To wrap up 2013 in style I've decided to offer up my very own
best-of-the-year list focusing in on the top releases from a musical
genre generally referred to as "
stoner rock". Stoner rock is a bit of catch all for various styles that include desert rock, traditional
doom metal,
sludge,
drone metal,
occult rock, fuzz rock, heavy psych, and so forth. As I noted before
here, stoner rock is a genre that was seemingly steeped in
synchro-mysticism from its very inception.
Desert rock, for instance, was spawned near the
infamous thirty-third parallel north in the desert surrounding
Palm Desert area. This region also includes
Joshua Tree National Park, a location that became legendary in rock 'n roll lore after
Gram Parsons' (of the
Byrds and
Flying Burrito Brothers,
among others) body was burned there in a bizarre send-off by his road
manager. Less than 20 years later the surrounding deserts would play
host to what became known as "
generator parties."
Local bands would erect makeshift stages deep in the deserts and use
generators to power their amps. Festivities would begin shortly after
dark, with local kids making the scene and consuming massive amounts of
beer, weed and hallucinogens. Frequently the bands would play for hours,
not stopping until the early hours of the next day. For all sakes and
purposes these generator parties brought rock 'n roll back to its
shamanistic origins and it should come as little surprise that musicians
who cut their teeth in this environment would become key members in a
host of bands that include
Queens of the Stone Age,
Kyuss,
Fu Manchu, the
Obsessed,
Goatsnake,
Yawning Man,
Fatso Jetson,
Masters of Reality, and so forth.
To this very day the whole Palm Desert/Joshua Tree area remains a musical mecca, with both veterans of the
Palm Desert scene as well newer bands with no direct links to region heading there to record.
Blaak Heat Shujaa,
a group comprised of individuals from France and the eastern United
States, even went so far as to relocate there before recording their
most recent EP and album so as to bask in the atmosphere.
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| Rancho De La Luna, one of the famed recording studios in the palm Desert/Joshua Tree region |
The origins of other styles associated with the stoner rock genre are
not quite so dramatic, but regardless this genre has long displayed a
curious relationship with the occult and mystical. Of course rock bands
delving into the occult, especially in the metal genre, is rather passé
in this day and age but stoner rock always took a much more original
approach than the lame
LaVeyian Satanism and Nordic paganism of many
extreme metal bands. Consider, for instance,
In the Labyrinth's
The Garden of Mysteries, an album originally released in 1996. This album, recently re-released in 2012, attempts to be a kind of soundtrack to
ancient Mystery traditions from across the
Mediterranean. More recently
Sabbath Assembly (whom I already wrote at length on
here and
here) set the hymns of the notorious
Process Church of the Final Judgment to music in two superb albums,
Restored to the One and
Ye Are Gods.
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| In the Labyrinth's The Garden of the Mysteries (top) and Sabbath Assembly's debut (bottom) |
So yes, despite the hedonistic and escapist nature of much stoner rock, there are some incredible instances of
synchronicity and occult musings. For a genre that is not considered especially serious in nature it seems to routinely out do the
Masonic Easter eggs of much pop music.
2013 was a year in which synchs seem especially pronounced in some of
the genre's top releases. Hence, my decision to offer up to my readers
the top thirteen synchro-mystic stoner rock releases of 2013. Those
iTunes and Amazon gift cards would likely be put to better use exploring
some of these releases rather than latest offerings from Jay Z or Lady
Gaga, at least in this researcher's opinion.
Before beginning with the countdown I would like to remark on two trends
I've noted in this year's releases. The first is that, despite some
serious over exposure, the retro occult rock movement continues to churn
out quality releases. This movement began in earnest in the mid-00s
with the emergence of Sweden's
Witchcraft. Witchcraft took the sound of
Black Sabbath and 1970s
Pentagram and the occasional
prog and
psychedelic flourishes and fashioned a sound so retro that it was almost more 70s than many albums that were released in the 1970s.
 |
| Witchcraft's landmark debut |
Since then many bands have followed in their wake, mining the sound of late 1960s/early 1970s metal,
acid rock and prog
while adding increasingly occult-centric lyrics and imagery. This is in
stark contrast to the approach many bands from an "alternative/indie"
background take to retro rock (i.e. the
Brain Jonestown Massacre, the
Black Angels, the
Elephant Six Collective, etc). While these bands may have painstakingly recreated the sounds of the
Beatles or the
Rolling Stones
they generally seem to have felt the need to apply more contemporary
(and even politicized) lyrics to their work (with a few exceptions, such
as the great
Kula Shaker). To this listener's ears, this lends a certain hollowness to much of these efforts that is hard to overcome.
By contrast, the musicians coming from a metal background were not
afraid to tackle the most uncouth aspects of the Psychedelic 60s and
the Heavy 70s --the witches, the mythological gods, the dragons, the pot
smoking wizards, and so forth. In a way this has created an idolized
version of the first great wave of heavy music (which ran from roughly
1968 till 1974), one in which every band seems to operate their own
coven on the side.
While the reader may find it hard to believe after reading the upcoming
list, Recluse does in fact listen to other types of music other than
retro occult rock. Indeed, he contemplated rearranging the list several
times to reflect this diversity (as well as making the writing process a
little easier), but the fact is the albums put out by this subgenre
easily surpassed many of the "modern" sounding releases of this year.
The next trend that bares noting is the reflections upon
the current state of rock n' roll several of these bands engage in. Rock
is of course approaching 65 (or may have already surpassed that mark,
depending upon where you date the birth of rock 'n roll), and more than a
few observers believe that it is getting a little long in the tooth. It
is of course no longer the dominant style of music in youth culture,
having long since been surpassed by hip hop, and even its historic live
tradition is beginning to fade away, at least in these United States
(though possibly not in Europe). This uncertainty seems to have been at
the heart of several of the years best releases, inspiring both defiance
and contemplation.
And with that out of the way, on to the list...
#13 --Jex Thoth, Blood Moon Rising
Jex Thoth is both the stage name of Jessica Bowen as well as the name of
her band. Miss Bowen is one of the pioneers of the modern occult rock
sound. She first began recording in the mid-00s as a member of
Vanishing Voice, a collective that also included Miss Bowen's ex-husband,
James "Wooden Wand" Toth.
Around the time their marriage started falling apart Miss Bowen founded
Totem with several other members of Vanishing Voice. After realizing
the name was already taken, the group was re-christened Jex Thoth and
released their acclaimed self-titled debut in 2008.
Despite displaying ample influences from groups such as Black Sabbath and
Amon Duul,
there was a modern sensibility to Jex Thoth's self-titled that many
later occult rock acts would forgo. The album itself was littered with
references to the occult and the band would develop a highly ritualistic
performance style that includes bathing the stage in candlelight and
burning
Palo Santo before beginning their set.
Miss Bowen further upped the occult ante in 2010 when she joined Sabbath Assembly and handled the lead vocals on Restored to the One,
an album based up the hymns of the Process Church of the Final
Judgment. After touring with Sabbath Assembly for a time she dropped out
and reformed Jex Thoth with mostly new musicians. It would not be until
2013, however, that a proper follow up to the debut full length
arrived.
Blood Moon Rising finds Jex stripping away much of the
psychedelic and retro aspects of her sound. This album is steeped in a
stripped down, highly atmospheric brand of traditional doom metal that
occasional echoes female-fronted alt-rock outfits, most obviously
PJ Harvey. Jex also seems to have been influenced by some of the work
Sera Timms has done with
Black Math Horseman and the
Ides of Gemini
on this outing as well. Despite being a five-piece, the instrumentation
is very sparse throughout the album. Lyrically, the album seems more
personal and less occult-driven that Miss Bowen's prior work but such
musings still appear rather frequently.
On the whole, this album is a step down from Jex's prior works and
requires multiple listens to fully grasp. While I appreciate subtly,
this album borders of meandering at times. Still, Jex remains one of the
most compelling and original figures in occult rock even if she can not
quite overcome the dreaded "sophomore slump."
#12 --Black Pyramid, Adversarial
On
their Facebook page
Black Pyramid describe their sound as "Psychedelic War Metal." Its an apt label, having grown out of a fusion of
Sleep and sludgier groups such as
High on Fire and
The Sword.
After some serious lineup turmoil the formerly Massachusetts-based
power trio delivered their third, and possibly final, album earlier in
the year.
The word "adversarial" is generally used in reference to the
legal system used in
common law
countries in which two adversaries, one for the prosecution and one for
the defense, square off. In some accounts this system derived from a
medieval mode of trail-by-combat in which some litigants were allowed a
champion to represent them. I suspect that this is the inspiration for
the name of Black Pyramid's third long player, war being a reoccurring
theme throughout.
The opening cut "
Swing the Scimitar,"
possibly both the longest and heaviest track Black Pyramid has ever
released, makes this clear right off the bat. Its followed by the more
up tempo "Bleed Out," seemingly a condemnation of modern day
warmongering. The instrumental "
Issus," placed square in the middle of the album, is named after the
ancient settlement
located in modern day Turkey. It was the site of three battles that had
ramifications for world history of varying degrees --the
First Battle of Issus, in which
Alexander the Great defeated
Darius III of Persia; the
Second Battle of Issus, a minor Roman civil war in which the Emperor
Septimius Severus defeated his rival,
Pescennius Niger; and the
Third Battle of Issus where the
Eastern Roman Empire defeated the
Sassanids in a victory the
Prophet Mohammed supposedly foretold.
 |
| a depiction of the First Battle of Issus |
The albums closing track, "
Onyx and Obsidian," is an epic that makes good use of the
mythos surrounding twins, in this case of the warring variety. Both
onyx and
obsidian have extensive magical associations --onyx stones were worn by ancient Israel's priests and are said to be the stone of
Solomon; obsidian was the material used for sacrificial knives amongst some
Mesoamerican tribes while also being used as a seeing stone by the
Aztecs as well as magicians such as
John Dee and
Joseph Smith.
# 11 --Naam, Vow
Naam is the
Sanskrit word for "name" but it is also associated with the
divine identity of the Creator. It is also a type of meditation, so it should be unsurprising that much of the music produced by the band
Naam seems bent on capturing a journey into inner space.
With this, their second full length, Naam has joined the forefront of
the mostly European-dominated heavy psych scene. While many of the bands
on the other side of the Atlantic prefer epic length tracks heavy on
jamming, Naam has progressively scaled back their song lengths. Only
three of the albums eleven tracks go over five minutes.
Sonically the group builds upon the
space rock of
Hawkwind, slowing it down and making it even more cerebral. There's also the inevitable
Pink Floyd influences as well, but Naam remains their own outfit with each player carving out a distinct niche within their sound.
The major knock on this album is none of the tracks, aside from the lonesome country of "
Laid to Rest" and the driving "
Brightest Sight", really standout. Still, this album washes over one like a pleasant reverie and departing before overstaying its welcome.
# 10 --Purson, The Circle and the Blue Door
Cunningham was the work's chief songwriter as well as playing the bulk
of the instruments on the album. Despite the band name and the album
title Cunningham takes a light approach to the occult --Witness "
Spiderwood Farm",
an almost gleeful take on a cult. Elsewhere the album ventures into
subtle character studies ("Sailor's Wife's Lament") and even sensual
musings ("
Well Spoiled Machine").
The album's closing track, "
Tragic Catastrophe",
is easily one of the year's strongest cuts. Its also one of the most
poignant ruminations on the present state of rock 'n roll. The song
begins with the protagonist's discover of the whole rock
thing, employing almost
Knowles-ian language for this moment:
"In a dusty attic, he found a magazine
Full of gods and heroes, of deities and queens
He took it as his bible, with religion in his eyes
He saw his life before him, he saw his name in lights"
But the Golden Age of rock 'n roll is long past, having succumbed to
corporate masters who initially did everything in their power to reduce a
vibrant medium to another soulless commodity. Now they are ready to
move on from something they always found rather bothersome and cannot
hide their glee. The song woefully notes:
"And what will become of him?
This day and age has no time for a dinosaur taking the stage
It's a tragic catastrophe
'Cause there's nothing else that he can do
"Chairs of computers sing
The mannequins played guitar so convincingly tonight
The man says boy get a real job,
Take off all of that make-up"
Get a real job has become something of a mantra for modern society.
Thus the dreams of local garage bands become ever more unattainable to
the delight of "real" professions, such stock brokers, investment
bankers, corporate lawyers, defense contractors, private security
specialists, CIA assets, and so forth.
#9 --Kadavar, Abra Kadavar
The sophomore outing of the German proto-metal power trio. While a solid
release in its own right, this album is certainly a step down from
Kadavar's
self-titled debut.
The debut, which truly sounded like an album that could have been
released in 1968 production wise, was aided immensely by a moody
atmosphere that lent mystery to its six compositions. By contrast the
sophomore outing, while still suitably retro, sounds to "bright." The
additional songs and longer running time don't help matters either.
Regardless, one would be hard pressed to find a more rocking collection
of acid rock songs released in 2013. Kadavar seems to have both upped
the tempos and the LSD intake, creating an album that would fit
comfortably in rotation with the likes of
Blue Cheer and
Sir Lord Baltimore. The first single, "
Doomsday Machine" is as driving as anything off of
Kingdom Come while later tracks such as "
Liquid Dream" and "
Rhythm for Endless Minds"
surpass the acid-washed fuzziness of Blue Cheer at their most primal.
You will not find many profound insights here, but few albums released
this year are quite as fun to listen too.
#8 --Spirits of the Dead, Rumors of a Presence
While certainly retro leaning,
Spirits of the Dead's earlier work (that Recluse has heard, at least), offered a modern take on
acid folk
with occasional heavy rock interludes. The Norwegian four-piece's
songwriting is firmly rooted in 60s psychedelia and 70s folk, prog and
heavy rock, but the approach to production is firmly modern. Many of the
tracks SOTD's last offering,
The Great God Pan, are so elaborately produced and mixed that the group can not recreate them live as a four piece.
While
The Great God Pan was firmly rooted in acid folk the
follow up is a much more "conventional" rock album, with only one track
("Seaweed") done in the acoustic vein of the prior release. By contrast,
Rumors is dominated by fuzzy, effects-laden guitars and trippy keyboards. While still firmly in the retro camp, "
Golden Sun" almost sounds like something the
Screaming Trees could have written in the late 1980s while the slow, Sabbathy-blues of "
Red Death" wouldn't sound out of place on Goatsnake's
debut. The title-track is effectively a modern fusion
In the Court of the Crimson King and
The Man Who Sold the World-era
Bowie while the epic closer, "
Oceanus", updates
Secret Treaties (an album littered with synchronicities and high strangeness, as noted before
here and
here)-era
Blue Oyster Cult.
Spirits of the Dead take their name from a short story by
Edgar Allen Poe,
an individual with more than a passing interest in metaphysics and the
occult (I briefly touched on this aspect of Poe in my examination of
The Following, which can be found
here). Recluse suspects that SOTD also have a fondness for such topics --the opening track, "
Wheels of the World",
boasts "I have a taste of forbidden knowledge" after all.
Unfortunately, Recluse does not have the lyrics to this release and has
problems making them out on several tracks, making an in-depth
examination of this album's themes difficult. But when a band names a
track after the Greco-Roman god
Oceanus, a being usually depicted as having the upper half of a man and the lower half of a fish (such gods are highly significant in
Robert Temple's theories concerning
Sirius), its a pretty safe bet that they have more than a passing knowledge of the arcane.
#7 --Hidden Masters, Of This & Others Worlds
It's almost obligatory to put a band with the name
Hidden Masters
on a synchro-mystical list. Fortunately, the British trio's debut is
one of the most unabashedly fun albums of 2013. Unlike many retro bands
in the stoner rock camp, Hidden Masters' sound is more Psychedelic 60s
than Heavy 70s.
Of This & Other World's ten tracks sound like they could have been a bonus disk for the second
Nuggets box set,
Original Artyfacts From the British Empire and Beyond, as well as displaying shades of more well known acts such as
Cream,
Revolver-era Beatles, and the
Syd Barrett-fronted Pink Floyd. There are also shades of contemporary retro acts such as the
Dukes of Stratosphere and Kula Shaker. In short, this is prime psychedelic garage rock with a thoroughly British sense of whimsical and the absurd.
Hidden Masters do not take a serious approach to metaphysics, at times
even falling back on one of the most time-honored themes of old school
garage rock: women. But these are women who bring time itself to a stand
still and seemingly plunge the narrator into an alternative reality
(opener "
She Broke the Clock on the Long Now");
or mysterious women who possibly disappear into the "smoke and the
alcohol" ("Perfume"). There are also the inevitable ruminations of
altered states of consciousness, other dimensions, and beings from outer
space. Like Kadavar, Hidden Masters did not turn in one of the deepest
releases of the year. But there are few more fun.
#6 --Wolf People, Fain
This is the second album from the British quartet, though this author is
unfamiliar with the group's debut. Like Spirits of the Dead,
Wolf People craft songs that sound like 60s/70s rock, but have a contemporary edge. Throughout
Fain
they beautifully capture the vibe of a British countryside during the
early hours of a winter morning. Wolf People manage a very Medieval
atmosphere on this album, calling to mind both Fairport Convention as
well as
Led Zeppelin's folk-centric
third album. There's also a bit of
Jethro Tull and early King Crimson.
#5 --Blood Ceremony, The Eldritch Dark
This is
Blood Ceremony's third, and best, album. Like several of the other albums we've already considered,
The Eldritch Dark
is strongly influenced by British folk and prog such as Fairport
Convention and Jethro Tull (yes, Recluse has a thing for druggy,
Medieval-sounding music). Front woman Alia O'Brien even adds some
Ian Anderson-style
flute parts to the proceedings, along with her vocals and work on the
organ. Blood Ceremony is heavier than similar groups such as Purson and
Wolf People, however, and unleash ample amounts of thick, sludgy
Sabbath-style riffs.
Blood Ceremony can replicate Black Sabbath with the best of them but on
this album their prog and folk influences provide a compelling contrast
to the more convectional proto-metal riffing. "
Lord Summerisle" (an allusion to
The Wicker Man) is a gorgeous ballad in the mold of Fairport Convention sung by bassist Lucas Gadke. "
Ballad of the Weird Sisters"
is a foot-tapping murder ballad involving two desperadoes that come
upon a trio of witches. The witches take the two men in and give them a
strange brew featuring "eye of newt and
Mandrake root." Murder ensues.
Closer "
The Magician", clocking in at just a little over eight minutes, recounts a sorcerer named Haddo's bid to perform a
Black Mass.
In lesser hands this track would come off as utterly ridiculous, but
Blood Ceremony manage to pull it off in style. The same could be said of
the rest of the album.
#4 --Uncle Acid and the Deadbeats, Mind Control
"Formed in Cambridge by media-shy frontman K.R. Stars, in an era of
profile building, brand-expanding and over-exposure Uncle Acid & The
Deadbeats are a cult genuine phenomena. The dictionary definition of
cult, in fact: 'a system of religious worship, with reference to its
rites and ceremonies. A group or sect bound together by veneration of
the same ideal.' In this case: taking rock music back to its ritualistic
beginnings when pagan heathens would stomp out a dirt-rhythm and howl
at the moon. When music was the carnal catalyst for orgiastic midnight
reckonings."
In fairness to Uncle Acid, front man K.R. Stars has insisted that the group's
occult pose is not serious and more inspired by old horror movies than anything else. Regardless, this album is a synchronistic gem.
While many bands have attempted to capture the sound of early Black
Sabbath over the years, few have been as successful as Uncle Acid. The
production and guitar throughout
Mind Control sounds like vintage
Vol. 4. Uncle Acid have stepped up the psychedelia on this album, their third, however. "Follow the Leader" sounds like something
Revolver-era Beatles could have written pending
Tony Iommi's gear could have been brought a few years into the future.
#3 --Vista Chino, Peace
Vista Chino has its origins in
Kyuss Lives!, a group formed by
Kyuss veterans
Brant Bjork (drums),
John Garcia (vocals) and
Nick Oliveri (bass) to perform the back catalog of the desert rock giants. After ample legal haggling with Queens of the Stone Age's
Josh Homme (who was Kyuss' guitarist) over the name, the group (which also features guitarist
Bruno Fevery) rechristened itself Vista Chino and issued its debut this year.
Kyuss of course had it roots in the generators parties of the Palm
Desert scene (mentioned at the beginning of this article), an experience
that would have a tremendous effect of the group's sound. Kyuss is one
of the most atmospheric groups ever, their sound taking the listener to
a primal place in human consciousness, namely the haunted deserts where
so many holy sites of the ancient world resided. Kyuss was never an
occult-centric group, but their sound was practically shamanism set to
music. None of the former members, including drummer Bjork (who never
ventured far from the Southern California deserts) has ever quite
matched the incredible vibe of Kyuss.
Nearly 20 years has passed since the demise of Kyuss and more than a
few wondered if Bjork and Garcia would be able to recapture the old
magic when they decided to cut a new album together, especially without
Homme (who was Kyuss' chief songwriter) on board. Not only did they
deliver, but guitarist Bruno Fevery takes Kyuss' legendary sound into
the 21st century with shades of European heavy psych and Nordic fuzz
rock (i.e.
Dozer,
Truckfighters,
Brain Police, etc) in his playing. Like Kyuss at its best,
Peace takes the listener back to that primal state that could only be found in the harshest and most mysterious of environments.
#2 --Monster Magnet, Last Patrol
Last Patrol represents a bold step for the veteran rock outfit. After over a decade of playing arena-ready heavy rock the
Magnet opted to return to the heavy psych and space rock of their first three albums (
Spine of God,
Superjudge and
Dopes to Infinity, respectively). The group only gained some semblance of mainstream success after they streamlined their sound enough on 1998's
Powertrip for kids raised on
White Zombie to grok. Beyond this, the band (with the exception of founder, vocalist and sometime guitarist
Dave Wyndorf)
is entirely different from the space rock years. Needless to say, there
were probably some serious skeptics when the 57-year-old Wyndorf
started talking about the Magnet returning to their roots.
But not only is
Last Patrol a success, its arguably the strongest album the group has released since
Dopes.
Its aided in no small part by the emotional heft Wyndorf's
one-of-a-kind lyrics add to the rumbling, Hawkwindian bass lines, druggy
synths swooshes and effects-laden guitars.
Last Patrol is an
hallucinogenic take on the current state of rock 'n roll and, to an
extent, Western culture on the whole. The nine minute-plus
title track makes this clear, beginning with Wyndorf contemplating retirement before letting his defiance fly:
"Baby, can you save my heart and take this gig into the stars
Melt the ghosts inside my head
The same ones who told me rock was dead
No more will those dogs pervert the life I've lead in motion blur
I'll fry the fools who'll never learn
and leave them in my after-burn"
"
Paradise" is
seemingly a melancholy take on rock's storied live tradition and its
erosion in the States. "Hallelujah" is a scathing send-up of the
Mega Church age of Christianity, followed by "
The Mindless One." Whether intentional or not, this track echoes long standing Gnostic sentiments concerning the
Demiurge
who, in some accounts, is referred to as Samael (a word literally
meaning "Blind Idiot"). Closer "Stay Tuned" is as good a reflection on
the sheer hollowness of Western culture at the onset of the second
decade of the twenty-first century as any yet written:
"There ain't no targets to aim for
No more mountains to climb
At least they're not where they used to be
Why even keep it hard in a flat-line world
Where every piece of dung is the next big thing
"What's gonna happen now?
Will the good guys pull through somehow?
Stay tuned till next time and we'll see what's what"
Hell,
Last Patrol even has a
Donovan cover ("
Three Kingfishers") that more than does justice to the original. In other words, it is a triumph of the highest order. Highly recommended.
#1 --Clutch, Earth Rocker
This selection should come as little surprise to regular readers of this
blog as I already posted two in depth blogs (which can be found
here and
here) on
Earth Rocker
earlier in the year. As noted there, Earth Rocker is a loving tribute
to rock 'n roll as well as a call to arms in the ongoing rock 'n roll
wars. Thus, it is thematically linked to
Last Patrol, though
Clutch return to their hard rock roots on this outing rather slipping
into the ether as Dave and company did. Unsurprisingly, both albums make
great companion pieces to one another.
I don't have much more to add here other than give this band and album a
chance if you haven't done so already. Clutch is truly one of the most
intelligent and unique heavy rock outfits to emerge over the past twenty
years and is still churning out great releases at a point when lesser
bands had long ago become pale imitations of their former selves.