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Posts mit dem Label Deepsky werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label Deepsky werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

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.








2025-05-06

ROADBURN FESTIVAL 2025 • DAY THREE: Saturday, April 19th

- Why Club Japan -


feat. CHAT PILE, DEEPSKY, HAATDRAGER, KUUNATIC, ONE LEG ONE EYE, ORA COGAN, SUMAC & MOOR MOTHER and WITCH CLUB SATAN



Good morning, let's enjoy the weather getting a little bit nicer and warmer every day, take a deep breath...


... confuse a cat during breakfast...


... and then... just step out of the sunlight right into a special corner of hell!







Yeah, right. So shortly after noon there's just no smooth transition into this. But I had been extremely happy when I saw that Witch Club Satan would be playing at the clash-free first spot in The Engine Room, because last year in Copenhagen, when I pulled the stunt of leaving A Colossol Weekend for several hours to see a Laibach show, the price had been to miss out on Wiegedood and this Norwegian feminist Black Metal trio at the great "Mini Roadburn" festival. Of course I had to take this chance to thank Madame Karma for giving me the opportunity to catch up on  their show now.

But "showing your tits doesn't make you a feminist" I overheard in a conversation later in the day. Ok, good that we cleared that up, because how could some random male bro's opinion on the matter not be authoritative, right? No dude, seriously not your call.
Personally I didn't let the frontal presentation of undeniably presentable breasts distract me from the impression that Witch Club Satan's very theatrical combination of rawest Black Metal and some myrkurish atmospheric breaks with a clear artistic channeling of female rage was a very strong and accomplished concept, which also was executed with a healthy dose of fun without taking away from the seriousness of the core message.

Not even permanent technical issues with the bass dropping out could affect the success of this performance. In fact it lead to the unplanned moment of the bassist saying fuck it! and taking a spooky journey through the crowd while letting the stage crew finally fix the problem for the final song.

The show also rewarded me for wearing my red Dymna Lotva shirt today, because after I couldn't exactly see what one member of this coven was doing at the edge of the stage due to the hard backlight, I suddenly felt a big splash of fake blood being spat onto my face, which led to a nice temporary social media profile picture and a couple of actually worried inquiries, haha.

No, I couldn't have imagined the day starting any better than this.









After my shockingly only full Engine Room show of the festival I headed over to the Hall of Fame for my only show in there today, where Roadburn for the third year in a row presented a young group formed by students of the Eindhoven Metal Factory music education institute.

Fronted by a singer who displayed a different kind of female rage than I had just witnessed, rooted in angry and desperate Hip Hop, Haatdrager combined post-metallic Sludge with Electronic elements and delivered a very convincing debut show in a packed room, which most young bands can only dream about. Not everything was perfect to the tiniest detail and one could question if the same amount of textures and heaviness could maybe also be achieved by only five instead of seven members, but come on, this was sick stuff and already had a very independent identity. I certainly enjoyed it.  



CLASHBURN:

Apart from a couple of immovable items I had revised my plan for this day several times, lastly this morning, when I realised that the order and showtimes of the inofficial free side programme performances I had taken over onto my printed schedule were all wrong. As thankful as I am for whoever entered the Roadburn data into clashfinder.com, that person was seemingly as unjustifiably dismissive of everything Offroad as my dear Veil of Sound peers, while I must say that the few Offroad shows I have made happen so far all have been valuable additions to the overall festival experience.

However this development meant goodbye to my ambituous yet not completely unrealistic plan to attend ten shows today, including Designer Violence at Kafee 't Buitenbeentje. And while I wouldn't be able to see Myriad's Veil, a Psychedelic Folk duo featuring a member of Temple Fang in the LOC Hal, which is Tilburg's public library housed in a huge former locomotive workshop hall, I could meet another duo from the 2024 Paradox line-up there again. So instead of picking up a beating by Gillian Carter as originally planned I opted for the complete opposite now. 






Set up in this quiet public space with a deliberately empty floor in front of the stage and most of the audience being seated on big stairs further away, this was easily the most atypical setting for a show I've ever seen in Tilburg, and since there were still the usual normal visitors reading and going on with their regular business this was not the place that would invite bands like Primitive Man, but rather choose acoustic or Ambient acts.

Deepsky with their cosmically meandering improvisations on guitar, effects and drums fit right into the latter mold. The circumstances certainly didn't make it easy to assess the audience reaction, and the drummer had to deal with playing a very different, electronic kit, since his regular instrument just would have been way too loud for the acousticis of this vast room.

So the vibe was a little different from last year's performance or from the sessions on the cassette I purchased directly off the stage afterwards, but it was what the attendees wanted: not a spectacular mindfuck or mental challenge, yet an instance to either drift away or center yourself and peacefully gather energy for the long rest of the day.

Roadburn sometimes feels as if you're transporting through portals between worlds, and this had been a strangely interesting resting stop on the inter-planetery journey. If the LOC Hal hosts shows again in the future I can only recommend going there!









Among the positive consequences of me changing my plan in the morning was that I now suddely had the opportunity to witness a Main Stage performance in full, which until then I thought I would only glimpse into for a while: Sumac and Moor Mother, both artistically driven entities known for deconstructing their respective genres to (and beyond) the limit.

Moor Mother's first Roadburn appearance with Zonal alongside Justin Broadrick and Kevin Martin had been a groundbreaking event in bending the festival's range towards Electronic Noise and Hip Hop, while the last time I had seen Sumac in Tilburg was actually not their 2019 performance with Peter Brötzmann right here, but when they played a much more intimate show at the Little Devil Bar in October 2022.

They presented their collaborative album "The Film", which combines musical abstraction with ultra-heavy punch, direct aggressive and expressive narration with advanced yet never pretentious Avantgarde arrangements, just in the best way you could expect from both involved parties.

So of course it was hard to put this show into a box other than That's Roadburn. Uneasy listening,  but actually easy to appreciate. It was unconventional. Expressional. Crushing. A releasing of forces. I loved it from start to finish.









I directly continued next door with One Leg One Eye, a duo formed by Lankum member Ian Lynch, which took some of the motifs of his bigger band - like bag pipes, his occasional Folk vocals, but also just the mystical Irish atmosphere in field recordings and visuals - and in a long immerse Ambient and Drone performance set them into relation with primevil yet also civilizational noises.

Since I had only briefly touched on this project in my preparation, this was much more captivating and powerful than I had anticipated. It was one of those somehow vague yet deep experiences that just wants to linger a while after it has ended...









...and that effect influenced me when I returned to the Main Stage, where another Lankum member, Radie Peat, was involved as one of two amazing singers/keyboardist in Øxn. While their slow tales, dirges and murder ballads surely were brought to life in a beautifully haunting manner, my hunger for Irish darkness was just satiated at this point, so I couldn't follow the show for long.



CLASHBURN:

From now on I was really just staying inside the 013 venue, since three of the five upcoming shows on Main and Next Stage had such high priority for me that any attempt to go elsewhere to see only half of any other thing felt like wasting energy. Not attending Midwife with Thou as her backing band, nor all those secret shows I won't even look up now, or any Paradox show - even though I had covered the whole line-up of the venue in a hype text for VoS beforehand - were the hardest pills to swallow. Seriously: I don't have many wishes, but Roadburn really needs at least one more Paradox day!




Asian representation was a strong throughline of the festival this year and the all-female Japanese Psychedelic trio Kuunatic drew a big exclamation mark behind it with a sound that was mainly performed on Rock/Pop instruments (keyboard, bass, drums), but through the choice of sounds, melodies and at times weirdly angular tribal grooves incorporated such a multitude of traditional ethnic influences that it created a completely unique musical world that was both earwormy and mystical, unpredictable and infectious. Especially the three-way harmony vocals bordered on utter magic. What a journey!

In absolutely unsolicited metabolic news I sadly had to leave during the last song due to urgent gastro-intestinal business, which really was the very first time this happened here in all those years, if I remember it correctly. For the next time - hopefully in ten years or so - I have learned that you should find someone to entrust redundant hoodies for this occasion, because cabins without any hooks or door handles provide an unnecessary shitty (bad pun intended) sidequest when it's least needed.









Since I had falsy assumed to be at another show due to my wrong Offroad timatable, I hadn't given too much thought about Altin Gün beforehand, yet now watched them from afar for a while. Their Anatolian Psychedelic Folk Rock was impressive and I surely would have loved their show under different circumstances. But just like with Øxn this was a case of my itch having been scratched enough, even if it had been in a far more Eastern variety. And also so far into Roadburn my head simply needs a break from all the sonic input every once in a while. 







Luckily I was ready for more input when Canadian singer/songwriter Ora Cogan and her band hit the Next Stage with their dreamy yet dark-ish and energetic Psychedelic Americana. With guitars, violins, keys and masterful Folk/Country drumming providing a captivating background for Cogan's ethereal voice plus some stunning harmonies this show show was simply all around wonderful. A great artist and yet another brilliant addition to Roadburn's beautiful stylistic diversity!

I wish I would have seen the whole performance. Leaving it early is actually my only active running order decision during the whole festival, which I really regret in hindsight. Because the spot I ultimately got at the final show of the day afterwards clearly didn't justify it. Maybe I will change my general 013 policy in the future and generally prioritize complete Next Stage shows over the first row of the Main Stage. But then, also maybe not. Still got almost a year to consider after all...









Did you bring a video backdrop? Another picture of a crashed car? Maybe a band logo? - Nah, just keep it black and turn the lights on "extra blinding"!

Chat Pile kept it even simpler than during their European debut here two years ago. And that included the banter between the songs. Raygun Busch had listened to their brand new "Live At Roadburn 2023" record before the show to avoid recycling his parade of cheap Netherlands puns - only to do exactly that. Hilarious!

But while the humour and his angry, desperate, fatalistic vocal performance between narration and feral screaming built a coherent fucked-up hole, which somehow tied everything together, you just couldn't dismiss the enormous potency of the music. Their mixture of Noise Rock, Sludge, Post Punk and whatever they deem fitting just kicks major ass. That tight brutal godfleshy rhythm section alone deserves ten chef's kisses. Has bleak frustration ever been so fun?

Most of the setlist consisted of material from last year's album "Cool World", so the music thankfully didn't feature as many throwbacks to 2023 as the sspoken words. But of course they played the song become Roadburn meme "Why" - and damn, how the crowd erupted during that one! Chat Pile, what a band! Fuck yeah, it was a blast!

And that was my Saturday. What a film! And still one more day to go...




reviews of the other festival days:

ROADBURN FESTIVAL 2025 • THE SPARK: Wednesday, April 16th

- Rodents in thy Holy Place -

ROADBURN FESTIVAL 2025 • DAY ONE: Thursday, April 17th

- Isn't it funny how the Body Machine burns? -

ROADBURN FESTIVAL 2025 • DAY TWO: Friday, April 18th

- Please stay close to me now
Weave the orb, Spin the dress
Don't you ever leave
me undead undead anymore -

ROADBURN FESTIVAL 2025 • DAY FOUR: Sunday, April 20th

- Diabolical Spite & Divine Healing -