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Showing posts with label Skraeckoedlan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Skraeckoedlan. Show all posts

Friday, January 8, 2016

Toby's Top Ten of 2015

Having been little more than a part time contributor to the mighty Heavy Planet for quite some time now, I find it a lot of fun to check back in with you good people now and again, particularly when it comes to sharing my favorite records from each passing year.  To be sure, 2015 was one of the best years for heavy music in recent memory and trying to pick and choose ten albums out of everything I dug this year was a near impossible task.  With that said, I did my best to keep up with those records that seemed to stick with me the most.  It's worth stating however that music, as with all art, is highly subjective, and because of that, you'll likely find my "best of" list differs from many of my peers…and that is of course, just fine.  In fact, it's a very good thing because it means we're all collectively shedding light on even more great music for you all to pollute your ears with if you haven't done so already.  So with all of that said, I hope you enjoy my favorite albums of 2015, maybe find something new that you hadn't heard before, and I look forward to sharing more great tunes with you in 2016 and beyond.

10) Kings Destroy - Self-Titled


I've always been of the mindset that when a band decides to "self title" an album, particularly one that isn't their debut, it hints at that album being definitive of their sound…their vision…and most importantly, what it is that they're all about.  Upon hearing the first track "Smokey Robinson" on Kings Destroy's eponymous third record, I knew that to be true in this case as well.  This isn't the first time that this Brooklyn alt-doom four piece has graced one of my year end lists, as I was a big fan of their 2013 record A Time for Hunting as well, and said as much right here.  But the growth that they've shown from that album to this one is substantial, and for that reason, Kings Destroy earned a well deserved place amongst my favorite albums of 2015.  

09) Valkyrie - Shadows


Valkyrie are a band that have been around for a decade plus in one form or another, churning out a doom-laden hybrid of classic heavy metal and psychedelic rock.  On their latest record Shadows, a flurry of dual guitar harmonies meld seamlessly with a pummeling rhythm section that carries these seven tracks through a multitude of tempos and paces.  Come for the virtuoso performances, but stay for the bone rattling heaviness.  Shadows remained on repeat for me in 2015, and while picking a favorite on this one isn't easy, go ahead and check out "Wintry Plains" for a sample.  I promise, you'll dig this shit.  

08) Weedpecker - II


I was unfamiliar with Polish desert rockers Weedpecker prior to hearing their aptly titled sophomore record II.  My God man, this album is beautiful.  Tracks like "Fat Karma" and "Nothingness" feature soothing grooves intertwined with heavy layers of fuzz and vocals that just barely manage to break through the haze.  The band deftly constrains their heaviness with flourishes of subtlety and nuance that belies the beast within and when Weedpecker truly lets loose, they are devastating.  Give a listen to "The Vibe" as the band transfixes you by way of a delicate jam and then buries you with their heavy groove.  Weedpecker's II was easily one of the best records of 2015 and this band is firmly on my radar going forward. 

07)  Refused - Freedom


Seems like I always manage to stick an album in my "best of" list that may or may not belong on a stoner/doom blog and this year that album would be the return of hardcore punk legends Refused.  Nobody…and I mean nobody…is more pissed off than these four Swedes and you'll know what I mean as soon as you fire up the album opening "Elektra" with it's frantic, yet memorable hook and pulverizing vocals.  On subsequent tracks, the band goes from the freaky funk of "Old Friends/New War" to the devastatingly heavy "Dawkins Christ", to the wickedly fun "War on the Palaces" replete with horns and a sing-a-long chorus of "let's carry the dead."  Whether you were a fan of Refused's genre defining, now classic The Shape of Punk to Come or if this is the first time you're hearing about them, I encourage you to give Freedom a listen.  This is the most fun you'll have being pissed off since that time you kicked your little brother's ass for spying on you and your lady friend back in high school.

06) Freedom Hawk - Into Your Mind


How apropos that Freedom Hawk's latest record was released back in June, just as summer was rolling in for its annual three month stay full of sun, sand, and sweat.  These Virginia Beach natives, who also happened to grace my 2011 top ten list (here), have created another masterpiece of soulful, stoner jams that are perfect for rolling down the windows and cruising the strip on a blistering hot day.  Freedom Hawk somehow create jams that sound inherently relevant while also managing to conjure images of the 1970's rock n' roll glory days, yet never come off sounding intentionally "retro" or post-whatever-the-fuck.  I mean shit man, the first track "Blood Red Sky" sounds more Sabbath than Sabbath and the boys never look back from there.  Give a listen to the insanely catchy, head nod inducing, psychedelia of "Lost in Space" for a perfect example of the band's approach.  Taking the beach mentality of their hometown, these laid back surfer boys intertwine an undeniable heaviness with an easy going vibe to create an amalgam of heavy grooving, soulful crooning, and spacey noodling, and that's why Into Your Mind was one of the best of 2015.

05) Kadavar - Berlin


German trio Kadavar have consistently released stellar albums since coming on the scene back in 2010, but with their third record, the band really hit their stride.  Named after their home city, Berlin is loaded with tasty riffs, heavy handed drumming (I mean that in a good way), and groove for miles and miles.  I mean, have you heard "Last Living Dinosaur" for the love of God?  As with any successful music style, the retro-rock thing has become increasingly watered down over the past few years with more and more bands jumping on that bandwagon, but Kadavar manage to make the sounds of yesteryear new again.  More importantly, they craft songs that sound all their own.  Check out "Lord of the Sky," "Stolen Dreams," or "The Old Man" and just listen to the powerful vocals, the adept fretwork, and the thunder behind those beats.  Berlin may be a re-imagining of sounds from the past, but it sounds fresh in 2015 and was one of my favorite records of the year.  

04) Baroness - Purple


As I mentioned earlier, I was fairly diligent in keeping track of each album that struck a chord with me in 2015 so that I'd be prepared when it came time to put this list together.  One thing that made it a little difficult was the gnawing knowledge that Baroness wouldn't be releasing Purple until late December, around the time I'd be trying to rack and stack my top ten so that I could write this and get it out to all of you.  Now to be sure, Baroness have become one of a handful of bands (if not the band) that represents the face of this stoner/doom/sludge scene that we all know and love.  Some may disagree with that statement, but I'd argue the fact that they've been invited to play such unlikely places as Coachella and Bonnaroo or that they consistently appear on blogs like Pitchfork and Stereogum, shows that they've reached a level of success that seemingly equates to respect, even from those not typically associated with the heavier end of the musical spectrum.  The bottom line of what I'm trying to say is that this list was never going to be completed until I'd heard and absorbed the new Baroness record.  Given that the Savannah, Georgia band were making a comeback of sorts after a horrific 2012 bus accident that left them physically and mentally battered (and sparked a significant lineup change that saw them replace their bassist and drummer), I was even more interested to see what direction Purple (appropriately named after the color of bruises, according to vocalist/guitarist John Baizley) would take them.  As it turns out, my instinct to wait was spot on, because the new Baroness is easily one of the best albums of 2015.  While "Morningstar" opens the album with a heavy groove that'll be familiar to anyone who's ever listened to the band, it doesn't take long before new elements begin to appear, such as on the second track "Shock Me" which incorporates striking synths and as catchy a chorus as you'll ever hear from a band associated with sludge metal.  Subsequent songs like "Kerosene" and "If I Have to Wake Up (Would You Stop the Rain?)" further show an evolution for Baroness, one that sees them embracing the heaviness from which they came, but also evolving into a fully realized rock and roll band.  These aren't just a collection of riffs and beats to simply nod your head along to, but songs to deconstruct, to understand, and to experience.  Baroness are continuing their trajectory upward and onward and Purple was not only a mesmerizing comeback record for the band, but easily one of the best of 2015.     

03) Wildlights - Self-Titled


The duo known as Wildlights is the side project of ASG vocalist/guitarist Jason Shi and Thunderlip drummer Johnny Collins.  Now I'll admit, I'm not familiar with Thunderlip, but I dig ASG (their album Blood Drive was my favorite record of 2013), so when I heard about this one, I was immediately onboard.  Upon first firing up this self-titled debut, the similarities between this band and Shi's main gig were astounding (due in no small part I'm sure, to his distinct vocals) and it isn't immediately obvious why these songs didn't end up being on an ASG record.  Regardless, Wildlights pack ample amounts of melody and punch into these 12 tracks and I'd wager that if you aren't sold right away after hearing "Anchors" and "Rebel Smiles," then this record simply isn't for you, because that opening salvo is a perfect example of what you'll hear throughout this incredible album.  I'm always amazed when I listen to a two-piece band, at how much sound can come from only two musicians and that applies here as well.  Wildlights was by far the biggest surprise for me in 2015 as they came out of nowhere (at least for me) to knock me on my ass and I've returned again and again throughout the year to repeatedly get pummeled.      

02) Skraeckoedlan - Sagor


Unlike the previous album, which totally took me by surprise, this is one that I had been anticipating for quite some time, particularly since the debut from this Swedish band was my favorite album way back in 2011.  Four years is quite awhile between records, so my expectations were high for Sagor, which translates to "Tales" in English.  Now I've often wondered how and why Skraeckoedlan aren't a bigger name on the underground, heavy rock circuit…perhaps it's their name, which is impossible to say (and even harder to spell), or maybe it's because they sing almost exclusively in their native tongue.  Whatever the reason may be, I want you to know that if you're reading Heavy Planet, then you need to be listening to this band.  From the opening instrumental "Prolog" which flows into the massive sounds of "Gigantos" to the beautiful female guest vocals that coalesce seamlessly into the bands complex rhythms and chord progressions on "El Monstro," Sagor is an aural journey worth taking.  Listen after listen will have you uncovering yet another layer of sound, something you will have missed on previous spins of the record, and what becomes clear is that nuance and delicateness can be traits of music that is so overwhelmingly and astoundingly heavy.  Skraeckoedlan have created a followup more than worthy of their debut and it's obvious that they used every bit of those four years between albums to create what was most certainly one of the best records of 2015.        

01) We Hunt Buffalo - Living Ghosts

 


Truth be told, any one of my top four albums could have landed here, but Vancouver's We Hunt Buffalo take the top honors this year because quite simply, I played their record more than any other…I just couldn't get enough of Living Ghosts.  Whether it was the bluesy stomp of "Back to the River" or the stampeding drums and caterwauling screams of "Prairie Oyster," this album seemed to hit on everything that I love about heavy music.  Songs like "Fear" and "The Barrens" are weighty, not just musically, but lyrically as well and I found myself contemplating their meanings as I nodded along to their intense rhythms.  And perhaps its that deeper meaning that seemed to permeate this record that kept me returning over and over again.  Late in the album's run time, We Hunt Buffalo take a bit of a psychedelic turn with "Looking Glass" and a theme sort of appears from the haze…a theme that perhaps runs throughout the entire album…"all we are is living ghosts…waiting our turn to fly…my body is a gracious host…that one day will wave goodbye."  Goosebumps for days…album of the year.

NOTE 1: I had no idea prior to putting this list together that We Hunt Buffalo's record was also the album of the year based on reader hits to this site, but I'm happy to know I'm in good company with my selection.  Cheers all!

NOTE 2: I did not include compilations in my list, and instead focused on albums created by a single artist.  If I had decided to include compilations, the re-imagining of Jimi Hendrix' Electric Ladyland entitled Electric Ladyland [Redux] which was masterfully pulled together by Magnetic Eye Records would have certainly found a place on this list. If you haven't already done so, I encourage you to check it out.

For Consideration: Electric Ladyland [Redux] by Various Artists courtesy of Magnetic Eye Records

   

Friday, August 21, 2015

Song of the Day-Skraeckoedlan-"Mothra"



"Mothra" is taken off of the latest release "Sagor". Calculated Stoner Metal devastation at it's finest. For more information, please check out the following links: Facebook | Website

Monday, January 2, 2012

Toby's Top 10 of 2011

Let me start by wishing everyone out there a very rock and roll New Year! Based on the sheer variety of albums being mentioned by Seth, Zac and myself, it's evident that 2011 was a fucking monster year for this music that we all know and love. Of course, if you haven't already done so, I recommend that you make a point to check out every album on all of our lists...as well as those on Reg's...which will be unleashed tomorrow.

Why take our word for it? Because between the four of us, we've listened to hundreds of albums by bands from around the globe and we've done our best to cherry pick our personal favorites. It wasn't an easy task and if I tried to put this list together again next week...hell, tomorrow even...it may very well look different. But this is today and this is my list, so here goes nothin'...I give you Toby's Top 10 of 2011.

10.Rwake - Rest

Seth reviewed this one as part of his Sunday Sludge feature and I don't know about you, but if Seth says something is good enough to be his album of the year, then I check that shit out. Rest is an atmospheric head fuck from start to finish that will make you want to crawl into a hole and curl up in the fetal position. In Seth's words, "this is an album you'll feel, one you'll discuss, and one you'll remember." Do not miss it.



09. The Gates of Slumber - The Wretch

With their 2011 release The Wretch, The Gates of Slumber ditched their Conan the Barbarian worship and went straight for the jugular. This one is eight tracks of sorrow, longing and regret set to music. You want to know what a doom record sounds like, then give this one a spin. As I said when I reviewed this one last summer..."pure sonic drudgery." And I mean that in the best possible way.



08. Lo-Pan - Salvador

Dude! As soon as you hit play on Lo-Pan's latest effort and hear the opening feedback spill from your speakers, you will be hooked. From the driving bass line and soaring vocals of "El Dorado" to the unmistakable groove of "Solo", this is an album of pure rock fury...pardon the Clutch reference. In Zac's review for this one, he compared the vocals to part Maynard Keenan and part Chris Cornell...how can you not get down with that?



07. Borracho - Splitting Sky

You had to know that this one was gonna be on my list, seeing as I pimp this band every chance I get. Borracho stormed onto the scene this year and made an immediate impact with their debut LP. Combining stoner rock grooves, doom metal riffs and classic guitar licks, oftentimes all in the span of the same song, this album was definitely one of a kind. Throw in the barking, drill sergeant-esque vocals and you have yourself a fine slab of rock.



06. Elvis Deluxe - Favourite State of Mind

A lot of stoner/doom type stuff is abstract and somewhat conceptual. Not so with Elvis Deluxe. This band wallops you over the head with some of the catchiest rhythms and sing-along choruses you're likely to hear this side of FM radio. Think the zanier, Oliveri sung bits of QOTSA and you're on the right track. I got my hands on this one thanks to Zac's glowing review and months later, it's still in heavy rotation for this guy.



05. U.S. Christmas - The Valley Path

Speaking of abstract and conceptual...what a perfect segue into the latest from USX. When I first heard this gargantuan 38 minute song (yes...the entire album is one song) I didn't quite know what to make of it. But after multiple listens, it grew on me like a mold. The combination of over the top orchestration with the sounds of nature is...as I said in my review...arresting. This one requires patience, but in the end, it is a trip worth taking.



04. Ponamero Sundown - Rodeo Electrica

As soon as I heard the opening drum roll of the first track, "Evil Wand", I knew this album would be one of my favorites. Ponamero Sundown do not let up...ever! Take the laid back fuzz of Kyuss, the catchiness of the Foo Fighters and the heaviness of every grunge band Seattle ever spawned and throw it into a blender. This is desert rock at warp speed.




03. Across Tundras - Sage

Back in January 2011, if you had told me that one of the best albums of the year would mix the heaviness of doom with the twang of country, I would have laughed. But that's exactly what Across Tundras manages to do on Sage. As I said in my original review, this is "an incredibly original slice of Americana set to music." This is the sound of desolation...and it is beautiful.




02. Freedom Hawk - Holding On

Freedom Hawk released this album in October, I didn't hear it until December...and it shot straight to number two on this list. That should tell you all you need to know. But if that isn't enough, then just know that Freedom Hawk have written thirteen songs that are unforgettable and they sound kind of like Ozzy fronting Fu Manchu. This is "fist in the air, wind in your hair rock and roll."




01. Skraeckoedlan - Äppelträdet

I had a feeling this one was gonna top my list when I reviewed it back in September and damn if I wasn't right. Äppelträdet is chock full of ultra heavy riffs, more poly-rhythmic shifts than even Mastodon and soaring vocals sung in both English and the band's native Swedish. Skraeckoedlan manage to combine dissonance, power and volume with harmony, melody and rhythm and that my friends is why this is my favorite album of 2011.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Album Review - Skraeckoedlan: Äppelträdet


Skraecko-what? That was my initial reaction upon first hearing of these four gents from Norrköping, Sweden. Turns out the name means "horror lizard" and it's an homage to a fictional beast thawed from the polar icecaps due to global warming and set upon humankind as a sort of retribution for our haphazard ways. Vigilante environmentalists anyone? Works for me.

So with a name like that, you'd think this bunch must pack quite the sonic punch…and in that assumption, you'd be correct. "Världarnas Fall" (translation…"Worlds Fall") opens the album with enough pummeling riffs, offbeat time signatures and spastic poly-rhythms to make any fan of Mastodon crack a smile. Throughout Äppelträdet ("Apple Tree"), Robert Lamu's vocals are equal parts heavy metal howl and Gregorian chant…think Crack the Skye, not Leviathan. The lone exception being track number two, "Soluppgång" ("Sunrise"), which is surprisingly sung in English and combines the abrasive backing vocals of bassist Tim Ångström over Lamu's powerful wail. But it's Henrik Grüttner who keeps the entire ensemble from teetering into aural chaos as he layers the song with a sensational guitar harmony that'll resonate in your cranium for weeks.

"Chronos" is an instrumental that's as heavy as the titan its named after and features fantastic textures of sound as both Lamu and Grüttner allow their guitars to converge and branch off and back again through a series of stops and starts and melodies that are…for lack of a better word…beautiful. You could get lost in this music. The song feels as though Skraeckoedlan wrote it as a companion piece to the album's title track as it ultimately flows right into the riff that opens "Äppelträdet". And its here where I think I realized this band had a hold on me…probably around the time that Grüttner unleashes an absolute scorching guitar solo that sounds like some wicked hybrid of Devin Townsend's wall of noise and Eddie Van Halen's fleet fingered wankery.

"Haven" is a rumbling juggernaut of a song with another surprisingly catchy chorus that'll have you singing along word for word…even though its sung exclusively in Swedish. If I ever get a chance to see these guys live, I guarantee I'll be the moron up front demanding that the band play this song. "Doedaroedlan" ("Lizard Kills"…I think) sees the band slowing things down…albeit briefly…before they take off on another neck jarring riff-fest. This one sounds like the soundtrack to a death march primarily due to Martin Larsson's abuse of every drum and cymbal in his kit, which is just slightly more deafening than his bandmate's symphonic bedlam…but barely.

As you've no doubt already noticed, Skraeckoedlan interweaves both English and Swedish into the vocals on Äppelträdet, and on "Universe" Lamu switches back to the latter. Here the band continues to display an ability to batter your eardrums with deafening intensity, while gracefully captivating you with memorable hooks and rhythms. On "Cactus" the vocals (back to Swedish) are layered with a sort of psychedelic, echo effect that compliments the song's down tuned, elephantine riff. If you're starting to get the impression that this album never lets up, then you're catching on. "Fågelsång" ("Birdsong") keeps plowing forward with the band's unique balance of elegance and fury, leaving a wake of thick, massive sound…and bong resin…in your dome. Speaking of which, I'm not certain, but I think the album closer "Rokh" actually translates to "Smoking Point". Here the band leaves us with a jam that features a series of intangible cross-rhythms that'll have your head spinning.

I'll be honest, I'm not a fan of reviews that throw out premature "album of the year" accolades. I've listened to enough great music to know that my favorite song today will more than likely be replaced by something different tomorrow. But I'm gonna say it anyway…Skraeckoedlan has a real good shot at being at the top of my list for 2011. This band possesses a unique ability to combine dissonance, power and volume with harmony, melody and rhythm and because of that, these songs are absolutely glued into my brain. I cannot recommend Äppelträdet to you enough. In fact, I'm gonna put it to you this way…if you don't like this one, then perhaps rock music just isn't your thing.

Track Listing:

01 Världarnas Fall
02 Soluppgång
03 Chronos
04 Äppelträdet
05 Haven
06 Doedaroedlan
07 Universe
08 Cactus
09 Fågelsång
10 Rokh

Band Members:

Henrik Grüttner - Lead Guitar
Martin Larsson - Drums
Robert Lamu - Vocals/Guitar
Tim Ångström - Bass/Vocals

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Tuesday, May 18, 2010

New Band To Burn One To-Skraeckoedlan

The "New Band To Burn One To" today is Skraeckoedlan.

"The band Skraeckoedlan (translates into The Dinosaur or The Horror Lizard) from Norrköping Sweden, got together and started playing music in the late spring of 2009.

It was decided that the band was to play groovy, heavy music with lyrics in swedish.

In september of 2009 the band went to Örebro in Sweden to record their first EP, "Flykten från Tellus" (The Escape from Earth), in Bombshelter Studios with Oskar Cedermalm of Swedish band Truckfigthers as producer/technician.

The result was a 5 track EP with an abstract concept concerning the enviromental issues we face here on planet Earth, with the temperatures rising and the polar ices melting, forests beeing cut down and urban civilization spreading out.

In the EP the rising temperatures leads to a big horror lizard being thawed from one of the polar ice caps. The lizard begins to demolish the entire human civilization."


Here's a surprise, another freakin' awesome Stoner Rock band from Sweden. Following in the footsteps of fellow Swedish bands such as Dozer, Truckfighters, Abramis Brama, etc. the band has managed to create a masterful blend of groove heavy psychedelic Stoner Rock. Nothing utterly unique here people, just straight to your face rock and fuckin' roll. Can you dig it?

"they sing in their native tongue and rock like a trio of northern woodsmen from outer space, heroes in the epic quest to best the beast. Christ, between Dungen and Skraeckoedlan, I am starting to get spoiled on foreign language rock, and why not? In this particular case, we’re treated to what sounds like medieval, alien dopespeak urging on the psychedelic juggernaut of heavy fuzz that rolls over you like a cosmic tempest."
- http://www.brokenbeard.com/

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