LP EARTHLESS From The Ages (2LP) ORANGE VINYL - Tee Pee Rec. TPE-158 - SEALED
Sold Date:
January 6, 2017
Start Date:
January 8, 2015
Final Price:
€28.99
(EUR)
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2LP EARTHLESS
From The
Ages
Limited Edition In Orange
Vinyl
Country of
release: U.K, 2013
Label: Tee Pee
Records
Catalogue
number: TPE-158
Barcode:
0707239015811
Klappcover/Gatefold Sleeve:
Ja/Yes
Condition Records: 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. Violence Of The Red Sea (14:46)
Tracks Side 2:
1.Uluru Rock
(14:08)
2. Equus October (5:42)
Tracks Side 3:
1. From The Ages Pt. I
Tracks Side 4:
1. From The Ages Pt. II (30:55 - Part I &
II)
Listen At YouTube:
From the Ages is the first studio recording from
instrumental power trio Earthless since 2007’s Rhythms From a Cosmic Sky. Though
the silence may have been deafening for their small but devoted cadre of fans,
the wait was worth every moment. From the Ages finds Earthless at their most
concentrated, and that distillation of psychedelic rock, stoner metal, and
electric blues is a heady brew in the hands of Messrs. Rubalcaba, Eginton and
Mitchell.
What makes this such a powerful mix—and what
separates Earthless from other stoner rock bands with a tendency to go on (and
on and on)—is that rarely, if ever, do they sound like a band merely jamming.
Earthless is about improvisation, more akin to jazz than the noodling stoners
that follow in the patchouli-drenched wake of jam band “explorations.” Listen
closely to opening track “Violence of the Red Sea”, and hear the band state a
theme, build a solo from it, and then react to the impact of the solo upon that
initial form. This is not “Blues in A”, but a constructed form given room to
breathe because of the near telepathic connections between the
players.
Isaiah Mitchell is the obvious first attraction. His guitar
playing is a constant surprise, soaring, diving, streaking through the sky like
a hawk playing in the updrafts along the face of a cliff. But Mitchell isn’t
untethered; listen closely, as time and again drummer Mario Rubalcaba and
bassist Mike Eginton pull Mitchell out of a groundward spiral with a lift of
cymbals or a rising bass line that meets Mitchell and buoys him upward. Or
conversely, an insistent kick and snare line tugs downward when the guitarist
seems ready to break free of gravity’s pull, the bass joining in to drag
Mitchell back, the Stratocaster in his hands kicking and screaming. Earthless is
like a stunt kite, and though you may be watching the guitarist and his
acrobatic flights of fancy, it is the steady hands at the base that control the
motion.
Even when the band dials things back, as on the nearly
meditative, nearly OM-like “Equus October”, Earthless levitates in
contemplation, unable to truly ground itself. Eginton’s soft, supple playing is
a through line for the conversation of drums and guitar, and as those two
instruments ramp, chatter, and rise in pitch and forcefulness the bass holds
things neat and strong. His bass never controls that conversation, but like a
good moderator he keeps it from turning into a screaming match.
All of
this structure, connection, and conversational improvisation is what makes the
title track work despite its more-than-30-minutes run time. “From the Ages”,
first released on 2008’s Live at Roadburn, is where one measures one’s ability
to handle what Earthless dish out. If “Equus October” was a pint, and “Violence
of the Red Sea” and “Uluru Rock” fifths, then “From the Ages” is a gallon of the
distilled spirit of the band.
In the five years since that Roadburn
performance, Earthless have grown in restraint. While the live recording is a
full-on burner, a nearly relentless charge from the entire band, here the themes
are allowed time to evolve and reach a sense of resolution. It’s never a chore
to listen to, and there are moments of pure delight greater than anywhere else
on the record. But chore or no, it wears. It’s tiring to focus on their playing
for such a long spell, even though that focus brings many rewards. For example,
listen to the hypnotic, Arabic loops of bass, drum and restrained guitar that
bubble up naturally out of the dense fug of aggressive riffs around the
13-minute mark. The slow, almost languorous build out of that passage, and the
control of tension Earthless exhibit, is masterful. It isn’t the flashiest
section, but the conversation these musicians are having is worth that close
attention. But again, not everyone has the tolerance to drink in such a potent
concoction.
Those who make it to the end, and who choose to listen again
and again, will find a new Earthless; a band that has grown through side
projects and geographic separation, yet returned with greater chemistry,
intuitiveness, and understanding. From the Ages is not just the latest album
from this long running band. It’s their best. (Erik
Highter/popmatters.com)
Isaiah Mitchell - Guitar
Mike Eginton -
Bass
Mario Rubalcaba - Drums
Versand innerhalb Deutschland (versichert mit GLS - generell innerhalb von
24 Stunden) 5,00 Euro
Egal wieviele LPs
gekauft werden, Versand immer 5,00 Euro. Keine weiteren Versandkosten ab der
zweiten LP!!
Shipping within EEC (AIRMAIL) 8,50 Euro
Shipping Oversea (AIRMAIL, REGISTERED) 10,50 Euro
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