Asva is a band helmed by Stuart Dahlquist, formerly of Burning Witch, Sunn o))), and Goatsnake, and recorded with members of bands like Burning Witch, Mr. Bungle, and Earth. You probably don't need to know much beyond that to have some idea of what this sounds like already, but leaving this at a paragraph wouldn't do it justice. Their new album for Southern Records (not to be confused with Southern Lord, who I initially thought was putting this out), What You Don't Know is Frontier, is a sparser, more composed, more varied take on the metallic drone pioneered by Sunn o))), and ultimately, manages to be a pretty damn good album. The first track, “What You Don't Know in Frontier” (sic), is a Sunn o)))-style drone, sped up, with a very prominent organ in front of it. Noisy, fuzzed-out, feedbacking guitars drift in and out, and give way to atmospheric, Earth-y leads, subtle changes in the rhythm guitar, and so-slow-they're-barely-there drums. “Christopher Columbus” is built on a subharmonic bass drone that sounds like the movement of the ocean, with cymbal crashes adding a sense of impending doom. Inevitably, the feedbacking guitars come in and drone mechanically over it, sounding something like a doomed vessel lost at sea. Drones are piled on and phased in and out over time. Drums and metallic chugging create a surprisingly rhythmic build-up to slow, actually musical sounding guitar leads. “A Game in Hell, Hard Work in Heaven” starts out with a clean, contemplative guitar on top of a subtle organ drone. Organs overtake the guitars, evoking more of a sense of hope than anything else on the album so far. Chanting vocals in a language I honestly can't identify come in over sometimes discordant keyboards and an Earth-y lead guitar, which all eventually builds into a meandering climax of sound. The last track, “A Trap For Judges” is a sprawling, almost 25-minute epic that builds from a keyboard drone up to a strangely hopeful sounding cloud of feedback, keyboards, and the ever-present downtuned rhythm guitar and drums trying to crush it all underfoot. This song turns into probably the closest thing to Sunn o))) these guys do on this album, with the trademark Sunn o))) guitar dynamic, with the “rhythm” guitar stomping around like an angry dinosaur, and the “lead” droning on top of it. The biggest difference is, these guys actually speed it up quite a bit, although still keeping it incredibly slow. It breaks down into an organ drone that builds into a hopeful climax and an awesome ending for the album. I can't find any tour dates or anything for these guys, but everything I've read about their live set suggests that you should probably actually wear earplugs for once if you catch them. The album is out today on Southern Records. While I doubt this album will change your mind if you're not into this sort of thing, generally, fans of Sunn o))), Burning Witch, or Southern Lord style metal will definitely dig it. More info can, of course, be found at the band's MySpace page.
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