SMOTE
A GRAND STREAM (PINK & BLACK VINYL) (ROCKET RECORDINGS)
Last Summer, Daniel Foggin, guitarist, writer and chief architect of Smote, uprooted himself from his usual home in Newcastle to live and work in a farmhouse in Kelso, near the Scottish border.
"Through the summer when I was working up there, myself and Rob (Smote drummer) would finish work and go sit by a small river and have a couple of beers in the sun, and it was the best thing ever" he relates "So I guess the philosophy is that to some people it looks like any other stream, but to us it was supreme happiness." Hence came the title of the fourth Smote album proper, one largely recorded in this same farmhouse - A Grand Stream.
It's an album that's the truest incarnation thus far of his vision for this band - a full-scale psychic voyage into the ether and a drone-and-repetition-fuelled series of incantations that takes simple, primal ingredients and utilises them for the purposes of aural sorcery, summoning spectres and revelations aplenty in its wake.
Whilst the folk-tinged, ceremonial ambience that Smote have made their trademark is present and correct here, utilising Swedish classic psych heaviness and Swans textures as fuel for the ominous rhythms of 'Coming Out Of A Hedge Backwards' and the uplifting cadences of opener 'Sitting Stone Part 1', Foggin and his cohorts also waste little time exploring new more eerie and ethereal textures and dimensions.
The meditative 'Chantry' in particular sees them gravitate towards a headspace akin to the drone-based epiphanies of Kali Malone's 'Does Spring Hide Its Joy' filtered through the transcendent amplifier worship of 'Earth 2'.
A Grand Steam takes this band - one who've always eschewed the cliches and stumbling blocks of all contemporary psych rock in favour of their own unique and wyrd vision - into a realm in which they transcend through willpower and skill alike into something preternaturally thrilling, mapping out their own crepuscular new territory Question is; dare you step over the threshold?