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Primitive Man and Valkyrie at the Hi-Tone

Primitive Man perform tonight at the Hi-Tone.

 
Like any genre that serves as one of the primary colors of musical style, genuine metal (meaning everything but the tenuously-associated historical mainstream embarrassments like hair metal and rap/nu-metal) continues to fracture into a vast spectrum of subsets, and this bill’s co-headliners, Primitive Man and Valkyrie, come from very different places therein. However, one commonality shared here is that both bands are somewhat new additions to the Relapse Records roster, the label itself celebrating its 25th year of metal diversity and reliable quality. 
     
Primitive Man, a trio from Denver that formed in 2012, makes an admirable effort to be the heaviest, most brutal band on the planet. With an undiluted focus on consummate negativity/misanthropy as delivered through an unrelenting mix of death, sludge, doom metal, and harsh power electronics-style noise, Primitive Man deliver on the title of their recent EP, Home Is Where The Hatred Is. As on the trio’s 2013 debut album, Scorn, their four-song Relapse debut shows a proclivity for stretching the sonic punishment into endurance test territory (see the accompanying 11-minute “Loathe” single from the EP), but what a provocative endurance test it is. The band’s idea of “breather tracks” on each of these releases could easily qualify as Merzbow or Wolf Eyes’ scariest aural attacks, with an extra coating of soundbite/sample depravity. 

Sharing the latter portion of the evening with Primitive Man is Valkyrie, not to be confused with the innumerable other metal bands that have chosen the same moniker. This long-running but sporadically-active quartet is centered around brothers Jake and Pete Adams (both on guitar/vocals), the latter better known for his work as a principal (and remaining) part of the Baroness lineup for the last seven years. Valkyrie has been around since 2002, and prior to their debut with Relapse earlier this year, Shadows, the band has released three demos, three splits with other bands, and two previous full-length albums (in 2006 and 2008 respectively). While Baroness continued to move beyond its origins of pummeling heaviness and crusty His Hero Is Gone/Neurosis influence to a polished but distinct type of modern hard-rock with progressive and psych overtones, Valkyrie is a study in extracting the proto-metal ’70s hard-rock out of a doom/stoner-metal template, though both bands share a love of the more prog-rock things in life. Luckily, with so many bands mining the same territory, Valkyrie does have a very strong knack for memorable songwriting in its pocket. Still, next to Primitive Man, Valkyrie feels like the Fairport Convention or Flying Burrito Brothers, and I don’t mean that as a derogatory assessment. 

The two appropriately-sterling local openers on the bill are Gringos and Reserving Dirtnaps. Now in the middle of their 21st year, Gringos are currently recording the follow-up to 2012’s excellent Pearly Gates, though format and other release logistics are still TBA at this time. Reserving Dirtnaps continues a busy year of bringing Memphis’ heaviest metallic hardcore in the live arena and riding some certain momentum in the wake of releasing their self-titled debut CD earlier this year.

Primitive Man and Valkyrie at the Hi-Tone

Monday, July 27th @ Hi-Tone Big Room. $10 Ages: 18+ Doors: 8pm Show: 9pm      

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Music Music Blog

Weekend Roundup 22: Pokey LaFarge, John Paul Keith, Western Medication

Marcella and Her Lovers play this Friday night at Bar DKDC.

Welcome to the 22nd edition of my Weekend Roundup. This roundup is a little sparse compared to some of the jam-packed weekends we’ve had so far this summer, but there are still a lot of bands worth checking out over the next few days. 

Friday, June 26th.
Pokey LaFarge, 7:30 p.m. at the Levitt Shell, free.

Weekend Roundup 22: Pokey LaFarge, John Paul Keith, Western Medication

Banned Anthem, Red Tape Riot, Cult of the Flag, TornApart, Spline, 9 p.m. in the Hi-Tone Small Room, $10.

Marcella and her Lovers, 10 p.m. at Bar DKDC, $5.

Atlas Road Crew, 10 p.m. at Lafayette’s Music Room.

Weekend Roundup 22: Pokey LaFarge, John Paul Keith, Western Medication (2)

Saturday, June 27th.
Stax Academy All Star Band, 7:30 p.m. at the Levitt Shell, free.

The Neverhawks, All The Indians, Idle & Wild, Movie Night, 9 p.m. in the Hi-Tone Small Room, $10.

John Paul Keith, 10 p.m. at Bar DKDC, $5.

Weekend Roundup 22: Pokey LaFarge, John Paul Keith, Western Medication (3)

Gringos and Buldgerz, 10 p.m. at the Buccaneer, $5.

The BB King’s Blues Club All Star Band, 10 p.m. at Lafayette’s Music Room.

Sunday, June 28th.
The Wampus Cats, 4 p.m. at Lafayette’s Music Room.

Western Medication, 9 p.m. at Murphy’s, $5.

Weekend Roundup 22: Pokey LaFarge, John Paul Keith, Western Medication (4)

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Music Music Features

Hard ’n Fast Fest Plus Buldgerz Return

It seems like every other week there is a music fest in Memphis, with Spicerfest and Memphis Punk Rock Fest having recently concluded, and Goner Fest right around the corner. But that’s not going to stop five local bands from throwing the first annual Hard ‘N Fast Fest in the Hi-Tone small room this Friday night. It’s a bit humorous to call a five-band bill in a 200 person capacity room a festival, but I guess you have to start somewhere. Headlining Hard ‘N Fast Fest is local street-punk band Banned Anthem, which recently finished recording at the local studio 5 and Dime. Locals Cult of the Flag and Red Tape Riot should also provide some high-quality head-banging material.

Buldgerz

On the older side of things, scene veterans Buldgerz are back in action, and they’ll be playing alongside Gringos. Rising from the ashes of No Comply (a short-lived hardcore band that released one single), Buldgerz also features members of the Blackberries and Hosoi Bros, meaning a group of dudes who would probably be hanging out at the Buccaneer whether they were playing a show there or not. Headlining Saturday night’s show is Gringos, a band that Memphis Flyer freelancer Andrew Earles once wrote couldn’t be beat due to their “frenetic instrumental skill, visceral heaviness, and unbelievable power (especially live).” Gringos don’t perform too often, but when they do, it’s almost always at the Buccaneer, and surveying the number of creatures who come out of the woodwork for their shows, that is worth the price of admission alone. If heavy metal and hardcore punk is your thing, it’s a good weekend to live in Memphis.

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Music Music Features

Heavyweights

Memphis’ Gringos, the same band that operated under the Adios Gringo moniker from 1994 until 2006, have spent the past 18 years solidifying its membership in a rather special group of bands that represents a tiny percentage of the active rock/metal/hard-rock/punk/hardcore expanse: those acts that can be recognized by a truly singular sonic identity. Gringos’ frenetic instrumental skill, visceral heaviness, and unbelievable power (especially live) are just a few of the attributes that combine to ensure that no other band really sounds like them.

Co-founder/guitarist/vocalist Paul McIntosh, longtime bassist Todd Park, and a strong contender for Memphis’ best drummer (and co-founder) Robert Gardner concoct a sound that evokes John Zorn’s marriage of free-jazz and grindcore, doom/stoner metal, death metal, hardcore punk, metal pioneers like Black Sabbath and Judas Priest, and Southern hard rock.

“There seem to be more subgenres in metal and hardcore punk than any other styles of music,” McIntosh says. “The criteria are very specific, and I don’t think we’ve ever felt comfortable in any one of them. It’s all rock-and-roll to me, good or bad.”

At the Hi-Tone Café on Saturday night, Gringos will be celebrating the release of Pearly Gates, the band’s fifth full-length album, which was recorded by Kyle Johnson at Rocket Science Audio and self-released by the band (on their High Evolutionary Recordings imprint) with the help of local label Wrecked ‘Em Wreckords. It is the latest achievement in the ascending arc of quality, exploratory inspiration, plus bulldozing rock and metal force that dates back to the Gringos’ formation and debut 14-song demo tape in 1994.

Founded by three former members of the colorfully named Taintskins, Adios Gringo’s first vinyl releases were a pair of 7″ EPs. Around this time, current Ex-Cult guitarist J.B. Horrell held down the bass position. Park replaced Horrell in 1997. Original second guitarist Rob Rich was on board until 1999, then returned to make the Gringos a four-piece from 2005 until leaving again 2009, when the band reverted to its current trio format with more than enough of the requisite “power.”

Adios Gringo’s 19-song debut CD was recorded at Easley-McCain and released in 1998, followed in 2000 by Gringo the Harbinger and the 20-song Our Stellar Devotion in 2001.

A four-song CD of Black Flag covers and the Paranoid 7″ EP showed up mid-decade, then a split 7″ with locals Damn Your Eyes and the band’s fourth studio album, Forging Hammers, were both released in 2007, followed by the Gringos Versus Chiefs live CD split with long-running associates the Joint Chiefs (also an outlet for Robert Gardner’s considerable talents behind a drum kit).

With Pearly Gates, the band made the decision to forgo the CD format in favor of heavy-gram vinyl that comes with a download card. It is, hands-down, the best full-length in the Gringos discography. The telepathic musical communication exchanged between three guys is one of many reasons that Pearly Gates is one of those all-too-rare albums that not only sounds heavy, it feels heavy, like the heaviness is the fourth member that makes the music take on a life of its own the very second McIntosh, Gardner, and Park hit the first notes of the first track (the side-winding “Ghost”).

Also, Pearly Gates has a more subtle application of those sonic qualities than one might consider metal and a more overt connection with the noise-rock that was the stock-in-trade of labels like Amphetamine Reptile, Trance Syndicate, and Touch and Go in the early-to-mid-’90s. Despite this subjective observation, when asked what outside music was in heavy rotation over the last year and specifically during the time in which the new album was fleshed out and written, McIntosh says, “It’s hard to speak for all the guys, because we listen to a lot of different stuff. But it’s fair to say probably a good mix of Scandinavian black metal, 1970s-era rock, and 1980s American hardcore and new wave, along with ’60s jazz.”

Incorporating jazz into an otherwise heavy rock or metal template is playing with fire, but Gringos pull it off (and then some) with the simultaneous swing and pummel of “Ode to a Blind Masseur.” And, to get a better idea of how this band came charging out of the gate as a fully realized entity, there is the Melvin-ish title track.

“‘Pearly Gates’ is one of our oldest songs, but it had worked its way back into the set list,” McIntosh explains. “Except for the Adios Gringo demo tape, somehow it had never been recorded. We probably played this song at our first show as Adios Gringo with Bikini Kill at the Antenna in ’94.”

Then there is the stunning instrumental “Pack Mentality” that, quite appropriately, closes the album.

“We’ve always played our fair share of instrumental tunes, but on ‘Pack Mentality’ we really let the inspirations for the song dictate the direction it was going to go,” McIntosh says.

“We were trying to expresses the ferocity and cadence of a hunt for prey, or a good snack.”

Gringos Pearly Gates

Album-Release Show with Powers That Be

Hi-Tone Café

Saturday, December 15th, 9 p.m.