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EARTH
https://thronesanddominions.com

Over the course of their thirty trips around the sun, Earth has remained diligent in their commitment to monolithic minimalism. The sonic vocabulary may have changed--from their early years churning out seismic drone metal on albums like Earth 2 (1993) to the dusty Morricone-tinged comeback album Hex; Or Printing in the Infernal Method (2005) to the meditative rock approach of Primitive and Deadly (2014)--but the underlying principle of austerity and restraint remains a constant. With their latest album Full Upon Her Burning Lips, Earth purges the layers of auxiliary instrumentation that embellished some of their previous records and deconstructed their dynamic to the core duo of Dylan Carlson on guitar and bass and Adrienne Davies on drums and percussion. In the process, they tapped into the Platonic ideal of Earth--an incarnation of the long running band bolstered by the authority of purpose, where every note and every strike on the drum kit carries the weight of the world.

Full Upon Her Burning Lips opens with "Datura's Crimson Veils", a twelve-minute opus that adheres to Earth's 21st century approach with Carlson's sepia-toned Bakersfield Sound guitars lurching across a barren landscape while Davies punctuates the melodies with death knell drums. It's a sound that harkens back to the riff-constructed vistas of their Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light albums, but stripped of their ornateness. "It was definitely a very organically developed record," Carlson says of the process. "I limited the number of effects I used. I always like the limiting of materials to force oneself to employ them more creatively. Previous Earth records were quite lush sounding, and I wanted a more upfront and drier sound, using very few studio effects." In less capable hands, these kinds of limitations might diminish the aural scope of the compositions, but Carlson and Davies have always thrived on reductive methods.

The stripped down approach had another advantage. "I really wanted the drums to be present," Carlson says. "I felt with previous Earth records that other instrumentation took up so much of the sonic space that the drums were kind of pushed to the side." This tactic helps highlight Davies' ability to elevate the drum kit beyond its mere metronomic functions and allows it to serve as an expressive, nuanced, and tonally rich component to Earth's arsenal of sound.

In addition to scaling back on their ranks, Earth altered their previous trajectory by entering into Full Upon Her Burning Lips without a conceptual arc to guide the process, relying instead on their collective subconscious to hone in on the overarching muse as the songs developed. "In the past I've usually had a strong framework for an album," Carlson says. "This one developed over the course of writing and recording. It just felt like 'Earth'--like just the two players doing their best work at playing, serving the music." The absence of a pre-existing narrative guiding the compositions meant that the songs were more open and intuitive, often resulting in more terse musical vignettes like the richly harmonic "Exaltation of Larks" or the dreamily itinerant "Maidens Catafalque". Yet subconscious impulses gradually created their own subtext for the album. "I wanted this to be a 'sexy' record, a record acknowledging the 'witchy' and 'sensual' aspects in the music... sort of a 'witch's garden' kind of theme, with references to mind altering plants and animals that people have always held superstitious beliefs towards. A conjuror or root doctor's herbarium of songs, as it were."

The ten tracks on Full Upon Her Burning Lips came together in bits and pieces. Songs like "Cats on the Briar" and "Mandrake's Hymn" stemmed from a handful of musical phrases and repeating patterns concocted in moments of downtime during their 2017 tour schedule. "Descending Belladonna" came from a live soundtrack project. Other songs came from rehearsals in the months leading up to recording or in moments of divine inspiration in the studio. The record was engineered, mixed, and mastered by longtime associate Mell Dettmer at Studio Soli. Knowing their process and their sound, Dettmer helped harness, shape, and document the songs in a manner that highlights the depth of Earth's sparse components, capturing hidden dimensions much like the veiled images residing in the Magic Eye prints from the '90s. For the patient listener, the cyclical nature of the songs "She Rides an Air of Malevolence" or "An Unnatural Carousel" reveal new forms with repeated listens, with the subtle variations between passes creating a kaleidoscope of auditory activity.

"I feel like this is the fullest expression and purest distillation of what Earth does since I re-started the band," Carlson says in reflection of Full Upon Her Burning Lips. And indeed, anyone that's followed Earth on their journey will bask in the unadulterated hums, throbs, and reverberations conjured by Carlson and Davies. Sargent House is proud to offer up the album to the world on May 24th, 2019 on 2xLP CD digital formats.



ICEAGE
https://iceagecopenhagen.eu

With each new release, Elias Bender Rønnenfelt, Jakob Tvilling Pless, Johan Surrballe Wieth and Dan Kjær Nielsen refigure the contours of a typical Iceage song. This is especially true of Seek Shelter, their fifth LP and first for Mexican Summer. Enrolling Sonic Boom (Pete Kember of Spacemen 3) to produce the record and an additional guitarist in the form of Casper Morilla Fernandez, Seek Shelter sees Iceage's propulsive momentum pushing them in new, expansive, ecstatic directions. A decade on from their first record, Iceage continue to harness their lives together through music. This journey, in music and life, has never progressed in a linear fashion.

Seek Shelter is the sound of a tight emotional core unwound. Rain dripped through cracks in the ceiling of Namouche, the dilapidated wood-paneled vintage studio in Lisbon where the band set up for 12 days. The band had to arrange their equipment around puddles. Pieces of cloth covered slowly filling buckets so that the sound of raindrops wouldn't reach the microphones. Kember arranged garden lamps from a nearby party store for mood lighting in the high-ceiling space. It was the longest time Iceage have ever spent making an album. When the rain had stopped, Seek Shelter revealed itself as a collection of songs radiating warmth and a profound desire for salvation in a world that's spinning further and further out of control.

Iceage started making music together in 2008 as young teens in their hometown of Copenhagen. The band's 2011 debut, New Brigade, crystallized the raucous energy and unbreakable brotherhood of Danish teenagers weaned on post-punk, hardcore and no wave, and it found ears and kin around the world. 2012's You're Nothing was hard, fast and raw, a bold doubling-down on the aggression of youth in the first record as well as the weight of expectation. Plowing Into the Field of Love (2014) and Beyondless (2018) saw a softening of the band's hardest edges and the arrival of a certain world-weary vaudeville in the Iceage sound. In an extraordinary and unexpected run, the band had gone from the fertile hyperlocal Copenhagen scene to stages all over the world. Iceage's past two records -- all filtered twangy guitar riffs, sparse piano arrangements, and slinky, slow-moving rhythms -- ventured into an intoxicated but knowing swirl, surveying the party at the end of the night. They'd seen it all, at least once, and their music rode the crest of that chaos.

Seek Shelter, the band's first record made with an outside producer brought in alongside longtime collaborator Nis Bysted, is the place they have been called to next. Elias Bender Rønnenfelt casts the influence of producer Sonic Boom as that of a sparring partner, another wayward mind to bounce ideas off of and another pair of hands (along with Shawn Everett, who mixed the record) to help shape the sound. Kember had said in an interview that he'd like to produce for the band, and the feeling was mutual. Rønnenfelt recalls being 12 or 13, listening to Spacemen 3, the band Kember co-founded in 1982 at the age of 16. "It was one of those things that just reverberated with my being," he explains. For Seek Shelter, "we wanted a partner that had some noise that we didn't have, more a wizard than a producer. We thought he'd be that kind of wizard for us, and we were right -- he came in with a truckload of strange equipment that we'd never seen before." Kember, reflecting on the session and reaching for his highest praise, describes Iceage as "fucking show offs, like everyone who was ever great and emotional and honest."

For Seek Shelter's story of scorched-earth salvation, the band's songwriting embraces conventional structures more conspicuously than it has in the past. The dirge-like drone that opens the record gives way to a wall of reverb that sounds fuller and brighter than anything they've committed to tape, signalling a clarity of clouds breaking. American gospel and blues signatures break to the front of the slow-grooving "Vendetta" and harmonica-flecked "Gold City," a record which sounds like the road, a desert mission under a blazing sun. The Lisboa Gospel Collective, who joined the band for two tracks on the final day in the studio, provide a new scale to Rønnenfelt's incantations. There are moments of unvarnished romanticism, as on the brisk Jacques Brel-like "Drink Rain," and an overcast tenderness that gently glides over "Love Kills Slowly." The massive "High & Hurt" interpolates "Will the Circle Be Unbroken," a warhorse of the American religious vernacular that has become an increasingly urgent plea over the past century. It's not the only anthem that calls out to the heavens: later on, Rønnenfelt invokes the patron saint of music and poetry on "Dear Saint Cecilia," a song for seekers everywhere. "Writing a song is like trying to find a space where you can make something that's been riled up and down through the years feel like it belongs to your present moment," says Rønnenfelt. "It's all just scaffolding that you can project something onto."

Rønnenfelt's lyricism reaches grand heights despite its classic opacity -- he sings of taking shelter, of tranquil affections that threaten to combust, and of a limp-wristed god with a cavalcade of devotees in search of relief. His expressionist imagery consistently hinges on the divine, a natural result of his desire to take a kernel of ordinary emotion and, as he explains, "blow it up like a balloon." For Seek Shelter, as with all Iceage's previous albums, Rønnenfelt stowed away for a set period of weeks and wrote the lyrics in one shot. "I set a time just to make sure that all the lyrics are written from the same mindset," he explains of these weeks alone. The lyrics stem from journals that he's kept over the past few years: "it becomes an amalgamation of ideas and impressions of things that you've been provoked by or had to live through. You end up with something that is a rough, blurry perspective of what that period of time was like, a mishmash of personal struggle that is shaded throughout by a world that seems more transparent in its inherently cruel ways." Romance and desire, as described in "Love Kills Slowly" and the album closer "The Holding Hand," are feelings that stretch torturously -- a race without a finish line.

What precisely makes an Iceage song is still a mysterious thing, and the band wishes to maintain this protean quality. "If there's ever a point in our history when something in the songs starts to seem easy but doesn't really excite us that much, we just discard that shit right away," he says. "You've always got to find a new vantage point to attack the assignment of writing a song. If we had a formula, it would be just a continuous watering down of what we do until we hated ourselves and quit." With Seek Shelter, they've managed to hold onto this core of presence and risk while writing their most ambitious songs. Even Rønnenfelt was surprised with what they were able to create together. "I think when we started we were just lashing out completely blindfolded with no idea as to why we were doing anything." He's speaking of the new record and also of their entire existence as a band, a travelogue that has catapulted these four friends far past the horizons of punk. "Some of that we wanted to remain intact. We try to keep the mystery. If there's no sense of mystery in it for us, then it's not fun." Seek Shelter is a record that now exists at a moment of a collective unknown, when every beating heart wonders what will happens next.

~~~~~~~~

The band is touring in support of last year's acclaimed Seek Shelter and the upcoming compilation Shake The Feeling: Outtakes & Rarities 2015-2021 (out now on Mexican Summer). Iceage's latest releases are a study in the powerful song form and raw execution that have defined the Danish rock band throughout their exciting career. Seek Shelter and its songs appeared on numerous year end lists, including Pitchfork, Stereogum, Paste, The FADER, Under The Radar, and beyond.

~~~~~~~~

It's not often that you hear a perfect record. Or a record created with such honesty and energy that it makes you drop absolutely everything, listen intently, and then completely readjust your outlook on music. With an average age of 17, this Copenhagen quartet has somehow managed to redefine our perception entirely, and we love it. Uncontrived, pure - this record is a youthful assault of downer, jaw-dropping, no-wave hardcore, wise beyond it's years. Dais/What's Your Rupture? Records.
EARTH
https://thronesanddominions.com

Over the course of their thirty trips around the sun, Earth has remained diligent in their commitment to monolithic minimalism. The sonic vocabulary may have changed--from their early years churning out seismic drone metal on albums like Earth 2 (1993) to the dusty Morricone-tinged comeback album Hex; Or Printing in the Infernal Method (2005) to the meditative rock approach of Primitive and Deadly (2014)--but the underlying principle of austerity and restraint remains a constant. With their latest album Full Upon Her Burning Lips, Earth purges the layers of auxiliary instrumentation that embellished some of their previous records and deconstructed their dynamic to the core duo of Dylan Carlson on guitar and bass and Adrienne Davies on drums and percussion. In the process, they tapped into the Platonic ideal of Earth--an incarnation of the long running band bolstered by the authority of purpose, where every note and every strike on the drum kit carries the weight of the world.

Full Upon Her Burning Lips opens with "Datura's Crimson Veils", a twelve-minute opus that adheres to Earth's 21st century approach with Carlson's sepia-toned Bakersfield Sound guitars lurching across a barren landscape while Davies punctuates the melodies with death knell drums. It's a sound that harkens back to the riff-constructed vistas of their Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light albums, but stripped of their ornateness. "It was definitely a very organically developed record," Carlson says of the process. "I limited the number of effects I used. I always like the limiting of materials to force oneself to employ them more creatively. Previous Earth records were quite lush sounding, and I wanted a more upfront and drier sound, using very few studio effects." In less capable hands, these kinds of limitations might diminish the aural scope of the compositions, but Carlson and Davies have always thrived on reductive methods.

The stripped down approach had another advantage. "I really wanted the drums to be present," Carlson says. "I felt with previous Earth records that other instrumentation took up so much of the sonic space that the drums were kind of pushed to the side." This tactic helps highlight Davies' ability to elevate the drum kit beyond its mere metronomic functions and allows it to serve as an expressive, nuanced, and tonally rich component to Earth's arsenal of sound.

In addition to scaling back on their ranks, Earth altered their previous trajectory by entering into Full Upon Her Burning Lips without a conceptual arc to guide the process, relying instead on their collective subconscious to hone in on the overarching muse as the songs developed. "In the past I've usually had a strong framework for an album," Carlson says. "This one developed over the course of writing and recording. It just felt like 'Earth'--like just the two players doing their best work at playing, serving the music." The absence of a pre-existing narrative guiding the compositions meant that the songs were more open and intuitive, often resulting in more terse musical vignettes like the richly harmonic "Exaltation of Larks" or the dreamily itinerant "Maidens Catafalque". Yet subconscious impulses gradually created their own subtext for the album. "I wanted this to be a 'sexy' record, a record acknowledging the 'witchy' and 'sensual' aspects in the music... sort of a 'witch's garden' kind of theme, with references to mind altering plants and animals that people have always held superstitious beliefs towards. A conjuror or root doctor's herbarium of songs, as it were."

The ten tracks on Full Upon Her Burning Lips came together in bits and pieces. Songs like "Cats on the Briar" and "Mandrake's Hymn" stemmed from a handful of musical phrases and repeating patterns concocted in moments of downtime during their 2017 tour schedule. "Descending Belladonna" came from a live soundtrack project. Other songs came from rehearsals in the months leading up to recording or in moments of divine inspiration in the studio. The record was engineered, mixed, and mastered by longtime associate Mell Dettmer at Studio Soli. Knowing their process and their sound, Dettmer helped harness, shape, and document the songs in a manner that highlights the depth of Earth's sparse components, capturing hidden dimensions much like the veiled images residing in the Magic Eye prints from the '90s. For the patient listener, the cyclical nature of the songs "She Rides an Air of Malevolence" or "An Unnatural Carousel" reveal new forms with repeated listens, with the subtle variations between passes creating a kaleidoscope of auditory activity.

"I feel like this is the fullest expression and purest distillation of what Earth does since I re-started the band," Carlson says in reflection of Full Upon Her Burning Lips. And indeed, anyone that's followed Earth on their journey will bask in the unadulterated hums, throbs, and reverberations conjured by Carlson and Davies. Sargent House is proud to offer up the album to the world on May 24th, 2019 on 2xLP CD digital formats.



ICEAGE
https://iceagecopenhagen.eu

With each new release, Elias Bender Rønnenfelt, Jakob Tvilling Pless, Johan Surrballe Wieth and Dan Kjær Nielsen refigure the contours of a typical Iceage song. This is especially true of Seek Shelter, their fifth LP and first for Mexican Summer. Enrolling Sonic Boom (Pete Kember of Spacemen 3) to produce the record and an additional guitarist in the form of Casper Morilla Fernandez, Seek Shelter sees Iceage's propulsive momentum pushing them in new, expansive, ecstatic directions. A decade on from their first record, Iceage continue to harness their lives together through music. This journey, in music and life, has never progressed in a linear fashion.

Seek Shelter is the sound of a tight emotional core unwound. Rain dripped through cracks in the ceiling of Namouche, the dilapidated wood-paneled vintage studio in Lisbon where the band set up for 12 days. The band had to arrange their equipment around puddles. Pieces of cloth covered slowly filling buckets so that the sound of raindrops wouldn't reach the microphones. Kember arranged garden lamps from a nearby party store for mood lighting in the high-ceiling space. It was the longest time Iceage have ever spent making an album. When the rain had stopped, Seek Shelter revealed itself as a collection of songs radiating warmth and a profound desire for salvation in a world that's spinning further and further out of control.

Iceage started making music together in 2008 as young teens in their hometown of Copenhagen. The band's 2011 debut, New Brigade, crystallized the raucous energy and unbreakable brotherhood of Danish teenagers weaned on post-punk, hardcore and no wave, and it found ears and kin around the world. 2012's You're Nothing was hard, fast and raw, a bold doubling-down on the aggression of youth in the first record as well as the weight of expectation. Plowing Into the Field of Love (2014) and Beyondless (2018) saw a softening of the band's hardest edges and the arrival of a certain world-weary vaudeville in the Iceage sound. In an extraordinary and unexpected run, the band had gone from the fertile hyperlocal Copenhagen scene to stages all over the world. Iceage's past two records -- all filtered twangy guitar riffs, sparse piano arrangements, and slinky, slow-moving rhythms -- ventured into an intoxicated but knowing swirl, surveying the party at the end of the night. They'd seen it all, at least once, and their music rode the crest of that chaos.

Seek Shelter, the band's first record made with an outside producer brought in alongside longtime collaborator Nis Bysted, is the place they have been called to next. Elias Bender Rønnenfelt casts the influence of producer Sonic Boom as that of a sparring partner, another wayward mind to bounce ideas off of and another pair of hands (along with Shawn Everett, who mixed the record) to help shape the sound. Kember had said in an interview that he'd like to produce for the band, and the feeling was mutual. Rønnenfelt recalls being 12 or 13, listening to Spacemen 3, the band Kember co-founded in 1982 at the age of 16. "It was one of those things that just reverberated with my being," he explains. For Seek Shelter, "we wanted a partner that had some noise that we didn't have, more a wizard than a producer. We thought he'd be that kind of wizard for us, and we were right -- he came in with a truckload of strange equipment that we'd never seen before." Kember, reflecting on the session and reaching for his highest praise, describes Iceage as "fucking show offs, like everyone who was ever great and emotional and honest."

For Seek Shelter's story of scorched-earth salvation, the band's songwriting embraces conventional structures more conspicuously than it has in the past. The dirge-like drone that opens the record gives way to a wall of reverb that sounds fuller and brighter than anything they've committed to tape, signalling a clarity of clouds breaking. American gospel and blues signatures break to the front of the slow-grooving "Vendetta" and harmonica-flecked "Gold City," a record which sounds like the road, a desert mission under a blazing sun. The Lisboa Gospel Collective, who joined the band for two tracks on the final day in the studio, provide a new scale to Rønnenfelt's incantations. There are moments of unvarnished romanticism, as on the brisk Jacques Brel-like "Drink Rain," and an overcast tenderness that gently glides over "Love Kills Slowly." The massive "High & Hurt" interpolates "Will the Circle Be Unbroken," a warhorse of the American religious vernacular that has become an increasingly urgent plea over the past century. It's not the only anthem that calls out to the heavens: later on, Rønnenfelt invokes the patron saint of music and poetry on "Dear Saint Cecilia," a song for seekers everywhere. "Writing a song is like trying to find a space where you can make something that's been riled up and down through the years feel like it belongs to your present moment," says Rønnenfelt. "It's all just scaffolding that you can project something onto."

Rønnenfelt's lyricism reaches grand heights despite its classic opacity -- he sings of taking shelter, of tranquil affections that threaten to combust, and of a limp-wristed god with a cavalcade of devotees in search of relief. His expressionist imagery consistently hinges on the divine, a natural result of his desire to take a kernel of ordinary emotion and, as he explains, "blow it up like a balloon." For Seek Shelter, as with all Iceage's previous albums, Rønnenfelt stowed away for a set period of weeks and wrote the lyrics in one shot. "I set a time just to make sure that all the lyrics are written from the same mindset," he explains of these weeks alone. The lyrics stem from journals that he's kept over the past few years: "it becomes an amalgamation of ideas and impressions of things that you've been provoked by or had to live through. You end up with something that is a rough, blurry perspective of what that period of time was like, a mishmash of personal struggle that is shaded throughout by a world that seems more transparent in its inherently cruel ways." Romance and desire, as described in "Love Kills Slowly" and the album closer "The Holding Hand," are feelings that stretch torturously -- a race without a finish line.

What precisely makes an Iceage song is still a mysterious thing, and the band wishes to maintain this protean quality. "If there's ever a point in our history when something in the songs starts to seem easy but doesn't really excite us that much, we just discard that shit right away," he says. "You've always got to find a new vantage point to attack the assignment of writing a song. If we had a formula, it would be just a continuous watering down of what we do until we hated ourselves and quit." With Seek Shelter, they've managed to hold onto this core of presence and risk while writing their most ambitious songs. Even Rønnenfelt was surprised with what they were able to create together. "I think when we started we were just lashing out completely blindfolded with no idea as to why we were doing anything." He's speaking of the new record and also of their entire existence as a band, a travelogue that has catapulted these four friends far past the horizons of punk. "Some of that we wanted to remain intact. We try to keep the mystery. If there's no sense of mystery in it for us, then it's not fun." Seek Shelter is a record that now exists at a moment of a collective unknown, when every beating heart wonders what will happens next.

~~~~~~~~

The band is touring in support of last year's acclaimed Seek Shelter and the upcoming compilation Shake The Feeling: Outtakes & Rarities 2015-2021 (out now on Mexican Summer). Iceage's latest releases are a study in the powerful song form and raw execution that have defined the Danish rock band throughout their exciting career. Seek Shelter and its songs appeared on numerous year end lists, including Pitchfork, Stereogum, Paste, The FADER, Under The Radar, and beyond.

~~~~~~~~

It's not often that you hear a perfect record. Or a record created with such honesty and energy that it makes you drop absolutely everything, listen intently, and then completely readjust your outlook on music. With an average age of 17, this Copenhagen quartet has somehow managed to redefine our perception entirely, and we love it. Uncontrived, pure - this record is a youthful assault of downer, jaw-dropping, no-wave hardcore, wise beyond it's years. Dais/What's Your Rupture? Records.
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