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VRSTY With New Single

New Spinefarm Records signing VRSTY have released their single “Shameless”.

VRSTY put out a unique blending of metallic grooves mixed with R&B swagger that has struck a chord with its genre crossover.

The band will release the EP Cloud City on December 4.

Watch “Shameless” below:

pre-orders available at: VRSTY/CloudCity.

Continue reading VRSTY With New Single at HEAVY Magazine – Rock, Punk, Metal Music & Beyond.

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DRY KILL LOGIC Are Back With A Vengeance

Dry Kill Logic were one of the pioneering bands of the nu-metal movement that started in the early 2000s. Their debut album The Darker Side of Nonsense catapulted them into the mainstream and subsequent albums The Dead And Dreaming and Of Vengeance And Violence left them on the precipice of world domination.

Then, in 2006, the band suddenly disbanded and was lost to the music landscape for over a decade before re-emerging last year with the single “Vices”.

Continue reading DRY KILL LOGIC Are Back With A Vengeance at HEAVY Magazine – Rock, Punk, Metal Music & Beyond.

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ARIA AWARDS Nominations Revealed

The nominations for this year’s ARIA Awards are in!

With just seven weeks to go, the nominees were announced via YouTube Premiere today, with the bands up for the prize in the Best Hard Rock/Heavy Metal Album category being:

King Gizzard & The Lizard WizardChunky Shrapnel (Flightless Records)
Parkway DriveViva The Underdogs (Resist / Cooking Vinyl Australia)
PolarisThe Death Of Me (Resist / Cooking Vinyl Australia)
The Amity AfflictionEveryone Loves You…Once You Leave Them (The Amity Affliction.

Continue reading ARIA AWARDS Nominations Revealed at HEAVY Magazine – Rock, Punk, Metal Music & Beyond.

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INFINITE ILLUSION With New Video

Infinite Illusion have dropped their new single “Absence”, which explores the detrimental effects of undiagnosed mental illness and the toll that it has on the body trying to reclaim their self-identity.

After teasing the track for a number of weeks the Sydney five-piece are finally ready to unleash the song on the world.

Watch “Absence” below:

Continue reading INFINITE ILLUSION With New Video at HEAVY Magazine – Rock, Punk, Metal Music & Beyond.

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NICOLAS CAGE FIGHTER With New Single

Brutal metal/hardcore band Nicolas Cage Fighter return with crushing new single “Devil’s Head”.

The single is lifted from their upcoming conceptually based EP which will deal with mental health issues.

Watch “Devil’s Head” below:

Continue reading NICOLAS CAGE FIGHTER With New Single at HEAVY Magazine – Rock, Punk, Metal Music & Beyond.

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STEVE HUGHES To Release Solo Album After 22 Years

After a 22 year musical absence one of Australia’s founding Father’s of metal is back with a new solo album.

Known more recently for his stand up comedy routine, Steve Hughes rose to prominence through extreme metal outfit Slaughter Lord before playing for Mortal Sin, Nazxul and Presto before opting for a different stage career path.

Now he returns as Steve Hughes – Eternum for the album Alone But For The Breath Of Beasts, which will be released on October 16 via Dinner For Wolves.

Continue reading STEVE HUGHES To Release Solo Album After 22 Years at HEAVY Magazine – Rock, Punk, Metal Music & Beyond.

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FRANK CARTER & THE RATTLESNAKES To Perform Interactive Live Show

Frank Carter & The Rattlesnakes have announced a virtual gig which will be streamed from the O2 Academy Brixton on November 13.

The performance will feature the live debut of songs from their forthcoming album Blossom Deluxe that drops on October 23.

Fans will get the chance – virtually – to invade the stage, pick the setlist and chat to the band via interactive screens.

Continue reading FRANK CARTER & THE RATTLESNAKES To Perform Interactive Live Show at HEAVY Magazine – Rock, Punk, Metal Music & Beyond.

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Fallow Heart: The Uncertainty Principle, A Biased Observation of Steve Austin, Part 1

DES GOÛTS ET DES COULEURS ON NE DISCUTE PAS

I was talking music with a co-worker of mine recently. She’s a Juilliard trained classical pianist with an extracurricular taste for light jazz, neo-soul, trip hop, (coffee shop music essentially, you’ve heard this stuff.) We chatted about the ‘Franks’ we both dig (meaning Lizt, Poulenc and—thinking we were very clever—bebop saxophonist Frank Morgan,) for a few and the peculiar mindset of career, classical musicians until she suddenly pulled the colloquial railroad switch with an exasperated punch in my shoulder. She’d always known me as ‘the metal guy.’ Why hadn’t we had this conversation before? Why hadn’t I expressed to her how broad my musical appreciation was before now and what even was it with me and metal in the first place? She was genuinely puzzled by what she interpreted as my deeply incompatible artistic biases. Isn’t metal essentially a mausoleum for adolescent fantasy? Isn’t the bulk of it just pompous onanism or knuckle-dragging chauvinism or both? How could that form the framework of my listening diet which also included so many sequences of music that she understood to be qualitatively good? She couldn’t square it.

Barring the elbow room right then and there to make my case via a few selections of what I deem ‘gateway metal,’ (specific passages by Opeth, Intronaut and Enslaved have always pretty effectively done the trick for me,) I preached on the tremendous liberty the genre exudes; the unparalleled elasticity that functions as the flex to keep the old pillar so resilient. Consider any melodic discipline or artistic value, I promise that it can be adequately rephrased if not directly woven into metal’s fabric; it has a knack for stylistic reconciliation. And anyway, classical music’s riddled with quixotic and arguably puerile themes, (hell, one of its most basic forms is called fantasia,) and Lizt—for one—could be almost barbarically aggressive, you kidding me? (That’s a slight overstatement—Lizt was no Bartók—but whatever, I had her; or at the very least she was swayed.)

That evening as we waited for our ride to collect their things and say their goodbyes to the staff she rounded on me. “Hey, play me something. I’m interested in hearing some of this stuff from your point of view.” Completely unprepared, ladies and gentlemen. My mind had been entirely occupied with calculating how many hours of sleep I could reasonably expect before I had to hoist my—in all likelihood howling—son from his bed in the morning in order to prep him for school. Shit.

“Um, sure. Give me a second,” I hedged, scrolling quickly through the library of albums on my phone for a worthy specimen.

“Don’t sanitize it for me,” she protested. “Just play me the last thing you were listening to.” And with my phone quickly wrestled from out my hand she pointed to the play button at the bottom of the screen. “Today Is the Day; are they metal? They sound kind of like an ‘80’s straightedge band.”

“No, they’re metal. Tangentially, I mean.” Fresh off the heels of reviewing the band’s No Good to Anyone release I’d been revisiting Today is the Day’s back catalogue incessantly for the past week. The album I’d been occupying myself with on the drive up to the event was Willpower, a record that is—to me—the very objectification of idiosyncratic hostility. ‘Gateway metal?’ Not hardly. Not by a fucking country mile.

“Good enough,” she smiled, pressing play and handing the phone back over. She leaned towards the speaker as “My First Knife” wept like sour, oily smoke from out of the device, and as her posture shuffled from degrees of earnest, straining focus to full-body, waspish scowl I began to marvel at how different the music sounded there with her than it had just a few hours earlier. It was aggravating, like a loose tailpipe dragged shrieking over pavement. It was an utterly disagreeable waft of sour milk. There in that moment it was way the fuck unwelcome.

And yet it was precisely the same music I’d been ravenously absorbing for days now, absolutely savoring its ‘aggravating’ glory. Obviously, it was the receiver that had been altered, the transmitter was no more or less flawed than ever before. I was interpreting it all differently. And so, the question surfaced from wherever it is that questions bubble up from: what does Today Is the Day really sound like divorced from all of our petty biases? Can music even be evaluated outside the vacuum of lived experience? Can melody have any sort of value in that sphere? And what about the flip side? Is it possible to measure music’s value when passed through the lens of very specific biases?

“I’m sorry but I think this is going completely over my head,” sighed my exasperated coworker inching farther back into the streetlamp’s ghastly sherbet-colored corona.

For example, I thought: what would Today Is the Day sound like to a career musician who’s suffered overt bodily trauma, who’s physical pain’s advanced enough so that they can barely hold a guitar pick between their fingers anymore? A musician who’s travelled so far inwards that they encode their latest album with cryptic personal asides to the extent that the album’s subtext is essentially impenetrable to everyone but themselves; like cairns raised along an overgrown path leading back into the past?

“Huh?” I startled, pressing stop. “Oh yeah. Well, the track was almost over anyway.”

I was absent; lost within the hedge-maze of this specific thought: What does Today Is the Day actually sound like to Steve Austin?

“The crucial discovery was made that, in order to become painting, the universe seen by the artist had to become a private one created by himself.” —André Malraux

WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE?

“I feel like anytime ever that I’ve listened to music that was doing something different than what everyone else was doing, it usually turned me off. It usually made me go, ‘what the fuck is this?’ It could take me two weeks to a month for it to set in my head ‘till finally I would go, ‘Oh my god… this is totally doing something for me that I would have never expected from a heavy, underground music album.’”

Steve Austin’s voice furls outwards like wisteria over abandoned power lines. It moves at its own pace, curling in and around itself in strange paraphrastic arcs, swallowing up whatever talking point the interviewer may have dispensed and utterly reshaping the ground beneath it. It’s easy to become boxed in or else turned contrariwise by one trajectory as it cooly forks into multitudes. You’d best have brought along a map.

“Look, whenever you break the flow of anything and you try to do something different, you’re going to have to be brave enough and believe enough in what you’re doing,” he continues. “You’re not Led Zeppelin, this is not going to be an instant crowd pleaser. And whatever; I’ve always tried to ensure that Today Is the Day is the opposite of the mainstream, meaning that there’s no ‘prepared statement,’ there’s no preconceived ideas. Everything is free-thinking stream of consciousness that’s put out there as just this very visceral testimony. This is not a party experience.”

As a piece, No Good to Anyone may be a lot of things. It’s a deafening salvo clattering the earth in the wake of a protracted dead zone, it’s an annotation on the sinew of human will, a type of musculature so few of us ever deign to exercise, it’s the ominous rattle of a coyote testing its strength against a length of chicken wire. However, what No Good to Anyone is not is a ‘party experience.’ There are moments on the album that can feel at best like daunting incidentals and at worst like small scale catastrophes akin to watching a musician being sucked downwards into wet earth as they stubbornly push onwards through the show. It can sound like a machine vomiting sparks as something essential ricochets loose around inside it. And it can certainly effect, a kind of awesome magnetism on the listener as it rears back off the heels of its foundations while refusing to give in and topple. But one is rarely moved to celebrate in a storm cellar, (especially not to the tune of the structure’s groans of torment above them.) This is not a party album. This is not Led Zeppelin.

“Yeah well the whole point of the album is to go right over your head. Anything that breaks the mold is going to find resistance initially but I don’t think you can make great art if you’re afraid to do things that are untried and untested. I make these records to try to understand life. They’re a healing tool. I try to make something that—during whatever period of my life—behave like a little mirror that I can study my reflection by and try to understand what exactly is happening to me. Throughout all the albums up through this one, I feel like I’ve always been seeking answers and I’ve always been trying to understand myself because I don’t understand myself a lot of the time.” Steve loiters over the thought like cigarette smoke just outside an office break-room window. “I have a lot of built-up, super-intense anger that drives me fucking crazy but then at the same time, I’m the most loving, caring, thoughtful person. And it comes from the heart,” he emphasizes. You know, this whole time that I’ve been doing Today is the Day, a lot of it has been about exploring a question. It’s been trying to understand what it means to be a good person in a really fucked up world, trying to come to grips with the fact that you’re not always a good person. Sometimes you’re a bad person. Sometimes you’re a villain.”

NONE OF THE SHEEP WILL SURVIVE

“All art is a revolt against man’s fate.”  —André  Malraux

Researchers from John Hopkins Hospital have estimated that as many as 40-80% of chronic pain patients are routinely misdiagnosed owing most especially to the physician’s failure to take a comprehensive history from the patient and from ordering the wrong tests. Following a van accident in 2014 in which Today is the Day’s touring vehicle was struck and flipped upside down across l-495 at 65 miles per hour, Steve Austin began to suffer severe and persistent inflammation and found it increasingly difficult to walk. His condition was diagnosed as one of any number of things “from rheumatoid arthritis to fibromyalgia.” On the counsel of one physician and desperate for relief, Austin began rounds of an intensive anti-convulsive medication.

Now, let’s say that this specific proscription had been determined correctly. Anti-convulsive medications function by altering electrical activity in neurons or chemical transmissions between neurons. From there the potential cascade of side effects are as aggregate and as variegated as one can imagine, but—according to the medical resource site RxList—one of the most common side-effects across all of the most commonly prescribed seizure medications is the inducement “of suicidal thoughts and action,” (not to mention such possible delights as liver failure, serious blood disorders and—perhaps paradoxically—violent tremors.) Even in the best case scenario things can get dicey. Now imagine a body increasingly consumed by agonizing fits of inflammation, whose throat can swell up to the extent that its airway’s can become fundamentally blocked, whose hands and face might expand to twice their size and begin to feel as if they’ve literally been set on fire. The pain is fucking exquisite and the body can become physically unrecognizable to its owner. Imagine this drug and its potentially deadly psychological effects being introduced to this system, (entirely based on a misdiagnosis, mind you,) and the unholy chaos that can ensue from there. Just think about it for a second.

Still feel like you’re having a fucking bad day?

 

“If this album were a film, then when ‘Attacked by an Angel’ kicks in it would have been like shifting all of a sudden from this dense action scene with the first track to a shot of a hospital patient who is heavily drugged, staring out the window trying to cope with pain, fantasizing in terms of trying to reconcile their previous life with being immobile, ‘Sit and watch the time go by of which I am a slave, all the time that’s rolling by I cannot ever save,’” Austin sings soothingly. “This is just me staring out the window, daydreaming. Just trying to understand what’s happening to me.”

Let’s just say that my introduction to No Good to Anyone got off on the wrong foot and “Attacked by an Angel” was the proverbial out-of-kilter cadet that fucked up the entire military parade for me. I hated it. Its slippery, rhythmic nonchalance along with those coequally detached modal shifts in Austin’s vocal delivery, (contrast the melodic phrasing between the second line of the first verse and its reprisal on the second verse,) irritated me to the extent that I was initially closed to the album and began forecasting my sure-to-be high-minded and punishing review with genuine relish. But as it often happens with a new crush, it was this same track that took to roosting in my thoughts during the oddest moments, first as an interloper and then as a welcomed guest. Upon inspection “Attacked by an Angel’s” blemishes began to look a lot more like beauty marks such that I became enthralled by its eccentricities; until even -let the record show- I came to adore that subtle modal shift in the second verse, (“there’s no hope for you or I, you’re guilty and betrayed.”) And with that single but noteworthy recalibration the entire album clicked sharply into focus. Ah, this song, man… It lurches like an old whale-boat drawn into the eye of a ferocious squall. You can almost feel your grip slowly loosening from the mast as the waves salivate beneath the soles of your feet.

“It’s funny because I had this riff that I kept playing around with on tour,” Steve’s smile telescopes out from the compressed wave issuing from my laptop’s speakers into something nearly tangible. “It’s five notes and it repeats in a weird way and I don’t know why but I just kept grabbing that riff 1-2-3-4-5, 1-2-3-4-5, 1-2-3-4-5. It was very monotonous but it was also extremely difficult in a very weird way to play. The fucking thing should be so simple for someone like me who’s been playing odd time signatures my whole life so I don’t know why but when I went to record that fucking part it was a trip to do,” he laughs. “And when I got through making that song—just as a fan of hard music and whatever—I listened to it and I thought, ‘Steve, what are you even doing?! What is this vocal style at the front end?’ But I realized that for me to do it the right way, it needed to not be sung powerfully. It had to come from a fragile place to where you’ve just got the breath to push it out, almost like you’re muttering to yourself rather than you’re speaking to someone else. And you know, one of my favorite parts on the whole album—that I think is pretty fucking inventive—is the ending of ‘Attacked by an Angel.” It has this almost Meshuggah-like, mechanical, industrial rhythm… its off time again so it fucks you up when it kicks in but there’s also the vocal I laid down there. I sang it in a Southern accent—like cowboy style—so that, (hopefully,) it would accurately reflect me as a person or as a spirit. Like my spirit singing on top of this mountain near my house and my ashes being scattered from it by my family.

“Now that I really think about it, this album’s fractured-ness probably is a good capture of what my life was like around then because very little of it made sense. It was just fragments, you know? One minute I was dreaming about something just thinking these really morbid thoughts like ‘am I going to cut my arm off? What am I willing to do to end this pain?’ but then the whole fantasy shifts… Like, now there’s a birthday party and I’m using a walker to make it into the kitchen to sing happy birthday for my son. So [the record is] all of these different little fragments collected together like a family snapshot album and yeah, it’s definitely weird. But it’s a pretty good diary. I would think that if my son Hank had a kid one day and he was wanting for him to understand his grandfather at this period of time, if he was to put on this album for him, I wouldn’t doubt that the kid would listen to it and go, ‘Oh, okay, I kind of have a picture of what grandpa was doing. I can sort of see who he was.’”

“The greatest mystery is not that we have been flung at random between the profusion of matter and of the stars, but that within this prison we can draw from ourselves images powerful enough to deny our nothingness.” —André Malraux

WUNDERKAMMERN 

Richard Feynman was a theoretical physicist who proposed that all positrons are merely electrons that are moving backwards through time. It’s worth noting that he didn’t seem especially fond of this idea because he didn’t care for many of its implications. Nonetheless, it was simply the way the math worked out ergo that’s the way this particular slice of cornbread crumbled. Think about a black hole, a region of arching spacetime fringed by an event horizon and broadcasting a jet of positrons in the form of antimatter. According to NASA, when a star’s enthralled by the gravitational pull of a black hole it begins to collapse in upon itself. But as the star is drawn closer to the black hole’s theoretical boundary—the event horizon—time slows down and then finally…stops altogether. The star is no longer collapsing while it is now simultaneously always collapsing. It’s like being torn apart by the past while being held in stasis by the present.

If you could gaze into the past, what would you really see? Would it settle into familiar forms before you? When the Greek statues of pre antiquity arrived to European museums of the 18th Century, they came bleached by time of all their color. And therefore, ever since we’ve collectively envisioned an Ancient Greece populated with either alabaster or drab, khaki-toned statuary. But according to Plato these statues were actually painted so realistically that passing birds were attracted by the clusters of grapes that they held. All except for their eyes. Plato said that their eyes were customarily painted red; imagine that!

Maybe our past is nothing like we left it. Maybe the past stares back at us through blood-red eyes.

We’ll close the loop on the first portion of this observation here. Of course, we’re by no means done. If you thought that Steve Austin might simply have nothing more to say then you don’t know Steve Austin. Which, my friend, you most certainly don’t.

What is not surrounded by uncertainty cannot be truth.” —Richard Feynman

The post Fallow Heart: The Uncertainty Principle, A Biased Observation of Steve Austin, Part 1 appeared first on Decibel Magazine.

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Track Premiere: Ett Dödens Maskineri – ‘Låsta dörrar’

As conservative voices in power around the world get louder, so too does the opposition’s. Joining that roar of voices is Sweden’s Ett Dödens Maskineri, a Swedish hardcore punk band whose new album, Det Svenska Hatet (“The Swedish Hate”), will be released later year as a response to far-right beliefs in their home country.

Although the lyrics are in Swedish, the band’s passion for the subject can be heard in singer/guitarist Daniel Garpebring’s emotive delivery. Musically, Ett Dödens Maskineri recall Sweden’s rich history of crust and punk; equal parts Disfear, Skitsystem, Asta Kas and even Modern Life is War can be heard on songs like “Låsta Dörrar,” streaming via Decibel.

Most impressively, Ett Dödens Maskineri sound like they would be at home in an arena or in a grimy, beer-covered basement. Their music is  anthemic without sacrificing aggression, which helps Ett Dödens Maskineri stand out from other crust and punk artists.

“‘Låsta Dörrar’ is a testimony about the closed hearts of today and about how Sweden’s society thrives on distrust, individualism and a systematic downsizing of everything that builds solidarity,” Garpebring tells Decibel about the song. “Where exclusion and socio-economic division fuels a cold and inflexible society.”

Listen to “Låsta Dörrar” below. Det Svenska Hatet is out November 30 on Suicide Records.

The post Track Premiere: Ett Dödens Maskineri – ‘Låsta dörrar’ appeared first on Decibel Magazine.

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Goth Gorgon’s Top 5 Life Events After Mörk Gryning Disbanded

By Goth Gorgon (Mörk Gryning)

I had been a metal freak for a big part of my life. It started nice and sweet with Europe, but soon went down/uphill when my brother bought New Jersey by Bon Jovi. Soon followed Guns N’ Roses, Skid Row, Mötley Crüe, Judas Priest, AC/DC, Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, Helloween, Anthrax, Metallica, Kreator, Slayer, Nuclear Assault, Megadeth, Sepultura, Morbid Angel, Deicide, Entombed, Dismember, Bathory, Darkthrone, Mayhem, Tormentor… All in two-three years, so at 12, I was already hooked on black and death metal. There was not really anywhere to go after that, so I started regressing in a sense; going back to thrash and then through the different styles from the ’80s. I went rummaging through second-hand stores, hunting vinyl. I wasn’t a fanatical vinyl fan to be honest — true, it was much cooler than a CD, but often the scratches could intervene with the experience. It was more for practical reasons. There simply were more LPs of old metal bands than CDs, and they were often cheaper. After the ’80s came the ’70s, with bands like Magnum, Uriah Heep, early Judas/Scorpions, Riot and so forth, down to Sabbath, Purple, and Zeppelin. Through those bands, I started coming across psychedelic and bluesy stuff, which took me a while to get into but once I did, it opened new doors to me. And this got me connected with more modern bands in the same vibe such as Tool — or Kyuss — and this made me wanna do other things than play metal.

So, here are the Top 5 Things I Did After Mörk Gryning disbanded in 2004…



5. Berlin
I had had enough of Stockholm; it was too boring, too square. I needed to get out, so I went to Berlin. To pay the bills, I started DJ-ing again, but I wanted to get back to playing, so I joined this noise/garage band called Lolita Terrorist Sound, run by a guy who was actually a great drummer, but here he was a singer, which, to be honest, maybe wasn’t his strongest side, but he had a great charisma on stage and was a big talker, so he got in contact with all these famous people. We could rehearse for free in this incredible rehearsal room with every amp and effect pedal you could possibly want. Apparently, it would normally be rented out for 200€/h to huge bands on tour. To enter the room you first had to pass through this ritual hall where they would perform satanic rites. There was an altar with a pentagram and a cat(!) on it and satanic priest robes and shit. It all looked straight from some ’70s horror movie. We did two shows opening up for Anna von Hausswolff (she was incredible) and on one show in Berlin, where the guitar player of Swans — Christoph Hahn — joined us. Unfortunately, the guy was a better talker than a doer, so not much more happened after that. But who knows for the future, I think he’s still working on it. I wish him the best of luck.



4. Spiritualism
I was into this a lot when I was younger, but lost interest as alcohol and women came into my life. When I was living in Berlin, I heard of an American shaman who did drum journeys, so I went to participate. This takes you to a trance-like state where you can float off into different worlds. This was another reason I wanted to go back to the jungle on my second trip to South America, to see shamans. I had already done ayahuasca one time during my first trip, but this time I wanted to go deeper. The first two times it didn’t have much effect (apart from shitting and puking my lungs out), but the third time it blew me away. Ayahuasca is a healing agent that makes you work on yourself, whatever issues you have and this might not be easy all the time. One moment you’re in a beautiful place where you feel all safe and good, and the next you’re in demon land. But as long as you don’t freak out and stay with it, not trying to flee from it, you’ll feel much better afterwards. For me, this opened doors to my subconscious or spiritual world, and it has helped me since. During the time I wrote the songs for our new album, I consulted it a lot through drum journeys and meditation.



3. Traveling
I’ve always found it hard to settle down somewhere. I wasn’t very happy living in Stockholm; it bored me. During Mörk Gryning’s 15-year hiatus, I traveled a lot, and to South America twice. I’ve always loved the woods and had a big passion for nature in general. Now, sightseeing in cities is about the most boring thing I can imagine. Instead, what gets me going is meeting interesting people and great nature scenery. In South America, you have plenty of both. Like the mountains. Although we do have majestic mountains in Sweden, it’s not quite the same as those of the Andes. These canyons and waterfalls, or volcanoes covered in snow, or ascending into the clouds, just leave you speechless. But even so, what called me the most was the jungle. Just as the mountains are not quite the same in Europe, so are the forests. When you enter the jungle, your senses get razor sharp, ’cause you know you’ll need them. One time, I was walking in the jungle in the middle of the night with this indigenous guy I’d known for a while. As we’re walking around he tells me that there is just one animal we really need to fear, and that’s shushúpe (bushmaster, a pit viper). He can get very aggressive if you shine your flashlight on him. “If this happens,” my friend tells me, “we must cut down a small tree or a branch to kill him because he’s too fast to kill with machetes. He can jump up to two meters and bites multiple times. And if he bites your arm, for example, we got 30 seconds to cut it off.” I tried to reason with him that maybe we could just carve up the wound and suck out the poison (a guy I met in India who was bitten three times by cobras had told me that’s what he used to do), but he said it was not possible, the arm’s gotta go. Luckily, we did not see any shushúpes that night. However, the next morning we came by a village, where a family that my guide knew lived, so we paused to say hello. With a monkey roasting on the grill, they greeted us warmly and gave us bowls of chicha de yuca (mashed manioc they mix with their spit to make it ferment quickly. It sort of tastes like alcoholic yogurt). After a while, the father takes us down to the river to show us something. He walks away and comes back with a headless shushúpe that had attacked him the night before. It was about two and half meters and almost as thick as a thigh. Eight years later, when I returned to Peru, I visited my guide in his village outside of Iquitos. It was very nice to see him again, and I stayed for about a week. When I got back to Iquitos, I was told that a woman had just been killed by a shushúpe in the village I had just came from. Apparently, it had happened right after I left on the boat. Moral of the story, better keep your senses sharp in the Amazon.



2. Klubb Gås
Klubb Gås (‘gås’ means ‘goose’ in Swedish; also slang for a ‘joint’) was a music club that me and a friend started up in Stockholm in 2008. We were sick of the glam and sleaze scene, and wanted a place with (what we considered) proper rock. We had no idea if there were more than a handful of people into this in Stockholm but we talked a bar into letting us try it out one time and printed loads of posters for it (Facebook was still not a big thing). Luckily, we almost filled the place, so we got a deal to do Thursdays. At first, we focused on stoner and ’70s rock, but as we got to meet new people that came to the place, we were introduced to loads of bands and styles we’d never listened to before so the spectrum broadened. After a while we found another place where we could arrange gigs and soon a third place where the weekends were available and so for a while we ran four nights per week. It was too much for just the two of us to handle so we recruited some of our young regulars to sit at the door or DJ for us. Soon, we could do live bands at the weekend place, so we skipped the others and kept going there for two years with two-three bands every Friday and Saturday. In the end, they closed down and we kept arranging things at four-five other locations for about a year until it was time to give it up. There are, of course, a thousand stories I could tell from those days, but I guess it goes without saying that we had a pretty good time.



1. Port of Saints
Me and Aeon (keyboardist in Gryning, guitarist here) started the band immediately after Mörk Gryning split in 2004. We were into bands like Kyuss, Masters of Reality, Clutch, Soundgarden, Stooges, Sleep, Dozer, Big Business, etc., and wanted something psychedelic, dark and heavy, but with a rock ‘n’ roll vibe to it. Stoner rock, basically. The band had numerous line-up changes and struggles over the years but in the end we managed to record one album called No Sleep Forever. An album I’m still very proud over today but by the time it was out, I was weary of managing a band with all the troubles it comes with. Also, in those days, sleaze and glam rock was a huge trend in Stockholm, and that didn’t help us much. Stoner rock had had its days in the late ’90s, so we didn’t time it very well. Facebook

** Mörk Gryning’s new album, Hinsides Vrede, is out October 23rd on Season of Mist. Pre-orders for CD, LP, and t-shirt are available via the label’s US store (HERE).

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