Apr 122017
 

 

You can’t accuse Tampa’s Meatwound of picking a misleading name for themselves. But this song “Séance“? That title might be a bit of a misdirection… unless you contemplate a Lovecraftian seance, one that brings some nightmarish horror into the haunted house and you have to run for your life.

Séance” is the name of the song we’re premiering. It comes from Meatwound‘s new album Largo, which Magic Bullet Records plans to release on May 12, I guess because they think you’d look better breathing heavy, with black eyes and fewer teeth.

 


Meatwound (in the foreground)

 

I got an e-mail directed to our site a few days ago from a long-time reader who asked (politely) “if there’s any chance you could make it more apparent what the album you’re discussing is going to sound like”, because “the opening few paragraphs on each article/review on your main page don’t actually indicate what the style of music is going to be”.

Even if I were more inclined to grant that request than I really am, it would be a heavy lift in the case of “Seance“. I could toss out the tags from the Bandcamp page for the album — “punk death florida hardcore meatwound metal post-rock shoegaze sludge tampa”. Did that help?

Let me just do it my way, okay?

I’ve had so much fun listening to the bass-player and the drummer on this song. I’ve listened to the track multiple times doing my damnedest just to follow what the hell they’re up to. I’m still quite conscious of the vocalist continuing to howl, bray, and yell like a crazy man with a knife, and the guitarist causing his instrument to convulse in increasingly violent throes of dementia — needling, pulsing, scraping the enamel off your teeth. They’re hot as hell, too, but man, the rhythm section kills it on this song.

What they do is part avalanche, part concrete-splitter, part acrobatic team (wearing steel-toed boots), part hummingbird the size of a condor (shut up, I’m doing this my way). They’re manic and punishing, but they’re also precise and inventive — and it’s loads of fun to listen to them cut loose on this song.

 

It’s a boisterous, intense, head-battering, brain-twisting track, that’s for sure. And if you’d like to know how it was created, read these comments by vocalist Daniel Shook (don’t worry, I don’t think you’ll get bored by the explanation):

“We used to practice in a storage unit that had previously been a hair braiding spot. The Black Diamonds and Pearls sign was still above the door and the interior was still pink and purple with plastic pearls and ribbons on the walls. I hung one of those Cursed Two goat banners on the drop ceiling to watch over us. During this time, we wrote Seance, Pigs, Reproduction Blues, and Largo.

“We had started writing Séance (aka haunted house) with our old drummer and the music stayed the same but as it came together with Leo on drums, it sounded more like sped up Calypso rhythms and we began referring to it as Polyester Motorhead. I started picturing some Serpent and the Rainbow shit.

“The lyrics were originally going to be more of a straight exorcism ritual transcript. Once the song was settled, it made more sense to set the table in the first half and then bring in the priest after the bass break in the middle. Who sets the table for a supernatural tale better than HP Lovecraft? So, I swiped from the scribe of unnameable horrors and eventually figured out how to land my white ass on Marty and Leo’s choppy island beats.

“Also around that time I met an English teacher that had never read HP Lovecraft and I was offended.

“Coincidentally, after invoking Lovecraft, a strange oily substance started seeping through the wall and mucking up all our shit. Turns out the hydraulic lift in the mechanic shop next door sprung a leak. We had to move into a different space two units over and a biker church moved in to Black Diamonds and Pearls. It didn’t last long.”

 

Largo was recorded by Dan Byers at Rock Garden Studio, just south of Largo, Florida, with mastering by Dan Randall at Mammoth Sound. The artwork was created by former Florida Man Chris Norris, aka Steak Mtn.

Largo will be issued through Magic Bullet Records on purple vinyl LP and digital platforms. They’re not paying for your dental work. Pre-orders can be placed here:

https://shop.magicbulletrecords.com/collections/frontpage/products/meatwound-largo-lp-purple-vinyl

https://magicbulletrecords.bandcamp.com/album/meatwound-largo

 

And if you’re in the vicinity of any of these locales, you can catch Meatwound live:

May 8th: WMNF 88.5 radio show (interview/live studio tracks)
May 12th: Tampa – Largo Record Release show w/Thunderclap, Shot @ American Legion Post 111
May 13th: Gainesville – w/Thunderclap, Dozier @ High Dive
June 10th: Tampa – w/The Absence, Dead to Fall, Queen of Ex @ Crowbar
July 7th: Tampa – w/Siege, Maruta, Asshole Parade, Shitstorm, and more @The Orpheum

Lots of Links:
http://www.facebook.com/MEATWOUND
http://www.magicbulletrecords.com
http://www.facebook.com/magicbulletrecords
https://magicbulletrecords.bandcamp.com

 

  6 Responses to “AN NCS PREMIERE: MEATWOUND — “SÉANCE””

  1. Great review! Between hummingbirds the size of condors and rats having hate sex in steel drums, we’ve got quite a menagerie going on here at NCS. And slow lorises.

    “around that time I met an English teacher that had never read HP Lovecraft and I was offended.” I would love to buy this guy a beer 😉

    • “hummingbirds the size of condors and rats having hate sex in steel drums”… and we have a new sub-header for the site…

      • It’s like a tag line to David Attenborough’s B-grade documentaries 😉 a dubious sub-header for a dubious corner of the interweb

  2. Been lucky enough to catch these guys on a couple of slots as the local openers at the Orpheum in Tampa . They’ve always put on a hell of show. Glad to see they’re getting some recognition outside of the immediate area.

    • Since I’m a continent away, I can say honestly that you’re a lucky man. I’d love to see this band live, but it will be a long stretch to get into their neighborhood.

  3. I’ve been lucky enough to see them play this song live a couple of times already. I assure you the bass/drum breakdown is just as sick live as it is here.

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