Press- Reviews
Aug.
4/ 2009--Review of "Desert Opuses" in Stoner
Rock / The
Obelisk (thanks to JJ Koczan/ HP Taskmaster):
"Since
High Watt Electrocutions main man Ryan Settee prescribed a
headphone listen in the liner notes, I broke out my dusty old pair and
went for it as directed. Yes, I do everything liner notes tell me. It’s
not a bad way to go through life. Beats religion, anyhow.
Sure enough,
as Settee promised, a listen to Desert Opuses
– the second release from the Winnipeg songwriter /multi-instrumentalist/ producer under the High Watt
Electrocutions moniker following 2007’s Night Songs– through
even the dingiest of headphones proved that the tonal richness and
layered density is best experienced at close range and ridiculous
volume. The ringing guitars of “Slow March” that follow the distinctly
Middle Eastern tones of “Ode to Snakecharming” feel like they could eat
your head whole and launch you on some psychedelic journey into the
rainbow colored belly of a giant lizard. Like a scene out of some acid
cartoon. Like Queens of the Stone Age gone spiritual.
Desert Opuses
delivers what the title offers, which might be its greatest
accomplishment. Not being familiar with the landscape in Winnipeg, I’m
assuming it’s not quite the same as Death Valley, but Settee (with a
host of guests) harnesses a dune-climbing aesthetic that knows it’s
best to travel by night. Layers of acoustic guitar, vocals, Moog and
other noise shift in and out, producing a wash that is positively
engulfing. Even on the instrumental “Obliteration,” which is one of
Desert Opuses’
most down to earth moments, the vibe of moonlit psychedelia is palpable
and one can dig a tunnel into the sound itself and come out somewhere
different each time.
Of course, “Headphone Opus” is an
appropriately rich listening experience that lends credibility to
Settee’s liner notes suggestion and the feeling of just how well
planned Desert Opuses was to begin with. A highlight of side B,
Settee brings the bass up front and lets it ride shotgun for a big sky
trip down the empty road ahead. Piano, keys, moaning vocals and more
make it so that there’s so much life in the recording it’s hard to
think of it as an homage to a place so desolate, but the affected
musical ecosystem is nonetheless impeccably pulled off. The minor
chords throughout keep a consistent exoticism and Middle Eastern spice
in the sound, and even as “Tut Will Have His Revenge” launches into its
noisy and chaotic finish, the overwhelming calmness is left unbothered.
Settee fades into the riff-then-organ excursion “Evilution” and closes
with three minutes of Moog and harmonica interplay on “Stripped Ruins.”
His pairing of elements gives Desert Opuses
a fresh sound in an otherwise well-established genre, and while the
album is mostly unconcerned with the traditional songwriting tactics to
which much of desert rock strictly adheres, an engaging balance between
high artistry and worldly tact is struck that remains unblemished no
matter how far out Settee goes sonically. And to be fair, he goes
pretty far out. Desert Opuses will have a sound too complex for
some, but plenty of heads will find their minds willing to be expanded
by its journeying tones and unfolding grandeur. Here’s to it."