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2025-05-18

cassette craze chronicles XL feat. BONG-RA, BRUIT ≤, DEEPSKY, LÉSION ÉTRANGE and TEMPÊTE SOLAIRE


Even though my player is driving me insane sometimes with complete unpredictability when a tape is worthy of being played and when not; eventually the machine will bend to my will. And I will keep feeding it with new stuff. Here the most recent additions to my cassette collection:







DEEPSKY - 1 Galactic Instant (2024)

At least as long as I haven't been to a full festival again, I'm still affected by the Post Roadburn Blues, so it seems fitting to begin with a tape I bought directly from the artists after their Offroad show in Tilburg's public library.

In little over forty minutes "1 Galactic Instant" features cosmic Ambient improvisations from 2023, recorded during two shows in Tilburg and one live stream.
Deepsky live in Tilburg 2025 
The guitar and effects / drums and percussions duo doesn't linger on ideas as endlessly as many other Psychedelic artists would do, but they're also not changing things up so fast that it could pull you out of the floating escapist state this music creates.

And even when Carmen Ra and Koen Wijnen get a bit louder and daring like towards the end of "Neptune" or play with a certain tension when they are "Circling the Ice Giant", the're always doing it within the atmospheric framework they've established.

Deepsky aren't on a mission to reinvent the wheel of relaxing Space music, but they're putting an interesting personal spin on it.








TEMPÊTE SOLAIRE - Heliospheric Dialogues (2024)

My second tape souvenir wasn't actually for sale at the festival, but a gift I received from a fellow Roadburner, who brought it with him from Montreal, because he thought I might appreciate it more than other people who he could have given it to. And you can be sure that I'm indeed enjoying it very much.

Tempête Solaire is a trio featuring Drone guitar master Eric Quach (thisquietarmy), which is already a plus. Yet this also fuels expectations this EP is subverting y being much more Jazz-oriented than what I've heard of his huge output so far.
His role next to Eric Craven on drums and Elyze Venne-Deshaies on saxophone is not even playing guitar, but eight-string bass. In "Nuages Magnétiques" they are starting on a vivid Free Jazz journey with some eery modern effect twists. It's dark and droning, yet also Spiritual and transcendent.

Both the "Dove Manoeuvre" and "Syzygy" show a more Psychedelic, yet also faster and much funkier side of Tempête Solaire. But don't think you have figured these tracks out too quick, because the unsettling Space sounds and distortions you wouldn't have heard in your grandpa's Jazz trio, will probably correct your assumptions immediately. It's a special niche sound. And I wish we could hear more of it that these very fine nineteen minutes.  








BONG-RA - Black Noise (2025)

It took me a while to decide in which format I wanted to purchase the new album of Jason Köhnen's main band, which once again has shifted its shape significantly.
I ultimately chose the tape from Tartarus Records over vinyl or CD, because the simple black box just fits the album title "Black Noise" the best.

Musically Bong-Ra partly returns to the Electronic break-beat solo project days as last celebrated on "Vaseline", completely abandons the saxophone Jazz elements of "Meditations", but definitely keeps the riff power and heaviness of "Antediluvian".
You can also expect sludgy Doom influences, yet embedded in a very different context, because the now Industrial Metal trio (which has since also released a cover of Godflesh's "Cold World") just is a different beast.

As I haven't been too keen on every of Köhnen's past combinations of Metal and electronic beats I came in a bit sceptical and needed a couple of listens until I was fully hooked, but boy, these nine tracks are actually an enormously satisfying throwback to the heydays of Nineties Industrial Metal, including a certain two-dimensional flatness of its synthetic sounds and sawing guitars. But somehow it's just what this delightfully demonic soundtrack to the demolition of mankind needs.

Select influences from Jourgensen and Broadrick, killer riffs, distorted hollow screams, obligatory voice samples and a mad drum computer going berserk. And the gruesome hopeless darkness of the closer "Blissful Ignorance" alone... Yeah, that's some great brutal noise. "Black Noise" rules. 








LÉSION ÉTRANGE - Lésion Étrange (2025)

Think there's an easy cheat code for writing music reviews by just reading the Bandcamp tags? Well, then try this release by Arsenic Solaris: "black metal  experimental  extreme metal  drone  free improvisation  jazz  jazzgaze  noise  postrock  Lyon".

Well, ok... forget what I've just said, because this actually helps, I guess. So why do I even bother always to find my own angle? Whatever, these two longtracks of twenty-three ("Alpha") and eighteen ("Omega") minutes by Lésion Étrange are really something!

Imagine Olhava's infinity-embracing Blackgaze, but with a more Heavy Jazz-reminisent drumming. A hypnotic swirl of Post Rock guitar licks and layers of Noise spiraling towards... a resolution in smooth yet menacing, dynamically grooving Ambient atmosphere, which finally grows back into the beautiful primal chaos of creation.
A dissonant yet magnetically transfixing meditation fades into celestial Drone. Ghost winds are howling through the void until they are blasted away by an annihilating Blut Aus Nord cacaphony. Only a soothing triumvirate of Swing, Folk and Ambient can bring you down after this.

Phew, what a journey!








BRUIT ≤ - The Age Of Ephemerality (2025)

The surely most noted album of this lot has to be the new work of the French Post Rockers Bruit ≤, which comes with a self-conception the word ambituous seems almost too small for.

Recorded as a patchwork of different techniques and approaches, from programmed demos over free improvisations to explorations of sonic space in a church with a variety of guest musicians on brass and guitars, "The Age Of Ephemerality" feels like a snapshot of humanity from a cosmic perspective.

What happened so suddenly between the age of a depopulated Europe under feudal religious reign and the post-capitalist chains of global digital slaverey?
You could write books upon books about questions like this. Or you let this band which talks remarkably loud and detailed about its process and message for an instrumental group, actually deliver on the promise of their words and give you at least a highly impressive idea of an answer while they melt together centuries of musical expression from church organ and classical strings to analogue synthesizers, digital programming and the huge dynamic potential of dreaming, contemplating, urging and devastating Post Rock to a towering whole that can hardly be believed to be created just by four dudes from France and their friends.

Even though it's put together from a lot more fragmented, sometimes seemingly random pieces, this album even eclipses the band's widely lauded 2021 release "The Machine Is Burning And Now Everyone Knows It Could Happen Again". This is how you fill instrumental Post Rock with meaning to the brim. Absolutely huge!

Thankfully the creators of this tape edition from Frozen Records took it as serious as it deserves and didn't half-ass its design.








2025-03-21

digital delirium with BONG-RA, RADAR MEN FROM THE MOON x TWIN SISTER, TDK / ТДК and many many other various artists


Did I freeload new promos again? Am I too poor to buy proper records/CDs/cassettes again? No and no. Or well, yes too actually, but it doesn't apply to this post here. These are actually all recent digital-only releases of... mildly varying length. The first one is a reminder that Christmas Roadburn is only one month away:




RADAR MEN FROM THE MOON x TWIN SISTER - Mirrors For Discharge (2025)

The finale of Roadburn Sunday 2022: A spontanous jam of Kanaan and RRRags led me to miss this comissioned cooperation of Dutch Heavy Psych machine Radar Men From The Moon and the trio Twin Sister, which itself includes René and Otto from Dead Neanderthals. Surely one of the toughest clashes of that extremely strong festival edition. I'm glad that at least I finally get the chance to hear what I missed now!

In total there were nine people on stage, including two bass players and three drummers. And they did pretty much what you would expect from knowing the featured bands - and probably even the best version of that. "Mirrors For Discharge" is a stomping work of hypnotic Industrial Sludge Noise with Punk vocals on top. This rumbling beast of five mighty repetitive steamrollers must have been completely obliberating to behold. Since there's no physical release planned at the time this is as must-have as a download can be!





BONG-RA - Cold World (2025)

We're not moving into too different territory with this new single from Bong-Ra, who have recently turned from a Drone Doom Metal trio with Jazz influences to an Industrial Metal trio with electronic drums. As one does. Or as Jason Köhnen's mood wants it. The title sounds very familiar and indeed this is a cover version of one of the greatest Godflesh songs of all time. Can it be as great as the original? Probably impossible. But great still this is. And surely a banger to perform during their shows. Would love to see that!

And yes, I will review the recent new album of Bong-Ra. But not today.





TDK / ТДК - ZHVK (2025)

This new three-track EP from Bulgaria continues right where "Nemesta" left off - with an absolutely bonkers clusterfuck of Post Punk, Mr. Bungle Avantgarde, Disharmonic Extreme Metal, Jazz, Noise and manic spoken words vocal performances. TDK are all over the place - and they are the landlords of this particular, delightfully paranoid place. This quintet plays in the top league of whatthefuckishappeninghere. Wish this was longer than just thirteen minutes!





VARIOUS ARTISTS - Who Is The Dreamer? - A Tribute to David Lynch (2025)

This release is unreviewable. I probably haven't even listened to half of it and sure as hell will never play the whole thing. So does it suck so bad?

No, but let's just say that 383 (three-hundred eighty-three) tracks with individual lengths between one and forty minutes are quite a task, even if the devoted listener burns the complete rest of his/her music collection. There might be record-horrible stinkers on this compilation or the best song of all times - and I haven't even noticed either while shuffling through it. However what I can say for sure is that the overall atmosphere feels very adequate for a tribute for the great late David Lynch.

It's pointless to list even a fragment of all the artists and bands involved in this mammoth collection. Naturally it includes a lot of Experimental music, but you'll also find bits of Rock, Pop, Hip Hop, Jazz, Country, Modern Classical and who knows what else in the depths of this lodge. There are variations on soundtrack pieces like the legendary Angelo Badalamenti themes from "Twin Peaks" or Ambient textures with interview snippets from Lynch over it. Some artists are only featured with one small track, others provide a whole album's worth of material.

This is the water and this is the well. Props to The Church of Noisy Goat for curating this endless surreal odyssey!




 

2023-09-01

Bandcamp Friday haul September 2023 feat. BONG-RA, BZAAT, CAZAYOUX and EMMA RUTH RUNDLE


Ouch, my wallet! Why is the first Friday of the month so early? Well, here are four artists who shut up and took my money for digital releases today:




BZAAT - Funkoholics (2022)

I saw Hadar Levi (guitar) and Aviv Mainzer (drums) aka Bzaat smashing the small Woodbunge Festival in July and I've been wearing the shirt dedicated to their song "Kill Confirmed" ever since. Time to finally get the album then, right?

"Funkoholics" consists of eight tracks of brain-melting instrumental Heavy Funky Orientally Grungy Mathy Hardcory Assy-Kicky Rock with a guitar seemingly inspired in equal parts by Morello, Weinmann and Hendrix.
And the only reason I excluded the ninth track "Staring Inside" is that it surprisingly has vocals, so I guess there's also a little King's X comparison in the mix.
It doesn't make sense to put these insane Israelis into a box anyway - they will immediately jump out of it.

This duo, this album - it's just pure fucking fun!  






EMMA RUTH RUNDLE - Engine Of Hell - Live at Roadburn (2023)

The memories and emotions triggered by this release are quite different, yet at least equally as precious. Emma Ruth Rundle's intimate "Engine of Hell" is still as wonderful as the day it came out and seeing it performed live in full was an almost magical experience. For me that was in Hamburg, since I had missed the premiere performance at Roadburn due to clashes.

So here it is and Emma capturing the completely silent audience in the packed 013 only with her voice, piano and acoustic guitar is as wonderfully moving as expected.
Nothing is cut between the songs, because her humbly and humorously talking about the songs and the transformative meaning of the festival for her is a crucial part of this album, which makes it whole and gives it another dimension than the studio recording additionally to the overwhelming emotional power of those songs themselves.

As an encoure she plays - on piano, not organ - the "Pump Organ Song" from the "Orpheus Looking Back" EP.






CAZAYOUX - Rendezvous (2022)

I just reviewed the self-titled debut album of this great Latin / World Jazz Fusion band from Texas, named after and led by drummer Forest Carazoux. If you've heard and enjoyed that one you'll surely have a great time with this preceding EP from last year, too.
Six tracks, mostly short, but filled to the brim with classy brassy funky summer vibes. Carazoux just play the sound of joy. If this isn't ultimate feelgood music, what on Earth is?






BONG-RA - Vaseline (2023)

He does this on purpose, right? Jason Köhnen has so many different musical outlets at hand to follow all his manifold ideas and inspirations, yet Bong-Ra, the once solo project, which he had transformed into an epic, droning and sludgy Doom Metal meets Jazz and World Music band, now suddenly returns  with an EP in the old Breakcore Electronic style. Ok, you're not confusing anyone.

But of course I'm not complaining, otherwise I wouldn't have bought this, right? There are still floating synths, which build a loose common atmospheric thread. It's only that now the mood isn't crushed by brutal distorted bass, but by a Jungle of super hard beats and noises. And what can I say? It rules! Wild stuff for friends of JK Flesh.

Slides in like... no sorry... Let's leave titles and artwork out of this mini review, before it gets silly, alright?







2022-11-17

cassette craze chronicles XXII (feat. ACID LUMO, BLACK SHEEP WALL, BONG-RA and WHITEHORSE & THE BODY)

Yes, you're right. I will probably need a new shelf in the not too far future... But for now let's start this with two tapes released on a regular in this series, the good cat people of Tartarus Records:




BONG-RA - Meditations (2022)

Even though most of Jason Köhnen's music is rather slow, it's not the easiest task to follow his prolific output. Being aware of that himself he's already released more than one newsletter explaining and differentiating all his projects. Most of them - even Bong-Ra, which I first encountered still being a breakcore solo thing as the support for a Dillinger Escape Plan show in 2017 - offer some variation of what he coins darkjazz. Several overlaps in personnel certainly don't make it easier to distinguish all that stuff from each other, right?
Well, if the doom metal bass shreds your speakers to pieces, it's most likely Bong-Ra. But on the second album of the project since its doom rebirth, things get significantly jazzier than on "Antediluvian" without sacrificing any of the shattering drone doom heaviness. But with many contributions from one of his partners in Mansur, Dmitry el Demerdashi on oud and jack of all saxophone trades Colin Webster, these "Meditations" sound less like a global sound collage than its predecessor, and more like a coherent band.
The vocals on the four tracks are mostly dark Type O Gregorian choirs and some unintelligible blackened funeral doom gasps, while the role of the actual lead voice is occupied by the saxophone. Together with many Arabisms this creates a sound which will very much speak to any fan not only of Köhnen's other work, but also of similarly minded groups like Wyatt E., Five The Hierophant, White Ward, Neptuninian Maximalism... wow, one could think there was a trend going on there, right? Obviously I'm all here for it. Awesome epic oriental jazz sludge!






WHITEHORSE & THE BODY - Whitehorse & The Body (2019/2022)

Also packed in the typical Tartarus cardboard sleeve we have The "we'll do a collaborative release with every band we meet" Body and an Australian brutal doom horde I've last written about back in 2014, when they raided Roadburn: Whitehorse. To say that it's nice to welcome them back into my world would probably the wrong wording, because if this EP is one thing, then it's hopelessly fucking bleak.
As so often with The Body the song titles alone almost want to make you slit your wrist: "In My Heart The Answer Is Yes, But I Said No" and "We Found You Totally Innocent, Which Is The Worst Crime Of All".  Damn, those are downers.
The history of this collaboration is a little bit convoluted, so let me keep it short: First recordings 2013, then shelved, revived and finally released on CD in 2019. Now, another three years later this is out on vinyl and this little silver-grey tape, enhanced with an Andrew Nolan and Bacchus Harsh remix of "In My Heart", as well as a Statiqbloom and a Lameness remix of the other song. And is all this necessary? Well, if you like sunshine and ice cream it probably isn't. But if you dig ridiculous noises, guitar distortions and vocal disassociation for the sake of the harshest mental breakdown experience, then this might just be your jam. Stare deep into the abyss of nothingness while you drift and dance to the electronic beat of depression! Maybe this should come with a trigger warning? Make it a challenge to live through this and stay in good spirits! Seriously though: This is good stuff. The punishing party ruining potential is just a bonus. 











BLACK SHEEP WALL - I'm Going To Kill Myself (sunset yellow edition) (2015/2022)

Still in noose mood? What better medicine could there be than this Sludgelord Records reissue of Black Sheep Wall's bluntly titled "I'm Going To Kill Myself"? In combination with the genius darkest of cover artworks I couldn't resist this item, even though it would mean waiting on the cassette to be rejected from leaving the brexited Empire by customs several times while kings and premiers were changed as often as a baby's diapers.
Ultimately the dry and filthy music was absolutely worth it though. Reminding me a lot of Lo! (vocals), Sumac respectively even more so Old Man Gloom (general sound and experimental arrangements) the three tracks on side A - each clocking in at almost ten minutes - are already brilliantly angry, twisted ordeals. But then comes the other side with just one endless piece of pummeling thirty-three minutes of riff worship. If this was purely instrumental, Bongripper would come to mind as an unavoidable reference. Obviously this rudely screaming, unyielding sludge epic sounds nothing like Metallica. Why would it? But it's called "Metallica"! That's just to fuck with your expectations I guess. Ok, this band also comes from California. But why not "Red Hot Chili Peppers" then? Who knows... I can only say that this album is a quite unique monument of mentally and sonically punishing doom. If you haven't heard of this gem before - get your hands on it! Especially in combination with its presentation this is a modern classic!











酸魯磨 ACID LUMO - 桔片 Orange Medicine (2022)

Speaking of presentation: It's time for some WV Sorcerer Productions love again! After their version of  Nadja's "Labyrinthine" this is yet another tape with a beautifully designed extra-long J-card. The only thing bothering me a little bit is that the extra craft paper insert with the English/Chinese credits and liner notes is too thick to fit into the tray, so maybe it would have been better to include a cardboard sleeve like Black Sheep Wall above have it, to keep everything together. Of course misspelling the album title is a little bit annoying, but who else makes up for mistakes like that by adding an erratum printed on premium paper? You can always tell that the guy behind this label absolutely loves his physical releases and goes the extra-mile if necessary.

The music on here is a fourty minute improvisation (same track on both sides of the tape) from a Wuhan underground collective, recorded in Shanghai at the Psyche Delta Festival 2020. Its instrumentation includes rock instruments like drums and guitars, jazzy saxophone, clarinet and flute, mystical synth, sitar and erhu (Chinese spike lute), the vocals are ancient drone incantations from another plane of existence. It's an excellent, very loose psychedelic jam with a sound palette as original as engaging, an ear-opening trip for anyone who claims to be familiar with everything free jazz. And then this is also very much a WV Sorcerer in a nutshell release. Aaand among the most exciting live albums of 2022 for sure! Brilliant stuff.




2019-01-30

BONG-RA - Antediluvian

Ok, strictly speaking this one is a 2018 release, since the digital version has been out since October. I had it on my Bandcamp wishlist but never really got around to really listening to it with full attention. Sometimes it needs a thing like a limited individual physical version to lure me. And a nice CD version with a stamped cover artwork this is, reminscent of some of Michael Gira's live album works for Swans

This however is Jason Köhnen with his project Bong-Ra, which - as I unknowingly witnessed before the last Dillinger Escape Plan show in Hamburg - until 2017 was a one-man-rave/noise-and-breakbeat-electro project.






BONG-RA - Antediluvian (Limited Edition Custom CD) (2019)

At last year's Roadburn Festival Bong-Ra presented itself as something completely different than before, combining aspects of various of Köhnen's other creative ventures.

Most obviously the band is now a duet, it basically is the Köhnen Pandi Duo, but this time they are not playing doom jazz with Köhnen on electronics and samples and Balazs Pandi on drums, but something much more pummeling and ferocious, where Köhnen stills brings in the knobs and keys, but most prominently plays a low droning super distorted bass guitar.

This is doom. And ironically the first comparison that comes to mind is non other than the meditative hypnotic drone doom of the almost-namesakes Bong.

It's actually a pretty complete description to say that Bong-Ra sounds like a direct instrumental crossbreed of Bong at their meanest with probably still my favorite Köhnen project after the discontinuation of The Mount Fuji Doomjazz Corporation aka The Kilimanjaro Darkjazz Ensemble, which is The Thing With Five Eyes.

Bong-Ra live at Roadburn 2018
Where Bong are cited, Zaum are usually not far away. That goes especially in this case, on the one hand because of the duo line-up without a lead guitar, on the other for the whole transcendent, dreamlike vibe unfolding on "Antediluvian".

Over a mount of heaviest matter doom there's a constant flow of all kinds of atmospheric sampled sounds from the realms of arabic music, ambient soundscapes, world music, nasty free jazz saxophone and smooth piano.

All in all the concept and execution of the new Bong-Ra sound are a very distinct and complete package, which should bring joy to many fans of sheer doom intensity and escapist experimentalism.


The only point of criticism is that "Antediluvian" ends too soon after four tracks with a total playing time of not even 34 minutes, which makes it one of those releases that can't really decide if its still an EP or already a proper album. Give me another track of 10+ minutes like the opener "Kheper [Pharoah's Serpent]" and this would be a perfectly rounded experience.

And then there's of course the lingering question whether my or any of the other ninety-nine hand-crafted CD editions will ever be opened. For now I don't have the heart to do so - and if I will someday, I'll be careful only to cut the thread, but not to break the wax seal.


So, do I even open this or not? Fuck, man.

Luckily you can spot that there's indeed a compact disc inside, but thinking about it Jason Köhnen could have totally made this a scam by just putting a piece of cardboard inside. Because most likely all buyers will stick to the Bandcamp download and would have never realized it, haha.


Remains only the other big question, why a man who evidentily has no problem to launch new musical projects for new concepts, has published "Antediluvian" under a moniker which formerly stood for such a radically different sound.

I guess he just thought that Bong-Ra is a way too cool name to be abandoned. Well, I'm not even a stoner and I would totally agree.





2018-04-29

ROADBURN FESTIVAL 2018 • DAY ONE : Thursday, April 19th

- Put me down where I can see
the Bong of Doom and Christmas - 


Cult Of Luna & Julie Christmas


If you've read my Roadburn reports from previous years you probably know that I seldom come directly to the point (being the freaking festival itself), but first have to bore you with what I did during the rest of day.

At least this time I changed things up a little bit and didn't stay in Oisterwijk as every Roadburn before for the first time, but north of Tilburg in Loon op Zand, an arm's length away from the national park Loonse and Drunense Dunes. Which is hell of a doom-ish name, by the way.


Good morning, Loon op Zand!

So as usual I brought some film cameras with mostly risky, long expired films with me (which are testing the nerves and patience of the laboratory right now) and took a little post-breakfast trip right into the heart of the desert.

Yes, you're reading right. Even though a good percentage of the park is covered with forest and heather landscapes, there is actually an areal of pure sand and minimal vegetation which actually counts as desert. Of course it's not a convincing Sahara stand-in, as there are way to many footprints, a green horizon on every side and that part where dogs are allowed to run without a leash. (And some dudes appearanty seem to bring their asshole dogs.)

It is impressive nonetheless and the almost ridiculously sunny weather of the whole week felt even hotter there. In case you're planning on sleeping outside of Tilburg next year and want to do a little "Dopesmoker" tribute photoshoot, I can highly recommend this place. The soft sand is a nice vacation for festival-weary feet also. And as we are in the Netherlands you logically also have the possibility to camp right outside the national park.

Here are some pictures I took with my Digital Harinezumi 3.0 (that funny little turquoise toy camera by which many fellow Roadburners probably recognize me the most by now, as it also produces all the weird trashy live photographs in my concert reviews):






But now back to Tilburg city where Roadburn 2018 officially started and my first steps after lunch carried me to one of the two new venues of the festival.



No, not that church! That's a little too far way from the action. A shame really, I could imagine some nice occult gatherings there.


The real new venues already seemed to be far away compared to the super short distances Roadburn has spoiled us with in the past. But in reality - and if you take the suggested shortest route -, the Koepelhal and right next to it the Hall of Fame are just five +/- two minutes away from the 013 and  Het Patronaat (depending on walking speed, traffic light situation and pedestrian concentration).

The Hall of Fame is a small club with very similar stage and room proportions to the Ekstase, which is no longer participating. There's also an indoor skate park inside the same building which would see several announced and surprise free shows (also for non-Roadburn visitors) during the weekend, where bands were playing while skaters would do their thing. Would have loved to see one of those, but my schedule didn't allow it.

Right now I was aiming for the Koepelhal, which is a huge fair hall, a venue so big that only half of it would be used as a concert location on Friday and Saturday. The other half was open on all days and hosted an exhibition of Roadburn-related artists (which are quite a lot by now) and the merch sale for the festival.

So is it a good or a bad novelty? Well, mostly it was an improvement, especially as last year's solution was very unsatisfying. But things could still be better.
The coordination of merch purchases can be hard on festivals anyway. Some bands come late, others leave early and so does their stuff. And at least my personal time windows for shopping were few and narrow. And I don't want to carry my vinyl or whatever around the whole day. Now there is the merch storage directly in the same hall, but it doesn't really help when it closes significantly earlier than the shows go on and you can't store anything overnight, but have to pick it up before.

So I bought my mandatory Bell Witch "Live At Roadburn 2015" LP (this year's special Roadburn release) and one of the festival shirts and took a look at my schedule and the merch store closing time... and stored those items in my car, which meant to ditch the chance for a good place at the Sannhet show which kicked off the festival in the Green Room.

Since I had only planned to see a couple of songs anyway I went right to the front of the main stage now and waited for not only my first show of this Roadburn edition, but also the first show to completely blow my mind.


Waste Of Space Orchestra

What is the Waste Of Space Orchestra?

It is what happens when you ask two outstanding and innovative extrem metal bands with an almost legendary status as live acts to compose and perform an exclusive commissioned set together just for your little greatest festival in the world.

Thus Oranssi Pazuzu and Dark Buddha Rising united their forces, came on stage with at first nine people and played a gigantic, overwhelming piece in ten movements. It had all the shamanistic, hypnotic grooves both groups pull off so good and doubled on the layers of atmospheric blackness.
After half of the set the main vocalist joined, who seemed to take his inspiration from Black Metal and  King Diamond as well as Diamanda Galas. Later all singers did this spooky almost-throat singing thing which took the intensity of this performance to a whole new level.

What the Waste Of Space Orchestra celebrated here was a glorious, majestic, evil monster. Fuck, most promoters would shit their pants to raise the bar so high with the first main stage act. Insane!


Khemmis

There was a slight overlapping and a line outside Het Patronaat, but I still got to see about two thirds of Khemmis' first european show ever. I love the two albums of the doom metal quartet from Denver, so there was no question for me to be there.

Even though they have a very sludgy guitar tone and incorporate growls into their songs, they were without a doubt the closest to traditional epic doom I saw this weekend. In parts they are very similar to Pallbearer, especially due to the amazing clear vocals of Phil Pendergast. All in all I prefer the slightly rougher, but with the strong Iron Maiden twin lead guitar influence still very melodic sound of Khemmis. They pulled off their material perfectly and you could already tell from afar how happy the guys were to play in this church of doom.

So there's absolutely nothing bad to say about their show. Yet admittedly it didn't have the full impact I had hoped for. But that was totally not their fault. Only after that massive Waste Of Space experience, a straight forward rocking doom metal band seemed almost a little too normal and not advantgarde enough.


Sum Of R


My next stop was in the Cul de Sac. While the duo Sum Of R set up their gear, which was one bass guitar running through multiple amplifiers, a transparent drumkit and some electronics, I was talking to another Roadburner about my Zaum experience on this stage last year.

And then the meditative instrumental doom of Sum Of R indeed wasn't droning that far from my reference. It had stronger post rock and soundtrack vibes than groups as Zaum or Bong, but if you are into those bands it's highly likely, that these two guys are also something for you. Flawless performance.


Afterwards I needed to get out of the extremely warm venue for a moment. The weather really was ridiculously good, as if there was an open air festival going on.
Two vital hydration tips from me: Always have a small plastic bottle of water with you! The venues don't mind, they make enough money with beer sales anyway. And if you have the time a short walk to the next super market to buy something to drink for the quarter of the price you pay in plastic tokens doesn't hurt your wallet either.


Insect Ark


I returned to the small club stage again for one of my most anticipated shows of the day. "Marrow Hymns" is easily one of my absolute favorite albums of this year so far, so as there luckily were no major clashes for me at this time in the early evening, attending the Insect Ark show was as mandatory as it gets at Roadburn.

With a similar constellation of two players at the front of the stage - but adding a lap steel guitar to the bass -  they were purposely placed after Sum Of R so they should share some equipment. Still there seemed to be some obstacles during soundcheck, so the duet managed to start just in time.

The dependency on multitasking and tricks like looping the lap steel guitar and the small quirks arising from it was what kept their compositions from reaching their full album quality close to the likes of Earth and Swans. But that being said the bar is set very high here, so this was still was a totally great show. And how drummer Ashley Spungin's smiled her way through that gloomy set was one of the most charming things of the whole weekend.

Roadburn newbies also could learn a lesson about the audience here as after one applause the anticipating crowd got so quiet that Dana Schechter asked if we were still having fun and someone just answered "We're being respectful."


After Insect Ark I admittedly wasted some time by being too indecisive.

The dark synth goth rock (?) of Kælan Mikla was circled on my running order and would have been my first show in the Hall Of Fame. I even went there to take a look, but before the band started I already left in favor of getting a good spot at the following Main Stage show. Grabbing some fries to eat on the way over took way longer than the term "fast food" suggests, so in retrospect I think that the time walking from A to B and waiting for the deep-frying fat to boil would have been better spent in the Green Room watching the saxophone jazz metal of Ex Eye.


Cult Of Luna & Julie Christmas

Cult Of Luna & Julie Christmas


But what does all this matter against the privilige of witnessing the last of those very rare "Mariner" shows?

Cult Of Luna and the unparalleled Julie Christmas, who I already had on my Roadburn wish lists before I even knew the swedish post metal super power, playing their joint album; what can I even say about this? Just like the Waste Of Space Orchestra performance it was one of those occasions the Main Stage works best for: a larger than life event.

Do I need to talk you through the album, which I love even more recently than when it came out or when I wrote my "best of 2016" list? Seeing these monumental songs come to life was just bliss - and in case of the somber Christmas-less "Approaching Transition" made me appreciate the piece even more than before.

And of course I have to single out that "Put me down where I can see you run!" part in "The Wreck Of S.S.Needle"! One of the two biggest goosebumps moments of the whole festival for me.



After a performance like this it's time to contemplate and collect your senses.

Or you just walk straight into the Green Room, into the first part of...

 *drum roll*

...



FUTURE OCCULTISM:


Annoying things first, but I have to start with some criticism here.

So the idea was to make the shows of three conceptually somehow strangely intermingled bands (Bong-Ra, Servants Of The Apocalyptic Goat Rave and Phurpa) seem like one big mystic thingy. So during the breaks there was still ominous music playing, the show wouldn't really fully stop.

Well, this didn't work. Especially the second break before Phurpa was painfully long. I had rather prefered it if the three sets would have been announced seperately with clear times on the running order - and if it only was to plan something different with my time for the middle part I wasn't that excited about.
Or - and that would have been the ideal solution - just take a longer break before this whole triptykon, put the equipment for everything on stage and then pull it off with really quick breaks!
Since Bong-Ra had their drums in the front, Servants were only playing two guitars and Phurpa exclusively occupied the back half of the stage, this could have been pulled off so easily with the professionals working at the 013.

Bong-Ra

And now finally to... yet another little detour.

I've seen Bong-Ra before last year, but until very recently I wasn't even aware of that.

Back then the "band" was indeed a breakbeat/noise/rave solo project and opened for the mighty Dillinger Escape Plan on their last ever stop in Hamburg. There was no announcement of the support act. And I also didn't recognize the man, Jason Köhnen, even though I'm a fan of some of his other work with The Mount Fuji Doomjazz Ensemble, the Köhnen Pandi Duo or now especially The Thing With Five Eyes.


But on this night we saw a re-invented Bong-Ra. As a heavy-as-shit bass and drums (plus lots of samples) doom duo they were the third band in this constellation after Sum Of R and Insect Ark, which I both admittedly liked a little bit more, probably because I had watched their shows from the beginning and in a more intimate venue.

Especially through all the arabic / egyptian style samples you could hear the influence of Köhnen's other projects on this new Bong-Ra sound, which made me wonder why he didn't present a live version of The absolutely fabulous Thing With Five Eyes, which would have been an absolute highlight for me.
On the other hand this already was very good impressive stuff and I shouldn't get so spoiled and nitpicky after this colossus of a festival Thursday, haha.


Servants Of The Apocalyptic Goat Rave

After Bong-Ra Jason Köhnen stayed on stage, switching from bass to six string guitar.

I wouldn't even be surprised if the second guitar player was the same guy that played the drums moments before, but he was hooded and on the far away side of the stage, so I don't know about that.

What I know is that the in-your-face electro black metal of the Servants Of The Apocalyptic Goat Rave, even though it's meant to be provocative, was just a tad too dull for my taste. Yeah, they were trying to make some kind of point there, but nope. Not my favorite Köhnen band by far.


Phurpa

Phuture Doom, another Svart Lava label artist (I assume also with some Köhnen participation) had to cancel this show shortly before the festival, but the surrogate was really something else.

Phurpa were three mysteriously clad figures sitting in the back of the stage, celebrating some strange Tibetan or whatever ritual, using mainly their voices and sometimes primitive wind instruments including a seashell horn. And I kid you not - besides one big brave moment on Sunday their throat singing might have been the droniest experience I had the whole weekend.

Totally weird, astonishing, exceptional. I couldn't make it through the whole extensive meditative experience, because I was a little exhausted from this long festival (and desert exploration) day.


And all this was just the fucking Thursday! At this point the imagination alone that there were still three full days of Roadburn extravaganza to come was almost too much to comprehend for my little earthling mind.





HIGHLIGHTS OF THE DAY:

Cult Of Luna & Julie Christmas
and the Waste Of Space Orchestra both delivered once-in-a-lifetime shows that will go down in Roadburn lore.
Phurpa for being one of the boldest and most outlandish Roadburn groups ever.
The Insect Ark and Sum Of R shows follow in a close tie.

MOST PAINFULLY MISSED:

I would have loved to see the solo show of Toby Driver, who I've met before with his travelling case at the traffic lights. But there was no chance against the Orchestra. At least I got his latest album, which had been on my wishlist for a while, from the merch later.
Hooded Menace out-clashed by Julie Christmas also was a pity.




reviews of the other festival days:

- Attakk of the Evil Belgians -


ROADBURN FESTIVAL 2018 • DAY TWO :
Friday, April 20th

- Go Spread Your Psych -

 

ROADBURN FESTIVAL 2018 • DAY THREE :
Saturday, April 21st

- If it doesn't make us wiser
Doesn't make us stronger
Doesn't make us live a little bit
What are we doing? -

 

ROADBURN FESTIVAL 2018 • DAY FOUR :
Sunday, April 22nd

- Leave the lights on
I'm going blind -

 




Waste Of Space Orchestra:


















Khemmis:







Sum Of R:












Insect Ark:











Cult Of Luna & Julie Christmas:























Bong Ra:
 





Servants Of The Apocalyptic Goat Rave:






 

Phurpa: