maandag 30 juni 2025

Stoner HiVe’s Top 10 Most Listened Artists Last Week…

 

 

Stoner HiVe’s 
Top 10 Most Listened Artists Last Week…


Brant Bjork Trio
Lorquin’s Admiral
King Buffalo
The Machine
Motorpsycho
Magic Pie
Master Charger
Monteceneri
Killiad
Mantar

It’s hot over here. We had somewhere around 32 to 34 degrees in the city. Tomorrow, probably 37 or 38. That’s not a good temperature for the Netherlands. But it’s only a few days, so I guess we can live with it. And we know, there are way worse stuff happening across the globe… Plus, we returned from another mini break to the lovely town of Deventer, where we saw a stunning gig at Burgerweeshuis by The Machine, Brant Bjork Trio and King Buffalo. The Machine sounding denser and murkier than before, giving you no time to breathe and searing the sky with their riffs. Brant Bjork, Mario Lalli and Mike Amster grooving away as tight as possible, standing there as if they still wanted to prove something. So intense, so in your face and so fast! They even surprised themselves they still had time left for another song at the end. And another amazing gig by King Buffalo, with a starting salvo of songs that put something like a mean grin into their sound, more power and grit that made them sound even grander. Almost otherworldly good. It’s good Sean started to sing the wrong song at one point, showing us all that they were human after all. Amazing night! Can’t wait to see all three again. That was Friday, the same day we published that long form interview with Dawn and Dandy Brown about Lorquin’s Admiral. Which we also reviewed. And we mentioned that amazing Lifers – The Movie documentary, brought to you by Matt Hartnett from Seismic Sounds and One Palm Productions. A must see! This week. Not sure what we can do, but we also hope to bring you some heat… Some molten riffs and some songs that burn like lava! 


The Spotify Playlist for...

Stoner HiVe's Weekly Top 10 Most Listened

Week 26

vrijdag 27 juni 2025

Interview - Lorquin's Admiral - Dawn and Dandy Brown

 


Interview - Lorquin's Admiral

Dawn and Dandy Brown 

She watches from the sides, spread out, somewhat seductively, on the leather couch, with eyes softly closing, loudly purring, signaling that its good… Or the little Bengal curls up in an almost hidden dead space, strolls along the cabinets and amps, without requiring much from the artists standing in the middle of the room recording the vocals. She gives them their space and is simply supportive of them with her presence… 

Recording on those microphones, a lovely couple by the name of Dawn and Dandy Brown. The cat, Margot. The project, Lorquin’s Admiral… And as Margot gave her blessing to the recordings and championed the endeavor, so did Dawn and Dandy Brown… 

We’re on Zoom with the two to talk about Lorquin’s Admiral, a project that sees the two shine as vocalists and the couple they obviously are. Competitive in games: “It’s been a long winter, but as soon as I have my service back, Dawn won’t stand a chance!” Collaborative in arts: “We can't help ourselves but to collaborate. We just enjoy it so much.”

And that last side is ever present, every day and is clearly audible on Lorquin’s Admiral. But let’s get one thing straight, it’s not Dawn and Dandy that started Lorquin’s Admiral. It’s a project instigated by Marlon King and Nick Hannon from bands such as Sons of Alpha Centauri and Yawning Sons. Who immediately thought of Dandy Brown as the main vocalist and songwriter companion for their project after already having delivered the goods for their 2021 Yawning Sons album Sky Island... 

    




“They are such amazing songwriters. They called me up back then for the Yawning Sons album, if I wanted to perform, but I was in the frame of mind at that point, that I wanted to sing. I had been playing instruments on every record I had ever been on. They were cool with that, and when you hear it back, the playing, the production on that thing, they are tremendous at what they do. So we always kept that connection flowing, sending tracks back and forth. And you know, Dawn had done some background vocals on that Yawning Sons record as well. So, we suggested splitting the tracks between Dawn and me. We wrote a bit of music and melodies, but don’t play anything. We just sing. Then after a few months, the project took shape and turned into a family affair. I mean, Steve Earle (Afghan Whigs) is an amazing drummer and he has been with me for some twenty years, so I had to ask him. And Dave Angstrom, from Luna Sol, Supafuzz and Hermano, he’s a monster, just listen to his solos. Country Mark Engel, was with me on Orquesta Del Desierto, and brings all that natural feeling. It’s an ever growing family that has worked together for decades and are all in it for the love of it. It’s a cumulative process, engineering your craft, moving forward and always keeping a cohesive line throughout your body of work.”


It doesn’t take much to get Mr. Brown to talk about music, so it might be best to let him and Dawn ramble on…  It’s their tree of life after all and this album is another branch. “It’s been an integral part of my life ever since I can remember, you know. I love to dig into music. I love to play it. Look at the world around you. It’s such a depressing time for the world. Even though personally, there are so many great things happening for us. Those two sides collide. And music is always there. It’s sanctuary.”


“Such a powerful word choice,” Dawn chimes in, “cause it’s both sanctuary and therapeutic. It can put you in a very specific headspace when you’re exploring a certain musical landscape. It enables you to disappear into another world for a little while and forget your troubles. And we are awfully lucky, we realize this on a daily basis, for we share this passion together. My writing partner is here. All the time. That’s a beautiful experience.”

So, how does a normal day in the Brown residence look like? 

Dandy: “Depends on what day of the week it is. We’re working stiffs. So, normally I’m at work, for a public entity, nonprofit, just helping the citizens of our city.”
Dawn: “I work in a camera lab as a technician. I do photo editing all day long. And when I’m done scanning film at work, I come home and scan my own film for another two hours.” 

And music wise? 

Dawn: “I've been playing music my whole life. It felt like a golden opportunity when we got together. I was like, well, I, I play music on my own and I write and I think that together it would be the perfect opportunity for us to just put two heads together, mm-hmm.”

Dandy: “And see what comes out of it. It just worked, it just fell naturally together. It wasn't long after we started playing tennis that our relationship started growing towards where it is now. And on that path and after many conversations, it was like, why don't we try to do something? Why don't we try to play some music somewhere? And I think within seven months of us being together, we had booked a tour in Italy and we did a number of shows acoustically. And we had just such a hoot of a time. We thought let's expand this. Let’s start doing it on electric and let's bring in a drummer and let's bring in a bass player and let's just see where we can go with it. We might not be that good, but we've done some interesting stuff. I think we've caught some ears along the way of folks who appreciate what we're doing. I mean we're definitely, uh, a little bit different and unique. And, we're just very lucky that other people have been interested in it and wanted to put out records for us.”



You are partners. Your creative partners. Does that make things easier or difficult when something doesn’t feel quite right, for instance?

Dawn: “I would say it makes things easier just because there's a certain level of trust. And so we know we're not going to violate that trust. If we want to express an opinion, whether it be, oh, I think perhaps these two chords might not really be in the vibe of the song that we're trying to go for. So maybe let's try a different set of chords. Or perhaps this word could be swapped out for this word.”

Dandy: “It eases the writing process rather than creating a barrier. Yeah, I think it makes it much easier. Being married and being in love with each other, there's just not a whole lot of egos in the room. When we're writing together, we know each other too well for that. Obviously, I've been in bands before and played with many musicians where you could get into a writing situation, where ownership over things that people don't want to give up on comes into play. People sometimes get frustrated that their ownership is being questioned in some way. But we just don't have that, you know? Strength of our love for each other. And that just spills over into the writing process between us.”

Dawn: “It's very easy for us. We'll get out of the shower and one of us will run over and write down some lyrics that we've thought of or, you know, bounce ideas off of each other. Continually, and trade songs back and forth. I'm stuck here. Can you take a look at this or vice versa? But really being open to it all since we know each other and we know each other’s styles so well and we've written together so much. Just knowing what fits where.”

Dandy: “You know, maybe I'll produce a riff and think, this is really one that Dawn should sing, or this is really one that she should write the lyrics for. It's like, let's share this between us and see what we come up with. And it works really well.”


So this record than has to open with a song called My Blue Wife, an in your face rocker, with of course Dawn as subject. But she answers that one with My Blue Husband, which is more of a sexy song. Did you surprise each other with these tracks? Or did you collaborate on those as well? 

Dawn: “We collaborated as we do on everything.”
Dandy: “We can't help ourselves but to collaborate. We just enjoy it so much. I just thought, since we're both singing on this record and since we're splitting up the duties of singing, wouldn't it be a really cool thing as part of that kind of uplifting message that we were trying to pursue on this record, to sing a song to each other, about the connection between each other, and the passion that we share for each other. And the passion that exists in our lives. And it created just a certain level of dynamism on the record that I thought was quite essential to have.”

And then you went off to Kent to record? 

Dandy: “After we did a European tour for the Fizz Fuzz project we stopped over in Paris, for a few days off and then flew out to Kent to record our vocals. Steve Earle had already recorded all the drum parts before us and we did our vocals in two to three days. With only a few minor overdubs from our own house. But pretty much what you hear on the record is what we did in Kent. It’s called Joplin House, it’s a tremendous facility, run by a guy named Dan Lucas, a genius engineer.”


Do you always work that fast and easy? Do you need the pressure? Cause we all know the stories about how hectic the recording days were for legendary Hermano… Or fabled Orquesta Del Desierto… 

Dandy: “Haha, well in this case, we really didn't have much of a choice, right. Because our flight was leaving in a few days. So we kind of surprised ourselves at how well we pulled it off, over those three days. But yeah, just due to the limitations of time, we tried to, get everything as ready to go as we can, just because we don't necessarily have the benefit of being able to have a month in the studio. We usually only have a handful of days or a week and so we roll up our sleeves and get it done.”

Dawn: “Yeah. But we do take a little pressure off ourselves because we have a rig that works well enough here at our home. So, if something goes off the rails entirely and we know we can't use it, then we can always do tracks here at our house. But the material we cut for the Lorquin’s Admiral record; we surprised ourselves and we really knocked it out while we were there.”

Dandy: “And we were both sick. We were both sick like a dog. Steve Earle came off the tour with some sort of bug and he ended up passing it to us. So we got lucky to go into the studio completely congested, and we just swilled back some medicine and went for it. You know, with how well it turned out, maybe that needs to be our plan going forward.”

Dawn: “I think that contributed to the adrenaline in the studio. 'cause we were like, oh, I really hope we can get this take.” 

It does seem to be a recurring theme with you Dandy because as I already mentioned you also recorded at the very edge of the needle with Hermano. So maybe you work well under pressure? 

Dandy: “I do creative motivation. I do enjoy that. I do enjoy bringing people together. I do enjoy bringing them into an environment where maybe they are not a hundred percent comfortable. And they've gotta work on the edge and get the tracks done in the time they have offered. Hermano was perhaps one of the most mind blowing experiences of my life because none of those guys really knew each other until we walked into the studio. And I mean, literally, we did that first record, live, we just jumped on it. And from the very first note we played, it was: oh my God, this is tremendous. The tones and just the feel, you know, and we just looked at each other, we got something really cool on our hands here. It's like the variable X, that one undefinable thing that's in the air.”

That seems to be present on the track, Burn and Heel as well, with the different guitar lines and your more staccato vocals. How was that one born? 

Dawn: “The story behind that song is kind of funny. I had rewritten it a number of times, and then the day before, the night before actually, we were back in our hotel room and I knew I had to get it done. That's how that variable X got in there because the timeframe in which the lyrics were written was very narrow. Maybe an hour or two. And he was asleep already. He was snoring away. And I'm just like, oh dear, I gotta drone this man out. And then suddenly it just clicked, maybe even thanks to his snoring.”

Dandy: “And the guitar parts were made up by Nick and Dave. Well, the core of the song was Marlon and Nick. And as far as the leads on that, you know, Dave Angstrom always takes anything he plays on to the next level. You know, he's my favorite lead guitar player out there. County Mark's way up there too, because of the feeling he can put into every note he plays. But Dave Angstrom has something that really nobody else has tone wise.” 


Well, what is the most important thing Dave Angstrom brings to the table for you?

Dandy: “That tone, man. That tone and those chops. He's something else. It’s the aura of Dave Angstrom.”

So talking about all the members, let’s circle back. How do you think that variable X in the air felt for Nick and Marlon who brought this all together? 


Dandy: “Nick Cannon. Marlon King. Those guys are, writing machines, and they write all different genres of music. They're really great at these beautiful soundscapes. But they can also contain it within certain limits with a kind of a pop element to it as well. Souding so appealing. It doesn't necessarily have to go into a heavy rock area or that atmospheric side of music. They can write anything in between. And it's just been a real thrill and honor to work with those guys. It has that level of contrast that people can be hungry for. You listen to a certain genre for so long and it can start to kind of blend together. But having different elements included, really sparks the energy.”

So I suspect this was all written over a longer period of time? 

Dandy:  “Yeah, I think over about a year of passing material back and forth. And then the rest of it was just logistics of bringing people together. We just so happened to have done a Fizz Fuzz tour in Europe and it just kind of lined up with the end to jump into the studio. But those guys had never met Steve Earle and those guys had never met Country Mark or Dave Angstrom. So it was one of those instances where people come together that have never met each other before, and you got an hour before your track to get to know each other and then just, let's get it on. And man, I've had such luck working in that kind of atmosphere where people come together for the first time and there's just kind of a magic in the air. And I think this record is alive will all that electricity.”



It’s all that X again! Well, who invented the name in that case? 

Dandy: “That was me. Whenever there’s a new band or project, I immediately start surfing around and pecking and hunting. And we made a list of probably thirty different names. And we just kept circulating those names and Lorquin’s Admiral was at the beginning of developing that list and every time we would add something to it or circulate those names, we just kept coming back to it. It just seemed like a name that had kind of a mystic feel to it. And a natural beauty to it, you know, it's the most beautiful butterfly. I'm sure a lepidopterist would maybe have a different opinion. They're native to Northern California and kind of rare.”

Dawn: “We don't see one often. I have seen one in the wild. When I was visiting down in the desert and I was just walking out into the Joshua Tree National Park. And I just so happened to see this little thing flutter by and land on a piece of dead grass. I'll be damned, that's a Lorquin’s Admiral. And I tried to take a photo, but I wasn't quick enough. We do have a prop one. We call him Quinnie.”

Dandy: “The butterfly fits the tenure of this project, this group. We kind of set out to write things this time that were more uplifting. With more positive messages behind them. Instead of anything that's kind of down or doomy or gloomy. I really wanted to focus on themes that were uplifting and hopeful.“


Uplifting and hopeful, let’s end with that… What was the most euphoric moment surrounding this record?


Dawn: “Well, haha, the most euphoric moment was when we were all crammed in that van in the UK and you had to learn how to drive on the other side of the road. And there's just a moment where everyone was like, your personal cheerleading squad yelling: “don't look that way” and “look the other way.” “You're supposed to look this way!” Cause yes, there were a couple of sketchy moments in there and it’s just the euphoria of missing death by a hair. Haha.”

Dandy: “When you receive the final master of something you've been working on for a long time and you get to hear it as it's going to be released, that's always a really tremendous moment. But there are so many euphoric moments making this record. Sending the material to Country Mark and having him send his tracks back, not knowing, what's this guy going to do. And to hear that for the first time and be like, whoa! It's like opening up a present. You know, that feeling, butterflies in the stomach…”



Words on the Lorquin's Admiral album...


Argonauta Records

Or check out some more Dandy Brown stuff below... 

(Margot)

donderdag 26 juni 2025

Lorquin’s Admiral – Lorquin’s Admiral

 

 

Lorquin’s Admiral – Lorquin’s Admiral
Argonauta Records – 2025
Rock, Desert, Stoner, Grunge
Rated: ****

There’s a certain familiar aspect to the songs. It speaks to your stoner rock muscle memory as much as it flexes it to makes new connections. Connecting the dots between an extended family of musicians, Lorquin’s Admiral self-titled debut album shoots out the gates with an in medias res rocker called My Blue Wife. That desert, stoner, grunge hued guitar tone immediately setting the scene and vocalist Dandy Brown’s sweet voice surfing across the hills and valleys of the melody… Dandy Brown! As some of you might know, Stoner HiVe is of course a highly personal account of our love for heavy music. There is no such thing as objective journalism and it’s even completely impossible when it comes to music. And I guess we have professed our love for Mr. Brown and his highly varied and great number of projects many times before. Seeing Orquesta Del Desierto live back in 2004 remains one of my most cherished memories. And if you would have told me back then I would be talking to Mr. Brown on multiple occasions, I probably would have swooned. If his Blue Wife swooned when she heard this opening song can be read in the interview soon to be published. For yes, a long form interview with Dawn and Dandy Brown is about to go live on Stoner HiVe. But before we publish that long screed, a few more words about the Lorquin’s Admiral album… 

For even though there’s a definite Dandy Brown signature across the tracks it is not his new band. But that it still feels like it, is mostly thanks to the instigators for catering to and writing with Dawn and Dandy’s voices in mind. The project started with Marlon King and Nick Hannon of Sons of Alpha Centauri , who of course already collaborated on the Yawning Sons album Sky Island, sending out tracks to Dandy and it then slowly involved into the family affair it has become. Cause lifelong accomplice Country Mark Engel  from Orquesta del Desierto, Dock Ellis, Deus Vult is there for extra guitar duties and longtime collaborator drummer Steve Earle from the Afghan Whigs joins in. Rounded out with guest appearances by another permanent fixture Dave Angstrom (Hermano, Luna Sol, Asylum On The Hill, Supafuzz). And we can safely state this is an all-star formation of friends that have one common denominator, the man that loves to bring everyone together, get the energy up and jam till that lightning is captured and firmly secured in a bottle once again… 

And even though we get all the familiar faces in one sitting, it’s still a different animal than The Fizz Fuzz or Orquesta Del Desierto or Hermano or any of those other bands and projects the boys have been a part of. This one flutters with ease and glows with soulful warmth. There’s desert, there’s stoner and there’s grunge, but delivered with so much sensibility, that you can’t just simply put on one track and listen distractedly. No, this is immersive from an entirely different angle and paints its very own landscape. Whether it is the more stoner shoving Inexplicable Things, rough and rowdy, taken higher by the guitar lead and Dawn’s varied vocals. The beautiful guitar work in Could Have Been Better, which also returns throughout Black Water or the love shown by Dawn and Dandy for one another through the album but especially on the two sided coin of opener Dandy’s My Blue Wife and Dawn’s My Blue Husband. The latter also sporting a few instance of robotic riffage that might pop QOTSA into your head. Which is another grandiose thing about the album, the interplay between the vocals throughout the album add that extra touch, the slightly sultry singing of Dawn, which she switches with more nasal touched power and the honey-d voice of Dandy that always has this hazy and airy element to it. In all there are nine tracks of flow and groove and it will install a powerful lust in you to keep listening and to constantly fly along with. For it’s absolutely beautifully crafted and will make your heart take flight, just like it does on those rare instances when you see a Lorquin’s Admiral flutter through the desert sky… 


(Written by JK)




Argonauta Records

Or check out some more Dandy Brown stuff below... 



Lifers - The Movie


 

Lifers - The Movie

They are in it for the pure love of it. The need. A craving and an urge to create and to exist by way of the riffs and melodies they shoot out into the world. To saunter through the streets holding their breath and to finally inhale and exhale when on stage. They are the Lifers, the artists who are in it for the long haul. Who dedicate themselves every waking moment to fulfilling the promise they made to themselves. To live their life according to their set of rules, damn the consequences. And now, there’s a documentary dedicated to a selected group of those Lifers. It's out on One Palm Productions and Seismic Sounds spearheaded by the one and only Matt Hartnett. Written and directed by Matt Hartnett and Tanner Poppitt. And it gives you two and half hours of pure dedication. It’s not just the Lifers who get to talk about their art and their life; it’s the manner in which it is so lovingly presented that shows that Matt and Tanner are Lifers too. They’ve clearly dedicated many long hours to this project and it shows. Meticulous and with constant courtesy to the selected artists they followed around… To hear them talk about what it all means to them and what they went through and go through on a daily basis, gives you the perfect glance into what these Lifers are about. We get to hear  Ruben Romano (The Freeks/ex-Fu Manchu & Nebula), Trevor William Church (Haunt/Beastmaker), Erik Kluiber (Gypsyhawk/Void Vator/White Wizzard), Nacho Maldonado (Mezzoa) and Kip Page (Formula 400) talk at length about their Life and experiences and this glowing, searing, all encompassing passion for music. With cameo’s by a truckload of other Lifers that all shine an extra bit of light on certain aspect of the artists, their career or the manner in which the love for this thing we call heavy rock encompasses everything they do… Lifers, true dedication… 


(Written by JK)




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Soon on Filmzie

 


maandag 23 juni 2025

Stoner HiVe’s Top 10 Most Listened Artists Last Week…

 

 

Stoner HiVe’s 
Top 10 Most Listened Artists Last Week…


Trainer
Queens of The Stone Age 
Killiad
Dusty Rose Gang
Psychedelic Porn Crumpets
1968
Causa Sui
Margarita Witch Cult
Master Charger
Beware of Gods

It’s Monday! The start of a new week! The first full week to start after our return from Italy. It’s always heavy on the nerves getting back into the swing of things that first week. Obligations swarming in from everywhere. Less than fun rent paying stuff you need to deal with. The bad news hitting you from every angle. Holy hell people. Why. And where are we going with all those horrible developments. Sigh…

But luckily we have the warmth of our little niche to curl up into and get out of the cold. Those amazing albums young and old to keep us sane. Above are the ten we listened to the most past week. And thanks to our resident poet Ronny Dijksterhuis we also already had a few posts up. Did you read his awesome Wąż – Monolith review? Or his Doūsk - Live!? Both reviews and albums worth every minute of your time! We of course mentioned those Doom Charts posts and managed to write a few words about the new Trainer ourselves. Oh, Mandy does not come out till August, but when it comes, it gives, without taking... Yes, we could not contain ourselves. It’s that good! Got a few things brewing that I hope to finish in the next few days. Barring even worse world wide developments or rent paying stuff that needs to be done, it will happen. And for all of you, I hope your week will be brilliant, the sun will shine and you can smile at all the beauty that nature has to offer… 



The Spotify Playlist for...

Stoner HiVe's Weekly Top 10 Most Listened

Week 25



zondag 22 juni 2025

Trainer – Oh, Mandy


 

Trainer – Oh, Mandy
Fidel Bastro / Broken Silence – 2025
Rock, Noise, Punk
Rated: ****

Some bands know how to do things the proper way and get you all psyched before you’ve even heard those first tones... Those first piano keys... And often, they turn out to be the old soldiers. The old punks. Evoking memories of a lovely Barry Manilow, selling tea towels as merch and musically turning on every screw, yes, Trainer belongs to that selection of bands. The four geezers from Germany deliver their tunes with two guitars, drums and a vocalist. And on their second album Oh, Mandy they hand you almost forty minutes of punk. But it’s a funky bunch though, experimental, noisy on occasion, more wave related at other times or even moshing through hardcore slam dance territory, but always slightly manic and blazing a trail of rage and melody. Choppy by default, you’re being cast about like a ragdoll in a washing machine. Which seems fitting for the emotional charge; turbulent, anger, frenzy. It’s all there as the four translate personal strife and difficulties as well as world wide issues. Nicely bookended with that beautiful opening piano ditty Powietrze and closing it all with El Luchador Nihilista that clangs itself slowly away into the dark night. But the beat meat and the guitar poetry is between the covers and soon worms its way into soul and under your skin as New Economy Symptoms delivers its sonic environment, like the ever evolving complexity of our surroundings. The rhythm starting almost primordial, soon turning more into the sounds of a steam train, imploring the cracks, creaks and clangs of early industrialization. And that’s the exploration they take the listener on, discerning the sounds that make up our western civilization and dissecting them into rhythmic pounces and punches. And they do this to such a wonderful degree, that you will be moving around like boxer on speed, shadow boxing like a madman! Following track Mandy will leave you breathless, but so will almost all of the other tracks. Longest track I Would Have Said 'Fuck You!' opens its six and a half minute long stretch of anxiety with a nervous guitar and a building energy that never actually grows larger until it finally blows. Like the nextdoor neighbor on every news story... Beautifully crafted, the explosion is not what you'd expect and becomes this matter of fact uttering and break down. It's one of the many gifts Oh, Mandy has to offer, no instant gratification, but a slightly psychotic struggle to get the upper hand on the rhythms and your own shadow. And as the silhouette of the luchador saunters of stage you feel refreshened by the skin you shed and all that angry sweat you lost… Oh Trainer, you came and you gave without taking… 


(Written by JK)

You can listen to their debut album Athletic Statics right now and be all jazzed up for Oh, Mandy which will arrive on 08-08-25!




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zaterdag 21 juni 2025

Wąż - Monolith

 

 

Wąż - Monolith
Interstellar Smoke Records - 2025
Progressive Metal, Progressive Stoner, Progressive Rock
Rated: ****1/2

On their sophomore album Polish progressive rockers Wąż aren't making life easy for themselves. They combine (amongst others) progressive stoner, progressive metal and psychedelic rock, while also using polyrhythms on a regular basis. Chances are they could be facing a brick wall in no time, but they manage to avoid it with gusto and even make their complex instrumental cocktail sound quite accessible. So, let's explore this Monolith together, because, well, this album is something that can't be ignored and stands out in the landscape that surrounds it.

Opener 'The Dawn' comes straight at you with a mixture of (mainly) heavy progressive metal and some more intricate sidesteps that venture into progressive rock territory, while using odd rhythms and different atmospheres that melt together into a new feeling that stands on its own. Hope this makes some kind of sense, because I can't find another way to describe it. The first half of 'Impulse' continues on the progressive metal trail but mixes it seamlessly with a stoner-like groove before the foot is taken of the gas and makes room for a meandering passage and a heartfelt guitar solo. You can almost feel the water in brook flow towards bigger things before the composition abruptly gets back to being its menacing self.

And that's just the beginning of this seven track album that has got a perfect flow from start to finish and an excellent production as well. 'Collapse' starts with a beautiful guitar intro before a heavy stoner riff kicks in. It shifts pace and energy on various occasions and has another ripping guitar solo, while the drums and bass contain a jazzy vibe in some parts. There's so much happening here you'll have to listen to it yourself to fully grab what's going on. That goes for the whole album, but especially for 'Collapse', which I would say is my favorite track of the bunch if someone decided to put a gun to my head and force me to make a choice.

The remainder of the album has got the two longest compositions, as well as the only two that don't even reach the six minute mark. You can probably guess there's some serious progressive stuff going on in the epic tracks with beautiful paths that'll lead you to new grounds to discover. The title track even has some slow, kind of weird space rock shenanigans going on. The two shorter tracks are a true diptych, with the first part being the build up to the second part that lets some post rock influences seep into the complex progressive rock that leads the way. An eclectic piece of work before 'The Receiving' rounds things of. It's another bout of progressive metal mixed with progressive rock that makes this excellent album come full circle. It fades out a little after nine minutes and after a two short pauses offers two surprising hidden tracks, one being a truly wonderful short composition on acoustic guitar and piano.

Hope this review convinces everybody to check out 'Monolith', because it's a true gem that needs to be heard by as many people as possible.


(Written by Ronny Dijksterhuis)




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The Doom Charts Peroration - May 2025

 

The Doom Charts Peroration 

May 2025

“In a hole in the ground there lived the Doom Charts. A nasty, dirty, wet hole full of worms and oozy smells”

~ probable misheard quote by JRR Tolkien

 

The Doom Charts crew once again were swamped with an outpouring of new albums this May from the Heavy Underground, far too many to give all their deserved attention, but we dig on into the mound and are thrilled to present a whopping FORTY albums for the May Peroration post! Crawl into our hole of dark delights and find a new favorite album or 40…

Gone for a little month and only managed to vote for the regular edition, which is filled with forty stunning albums. We're still going through that majestic list. Clamfight's new album is up next to listen to. Killiad was one I had not heard yet, digging it like crazy! And now, there's already the May 2025 Peroration Post to deal with! Luckily there were a lot of extra blurbs written by my fellow Contributors. So much of that love is featured but then there are quite a few more, cause in total, there are another FORTY albums! Wowzah! Check'm out! Check'm  all out!

 

The following are professions of love and adoration by Doom Charts Contributors for albums they could not stop spinning. Each month, the Doom Charts critics submit their picks for the best new doom, sludge, metal, stoner, psychedelic and other sorts of heavy rock and metal albums. The results are compiled and tabulated into the chart which is published on the First Friday of the new month. However, sometimes a love is so great, but for whatever reason the album unfortunately did not make the published Doom Charts Edition or because there were so many contributors in love with that one album, that multiple blurbs were written, and only the one got published… Well, you can peruse that love here…

The Doom Charts Peroration - May 2025 

vrijdag 20 juni 2025

Doūsk - Live!


Doūsk - Live!
Riff Dealers - 2025
Stoner, Noise Rock
Rated: ****1/4

When you decide your first official release will be a live album, it comes with some hazards you have to cope with. First you fully expose yourself, bringing things back to its pure and naked form. Furthermore we all know that live recordings often tend to sound a bit plain and cheap, forgetting to capture the true spirit and energy of a live concert. Belarusian instrumental duo Doūsk, consisting of drummer Dmitry Vashkov and bass player Igor Shaminsky, knows how to avoid those pitfalls. 'Live!' sounds raw, sweaty and heavy with some kind of delayed energy - as if the punch comes a few seconds after the grooves hit you in the gut. Time and time again. It's exciting and makes you feel like you're standing in the middle of the crowd, being engulfed by a wave after wave of unbridled purity.

Yes, this is desert-style rock like it should be, trimmed down to the bare essence of a duo that's perfectly in sync and knows how to draw you in with catchy melodies and hypnotic patterns. In that regard 'Sludge Dredd' is the perfect start to 35 minutes of calculated mayhem. Luring you in with some subdued drumming and atmospheric sounds produced by the four string, it hits you out of the blue with a larger than life groove. And that isn't the only one. These guys deliver the goods for the full 35 minutes and you can hear and feel the joy seeping out of every pore the entire time, adding various subtleties to prevent things from getting (too) predictable and monotonous. 'Blueprint' and the intro to 'Running on the Roof' add a welcome psychedelic edge. And when they lift the lid of density and open things up a bit, it sounds like a stonerized version of highly underrated Czech noise rockers Deverova Chyba, especially in parts of 'Whiskey Robot Dance' (great title!), 'Running on the Roof' and '5'. Stoner HiVe head honcho Joop Konraad stated about the latter that it "will make you feel like a whirling dervish dancing through a wormhole in space and time". And that can be said of the entire album. This is freedom in its purest form; a brilliant sonic whirlwind of hammering bass and pounding drums that is bound to hypnotize everything and everyone that appears in its wake.


(Written by Ronny Dijksterhuis)




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The Doom Charts for May 2025

 


DOOM CHARTS

MAY 2025

There’s no crime in giving yourself over to doom

~ probably misheard quote by Dr. Frank-N-Furter

 

It’s that time again, when a month overflowing with new music across the heavy spectrum comes to an end and we’re left with the impossible task of funneling it all into 40 albums. A whopping 247 bands were voted for by the Doom Charts contributors this month, from doom to death to psych and back again, and below you’ll find the 40 that floated to the top among our riff-hungry ears! Get your weekend kicked off in proper heavy fashion below, and while you’re in the dark depths of Bandcamp don’t forget to check out the new Doom Charts patches!

 

We're back from our Italian adventure; and we have that May Doom Charts waiting for us to enjoy! It's been out for two weeks now...  And the Doom Charts Peroration Post will go up later today! Wowzah! Lots of great music to dive into. Cause even though we left early, we sent our list early and still cast out votes for many on the list, but there are more this time around that we did not even hear! So, we're gonna be starting our rundown of the May 2025 Doom Charts right now with Number 40: Psychedelic Porn Crumpets – Carpe Diem, Moonman! 

But we voted for many that DID make the list... Like: Tier, Thammuz, Tumble, AAWKS, Crystal Spiders, Paralyzed, Grin, Mudfinger, Whitehovse and ofcourse for Kal-El! And some of them already got some attention over on Stoner HiVe... Check it out here: 


Kal-El – Astral Voyager Vol.1

AAWKS – On Through The Sky Maze

Paralyzed – Rumble & Roar

Thammuz – III

Tier – Backwood Blues 

 

Welcome to Doom Charts, representing some of the finest bloggers, journalists, radio, podcasters and reviewers from the heavy underground around the globe.  Each month, our critics submit their picks for the best new doom, sludge, metal, stoner, psychedelic and heavy rock albums.  The results are compiled and tabulated into the chart below.  This is a one-stop shop for the best new albums in the world…

 

The Doom Charts for May 2025

donderdag 19 juni 2025

Back from Italy...

 

Back from Italy… 


And then you are back in the mess once again… Luckily we have almost a month’s worth of great memories to swim around in. What an amazing time we had! There’s music everywhere and in everything! Doing more tourist things the first days by visiting Naples, Pompeii, Vesuvius, Sorrento and the Amalfi coast… But not finding time to head into the southern parts of Salerno. We shall have to come back! And then heading off into the Abruzzo mountains. Hiking around its more southern parts first and then the north. The mountains near Barrea and its lake, stunning! And then the Corno Grande and the Grand Sasso region, breathtaking! Amazing times! Amazing weather. Meeting nothing but good people, mountains and trees with great energies and lovely spirits! And realizing on the road the back we skirted towns where the boys from Deadpeach and Warcoe live. Yes! Next time we hit all those towns for sure! Can’t wait to come back… 



The more than a 1000 years old tree Methusalem... 

"Remembering his time as a sapling... 
And hoping for a thousand years that man would do better..."

But now, it’s back to the grind… But we have those memories… And all that great and heavy music! Only some 2000 emails to sort through… So, soon, Stoner HiVe will be back in action! It might just take a day or two more though… The listening to the good stuff starts now… 

 

But wait… What to listen to first? What’s your favorite album of the past month?



See... There’s music everywhere!