Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Review: Electric Moon / Terminal Cheesecake “In Search of Highs Volume 3”



The third volume of Riot Season Records’ “In Search of Highs” brings together Electric Moon and Terminal Cheesecake. As a testament to the bands and the label, the pressing of 300 in blue and 300 in red basically sold before they were even released, which is quite something.
Electric Moon start the record with “Beacon Light Hereafter”, a song that slowly taps along and creeps its way in with a lightly psychedelic riff that feels quite haunting, but in a sense that you are heading towards the light. It slowly builds with a certain emotive feeling only Electric Moon seem to be able to produce, and the song starts to take on a life of its own as it thickens up with layer after layer of what conjures that sense of travelling off into space. The soaring guitar drops in and out followed by a riff that opens up the space rock, then as it comes to a high everything stops and you can feel everything drifting out into to nowhere. The bass remind you that you’re still out there somewhere and the drum rhythms hold you in the hypnotic trance of space. As this keeps drifting about the guitar takes you further out there, back and forth, again and again and again. Everything slowly starts to build and become more hypnotic, giving you the sense you’re slowly coming back towards the Earth, and as the hypnotic rhythm speeds up you’re back to a familiar place and for the next 5 minutes Electric Moon kick into overdrive doing what they do best, making that jam that keeps repeating its self, putting the listener into a sonic beat that feels like a chant to the skies. 
No way can your head not nod to this, 21:44 of pure magic. I know that they have done it before and will do it again, but “Beacon Light Hereafter” shines like a beacon amongst a back catalogue of the highest standard.


On the flipside, Terminal Cheesecake are a band I remember from back in the 90’s listening to John Peel but I have to admit they’ve passed me by since they reformed back in 2013.
“Fake Loop” slowly takes hope of you in an abrasive manor with a series of spoken lines mixed within that give you a darker psych image from the backstreets of England. Layer after layer of fuzzy guitar lines that almost feel apocalyptic at times. 
“Song for John Part 2” has a fuzzy live feel to it that kicks in like an early Hawkwind song. As the thick layers of guitar ride over each other, the rhythm section creates a drone like hypnotic backbeat. As the song takes on a life of its own, the speed doesn’t pick up and the fuzz of the guitar turns a lot more abrasive.
Definitely a lot more mood inducing through the darker feel to the music and subject, Terminal Cheesecake are a band I am going to revisit the back catalogue. 
A third pressing in black is now up for pre-order:
Terminal Cheesecake




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