Sunday, June 29, 2008

Double Album: Daniel Guzmán and Steven Shearer, New Museum, NYC



In this well-curated exhibit, Daniel Guzmán and Steven Shearer work in a variety of mediums to present their views of identity, adolescence, rock culture and death. Metal Heads of all varieties are sure to enjoy the inside references of a familiar culture, while at the same experiencing the subjective filter of two prominent artists with very specific viewpoints.

Highlights:

Guzmán: Interesting interplay of current events, cultural idols, sin and salvation. Guzmán is influenced by comic books, Mexican muralists, Aztec myths, psychedelia, William Burroughs, and mainstream rock and roll. His work is comfortably narrative although at times a bit didactic, but it’s generally not forced. For those not familiar with installation art, they should get a kick out of his installations. For those who are familiar with the medium, it’s not worth more than a cursory glance. (Sorry, but a B.C. Rich Warlock bass on an orange lounge chair is just not that interesting.)

Shearer:
In my opinion, he’s the real reason to attend. His work includes very honest, very precise and creepy drawings of long-haired metal heads that almost resemble Dürers or Bruegels. His paintings of similar subjects (one of which includes the famous photograph of Dead from Mayhem shortly after his suicide) are more primitive but no less scary and effective. Not to be missed is his series of poems on canvas that mimic the most abject, brutal death/black metal lyrics. I read this piece with pure enjoyment as a woman next to me turned green with revulsion!

Generally, this exhibit is pure enjoyment and is not rife with the didactic, postmodern crap one often finds in dealing with popular culture subjects. In fact, Guzmán and Shearer seem very respectful of their subjects and references. I wonder if the editors at ArtForum blasted Immortal in the conference room while discussing how to approach their review. Probably not.

Links:

New Museum: www.newmuseum.org/exhibitions/21

Friday, June 27, 2008

Concert Review: Summer Slaughter Tour, Fillmore, NYC, 6/26/08

Awesome show, incredible tour, great lineup. Don’t miss it!

I’m going to make this brief because it’s early and I’m not firing on all cylinders yet. Plus, by the time I really wake up, I’ll have forgotten everything. Guess that comes with age.

Whitechapel: Missed ‘em because I got caught up in something at work. Sorry.

Psycroptic: Caught the last five minutes. Decent, hard working, technical death metal band. Apparently the sound man was doing something else during their set, because it was really muddy. I’d look forward to seeing them if they opened for someone else, but I’m not going to rush out and buy tickets if they headline.

Born of Osiris: A sprightly bunch of tech/prog/death lads from Chi-town. Nice, razor-sharp set, full of energy. I enjoyed them at 300 BPM, then 50 BPM, then 10 BPM, then 300 BPM, then 20 BPM, then . . .

Aborted: I love Aborted, so I was a little surprised at the run-of-the-mill-ness of their set. I expected just a little more. Perhaps my expectations were too high. I guess I’d still pay money to see ‘em again, though.

Despised Icon: Two singers, and it works! Nice deathcore groove, plenty of breakdowns and tempo variety. They a played really hungry set. I like to see bands work hard. Go see them if you can.

The Faceless: Nice surprise. Are these guys friends with Born from Osiris? Similar tech/prog/death sound, plus a very versatile lead guitarist. Precise and heavy as hell. I predict that this LA-based band will get better with age.

Cryptopsy: For some unknown reason I never got into Cryptopsy, but apparently they’ve taken some flack for their last album. No matter. In my opinion, their set was just OK. They played hard, did the windmill-hair thing, and gave everyone what they expected. I wasn't surprised at the crowd-surge when they took the stage. The greater NYC area is a big Cryptopsy fan-base.

Vader: If I stayed home and had someone fire an artillery shell through my house, that would have been equal to Vader’s set. And that’s just what I expected from the second Piotr Wiwczarek stepped up to the mic and asked, “Are you ready for zome fahkieeng metal!!” I would have paid 20 plus just to see these guys and go home. Obviously, so would the other few hundred people with VADER painted on the backs of aged motorcycle jackets and leather vests. Old-school!!

Kataklysm: Third time I’ve seen Kataklysm, and they were just as good as the first and the second time, with the added bonus of a longer set. Blood on the Swans was pure gravy. I’m a big fan of the new Prevail material (unlike others), and I was psyched to discover that it played well live. To be honest, Kataklysm and Vader were the reasons I showed up to stand through six-plus hours of this shindig. No offense to the other bands, and I did have some nice surprises. But Kataklysm just pounded!

Black Dahlia Murder: Nothing to report. I left before they came on. I know what you’re saying, but I had shit to do and places to go. I’m not a big fan anyway. And why the hell are these guys headlining this tour? Did promoters suddenly forget about that whole ‘paying dues’ thing? No offense, but I dissent on this issue.

Conclusions:

The geographical reach of this line-up speaks to the momentum that extreme metal is gathering. The edge is getting pushed further and further out on a popular level, and that's a good thing.

All newer tech/death/prog metal bands are required by law to send ten percent of their tour profits - if any - to Meshugga.

No photos. Sorry. I’m a lazy-ass.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

FurTV Ed's Furry Guide To Metal

The funniest thing about this video is that when Ed names the different genres of metal, the same exact song is used as an example of each. That would annoy me if it weren't classic!


Fur TV MySpace
Fur TV - MTV website

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Album Review – Opeth: Watershed




I’m coming in late on this review, but I don’t care. Opeth’s latest is absolutely frigging brilliant. I didn’t think it could get better than Blackwater Park or Ghost Reveries, but it has. Upon the fourth listen, I’m still mind-blown.

Everything is here. Slow, soulful and creepy. Epically symphonic and black. Jazzy-progressive interludes – it just keeps going and going. Some of the tracks are especially mellow, such as Hex Omega and Den Standiga Resan, but of course this is an Opeth album. For the heavy-minded, Heir Apparent, The Lotus Eater, and Hessian Peel are more than sufficient. And the cover of Robin Trower’s Bridge of Sighs?!!!

Funny how whenever you talk about Opeth, your conversation is full of slashes and hyphens. I’ve gotten so tired of saying ‘epic/symphonic/progressive/folk/death-black metal’ that now I just say, ‘Well, you know, it sounds like Opeth, only better.” That seems to work well for me.

I missed them in NYC recently because I was out of town, so I didn’t get to see if they let new guitarist Fredrik Akesson really cut loose. Anyone who might have seen him live with Arch Enemy knows the man can shred his ass off. And btw – great job on drums by Martin Axenrot. He had big shoes to fill upon Martin Lopez’s departure. Nicely done.

BTW – there are two separate releases for this album - the regular and the special release. I recommend the latter.

Opeth website: www.opeth.com
Opeth MySpace: www.myspace.com/opeth

Monday, June 2, 2008

Album Review: Kataklysm - Prevail


Over the past few years, I’ve come to believe that Kataklysm is one of the most solid death metal bands out there. They’ve proved me right this time with their latest release, Prevail. The new album offers the combination of heaviness and melody that Kataklysm has become known for, along with what I believe to be an improved production value. (Not that their albums have suffered from poor production in the past. I just think there’s more cohesiveness and punch here, and it’s probably only going to get better with further releases.)

One thing I like about Kataklysm is that they’re equally good at different speeds. There are a few fast ones in here, and a few medium-tempo numbers to round things out into a nice package, which is what I always liked about Kataklysm. As a live band they are real pros at this. I’ve seen Kataklysm twice, and I can say that each time I’ve walked away feeling like I’ve seen a truly diverse and satisfying show. I can’t say that for all death metal bands I’ve witnessed.

I look forward to seeing these guys on the Summer Slaughter tour this year.

BTW: it’s about damn time these guys headline in the U.S., at least in medium-sized venues. I think they’ve earned it!

Check out Chad Bowers review on About Heavy Metal: http://tinyurl.com/6mnyqm

Kataklysm website: http://www.kataklysmrocks.com/
Kataklysm Myspace: http://www.myspace.com/kataklysm