Showing posts with label stoner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stoner. Show all posts
Wednesday, November 16, 2016
Ufo Gestapo ::: Vatependr!
Label: Streaks Records – STREAK #7
Format: Vinyl, LP, Mini-Album, Limited Edition, Numbered, Pink
Country: Germany
Released: 22 Dec 2008
Genre: Rock
Style: Stoner Rock, Hardcore, Doom Metal
Tracklist:
A1 Vatependr
A2 Abyssopelagic Zone
B1 Assault (Phase 2)
B2 U. S. O.
B3 Scavenger Of Death
Download:
http://viid.me/q0sB8y
Labels:
doom metal,
stoner,
Ufo Gestapo
Wednesday, July 15, 2015
Curve ::: Doppelgänger
Label: Charisma – 92108-2, Anxious Records – 92108-2
Format: CD, Album
Country: US
Released: Mar 1992
Genre: Electronic, Rock
Style: Alternative Rock, Industrial, Shoegazer, Ethereal
Tracklist:
01 Already Yours
02 Horror Head
03 Wish You Dead
04 Doppelgänger
05 Lillies Dying
06 Ice That Melts The Tips
07 Split Into Fractions
08 Think & Act
09 Faît Accompli
10 Sandpit
11 Clipped
Download:
http://www64.zippyshare.com/v/FYp7a101/file.html
Labels:
Curve,
industrial,
post-rock,
stoner
Tuesday, July 14, 2015
The Ills ::: Zoya
Label: Exitab – EXTB058
Format: 8 × File, MP3, Album, 320 kbps
Country: Slovakia
Released: 10 Sep 2014
Genre: Rock
Style: Post Rock, Shoegaze
Tracklist:
1 Born Under The Mournstar
2 Raised Among Cuckoos
3 Merry-Go-Round
4 Hide And Sick
5 Scent Of Rain
6 Deaf Flower Bleeding In The Slaughterhouse
7 Body Made From Crystal
8 She Died At 20:00
Download:
http://www6.zippyshare.com/v/L0BRQwg4/file.html
Friday, May 8, 2015
Archaeopteryx Ultraavantgarda ::: Vol. 1
An ensemble from the wet and evergreen land of Asturias, Spain. It contains minimal compositions inspired by some kind of visual avant-garde fantasy, all run-off in an retro-futuristic ambience.
Tracklist:
1. Meissner-Oschenfeld Overture
2. Animaris Percipiere
3. Gammapolis III
4. Moloch Maschine
5. Protoactinium
6. Auto Union Diesel
7. Wardenclyffe-On-Sound
8. Intermission
9. Tesla Girls
10. Artefact
11. American Nightmare
12. Streamline Moderne
13. Van der Graaff Generator
Download:
https://mega.co.nz/#!Yh1WTYJI!v6gKFWyCtmJq2quGxTjypPsGnveFnLFoDOYMQ1Pm1Es
Labels:
ambient,
experimental,
instrumental,
stoner
Saturday, March 28, 2015
Belong ::: Common Era
Belong's 2006 debut, October Language, processed guitars into clouds of edgeless texture and tone. The Colorless Record EP from 2008 reorganized those huge, crumbling drone-chords on a spindle of obscure psych-pop covers, making the sound less abstract while remaining a glorious ruin. With Common Era, the new album from the New Orleans duo of Turk Dietrich and Michael Jones, an evolutionary timeline emerges.
The band's development began in the primordial muck on October, leapfrogged to the 1960s with Colorless, and now lands with one foot in the krautrock of the 1970s and the other in the shoegaze/post-punk of the 1980s. (Let's hope that next, they pass over their grunge record and skip right to dubstep.) This is Belong's least mysterious album by far, with a greater emphasis on vocals, perceptibly changing chords, and rock rhythms. They used to sound like Tim Hecker having a dream about JAMC, My Bloody Valentine, or even Joy Division. Now they evoke such acts much more directly, as well as the distantly thundering drums of Can at their most elemental. Those drums especially temper Belong's sublime omnipresence, and their music comes to sound flattened here.
Belong often do a great job of separating these key influences from their unique style, but it feels like too much of a genre exercise to maintain album-length interest. Opener "Come See" is a tour de force of reconstituted krautrock: A gale of melody-drenched distortion and interference twists around a sinewy bass and drum figure. Sustained chords fall through one another to the sound of rending metal. Elongated vocals pull back against the pulse, and it's all capped by a stuttering feedback solo. The song is so comprehensive in its homage and mighty in its execution that it renders the rest of the album somewhat redundant, as Belong continue to mine the same vein with diminishing returns.
The dark synth-pop mood of "Never Came Close" should make for a change of pace, but Belong's murkiness obscures songwriterly differences, emphasizing instead a sameness of surface: muffled voices and broad strokes of glittering melody. The song's endlessly echoing snare also illustrates how limp their version of the motorik pulse can feel; it actually drains tension from the music. It's not that there isn't cool stuff here after the first track-- the curling bass line and stately progression of "A Walk" make it sound favorably like a chillwave M83, and its opening flourish is especially neat. But "neat" is where Common Era seems to stop. Most of the songs are solid, with the possible exception of the slackened "Keep Still", but none after the first has much capacity to surprise us or deepen the palette. -[pitchfork.com]
Tracklist:
1. Come See
2. Never Came Close
3. A Walk
4. Perfect Life
5. Keep Still
6. Different Heart
7. Make Me Return
8. Common Era
9. Very Careful
Download:
https://mega.co.nz/#!8s8ljQgL!mxBb4cHy8tHITC1bIVDqYUgjFbjnBrxFFD_9cHlxYpk
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
Om ::: Variations On a Theme
This three song album feature only bass, vocals, and drums, there are no guitars. However, the massive amount of distortion on the bass makes this unnoticeable and the riffing is just as it would be if there were guitars on the album. The use of only one stringed instrument works to give the songs a more stripped down feel than Sleep had. The riffing can be compared to a mixture of the second and third Sleep albums, Sleep’s Holy Mountain and Dopesmoker, in the way that it is slow but not quite as oppressively heavy or epic as Dopesmoker. Despite this fact there is plenty of heaviness to be found in the fuzzed out 70s styled trance-inducing riffs that the bass churns out; these riffs are as slow and heavy as you’d expect from ex-members of Sleep.
Drum-wise this leans more towards Dopesmoker in the way the drums methodically plod forward and utilize the heavier cymbals to bring out the heaviness of selected parts. Drum production is also reminiscent of Dopesmoker in the natural and live feel that the drums breathe into the music. The vocals are reminiscent of the subdued parts of Sleep’s Holy Mountain; the hoarse stoned yells that appear on Dopesmoker are not present here. This subdued quality of the vocals makes them sound like sacred chants, thus adding to the overall ritualistic atmosphere the music invokes.
Overall this three song album that runs about 45 minutes long creates a ritualistic atmosphere full of stoner doom heaviness and fuzzed out riffing. Variations on a Theme establishes Om as a well-experienced band that that fans of stoner doom should not pass up. This is probably the closest you’ll come to hearing something new from Sleep and it does not disappoint.
Tracklist:
01 On The Mountain At Dawn (21:16)
02 Kapila's Theme (11:56)
03 Annapurna (11:52)
Download:
http://www5.zippyshare.com/v/33761506/file.html
Labels:
stoner
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