Sleestak - Aeon (2020)

Artist: Sleestak
Title: Aeon
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: Altrusian Grace Media
Genre: Psychedelic, Stoner Rock, Doom Metal
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:03:44
Total Size: 146 / 402 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Aeon
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: Altrusian Grace Media
Genre: Psychedelic, Stoner Rock, Doom Metal
Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:03:44
Total Size: 146 / 402 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Infinite Eternal (7:47)
02. The Void (6:52)
03. Black Iron Prison / Submerged (7:58)
04. Distant Lights (8:00)
05. Keepers of the Illusion (6:03)
06. Out of Body (6:01)
07. Omelas (4:22)
08. STCFTHOTS (Pink Floyd cover) (16:41)
It's been almost a decade since the reptilian doomsters released their last full length, The Fall Of Altrusia, which I described thus:
"The band is still anchored in Stoner Doom, but in much the same way Halley's Comet is anchored by the Sun. Powerful doom riffs and shouted vocals make a stirring appearance before the band takes off for a long space voyage. For those slow with metaphor translation… this album is like 35% stoner doom and 65% tripping balls and floating through the cosmos."
AEON sees the band furthering this trend with a much, much wider orbit. Like two short flights zipping over Metalstan's airspace before resuming their path off past the Oort Cloud, blowing past V'ger en route. You can see why this made a great soundtrack for a long, boring drive. Kept me wistfully blissfully floating along as the miles passed. So what does it sound like? I guess the easiest descriptor for the album would be their choice in a closer - a cover of Pink Floyd's "Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun". Go in to the album expecting something along these lines and you'll have a good trip.
If you want to get your metal on, "Black Iron Prison/Submerged" and "Keepers Of The Illusion" are tracks for you. Schmitz's familiar growlyhowl atop trudging doomsludge riffs you might recall from spots of Fall Of Altrusia or Skylon Express. Additionally, sprinkled in throughout the album are some of the other Sleestakisms such as the foreboding single-note, clean reverb echoey notes. That particular innocuous yet ominous sonic trick is a welcome return. While I do have a few fave tracks - "The Void", "Black Iron Prison/Submerged" and "Keepers Of The Illusion" which encapsulates the album succinctly, would both be good starter points (though "BIP/S" takes some time before the stomping of the distortion pedal) to see what's going on, the album is best taken as a whole, as needed, for numbing.
And sentimental schmaltz to close this out - way back a decade ago Marcel sent his first "Awesome Package of Doom", a box stuffed full of dome/stoner t's and cds, including Faal, Profetus and a copy of Skylon Express. Been a huge fan since. If you find yourself grooving on this remotely as much as I am, be sure to pour a little of yer fave firewater out for the big man. I get the assist, but he deserves the credit for the goal, as it were.
"The band is still anchored in Stoner Doom, but in much the same way Halley's Comet is anchored by the Sun. Powerful doom riffs and shouted vocals make a stirring appearance before the band takes off for a long space voyage. For those slow with metaphor translation… this album is like 35% stoner doom and 65% tripping balls and floating through the cosmos."
AEON sees the band furthering this trend with a much, much wider orbit. Like two short flights zipping over Metalstan's airspace before resuming their path off past the Oort Cloud, blowing past V'ger en route. You can see why this made a great soundtrack for a long, boring drive. Kept me wistfully blissfully floating along as the miles passed. So what does it sound like? I guess the easiest descriptor for the album would be their choice in a closer - a cover of Pink Floyd's "Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun". Go in to the album expecting something along these lines and you'll have a good trip.
If you want to get your metal on, "Black Iron Prison/Submerged" and "Keepers Of The Illusion" are tracks for you. Schmitz's familiar growlyhowl atop trudging doomsludge riffs you might recall from spots of Fall Of Altrusia or Skylon Express. Additionally, sprinkled in throughout the album are some of the other Sleestakisms such as the foreboding single-note, clean reverb echoey notes. That particular innocuous yet ominous sonic trick is a welcome return. While I do have a few fave tracks - "The Void", "Black Iron Prison/Submerged" and "Keepers Of The Illusion" which encapsulates the album succinctly, would both be good starter points (though "BIP/S" takes some time before the stomping of the distortion pedal) to see what's going on, the album is best taken as a whole, as needed, for numbing.
And sentimental schmaltz to close this out - way back a decade ago Marcel sent his first "Awesome Package of Doom", a box stuffed full of dome/stoner t's and cds, including Faal, Profetus and a copy of Skylon Express. Been a huge fan since. If you find yourself grooving on this remotely as much as I am, be sure to pour a little of yer fave firewater out for the big man. I get the assist, but he deserves the credit for the goal, as it were.