Showing posts with label trance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trance. Show all posts

Monday, August 4, 2025

Head Medicine weekly vol 1



Head Medicine Weekly
vol 1
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the first installment of a new feature, a weekly dose of various sights and sounds, 
comics and culture for your eyeballs and earholes. 
a new volume every Friday.  follow on Facebook or Twitter  


too many memorials recently...

Ian "Lemmy" Kilmister   1945-2015





David Bowie 1947-2016




  Nigeria Rock Special
 Psychedelic Afro-Rock and Fuzz Funk in 1970s Nigeria
2008 Soundway Records
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when Ginger Baker, drummer of Cream, arrived in Nigeria in 1970 and hooked up with Fela Kuti, two amazing musical ambassadors' worlds collided.  Baker brought Western acid rock with him and it melded seamlessly with Kuti's Afro-funk sounds and traditional African rhythms. the young people of Nigeria went wild for this concoction, and countless bands sprung up playing a brand new style of psychedelic, fuzzed out afro-rock.  there are several great compilations to wade in to that document this rich musical era, and Nigeria Rock Special: Psychedelic Afro-Rock & Fuzz Funk in 1970's Nigeria will give you plenty of material to sift through.  buy it HERE.

here are a few of my favorites:











The X-Ray Audio Project
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In the Soviet Union during the Cold War, music and records that were not controlled by the state were highly sought after but hard to come by.  an underground market formed, and bootleggers needed to use their ingenuity to create the product.  armed with a record press but suffering from a lack of supplies, these bootleggers used repurposed x-ray plates to fill the demand. 







these albums were forbidden treasures, and their ghostly story is only now starting to emerge.

click HERE for more information on The X-ray Audio Project 






UNKLE
The Runaway
  video directed 
by
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a scuzzy, down n' dirty track from James Lavelle's long-running UNKLE project, off of their 2010 release Where Did the Night Fall.   vocals by Elle J, with a darkly seductive video by Warren Du Preez and Nick Thornton Jones.  very, very cool stuff.








Volumen Uno
by
Fabian Rangel Jr, Alex Ziritt, and Ryan Ferrier
 ___________________________________________________________________________________________

created by Rangel Jr and Ziritt
written by Rangel Jr
art by Ziritt
lettered by Ryan Ferrier

Space Riders:  Volumen Uno collects the entire introductory 4 issue mini-series, and, from one look at the cover, you know exactly what you are going to get.  there are no subtleties here.  this is a 1970s black light poster hallucination exploding to life.  Rangel Jr's story is properly unhinged, flowing like a stream of consciousness Fletcher Hanks creation, and Ziritt's art looks like a mix of Jack Kirby and Paul Pope on a steady diet of LSD.  it's a perfect blend.  buy the book HERE











the Head Medicine Weekly playlist 
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~kojak  

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

GOAT - Commune (Rocket/Sub Pop/Stranded 2014)

Gathering of Ancient Tribes art by KOJAK


GOAT
COMMUNE

(Rocket Recordings/Sub Pop/Stranded 2014)







commune 1 |ˈkämˌyoōn|
noun
1 a group of people living together and sharing possessions and responsibilities.

commune 2 |kəˈmyoōn| |kəˈmjun| |kəˈmjuːn|
verb [ intrans. ]
1 ( commune with) share one's intimate thoughts or feelings with someone or something, esp. when the exchange is on a spiritual level

 
     For the uninitiated, GOAT is a shamanistic psychedelic music collective from Arctic Sweden who just might be the best band around right now.  A steadily growing number of hypnotized devotees would agree. Since they emerged from the ether two years ago, few bands (if any) have been burning hotter, pushing further, or digging deeper than GOAT. They have a fantastical origin story, and their rise from obscurity has been absolutely fascinating to watch unfold, but it's too long of a story to tell here. Luckily i've been doing all of the legwork and chronicling their career since their debut so you can get caught up to speed.  Check it all out HERE.  It's worth it.

     GOAT's new album, Commune, is the sound of a frighteningly confident and talented band going full supernova. As crazy as it may seem, this album has evolved far beyond its brain-melting predecessor, World Music (which just happens to be one of the best albums of the last decade in case you weren't aware). Commune is even more diverse, performed even more masterfully, with warmer and richer production. Every raw edge has been shaped and formed to precision. Creatively, GOAT has broken through to an entirely different dimension, drawing from an even deeper well of influences than they were before... exotic sounds and styles from every remote corner of the globe, boiled down to their most primal core, and cranked to the point of spontaneous combustion. Technically, the band members have developed to a point where they can pull off just about anything their minds can conjure up.  Most notable are the strong performances from the anonymous dueling guitarists--among the very best in the world, in my opinion--and the bassist, who is on a John Paul Jones-level trajectory. These elements are combined with their trance-inducing percussion and the hair-raising wails of the twin priestess vocalists to create a limitless sound unlike anything else out there. Tranced out dance music from the past, beamed in from the future. As if that wasn't enough, GOAT continues to tap deeply into something that few others are even conscious of... an ancient tribal mysticism from a time far different than our modern day technological hamster wheel culture...traveling to the spirit world and returning to relay what was found... a strong sense of community where everyone tunes into each other on a far deeper level, attempting to create something together that no one individual could ever in a million lifetimes achieve.  It's a welcomed perspective in such a depressing, cynical time.


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     The album opens with a tolling temple bell, slowly fading in with each ring.  It is a meditational introduction to clear your mind and align your focus... Commune is one of those mesmerizing, perfectly sequenced travelogue albums that will pick you up and carry you to exotic lands, if you let it.  The more attention you pay, the more you will find.  Headphones are a must.

     "Talk To God" lifts off with hypnotic, cyclical guitar riffs that echo the sounds of the Tuareg -- Saharan desert nomads and their modern ambassadors Tinariwen, Bombino, and Terakaft.  Images of vast desert expanses float in... camel caravans off on the horizon.  The guitars magically weave through eachother for what seems like forever, in no hurry at all, in complete defiance of typical Western song structure.  and really, that's kind of GOAT's defining trait... zoning off for waaaaaayyyy longer than most while attempting to achieve transcendence through repetition.  At one point, the guitars and vocals drop out and all that is left is that sick Rickenbacker bassline and percussion gnawing at eachother.  It's an eyes-rolled-back-in-the-head moment and for the rest of the track, everything warps together into a hazy mirage.

     "Words" is quintessential GOAT... an ancient war drum beat, summoning a fucking colossus out of the earth... phased guitar spiraling into infinity... white hot guitar leads stabbing in and out... this is GOAT distilled to laser precision, unrelentingly driving itself into your head like a railroad spike.  Live, this song will turn a crowd into a delirious mass.

     Shifting gears completely, "Light Within" is a piece of Latin space rock, with a slinky samba vibe.  This tune pushes out GOAT's already boundary-less sound to something far more refined than they were capable of on World Music.  The musicianship is top shelf, and an attentive ear can appreciate the brilliant final mix with light touches of finger-picked acoustic guitar and vibraphone threaded throughout.

     "To Travel the Paths Unknown" is a brief instrumental meditation to chill things out for a moment. Effects drip off of the guitar and what sounds to me like a strummed banjo, bringing Ennio Morricone's spaghetti western muzak to mind.

     This transition leads into the serpentine funk of "Goatchild."  For the first time, we hear men's voices in a mating dance call-and-response with the girls, singing about getting together for some free love.  Things get steamy with layers of 70s porno wah guitar solos stacked on top of one another as the song washes out in a tantric sex blur.  The goatchild is conceived.  Classic.

     "Goatslaves" blazes by like a comet... Everything is fused together tighter than ever before and the girls reach through the speakers and shout "Dying for Freedom/Dying for peace/Too many people live on their knees." Blistering stuff, and should rightly be the band's next single.

     "Hide From the Sun" has an entrancing Middle Eastern sound, reminiscent of  Turkish psych funk pioneer Baris Manco. The mood is more ominous,  with an off-kilter rhythm and a savage fuzzed out guitar solo.

    Named for the creator deity from Haitian Voodoo mythology, "Bondye" aims straight for the psyched out center of it all.  This instrumental is based on a rhythm similar to those found in rural Thailand, recently represented to a larger audience by Khun Narin's Electric Phin Band.  GOAT thrives on the merging of sounds that have never been put together before, so of course there are Gothic Americana fiddle solos flying around with more fuzzed out wah guitar to top it all off.  They make a perfect fit.

     The album's majestic finale, "Gathering Of Ancient Tribes," (note the acronym) brings things back around full circle to the expansive sounds of the opening track, but this is even more focused.  The intensity continues to build higher and higher, and when the girls are screaming "Into the Fire!!" it sounds less like a condemnation than it is an invitation to join them in the flames.  The track totally breaks open here, and all of the tension the band has built up over the course of the album is released in a mind blowing finale.  The tolling temple bell from the beginning comes back around and brings the album to a silent close.


    -----------------------------------------------------------
     Commune, comes with considerably more interest and attention than World Music when it first appeared in 2012. Maybe even bordering on hype. With North American distribution this time around (finally) from the mighty Sub Pop, GOAT will have a unique opportunity to spread their gospel to a far wider audience than ever before. And as they have done at every step of their evolving career so far, Goat effortlessly rises to the occasion, unhindered by any outside force or pressure.  They are already in uncharted waters, it will be interesting to see where they navigate to from here.


Buy the album HERE in North America via Sub Pop,  and HERE via Rocket Recordings everywhere else



     GOAT is in the midst of their first ever extended European tour, and if you haven't witnessed one of their rare live rituals, I highly recommend trying your best to change that.  The shows are taking on mythic proportions.  If you can't, here is a taste of what you are missing: 





GOAT just released their first ever official video and it's fantastic.  directed by Sam Macon




For those of you who weren't able to get a copy of the limited edition 7" included with the Commune vinyl, here is the bonus track, "Dig My Grave."  Not only should this have been on the album, it should have been a single!  oh, those tasty guitars never get old...






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art and writing by KOJAK









Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Forgotten Classics - Vol 3: Robin Trower - Bridge of Sighs (1974 Chrysalis)



Robin Trower is a bit of a dark horse in a best-guitarist-of-all-time conversation, but his name deserves to be mentioned more often.  over a long and still running career, his atmospheric, cough medicine-drenched slow-mo Hendrix sound and tone has etched his name in guitar immortality.  he found some mainstream success as a member of Procol Harem as well as with his solo career and various collaborations, but today he is mysteriously absent from classic rock radio.  regardless, his second album with the Robin Trower Band, 1974's Bridge of Sighs, is his undisputed masterpiece and is one of rock music's most criminally under appreciated albums.

i had heard Robin Trower's name mentioned enough times over the course of a decade of online music discussions that when i saw Bridge of Sighs at a flea market for one buck, i grabbed it.  supposedly he was a helluva guitarist, that's all i knew.  when i got home i slapped it on the turntable, got right, and slipped on the headphones.  *gasp* it was one of those albums that makes you feel like a complete ass for never checking it out earlier.  it's sooo fucking good.  of course Trower is the star of the show here, but the contributions from bassist/vocalist James Dewer and dummer Reg Isidore are obvious from the beginning.  Dewer stakes his claim as one of the finest underappreciated rock singers from that era, with a deeply soulful, blue collar voice, and his bass work melded perfectly with Isidore's tasteful drumming.  their rhythm section formed a seamless foundation for Trower's cosmos-travelling solos.


so here's the Robin Trower Band's Bridge of Sighs.   it's too bad that the second song, the title track, isn't tattooed on our collective classic rock consciousness.  it truly is one of the most magical and mystical pieces of guitar music ever made.

Bridge of Sighs  (1974 )



Before recording Bridge of Sighs, Robin Trower was an English guitiarist who got his start in 1967 with Procol Harum, stepping in just after their Summer of Love anthem "Whiter Shade of Pale."  He split in 1971 after five albums, and eventually formed the Robin Trower Band with bassist/vocalist James Dewer and drummer Reg Isidore. 

Originally, Dewer was bassist in the Scottish blues group Stone the Crow with vocalist Maggie Bell, which was managed and championed by Led Zeppelin's Peter Grant.  he eventually moved on and teamed up with the now-single Trower and Jethro Tull drummer Clive Bunker for a group called Jude.  the band never recorded and quickly disbanded. Trower and Dewer continued on and brought in the West Indian-born, London-based drummer Reg Isidore in December of 1972.  "Reggie was the first drummer we auditioned," said Trower. "Reggie came down for a jam and we played together for about ten minutes, and i said, right... that's it... you're in, like it or not!" 

Twice Removed From Yesterday, the Robin Trower Band's first album in 1973, sets an immediate mood... slower, longer, more dramatic stoned guitar jams... the first three tracks, "I Can't Wait Much Longer," "Daydream," and "Hannah" form a sprawling spaced out epic with some of the very best guitar shit you will ever hear.  the seeds for Bridge of Sighs originate here.


Reg Isidore left the Robin Trower Band after the release of Bridge of Sighs, but Trower and Dewer continued on with drummer Bill Lordan for the rest of the decade.  For Earth Below in 1975 and Long Misty Days the following year continue on with the Sighs signature sound, and even though they fall short of matching that record's ridiculous classicness, they are well worth checking out.


Long Misty Days (1976)


Dewer left in 1983, and Trower continued on with a variety of projects, most notably three albums with Cream bassist/vocalist Jack Bruce.  Dewer passed away in 2002 after a botched surgery.  Trower continues to record and tour. 

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Earthless - From the Ages (2013 Tee Pee Records)



Earthless
From the Ages
2013 Tee Pee Records

Earthless, a ridiculously talented power trio from San Diego, released a new album From the Ages in 2013 and it's one of the most unrelenting slabs of acid metal in recent memory.  guitarist Isaiah Mitchell pulls out all of the guitar pyrotechnics of Hendrix, the dreamy atmospherics of Trower, the flair of Eddie Van Halen, Iommi's riffage, and the full tilt jams of Jimmy Page all at once, and the the solid iron core of the rhythm section (bassist Mike Eginton and drummer Mario Rubalcaba) provide the gravity that holds everything together.  their mostly-instrumental jams are retardedly over the top...  when every other similar group would have long ago tapped out, Earthless routinely puts it in a higher gear and pushes on, spiraling straight into the sun for ten, fifteen, twenty, THRITY+ minutes longer.

they honed their sound on 2005's Sonic Prayer and Rhythms From a Cosmic Sky in 2007, but From the Ages is arguably their most focused to date.  and if their album Live At Roadburn and the videos of their live performances are any indication, they are a must-see.  i will be eager to soak in their sounds at the Austin Psych Fest this spring.

buy their music HERE


From the Ages (full album)



and a live performance from july '13 that will turn your brain to liquid

Friday, January 31, 2014

Khun Narin Phin Sing (aka Khun Narin's Electric Phin Band) (Thai Psychedelia)




soulful, transcendental psychedelia from Thailand's Khun Narin Phin Sing aka Khun Narin's Electric Phin Band.  the group takes it's name from the double necked stringed instrument that's being played, an electrified version of a traditional thai instrument called a phin.  they are performing for an ordination ceremony of some sort.   the entire audience... men, women, and children, old and young... have their backs turned to the musicians and seem generally oblivious, focused on the ceremony itself.  the band members relax in plastic lawn chairs, LOUDLY pumping their dense, reverb-drenched sound through a wheeled PA.  the phin player conjures a noise like nothing else i've ever heard, the bassist is fucking killing it while kicked back, chillin' in his chair, and several percussionists combine together to form an incredible groove.  it's a very unexpected setting for such a mindblowing sonic experience.  

here is their facebook page. apparently they are recording an album.

the first track features an insane phin solo around the 2:00 mark, with a cool, spaced out funk jam afterwards that's pretty damn tasty.  the other songs are more sprawled out and epic.  beautiful stuff.

EDITOR'S NOTE:  here's what a guy named robert horn had to say in the comments section over at Dangerous Minds about this band:

"This is very typical Isan (northeastern Thai) folk music. You can find bands like this doing exactly the same thing all over Isan and sometimes busking on the streets of Bangkok. I suspect that many other Phin players have also used some delay and most definitely lots of reverb. From their vests, it appears this band are all part of a group of "pak soi" - motorcycle taxi drivers. I"m sure they are keeping their day jobs."

and a response from EW77:

"Robert, I experienced the same thing on a trip to Thailand last year (my first). My initial impression while in Bangkok was similar to Marc's....'holy mindblowing dripping third eye reverb!!!', but I ended up seeing so much of this music all around the city over the next few days. At one point, I happened on a police band playing some of the trippiest funked-out versions of this stuff while trying to raise donations for tsunami victims....just couldn't believe that something so utterly awesome could be so commonplace. One of the many reasons I can't wait to go back to Thailand."







ANOTHER EDITOR'S NOTE:

Innovative Leisure Records has released Khun Narin's Electric Phin Band's debut album!  here is the official press release, with a healthy amount of background info on the band.  and check out a nice little article HERE at Wired with some more info.  and HERE is a cool interview with Josh Marcy, the producer who recorded them.  Easily one of the great feel-good music stories of the year.  ENJOY!



Friday, December 20, 2013

Goat - Head Medicine's 2013 Band of the Year



Goat's Electric Ballroom poster by Adam Pobiak



Potential.  A lot of artists and bands have it, but few ever dig deep down in and reach it to the fullest.  Over the past year, the electrifying Swedish afro-psych collective Goat has been the rare exception.  Not only have they continuously met my ridiculous expectations, but they have time and again exceeded them.  Goat first came to my attention in the summer of 2012 after the release of their first 7" single and i was instantly mesmerized by their dense, trance-inducing afro krautrock sound.  My expectations were deliriously high for their debut album World Music that August by Rocket Recordings.   It was an instant classic and, in my opinion, light years above everything else released that year.  To make things even more mysterious, the band had never performed live outside of their Arctic Circle commune until that fall with a few exploratory live rituals around Northern Europe.  These shows revealed a band hitting the ground at full speed with a blistering live show and stunning stage presence.  By the end of 2012, i was fully on board with Goat, hook line and sinker, drinking every drop of Kool Aid set in front of me, excited for what 2013 would hold.  No band started off the year with more potential than Goat, but what would they do with it?  Would they reach up and grab it or would they remain in obscurity and let things fizzle out?

Goat started off in the spring with the release of the "Stonegoat/Dreambuilding" single, two new compositions that deepened and widened their sound even further, before unleashing their first US tour.  The group's destination was the Austin Psych Fest, with a handful of East Coast and Midwest dates leading up to and following their great American unveiling.  The shows took on an instantly mythic quality, with the realization to all in attendance that something special was being witnessed.  The music was stretched into expansive Zeppelin-esque mind altering jams that dove deeper and harder into outer and innerspace than their recorded material, and by the time the group returned to Europe to hit the major summer festival circuit, Goat's live performances were air fucking tight.  With complete self confidence, the band shared stages with some of the very best bands in the entire world, and were consistently hailed as standout performers.  GlastonburyRoskilde.  Primavera.   How amazing that must have been, being out in the crowd and  obliviously stumbling on Goat at a show like Roskilde, and getting your mind turned inside out?  The thousands of new fans and instant converts that followed in Goat's wake after every performance is proof of the group's power.  Goat  wrapped up 2013 with an honored appearance at the final All Tomorrow's Parties festival, and with one last intimate club show at Koko's in London in December.  This was a  release party for their  live album, Live Ballroom Ritual, a recording of their London club gig at the Electric Ballroom in June which acts as a document that captures and preserves their monumental year.

It was refreshing to see a band confidently step up, right out of the gate,  and slay at every given opportunity without any wavering.  Goat's year long steamrolling of music fans around the world was truly remarkable to watch as it unfolded, making them HEAD MEDICINE's easy choice for Band of the Year.  And if there is another album and touring involved next year, they will be frontrunners for the 2014 title as well.


HEAD MEDICINE recently checked in with Goat, who have retreated to the recording studio, to see what lies ahead for the band in 2014.


HEAD MEDICINE:  Rocket Recordings recently released  Live Ballroom Ritual, a live album capturing Goat's  performance at the Camden Electric Ballroom in London  this summer.  What are your thoughts on this recording and it's release?  In your opinion, what were the top Goat performances from 2013?

GOAT:  We are very happy with the release. It captures the set we have been playing most of the year and it has a good sound where you can feel the energy as well as the Beauty spots. And we like that it captures a whole show. It becomes some sort of album where we can look back and relive 2013 shows. We discussed which shows that we remember the most and everyone feels differently of course but I think most of us could agree on the Glastonbury experience, Roskilde festival, Austin psych fest and now at Koko in London. Chicago and New York was special to. But it is hard to point out anything since we are happy with all of the shows really.


HEAD MEDICINE:  The mostly-instrumental track "Goat Jam" appears on the  "Crystallized - Celebrating 15 Years of Rocket Recordings" compilation.  its laid back vibe sounds like nothing else you have released so far and adds a new flavor to your catalog.  What can you tell us about this track?  is this a new recording or is it from an older session? 

GOAT:  it's an old session. Don't know from when but I think in the mid nineties. No one in the current live lineup are playing on the song. Not sure who does at all actually. I think it is a jam with some overdubs on it.


HEAD MEDICINE:  San Francisco psych dj Al Lover has been releasing some pretty incredible  projects lately and has a highly anticipated Goat remix 12" coming out in 2014 on PNKSLM.  Have you heard anything that he has been cooking up for that project? what are your thoughts on Goat remixes?

GOAT:  we have absolutely nothing against that anyone makes remixes of our songs, just go ahead. And about this Al lover, we have heard what he has done and I seriously consider this man a genius.


HEAD MEDICINE:  Goat recently played at the final All Tomorrow's Parties Festival in Sussex, England,  and later a sold out headlining show at Koko's in London to close out a phenomenal year.  how was that experience?  it must have been quite an honor to be invited to perform at the Loop-curated festival for its final run, and by all accounts the Koko show was an electrifying success.


GOAT:  yeah! This weekend was amazing! So nice to hang out at the ATP area where we all stayed in flats having a great time. Met Michael Rother from Neu! And those people from Beefhearts magic band. Wonderful people! And the Koko was a stunning club. It was magic to play there and to end this year there, it really was.


HEAD MEDICINE:  Has there been any progress on writing or recording any new Goat material?  What can you tell us about the sessions?

GOAT:  we are working on it. But we take it in parts as we did with the last one and we don't wanna stress it. That is not good for creativity. But we got about 7 tracks more or less finished, and we are gonna do 4-5 more. It will be fine. We feel no pressure and just play what feels right. Don't wanna tell you to much of how it sounds yet but some tracks have a little bit of a desert feeling to them.

HEAD MEDICINE:  Is the lineup for these new recordings essentially the same as World Music and/or the touring group, or are there new contributors?

GOAT:  it always depends on who has time and who is present at the session. It is a relaxed atmosphere and people come and go.


HEAD MEDICINE:  How has the past year influenced, inspired, or helped evolve the new material? 

GOAT:  can't say that what we have been doing this year really affect our way to work in the studio but we have discovered some new music, at least new to us, and those kind of discoveries always works themselves into the music unconsciously you know.


HEAD MEDICINE:  are any of the members of Goat involved in any other bands or musical projects that we should know about?

GOAT:  No. There is no member of the Goat band that are involved in anything else at the moment. Maybe after we  quit doing this rockband thing people will do other kinds of music in other formations but we will see.


HEAD MEDICINE:  any tentative plans for 2014?
GOAT:  no, not really. We are gonna finish the new album, do some touring and some festivals but mostly we are gonna try and stay true to ourselves and the collective and be at home with our families most of the year. Goat will never be a hard touring band.


~kojak


thanks again to Goat for taking the time to speak with HEAD MEDICINE! 


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Thursday, December 5, 2013

Zombi - St. Louis 12-3-13 (in support of Goblin) FULL SET and interview with A.E. Paterra



Zombi, the mighty synth/bass/drums overlords from Pittsburgh PA, have been pretty quiet recently, especially as a live touring act.  Drummer A.E. Paterra and synths/bassist Steve Moore have given only a small handful of live performances since 2007.  But with their recent two week-long gig supporting legendary Italian prog maestros Goblin on the second leg of their first ever North American tour, Zombi have emerged dramatically from the shadows.  Being paired up with Goblin was an inspired choice since Zombi obviously shares much of the same DNA as their 1970's forerunner, making this probably the most powerful, can't-miss tour of the year.


Head Medicine is honored to have had the chance to witness this epic match up on their recent stop in St. Louis, Missouri.  there will be a full concert review in the coming weeks, but for now, here is Zombi's performance in its entirety, and a brief interview with A.E. Paterra on what lies ahead for the band. (click HERE for Head Medicine's previous interview with Paterra, our 2012 Solo Artist of the Year, for his prolific work on his spaced out Kubrickian solo project Majeure)


part one

part two



HEAD MEDICINE'S interview with A.E. Paterra


Head Medicine:  How did this tour come about and what's it like playing with @#$%ing Goblin right now?

A.E. Paterra:  Their booking agent got in touch with us and asked us to do the tour a few months ago.  well, he said it was possible that it might happen, and then it all worked out.  It's... kind of surreal.  When we started this band, the one thing that we both talked about the first time we met was Goblin.  That was a very common link, and that was the starting point.  Then we realized we liked a whole bunch of other things, but that was the first thing we latched onto.


Head Medicine:  There was a song you guys played tonight that i had never heard.  Was that a new Zombi tune?

A.E. Paterra:  None of that material was new.  Most of it was from the Surface to Air album.  There was  the song "Infinity" that was originally on a split with the band Mazerati and is on the current Relapse reissue of Spirit Animal, and the song "Orion" which was on Cosmos.


Head Medicine:  Is there any new Zombi material on the way? 

A.E. Paterra:  We've been sending some things back and forth, but nothing is really picking up steam.  I think we both agree on the fact that if we do another album, we want to write it together.  We don't want it to be fileshared.  We have a few things floating around, but i think we will actually want to get together in the same room and sit down and play some bass and drums and see what happens from there. 


Head Medicine:  Are there at least any Zombi musical ideas brewing in the back of your head?

A.E. Paterra:  Not really.  I think we both have an idea of what we would like to do, but nothing has really been written at all.  But i think we both kind of see where we want to go.  It's something we will talk about, but i hope that maybe by spring or summer we could maybe start something, but we will see.  Ideally what would be great is to write another album and to do a small tour for the album.  that would be great, but who knows.  At our pace...


Head Medicine:  You guys have so many other projects, is there more of that coming up?  Is there more Majeure in the near future?

A.E. Paterra:  When i get back in January, i'm going to try to write for Majeure.  Maybe in the spring i would like to get out to the West Coast, i haven't been out there in...  i don't think i've ever played out there with Majeure. Steve is working on a couple of soundtracks right now for a couple of films, and i think when he's done with that and when i get through my writing process, i would love to put another Zombi album out. 


Head Medicine:  Any other plans for 2014? 
A.E. Paterra:  Not really.  i would be great to have another Majeure album out in the fall.  That's kind of my plan. 





GOBLIN/ZOMBI 2013 USA TOUR
Fri 11/29 Chicago, IL/ The Empty Bottle w/Taiga, Alex Barnett (no Goblin)
Sat 11/30 Minneapolis, MN/ The Varsity Theater
Sun 12/01 Milwaukee, WI/ Turner Hall
Tues 12/03 St. Louis, MO/ 2720 Cherokee
Wed 12/04 Cincinnati, OH/ Taft Theatre
Thur 12/05 Cleveland, OH/ Beachland Ballroom
Fri 12/06 Pittsburgh, PA/ Carnegie Music Hall
Sat 12/07 Sayreville, NJ/ Starland
Sun 12/08 NYC, NY/ Le Poisson Rouge
Tues 12/10 Boston, MA/ Sinclair
Wed 12/11 New Haven, CT/ Center Church on the Green
Thur 12/12 Philadelphia, PA/ Trocadero
Fri 12/13 Washington, DC/ 9:30 Club
Sat 12/14 Carrboro, NC/ Cats Cradle




thanks to A.E. Paterra for taking the time to speak with HEAD MEDICINE!



~kojak

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Goat - July 2013 Interview


GOAT:  THE JULY 2013 INTERVIEW

by kojak



After a blistering run through Europe's most prestigious summer music festivals, the Swedish tribal psych collective Goat have a growing number of fresh converts following in their wake.  Though only a live touring entity for less than nine months, Goat's performances were among the most talked about from their respective festivals, oftentimes staking their claim amongst some of the biggest and best bands in the world (watch their full Glastonbury performance HERE and the full set from Roskilde HERE)

HEAD MEDICINE recently checked in with the band to find out more about these stunning shows.  one thing is obvious after sitting down for a third time with the notoriously press-shy group:  Goat lives and breathes inside its own impenetrable bubble, unaffected by the fleeting whims, tastes, or demands from the outside world.  They are anchored by an unshakable self confidence and a genuine love of living in the moment, communing through music with each other and anyone who happens to be in attendance, whether it is 150 people in a small club, or tens of thousands at a major festival.  Their expectations and ambitions are unusually humble.  Goat will be whatever they want to be for as long as they decide.  Any future success will be on their own terms.



HEAD MEDICINE:  Goat's reputation continues to build after a series of high profile European festival appearances, including Primavera in Spain, England's Glastonbury, and Roskilde in Denmark.  by many accounts your performances were  among the best of those weekends.    are things just getting surreal at this point with all of this growing attention and praise?  any particularly memorable or unreal moments over the last few months that would have been impossible to imagine one year ago?

GOAT:  Well, that we were gonna play any of these festivals never crossed our minds one year ago but we are happy and thankful for the opportunity to do so. It has been amazing for sure. And I also think that the US tour improved our live set and has tightened us together as a live act so that these shows afterwards have been the best we've done live so far. But I'm sure we can still find new ways to develop live also, with new material and so on. But it is not in any ways getting surreal really cause you have to understand one thing, this is not taking over our lives. We keep our minds pure and simple and our feet on the ground. We know what is important in life and we just try to have a good time and enjoy the ride. If it ends tomorrow we will be just as happy. With that said I have to admit that playing that day time show at Glastonbury seing all those people was something out of the ordinary.


HEAD MEDICINE:  i would like to talk about the Glastonbury performances. the daytime show on the West Holts stage was your most high profile live show yet in front of your largest audience, many of whom had never heard your music before, and filmed from every possible angle by the BBC.  be honest, did you guys feel a bit more pressure with that show?  did you treat that performance the same as a small gig in a dark club, or did it require a different kind of preparation?  i am curious what kind of thoughts or emotions were running through you before/during/after that performance.

GOAT:  It was no difference in preparations or pressure. We can only do what we do and rely on each other. And play as good as possible. Actually we were very calm before that show as far as I remember. We discovered that there really is no difference playing small clubs then big festival stages. But it is fun to try both when we get this opportunity.


HEAD MEDICINE:  later that night you performed a second set on the Hells Stage in Shangri-La, and the previous evening, you blew up the Electric Ballroom in London in front of a bloodthirsty crowd of Goat fans.  what are the pros and cons to large daytime festival performances vs. smaller and more dramatic nighttime/club gigs, and a crowd who is familiar with your music vs. a mass of potential new converts?

GOAT:  I don't know. For me it is the same always. I feel no difference really. And I know that it is the same for everyone in the Goat band. It is just music and for whom or where you perform it doesn't matter as long as people enjoy it. If people were not enjoying it we would stop playing live I think but for everyone it is a nice feeling when you get this spiritual exchange of energy with the people listening and dancing. That really turns us on. We were not aware of this experience until we started to play live last year.


HEAD MEDICINE:  your Roskilde performance was notable for having a new member on stage playing keyboard, sax, and, harmonica.  he added an entirely new dimension to Goat's live show, and i was especially impressed with the addition of a harmonica solo during a blistering rendition of "The Sun The Moon."  will he be coming along on any future Goat tour dates or was this a one time thing?  was he by chance the guy playing keys and sax on World Music?

GOAT:  No he is not playing on the album. He is a long time participant in Goat born and still living in Greece. He travels a lot and plays with various groups around the world. He has done one show before with us at Stora Teatern in Gothenburg December last year. He will be with us when he has time or feel like it. He is great playing with, you never know what he is gonna do. The harmonica part on The sun the moon was never rehersed for example.

HEAD MEDICINE:  outside of Goat's live performances, are there any new song ideas bubbling to the surface?  is the band getting the itch to retreat back to the studio and cook up some new tunes or is everyone looking forward to some extended time off before considering new material?

GOAT:  Yes. We will start recording in September. Everyone is really looking forward to this more creative process again.


HEAD MEDICINE:  looking back, how do you feel the band has evolved over the last year since the release of World Music?

GOAT:  The live group is a more tighter musical unit now and we have learned how to play our songs good and with no stress. So as a live act we are much better now then last year. But Goat as a spiritual and living community, or as a musical creative collective, hasn't changed at all. Music shall be treated with joy and simplicity, use your ears and your heart and don't give a fuck about anything else. Loose your mind, stop questioning, thinking, and all that stuff. Are you enjoying the sounds you hear? Are you experience anything? Feeling something you like? Then it is enough. That is the principle we live by when we make music.


HEAD MEDICINE would like to thank Goat once again for their time.  tune in this fall when we check in on the recording of their new album.  should be interesting. 


come join HEAD MEDICINE on Facebook and you could win a Goat art print by Kojak



HEAD MEDICINE has all of your Goat needs covered.  the most complete online collection of exclusive interviews, album/live reviews, audio/video, links and more HERE



Saturday, July 13, 2013

Goat - Roskilde Festival full set (july 6th, 2013)

Goat continues their tear through Europe with another stunning performance, this time at the Roskilde Festival in Denmark.  for the first time in public, there is another band member on stage adding keyboard, sax, and harmonica, greatly enhancing the group's sound.  it will be interesting to see if this continues in future performances.
stay tuned for another HEAD MEDICINE exclusive interview with Goat and these soon-to-be-historic live performances.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Goat - Glastonbury Festival full set

more Goat updates... they completely destroyed it at probably the most important gig of their lives at the massive Glastonbury Festival in England.  the BBC was there and filmed the entire thing.  god bless them.

HEAD MEDICINE has all of your Goat needs covered, exclusive interviews, live and album reviews, videos, links and more.  you can find all of that HERE



Thursday, May 23, 2013

The Black Angels


written by kojak
photography by mike gualdoni

"You ever heard of The Black Angels?" said the cool-as-fuck dude behind the counter at the liquor store down the street.  This was probably 2 or 3 years ago.  I hadn't.  We had quickly built up a musical trust with one another over the previous months, talking tunes and offering suggestions, so my mind was wide open to his recommendation. "Oh, shit, man... you'll love it!  Take these right now and go dump em in your computer."  He handed me their first three albums: Passover, Directions to See a Ghost, and Phosphene Dream (from '06, '08, and '10 respectively).  I knew straight away he was right, that i would indeed love these, as i held the beautiful, embossed Op Art cd digipaks in my hands.  Any band that puts that kind of care into their album art is alright in my book. And, sure enough, the music was fucking awesome.  Every single note of it. The Angels were so far up my alley it hurt.  I felt like a dumbass for dropping the ball and missing out all of those years, but oh well.  Can't win every time.  

It's pretty easy to know if The Black Angels are something that you might be into.  They are unashamed about their musical influences, wearing them right there on their sleeve like a badge of honor.  their inspiration starts from the early 60's British Invasion and into the legendary Austin proto-garage-psych scene, though Bill Graham's Fillmore West and the Haight-Ashbury, continues on to the art damaged Warhol drone of the Velvet Underground, and stops suddenly at the hippie's last stand at Altamont.  All of the glam and prog excesses that define the 70's are non-existent here, and there is absolutely no hint that the 80's ever even existed when listening to The Angels. Instead, they have been steadily building upon the foundation those original bands laid down 45+ years ago and have given it a new twist.  Their following has been steadily growing, and with the recent release of their new album Indigo Meadow, they seem poised for breakout success.  And as their once small, handmade hometown Austin Psych Fest reached an entirely new level of acclaim in it's 6th year back in April, The Black Angel's reputation as international tastemakers and leaders of the new psychedelic movement in music and art has been solidified.  If you have not climbed on board yet, it's time you do.


PASSOVER (2006 Light in the Attic Records) and DIRECTIONS TO SEE A GHOST (2008 Light in the Attic Records)

I consider Passover and Directions to be Side A and Side B of one record spread out over a couple years. The Black Angels mine the deep well of sounds from The Doors and The Velvet Underground on both of these albums, and somehow pull it all off without being derivative.  A perfect guitar note hangs infinitely in the air, wrapped up in thick blankets of fuzz and reverb, that one note sometimes repeated  by 2 or 3 guitars, and pushes the atmosphere out of the way and fills the room. Monotone bass and organ merges with Mo Tucker-style tribal drum poundings, always keeping a plodding war march over a constantly rolling landscape.  the vocals sound like Jim Morrison and Grace Slick's Summer of Love child.  there are no extraneous guitar solos, or off-kilter drum timings, this is all very straight forward and stripped to its core... it's more about The Note or The Vibration than it is about The Riff.  this is music that keeps your body moving while your mind spins out into another dimension.  good stuff.









PHOSPHENE DREAM (2010 Blue Horizon Records)

Phosphene Dream builds upon and expands out past the first albums.  there is less molecular-merging-with-the-furniture drone and more psychedelic pop with traditional structure and a wider scope of sounds and riffs.  the earlier monochromatic mood is replaced with a far sunnier sound.  there are stronger melodies and hooks as actual songs begin to materialize out of the haze, thanks in large part to producer D. Sardy.   






INDIGO MEADOW (2013 Blue Horizon Records)

their tightest and most concise album yet.  there are huge, arena-sized sounds at times, and they flirt with discordance as often as they allow a continuous trance to gain momentum.  these are their quirkiest songs to date, and they have more anxiety in them than at any time prior.  the production is beautiful, and the band sounds ready to turn as many people as possible onto their sound.




here are a couple of EP's the Black Angels have put out.  i'm not familiar with them enough to write anything about them just yet.



NOTE: these have been removed from youtube. if they pop up again i will link them up.


The Black Angels have been consistently known as a phenomenal live act, and having recently caught them twice, once at the Austin Psych Fest and a couple of weeks later in a bar in St. Louis, i can attest to that. Their sound was far too large to be played in such an intimate venue like the Firebird, but i'm not going to complain. With the band and their plain white backdrop painted with a kaleidoscope of projected colors and patterns, they tore through a nearly two hour set that reached into their entire catalog. All of the band members (except the drummer) traded instruments several times throughout the show, switching off on guitars and bass and organ. And they sounded absolutely fucking great, from the first note to the last. i look forward to seeing them again soon.




and here's a few videos.


Monday, May 13, 2013

Goat: Live in the USA



HEAD MEDICINE'S EXCLUSIVE LOOK BACK ON GOAT'S FIRST US TOUR

written by KOJAK

photography by MIKE GUALDONI  (miketheeye.tumblr.com)

      I still find it a bit unbelievable that Goat, one of the most enigmatic and electrifying bands currently on the planet, chose to make a stop in Saint Louis, Missouri on their all-too brief introductory US tour. The fact that Goat had come to the United States at all was extremely exciting, but the thought that they were bringing their gospel so far off the beaten path and virtually to my front steps, a mere three-and-a-half hours away from me square in the middle of nowhere, was almost ridiculously unexpected. Three days prior, i was fortunate enough to witness the group give their most important performance to an American audience at one of the finest mind-expanding music festivals in the world at the Austin Psych Fest in Austin, Texas. The performance was the crown jewel of their recent trek through the heart of the country and solidified their growing international reputation as one of the freshest and most formidable live acts out there. I was still exhausted from the life-altering three-day Austin experience and the long psychic and geographic road trip there and back, but there was no way in hell i was going to miss this performance. The band had granted me a rare face-to-face interview to top it all off. As i drove to Saint Louis, i reflected on Goat's unlikely journey from their far away homeland to that night's performance and how, until just recently, they dwelled in complete obscurity but now find themselves on the furthest edge of a new musical frontier.



      Fourteen months ago, Goat was hidden deep within the shadows of Sweden, privately creating a vertigo-inducing style of worldly tribal psychedelia. Only friends and family were aware of their existence. According to their own legend, Goat is the modern incarnation of a centuries old musical tradition from Korpilombolo, a tiny village north of the Arctic Circle with a mysterious past, and are followers of the shamanistic voodoo religion practiced there. Goat was formed over the years by their ancestral ritualistic rhythms and a boundary-less approach passed down by the village elders to absorb all styles of music from around the world and integrate it into their own. The band itself has no real perimeters, featuring dozens of members that float in and out of the lineup; some members are from the original commune in Korpilombolo and others are scattered around Sweden. They had never performed to a live audience outside of their village's commune. UK psychedelic record label Rocket Recordings were the first to catch wind of what was going on when they were tipped off by Hills, a band already on the Rocket roster who shared rehearsal space in Gothenburg with Goat. [read HEAD MEDICINE'S interview with Rocket HERE]  Rocket excitedly released Goat's first public recordings with the "Goatman/The Sun the Moon" 7" single, and the genie was out of the bottle. Word quickly spread around the world by people with taste that something extraordinary was rising out of the tundra. Rocket Recordings commissioned an album and Goat retreated to their home studio, coming back a few months later with World Music, their debut full length record. [read HEAD MED'S review HERE]  World Music was instantly recognized as a fully formed masterpiece and one of the most exciting debut releases in recent memory. After quietly perfecting their refreshing mix of heavy African tribal rhythms, psyched out guitar, and a seamless blend of virtually every great style of music from around the world over the last 50 years, international demand for live performances began almost immediately.
   
      Goat finally emerged from the shadows with a handful of inaugural public concerts around Europe in the fall of 2012, and word began to gather even more steam when video of their incredible performances trickled online. Their outrageous and flamboyant stage presence reflected their tribal and ritualistic roots as the band members wore masks and brightly colored robes, keeping a sense of anonymity onstage while projecting an unforgettable visual for those in attendance. Goat showed a shocking musical prowess onstage, effortlessly recreating World Music for the audience while stretching the songs into new directions with long improvised jams. This was a band dramatically leaping from out of nowhere into the spotlight, fully formed and firing on all cylinders. Any awkward embryonic steps were long ago worked out. With barely a dozen live performances under their belt, Goat traveled across the Atlantic Ocean in April after a successful appearance at the Roadburn festival in Amsterdam left European fans and new converts clamoring for more. Their first performance on American soil was at the Music Hall of Williamsburg in Brooklyn, NYC (beautifully captured on tape by nyctaper), before continuing down the East Coast with dates in Philadelphia and Washington, DC. Goat then turned their sites on the Austin Psych Fest, giving one of the weekend's landmark performances amongst a line up featuring some of the finest consciousness-expanding bands in the entire world. The group changed course and headed back east for the final leg of their US tour, bringing them to this night's gig in St. Louis before eventually returning to Europe for a string of summer festival dates.



      I have to be honest. As i walked up to the Old Rock House, an intimate music venue just off of downtown St. Louis, to talk with the members of Goat, i was a bit intimidated. Goat rarely grants interviews, and almost never conducts them face to face, but since i had interviewed a few members of the band via email back in January (read Goat's HEAD MED interview HERE), they were gracious enough to allow me a chance to sit down and get their thoughts on their first US tour. In today's Facebook and Twitter-obsessed culture where everyone knows everything about everybody, Goat has successfully managed to keep a dense air of mystery around themselves. No-one knows what they look like under their masks, and their mysterious background story of shamanistic voodoo worship deep in the Swedish netherworld gives them an air of impenetrable secrecy. As i approached the venues' entrance, i wasn't sure what to expect. I wondered if i would be led backstage to a dimly lit red velvet-draped room with heavy ceremonial incense hanging in the air; the band members cloaked in their ritual garb seated in the shadows on ornamental thrones. i told the doorman that i was there to interview the band. "They are all out on the patio," he said. And there was Goat and their road crew, probably a dozen unmasked smiling and laughing Swedes savoring the beautiful evening air, drinking beer with a perfect view of Eero Searanen's always spectacular Gateway Arch off in the near distance. Everyone was clearly appreciating this moment on what i would assume is one of the greatest journeys of their lives. i couldn't have imagined a less intimidating group of people. After pleasantly chatting with everyone for a bit, i paired off with one of the anonymous band members and was able to ask a few questions about Goat's tour of America and what is next for the band.

HEAD MEDICINE: Have any members of Goat been to the United States before or is this your first time?

GOAT: no, it is the first time. (to female member of Goat) well, you've been here before on some kind of journey?
GOAT-ESS: yes, with my family

HEAD MEDICINE: You have been traveling around this country for a week now, are your experiences different from any preconceived ideas you may have had before you arrived? 

GOAT: not really. the people are very very nice. very nice people here. everyone is very friendly and very kind everywhere we go. we knew some people who have been here, telling us that people are kind, friendly, and open minded. and it is true, at least with the ones we have met so far. so, i don't know if we expected it, but we weren't surprised.

HEAD MEDICINE: Goat has had alot of downtime on the road recently. What has been on Goat's road trip playlist? 

GOAT: In the car on this trip we have mostly been listening to The Shaggs, Fleetwood Mac's "Future Games," and the Carter Family.

HEAD MEDICINE: Your first American performances were in New York, Philadelphia, and Washington, DC. What was it like playing in those cities and can you tell us about those shows; the energy that was created and the reception you received? 

GOAT: well, for us, it was more or less like in europe. there were very many people, the first three places were sold out, so there were alot of people and most of them seemed to enjoy what we were playing.

HEAD MEDICINE: Did you feel that the audience was familiar with your music or did it seem that people were hearing it for the first time? 

GOAT: i'm not sure. people up front were singing along with some of the tunes, but we sold alot of albums so i guess alot of people didn't already have it.

HEAD MEDICINE: This tour has taken you a bit off the beaten path to some unusual venues in Newport KY and Denton TX and tonight's show in St. Louis. Since Goat is still relatively obscure in the US, i am curious how these shows in middle America compare to the East Coast performances. 

GOAT: the audience was more or less the same. nice people. in denton, it was more students... more of a student town. but, i don't see any differences, really. i really don't.

HEAD MEDICINE: What are your memories from your Austin Psych Fest performance?

GOAT: i think we all were happy with the show and how it went. we had a good sound, and we felt a good vibe from the audience. it was a beautiful location, with the river to our back. and it was beautiful to see the Dead Skeletons there before us. it was great to play there, we had a very nice show. 

HEAD MEDICINE: When i first interviewed Goat back in January, the band had only performed a handful of public concerts and any future touring was questionable. Now that you have several shows behind you and it's obvious that there is a receptive and hungry international audience for Goat, how has the band’s opinion towards touring evolved? 

GOAT: it's still... we don't know, but we are not going to make alot of touring. there is alot of offering going on right now, and we have taken some offers for some festivals this summer because they are comfortable and close, and some are because it's nice to travel to that place, and we do some festivals because we've never done anything like it, playing outdoors on a big stage. so it's a new experience which is fun to do. but i'm not sure if we are going to do it next year or if we are going to do any more in the future. we are trying it out now. like this tour... we tried it out and we are enjoying it.

HEAD MEDICINE: In a little more than one year, Goat has risen from complete obscurity to stealing the show at some of the world's most prestigious music festivals. With numerous European festival dates throughout the summer, the number of fans and attention will only continue to grow. Do the members of Goat find this growing success and attention overwhelming or intimidating? 

GOAT: if people like our music, it is definitely nothing to complain about. it is very nice that people enjoy it and like our music. we are very happy for that. but everything around it doesn't necessary affect us that much. we sit in the van, like now, and then we go to play and have a beer and then we get home and just hang out with our families and work, so it's nothing that we walk around and think about all day. y'know what i mean? you read some reviews and stuff, but it's unreal in a way, that part of it is quite unreal. it's more of a way of thinking, we don't focus so much on that part. this is not something that we have... we are happy for it, but we have not tried to move in this direction. we just released an album and thought we might sell a thousand copies, which is fine, but suddenly it blew up and we hadn't expected that or planned for it. it just happened. we don't think more of it now, really, than we did before.

HEAD MEDICINE: When your world tour is completed in August and you return to Sweden, what comes next for Goat? are there still plans to record in the fall? 

GOAT: we really love making music. we really love to record and the whole process of recording. it is more calm, more relaxed, more creative in a way than playing live. when you are creating music and just enjoying it, it's more creative in a way than performing which has it's limitations with the song that you have already created. but playing live is more energetic, which is fun, and it's nice to see when people like it and you meet new people. i think we are going to make a new album. we haven't decided anything, really, but we are going to start recording and see what happens, because we want to record. if we are happy with an album, if we put songs together into an album, than we want people to hear it. if people want to hear it, we feel that they should be able to. but we might not tour for it, we will see. or maybe less shows. it depends, maybe not everyone... this is not a band in that sense. people might feel like they want to do other things, and that's fine. we will see. we will record some stuff with the people that are involved at that time. we will see who that will be and see what happens, and if it turns out to be something that we would like to release.


     As much as i wanted to continue chatting with the band, i politely thanked them and allowed the band members and crew to enjoy a few more moments of privacy before their performance began. i felt grateful for being given such a unique opportunity, and i looked forward to the night's performance more than ever, unsure if i would have the chance to catch a Goat live show again in the future. During their performance in Austin, i was on a very powerful and personal journey through the astral plane with Goat as my psychic guides (more on that at a later date), so i was excited to see another show, this time filtered through more clear eyes. i wanted to soak up and savor every minute of this. i loosened up with a couple of tall Guinness’s and took my place at the front of the stage.



     The show opened with the two guitarists alone onstage slowly setting the hypnotic mood with a simple, repetitive spaced out guitar line. The bassist soon joined them and "Diarabi," the atmospheric opening track off of World Music, slowly began to unfurl. The drummer then walked on, adding dramatic cymbal washes with mallets, enhancing the tension. When the conga player took his seat and the song fully lifted off, the priestesses emerged, dancing through the crowd, and made their way to the stage. As the music swelled and surged, the women danced furiously, banging on a wide variety of assorted percussion instruments and twirling ribbons that were laid out at their feet, generating electricity that fueled the band and the audience.  As "Golden Dawn" exploded and the band was washed in undulating swirls of colored liquid lights, the entire performance melted into a pure transcendental psychedelic experience, and the crowd totally flipped.

     Now, i have seen many incredible live performances over the last 20+ years from some of the best bands and musicians in the world, but very few, if any, have been this visceral and electrifying, wedging themselves deep into my memory. Goat's performance had to have been what it was like seeing a young Led Zeppelin on their maiden US tour, lighting a place like the Boston Tea Party on fire and leaving its small audience stunned and mystified. Or maybe it was similar to the Bacchanalian carnival of an early Jane's Addiction performance on the Sunset Strip circa 1987. This is a band that has effortlessly lived up to every word of it's hype, and then some; an awesome and entertaining stage presence with blistering musicianship delivering one of the most unique sounds ever produced onstage. If you have the chance to witness this show and it has no effect on you, then get the fuck out and make room for someone else. i can't even imagine what it takes to get your engine cranked up.

     The rhythm section formed the solid bedrock of the performance as the drummer's ferocious bass drum and the percussionists rippling conga propelled the entire machine constantly forward, while the bassist, a goddamn monster for the entire set, laid down monumental slabs of thick, rubbery grooves. Meanwhile, the guitarists tore holes in the space/time continuum with blasts of distorted guitars drenched in mesmerizing wah effects. Among the many show highlights was the extended jam on "Disco Fever." On World Music, the last half of the song warps into an LSD-soaked organ solo, but live it honed in and riffed on the Rolling Stones unheralded disco funk classic "Hot Stuff." The spaced out guitars spun around that ass shakin' groove for a solid five minutes, and it was still too short for my tastes. The Hendrix-ian "Stonegoat," a new track from a double A-side single out in June, features some of the tastiest wah guitar out there, with an aggressive drum beat driving it all off the cliff. "Let it Bleed" was slowed down juuuuust enough to allow the groove to dig one step further in and grab hold of your gut. "Dreambuilding," the flip side of the "Stonegoat" single, shows a bit of an evolution for the band. It started off as something that would have fit right in line with the first live Jane's Addiction album, and after a short drum break, cracked open to reveal a blissful, life-affirming ray-of-sunlight wah solo that raised every hair on my body. At that moment, i realized how lucky i was and that there was nowhere else in the entire world i would rather have been. "Run to Your Mama" is a frustratingly short 2:23 on World Music, its monolithic Sabbath roar begging to continue. Live, it delivered the goods and for nearly seven minutes beat the crowd into glorious submission with its dense tribal pulse and blasts of heavy guitar chords. By this point, Goat was in charge and had complete mastery over the room and its inhabitants. On record, the show closer "Det Som Aldrig Förändras" is a psychedelic swirl of organ and bass and drums, but here it was a ruthless monosyllabic pummeling, almost unrecognizable from its previous incarnation. It was a tidal wave of sound that washed over the audience for nearly ten minutes, forcing everyone in the audience to submit to its transcendental power. The mass of people were locked in a hypnotic sway, eyes collectively rolled back in their skulls. The music eventually came back around to the opening melody of "Diarabi" for its finale, and when it was over, Goat left the stage to a stunned applause. i wish St. Louis would have known to ratchet up their ovation to get them back on stage to pull out their encore, a mind blowing rendition of "The Sun the Moon," but it was not to be. the show was over and the congregation stumbled out into the soothing night air, blown out by what their brains had just soaked up for the last hour.



     I'm not sure what the future holds for Goat, and do not know whether we will have the opportunity to see this extraordinary performance ever again. But i am going to remain optimistic. We need Goat. They are a reminder that all people from all corners of the globe, to the past and into the future, are connected by a collective musical consciousness. There are no genres, there are no styles, there are no boundaries. Music is a language that we all speak, and when Goat is playing, everything else in the world drops away. All of the pain and misery that beckons right around the corner is lost and all that remains is a joyful musical communion that will not be forgotten anytime soon by those lucky enough to be a part of it.





HEAD MEDICINE would like to thank nyctaper.com for capturing Goat's first US appearance on tape and offering it as a free download HERE for all. please show your support and gratitude and drop a buck or two or five in their tin cup.


~Kojak

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