Showing posts with label *Kerouac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label *Kerouac. Show all posts

Monday, August 27, 2012

Kerouac - 2012 Heavy Hearted: Collected Recordings 2009-2011


Band : Kerouac
Album : Heavy Hearted: Collected Recordings 2009-2011
Release Year : 2012
Genre : Chaotic | Hardcore

Tracklist :
1. Heavy Hearted
2. Lay of the Landfill
3. Little Mountains We Move
4. Pale
5. Our Fathers' Guns
6. A Bastard Behind the Eyes
7. A Sheep. A Well.
8. Lay of the Landfill (Demo)
9. Pale (Demo)
10. I Owe Some People the World But I Owe You Shit
11. Young Wounds
12. Porcelain
13. Fiends
14. Lay of the Landfill (Kerouac Cover)
15. Our Fathers' Guns (Kerouac Remix)

Everything Kerouac ever wrote and recorded on one LP. From the very first demo recordings that have remained largely unheard until now, through the 'Cold and Distant, Not Loving' mini-album to splits with The Long Haul and Pariso to unlisted bonus live recordings, this is truly comprehensive.A feast of a package for the uninitiated and hardcore fans alike, this is the collection that this unique band will forever be remembered for.





Friday, April 22, 2011

Kerouac & Pariso - 2011 Split (ep)


Band : Kerouac & Pariso
Album : Split (ep)
Release Year : 2011
Genre : Chaotic | Hardcore

Tracklist :
Pariso :
1. Waster
2. Blastbeast
3. No Hope
4. Brutacus
5. The Recluse

Kerouac :
6. Skin Undone
7. Stillness And Cold
8. Sinkhole
9. Cheap Teeth
10. Dead And Gone
11. Fiends

A five-part mini-epic from the now near-indefinable Kerouac. Their most progressive recording yet - largely eschewing low-end crunch for black metal intensity/post-rock serenity and anthemic power. Pariso deliver perhaps what could be considered their 5 heaviest and most succinct tracks yet. Big riffs, grind and shards of off-kilter mosh with nods to Slipknot and Premonitions of War. Pure negativity.

This split was recorded in one day by Jamie Frye with both bands in the studio at the same time - taking it in turns to record instruments individually. This also marks the last recorded output by Mazz on vocals for Pariso. Both bands vocalists also guest on each others material.





Monday, March 21, 2011

Kerouac & The Long Haul - 2011 Split


Band : Kerouac & The Long Haul
Album : Split
Release Year : 2011
Genre : Hardcore / Chaotic / Screamo

Tracklist :
1. The Long Haul - Dead Soul/Endless Drag
2. The Long Haul - Lost Harmony
3. The Long Haul - The Passing of Dreamers
4. Kerouac - I Owe Some People The World But I Owe You Shit
5. Kerouac - Young Wounds
6. Kerouac - Porcelain

 
In August of last year, when Kerouac burst onto the hardcore scene with their debut EP Cold And Distant, Not Loving the world stood up to take notice. With their chaotic fusion of raw intensity and melodic disparities the band displayed heaps of raw ability and in 17 minutes flaunted a maturity other bands can only hope to achieve in a lifetime. Before embarking on a fully fledged long play, Kerouac are releasing a series of split EP’s, the first of which with fellow label-mates and Southampton based hardcore act The Long Haul. Split albums are notoriously inconsistent and often lead to a clear bias towards one act but throughout this split the two acts blend together almost seamlessly to create a surprisingly complete experience.
The record begins with a riff. It’s nothing special to begin with, but three seconds down the line, when Curtis Lightbown-Smith’s raw growl kicks the living *** out of you, a realisation dawns. It’s not apprehension, nor trepidation; it’s far too late for that, but when that primal surge of emotion roars through your veins you know this has the makings of something special. And so begins The Long Haul’s first officially recorded outing – ten minutes of relentless balls-to-the-wall borderline metalcore that will leave even the most resolute listeners breathless and hungry for more. The blueprint itself is fairly simplistic in construction; powerful vocals backed up with technically sound guitar work and brutally fast drum beats (think a less heady version of Botch) but perforated with understated artistic variances. These fluctuations, as illustrated in Dead Soul/Endless Drag, prevent the monotony of repetition and masks the minor flaws into insignificance. Well-timed breakdowns effortlessly shift the tempo down a notch and guest vocalist Lizzy Maries calms proceedings somewhat; her ethereal voice presenting an aura of serenity compared to the frenetic music it accentuates.

The expanse of musical horizons continues on Kerouac’s half of the split. Building on what they accomplished with their debut EP, the dense assortment of chaotic malevolence and astutely layered post-metal remains but has developed considerably in such a short time. Progress, through newly dynamic song structures alongside a distinctly improved vocal performance from Thom Denson lead to the bands best performance thus-far; the colossal Porcelain oozes with a graceful panache before exploding into an acerbic crescendo, all bitter vocals and sharply distorted guitar. Conversely, I Owe Some People The World But I Owe you *** is a full on assault of the senses, taking the belligerent fury of their debut and expanding it into an all-encompassing hybrid. Instruments bleed into one another; guitar, bass and drums incoherently converge to form an anarchistic whole, spitting and snarling in blissful fury.

By itself this split EP is as interesting in structure as it is in quality, for as similar as the two bands are to each other; the differences between them complement each other perfectly giving the record a more rounded feel than any individual venture. On the other hand, the lack of consistency this brings can often taint the continuity somewhat, creating a disparity in the musical flow. With this in mind, the maturity and technical proficiency shown by both acts is astounding and while Kerouac remains the more refined of the two acts, there are noticeable signs that The Long Haul can all but match their Southern English neighbours. It’s too early to predict the long term effects that this split EP will have on either bands’ future but what it does show is that the future for both acts is bright and underlines Southern England as one of the premiere districts for underground hardcore.


Sunday, December 26, 2010

Kerouac - 2010 Cold and Distant, Not Loving


Band : Kerouac
Album : Cold and Distant, Not Loving
Release Year : 2010
Genre : Hardcore / Chaotic
 
Tracklist:
1.Heavy Hearted
2.Lay Of The Landfill
3.Little Mountains We Move
4.Pale
5.Our Father's Guns
6.A Bastard Behind The Eyes
7.A Sheep. A Well

Their greatest arsenal however is the belligerence. The feeling here is resolute and employed to overcome the listener. There’s no need to convince you because the music feels created as cathartic value. It’s in the way they shift time changes like mood swings allowing no sense of comfortableness. The way there’s no distinction in instruments on occasion because the focus is in maddening the revelations; solidified by song titles, “A Bastard Behind the Eyes”, strengthened in lyricism – hope in our hearts but hate in our lungs, stuck on repeat our words, we become, we’re heavy handed poets, reciting verses that could bleed into one.
There’s only one result when listening to Cold and Distant, something has broken. Whether it’s the computer screen, a door frame or your fist, Kerouac evokes emotions in you suited for one outlet, the pit. It seems childish and unintelligent on paper, but on wax, or .mp3 file, all meaning is grounded. Kerouac have tapped into a source few bands can, like Throats, Converge and Galleons they’re creating havoc because they can.