Showing posts with label Polyrhythm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Polyrhythm. Show all posts

Tuesday, 10 November 2015

Instrumental Interpretations Part II: Serious Beak – 'Ankaa'

By: Phil Weller
Album Type: Full Length
Date Released: 03/11/2015
Label: Art As Catharsis




Self-described as playing “an amalgamation of psychedelic, progressive and poly-rhythmic discordant music,” this is all about creating atmospheres that, be they lucid and dreamy or viscous and tormented, has seen them create a cinematic work of art.

Ankaa CD//DD//LP track listing:
1. Proto (Menura novaehollandiae) (03:29)
2. Main Sequence (Dacelo novaeguineae) (13:00)
3. Red (Laniocera hypopyrra)(10:13)
4. Heat Death (Teratornithidae) (07:27)
The Review:

When your band lacks a singer, often times they lack an extra dynamic that you’re so used to being there; and because we are so used to having a voice at the forefront of music that, in one’s absence there can be something of gaping chasm. For Scale The Summit, ‘V’s’ technicality is impressive but it struggles to engage you – the lack of a vocalist taking away from its lure. It’s all fur coat and no knickers. But Sydney’s Serious Beak would be ruined by the presence of a singer. Just listen to the snaking groove of ‘Red’ as they flit betwixt time signatures like a ghost through walls and tell me you couldn’t get down to this. It’s a cocktail of flavours that reference the likes of Mastodon, Animals as Leaders and a battlefield. 

Self-described as playing “an amalgamation of psychedelic, progressive and poly-rhythmic discordant music,” this is all about creating atmospheres that, be they lucid and dreamy or viscous and tormented, has seen them create a cinematic work of art.

Opener ‘Proto (Menura novaehollandiae)’ provides the latter, the offbeat stabbings of syncopated guitars raising the curtain with a bombardment of heaviness. ‘Main Sequence (Dacelo novaeguineae)’ though, which follows, is quieter, more brooding at first and would sound perfect as a film score for some grayscale, tear stained scene, with hints of the epicedium coldness of Alice In Chains. That is until the sharp Mastodon inspired broken chords wade to the forefront of the mix, an air of Baroness in there too, building to a crescendo of a low down guttural groove. It’s powerful. It takes you somewhere other than your living room or that bus that stinks of piss on your morning commute to the daily grind. This is escapism and it’s bloody brilliant.

Each and every song takes unexpected ventures, just as you start to think you’ve grasped the plot there’s a sting in the tail and they invert your expectation with a wry smile. Serious Beak don’t need a singer, they just need your attention. They deserve it. If you like your music having a fine blend of intricacy and balls out bombast, then this is one hurricane of a record you’ll want to be swept up in.



‘Ankaa’ is available here

Band info: facebook | bandcamp

Sunday, 30 November 2014

Meshuggah - The Obsidian Trek (Album Review)


Album Type: Live DVD/Blu-Ray/CD
Date Released: 29/9/2014
Label: Nuclear Blast

“The Ophidian Trek” track listing:

1. Swarmer (1:58)
2. Swarm (5:22)
3. Combustion (4:21)
4. Rational Gaze (5:03)
5. Obzen (5:20)
6. Lethargica (6:04)
7. Do Not Look Down (4:56)
8. The Hurt (5:45)
9. I am Colossus (4:48)
10. Bleed (7:20)
11. Demiurge (5:18)
12. New Millennium Cyanide Christ (5:08)
13. Dancers To A Discordant System (10:14)
14. Mind's Mirrors - In Death - Is Life - In Death - Is Death (14:10)
15. The Last Vigil (4:09)

Meshuggah is:

Jens Kidman I vocals
Mårten Hagström | guitar
Dick Lövgren | bass
Fredrik Thordendal I guitar
Tomas Haake | drums

Review:

Meshuggah. One of the most influential bands in heavy music releases their second live album/concert dvd/blu-ray combination. Whenever you throw on a live album the only real important question is, does it capture the feel of the band live? The answer here is a resounding yes, having seen Meshuggah personally several times, their unique blend of polyrhythmic wizardry portrays a fury live that I've never seen equalled. This album successfully captures the intensity of the live performance and Jens Kidman's voice sounds almost better then recorded in a studio. The manic Thordendal solos really shine throughout the album, as well being a soloist who never shied away from deviating from the studio versions; his live soloing is as exceptional as his song writing.

The recording quality is pretty insane for a live album, indeed if you put this on not knowing it was live you would assume it was recorded in a studio. It literally sounds that good. This is just another example of Meshuggah pushing the benchmark of what is expected, other bands take note of the quality of this release.

A nice sampling of different stages of Meshuggah's career, “Ophidian Trek” does skew towards the more recent releases being somewhat ‘Koloss’ and ‘ObZen’ heavy. Including fan favorites “Rational Gaze,” “New Millennium Cyanide Christ,” and the stellar trio “Mind's Mirrors – In Death – Is Life – In Death – Is Death”, the glaring omission on this their second live release is “Future Breed Machine”.  It bit of a bummer for fans that haven't seen Meshuggah live, because it was not included on the previous live release “Alive” either.  It really is an exceptionally fun song live and I can only hope they include more from “Catch-33” as well, on future live releases.  That being said the highlights of this album are difficult to pinpoint but I'd say "Lethargica" and the Catch-33 Medley stand a bit above the rest, the bridge section of "Lethargica" is a little bit different here and sounds really good.   

Continuing their now tradition of being the band everyone else is trying to catch up with “Ophidian Trek” is a great capture of where Meshuggah is in their journey. It accurately chronicles one of the greatest metal bands of all-time at the peak of their art and is a fitting substitute for fans who have been unable to see them live. As we depart the madness of Meshuggah I am left with one unanswered question. What makes a trek ophidian?

Words By: Chris Tedor


Available Literally Anywhere Music is Sold

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Monday, 15 September 2014

Meshuggah - I (Album Review)


Album Type: Full Length
Date Released: 26/9/2014
Label: Nuclear Blast

“I” CD/DD/LP track listing:  

1). I (21:04)
2). Bleed (live) (07:33)
3). Dancers To A Discordant System (live) (09:49)
4). Pitch Black (05:57)

Bio:

Continuing with the momentum of celebrating their 25-year anniversary, Sweden’s extreme metal deviants MESHUGGAH proudly announce the re-issue of 2004’s one song EP, »I« on September 26, 2014 via Nuclear Blast.  Album artwork & concept are courtesy of MESHUGGAH drummer Tomas Haake, who comments on the EP’s mutant resurrection:

“This 21 minute madness that is the song ‘I’ is something we’ve always been extremely proud of!! Originally recorded for Jason Popson/Fractured transmitter record label, this was a “one off” that Nuclear Blast gave us the go ahead for - as we were under contract with them. Our plan was to just quickly write a little nugget of a song to help our friend Jason to kinda kickstart his label. It wasn’t quick however.  We ended up spending a couple months on this thing as it just kept evolving and kind of took on a life of its own. This song is really different as it wasn’t “written” in the normal sense, but recorded without anything more than very open guidelines/ideas as to what kind of style we wanted each part to have. For examples, the initial 1½ minute drumfill is an excerpt of around a 15 minute recording of me just randomly going off on a kick/tom fill. Once we had chosen which part of it to use, we had to chart out the hits on paper and guitarist Fredrik and Marten then basically used sight-reading/avista to get the hits right while recording. And this is how we continued through the whole song/process. We often get the question “When will you guys play ‘I’?” - And though I’m sure it could be done with a lot of listening and hard work - It’s really too unstructured a track. It would take up too much time and effort to make sense.

We’re super stoked now, to have this be re-released under the Nuclear Blast flag. Distribution and access to this little demon of a song was never quite what we had wished back when this was released, so we’re thrilled to see it be brought back to life!!
To further add value to this re-release, we added a couple live tracks and another weird little track ‘Pitch Black’ that some of our fans may have heard but probably not all, as it was only released in a limited number.
Enjoy!”

»I«’s 21-minute title track has been re-mastered and includes two live tracks recorded during the 2012 - 2013 Ophidian Trek World Tour, plus a previously unreleased studio track recorded in July 2003 at MESHUGGAH’s own Fear & Loathing studio in Stockholm, Sweden

The Band:

Jens Kidman | vocals
Marten Hagström | guitar
Fredrik Thordenthal | guitar
Dick Lövgren | bass
Tomas Haake |drums & voice

Review:

Meshuggah’s 2004 I EP is a piece of music unlike any other. In plain terms, it could be seen as the conceptualisation of the album Catch 33 which followed a year later, but really it is much more than that. Reading deeper into its creation you learn that not only is this a continuous piece of music or single ‘song’, but it’s also one of the most complex creations of any band ever.

The idea behind the I EP came from the tour de force that is Tomas Haake and Fredrik Thordendal. Random spasmodic drum patterns recorded by Haake were meticulously studied by Thordendal beat by beat to create matching guitar riffs, which in turn were recorded and vocals layered on top.

Split into many ‘movements’ the pace doesn’t really slow. Only in breakdown sections of ambient spooky guitar parts does the reprieve of polyrhythmic mayhem poise to settle the insanity that is I.

The composition is exactly what fans of Meshuggah are used to. Brutality, complexity, savage low A tonality and ambience amongst pandemonium. It’s impossible for any Meshuggah fan not to love this EP, so much of what inspired future records can be heard for the first time in a condensed form appeasing every want and yearning for that ‘Meshuggah sound’.

Remastering an album of such significance in a bands career is a monumental task.  To bring it up to a modern sound or just improve the clarity of what has already been laid down, which is a hard decision. Do you appease fans of the old, or fans of the new?  What the remastering has achieved is finding that happy medium. One noticeable thing about the original mix is that it felt quite squashed and flat. The overly compressed sound was definitely something that always bothered me as it subtracted hugely from the guitar tones and buried the vocals. I can happily say now that everything is in its right place, with the bass bought up to a level where it gives the guitars all the sonic dimensions I could have hoped for. The ambient background guitars are full of clarity to the point where you can actually make out each stroke and the drums aren’t just clicks.

As for the rest of the EP, the tracks included have been floating around for a while. The live tracks greatly capture the live Meshuggah sound; a good balance to the instruments is welcome as you can tell it was directly recorded from the mixing desk. The bonus recording of ‘Pitch Black’ was originally given away for free from Scion AV awhile after the release of Koloss, and is a solid track akin to the album that preceded it.

In all honesty, how can this get a bad review? Meshuggah fans everywhere are constantly on the edge of their seat waiting for their overlords of chug to put new material out. Talking to a Meshuggah fanboy is like talking to a Tool fanboy, while there’s material they don’t listen to regularly, everything they have done is the best thing you’ve ever heard. It’s like they have control of our brain using some rhythmic morse code embedded into their songs or something. Thanks for reading Y’all!

Words by: Asher G. Alexander

You can pick up a copy here



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