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YEARS OF DECAYS/T (LP)SYMPHONY OF DESTRUCTION - 13 €French melodic crust punk from 2007. |
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YOBATMA (DOLP)20 BUCK SPIN - 28 €
If you spend some time digging through interviews and
profiles of YOB, you'll find the consensus on the long-running
heavy-as-full-stacks army of Oregon's Mike Scheidt is that his band fits
partially into nearly half a dozen interconnected subgenres: psychedelic
rock, stoner rock, stoner metal, blues metal, and, most consistently,
doom metal. From associated instruments to target demographics, several
factors unite those niches, not least of which is the propensity to
indulge a sound, solo, or song for minutes on end. As it is with High on
Fire, so it is with Hawkwind, and as it is with Earth, so it is with
Eyehategod: When a band latches onto something it loves, be prepared to
go the distance. YOB, it seems, is no different: "The Great Cessation",
the title track of the trio's previous album, was a colossal 21-minute
closer that took its time snaking through several obsessions, from the
twinkling introduction and a throbbing mid-tempo midsection to a
monolithic coda that felt like a great, malevolent sigh. Similarly, "Adrift
in the Ocean" ends the band's latest LP Atma with a magnificent
16-minute rise: Middle Eastern-influenced guitars tessellate over teased
cymbals until the full trio of Scheidt, drummer Travis Foster, and
bassist Aaron Reiseberg lurches forward, rising and collapsing in thick,
deliberate bursts for about eight minutes. Like its predecessor, Atma
closes in a glorious burnout, Scheidt's post-rock-sized guitar solo
ultimately smearing into a drone over a mangled drum limp. One of YOB's
chief accomplishments here and throughout much of its discography has
been its sterling ability to maintain a sense of momentum, whether the
track ends after five minutes or pushes into the teens. The shortest of
Atma's five tunes, "Upon the Sight of the Other Shore", nears the
eight-minute mark thanks to several Geezer Butler-gone-Godflesh verses
and a handful of guitar solos. Its sense of constant movement, though,
isn't unlike that of the preceding "Before We Dreamed of Two", the
album's 16-minute, three-part marathon: In spite of languid riffs and an
occasional absence of drums, "Dreamed" never sits anywhere for too long
and, more important, never bores. In several Eastern religions, atma
means a more complete aware version of the self. Scheidt uses that word
during the refrain (or mantra, maybe?) of "Dreamed", singing "Self
reaching outward/ Toward within" at the apogee of the riff’s power. The
bulk of Atma seems to be about some human realization that's more
meaningful than the mundane, where change and finality and death and
loss actually work toward something important. "Burning within from what
must be/ The desire of the one to be witnessed," he howls as if caught
in mid-strangulation at the end of the title track, a menacing swirl of
drums and distortion at his back. You can hear those ideas throughout
Atma, a record that never takes the space it's been given for granted.
Each passing second feels like a chance for a new thought, a happy
diversion. That's not what you expect from the stasis and slow shifts of
doom metal or anything with which YOB is generally associated. It's
exactly what makes every bit of Atma so very powerful. |