Bezoar
Wyt Deth
No World Order Records
That’s it. You’ve convinced me, Brooklyn. You are now thee number one spot in the world for heavy, weird, fuzzy, psychedelic music. Okay? Hull, Elks, Bad Dream, Weird Owl, Children…and now Bezoar. I’m sure there’s plenty more rats crawling around in the sewers there that I’m not even aware of, but as far as I’m concerned right now, none of ‘em are bigger — or carry more diseases — than Bezoar. I mean, even their name invokes images of a mythical beast from children’s fables, and this three-headed varmint more than lives up to the hairy, red eye scares it promises. Expounding doom-infused wyt noize, Bezoar’s debut full-length, Wyt Deth, is a lumbering mess of feedback and mildewy riffs, a witchy, warbling deth-psych album that’s definitely hard to listen to, but surely impossible to turn off. Whether it’s the short and sweet allure of songs like “Burn Everything” and “Nikola” or the long and devastating hold of songs like “We Are Not Alone” and “Knight,” the whole damn thing is nauseously enchanting, and you might think it sounds like a dungeon full of hungry, dying prisoners moaning for sunlight, water, and mercy, but that’s just Sara Palmquist (bass/vocals), Tyler Villard (guitar), and Justin Sherrell (drums) laying down the most mystical stoner metal you’re likely to hear all year. Awesome stuff.
Listen to Wyt Deth in it’s entirety right here!
Posted by Jeff on Jan 27 2012 in Reviews
Tags: Bad Dream, beast, Bezoar, Brooklyn, Burn Everything, Children, devastating, disease, doom, dungeon, dying, Elks, enchanting, feedback, fuzzy, hairy, heavy, Hull, hungry, Justin Sherrell, Knight, mercy, Metal, mildew, moan, mystical, mythical, Nikola, No World Order Records, psychedelic, rat, riffs, Sara Palmquist, scare, sewers, stoner, Tyler Villard, varmint, warbling, We Are Not Alone, weird, Weird Owl, witchy, Wyt Deth
Black Pyramid
Black Pyramid II
Meteorcity
Although it’s been kicking around for awhile now, Black Pyramid’s second full-length isn’t slated for an official release until the end of January, but I didn’t even think there was going to be a II given some of the band’s cryptic postings about their demise. Truth be told, I thought they were done, and I still don’t know what the real story is, but lo and behold the band lives, and it just turns out that singer/guitarist Andy Beresky is out, having been replaced by Darryl Shepard of Milligram, Hackman, and Blackwolfgoat fame. However, II‘s hollow steamroller is driven by the original line-up, so consider this your final chance to hear Beresky lead Black Pyramid’s doom machine right into the Earth’s crust and dust. Which is exactly what he does, as Black Pyramid’s signature, banner-flying, fuzzy charge storms the gates of Hades heads down and helmets first. Black Pyramid have always found a home in the fire, and II is certainly no exception; in fact, they appropriate it so damn well that they’ve grown confident enough to spread their blazing wings and fly uncommon patterns, especially on the folksy “Tanelorn” and the album’s two epics, “Dreams of the Dead” and “Into the Dawn.” While “Endless Agony,” “Mercy’s Bane,” “Night Queen,” “Sons of Chaos,” and “The Hidden Kingdom” deliver the familiar Sleep-on-speed thunder we’ve come to expect from Black Pyramid, the band does add a bunch of energized riffs, nasty solos, and tempered breakdowns into the mix, making this effort ambitious and quite successful. There sure is a shit ton of heavy coming out of Massachusetts these days, and only time will tell if Black Pyramid will continue to play a giant part in that with Shepard at the helm (there’s no reason to think they won’t). And what of Beresky? He’s too good to stay down for long, you can count on that.
Listen to “Mercy’s Bane” from Black Pyramid II!
Posted by Jeff on Jan 1 2012 in Reviews
Tags: Andy Beresky, Black Pyramid, Blackwolfgoat, blazing, breakdowns, crust, Darryl Shepard, demise, doom, Dreams of the Dead, dust, Endless Agony, energized, epic, fire, fuzzy, Hackman, Hades, heavy metal, hollow, II, Into the Dawn, Massachusetts, Mercy's Bane, Meteorcity, Milligram, nasty, Night Queen, riffs, sleep, solos, Sons of Chaos, speed, storm, Tanelorn, tempered, The Hidden Kingdom, thunder, wings
The Heavy Eyes
Heavy Eyes
Self-Released
Full-on Delta doom from these Heavy Eyes, whose debut full-length is dripping with enough Southern cough syrup to make you forget you’re listening to a stoner rock record. Between the tumbleweed riffs of songs like “Wax Apple” and “Where is Wilder” to the Memphis medicine of songs like “Iron Giants” and “It’s Been So long,” Heavy Eyes slides on through the smoke and takes a midnight sail down the winding river of groove. Of course, this is a stoner rock record, a real lid-dropper, and the fuzzy psych-blues of songs like “5%,” “Voytek,” and “Supermoon” play right into your floating hand, man. A real solid album, this one, and The Heavy Eyes do awfully well to treat you like the custodial prize in the landmark case of Cactus V. Clutch, presided over by judge Fu Manchu in the court of Sabbath. Hell, you just have to have an affinity for bands with ‘leaf’ in their name, and The Heavy Eyes will do right by you.
Listen to The Heavy Eyes’ Heavy Eyes right here!
Posted by Jeff on Nov 26 2011 in Reviews
Tags: 5%, blues, Cactus, Clutch, cough syrup, Delta, doom, float, Fu Manchu, fuzzy, groove, Heavy Eyes, Iron Giants, It's Been So long, leaf, medicine, Memphis, midnight, pysch, river, Rock, Sabbath, slide, smoke, southern, stoner, Supermoon, The Heavy Eyes, tumbleweed riffs, Voytek, Wax Apple, Where is Wilder, winding