Sometimes German, sometimes English. • The title of this blog used to change from time to time. • Interested in me reviewing your music? Please read this! • I'm also a writer for VeilOfSound.com. • Please like and follow Audiovisual Ohlsen Overkill on Facebook!
Posts mit dem Label Healthyliving werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label Healthyliving werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

2023-12-25

MUSIC 2023: top 23 albums


Albums which I play in the car all the time. Albums which are way too long to listen to every day. Albums which I already listened to too much. Albums which I unjustifiably neglected. Albums with a profound message. Albums which are just pure fucking fun. Albums from bands I've been a fan of for ages. Albums I only just got in the last couple of weeks. And so on and so forth...

So many different albums with so many criteria coming into play. So many different moods and styles. What is more valuable? An album which calms me down? And album which makes me think? An album which puts me into a cathartic rage?

I feel that it's getting harder to come to a satisfying result when putting together my favorite studio releases of the year every time I'm doing this. My usual practice of only considering studio albums which I own as physical copies narrows the list down a little (obviously not always in a way that's fair), but the task still remains impossible. At some not too far point in the future I will inevatibly look back on some choices I made or missed and shake my head in disbelief.
How couldn't I with all those varied great releases that just didn't fit in anymore? When I had settled on 22 (or really 24, because I bent the rules twice) I still had a competition of names like Årabrot, CrawlEdena Gardens, FleshvesselJegong, John ZornLes NadieOnkos, Sulphur Aeon and more battling for that last spot. And that's good! As long as it's a pain the ass to put together a ranking like this it means that I've been exposed to an abundance of great music.

In this spirit: Here are - cast in stone for all eternity, or at least until tomorrow morning - my personal...



TOP 23 albums of 2023:

  1. BELL WITCH - Future's Shadow Part 1: The Clandestine Gate

    Even though the one eighty-three-minutes song album (their second in that specific format after "Mirror Reaper"!) cannot even be conclusively judged yet, because it is only the first part of a trilogy, I already predicted back in July that I would probably crown this glacially moving Funeral Doom behemoth as album of the year. And how could I not? Dylan Desmond and Jesse Shreibman have even improved their songwriting and arrangement skills and expanded their sound palette to appeareantly score the sorrowful fading of existence as a whole. Stillstand beyond the laws of time has never felt as crushing as floating here, in the void behind the Clandestine Gate.








  2. LAIBACH - Sketches of the Red Districts

    Yes, the Slovenian collective has made it into top positions of four different MUSIC 2023 lists now! One answer to how they can pull this off lies in several writing teams. "Sketches of the Red Districts", an Industrial / Ambient / Electronic historical recontextualization of Laibach's birth myth in 1980 in connection with a bloody conflict between Yugoslav fascists and the local labour movement of Trbovlje in 1924, saw the current drummer and guitar player step forward to create an atmospheric masterpiece, which is one of the most classic sounding Laibach releases post the 1980's, but still presents a fresh new take on their aesthetics.









  3. POIL UEDA - PoiL Ueda / Yoshitsune

    Bending the list rules, part one: This spot inevitably had to be shared by two equally brilliant albums, on which traditional Japanese vocalist and satsuma-biwa player Junko Ueda tells epic stories from the Far Eastern Middle Ages with the aid of the absolutely bonkers Magma- and King Crimson-inspired French Avantgarde Prog Rock group PoiL. Both albums of their joint cross-cultural project PoiL Ueda burst with boundless creativity in stunningly intense virtuosic performances. Undoubtly one - err, two - of the wildest and most exciting musical adventures of the year!









  4. BIG|BRAVE - Nature Morte

    Once again the Canadian Noise Rock trio crushes our hearts, souls and bodies with the deeply satisfying Drone of monolithic guitars and the honest rawest emotion in Ronin Wattie's piercing heartfelt vocal  performance. In a discography that has never shown any sign of weakness "Nature Morte" sees Big|Brave broadening their compositional toolset by drawing lessons from the previous collaboration with The Body without sacrifing their principles of maximalist minimalism.








  5. HEALTHYLIVING - Songs of Abundance, Psalms of Grief

    While it's impossible to pin this band down on one specific reference like (old) Gggolddd, Brutus, Dool or Chelsea Wolfe, because every track shows a different side of their Post Rock/Punk/Hardcore/Doom/Noise/etc. mix and showcases another facet of Amaya López Carromero's amazing voice, which you might also know from her solo project Maud the Moth, one thing is for sure: Their amazing debut album is filled to the bursting point with strong songs which won't leave your head anytime soon.









  6. THE KEENING - Little Bird

    After the rest of Salt Lake City's sadly disbanded Doom Metal giants SubRosa have already released an album as The Otolith in 2022, it was now time for front woman and main songwriter Rebecca Vernon to also step into the light again. And be it as singer and lyricist or as a composer, arranger and multi-instrumentalist - she has so much to say on this genre-transcending full-length of wonderful Alternative Gothic Doom Folk greatness! The epic closer "The Truth" alone in truth is one of the greatest songs of the year. Gorgeous!   









  7. ESBEN AND THE WITCH - Hold Sacred

    "I am down here, in my chapel, where I'm safe from the evils of the world." Esben And The Witch's goodbye before an undetermined long break due to living far apart from each other now, is a magically intimate beauty I cannot stop listening to. Never has the trio's music been so stripped-down Ambient, so centered around Rachel Davies' mesmerizing voice and words. "Hold Sacred" goes right to the soul. This album is a soothing, consouling embrace in the darkness.









  8. DYMNA LOTVA - Зямля Пад Чорнымі Крыламі: Кроў (The Land Under The Black Wings: Blood)

    A Belarusian Post Black Metal band fleeing from the regime - right into Ukraine before Putin's  invasion - releases an anti-war album based on both the horrors of WWII in their home country and their personal experiences. Even after that serious premise you're hardly prepared for the gut-wrenching storytelling and adamant earnest stance of "Land Under The Black Wings: Blood". Musically Dymna Lotva's Black Metal incorporates Doom as much as influences from Folk, Classical music and even Jazz in a similar way artists like Dordeduh or White Ward are doing it. Very haunting and unfortunately so significant!









  9. GILDED FORM - Gilded Form

    Hardly even moving synths, the halting heartbeat of minimal drums and a guitar slowing down the Blues to tectonic lentitude pay homage to Dylan Carlson's Earth with a coat of bohrenish Doomjazz. Besides Bell Witch no album here will let you hover in a world-withdrawing state of timelessness like Dead Neanderthals (Otto Kokke, Rene Aquarius) and Nick Millevoi are achieving it on their joint project, debut release and forty-minute track "Gilded Form". Even though this is as conceptually reduced as ever it ranks among the most  powerful things the prolific Dutch duo has done so far.








  10. THE END - Why Do You Mourn

    Is it the chaotic baritone guitar and drums rhythm section of Anders Hana and Børge Fjordheim? Is it the double saxophone force of Mats Gustafsson and Kjetil Møster? Or is it the mind-boggling vocal craziness of Sofia Jernberg? Each of these elements alone would already make the dynamic experimental Heavy Jazz Fusion on "Why Do You Mourn" special. Together however The End are capable of anything - even super-slowing down the Sudan Archives Trip Hop track "Black Vivaldi Sonata" to thrice of its original length. 








  11. SWANS - The Beggar

    How to summarize two hours of Swans in just one paragraph? Yes, Michael isn't done yet at all, so here's another ginormous, existential offering, which combines the recent sound and wordiness of "Leaving Meaning" with the reverb aesthetics of "The Great Annihilator". This huge meditation on decline, decay, dissolution and Death even contains an album within the album with the forty+ minutes of the studio collage "The Beggar Lover (Three)". With all those larger than life works of the past it's unlikely that many Swans fans will crown "The Beggar" as their all-time-favorite. Yet of course the usual scale of operation alone still lets "The Beggar" tower far above most other music releases out there easily.








  12. AUTOPSY - Ashes. Organs, Blood and Crypts

    Fuck yeah! No deep analytical thoughts necessary for this one - it's a bloody gory new Autopsy album. Starting with the title it's a completely accurate what you see is what you get situation - that goes literally for the sick album cover and just as much for its rotten content. Last year's first album with new bassist Greg Wilkinson "Morbidity Triumphant" was already old school rancid Death Metal bliss at its best like only Chris Reifert and Co. can deliver it. But somehow the legends got even darker and filthier now. Gut-splashing, grave-desecrating Autopsy - they just always know how to throw the greatest parties.








  13. GODFLESH - Purge

    JK Broadrick and BC Green added only one letter to the title of their 1991 classic, and indeed the new Godflesh album is an open throwback to the sound and mindset of "Pure". While the guitar sound is fuller and sludgier now, the sawing riffs and screeching leads complimenting Broadrick's nihilist vocals are as similar as the rumbling bass sound and the Hip Hop inspired programmed and sampled drums. Due to its referential nature "Purge" isn't Godflesh's most experimental or original album by far, but with this execution - damn, it's a monstrously grooving cold and heavy Industrial Metal beast.








  14. SARMAT - Determined to Strike

    Recorded before, but released after their "Dubious Disk", which already made it into my TOP 7 non-album releases 2023, the album debut of Sarmat starts more on the Technical Dissonant Death side, before spreading wider into all kinds of Exreme Metal / Avantgarde Jazz Fusion insanity. "Determined to Strike" brings together brutality and classy brass with natural ease. This short but highly entertaining brainmelter for sure is a peak exemplary I, Voidhanger Records release and definitely one of the finest works in the current wave of Jazz Metal!








  15. KING GIZZARD AND THE LIZARD WIZARD - PetroDragonic Apocalypse; or, Dawn of Eternal Night: An Annihilation of Planet Earth and the Beginning of Merciless Damnation /
    The Silver Cord (Extended Mix)


    Of course! With Joey Walker instead of Stu Mackenzie wearing the main composer's helmet this time, the hyper-prolific Australians released an unlikey pair of twin albums based on related song ideas - and who am I to seperate them? "PetroDragonic Apocalypse" is King Gizzard's longer, more refined and more relentless second Thrash Metal album after "Infest The Rats' Nest", which also calls back to the Psychedelic Prog greatness of "Polygondwanaland".




    "The Silver Cord" on the other hand is their first completely (vintage) electronic work, which bounces between Klaus Schultze Synth Kraut, 90's Euro Dance, Beastie Boys raps and many more influences. Both albums can easily look eye to eye with the top tiers in the band's always growing discography - at least if you don't count the regular twenty-six minutes version of "The Silver Cord" and go for the vastly superior hypnotic one-and-a-half hour Extended Mix instead!









  16. REVEREND KRISTIN MICHAEL HAYTER - Saved!

    This album was the hardest to place in this ranking. It's just so hard to decide whether this incredibly fervent exploration of worship songs by the artist formerly known as Lingua Ignota is creepy, barely listenable - or an addictive, completely transfixing experience. How can these old and new blatantly religious hymns be so eerily alienating yet comforting, so ambivalently non-judgemental and still so powerful? Presented more detached from personal experiences than her previous work, with an analogue low-fi production simulating the decayed quality of unearthed, worn out historic recordings "Saved!" lays open the ecstatic core of congregational songs and deliberately leaves it up to us what to make of it. I guess I'm still in that process.









  17. COLD DEW - Yuyu 欲欲

    Released in early February the debut record of Cold Dew starts out so sugary and schmaltzy that I almost dismissed it immediately. And now look where we are eleven months later! "Yuyu 欲欲" still remains my favorite Krautrock album of the year - if the term is even sufficient enough for the boundlessly creative journey through East, West, mind and cosmos these Taiwanese Psychedelic Rockers allow us to share with them, as they confidently step into the space between the void which the departure of Kikagaku Moyo has left and Acid Mothers Temple, without trying to copy either of them.









  18. Best Harsh Electronics is a subcategory I probably wouldn't even have been able to fill every year since I've been doing these annual rankings. The double album of exile Russians Anton Ponomarev and Anton Obrazeena - featuring collaborative longtracks with Swiss experimental musician Alex Buess and Japanese Noise legend Merzbow - however must be included here. Made of Electronic Noise, guitar, saxophone and trumpet P/O Massacre is fighting fire with fire, as this unsparing "Anti-War" music sounds just like propaganda, invasion, occupation... war! Someone should melt the wannabe-czar's face with this!







  19. DIVIDE & DISSOLVE - Systemic

    Black Native American and Maori girls unite against the state of the world! A ridiculously over-amplified duo playing instrumental Sludge / Doom / Noise Rock with interludes of looped Jazz saxophones and keys against the white supremacist system. It's a good sign that a band with this specific niché premise can even exist in today's Metal environment. The actual execution of Divide and Dissolve's raw and real fourth album however is even better. Crushing!









  20. NI - Fol Naïs

    Is Benoit Lecomte the MVP of this TOP 23? The bass player did not only play the acoustic four strings on both PoiL Ueda albums, but is also plugged-in member of the absolutely loony Avantgarde Math Noise Metal band Ni. Their delightfully heavy new coo-coo complex instrumental album sounds pretty much like its hilarious cover looks and totally fits its Old French title, which translates to "Born Mad".









  21. THE NECKS - Travel

    The great mysterious question lingering on my mind when listening to The Necks is whether the Australian trio even needs to prepare or concentrate on a certain mood before they press record, or if this kind of almost spiritually hypnotic Post Jazz just comes out naturally in up to over twenty minutes long jams when you put these seasoned players into one room. Piano/organ, upright bass and drums - plus some overdubs and post production - forming transcendent signals and imprinting it into your bloodstream. (Look how I snuck all song titles into that sentence!)










  22. My number one exclusively uplifting feel-good studio release of the year hails from Texas. The self-titled debut album of drummer Forest Cazayoux'  big band is grooving with a many-layered, rich and smoothly produced amalgam of infectiously funky instrumental Psychedelic Latin Afro-Beat Jazz Rock Fusion. This sweet and spicy record bursts with amazing individual performances from innumerable instruments, yet noone steals the spotlight too much from the ensemble as a whole, which is the sparlking star of the show.








  23. HENRIK LINDSTRAND - Klangland

    Need a score to turn any everyday situation into emotionally complex, melancholically longing arthouse cinema? Swedish composer Henrik Lindstrand's sat down at his piano and composed a roundel of achingly beautiful melodic pieces, which accompanied by a sixteen-piece string ensemble will give you exactly that. Contempory Classical music which captures the fugitiveness of the moment in genuine purity.






    favorite MUSIC 2023 - all my lists:






2023-07-01

MIDYEAR TOP 15: my favorite albums of 2023 (so far)

Oh shit, half of the year is already over again, so it's time for the ever impossible task!

Put this together rather quickly and already feel bad for half a dozen releases I omitted. No distinction between studio and live albums or EPs, only stuff I already own in physical form.
Tomorrow this would probably look different, but that's just how it always is, right? After a couple of places the order is as good as random.

One thing I can guarantee though: If you don't have a shitty taste, you should check all of these out!


  1. BELL WITCH
    Future's Shadow Part 1: The Clandestine Gate



  2. LAIBACH
    Sketches Of The Red Districts



  3. TEMPLE FANG
    Live at Slachthuis



  4. BIG|BRAVE
    Nature Morte



  5. ESBEN AND THE WITCH
    Hold Sacred



  6. OTAY:ONII
    夢​之​駭​客 Dream Hacker



  7. COLD DEW
    Yuyu 欲欲



  8. POIL UEDA
    PoiL Ueda



  9. TREVOR TOMKINS' SEXTANT
    For Future Reference



  10. TILINTETGJORT
    In Death I Shall Arise



  11. EDENA GARDENS
    Agar



  12. HEALTHYLIVING
    Songs of Abundance, Psalms of Grief



  13. THE END
    Why Do You Mourn



  14. 李劍鴻 LI JIANHONG & 文智湧 WEN ZHIYONG
    & 鄧博宇 DENG BOYU
    歲​寒​三​友 Les Trois Amis de l'Hiver



  15. GRAVE DESECRATOR
    Immundissime Spiritus





2023-05-05

ROADBURN FESTIVAL 2023 • DAY THREE: Saturday, April 22nd

 - Resources of Suffering, Means of Catharsis -

feat. BACKXWASH, CHAT PILE, HEALTHYLIVING, KEN MODE, OTAY:ONII, PUPIL SLICER, REINIER BAAS' Heavy Jazz Jam, SCHNELLERTOLLERMEIER and SHOW ME THE BODY



Ok, since time and weather prevented me from going on any side quests, let's jump right back into the festival action, shall we?





PUPIL SLICER

Ever been woken up by Cyanide & Happiness' Purple-Shirted Eye Stabber?

No? Me neither. But I guess the Math/Grind/Hard/Insane Core of Pupil Slicer is close enough, right? With their wild dillinger escapist / hirsch effektive sound they swung quite a a wrecking ball through The Engine Room.

So maybe it was me, because even though I was impressed, the show didn't grab me as much as I would have loved. And I think that with the mentioned references in my mind I just had a bit too high expectations. I also wasn't the the biggest fan of Kate Davies' clean vocal performances in the new songs. But hey, I'm beginning to sound like I'm shitting on this show, while in truth this might just have been too much to take in for the time of the day, so we'd better just move over to The Terminal now!










KEN MODE

Holy shit! I wasn't sure if I would dig KEN Mode or not, but the Canadians pleasantly suprised me with their maximum aggressive mix of Hardcore, Sludge, Noise Rock and Industrial Metal. What a wall of punishingly punching groove and misanthropy! Special props to the role of the synths and occasional saxophone, which as we all know always earns extra points in my book. Massive!










HEALTHYLIVING

My first personal main event however took place back in The Engine Room with the first ever live performance of the Spanish/Scottish/German band Healthyliving, a trio on their debut album "Songs of Abundance, Psalms of Grief", but enhanced to a quartet on stage, where they played just that whole collection of Dark Alternative / Post Hardcore / Doom Metal etc. hits.

If this fantastic release hadn't already been reason enough for me to make the show mandatory, watching their singer play as Maud The Moth on the Next Stage the day before would probably also have done the trick. And here in this dynamic Rock environment between delicate dreaminess, creaky noisy bass and burst of blasting brutality, she utilized a whole different, yet equally as emotionally expressive range of her wide vocal spectrum.

A voice like that and immediately catchy but substantial songs, which can see eye to eye with the material of bands such as Brutus, Gggolddd or Dool - what could even go wrong? Of course the presentation wasn't nearly as confident as any of those, but this was the freaking debut of this constellation, so a little nervousness is highly understandable.

And not just the the staggering vocals, but also the musical performance was flawless. A paramount example of the striking level of quality in the choice of this year's full album shows. Wonderful!










CHAT PILE

No fancy video or interchanging artworks, just the documentary photo of a car that had crashed into a living room. This dry poetry of harsh reality as the backdrop of the Main Stage perfectly set the tone for the only show I saw in the 013 on this Saturday.

It would have been the European debut performance of Chat Pile, if they hadn't already played a secret show in the Hall of Fame the day before. (Couldn't see that, because I was watching PoiL Ueda.)
If that surprise gig did one thing, then it was multiplying the already great hype caused by the Oklahoma City band's sensational album "God's Country" - and of course establishing the simple question "WHY?" as this year's central Roadburn meme. And so the probably only group on this stage making their setlist up on the spot did the absolutely and only right thing and just started right away with the song of the same name responsible for the meme.

From there on Chat Pile had already won. With a "Hymns" era Godflesh tight rhythm section their Noise Rock / Justified Anger Core took no prisoners, while frontman Raygun Busch, whose performance often was closer to a grim spoken words routine than actual singing, hectically rushed his bare belly and feet around the stage with a frustrated divorced dad energy that rightfully should have felt like the downright denial of a proper stage show, but instead was the icing on the pile. It was as beautiful as I hope the movie "Cocaine Bear" (haven't seen it yet) is!

And since this band was not only charged with social and political awareness and a great talent for musical storytelling with seemingly primitive tools, but they were also weaponized with a healthy amount of humour - checking all the cheapest an American visits the Netherlands punchlines -, this show was just a complete win.

And please don't ask me WHY! I just fucking explained it.










SCHNELLERTOLLERMEIER

Phew, this was another change of pace to a sound far from anything else I've heard at the festival so far! Schnellertollermeier from Switzerland were already supposed to perform in the Paradox club last year, but got held back by one member being severely sick with you know what.
And the seriousness of that sickness and the quarantine regulations of that time aside the very precise and particular thing these Avantgarde Jazz Rock deconstructors are doing, surely demands a healthy mind and body to pull off.

In principle the trio just plays repetitive hypnotic grooves between percussive clickidiclack, super funky Jazz Fusion and even heavy Post Rock, but somehow they are often surgically removing all those bits which are making it possible for the listeners to orientate themselves. So with maybe one, two, three seemingly random hits or notes per instrument Schnellertollermeier just start with the most unlikely micro elements and keep it going and going, steadily putting the pieces together, while you can't help but groove with this polyrhythmic beast, even though you never quite understand it, until the band finally decides to release all the cleverly built up tension in a cathartic explosion.

These dudes have perfected a uniquely crazy nerd shtick, and the audience absolutely loved it. If you were there and this was your highlight of the day - I won't object.



And this seems like the proper place to play another round of...


CLASHBURN:

Parallel to Schnellertollermeier the synthwave show of Sierra was crowned as the surprise winner of Roadburn 2023 by more than one witness. And that one hadn't even been a big one on my personal radar.
Until now the most painful thing to miss had been the second show of Under The Surface
, where the Dutch group showed a totally different, yet also very exciting side of their versatile sound than together with White Boy Scream. I also omitted the commissioned project of Duma & Deafkids in favour of Healthyliving. And as tempting as it would have been to see the Sludge locals of Ggu:ll perform an Offroad show in Kafee 't Buitenbeentje, that unfortunately directly clashed with Chat Pile.

Immediately ahead at 8 pm lay maybe the most original of all clashes, which involved another Offroad show in the LOC Brewery featuring Dutch Black Metal commando Terzij De Horde and the "Dance Of The Seven Veils", a commissioned dance performance(!) in the Tilburg Theatre. Both of those however stood no chance on my schedule against the highly anticipated show of the Elizabeth Colour Wheel singer in the Hall of Fame:  








OTAY:ONII

I can proudly say that I felt very in the know for counting Otay:onii among my most mandatory appointments of the weekend. On the other hand however I really had no idea what the hell actually to expect from this solo performance. Lane Shi is an interdisciplinary artist, so it would surely be more than just music. And would it be music from her amazing three studio albums or something else entirely?

Just like the Paradox the Hall of Fame was always cleared out between the shows, so you had to wait outside ("Why do people have to wait outside? WHY?") during soundcheck and would be let back inside a couple of minutes before the performance started.
This time when I got in front of the stage, on which the singer was still preparing, I immediately realized that whatever was going to happen now would be unlike anything I had seen before - just by her very deliberate look. Her elegantly ragged, clothed but also semi-naked appearance conveyed a confrontational vulnerability, an almost uncomfortable intimacy, which obviously had to be matched by a strong artistic purpose, if it didn't want to be reduced to the mundane notion "well, she likes her body". And you bet it did!

Watching Otay:onii was like stepping into another world and being caught by it for the entire performance. And for sure a rich source for irritating out-of-context images.

I wouldn't bet my life on it, but I'm pretty positive that at least ninety percent of the show followed her amazing second album "Míng Míng" and told a personal story of the struggles of Chinese-American identity, which became very clear, when after mostly wailing to the piano for the first part of the show, she build up a loop of noises and disappeared backstage, while the screen showed all her passports, visas, bureaucratic documents of dismissal and approval.

When she returned in an alien elephant woman look, which also subtle played with the racist Asian face idea, singing "Oh whoever there / Have you seen a sub human cry? It hurts/ It’s ugly as it is" you couldn't witness it without being profoundly touched. Later she played a keytar with all black keys, she put on a bustier with a spiky Noise nipple on it, walked through the audience several times... and of course delivered a stunning vocal delivery over her exceptional songs between fragile minimalism, cross-cultural beauty and crushing harsh Electronics.
I'm surely not the only one to claim that it was like watching Lingua Ignota on Mars.

While the idea of ranking shows in itself feels very contrary to the Roadburn spirit - for the abundance of so many incomparably different performances alone -, there is no doubt that if I had to choose one, it would be Otay:onii! No other experience was as immersive as this breathtaking, artistically complete statement. This will vividly live on in my head for a long time.



CLASHBURN (reprise):

The plan had been to take a break and see yet another one-woman project, Mütterlein, on the same stage, but I realized that I would only be able to get a small slice of that show if I wanted to be back at the Paradox for the final event there in time.

But since after the intensity of Otay:onii I was content with switching the first with the (almost) last row in the audience for once, it was very doable and obvious to check out the second gig of Backxwash in the completely crammed Engine Room.








Inspired by the movie(s?) "Suspiria" and appropriately titled "Nine Hells" the performance of the Sambian-Canadian experimental rapper / producer levelled the ground like Dälek, the first Hip Hop band to ever play Roadburn, once did with the former location Het Patronaat.

Backxwash, whose voice was hoarse and sounded extra brutal from talking to too many fans after her triumph the day before, dominated the stage and room with her presence. And it is said that parts of the building are still vibrating from the bass of her Heavy instrumentals (including sneaky Black Sabbath samples) right now. Boom!










Heavy Jazz Jam

Last year had seen a spontanously organized "Heavy Jam" close the festival in the Paradox. Now this idea has been institutionalized under guitar player / host Rainier Baas, and if I desperately wanted to write a bad review about this show, I would point out that the special spirit and energy of Kanaan and RRRags being thrown together without any preparation couldn't be reached here. This jam also didn't come close to the world-class Free Jazz inferno of the Martina Verhoeven Quintet on the same Sunday.

But the good news is this doesn't mean much, because what this zornish Jazz Rock quartet cracked into the room was still an absolutely worthwhile banger. Baas mostly cultivated a seemingly erratic chaos, while the role of the backbone fell to bass player  Jasper Stadhouders, whose choice of a forceful Rickenbacker sound was a central defining element of the whole endeavour.
Saxophonist John Dikeman either levitated warm and smoothly above the sonic jungle or burst into head-reddening multiphonics. The greates joy to watch however was drummer Sin Mi Ho, whose flow and facial communication really made you feel how deep she dove into this improvisation.

And as far as I know no other drummer destroyed the resonance drumhead of a kick drum during the festival. It was a show within the show to watch the tear in the skin grow and wander around, even though the extra *flap* sound over the bass drum wasn't the sexiest addition. Still - someone give that lady a championship belt, the Roadburn Medal of Destruction or whatever prize seems appropriate!

In good old Naked City Grindjazz tradition the last piece was just a quick blasted noise. Wish Barney Greenway could have been there to shout "You suffer - but WHY?!"











My head had reached the maximum capacity of sonic input by now, but my feet still took me to one last show in The Engine Room. Thankfully the action there didn't require the highest amount of intellectual attendance, you just needed to be alert to crowdsurfers and stagedivers - that one you can see on the pic above surprised everyone with a swift and hard landing.

The sound quality was clearly weaker than during most other performances I had seen, but in this case part of it may very well have been on purpose, because considering the snotty Punk attidude of Show Me The Body's show it was rather fitting and not a disqualifier at all. And by the way: The band played an ass-kicking mix of Hardcore, Sludge and Rap and even a bit of Country(?) I guess... What, you disagree? Well, blame it on the sound then!




On the way to my car I stopped for wi-fi at the 013 and then outside of the backstage area passed a pile of Chat Pile members chatting.

Too meta for me, that almost broke my brain. And I'm not even going to ask wh...



reviews of the other festival days:

ROADBURN FESTIVAL 2023 • THE SPARK: Wednesday, April 19th

- Canned Beer, Chlamydia and Digestive Disaster! -


ROADBURN FESTIVAL 2023 • DAY TWO: Friday, April 21st

- Redefining Eternity: A Journey Through Timelessness -

ROADBURN FESTIVAL 2023 • DAY FOUR: Sunday, April 23rd

- A Constructive Criticism of Jesus and Other Brave Sunday Musings -