Album Of The Day: Ulaan Khol - Iii


Kategorie: Roadburn Festival
geschrieben von: Roadburn Festival geschrieben am: 26.03.2010 um: 08:56 Uhr

Ulaan Khol - III

Praise for Ulaan Khol’s III from San Francisco’s Aquarius Records:  Finally, the third volume in Ulaan Khol’s epic free-psych-drone trilogy. For those who don’t already know, Ulaan Khol is in fact Steven R. Smith, a beloved core member of the Jeweled Antler family, who has recorded on his own as Hala Strana, and with the first JA outfit Thuja, among many, many others. Much of Smith’s music is hushed and darkly romantic, folky and introspective, he does know how to rock though, and Ulaan Khol is where he really lets loose.

The first two installments in the series were both loud and heavy and psychedelic in their own ways, but number three definitely pushes the sound about as far as it can go. The opening track is a dense shapeless cloud of furious effulgent psychedelic guitar, warm and thick and gnarled and epic, the kind of guitarnoise that could fill up a whole record.  But there’s more to Ulaan Khol’s third outing, as is evidenced by the second track, an incredible, super rocking, crazy catchy burst of blown out psychedelic stomp. The drums pounding, beneath a sea of swirling guitar buzz, while way over the top, Smith unfurls wild soaring leads, pealing feedback, dense tangles of notes, long drawn out wailing tones, it’s like the perfect frenzied end to some classic space psych jam except it’s the whole song.

But fear not, III is not all blown out psych rock for headz, some of the tracks are humid, smoldering raga like dronescapes, buzzing guitar swells, spidery melodies, delicate and crystalline, others take that same ambience and wrap it around urgently strummed acoustic guitars, creating a sort of dark psychfolk, but it’s not too long before the record explodes into another incendiary blast of full on speaker shredding freakout.

The second half of the record is heavy on the dark blissy drift, the slow burning drifts, the blurred desert-y shimmer, all of which culminate in the super melodic 10+ minute closer, which sounds poised to explode, but instead channels that energy into something much more sublime, a long drawn out spacedrone / krautrock drift. The guitars thick and distorted, churning and roiling, but laced with gorgeous streaks of melody, dreamy, but still heavy, and pretty much the perfect way to close out Ulaan Khol’s epic psychedelic songsuite. Even though this is the third in a trilogy, we’re hoping S.R.S. will do an Ulaan Khol IV anyway, or maybe start making prequels, or something, ’cause we want more!

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