If you've been having problems with the site since last week (Friday 18 May) please read this. (Hide this message)

Rangda - False Flag

Recommended by us on 14th May 2010

False Flag by Rangda

4...according to our on Fri 14 May, 2010.

Oh my oh my what we have here is a super trio: Sir Richard Bishop, Ben Chasney and Chris Corsano. I could probably stop writing there and for many those three names alone would be a deal clincher... Opener 'Waldorf Hysteria' is a full on manic and intense psych rock freakout and then we get 'Bull Lore' which could be a score for a Sergio Leone epic. 'Fist Family' has Corsano pummeling away like a madman. What I like is that you get stuff that sounds totally improvised and then other moments where ideas have been fine-tuned. Doubtless to say fans of either musician will find something pleasurable here. When they go for it, it really is all guns blazing!

• As friends and labelmates with a mutual admiration for each other’s work, Bishop and Chasny had begun to discuss some sort of collaboration based around two electric guitars plus a drummer. Ben had worked previously with Chris Corsano in Six Organs of Admittance and thought he would be an excellent addition to the project and Bishop agreed. However actually getting everyone together proved nearly impossible as each lived in a different city, sprawled across the vastness of the United States. • In 2009 they decided something had to be done and without wasting any more time they agreed to make a record and hoped that Drag City would release it. They booked some studio time with sound guru Scott Colburn in Seattle, performed a live show a day or two before the recording session, and the three of them got together to come up with some ideas that they could do live as well as in the studio. Prior to this they had never played together before, but by the end of the show they had a couple of composed pieces that they knew they could flesh out further in the studio. When they finished the studio session, they each knew they had made a good record but at the same time, they realized that they were a live band more than anything else. • The album veers in many directions with the aurally challenging opener ‘Waldorf Hysteria’ followed by the laconic and almost doom-laden, spagetti- western-esque ‘Bull Lore’. ‘Fist Family’ is a call to battle, with a siren-like opening and then punching drums rolling like a flurry of fists. ‘Sarcophagi’ is swathed in sorrow but allows room to breath with a mournful beauty. ‘Serrated Edges’ sounds like it’s name; sharp, uncomfortable and jarring. The fifteen and a half minute closer ‘Plain of Jars’ is played with visceral abandon. If the album is anything to go by, their live shows must be pretty spectacular. Tracklisting: Waldorf Hysteria * Bull Lore * Fist Family * • Sarcophagi * Serrated Edges * Plain Of Jars

Be the first to review this record. Best reviewer each month gets £10 off their next order!

You don't have to provide your email address, but without it we can't give you a prize if this is the month's best review!

Keep it civil, please!

Anti-spam question...