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Zap Bang Magazine reviews Witch s/t

Forums › Forums › Dinosaur Related Discussions › Dinosaur/J News & Discussions › Zap Bang Magazine reviews Witch s/t

  • This topic has 0 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 19 years, 10 months ago by AGAP.
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  • March 27, 2006 at 1:39 pm #48904
    AGAP
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      zapbang.org

      Quote:
      Witch
      Witch
      Tee Pee
      2006-03-27

      You could always gain a quiet pleasure whilst listening to Dinosaur Jr. knowing that before they became the big college indie rock band of the late ’80s they were a speed Hardcore band. It’s a little like having a mate who’s generally the nicest guy in the world but to those who know him know that should provoked, he could be the evilest bastard imaginable. J Mascis, the longhaired lead guitarist of Dinosaur Jr. has just gone barroom himself with his latest project, Witch, which sees him return to his original weapon of choice – the drums – and a little closer to the hardcore sound that pre-empted Dinosaur Jr.

      The foundations that make up the Witch four piece are fairly unusual considering the mixture of early 70s heavy metal and stoner rock that is Witch’s fire, with Mascis opting for two members of the Avant-Folk outfit Feathers, Asa Irons and Kyle Thomas, who had been recently opening for the likes of Sufjan Stevens and Bonnie Prince Billy, completing the band with himself and longtime friend Dave Sweetapple. The conflux of influences and styles brings a really sharp fresh mood to a sound that is essentially nothing new and this can be heard right away on the record. With Kyle Thomas on vocals sounding like a young Ozzy Osbourne who was still capable of smacking his wife about, the first track opens on lucid fire-branding riff before, Mascis kicks in on the drums sounding like he might have rent to collect.

      Witch’s guitars sound a hell of a lot more robust and ‘jaw on curb’ crunching.

      If someone had told me a year ago that the geezer out of Dinosaur Jr. and a couple of mates out of an airy dulcimer and harp-playing folk band, were going to get together and make a sort of hybrid of Black Sabbath and Kyuss and pull it off, I probably would of replied, “Yeah mateâ€

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