Sunday, August 15, 2010


What of history, and context? What if Astral Weeks and There’s a Riot Goin’ On had never been given a chance carve their place in the pop music landscape? Such is the case of Paêbirú, a 1975 collaboration between Brazilian artists Lula Côrtes and Zé Ramalho. With most copies purportedly destroyed in a warehouse fire, Paêbirú has remained a holy-grail for collector’s willing to shell out the cheddar (like, 1,300 cheddars) for this psychedelic opus. And while it’s a stretch to assume any album can run with the luminary discs mentioned above, it’s tempting to dream that every once in a while history will uncover a lost classic and drop a fully-formed world-beater into our grubby little hands. Little is known about the recording of Paêbirú. Côrtes, who composes and plays on many of these tracks, seemingly appears only when we’re talking about obscure Brazilian psych reissues (Ramalho, on the other hand, has built a solid career as a Brazilian pop singer and takes on most vocal duties here). With all the murk surrounding the album, it’s easy to overlook the frankly silly nature of what we’re dealing with. Say the following out loud: Paêbirú is an obscure Brazilian psych concept album about the four elements (earth, air, fire, water) that was lost to time in a warehouse fire. Age and scarcity lend this record a legitimacy—and audience—it might otherwise be unable to muster. The most impressive aspect of Paêbirú, then, is the ease with which it transcends its goofy elemental approximations. If Paêbirú is too uniform in sound and style to truly transport from one element to another—your mind will not, for instance, immediately cease conjuring images of air and move on to fire at the close of track six—then it compensates with its transformative power. Côrtes and Ramalho are on some rainforest shit here, and when dealing with such gung-ho psych monsters it’s easy to forget things like “couch,” and “stereo,” and follow them down the rabbit hole. Côrtes and Ramalho skip the unicorn-horn crystalphones and do their best conjuring with pedestrian instruments, peppering their novel-length folk with liberal amounts of flute, sax, and congas. Interspersed among these longer, often improvised tracks are shorter arrangements, whose memorable melodies and vocal chants stand out against the Technicolor jams. The albums begins in a purple haze of buzzing insects and leafy drone, but by the time “Trilha de Sumé” ends, ritualistic grunts and a canopy-scraping sax are all that remain. The remaining two songs of the Earth segment traverse in galloping drum patterns before a placid guitar outro teases into the considerably calmer, and weaker, Air compositions. Chalk it up to an over-reliance on field recordings and a lack of Ramalho—these tracks lack the visceral heft of the album’s first segment. By design, perhaps, because on “Raga Doss Raios,” Côrtes check-raises the whole she-bang, ushering in the Fire portion with two and a half minutes of brilliant, muscular Hendrixian noodling. All of this, however, is warm-up for “Nas Paredes Da Pedra Encantada,” which approximates what the Doors might’ve sounded like if 1) they were capable of having a good time, 2) were a funk-rock house band from some lost Amazonian hit factory. Rifle shots of organ fight for face-time with a bulbous bass line, all before Ramalho bulls in with a blissful wall of vocals that encompasses the song’s final minute of mindfuck. The band lives off the sonic heat of “Nas Paredes” for two minutes on “Marácas De Fogo” before pushing forward into the Water segment, the band’s most focused and coherent work. “Louvaçao A Iemanjá” is a beautiful, unaccompanied call-and-response chant, while “Trilha De Sumé” sets the album over calm seas, a tidy acoustic coda for an intimidating, expansive music album. Paêbirú is a unique experience; a dated album untouched by time. It would be ludicrous to suggest that any indie rocker was shelling out the kind of e-Bay bucks it would take to land a wax copy, and as such, its influence on contemporary music is essentially non-existent. Deserving of its lofty reputation, if not its stratospheric price tag, Paêbirú is a time capsule of Brazilian psych music, a mercurial run through the jungle finally available to the rest of us. (Stylus Magazine )

http://www.megaupload.com/?d=GGQ9WGNA

Wednesday, August 4, 2010


The band is Peer Günt, a veteran of the “hard’n’heavy” style which is aging well as an excellent wine. Their newest release, Buck The Odds, is out now and it rocks!

Peer Günt (joyfully deforming the name of that fine opera, Peer Gynt, by Edvard Grieg) are a trio from Kouvola, Finland. The line-up includes charismaticTimo Nikki (vocals and guitar), Pete Pohjanniemi (bass) and Sakke Koivula (drums).
They started in 1976 and became famous in the late 80’s with albums Peer Günt (1985), Backseat (1986) and Good Girls Don't... (1987). They play an energic and catchy rock’n’roll with a strong bluesy background, although Motörhead’s influence is very strong. Frontman Timo Nikki is the charismatic element of the band, with his gritty and powerful voice singing about typical rock themes: “on-the-road” ruthless life, smoke-filled bars, rock’n’roll, easy girls, …
Apparently the frequent recalls to “Old American style” is related to the “frontier-like” region where these musicians come from in Finland.
Well, years pass by but these guys still know how to raaaawwwwk!
http://www.mediafire.com/?djtintznwgn

Read more: Doomed To Be Stoned In A Sludge Swamp: Finnish raaaawwwwk!

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Cherry Five


As for an original and expression of feelings part to which the band of Prog Rock of Italy had gone, a lot of unique cultures that the band in other countries doesn't have are involved. The rush power and the throb feeling of this Cherry Five will have been existence in a lot of bands where the diversity existed to which uniformity by the construction of a technical tune in respect to perform was done enough.
Generally, this band is known as an antecedent of the situation that reaches "Goblin". However, the united music characters and technical parts might have had the originality not installed only by Prog Rock of simple Italy. Certain part of composition of sound and tune. And, the impression that "Yes" and "Gentle Giant" are recollected will be given. However, the absorption of an original melody of Italy and music is expressed enough as their tastes.
The relation between about some respects and time can be enumerated if it thinks about the situation by centering on this Cherry Five. Part of creation of composition power of expression of feelings by Claudio Simonetti of keyboard player who will be known later as member of "Goblin" and guitar player's Massimo Morante and Bass player's Fabio Pignatelli and tune to rush. In addition, existence of "Il Ritratto Di Dorian Gray" that had existed as history of activity of music before this Cherry Five. And, the situation of the band that was called "Oliver" that derived from the band might have been in the part gradually exactly revolutionized in the market of Prog Rock of Italy. It is said that the member had already visited Britain as a guess at this time. Perhaps, it is guessed that it is reflected in lyrics all English to which the event at this time is sung by this album.
The existence of Carlo Bordini of the drum player known by the member of "Rustichelli&Bordini" might act overwhelmingly on the band, too. It contributes enough as a Music character of the band ..him.. the part of the nucleus. Part of construction of rhythm that supports band from the under and complete technology surely. And, the song of active Tony Tartarini gives the listener the impression of the axis of the band as a member of "L'uovo Di Colombo". The melody of the song completely contributes to an original tune that is. The flavor and originality that Italian Rock done at this time is good are equipped enough.
The activity of Cherry Five known well as a situation in which it went to "Goblin" for the above- mentioned description did not continue long as a result. The band by this member did not exist when the debut album of Cherry Five was announced because of the relation of the recording of "Profondo Rosso" of Goblin produced at the same time. The absorption of exactly good symphonic and the unique culture are uniting valuable existence. the Music character that Cherry Five didThe throb feeling and the rush power united overall might be overwhelming. If you like 70s symphonic progressive rock, you should definitely get this.

Goblin's score to Dario Argento's Suspiria is a timeless, horrifying ride into crazed vibes and buzzing progressive rock. Billed as "The Complete Original Motion Picture Soundtrack," this edition goes a bit overboard in its four redundant extra tracks. Before those final additions, Goblin kicks out the jazz-rock jams with cool aplomb and creates a number of genuinely unnerving compositions. Argento fans will swoon being able to hear Suspiria's terror centerpieces "Suspiria," "Witch," and "Sighs." "Suspiria" might contain some dated keyboard work, but the music rings like a demonic version of the score to The Exorcist. A wicked voice chants and hums along to the melody, before the song takes a prog rock departure nearly three minutes in. The song turns into something that Trans Am or their contemporaries might concoct on a better day; in that sense, Goblin's music is ahead of its time. "Witch" is equally creepy; it's the song that acts as the background to the movie's demented opening sequence. The song is as cinematic in its scope as Argento's brutal visuals. "Sighs" might one of the scariest songs ever recorded. Sounding like a throbbing didgeridoo nightmare, it's a monument to tension and suspense. On the remainder of the album, Goblin mostly strives for a cool jazz-rock hybrid. Suspiria works best for fans of the film, who will appreciate the terror of the songs more than newcomers who haven't experienced Argento's darkest creation. The score is as enjoyable removed from the movie as it is attached. Suspiria is quite an achievement, as a scary soundtrack and as a vibe-heavy rock album.
by Tim DiGravina

Wednesday, July 28, 2010


PRE-MED are a space rock band put together in 2004 by multi-instrumentalist Danny Faulkner and Hawkwind bassist Alan Davey. Soon Lewis Turner (guitar) came in and with the help of drummer Danny Thompson and former Landmarq keyboardist Steve Leigh they produced the band's debut in 2006, originally entitled 'Invisible Spies' but one year later re-released as 'Medication Time' by Voiceprint Records.

Lewis Turner was substituted by Eamon O'Neill some time later and in 2008 they offered another album called 'The Truth About Us'. Although influenced by Hawkwind PRE-MED have their own style featuring ambient and hypnotic moods, based on a rich keyboard/synth background and Danny Faulkner's unique voice.

"Pre-Med are a decidedly Space Rock band. The band was put together in 2004 by Danny Faulkner with help from Hawkwind bassist Alan Davey. The other main member of the band is guitarist Lewis Turner although he has since left the band. The bands debut release Medication Time was well received on its release in 2006 and also featured guest appearances form Danny Thompson and former Landmarq keyboardist Steve Leigh. Danny’s brother Martin also contributed to some of the lyrics on Medication Time The truth About Us is the follow up to that well received album and again features material." ~ VoicePrint

Band: Pre-Med
Country: UK
Genre: Space Rock

Listen to Pre-Med @ MySpace
Buy their records through their MySpace page

Alberta Cross are a New York-based band, formed by Petter Ericson Stakee (vocals, guitar) & Terry Wolfers (bass). Despite their different upbringings - Petter travelled from an early age between Sweden and England with his singer-songwriter father whilst Terry was brought up in London's East End - they formed what would later become Alberta Cross. After relocating to Brooklyn, New York, Petter and Terry solidified the line-up with the addition of Austin Beede, Alec Higgins and Sam Kearney.

The band's sound has been compared to Kings of Leon, The Band, Neil Young, The Raconteurs and other blues-influenced rock bands.

The band has toured extensively in the UK, performing with bands like The Shins, Bat for Lashes, Simian Mobile Disco and played the Latitude tour with Findlay Brown in summer 2007. During October 2008 Alberta Cross supported Oasis on its UK arena tour; playing at both Bournemouth and Cardiff. The band appeared at the Coachella Valley Music Festival on April 17, 2009. They were the support for Dave Matthews Band at the O2 Academy in London in June 2009 and for DMB's full European Tour in February-March 2010. Alberta Cross performed at the 2009 Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival in Manchester, TN, held in June, and they played at the 2009 Lollapalooza Festival in Chicago, IL, on August 9, 2009.

On May 11, 2010, the band opened for Them Crooked Vultures in Quebec City, Quebec, in Montreal, Quebec on May 12, in Ottawa, Ontario, in Windsor, Ontario on May 16, 2010, in Indianapolis, Indiana on May 17, 2010, and in Chicago, Illinois on May 18, 2010.

The band's first full-length album Broken Side of Time was released September 22, 2009.[1]

The band embarked on its first headlining tour in the United States in early 2010, selling out shows in Los Angeles, Santa Barbara and San Francisco. The Santa Barbara venue oversold the show, so when police arrived and forced 50 patrons to leave, the band offered to play two sets so that everyone who came to see them could.

2007 - the thief & the heartbreaker *r *m
2009 - broken side of time *r *m

"Out of the ruins of 'Reeder' (former band members) rides 'Koyen' with their high energy simple rock medium tempo desert/pop tinged numbers. It reminds me of the same level of energy that bands like Dozer come across as having, well that and other things in common.


It's safe to say that the members of Koyen probably describe their sound as desert rock, and why shouldn't they? It's got that same sort of Kyuss/Queens/Desert Sessions vibe.

The vocalist is definitely going for that melodic soul singing s t y l e similar to John Garcia, and the guitar tones and leads could be equally compared to Homme's s t y l e on some levels. Nonetheless, these guys are good at what they do and rock out...and that's what it's all about, the Koyen sound that is.

Simple desert blues rock numbers with soul, not quite as good as the originals but what is? On the same note it would be unfair to say that these guys sound exactly like any of those bands...there is definitely some indie rock flare thrown in here and there, and the songs are more actual written songs than jams if you know what I mean. Good middle of the road stoner stuff overall." ~StonerRock.Com

Band: Koyen
Album: Comatoso
Year: 2003
Genre: Stoner - Desert Rock