Monday, March 17, 2014

New Down Song: "We Knew Him Well"

New Orleans sludge metal super group Down have just released a new track from their upcoming EP, Down IV Part II. The band is made up of members from many other prominent sludge bands from the NOLA scene: Jimmy Bower on drums (Eyehategod), Phil Anselmo on vocals (Philip H. Anselmo and the Illegals), Pepper Keenan on guitar (Corrosion of Conformity), Pat Bruders on bass (formerly of Crowbar), and the recently added Bobby Landgraf on guitar (formerly of Honky), who replaced longtime Down member Kirk Windstein (Crowbar). The upcoming Down release will be Landgraf’s first with the band, and his playing on the newly released track “We Knew Him Well” shows real promise. The song can be streamed on SoundCloud:



The EP will be released on May 13, 2014 via Phil Anselmo’s Housecore records. 

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

New Eyehategod Song: "Agitation! Propaganda!"

In the aftermath of losing founding drummer Joey Lacaze, Louisiana sludge metal band Eyehategod has decided to get a new drummer and forge on. Although it is undoubtedly tough for the band losing a longtime core member, they have soldiered storms before, such as hurricane Katrina, as well as heroin addiction. While fans are all devastated by the loss of Lacaze, the band has just presented a sort of “light at the end of the tunnel”: a new song, and the announcement of a new album on May 26. Their new album is certainly going to be a bittersweet affair: the first Eyehategod record of all new material in fourteen years, but also the to feature Joey Lacaze (his drum tracks recorded before he died were used in the recording). All that said, however, the new tune the band just released, “Agitation! Propaganda!,” is stellar. 



It has a strong hardcore vibe rarely seen in the band’s catalogue, similar to their song “Peace Thru War (Thru Peace and War)” (found on the Dopesick album), but also features a sluggish and crushingly heavy slow section at the end, as is customary with Eyehategod. The band had released another song in 2012 (while Lacaze was still alive) called “New Orleans is the New Vietnam” that while being a solid song, had a different approach that seemed more straightforward than the rest of the band’s material and had fans (or at least me, personally) wondering how a new record would sound. But the group’s new song goes straight for the jugular. This gives me newfound hope that despite losing a vital member, Eyehategod will release a stellar and brutally heavy record as always.

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Thoughts on Sleep’s "Dopesmoker"

Sleep is a stoner/doom metal trio from San Jose, California. They are known mainly for two releases: Holy Mountain, a seminal stoner metal album, and Dopesmoker, an album consisting of two songs: the sixty-three minute long title track, and an eleven minute live recording called “Sonic Titan.” Dopesmoker predictably presented some problems for the band, however. Their label, London Records, did not know what to think of such a massively long track, and refused to release it in its current form. The song was reworked in the studio down to fifty-two minutes under the title “Jerusalem, but there was little noticeable difference between the two and the label again refused to release it. Frustrated by the situation, the band broke up. The album was later released in its full form in 2003, then re-released with new artwork and an extra track in 2012.

There were several covers for the album over its many versions: the original Dopesmoker had a bearded rider atop a flying steed with many heads, and the trimmed version (called Jerusalem) featured a priest bowing before an altar. However, the one that I feel best embodies the song was the cover of the 2012 re-release. The lyrical content of the song is about a stoner caravan crossing through the holy land, and that is what was painted by artist Arik Roper, who was tasked with creating the cover.

While the caravan pictured may not appear to be crossing any Earthly desert (see: the two moons), this cover certainly gives the record the feel that the title track embodies: that of an epic journey, albeit one heavily affected by (or even created by) cannabis smoke, hence the title of the album. When actually listening to the song, it is best to isolate oneself from others, so as to ensure that the listening will not be interrupted, as well as simply allowing the listener to fully concentrate on what they are hearing. From there, let the music take you. The ebbing and flowing riffs create an atmosphere embodied by the album cover, and it is best to let one’s imagination roam as your mind fills itself with images produced by the music. If this description starts to sound like the influence of drugs on a person’s mind, that’s because it’s intended to come across like that. Only this time, the music itself is the drug. There are some bands that many believe can only be appreciated while high, but then there are bands that with the appropriate listening environment have the power to influence your mind in a similar way. If you are an anti-drug person, do not mistake this as a drug endorsement, it is instead a description of the effect of the music. For instance, during my concentrated listening experience (I have only listened to the entire song four times, and only one of those four times was I fully concentrating on the music) I was carried away to a different dimension by the massive power of the riffs, a sensation which I have not felt in that powerful of a way since. If given the proper attention and respect, a listening session of this album is indeed a powerful thing.

To me, “Dopesmoker” is more than just a song, it is an experience. One can review the track based on its stoner/doom qualities, but that is extremely limiting in my view. Most bands’ songs can be appreciated on simply a musical level, but this remains the only level on which they can be viewed. While many of these bands do stand out as exceptionally good, there is no other way to appreciate their music. Sure, the music itself may hit listeners on an emotional level for their own reasons, but they were originally composed to be only songs. But there are some bands whose music transcends the classification of simple “songs,” and enter the realm of being things to be experienced rather than just listened to. The music of bands like Swans and Godspeed You! Black Emperor (while in no way can they be compared to Sleep) embody this idea in its most profound form. In my opinion, Dopesmoker is one such recording. While its massive length may make it seem pretentious and inaccessible to many, it is simply the length necessary to present itself and what it embodies.