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Showing posts with label Desertfest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Desertfest. Show all posts

Wednesday, 4 April 2018

Desertfest London stage times released




The UK's premier independent Stoner Rock, Doom, Psych & Sludge festival, lands in Camden Town once again for its 7th edition on 4th - 6th May 2018.

Featuring a stellar lineup across three days and six legendary venues along Camden High Street, this year's festival includes acts such as Jex Thoth, Napalm Death, Graveyard, Monster Magnet, High On Fire, EyeHateGod, Akercoke, Hawkwind, Weedeater, The Obsessed and many more.

The stage times have been released in a handy lineup poster (above), and if that isn't enough you can also consult the 'Clash Finder' HERE to make sure you plan your festival and don't miss any of your favourite bands.

For more information including acts, tickets and other updates, please visit the official Desertfest London website.

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Monday, 15 May 2017

Live: DESERTFEST 2017, London 30/04/2017



DESERTFEST 
London, UK
30/04/2017


Your humble correspondent set off to the capital once again for day three of Desertfest 2017, one of the premier doom and stoner festivals in the world, and travelled light for maximum impact. Desertfest has made a real niche for itself over the past few years due to it's fantastic atmosphere, unfussy professionalism and great lineups, with this year being no exception.

Camden strikes a more subdued note these days under the current regime, with several of the regular bars and shops being closed and a rather downbeat atmosphere prevailing. Yes, the Dev remains a grittily dark outpost of alternative culture where the shadows of it's goth heritage still lay dormant. Although it will likely survive the current thrust to gentrification (the barman told me that he'd have to be 'taken out in a coffin') it remains one of the few remaining authentic places in Camden, which is increasingly becoming a dystopian vision of itself.


The Roundhouse, however, is more translucent than ever and is still one of the better largest venues in London. And so it was that Wolves in the Throne Room conjured up a storm, the dimmed lights and stage fires forming the perfect backdrop to a viscerally emotive and atmospheric performance. Wolves are the almost-perfect encapsulation of black metal, the chords hitting you physically on an emotional level even before you hear them, and the dissonance creating it's own pagan poetry, and leaving the crowd as stunned as they were euphoric.




Candlemass, grandmasters of epic doom ham, were up next for what was a note-perfect parade through their greatest hits – 'Well of Souls', 'Bewitched', 'Darl Reflections', 'Crystal Ball', 'At the Gallows End' and ending with a peerless 'Solitude', the band have probably never sounded better and the doomheads at the Roundhouse lapped it up. All it was missing was Messiah's trademark 'doom dancing'...



And last up were Sleep, kicking off with a heavy-as-fuck 'Holy Mountain' and 'Sonic Titan' which set the stage for a rampantly scuzzy hour which ended in a pulverising 'Cultivator/Improved Morris' that sent the capacity crowd at the Roundhouse go home satisfied, and another Desertfest sealed as a complete victory.

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Thursday, 5 May 2016

Live: Desertfest 2016 - London, 29/04/2016 - 01/05/2016


DESERTFEST
London, UK
29/04/2016 - 01/05/2016 


With classic lack of foresight I upgraded myself from punter to critic whilst travelling on the East Coast mainline to London without having even the vaguest outline of which bands I wanted to see. But, undeterred I dropped my bags off at my Kings Cross dive hotel and headed out to Camden to feast my senses on the Desertfest 2016 experience.


First up were Egypt at the Electric Ballroom, with the American power trio so keen to start that they had to be told to leave the stage and come back on 15 minutes later! When they eventually began the crowd were treated to a feast of bluesy riffage, starting with 'Valley of the Kings' and ending with a ten-minute wig-out of the raunchily upbeat 'Dirty Witch' by way of the standout track of their set - a wonderfully mellow 'Queen of All Time', which went from smokey lead lines to heads-down doom stomping.

Following that were another trio, Sweden's Asteroid. Less compressed and overdriven, their sound distinguished by clearer riffs and hectic fills, the suitably attired chaps had a cocky and exuberant blast as they romped through a divine demonstration of stoner rock, ending with a gorgeous rendition of 'Time'.

There then followed a sudden change of musical gear as the rather heavier Crowbar took the stage for a brutal but musically sparse set, demonstrating fierce riffola and a monochrome delivery that impressd the crowd at the increasingly rammed Ballroom. Following them were Friday's headliners Corrosion of Conformity, whose blend of desert rock and hardcore hit the right spot. Rather a minority interest in their heyday, CoC can now command a room full of devoted (and young) followers - your correspondent was lectured by a young fan in the toilets asking if I'd heard anything by 'Corrosion' ("only 25 years ago", I replied) - and on the strength of this performance, deservedly so.

Saturday kicked off with Leeds' very own Bong Cauldron. Now, I may be rather biased having seen the lads play so many times (and I'd probably go to Tory Party conference if they were on) but their performace to a packed Underworld was simply extraordiinary - slower and heavier than a supertanker, and full of killer riffs such as 'Bury Your Axe in the Crania of Lesser Men', Bong Cauldron are surely on their way to bigger and better things in the world of Doom.

Back at the Ballroom, Conan collectively tore a hole in the cosmos with their incomparably brutal set. With old classics like 'Hawk As Weapon' mixing it with newer, faster cuts such as 'Foehammer' and 'Revengeance', they appeared to be exactly the act Desertfest was made for. Battle Doom? Yes please!

Meanwhile over at the Dev, one of the least spoiled corners of Camden's former gothic splendour, My Project Ghost were just wrapping up a set of much juicy extremity.

Sunday kicked off with the rather mighty Witchsorrow at the Ballroom. With a set so crunchingly loud that it got my skull shaking, they served up one of the best performances of the weekend - droning low riffs and hard delivery, wrapping a bleak message of hopelessness and doom, this was the closest I'd seen them match the power they promised at Damnation 2012 all those years ago. A set which boded well for their durability on the UK doom scene.

Blood Ceremony, however, were even better. Having been on tour for weeks they were professional as Satan and polished to a shine, showcasing material from their new album 'Lord of Misrule' as well as lesser-played tracks like the sublime 'Drawing Down The Moon'. Singer Alia O'Brien's vocal virtuosity as well as her skills on organ and flute elevated the set firmly into the occult stratosphere, the crowd lapping up a sound that combined retro doom riffing with gothic ham stagecraft.

And then it was off to Koko with all the stampeding doomy hordes for Electric Wizard. As difficult as it is to analyse a sound so immense and dense as the Wizard's, it would appear that in contrast to their punchy and punishing set at Damnation their sound was slightly looser, fuzzier, and trippier - the result being a deliciously accessible and entertaining mammoth of sludge which had the crowds in doomy rapture. No encores given (in classic Wizard style) but none required, as all were fully satisfied and probably stunned by their full-on sonic assault. Peerless.

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