Grails
http://www.grailsongs.com
styles: instrumental rock, psychedelic
others: Faust, Six Organs of Admittance, Hawkwind
Black
Tar Prophecies Vols. 1, 2, & 3
Important, 2006
rating: 4/5
reviewer: p funk
Few albums have disappointed me like Grails' 2004 Redlight did.
Their 2003 debut, The Burden of Hope, mixed Mogwai-style
blockbuster movie instrumentals with Neurosis' sense of impending
apocalypse, and hinted at great things to come. Redlight wasn't
great things, though – it was merely more of the same, a bit stifled
and stilted despite the fact that its players had clearly absorbed a
wide array of sounds and developed a formidable vocabulary of moods.
Two years later, Grails have parted ways with their violinist, rinsed
the studio sheen off their hands, and spent time broadening and honing
their sound over the course of two limited-run vinyl-only releases,
which are compiled here and joined by a pair of additional jams. And
I'm no longer disappointed.
Grails have made progress primarily through taking a step back from
rock. That's not to say that the genre isn't this album's normative
mode – it undoubtedly is – but the song forms are wonderfully diverse.
"Black Tar Frequencies" cops a page from the post-punk playbook and
fuses dub bass with painterly wah guitar strokes and piano stabs,
sounding like Maximum Joy doped to infinity inside a cavern of reverb.
A similarly massaging bass lead powers "Erosion Blues," but this time
the additional instrumentation is faint and ambiguous – there might be
a sax or a 12-string guitar meandering around the edges, but a solemn
low-end incantation gobbles up most of the song's spectrum.
If this collection has a spiritual home in space and time, it's early
'70s Europe, as many of Grails' moves mirror those of British and
continental art rockers. Tape splices and samples faintly conjure the
mad house that is Faust's debut, while the album's few bombastic
moments – most notably "Belgian Wake-Up Drill" – share an affinity for
lurching, brink-of-chaos pummel with King Crimson and International
Harvester. Record collector rock this might be: time spent traveling
down progressive and psychedelic rock's backroads certainly enriches
the listening experience, and familiarity with the album's less
prominent Middle Eastern folk, "out" jazz, and drone elements sheds
some light on the group's newfound murkiness. Like that of the first
wave of American post-rockers, Grails' music now strives for new maps
of everything, inviting omnivorous listeners with a penchant
for stylistic trainspotting. "More Erosion" even sounds like a really
eff'd up Tortoise, dragging vibraphones into a mass of muddy, slurring
backwards effects. So this disc isn't an innovation or revelation, but
that's also okay, as most of Grails' "source material" is guilty of
just as much borrowing. Early art rock watersheds like Faust IV
and Future Days don't start new cross-genre conversations as
much as they just edit them particularly well. Cheers to these guys
for trying their hand at that same art here.
1. Back to the Monastery
2. Bad Bhang Recipe
3. Belgian Wake-Up Drill
4. Smokey Room
5. Black Tar Frequencies
6. Stray Dog
7. Erosion Blues
8. More Erosion
9. Black Tar Prophecy

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