Review: Windhand – Eternal Return

Just in time for Halloween, doom metal rockers Windhand (Parker Chandler – bass, Dorthia Cottrell – vocals, Garrett Morris – guitar, Ryan Wolfe – drums) have released their newest album, Eternal Return.  Fueled in part by one of the band’s co-founders, Asechiah Bogdan, leaving the band in 2015, the death of a friend of the band, and the birth of Garrett Morris’ son.  Eternal Return speaks of the cycle of life and death, doors closing and opening, and acknowledging some things will forever remain mysteries.  The album’s cover shows a woman who looks not unlike Cottrell standing in a forest and looking a hole in the ice over a frozen lake.  Did she just push someone in there?  Is she thinking of jumping into the lake?  Is she remembering someone who died there, or is she just admiring the cold beauty of it all?  I don’t know, but all of those are possibilities when you hear the themes of life and death throughout the record.

The album opens with “Halcyon” and the freight train-like in utero heartbeat of Morris’ son just before Morris’ cosmic chariot guitar kicks in and then Chandler and Wolfe nearly flatten you like the aforementioned train as Cottrell’s haunting voice entices you to stand on the tracks.  “Would it kill you to be here?” She asks at one point.  It might, but it’s worth the risk.

“Grey Garden” has Windhand sliding effortlessly back and forth between doom metal heaviness and sultry psychedelia.  Cottrell’s vocals about, I think, a forgotten cemetery and the lover she’s buried there, display grief, love, and (as always) a hint of danger.  The breakdown makes no bones about the band’s love of psychedelic metal, and the track is all the better for it (and good heavens, Morris’ solo…).  “Pilgrim’s Rest” is a metal ode to long-forgotten settlements, explorers, and a time when the land was still pure.

If that’s not metal enough for you, I’m sure “First to Die” is from the title alone.  Cottrell sings of suffering and sacrifice while Wolfe pounds his kit through the floor and Morris and Chandler unleash the sound of a swarm of killer robotic bees attacking during an earthquake.  “First to die, to be born,” Cottrell sings, again reflecting the themes of reincarnation.  The title of the instrumental “Light into Dark” keeps up the theme as well, and soars by like a comet nearly hitting the Earth.

“Red Cloud” features some of Wolfe’s heaviest beats and Morris’ heaviest shredding.  It’s a stunning piece firmly rooted by Chandler’s bass and Cottrell’s vocals enhance the riffs and beats instead of the other way around on the track.  It’s a neat choice by the band.  “Eyeshine” is an eleven-minute feast of doom sludge that crawls along like an alligator in a deep, dark lake.

Depending on how you define “Diablerie,” it either means “reckless mischief,” “charismatic wildness,” or “sorcery assisted by the Devil.”  Eternal Return is a doom metal album, so you can probably guess which definition Windhand was leaning toward here.  Cottrell repeats, “Hope it don’t come back again.” multiple times, leading one to believe the song is about how dabbling in magic sometimes goes horribly wrong and one is lucky to escape with their life.

The album ends with the thirteen-minute “Feather,” which begins with simple strummed guitar chords and a near-military march beat.  Cottrell sings, “What is laughing in the wind?  What is waiting at the water’s edge?”  These could be the thoughts of the woman on the album cover as she’s haunted by something in that frozen lake or in the woods around her.  It ends the album on a mysterious note, which is perfect for a record about the unknowable.

Windhand are crafting fine doom metal that deserves to be heard by a wider audience.  Cottrell’s spell-casting voice and Wolfe, Morris, and Chandler’s heavy and skilled instrumentation are a powerful combination.  They aren’t afraid to explore themes we consider when we close our eyes.  While many of us would avoid the frozen lake altogether, Windhand is willing to walk up to it and face whatever is there.

Keep your mind open.

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Review: All Them Witches – self-titled

Nashville’s psych / blues rockers All Them Witches (Jonathan Draper – keyboards, Ben McLeod – guitar, Charles Michael Parks, Jr. – bass and vocals, Robby Staebler – drums) have come back from a long road tour to do what any other band would do after a long tour – release a new album.

Opening with the wild, almost manic “Fishbelly 86 Onions,” the whole band goes bonkers, especially McLeod – who shreds more than usual while Parks yells out twenty counts.  “Workhorse” could be considered “classic” ATW (if there is such a thing).  It hits all the notes you love from the band – psychedelia, obscure lyrics, a bit of outlaw country flavor, and plenty of mystery.  Plus, Staebler’s tick-tock beats are excellent on it.

“1st vs. 2nd” could almost be a Thin Lizzy track, and Parks’ bass melds so well with Draper’s keys that it’s almost impossible to tell them apart.  It evolves into almost a heavy metal chug by the end.  “Half-Tongue” gets us back into a psychedelic jam groove as Parks sings about, I think, a relationship that didn’t end well.  I could be wrong.

“Diamond” is one of those ATW songs that you should play when people ask you to describe them.  Draper’s keys move like wisps of incense smoke, McLeod’s guitar prowls like a tiger, Parks’ bass moves like a robed wizard through a library built inside a dark cave, and Staebler’s drums drive forward like a Viking boat along a bubbling river.

The band’s blues influences come out with swagger on “Harvest Feast.”  “By the time I got back to my mountain, I was uninvited from the harvest feast,” Parks sings.  He can only walk away dejected as he’s spurned by his family, friends, and culture.  The song flows into a delightful instrumental jam highlighting Draper’s keyboard work and McLeod’s trippy riffs.  “HJTC” nearly has them playing stadium rock riffs, but they hold back just enough to keep it linked to their smoky Nashville club roots.

The album ends with “Rob’s Dream,” which one can’t help but think is about something drummer Robby Staebler dreamed one night.  He apparently dreamed of powerful guitars, even stronger drumming, and flying out of orbit (judging by how the track ends).

It’s another solid record from one of the best bands out there right now.  While All Them Witches aren’t ruling the airwaves is beyond me, but I think they enjoy being a bit of a mystery and a treasure hunt.

Keep your mind open.

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Enjoy Mk.gee’s quirky new single, “Come On (You Know that I’m a Fool).”

Mk.gee Shares New Single “Come On (You Know That I’m A Fool)”
Watch The Video Here

Announces Fool EP Out November 16th

Catch SF & LA Shows Next Month

[Photo by Erica Hernandez]
Originally from New Jersey, Michael Gordon, who creates under the name Mk.gee, has spent the last few years living in Los Angeles. The multi-instrumentalist took some time this summer between tours with Omar Apollo and select dates with Dr. Dog, to complete his new Fool EP. In line with his debut release from May, Pronounced McGee, the project sees Gordon handling all of the writing, recording and mixing duties himself.

Today, Mk.gee shares his new single, “Come On (You Know That I’m A Fool),” taken from his new Fool EP to be self-released on November 16th. The track is accompanied by a video premiering via Paste. Mk.gee says, “I wanted the video to be a bit of an ironic juxtaposition to the song. The music is pretty somber and deals with change and loneliness, but ironically the video is pretty light hearted and it’s just me and my friends doing dumb shit.” Furthermore, director Erica Hernandez comments, “The song itself is very introspective so when Mike and I talked about the visual approach, we decided it would be interesting to try something more counter-intuitive and make the visuals fun and ironic. Also, Mike has the coolest friends of all time so it was a win-win situation for all of us.”

Mk.gee will play shows in San Francisco and Los Angeles next month in support of his new Fool EP.

Watch “Come On (You Know That I’m A Fool)” Video – https://youtu.be/awFrlrfWZYw

Fool EP Tracklist:
1. Brick

2. Suburban Luv
3. Come On (You Know That I’m A Fool)
4. New Years
5. Num
6. Drown
7. Wheel

Mk.gee Live:
Fri. Nov. 9 – San Francisco, CA @ Rickshaw Stop
Sat. Nov. 24 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Moroccan Lounge

Keep your mind open.
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Stream “Out of This World” from Preacherman’s upcoming reissue of his classic, hard-to-find material.

Listen To Preacherman’s “Out Of This World”

Luaka Bop’s Forthcoming Reissue, Universal Philosophy: Preacherman Plays T.J. Hustler’s Greatest Hits, Out This Friday

(photo credit: Eric Welles-Nystrom)

This Friday sees the release of Luaka Bop’s forthcoming reissue of Preacherman’s (aka Tim Jones) music, Universal Philosophy: Preacherman plays T.J. Hustler’s Greatest Hits. After sharing “Feel It,” Luaka Bop is pleased to share another cut from the release, titled “Out Of This World.”
Stream Preacherman’s “Out Of This World” — 
https://soundcloud.com/luakabop/preacherman-out-of-this-world/

In 1979, under the name T.J. Hustler, Jones self-released one extremely rare LP, Age Of Individualism. In the years since, he’s released two even rarer CD’s as Preacherman, of which the tracks on this forthcoming reissue are taken.

Throughout the 1980’s, Jones was a technician for IBM in both Las Vegas and San Jose. At night he world perform in the Las Vegas lounges. Thoroughly fascinated by technology and also an engineer in his own right, Jones adapted a Hammond B3 organ to play a Moog synth with some of the organ’s keys (some still played the organ) and also adapted the organ’s foot controlled bass levers to play two Moog synth bass pedals (a failed item Moog made for a few years). Thinking he wasn’t much of a live performer, he had a custom wooden puppet made named T.J. Hustler. Together, Tim Jones/Preacherman and T.J. Hustler would perform long philosophical soliloquies.

These days, Jones is CEO and founder of Up Productions and lives with his 103 year-old mother in Oakland, CA. With his Casio CTK-7200 keyboard, equipped with five wireless mics, a P.A., Jones performs karaoke, easily matching whatever song request you might have.

Perhaps even more so than his first album, Universal Philosophy grants listeners access, virtually for the very first time, to Jones’ outlook, his purpose, and the way he lives and experiences life on this planet. The music presented here is otherworldly, homespun, folk art funk; concise and stream-of-consciousness simultaneously.
Watch/Listen/Share:
“Feel It” stream – https://youtu.be/35waZLUTbU0
Universal Philosophy Teaser Video – https://youtu.be/S4xHRkwlWUY

Pre-order Universal Philosophy: Preacherman Plays T.J. Hustler’s Greatest Hits — 
https://luakabop.lnk.to/Preacherman

Download album art & hi-res images of Preacherman — 
http://pitchperfectpr.com/preacherman/

(Universal Philosophy: Preacherman Plays T.J. Hustler’s Greatest Hits album art by Kevin Harris)
Luaka Bop online:
luakabop.com
instagram.com/luakabop
facebook.com/luakabop1989
soundcloud.com/luakabop
youtube.com/luakabop
twitter.com/LuakaBop

Keep your mind open.

[I’d feel out of this world if you subscribed.]

Review: Neko Case – Hell-On

Singer-songwriter Neko Case has been through a lot in the last five years.  The biggest calamity was that her home in Vermont burned to the ground while she was recording in Sweden.  The loss and enlightenment that fire brought to her were the inspiration for much of her new record, Hell-On.  Even the album’s cover has her wearing a crown of cigarettes while a blazing tar fire burns on her shoulder.

The title track opens the record and has Case boldly stating, “God is not a contract or a guy….God is a lusty tire fire.”  Nature, much like Case, cannot be controlled.  You shouldn’t even try.  “Nothing quite so poison as a promise,” she warns.  Just sit back and listen.  You’ll come through this song (and the whole record) with respect and an altered perspective for her, nature, detachment, and femininity.

“Last Lion of Albion” is one of Case’s many songs about nature, animals, and the importance of protecting both.  The beats and acoustic guitar riffs are wonderful throughout it, but they (like most everything else) can barely keep up with Case’s expert vocals and assuredness.  “Halls of Sarah” encourages women to stand strong in the times of #MeToo (and check out that saxophone solo!).

“Bad Luck” is the song Case wrote after her house and barn turned into ashes.  It’s surprisingly upbeat and is an anthem for standing up when you’re knocked to the ground.  The song ends with Case stating, “I died and went to work.”  You take the loss, and you move on.  The past is gone so take the moment now and run with it.  “Curse of the I-5 Corridor” is a stunning showcase for Case’s voice as she sings, “I miss the smell of mystery.” and tells the story of a woman who left home with a fake I.D. and wandered in and out of relationships, one night stands, and life in general until she meets up with a former lover in old age when they both might be mad and facing death.  It’s one of her best.

“Gumball Blue” has Case singing about the trappings of fame, “Dirty Diamond” seems to be an ode to the (currently) necessary evil of petroleum, and “Oracle of the Maritimes” is a lovely story of fishermen, lost love, and the dangers of the sea.  I love how “Winnie” (a song about love among women) starts off with a quick four-count drumstick tap and then switches to a sultry bass groove that moves like a bathrobe being slowly dropped to the bedroom floor.

Case includes her cover of Eric Bachmann‘s “Sleep All Summer” (a song that, as the story goes, made her pull over her car and weep the first time she heard it) with Bachmann performing a duet with her is another stunner about lost love.  Guests artists are all over this record.  K.D. LangBeth DittoMark LaneganCarl NewmanKatherine Calder, and John Collins are just a few (the last three are bandmates with Ms. Case in the New Pornographers) who provide guest vocals, production, and instrumentation to various tracks.

“Black is blue if I say it is,” Case sings on “My Uncle’s Navy” – a story about a relative she admired for his strength and resolve.  The album closes with “Pitch or Honey,” in which she admits, “I use major chords to make this a sadder song…An effective manipulation.”  She’s right.  It works.  “I wrote this song for me, and now I let it go.  From the island of the Texaco, I release it into the custody of my huckleberry friend.  Am I making pitch or honey?”  I love the idea of Case embracing detachment yet still wondering if her work is any good.  It’s the curse of any artist.  Being satisfied with our work is a rarity, but we know we have to release it to someone sooner or later.

Case detached from many things while making this record, some literal (her house and many possessions) and some metaphorical (things from her past that she hadn’t yet fully sent down the river).  Hell-On is another beautiful work from a master of her craft and one of the strongest voices in music today.

Keep your mind open.

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Wrecka Stow: Smallville – Paris, France

Located at 26 Rue du Chateau d’Eau, Paris’ Smallville Records is indeed a small place, but it’s a good stop for lovers of vinyl records if you’re visiting the city.  Vinyl is far more popular than CD’s in Paris, it seems, and Smallville has plenty of records to spare.

It’s mostly modern artists, but you can find some good electronica, hip hop, and European rock there.  The record at the top left of the second photo is Zombie Zombie‘s Livity, which I highly recommend.

You can listen before you buy, and their turntable covers clearly show how much they love vinyl.

Keep your mind open.

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Review: CHAI – Pink

Originally released in Japan last October, but first released in the U.S. earlier this year, the four-piece pop-punk band CHAI might have released the most fun record of the last 12 months – Pink.

Twin sisters Mana (vocals and keys) and Kana (guitar) joined up with high school classmate Yuna (drums) and college pal Yuuki (bass) to create music that is cute, catchy, and crunchy all at the same time.  It’s the aural equivalent of Pocky, and I mean that in the best possible sense.

Beginning with “Hi Hi Baby,” a song about babies being goofy, CHAI puts down infectious cowbell-heavy beats, post-punk bass, and even steel drums to produce something so fun that you’re almost not sure how to process it.

“You are so cute.  Nice face, oh yeah!  We are so cute.  Nice face, oh yeah!” starts off “N.E.O.”, which is nearly three minutes of pop-punk laced with psychedelia and has maybe the sickest drum and bass groove of the last year.  This is the kind of track that makes you think, “Where the hell have these women been all my life?” when you hear it.  The bass gets fat and the guitars and synths get fuzzy on “Boyz Seco Men” while the dual vocals between Mana and Kana bring to mid early 1990’s glam-pop love songs.

“Horechatta” adds reverb and downright sexy vocals that remind me of late 1970’s yacht rock.  I’m fairly certain “Fried” is about how great fried fish is, but I could be wrong.  I doubt it, because a lot of songs on Pink are about food.  Tempura fish, when done well, is great, as are Mana’s bright synths on the track.  “She Is Kitty” bounces like a kitten looped on catnip and chasing a butterfly, and the psychedelic touches make you think the kitten has knocked over a lava lamp in the process.

Not weird enough for you?  Then try “Gyaranboo,” which I won’t even attempt to describe.  “Kawaii Hito,” a song about double standards of beauty, is almost as strange.  “Walking Star” is lovely pop-punk with some of the toughest guitar riffs on the record.  “Sayonara Complex” is a bass-driven song that seems to produce sunlight from your speakers.  The closer, “Flat Girl,” strolls along like a happy tourist on a Japanese beach.  By the way, it’s about women with small breasts.

This is one of the catchiest and surprisingly trippy records released in the U.S. this year.  It’s the perfect antidote for these modern, angry times.

Keep your mind open.

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Satan’s Satyrs release title track from upcoming album, “The Lucky Ones,” ahead of tour with Windhand.

Satan’s Satyrs premiere title track from forthcoming album, tour w/ Windhand starts Monday
 Produced by Windhand guitarist on RidingEasy / Bad Omen Records
Hear & share “The Lucky Ones” (YouTube) (CvltNation)

 

“Channels high-speed, denim and leather ’70s rock but gives it a slightly modern touch. You could imagine hearing it on the Dazed and Confused soundtrack just as easily as you could imagine hearing it on the radio next to Queens of the Stone Age.” — Brooklyn Vegan
 
“Rooted in a glammy early Seventies rock sound, ‘She Beast’ is the sort of head-nodding cut that you’d expect to hear blaring out of a muscle car, with a beautiful feathered-hair couple taking the front seats.” — Revolver
Richmond, VA quartet Satan’s Satyrs premiere the title track from their forthcoming album The Lucky Ones today via CvltNation. Hear and share “The Lucky Ones” HERE. (Direct YouTube.)
 
Satan’s Satyrs hit the road in support of the album with doom faves Windhand in October. See all dates below.
Revolver Magazine recently shared album track “She Beast” HEREBrooklyn Vegan previously launched album opener “Thrill of the City” HERE.
 
Upon recovering from being steamrolled over by the onslaught of Satan’s Satyrs‘ new album The Lucky Ones, you’ll likely wonder just what exactly it was that hit you. A punky, sleaze rock groove (perhaps even a whiff of 70s glam) meets NWOBHM melodic fury, Blue Cheer mass and volume, and Ozzy‘s dramatic charisma condensed into a sound all its own, perhaps. At its core is an unstoppable, unpretentious exorcism of rock’n’roll exuberance.
“It doesn’t sound like anything else happening right now,” says bassist/vocalist Clayton Burgess, who has spent the last few years splitting his time in British doom heroes Electric Wizard. “The band has its own unique idiosyncratic sound.”
A significant difference on this album is the addition of second guitarist Nate Towle, which expands the band’s steamrolling capacity tenfold. Burgess, Towle, guitarist Jarrett Nettnin and drummer Stephen Fairfield convened at the Richmond, VA studio of Windhand guitarist Garrett Morris, working in fits and starts over several months, first quickly capturing the raw energy of a band firing on all cylinders, then fine tuning the sounds and experimenting to get everything as massive as you hear it now. Likewise, Burgess’ lyrics show new levels of achievement.
“I pushed myself to get more of my own life in the songs, but open enough that anyone can interpret them in their own way,” he says. “I just wanted to capture weirdness. It reflects my unusual tastes, but also takes a personal perspective.”
The twin guitar assault begins from the very first beat of The Lucky Ones and never relents until the last second of the 9-track, 35-minute album. Opener “Thrill of the City” wastes no time launching into soaring harmonized riffs and swaggering rhythms setting the scene for a debauched good time. The title track, perhaps the most personal song on the album, is also the most unabashedly melodic. “Too Early To Fold” captures the frustrations and challenges of life as a touring musician, expressed through a belligerent 2-guitar attack and pounding snare on all 4 downbeats driving it all home. “Trampled By Angels” pits a swinging T Rex vibe against dizzy, noisy guitars and lyrics about a pioneer of fetish photography using his medium to express forbidden desires to the world. Likewise, The Lucky Ones itself is a vibrant, brash and loud expression of defiance against convention that refuses to be ignored.
The Lucky Ones will be available on LP, CD and download on October 19th, 2018 on Bad Omen Records, manufactured and distributed in North America by RidingEasy Records. Pre-orders are available HERE.
SATAN’S SATYRS LIVE:
10/08: Atlanta, GA – The Earl #
10/09: New Orleans, LA – Gasa Gasa #
10/10: Houston TX – White Oak Music Hall #
10/11: Dallas, TX – Club Dada #
10/12: Austin, TX – Barracuda #
10/14: Albuquerque, NM – Sister #
10/15: Phoenix, AZ – Valley Bar #
10/16: Los Angeles, CA – El Rey Theatre #
10/17: Oakland, CA – Starline Social Club #
10/19: Portland, OR – Aladdin Theatre #
10/20: Vancouver, BC – Venue #
10/21: Seattle, WA – Neumos #
10/23: Denver, CO – Larimer Lounge #
10/24: Kansas City, MO – The Riot Room #
11/01: Philadelphia, PA – Underground Arts #
11/02: Brooklyn, NY – Elsewhere #
11/03: Boston, MA – Brighton Music Hall #
11/04: Montreal, QC – Le Belmont #
11/05: Toronto, ON – The Legendary Horseshoe Tavern #
11/07: Chicago, IL – Subterranean #
11/08: Minneapolis, MN – Fine Line Music Cafe #
11/09: Milwaukee, WI – Cactus Club #
11/10: Indianapolis, IN – The Hi-Fi #
11/11: Nashville, TN – The Basement East #
11/12: Louisville, KY – Zanzabar #
11/13: Columbus, OH – Ace of Cups #
# w/ Windhand

Artist: Satan’s Satyrs
Album: The Lucky Ones
Label: RidingEasy Records/Bad Omen Records
Release Date: October 19th, 2018
01. Thrill of the City
02. The Lucky Ones
03. She Beast
04. Take It and Run
05. You and Your Boots
06. Too Early to Fold
07. Pulp Star
08. Trampled By Angels
09. Permanent Darkness
On the Web:

ridingeasyrecs.com/product/satans-satyrs-the-lucky-ones/

Keep your mind open.
[I’ll feel lucky if you subscribe.]

Live: Garbage and Dream Wife – September 20, 2018 – Paris, France

My wife and I were delighted to learn that Garbage would be playing in Paris while we were on vacation there.  I was surprised we managed to score tickets at face value, and even more surprised by the intimacy of the venue – the Bataclan. I expected a much bigger place, but the small size made the show louder, closer, and better.

Openers Dream Wife put down a raucous set of garage punk about subjects like female empowerment and ending gender bias.  The people tending their merch table were having a great time all night.

Garbage came out to a lively crowd and were soon tearing through hits from their second album, Garbage 2.0.  It was the 20th anniversary tour of the record, so you had to expect it.  They played other hits, of course, and lead singer Shirley Manson had the crowd in her hands within moments of the first notes she sang.

They tore through tracks like “Deadwood,” “Wicked Ways” (which included parts of Depeche Mode‘s “Personal Jesus”), and “The World Is Not Enough” – the Bond theme they did from the movie of the same name back in 1999.  Other highlights included “Medication,” with Manson telling the story of how she had to deal with health care in the U.S. after nearing dying of flu while on tour, “I Think I’m Paranoid,” “Sleep Together,” “Dumb,” and “Push It.”

They closed with “The Trick Is to Keep Breathing,” a new song called “No Horses” (which Manson said is about an environmental apocalypse), and “Cherry Lips” (which Manson said has become the Garbage concert anthem).

It was a fun show with an appreciative crowd.  You can’t ask for much more than that.

Keep your mind open.

[Don’t forget to subscribe.]

Unknown Mortal Orchestra surprises everyone with an instrumental album – “IC-01 Hanoi” – out later this month.

UNKNOWN MORTAL ORCHESTRA
ANNOUNCES SURPRISE INSTRUMENTAL ALBUM

IC-01 HANOI, OUT 10/26 ON JAGJAGUWAR; LISTEN TO “HANOI 6”

While recording Unknown Mortal Orchestra’s latest release, Sex & Food, Ruban Nielson, his longtime collaborator Jacob Portrait and his brother Kody Nielson, found themselves in the Vietnamese city of Hanoi at Phu Sa Studios.  During the recording process for Sex & Food the band recorded live sessions with local musician Minh Nguyen on Sáo Trúc, Đàn Môi, and Vietnamese Percussion and Nielson’s father, Chris, on Flugelhorn, Saxophone and keyboards.  These sessions became IC-01 Hanoi: a sonic distillation of the band’s influences in Jazz, Krautrock, and the avant-garde.  At its core Hanoi is a record of exploration, finding its closest antecedent in Miles Davis’ experimental On The Corner – itself a record full of nods toward avant-garde composers and jazz outsiders alike.  Hanoi finds Ruban amplifying and stretching out on lead guitar, with a blown-out and wandering fuzz tone that slinks throughout the sessions.  The rest of the group match Ruban’s melodic diversions with aplomb, mining their talents and finding as easy a role in the fusion of funk as they do in the more ambient and abstract tangents on Hanoi. IC-01 Hanoi will see release on October 26th via Jagjaguwar.

LISTEN TO “HANOI 6”
https://youtu.be/JDsmgYRh6nA

PRE-ORDER IC-01 HANOI
https://umo.ffm.to/ic-01hanoi

IC-01 HANOI TRACKLISTING
1. Hanoi 1
2. Hanoi 2
3. Hanoi 3
4. Hanoi 4
5. Hanoi 5
6. Hanoi 6
7. Hanoi 7

UNKNOWN MORTAL ORCHESTRA TOUR DATES
September 25 – Kuala Lumpur, MY @ The Bee
September 26 – Jakarta, ID @ Empirica
October 4 – Guadalajara, Mexico @ C3 Stage
October 6 – Lomas Atlas, Mexico @ Festival Hipnosis @ Deportivo Lomas Atlas
October 26 – Madrid, ES @ Sala Mon
October 27 – Bilbao, ES @ BIME Live
October 29 – Porto, PT @ Hard Club
October 30 – Lisbon, PT @ Aula Magna
November 1 – Clermont-Ferrand, FR @ La Cooperative de Mai
November 2 – Antwerp, BE @ Filter Festival
November 3 – Paris, FR @ Pitchfork Music Festival Paris
November 4 – Frankfurt, DE @ Zoom Frankfurt
November 6 – Copenhagen, DK @ Vega
November 7 – Stockholm, SE @ Kagelbanan
November 8 – Oslo, NO @ Parkteatret – SOLD OUT
November 9 – Bergen, NO @ Landmark – SOLD OUT
November 11 – Groningen, NL @ Oosterpoort
November 13 – Vienna, AT @ Flex
November 14 – Zurich, CH @ Rote Fabrik
November 15 – Vevey, CH @ Rocking Chair
November 16 – Amsterdam, NL @ Melkweg
November 17 – Leipzig, DE @ Trascentury Update No. 3 Festival
November 19 – Birmingham, UK @ O2 Institute
November 21 – London, UK @ Royal Albert Hall
November 22 – Brighton, UK @ Concorde 2 – SOLD OUT
November 23 – Sheffield, UK @ The Leadmill
November 25 – Dublin, Ireland @ The Academy
November 26 – Glasgow, UK @ SWG3
January 12 – Christchurch, NZ @ Hagley Park
January 14 – Queenstown, NZ @ John Davies Oval
January 19 – Auckland, NZ @ Western Springs – SOLD OUT

Listen to Sex & Food https://unknownmortalorchestra.lnk.to/sexandfood
Watch “Hunnybee” – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJrKlSkxRHA
Watch “Not In Love We’re Just High” – https://youtu.be/uY82vChor2A
Watch “Everyone Acts Crazy Nowadays” – https://youtu.be/ad2Iy0DMCWU
Watch “American Guilt” – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-JlcmCxIXU
Download hi-res images here: http://pitchperfectpr.com/unknown-mortal-orchestra/
UMO Online:
https://twitter.com/umo
http://unknownmortalorchestra.com/
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http://www.jagjaguwar.com/artist.php?name=umo
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Keep your mind open.

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