Archive for March, 2010


Never been a fan of Soulfly, but this new song they have out now, “Rise of the Fallen” is pretty cool. If you don’t mind some heavy semi-nu-metal sounding groove riffs and electronic bleeps and bloops, you should give it a shot. What makes this track stand out, to me, is Dillinger Escape Plan‘s Greg Puciato doing lead vocals on the song.

You can download “Rise of the Fallen” here for free for a limited time. And from what I can tell, it’s not about the Transformers. If you don’t want to download it, check out the video below of it on YouTube, which may or may not be available by the time you get to it.

Soulfly’s Omen is due out May 25th on Roadrunner Records.

- JR

[via Metalsucks]

The Ocean are coming out with two new albums this year, Heliocentric and Anthropocentric. The band are chronicling the albums through a four part web series documentary. Part one can be seen above.

Heliocentric is shaping up to be an amazing record, based on what I’ve heard from clips. Luckily, we won’t have to wait too long, as it comes out next month, April 14th, on Metal Blade Records, with Anthropocentric expecting to see release around October.

- JR

Deftones – Diamond Eyes

It takes a lot for a band to write and record an entire album, shelve it, and write another; especially with a dedicated fan base anticipating it so highly. Deftones took a considerable risk with Diamond Eyes, choosing to continue their efforts without Chi Cheng, who is still in a coma since his accident in 2008. Fortunately, the risk they took certainly pays off.

Diamond Eyes features a maturation of the same sort of sound that Deftones have become famous for: melding relatively simple yet heavy (and at times, aggressive) alternative metal riffs with dreampop-like atmosphere and floaty melodies. Much of the record has sounds reminiscent of 2000′s White Pony, and this is certainly the best album they’ve done since then.

The album opens with the simple radio-ready title track “Diamond Eyes”. This song does justice as the album’s namesake, with a beautiful chorus featuring mesmerizing lyrics and imagery.

“Once and for all, time will see us realign.
Diamonds rain across the sky.
Follow me into the same realm.”

Sadly, this song is over before you know it, but it is very memorable. Royal is a powerful song “CMND/CTRL” is one of the heavier songs, and it will get you feeling pumped up. The riffs in this song, when combined with Chino’s confident-and-cocky vocals (“Switching command, just because I can”), will make you feel ballsy and empowered.

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Veil of Maya have uploaded a new song on their myspace called “Mowgli“. I’m fairly sure that’s a reference to The Jungle Book, but hell if I know. It could just be random.

The song itself is pretty cool. It sounds like VoM, no surprises there. Your opinion wont change of them in the slightest because of this song, so check it out if you’re interested. If not, bitch and moan about it in the comments.

[id] comes out April 6th. Oh hey, that’s in two weeks!

- JR

WHITE! TAIL! HOLY! GRAIL!

So earlier on in my semester here at Pikeville College, I was informed that I needed to design an experiment for my experimental psychology class. I knew I wanted to do something with music, particularly metal, as I’m not too interested in anything else. In doing my research on metal and psychology, there isn’t much that hasn’t already been done. For the most part, as we metal fans have come to expect, metal has no negative effect on people… who listen to metal.

It’s a no brainer; if you play metal for people who listen to country music, they will, more often than not, hate it. Ignoring the level of ignorance some people may have of metal, we all have different opinions of what sounds good and certain aesthetics please us more than others. Some aesthetics rub us the wrong way. If you think this isn’t true, try to listen to a Ke$ha song and not get pissed off.

Metal is very cathartic. It relieves us of strong emotions. Studies have shown time and time again that metal is calming to people who enjoy it. That’s just how it works. Listening to metal is a positive experience to us.

Here is a basic rundown of metal and psychology, via Suite101.

Emotional Response

While a number of researchers have associated heavy metal music with depression or anger, these effects do not occur when heavy metal is the listener’s musical preference. A study of more than 1,000 gifted students aged 11-18 found that heavy metal music is used for cathartic release and to dissipate negative emotions, particularly among those with low self-esteem.

Grunge Music Effects

A study of the effects of different types of music found that after listening to grunge music, subjects reported increases in fatigue, tension, sadness and hostility, as well as decreased mental clarity, vigor, relaxation and compassion. However, grunge was likely not the musical preference of these subjects—a study of grunge fans may have produced different results.

Aggression

Some studies have found that individuals become more hostile, aggressive or angry after listening to heavy metal music, whereas others have found no aggressive response. Some researchers have even found that subjects who were angry to begin with become happier, calmer and more relaxed after listening to heavy metal when it is their preferred musical genre.

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Oh Man, I LOVE Owls

Best album art of 2010 goes to Deftones. Calling it right now. Owls are just so damn beautiful, man.

Deftones have also uploaded another awesome lyrics video to youtube for their single “Diamond Eyes.”

Diamond Eyes hits stores May 4th, and it is amazing.

- JR

Spawning from the bay area, the band Cormorant broke forth into the metal scene by creating two unique releases titled The Last Tree (an EP) and Metazoa. With a fusion of talent, diverse influences, minds, and immense passion the band Cormorant have gained love and fans across oceans without ever playing outside of their native California. In a few moments, you’ll be reading my attempt at picking the brain of Arthur von Nagel, the long winded, kind, and very intelligent bassist and vocalist of the band.

The teeth of lions sown by the wind,
Spurned by the salt of the
Earth’s fallow and barren skin,
Find fertile ground in me.

Rains of red poppies
Burst from the blue.
Fireflies and harpies
Beat their wings anew.
The wine from man’s fountains
Imparts courage to implore:
“Gods, step down from your mountains.
Fish, rise up from the shore.”

Cormorant - Salt of the Earth

MW: How old were you when you first got into music, and how did the interest come about?

AvN: My first musical memory was my mother taking me to see Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde.  I was 3 or 4.  Looking back on it now, the whole production was very metal.  Huge sets, bombastic music, crushing drums, horses, betrayal, myth, swords, blood.  All it needed was Manowar.  I regret that I fell asleep halfway through, but then again the damn thing was four hours long.  I still love opera.  I’m looking forward to the San Francisco Opera’s take on Faust later this year.

Growing up there was always music.  My father was into lots of late 60s counter-culture stuff like Captain Beefheart, Bob Dylan, and King Crimson.  My mother always had me listening to classical, lots of Tchaikovsky, Handel and Bach.  We had a beautiful old jukebox stacked with French traditionals and classic rock songs.  When I was a kid, I would fall in and out of love with different genres.   I had a hip-hop stage, a jazz stage, a folk stage, and I even recall not being interested in music at all sometime in my early teens.  I don’t know what I was thinking.  Probably rebelling against nothing.


How did you decide you wanted to make Cormorant a band?

Brennan Kunkel (drums) and I met playing in a thrash/punk band when I was 16.  It was fun but a bit limiting.  We got bored.  So we started creating quirky, poorly produced progressive black metal demos as a two-piece.  While the sound quality was garbage and we had no idea what we were doing, there were some cool ideas there and a lot of those early riffs went on to become parts of Cormorant songs.  We brought in Nick Cohon (guitars), a friend of Brennan’s from high school, and his style immediately clicked with ours.  We recorded our EP The Last Tree as a three-piece.  Apart from the song Ballad of the Beast, I don’t think we had quite discovered our sound yet.  It was when we met Matt Solis (guitars/vocals) at an Enslaved gig that we were really able to fully realize that expansive, progressive style the EP hints at, and Metazoa embraces.


How do you go about mixing the influence from other genres in your music? Or does it just come naturally?

We don’t really think about it. It’s a natural thing.  We’re just writing what we enjoy listening to.  I don’t know what genre Cormorant falls into anymore anyway.  That’s why we laugh along with the silly “Tiberian Ass Bastard Folk” tag fans have given us: it’s just as accurate as any of the more convoluted descriptions of our sound.  “Progressive blackened death-folk NWOBHM?”  I’ll pass.

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I know, I know. Indie music on a metal blog is grounds for lynching. But hear me out on this.

Silversun Pickups are not your ordinary indie band. They flirt around with alternative and hard rock and the shoegaze and dreampop influence is interesting. Singer/Guitarist Brian Aubert’s vocals are mostly soft falsetto. On first listen, some just might think they’re hearing bassist Nikki Monninger. While she does do backing vocals, it’s mostly Brian doing the singing.

“Panic Switch”, Swoon (2009)

Drummer Christopher Guanlao is interesting to me, in that he is left handed and plays the standard right hand kit while playing as if he were on a left hand kit, with left hand doing hi-hats and right doing snare. This makes for some interestingly snare rolls and drum fills that right hand players will find difficult to play because of hand positioning. Keyboardist Joe Lester can play with and manipulate Brian’s guitar signal during performances for interesting effects and sounds. When he’s not messing with Brian’s tone, he’s playing faintly in the background, making for a full and spacey environment.

“Well Thought Out Twinkles”, Carnavas (2006)

If you like the fuzzy guitars and atmosphere of Deftones, the laid back spaciness of Cynic, and the pop sensibilities of Devin Townsend, you might just like Silversun Pickups (although a better description of their sound would be throwing Sonic Youth, My Bloody Valentine, and Smashing Pumpkins in a blender). 2009′s Swoon was one of my favorites last year, but I left it off of my best-of list for not being being any form of metal. But now, I want to praise them for their good work. I’d highly recommend Swoon. Hell, I even paid for the album because I loved it so much.

So there you have it. Silversun Pickups: non-metal worth paying for.

Lazy Eye” (Live), Carnavas (2006)

- JR

You’d be hard pressed to find anything cooler than Mike Patton and a full orchestra doing covers of Italian pop songs. If there’s anything out there more awesome, please let me know.

Here’s the tracklist to Mondo Cane, Mike Patton’s tribute to classic Italian pop music.

1. Il Cielo In Una Stanza
2. Che Notte!
3. Ore D’Amore
4. Deep Down
5. Quello Che Conta
6. Urlo Negro
7. Scalinatella
8. L’Uomo Che Non Sapeva Amare
9. 20 KM Al Giorno
10. Ti Offro Da Bere
11. Senza Fine

The album drops May 4th, but in the mean time, you can watch them perform the above songs an more via this youtube playlist. Get classy!

- JR

Contextually Inept

Aussie post-jazz-prog-metal band Tangled Thoughts Of Leaving have made a new single, “Contextually Inept”, available online for free. The track was named as such because it didn’t fit in with the music on their upcoming album, due out at some point in 2010.

“Contextually Inept” is a great song, especially if you’re in an atmospheric and post-rock kinda mood. Tangled Thoughts Of Leaving are definitely great for journey music. I’d highly recommend this if you’re a fan of the experimental and instrumental side of metal, like Scale The Summit or Animals as Leaders. The song has a great dynamic aspect to it, transforming and flowing through a great soundscape throughout it’s 7 minutes and into a building climax.

You can download the new single, as well as other releases from TTOL for free right here. DOWNLOAD IT, YOU HAVE NOTHING TO LOSE AND EVERYTHING TO GAIN.

- JR

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