• Interview with earthtone9

    earthtone9 discuss the creative process behind In Resonance Nexus, their collaboration with producer Lewis Johns, and offer insight into the album’s exploration of themes like perception and reality.

  • Interview with Hail Spirit Noir

    Hail Spirit Noir delve into the inspiration behind their intense new sound, the philosophical and scientific themes that shape the album, and the collaborative process that brought Fossil Gardens to life.

  • Interview with Fuck The Facts

    Fuck The Facts drummer Mathieu Vilandre was kind enough to take some time to answer some questions regarding their new album “Pleine Noirceur”.

Showing posts with label Live Review. Show all posts

Torche @ The Grand Social Loft | Live Review

0 Comments
Torche + Wizards Of Firetop Mountain + Dott @ The Grand Social Loft
21 August 2013 – Dublin, Ireland


Five years have passed since Miami, Florida’s Torche last dropped their anvil-heavy pop songs upon Irish heads. Whelans provided the setting and Torche made their appearance in support of instrumental post-metallers Pelican, and although they only had limited time to show what they could do, they left an indelible impression. This is why Torche’s long-awaited return to Dublin is not an occasion to be missed by those who caught the band live half a decade ago, nor is it an occasion to be missed by those who have since discovered the genius of Torche’s music. The Grand Social, positioned next to the famous Ha’Penny Bridge, is the host tonight and Torche may be the heaviest band to ever play at this venue which has the reputation for showcasing an eclectic array of artists across music’s multihued spectrum. The venue itself is situated upstairs in this hip bar and is festooned like the inside of a festival tent or a function room used for parties (appropriate when it comes to Torche), with light bulbs strategically placed along the ceiling to illuminate the crowd and the small stage.

Opening for Torche tonight are Dott and Wizards of Firetop Mountain; two native bands looking to get their name and music out there. Galway’s Dott have a hint of The Breeders about their ‘90s inspired alt. rock, but because of sound akin to a bass amp committing suicide, their sugary vocal harmonies are lost in the unnecessary rumble. Wizards of Firetop Mountain are no strangers to the Dublin support role over the years; most recently seen in support of Red Fang. The band play a similar set again tonight and there are moments where their bar-room doom ‘n’ NWOBHM entertain (“Fire and Stone” and “Sonic War”), but besides guitarist Hooly (who is a dead ringer for a young Brian Tatler of Diamond Head) and drummer Ror, the band rarely show any passion on stage. Vocalist Dunchee is by far the band’s weakest link, as his vocals are just not strong enough. In addition to this, the melodies he favours are too predictable and it takes until two songs from the end for him to loosen up and enjoy himself – an ailment that he seems to constantly suffer from.


...in order to really experience what this band is all about you really need to stand in front of the stage and be hit around the head and lungs by the rush of riffs pouring out of the band’s Orange Amps at a tsunami-like velocity.


Words like “enjoyable” and “fun” are often flung around when describing Torche’s music and live show; both of which are normally regarded as an insult when applied to music of the down-tuned variety. But Torche embrace fun just as much as they embrace thunderous rhythms and riffs big enough to build an empire on, and tonight the band’s collision of polar opposites attract a sizeable crowd for a midweek show.

On record Torche’s sheer force is only hinted at, and in order to really experience what this band is all about you really need to stand in front of the stage and be hit around the head and lungs by the rush of riffs pouring out of the band’s Orange Amps at a tsunami-like velocity. From the moment Steve Brooks (vocals, guitars) implores the crowd to “come closer” in a comical evil voice before adding the caveat, “we bite”, Torche have every patron in the palm of their sweaty hands. Adrenaline spiking renditions of “Kicking” and "In Pieces" receive a warm reception early on; the crowd obviously very familiar with the band’s latest critically acclaimed album, ‘Harmonicraft’. While the up-beat grooves of “Grenades” get necks flapping and “Snakes are Charmed" – referred to by Brooks as the band’s “disco song” – sets hips slithering. Both Brooks and fellow guitarist Andrew Elstner share vocals duties and considering the quaking bottom-end that bassist Jonathan Nuñez pulls from his instrument as he straddles centre stage, their melodious tag-team vocal approach (at its best during "Across the Shields") is surprisingly audible and clear – even when the sound goes through muddy patches.

Aside from Brooks’ whiskey-fuelled quips (which are funny as hell), it is drummer Rick Smith who provides the focal point in terms of eye-popping stage performance. Seated bear-like behind Nuñez and wearing nothing but boxer shorts and a beard, Smith is a terrifying rhythmic force. He adds such weight to each seismic riff and the sight of him swinging his sizeable arms and connecting with the might of a lumberjack as the wood splinters and sprays off his drumsticks is quite remarkable. Torche deliver an insidious set tonight; in that, the four-piece become deafening as the infamous “bomb-string” makes a head-rattling, floor-shaking appearance near the end. By tuning down to the extent that the guitar string flaps like a pensioner’s bingo wing, the impact on the ears from this gimmicky yet physically overwhelming sonic is colossal, especially during “Charge of the Brown Recluse” and the encore of “Mentor”; two of the songs played off Torche’s 2005 self-titled full-length debut.

After the show when leaving to check whether the Ha’Penny Bridge survived the dreaded “bomb”, this scribe overheard one satisfied reveller ask another, “Do Torche ever play a bad show?” Possibly the best compliment that could be afforded to Torche came with the response given – “Do they fuck!” After the embrace of melody and heft tonight, Scratch the Surface has to agree with this eloquent reply. (8.5/10)


Photos by Rachel Connolly

Dean Brown is a metal scribe based in Ireland. He is currently a contributing editor to the North American cultural magazine Popmatters and he regularly throws words for a number of other reputable loud noise publications such as About.com/heavy metal, Soundshock.com, MetalIreland.com, MoltenMagazine.com, amongst others. He has a strong affinity for music that shakes souls and leaves debilitating tinnitus in its wake and such obsession has left him financially and medically crippled, but he wouldn’t have it any other way. Follow Dean on twitter @reus85

Read More »

Dragged Into Sunlight + Wound Upon Wound + From The Bogs of Aughiska | Live Review

0 Comments
Dragged Into Sunlight + Wound Upon Wound + From The Bogs of Aughiska
24 May 2013 - The Pint - Dublin, Ireland.


A room shrouded in almost-darkness. The flicker of bare candlelight illuminates the macabre visage of a pair of antelope skulls resting upon two amplifiers. A statuesque, three branch candelabra sits centre-stage from which the skull of a ram hangs; an ominous totem. Five men stand with their backs to the small congregation gathered. These men form the collective, Dragged Into Sunlight.

Prior to these striking scenes at the Dublin bunker known as The Pint, From the Bogs of Aughiska immersed the crowd in percussion-less drone-scapes. The Irish duo dressed, rather bizarrely, in shirts, ties and slacks and wearing executioners’ masks, unfurled blackened feedback and morphing, ambient noise from a lone guitar and a laptop. Stark black-and-white handheld video footage, projected onto the screen behind the duo, accompanied the swells of sound that washed around the venue. Scenes of eroding coastlines, dilapidated stone buildings and crumbling crosses stressed the repetitious, layered drones that built and collapsed like the visuals they underscored. It was a performance from one of Ireland’s more interesting underground acts that allowed for some serious thought and reflection.

Wound Upon Wound provided the direct support to Dragged Into Sunlight, and the band’s post-black metal snapped the crowd out of their trance-like state. Tribal rhythms and sludgy riffs were punctured by vocalist S.M’s high-pitched shrieks, and the diminutive frame of the dreadlocked frontman betrayed the sounds that came from his throat. When the band’s tremolo attack arrived it did have the requisite bite, but the transitions between the two worlds lacked certain cohesion. Interestingly, when the band worked with slower tempos they were much more effective, and ultimately that’s where Wound Upon Wounds’ strength lies. If the band cut the black metal ties and fully embrace the other side of their sound, great things may come.

"Dragged Into Sunlight, on the other hand, have no problem picking the bones of every extreme metal genre to flesh out a mongrel beast."

Dragged Into Sunlight, on the other hand, have no problem picking the bones of every extreme metal genre to flesh out a mongrel beast. Last year’s ‘Widowmaker’ demonstrated a wider vision as cinematic post-rock and Integrity-esque hardcore met the band’s visceral sound, perfected in filth on their 2009 full-length debut, ‘Hatred For Humanity’. Laying their debut to rest tonight, the melodic textures explored on ‘Widowmaker’ are absent. With drummer J taking his seat facing the crowd, the remaining four members continue to keep their back to the audience and remain unturned. Running headlong through fast, blasting passages, moments of soul-sucking doom, the confrontational power of hardcore and death metal’s sonic demolition, Dragged Into Sunlight are relentless tonight. Vocalist T’s pained delivery wretches up boil as he tightens his grip on the microphone stand for greater emphasis. The sparse crowd is constantly battered between the eyes with every malicious note hitting its mark, and the strobe light placed on the floor erupts with intermittent blasts of white light. The entire band looks as if they are moving in slow motion as the lights pulsate with the same intensity as the music, causing nausea and disorientation. At times, the strobes are syncopated with the pulverising rhythms, but when they land off-beat, the effect is the near meeting of apoplexy and epileptic shock. This combined with the force of the music, the darkness and the rejection of all standard showmanship makes for a visceral live show. The dramatic peak of which occurs when vocalist T momentarily turns from the dark to scream facing the crowd, a beam of light catching the white of his eyes just before he turns away again in disgust. It’s a distressing image that stays long after the nausea subsides. Tonight we have witnessed Dragged Into Sunlight’s audio-visual violence at full force; too bad there wasn’t as many victims present for this sensory bombardment as there should have been. (8)

Words & Photo: Dean Brown

Dean Brown is a metal scribe based in Ireland. He is currently a contributing editor to the North American cultural magazine Popmatters and he regularly throws words for a number of other reputable loud noise publications such as About.com/heavy metal, Soundshock.com, MetalIreland.com, MoltenMagazine.com, amongst others. He has a strong affinity for music that shakes souls and leaves debilitating tinnitus in its wake and such obsession has left him financially and medically crippled, but he wouldn’t have it any other way. Follow Dean on twitter @reus85

Read More »

Cult of Luna + Process of Guilt @ Paradise Garage | Live Review

0 Comments
Cult of Luna + Process of Guilt @ Paradise Garage
29 January 2013


The proof that post-metallers Cult of Luna have a loyal and committed fanbase in Portugal is that, despite being a working day and the cold temperatures felt outside, Paradise Garage was fully crowded to watch the return of the Swedes to these shores.
Opening for Cult of Luna was Portuguese doomsters Process of Guilt, who put out a great record last year entitled “Faemin”, so their set was unsurprisingly dominated by tracks from that excellent album. As expected they delivered an impressive performance, their combination of ire and gloom was tight and perfectly synchronized, and provided a great set-up for headliners Cult of Luna.
But the night clearly belonged to the Swedes, whose vast line-up currently includes no less than seven active members, which means that they can recreate live the complex and heavily layered songs created in the studio with impressive accuracy and energy. Their performance started off with “The One”, the instrumental track that opens their latest album “Vertikal”, quickly followed by the powerful “I: The Weapon”. Short on words, Cult of Luna delivered a set to remember, which drew heavily from their exceptional new record, though they also played some old favourites, including "Finland" from “Somewhere Along the Highway” and "Owlwood" and “Ghost Trail” from “Eternal Kingdom”.
For many people, it was one of the best gigs they'd seen this year and possibly even one of the best they'd ever seen and that applies to me as well.


Photos: Francisco Cordeiro

Read More »