Showing posts with label Abbot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abbot. Show all posts

Thursday, 15 January 2015

PODCAST - ep004 - Faster, Pussycat

There are so many mind-blowing songs coming out right now that it's incredibly difficult to pare it all down to one concise hour of the best music, but I've tried once again. The song to song flow may be a bit off, but what can you do when amazing bands are coming at you left, right and center with all kinds of different styles? You just dig your heels in and enjoy the barrage. I fixed the audio so that the levels were about even on all the songs but I don't think it worked out too well so if you wildly different volumes levels on some of the songs here, I apologize.

Tracklist
#. Song Title - Artist
1. Don’t Die On Me - Teacher
2. Sherpa - Decasia
3. Barbaric Transition - Somnium
4. Cheap Blow - Gunslinger’s Bride
5. Keep on Moving - Abbot
6. Another Life - Drifter
7. Weirdo - Kabbalah
8. Into the Night - Kadavar
9. Turning Green - Tragic Magick
10. Wandering Soul - Psychic Wounds
11. Electric Blizzard - Strange Broue
12. Am I Dead? - Widow & Children

13. On Love - Skip Bifferty



Tuesday, 6 January 2015

ABBOT - Between our Past and Future Lives

I first heard Abbot on the Soggy Bog of Doom podcast what feels like ages ago. I didn't rush out to rent a plane to fly over their houses and douse them in money, but they made a strong enough impression on me that when I saw this album up on bandcamp, I had to drop everything and check it out. I don't remember the song I heard on Soggy Bog, but I remembered that it was different. However else the band has progressed in the ensuing two or three years, they stick to that uniqueness like a little brother wanting to be shown the way to the mystery. Anyway, this album almost passed me by. It's gone a bit under the radar, maybe because of the unassuming cover, I can't be sure, but I'm glad I eventually found it. This is iconoclasm in action. Abbot carefully charts their influences and blogs about them, most of the names on their list will be familiar to you, how it all comes together might not be. But that's not a bad thing. This is very unique stuff, Les Claypool-like vocals with hard driving riffs and high energy that isn't entirely unlike Egypt. Now if you can imagine Primus and Egypt combined, you're getting close to the kind of idiosyncracy you'll find here. It's hard to imagine any fan of classic hard rock and proto-metal turning these guys away once they've heard Abbot. You can hear them on the player below: