The Week in Music May 10 – 14

Here we are. Here you are. It’s Monday morning, so let’s go back in time. Way way back, to last week. We’ve got new hits from the Goon Sax and Quivers, as well as some more obscure stuff like Keron and Nina Savary. Plus, we’ve got some old favorites in Dentist, Leon Bridges and Tapeworms, piled on top of a few tunes we dug that already got the mass of hype you’d expect. As per our tastes, its all over the place, which is sort of how I’m feeling on this Monday morning. Have a rad day my friends!

Top 10 Fun Fest Acts

So we hope everyone had just a dandy time at Fun Fest this past weekend.  ATH of course had a lot of fun jamming out, day drinking, and chilling with our music biz homies from around town.  As per usual, we thought we’d recap the weekend in list form via our Top 10 bands from the festival.  With so many acts to be seen, this can sometimes be a difficult task.  Follow the jump for who made the list.

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Friday In Austin! (11/13)

revivaltour2009Friday is another one of those rare (or not so rare) days in Austin that comes around every once and a while that blows the minds of us music types.  The day is so jammed full of music goodness that we are dedicating a whole post just to Friday’s shows.  Which one are you headed to?

The Parish: Elvis Perkins & A. A. Bondy @ 8pm for $14.

Mohawk: Bishop Allen and Darwin Deez outside @ 8pm.  Tickets for $10.

Stubbs: Indie supergroup Monsters of Folk @ 7pm for just $35.

Beerland: Local boys Frantic Clam, Visitors, Basic & Hotel Hotel for only $5 @ door.

Austin Music Hall: Mastodon, Dethklok, High on Fire, & Converge @ 6:30 for $35.

Red 7: The Revival Tour with Chuck Ragan (Hot Water Music), Jim Ward (Sparta), Frank Turner, Possessed By Paul James, & Jon Snodgrass and Chad Price (Drag the River) for only $10.

Mastodon – Crack The Skye

news9a_1Rating: ★★★★½

From the opening guitars and drummer Brann Dailor’s seize of the first verse on “Oblivion,” it’s undeniable that Mastodon’s objective on Crack the Skye was to transport the listener to an ethereal universe, far beyond the hellfire and brimstone of Remission, way past the treacherous waters of Leviathan, and hundreds of miles over the inescapable and brooding hills of Blood Mountain. You know what else is undeniable?  I feel high listening to this record.

Before transcribing my heavy-metal thesis, I must’ve conducted twenty-three listens (on separate occasions, of course) to Crack the Skye, the Atlanta, Georgia quartet’s fifth album and most accomplished work to date.  Prior to diving into individual songs, it’s impossible to elude the story behind the making of this record.  First, there was the decision of having producing juggernaut Brendan O’ Brien (Bruce Springsteen, Pearl Jam) at the helm.  Then, there was guitarist Brent Hinds inebriated altercation with System of a Down’s Shavo Odadjian and his entourage outside the 2007 MTV Video Music Awards that left Hinds with severe brain hemorrhaging.  And last but not least, we can’t ignore Dailor’s explanation of the concept of Skye:  visions of astral travel, wormholes, out-of-body experiences, Rasputin, and a tribute to the drummer’s late sister who committed suicide when she was 14-years old whose name happened to be Skye.  The expectations were of Thor-like proportions.

Crack the Skye is a seven-song, fifty-minute classic rock triumph.  This is the album headphones were made for.  I wish I could gun it to 88 in Doc Brown’s time-traveling DeLorean to 1976 and experience it with Mitch Kramer in the final scene of Dazed and Confused. Trust me, it beats the hell out of Foghat’s “Slow Ride.” First single “Divinations” is a brutal two-guitar assault for the ages.  The second Hinds and Bill Kelliher’s menacing “surf rock” guitars explode out of the speakers, you’re guaranteed to wipeout like Bohdi in Point Break. Excuse my Patrick Swayze reference, I saw the movie on TNT the other night and it still cooks.  The title track on this record features organ and mellotron courtesy of Rich Morris and guest vocals from Scott Kelly (Neurosis).  You may remember him from the “Crystal Skull” of Blood Mountain. It’s   refreshing to hear his blood-curdling screech during the verses adding a fierce intensity leading up to the choruses sung by Hinds and Troy Sanders.  Add robot vocal effects ala STYX’s “Mr. Roboto” on crack over eerie keys and you have yourself a thrilling combination.   Astonishingly, Skye showcases Hinds and Sanders powerful vocals and manages to prove these Southern boys can write a kick-ass melody and belt the hell out of it.  Occasionally, Hinds’ vocals sound jarringly similar to a certain bat-eating, Texas-landmark-pissing front man, but aren’t distracting enough to take away from the strength of these songs.

“The Czar” and “The Last Baron” are Skye’s centerpieces.  Clocking in at 10:54 & 13:00 respectively, Mastodon taunts the prog-metal monster by shifting from visceral melodies to Dailor’s spacey grooves, and manages to keep our minds fully engaged.  “The Czar” is a modern-prog classic, divided into four movements: I.) Usurper, II.) Escape, III.) Martyr, & IV.) Spiral.  These movements showcase the band’s most intricate and complex musical arrangements to date.  “The Last Baron” is no exception.  It’s challenging but most importantly, wildly engrossing.  By the six-minute mark, your head and ears should simultaneously combust with the band’s jazz-fusion freak-out that sounds like Pat Metheny just shook hands with Robert Fripp of King Crimson and bought him a Pabst Blue Ribbon.  “21st Century Schizoid Man” be damned!

Mastodon have publicly stated they wanted to craft a record that was destined for “shelf life,” an album you can listen to twenty years from now and say, “Shit, that was great.”  Of course, that remains to be seen.  But one thing is certain; Crack the Skye stands the test of time.  While some bands grow weary of inspiration, Mastodon continues to grow ambitious with every record and it’s never been more evident now.  Put your headphones on.

[audio: https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/mastodon-divinations.mp3]

Download: Mastodon – Divinations [MP3]

Mastodon Bring More Rock

mastodon-photoMaybe some of our readers are not ready for the face melting music of Mastodon, but count ATH as one of their many fans. The Grammy winning band are bringing you a new album on March 24th entitled Crack the Skye and have two new songs to preview the effort. First new song “Oblivion” can be heard on the album’s website along with some sweet flash animations.  We’ve got the other new tune “Diviniations” for you below.

[audio: https://austintownhall.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/mastodon-divinations.mp3]

Download: Mastodon – Divinations [MP3]

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