woensdag 19 november 2014

An Evening With Knives – An Evening With Knives


An Evening With Knives – An Evening With Knives
Self released – 2014
Rock, Metal, Sludge, Doom, Stoner Post
Rated: ***

Hailing from that same town as Komatsu; An Evening With Knives produce heavy ruckus that could be seen as an offspring of that band. Heavy, dirge like sludge and stoner metal are the main vein. And they use samples. But through those arteries race post-rock blood cells and substances that are highly volatile. Another reason might be the fact that Komatsu-frontman Mo Truijens produced the EP. And ofcourse guitarist Marco Gelissen filled in for Stephan Quint when the man was hospitalized. O' and the band opened for them on their last show in their hometown before they left on their European tour with Uncle John. There, that’s enough about that connection. But another background check showed drummer Ivo Jonkers being part of Hijos De Mayo and Red King Rising. (One of the first bands of Selim Lemouchi from Devil's Blood.) But let’s dive headfirst back into those two mountainous tracks. Huge in sound, color and atmosphere the three manage to keep you captivated and on edge for the entire time. There is something lurking down there in those deep and dark waters. And it is dangerous and armed with knives…

(Written by JK)

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dinsdag 18 november 2014

Pocket Size Sthlm – Exposed Undercurrents


Pocket Size Sthlm – Exposed Undercurrents
Self released – 2014
Rock, Prog, Experimental, Art, Jazz, Psych
Rated: ***

The new album Exposed Undercurrents by the Swedish musical mercenary squad Pocket Size Sthlm is not just a little psychedelic ditty one can enjoy on a lazy afternoon. No, this experimental jazz infused adventure desires your full attention. The man behind this endeavor is Peter Pedersen who has enlisted the aid of a multitude of artists from both sides of the Atlantic Ocean to help him surf these newly found undercurrents. It is a slippery ride that feels forced on a few moments but generally comes across like that tightrope acrobatic you once knew that loved his drink and drank his vodka like he was on a mission. Which is a dangerous mix that will sooner or later lead you to cross the wrong wire at the wrong time. And on some of those days you will be lucky and only break a finger or two and make a fool of yourself. But luck is a very thin wire between survival and disaster, and not many people can keep their balance. Peter and his band of brothers seem to be experts in surviving. They maneuver themselves into musical Cul-de-sacs where you think there is no way left to go. But they then manage to either find tight little hole to squeeze through or just turn around and stampede the way they came in from. This is high art and not to be taken lightly. This is a festive and highly fluid way to arrest a certain undercurrent of life. Not to hold it fixed for future generations but to expose it now for entire world to see. Or at least the lucky few who knew and who will understand…

(Written by JK)




Space Guerrilla – Boundless


Space Guerrilla – Boundless
Self released – 2014
Rock, Stoner, Space, Instrumental
Rated: ****

It is the story of many a stonerrock outfit. Guys get together to jam in a dusty little cellar somewhere and record a few tracks and send them out into the world. More often than not they have merit and you are glad they did, sometimes you wish they hadn’t and on a few occasions you wish they had more or will come through with more soon. The release Boundless by the Brazilian trio Space Guerrilla is one of those occasions. The five instrumental tracks on this record are highly spacious stonerrock and infectious wide ranged psychedelic meanderings. Accompanied by soundclips that are pushed back in the mix to invoke a sense of mystery; the songs take on this otherworldly atmosphere. They soon have you envisioning endless starry nights and vibrating comets hailing the coming of something good. The drums crashing and thundering one moment and tribalistic and meandering the next. Guitars that wail, howl and slide but also riff and rock where needed and a bass that flows and follows and sets the course for the infinite space. Simply magnificent!

(Written by JK)



Ocean Chief & Snailking at Club Undergången, 29th of November!


Ocean Chief & Snailking at Club Undergången, 29th of November!

If you’re in Stockholm on the 29th of November; swing by Club Undergången to have a night of stoner, doom and sludge! The mighty Ocean Chief and the thunderous Snailking will do their best to make your knees go weak and your head explode! Club Undergången where the darkness is revered!




donderdag 13 november 2014

John Garcia with STEAK and Komatsu – Live at W2



John Garcia with STEAK and Komatsu – Live at W2

On a reasonably cold Tuesday evening in November in an almost sold out W2 venue in Den Bosch, Netherlands desert rock legend John Garcia takes the stage. The man who rose from the sandy wastelands of the Palm Desert to stand at the very beginning of the music genre that unfortunately received the moniker stonerrock. Together with his hombres he formed Kyuss and with their four albums at the beginning of the nineties they laid the foundation for all those bands that came after and who also revere the low end tunes. But still, the band would never have received this godlike status if it hadn’t been for the true and powerful voice of Mr. John Garcia.



After the end of Kyuss, the man released amazing albums with Unida, Slo Burn, Hermano and Vista Chino before finally putting out a solo record. That self-titled release from this year is the reason he embarked on this European tour. But before we are able to enjoy the mighty voice tonight there are two bands that deliver a pre-show warm up. And those aren’t ones to miss or mess around with. Hailing from the United Kingdom it is STEAK that opens up tonight and show us immediately that it is all about the fuzz, the groove and the majestic riffs this evening. Mad wildebeest drummer Sammy Forway pounds his skins like crazy, undeterred by the problems with his kit and the sound. They truck on relentlessly and the songs from the Slab City album released earlier this year, which features Garcia on one track, fills the venue with dry sandy tones and a yearning audience. Even though the band doesn’t seem to be in the best state of mind on this sixth night of the tour. (Probably due to the hangover manufactured the night before.) They do sound like a marauding gang of motorcycle nuts on route to a generator party in the wastelands. And they make sure the audience is already riled up when the Dutch sludge force Komatsu walks on stage...




Thanks to that one flirt on Speedfest last year. A solid friendship between Garcia and Komatsu was formed. So when Waxy dropped out for the tour the man immediately asked the guys if they would want to join him. Jumping at the opportunity, they lost one of their own. Cause its four guys that walk on stage tonight. Drummer Miriam Bekkers has unfortunately left the group because family life, running a bar and touring for a month aren’t easily combined. But the guys seem to be in their element on this home game. Tight, raw and vicious they propel their songs into the venue and new guy drummer Jelle Tommeleyn from the Belgian band Miava, shows through his technical prowess, he has mastered the Komatsu material in an incredible short period of time. The way he builds layer upon layer on songs like Komatsu and the new WTF! is admirable. New instrumental intro Rose Of Jericho and pounding track Lockdown seem to be great new weapons in their arsenal. And together with the Against All Odds track might be found on the new album to be recorded after the tour. The only thing that always grinds and pains with Komatsu are the vocals. Tonight is no different. But thanks to the massive riffs and the ever growing ingenious melody lines it seems that those chafing vocals are part of the Komatsu creed. Namely: to demolish every venue whole. The reception is warm for the guys. Cause even though the biggest part of the venue is here for the main act, there is a big enough Komatsu contingent to show support before they truck on through Europe with uncle John…


As always with our favorite uncle, it is the musicians that arrive first and start playing. Guitarist Ehren Groban (War Drum), bassist Mike Pygmie (You Know Who) and drummer Greg Saenz (You Know Who, The Dwarves) play the intro before we get loud to hail the arrival of Garcia. It is immediately apparent that the singer has become more and more comfortable with the fact that he is the center of attention and focal point. With all his earlier projects the man hardly spoke to the audience. But this time around he has to, it is his name on the bill and the tour through Europe is to promote his solo effort. Ofcourse he lets us know that he is not that proficient in small talk and that he is just here to sing, but he wants to reassure the audience that they have not come in vain: songs from his entire catalogue will be played. As if he wants to apologize for the fact that he will also play new songs. Which is ridiculous ofcourse since the new album is filled with killer songs who are live even better; as we will soon find out…



Amazing versions of One Inch Man, Tangy Zizzle, Gloria Lewis and an unparalleled version of El Rodeo follow. Which shows a singer that is absolutely determined to deliver those songs as good as he possibly can and which tells us he finds them just as important if not more important than his new work. Even more so when the Slo Burn song July howls itself through the venue. From the new record we hear an impressive Blvd, Flowers, 500 Miles and My Mind, all tight and enthralling. But unfortunately the Garcia performance is also plagued by technical difficulties. At three quarters of the show, the during solo track Argleben and Slo Burn song Pilot The Dune the guitar troubles destroy the groove and state of mind of the audience. The running around of roadies and the guitar player cannot camouflage the fact that the band aren’t comfortable enough with each other yet to start improvising. So soon the music stops and after a third time the guitar sound fails Garcia walks off stage. After many checks and hiccups a new cable from guitar to pedals seems to be the solution. Wouldn’t you decide to switch cables sooner? 



The band wants revenge. And that hangs in the air when Garcia comes back and performs All These Walls. An absolute stunning live song that has the crowd on their toes and ready to pounce. And when Supa Scoopa And The Mighty Scoop and Green Machine finally come around we all change into a stampeding herd of buffalo or crazy dancing coyotes. But even though the end is truly majestic, it cannot hide the fact that the show never became as legendary as the prestige of Garcia himself. The powerful voice of the phenomenal singer has only grown with the passing of time. But the technical difficulties and complete stops of the show provide us with an unsatisfied feeling. The almost effect. Cause afterward you realize all too well what could have happened if things has just been a little different…


dinsdag 11 november 2014

DeepSpacePilots – Per Ardu Ad Astra


DeepSpacePilots – Per Ardu Ad Astra
Interstellar Dust – 2014
Rock, Space, Psych, Doom, Ambient
Rated: ***

The new deep space adventure Per Ardu Ad Astra is over before you know it. And this is not just because it, unlike your other usual space rock albums, does not last as long. Which is doesn’t, for the main part of the adventure only lasts for about twenty-five minutes. Which is refreshing. But it is mostly because you would want it to go on much longer. You catch your breath and think; where did we go? Why did it end here? Is there any more beyond this desolation? For yes, the DeepSpacePilots take you on a grand tour of the universe for twenty-five minutes and then leave you drifting through the horrible void for another fifteen. It is this Chicago based three-piece third release and truly aims for the great big distance. They produce this otherworldly groove that slowly builds on pounding drums and whirling guitars. Floating vocals add to the ghostly atmosphere and that is just the intro song Cult Of Ark. After which the tour the force really takes off. Their reworking of the rare Pink Floyd track One In A Million is inspiring and captivating. There is no struggle here; these musical astronauts know their heading and we can only follow in their wake. Let’s hope their next voyage lasts even longer!

(Written by JK)



The Cover That Could – I


The Cover That Could – I

Karma To Burn – Twenty Four Hours

There is not much left of that old Karma To Burn spirit. Sure, the new incarnation sounds damn good. But it is not the same without Oswald and Mullins. And just think back to 1997 to that very first album by this legendary instrumental stonerrock-formation, it surprised friend and foe. Not just because of the amazing quality of the songs. But more because we were suddenly also treated to a singer. And ever since that moment the fans have been divided in two camps. Those who love that first album to death and believe it to be the best they ever released and those who dismiss that first one and think it should never have seen the light of day. Whatever side you are on, there is a cover version on the record, which might as well be judged as better than the original. Which is in part thanks to the last minutes added vocalist (ordered by the record company) Jason ‘J.J.’ Jarosz. The original song describes the endless and hopeless darkness that is beyond any form of depression. So many things to fight for; yet without any real meaning. Cause everything slips away anyway. Perfect bass lines that provide the melody and thus become the fantastic toy for the mighty Rich Mullins… Karma To Burn’s version of the Joy Division song Twenty Four Hours is better than the original!





The Cover That Could


The Cover That Could

I am a sucker for cover versions. Covers done right add something to the original and on some occasions even make it better. Most often it just makes it sound different or interesting. Sometimes it’s just entertaining. And there are those versions that completely destroy the song. But still, for some reason I am always drawn to them. To hear what an artist comes up with when it is their interpretation. Well. On Stoner HiVe we will occasionally pay a little tribute to one of those versions. Once every so often it will enthrall, amaze or make you fall in love with the song all over again. And sometimes, it will make you laugh or puke…

Polarbeers – 1MV


Polarbeers – 1MV

Looking for one minute of complete and utter chaos? Punky ruckus and fun in a fun bus? Check out the new video for the 1MV song by the Italian Polarbeers!




woensdag 5 november 2014

Crobot – Something Supernatural


Crobot – Something Supernatural
Wind-Up Records/Nuclear Blast – 2014
Rock, Seventies
Rated: *****

These cats released their first album Legend Of The Spaceborne Killer to much of my anticipation back in 2012. But Crobot pulled it again due to the fact of new members entering the band. The line-up changed, the sound changed. Well, A bit. A tiny bit. And if that was possible at all; only for the better! Which resulted in the release of the teasing self-titled EP in the beginning of this year and now finally, the official through record company channels released Something Supernatural album. And it truly is supernatural. Produced by Machine (Clutch, Lamb of God) their huge sound becomes even more mountainous. Elegantly elevated to the level colossal. With an enormous amount of groove their seventies styled rock is funky fuzz and deliciously distorted where needed. But above all it is their sliding rhythms and thrown tempos that just mesmerize and hypnotize. On top ofcourse of the amazing songwriting quality, tight riffs, guitarlines, thrashing drums and a vocalist that wails, howls and screams like there is a Chupacabra biting his ass. Holy hell man, Crobot, it’s all happening. The way Legend Of The Spaceborne Killer has grown and still opens the album with an utterly massive bang. Wow. Crobot. Something grungy, something funky, something seventies and even something stoner, shit man, Something Supernatural. This is energetic, raw and wild music for wild times and we all deserve to have them at least once a week!

(Written by JK)





Crobot - Nowhere to Hide


Crobot - Nowhere to Hide

Second single Nowhere to Hide from the amazing Something Supernatural album by the mighty Crobot.

Crobot - Legend of the Spaceborne Killer


Crobot - Legend of the Spaceborne Killer (LIVE) 

The re-envisionig of the amazing opening track Legend Of The Spaceborn Killer for their new album Something Supernatural by the mighty Crobot. And we all ofcourse already know it from their 2012 album Legend Of The Spaceborne Killer which was one of the, if not the, best album of that year...

Lotus Ash – The Word of God


Lotus Ash – The Word of God
Self released – 2014
Metal, Doom, Sludge, Rock
Rated: ****

It is the underlying droning quality that drags you in. It becomes uncomfortable on many occasions and it is hugely impressive.

(Written by C)