A battalion
of atavistic bands are raising the specter of psychedelic music, painting it
black with plural nouns evocative of the netherworld. Saturday night's show at
Mad Planet billed two such chthonic acts as bookends with a curious bolt of
Call Me Lightning in the center.
Promoting
their fifth album, Heavy Deavy Skull
Lover, The Warlocksperformed
with a skeleton crew half the size of their original lineup. Despite attenuated
personnel and an unfortunate opening slot on a three’s-a-crowd bill, The
Warlocks filled the space with brooding, elegiac new material.
A
thundering—if not jarringly raucous—set by Call Me Lightning provided a
departure from the dark side, with Nathan Lilley headbanging his way through
his best send-up of A Quick One-era Roger
Daltrey.
Picking up where The Warlocks left off, The Black Angels opened with "Manipulation," from Passover, the band's 2006 full-length debut,with lead vocalist Alex Maas making way for guitarist Christian Bland's lucid monotone. Possessed by the timbre of John Cale, Bland
led the Angels into a solid set combining the strongest material from both Passover and their recent sophomore effort, Directions to See a Ghost. Resurrecting
the taut marching rhythms so endemic to their debut, Stephanie Bailey pounded out a militia's cadence on “Mission
District," a highlight from Directions
that typifies the Angels' uncanny ability to revel in demoniac sultriness.
For the remainder of the set, the band enlisted a pair of 16-millimeter
projectors to superimpose found footage on the stage, some sequences rendered
ominously sanguine with age.
The
Black Angels concluded with two warmly-received tracks from Passover, the bluntly-penned, overtly
political "Young Men Dead" and "Better Off Alone," an
anthemic ode to independence.
Like
Yorick's Skull, the magician's trick from which Directions to See a Ghost takes its name, The Black Angels inscribe
the tropes of late ’60s psychedelia from the past onto the present, though
their take is more in line with Blue Cheer and Hawkwind than the bloated noodle
rock plaguing college airwaves for nearly two decades.
And
while this ground's been marched countless times before, The Black Angels'
swaggering rhythms manage to ignite below-the-belt-buckle sexuality without
sacrificing their intent to blow the hinges off the doors of perception.
Whether or not their official mantra “turn on, tune in, drone out,” is possible
without either direct participation or controlled substances is subject to
debate, but these fallen angels put on an incendiary spectacle.
Yoshi13
Yoshi13
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