Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Kyuss - Blues For The Red Sun & Welcome to Sky Valley
It was after getting my wick wet with QOTSA that I sought more. QOTSA being a starter drug, so to speak. And here was the origin, the germ... the sausage of so-called Stoner Rock. This is thick and rich and comes from the California desert, caked in gunk, rez in the pipe. Sky Valley is def my favorite due the limited vocals and the chunkiness of the guitar, the concept jams, the trip. However, Blues just rips you a new one... pleasantly, politely.
Seriously bro, don't wuss out on this...
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Allmusic.com on Blues: With Josh Homme's guitar tuned down two whole steps to C, and plugged into a bass amp for maximum distortion, stoner metal pioneers Kyuss achieve a major milestone in heavy music with their second album, 1992's Blues for the Red Sun. Producer Chris Goss masterfully captures the band's unique heavy/light formula, which becomes apparent as soon as the gentle but sinister intro melody gives way to the chugging main riff in the opener, "Thumb." This segues immediately into the galloping "Green Machine," which pummels forward inexorably and even features that rarest rock & roll moment: a bass solo. "Thong Song" alternates rumbling guitar explosions with almost complete silence, and "Mondo Generator" plays like an extended acid trip. The slow build of the epic "Freedom Run" and the driving "Allen's Wrench" are also highlights, and though the album is heavy on instrumentals, these actually provide a seamless transition from song to song.
Allmusic.com on Welcome: After creating a classic with their second album, Blues for the Red Sun, desert metal gods Kyuss faced the unenviable task of delivering the goods once again for a new label, Elektra Records. And they almost pulled it off with 1994's stellar Welcome to Sky Valley. The album's 13 songs are divided into three "suites" which fully display the band's impressive creative range, from furious metal to psychedelic grooves, and anything in between. The first and most consistent of these suites starts with the huge guitar riff of "Gardenia" (which resembles molten lava flowing down the side of a volcano), continues into the moody space jam instrumental "Asteroid," and culminates in the strangely titled yet superbly diverse "Supa Scoopa and Mighty Scoop." Other highlights include the solid thrashing of "100 Degrees," the prog rock instrumental "Whitewater," and the rather mellow (by Kyuss standards) "Demon Cleaner." But no song exemplifies the Kyuss sound as well as the aptly titled "Odyssey," which opens suite number three and provides a veritable blueprint of the band's unique combination of ingredients. The track begins with a cryptic melody, explodes into a ferocious riff, glides into a psychedelic bridge, then returns to full-throttle for its conclusion.
HEAR Blues
HEAR Welcome
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Kyuss
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3 comments:
exactly what i needed thanks
stoner sausage. mmmm. tastee!
I never really liked QOTSA. But I like the Dwarves. I also like Dead Meadow.
So I'm finally giving Kyuss a chance.
It's OK so far, but I probably need to give it more time to grow on me.
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