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Start Date:
March 20, 2015
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LP STONED JESUS
The Harvest
Limited Edition of 400 copies in black vinyl
Country Of Release: Germany 2015
Label: Nasoni
Catalogue Number: NR 161
Barcode: 4260107842118
Klappcover/Gatefold sleeve: Ja/Yes
incl. Textbeilage/incl. lyricsheet
Condition Record: MINT
Condition Cover: MINT
LP ist noch verschweißt / LP IS STILL SEALED !!!
(Photo von meiner eigenen LP / Photo taken from my own copy)
Tracks Side 1:
1. Here Come the Robots (3:18)
There has been a genuine stylistic exploration over the course of
Stoned Jesus‘ three full-lengths. The latest from the Kyiv, Ukraine,
trio is The Harvest, which introduces drummer Viktor to the lineup
with guitarist/vocalist Igor Sidorenko and bassist/backing vocalist
Sergey “Sid” Slusar, and sure enough, it’s a departure from where
Stoned Jesus were three years ago on their last outing. That album,
Seven Thunders Roar was itself a departure from the riff worship of
their 2010 debut, First Communion, and moved into a jammier
sensibility. A core of songwriting remained, but tracks were more
open-ended and psychedelic. With The Harvest, Stoned Jesus have
crafted a six-track/42-minute long-player that’s neither indebted to
one side or the other — straightforward heavy rock or psychedelia —
but cops elements of both and puts them to use conveying a variety
of moods and even a bit of theatrics. One of the most impressive
aspects of Stoned Jesus‘ third is how comfortable the outfit seems
in switching tone emotionally, as even the jump between the first
two tracks, “Here Come the Robots” and “Wound” showcases. Musically,
they’re both uptempo heavy rockers, and though there are changes in
melody, even their runtimes are similar at 3:18 and 3:14,
respectively. Where they’re really more distinct is in the lyrics.
The opener takes an almost defiant tone. The line “I’m getting away”
features in the verse and sums up the attitude of the song nicely,
while with “Wound,” the idea is just the opposite. Its chorus, “All
these words unspoken/Leave another wound,” doesn’t want to run away.
It wants to talk it out.
Both those songs deal with relationships — the first seemingly a
personal one, the second, which talks about the downtime between
shows, seems more about the band itself — and make for a raucous
opening duo to what feels like an intended side A, but there’s an
outward-looking sensibility to The Harvest too, as
institutionally-minded songs like “Rituals of the Sun” and “Black
Church” make use of religious themes and side A closer “YFS” — an
acronym for “Youth for Sale” — speaks pointedly about the military
conflict in the Ukraine between Russian-backed separatist rebels and
the state. Sidorenko isn’t quoting news reports or anything, but
lines like, “Poison is boiling in brainwashed minds/But eye for an
eye makes the world go blind/Carry your cross, don’t forget the
nails/All I see now is youth for sale,” get the point across
nonetheless. There is sonic diversity to match, as the seven-minute
“Rituals of the Sun” pulls back on pace from “Here Come the Robots”
and “Wound” and delves into more severe chugging in its central riff
before spending much of its second half in an instrumental
exploration, keys and guitar intertwining over the bass and drums
only to be interrupted twice by a gang-shouted chorus. “YFS” is
funkier all around, bringing to mind Living Colour‘s progressive
blend, and the more extended “Silkworm Confessions” (9:11) and
“Black Church” (14:45) only branch out further on an immersive side
B, the chorus for the former an almost Mastodonic shout and the
latter gradually fading into a pummeling, militant snare march and
doomed vibe early and breaking off after 10 minutes in to
organ-laced, brooding cult rock. What unites the closing duo (which
make up more than half the runtime between them) is a sense of drama
in the vocal delivery, Stoned Jesus toying with these various
performance elements and their audience alike. Much to their credit,
they make it work.
And the musical turn of the closer, from militarism to mystique, is
not random. One can trace a religious theme all the way back in
Stoned Jesus‘ work to the title First Communion, and particularly in
light of the ongoing armed conflict in Kyiv, the band tying these
ideas together gives their work a new, broader context. That said,
The Harvest also rocks, and one can engage it on that level as well
and find it rife with hooks, movement and heft. Whether it’s the
tonal largesse of “Rituals of the Sun” or the opening shout of
“Jesus Christ!” that marks the full-sprint rush of “Here Come the
Robots” or the melodic catchiness of “Wound,” the album offers as
many sonic points of satisfaction as conceptual ones, and the
palette gets richer as they move into “YFS,” “Silkworm Confessions”
— in which a “harvest of souls” is mentioned from which the album’s
title derives and, accordingly, its artwork with the figure of Death
on the front cover — and “Black Church.” The last two cuts bring
about a shift in method, but across The Harvest‘s span, Stoned Jesus
remain firmly in control of where they want to take their material
and how they want to get there, so that by the time the album is
done, the only conclusion to draw is that after initially feeling
their way out sound-wise, they’re that much closer to what they want
to be. Of their three albums to date, The Harvest is easily the most
individualized of the bunch, and while it may be that subsequent
releases will present changes in approach of their own as Stoned
Jesus continue to experiment and progress, the foundation from which
they launch those explorations will be that much sturdier for the
work they’ve done here and for how much of their own style, of
themselves, they have put into it. (theobelisk.net)
Igor Sydorenko - Vocals, Guitars, Hammond Organ, Occasional
Keyboards And Percussion
Sergii Sliusar - Bass, FX, Drummachine, Backing Vocals
Viktor Kondratov - Drums, Percussion, Backing Vocals
&
Alex Ditch - Backing Vocals (Track 2)
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