar riffing in spots gives notice that this is modern day stuff, not simply rehashing the sounds of the sixties. This track alone would have made a great debut EP for Tangle Edge.

Their music is a bit hard to find, especially if you don’t live in northern Europe. But Tangle Edge are a consummately talent group of musicians and their music can be enjoyed by both hardcore and serious musicians, as well as simple fans who like to get their ears dusted off once and a while. Four stars and highly recommended to just about any progressive music fan.

peace


















Edited by avestin - December 31 2010 at 12:39
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