Doomed & Stoned

BRANT BJORK:
A Portrait

Photographs by Johnny Hubbard


Get a load of this man…

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Well I’m gettin’ up when the sun goes down
And I shine ‘em up and I hit the town
Well I trim it clean and I roll it up
And then I take it nice and slow…



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“Brant Bjork has spent over a quarter-century at the epicenter of Californian desert rock. From cutting his teeth drumming and composing on the legendary Kyuss’ landmark early albums, to propelling the seminal fuzz of Fu Manchu from 1994-2001 while producing other bands, putting together offshoot projects, and over the last 20 years embarking on his solo career as a singer, guitarist and bandleader, founding his own record label and more, his history is a winding narrative of relentless, unflinching creativity. Brant Bjork is a founding pioneer of the Stoner Rock/Desert Rock music scenes.”


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Shot at the Portal in Louisville, Kentucky on
March 21st, 2025 by Johnny Hubbard
(FB | IG)


THOU

Live ‘n’ Loud

Photographs by Johnny Hubbard


Doomed & Stoned has pure ferocity on display this week, as Baton Rogue sludge pummelers THOU (now in their 20th year) take on Kentucky audiences at the Portal venue in Louisville. Bryan Funck (vocals), Andy Gibbs (guitar), Matthew Thudium (guitar), Mitch Wells (bass), and Tyler Coburn (drums) were snapped earlier this month by the lens of longtime contributor Johnny Hubbard. The doomers have been touring in support of their sixth original full-length album, 'Umbilical’ (2024).

“This record is for the radicals, the crackpots, the exiles who have escaped the wasteland of capitulation,” says the band. “This record is for the militants and zealots refusing to surrender to comforts, to practicalities, to thirty pieces of silver. And this record is most especially for the weaklings and malingerers, burdened by capricious indulgence, hunched by the deep wounds of compromise, shuffling in limp approximation, desperately reaching back towards integrity and conviction.”

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At last, as we plunge into the abscess, blighted spirits so bereft. Shameful weeping, voices echo from the bottom of a well. Can you hear the cries of worn out phrases from listless gazes, pretentious lingering in childish phases, the heartless hand and empty gestures, the pitiful searching for hollow pleasures. Lost in a palace of mirrors, staring at infinite reflections gazing back, too near to see the mark of shame. Lost in empty dialectics, the art of building up and tearing down, of discussing all things and accomplishing nothing. Of compromised ideals, friendships abandoned, our works substandard, principles meandering. So speak our names as a warning, as a curse, as a failure. At last, it’s time to die. So die.



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Everything you’ve ever done, everything you’ve ever said, everything you’ve ever felt is a dagger on my belt. And I’m going to stab it till you’re dead to me. Everything I’ve ever done, everything I’ve ever said, everything I’ve ever felt is a chain around my neck. And you’re going to drag it till I’m dead to me. I thought nothing could come between us, two dreamers. But our mistakes are etched in stone till the end of our lives, till the end of time. And we’re being crushed beneath the weight.



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When the shrieking eye turns inward to the prison without locks, weakness laid bare. The artifice peeled back. The true face is revealed. To see the walls of limitation, grey skinned and impure, that righteous incoherence. When the shrieking eye turns inward, weakness is laid bare.



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Unclench those fists and release that white knuckled grip, a resolution to fruitless searching, a renouncement of sentimental frailty. Farewell, age’ed stalwarts. Farewell, stagnant corruption. Arise from our deathbed. Return to life and walk away. Life used to be so hard, now everything is easy. Turn back the page with my friend, with my friend from so far away. We’ve seen how love can grow, now we see how it dies. Peace has finally come upon me, and it leaves me weak. Farewell, age’ed stalwarts. Farewell, ancient corruption. Arise from our deathbed. Return to life and walk away. And I’m not coming back.



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Shot at the Portal in Louisville, Kentucky on
February 2nd, 2025 by Johnny Hubbard
(FB | IG)


DOPETHRONE:
A Portrait

Photographs by Johnny Hubbard


Montréal sludge wrecking ball DOPETHRONE has been at it for damn near 20 years and with six albums to their reputation and an astounding US tour they show no signs of stopping! Here are some snaps of Vincent Houde (vox, guitar), Micaël Riopel (bass), Shawn Ellingham (drums) wrangling devastating licks and ravaging lyrics at Portal in Kentucky recently. An unforgettable show!

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SMOKE!

  DRINK!

      DIE!



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Ain’t no sunshine when she’s…

      GOOOOOOOOONE!!!!



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Shipwrecked
Creatures

   Dodging
      Light….!



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Shot at the Portal in Louisville, Kentucky on
November 27th, 2024 by Johnny Hubbard
(FB | IG)


HIGH ON FIRE:

A PORTRAIT


Photographs by Johnny Hubbard


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No one will listen here
    Too late now, so we dread it
Decrepit word and lies
    Will we live to regret it?



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No devil prepared my enemy
    For this kind of storm
It’s been foretold, foreboding
    As you sleep, the plot as lest is born



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Captured at the Mercury Ballroom on August 31, 2024
in Louisville, Kentucky by Johnny Hubbard
(FB | IG)


Ripplefest Texas ‘24 Recap!

You may have heard by now that RIPPLEFEST TEXAS is growing into the largest and most alluring festival in the doom/stoner scene, west of “The Pond.” In 2024, Lick of My Spoon Productions and festival wizard Ryan Garney organized about 40 bands to play three separate stages at two venues over four days, with no gaps and no overlap in the music.

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The 2025 edition of Ripplefest Texas is taking shape fast with big names like Unida, Left Lane Cruiser, Mos Generator, Fostermother and more on the bill and tickets are on sale now! Are you on the fence about attending? We’ve got the info you need right here!

Doomed & Stoned contributor Doob Solo got together with Blue Heron bassist Big Steve, and Scotsmen festival veterans Iain and Jamie to recap their respective experiences at Ripplefest Texas, 2024. Sit in with this chill group while they illustrate the performance highlights, meet-ups, memorabilia and adventures that made their trips to the festival unforgettable.




REZN

☽ A Portrait ☾


Chicago psychedelic doomers REZN were photographed earlier this year by Johnny Hubbard on May 12th, 2023 at Portal in Louisville, Kentucky. Featuring Rob McWilliams (guitar, lead vocals), Phil Cangelosi (bass), Spencer Ouellette (modular synthesizers, saxophone), and Patrick Dunn (drums, sitar). We hope you enjoy this excursion into the band’s stage performance, lyrics, and music.


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Search far and wide
Lucidity running dry
Looking for something that’s never there



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Feels like I’ve been here before
Dropped in a world of my own
Perception streaking and blurred
Fusing into the absurd



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Don’t look away when it’s looking at you
Don’t run away from what you already knew
Don’t look away when it’s looking for you
You’ll find a way when there’s nothing to prove



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Will you care who I am
When my body turns to stone?
Will you know what I did
When the ink fades from the page?



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EYEHATEGOD

∋ A Portrait ∈


Last year, Doomed & Stoned contributor Johnny Hubbard captured NOLA sludge legends EYEHATEGOD in Louisville, Kentucky at Portal at fifteenTWELVE on November 3rd, 2023. Featured are singer Mike IX Williams, guitarist Jimmy Bower, bassist Gary Mader, and drummer Aaron Hill.


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Wake up at 6 AM
Go to work, go to school
Every day, every day, every day, every day

Wake up at 5 AM
Go to work
Every day, every day, every day, every day, every day



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It began just as I knew it would
Black and blue crayon scratches



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Shoes don’t fit, I don’t fit
East bank mess, west bank wreck
Shoes don’t fit, you don’t fit
This shit don’t quit, we don’t fit



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Clamp down on the deer trap
Chewing thru their cartilage
This is the birth of a much more ugly christ



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YOB: Live & Loud in Louisville

At the start of summer, photographer Johnny Hubbard witnessed a live show of legendary underground band YOB, playing Portal in Louisville, Kentucky. Here are some of his choice snaps, captured during Yob’s first US tour since 2019.

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Death on the horizon
Consciousness asleep
The soul is unprepared
Fear runs deep
Always agonizing
On what can’t be known
Heavy is th
e burden
When the jester rules the throne


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Churning maelstrom
A dying
kiss
Fury let loose


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A mammoth portal
Of epic size
Ruthless intens
ity
Eating all light


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Aeons old black hole devours
Empty hollow within
Eating the pain
Rej
ecting the soul
The beginning of the end


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Siren’s call
From the sea
Raging current
Pulls us under
Figh
ting for air
Scream for release
As colors dance and weave


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Beyond all birth and death
The real is timeless
Open the shutter of the mind
And it will be f
looded with light


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MR. BUNGLE
MELVINS  ☆
SPOTLIGHTS

★ The Showbox, Seattle


  Photo Review by Chris Schanz


One might ask what would bring me out of retirement? Was I retired? What the hell have I been doing for the past three years? All things Doomed and Stoned have been in flux for me. I’ve been focusing on my day job. I’ve been focusing on my family. I’ve been focusing on my garden. All this focusing has left me nearsighted. Blurry. The COVID era left me with a shitty hangover (not long COVID – I’m just trying to forget that shit and move on!). Sure – I’ve shot shows, band portraits, weddings, funerals yadda yadda fucking yadda. I wanted a sign that the universe is ready for my gifts, once again.

Enter Mr. Bungle and The Melvins. The Geek Show Tour, sponsored by Ipecac Records celebrates both the vast accomplishments of Mike Patton (Faith No More, Fantomas, Mr. Bungle) and The Melvins – on their 40th anniversary! The perfect lure to get me off my ass and feel like I actually can contribute something to music, art and photography in general without licking the taint of Instagram and an AI-generated algorithmic overlord soon set to devour us, Titans, Gods and all.

The Showbox at the Market is the perfect set. I feel at home there, usually right by the soundboard. So many shows seen there – Sonic Youth, Nudedragons (Soundgarden), Brothers Of the Sonic Cloth, Sleep, Uncle Acid, Bell Witch, Graveyard, Chelsea Wolfe, The Black Angels – on and on, and on and on. It’s by far Seattle’s best concert hall, IMHO.


SPOTLIGHTS



I admit. I wasn’t prepared for Spotlights. A buddy of mine in Denver by way of San Francisco said they’re sweetly DOOMY. I was in. I got three songs to fall in love. Head over heels! Words escape my brain, only memories of sweet, subsonic joy flowing through my chest and brain. I followed up with Sarah Quintenero after the show at the merch booth, loading up on their vinyl. I’m blasting “Tidals” on vinyl while writing this in my cave, but “Alchemy for the Dead” is a MASTERPIECE! I’ve been binging on their Bandcamp all week now. Bold, deep bass fuzz, ethereal vocals and serrated guitar riffs. My new summer soundtrack.

They’re still on tour – and I highly advise you to see them now!



Spotlights Setlist

  • “The Alchemist” (2023’s Alchemy For The Dead)
  • “Sunset Burial” (2023’s Alchemy For The Dead)
  • “Algorithmic” (2023’s Alchemy For The Dead)
  • “False Gods” (2023’s Alchemy For The Dead)
  • “Part 4” (2020’s We Are All Atomic)


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MELVINS



This brings me back to the Melvins. The force that shaped my twenties in Seattle. My band Fuzzbud had a six-degrees-of-Kevin Bacon thing with a Morton, WA / Monteseno, WA, somebody’s cousin played in a band that opened for…whatevs. We tuned to DUH flat and had a good time. BUT…The Melvins were always a mainstay in any of my playlists.

King Buzzo did NOT disappoint! I was singing along from the photo pit. I was kidding beforehand that there should be some sort of SNL skit – a play by play commentary of the photo pit action. Think Howard Cosell announcing each of the photogs falling over each other for the shots. I thought it was funny, anyways. I’m a dork.

ANYWHOO. Buzzo provides! Dale’s a GOD. I got my HEALTHY fix of Houdini, culminating in a THREE BASS OVERLOAD on Night Goat with Sara Qintenero from Spotlights and Trevor Dunn from Mr. Bungle joining Steve McDonald to rumble your bunghole. What did I miss by NOT seeing the tour finale in San Francisco? A reunion of Fantomas (Mike, Buzz and Dave Lombardo)! When these guys get together, (black) magic always happens!



Melvins Setlist

  • “I Can’t Shake It” (1998 split with Cosmic Psychos, Some Girls/I Can’t Shake It)
  • “Zodiac” (1990’s Bullhead)
  • “Copache” (1993’s Houdini)
  • “I Want to Hold Your Hand” (2018’s Pinkus Abortion Technician - Beatles Cover)
  • “Hammering” (2022’s Bad Mood Rising)
  • “Never Say You’re Sorry” (2022’s Bad Mood Rising)
  • “Evil New War God” (2010’s The Bride Screamed Murder)
  • “Let It All Be” (1999’s The Bootlicker)
  • “Honey Bucket” (1993’s Houdini)
  • “Revolve” (1994’s Stoner Witch)
  • “Night Goat” (1993’s Houdini - with Steve McDonald, Spotlights Sarah Quintero and Mr. Bungle bass Trevor Dunn on basses)


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MR. BUNGLE



The main event. I knew they led with the Mr. Rogers theme on most nights. ADORABLE! But to my surprise, and delight! They performed the John Sebastian theme to “Welcome Back Kotter”! FUCK YES. I’m a Sweathog and everyone knows it! We would also be treated to the Pepto Bismol jingle not too far into the set.

I was wanting, wishing for a few more songs from 1991’s Mr. Bungle release, primarily some “Squeeze Me Macaroni” and “Stubb-A-Dub” action. Stubb was my go-to track in our house in college. After many a trip, I believed I was the proverbial “family dog” to our tribe…just elated to be along for the ride scrambling from party to party. Luckily for me, I got some “My Ass Is On Fire” and I was satiated. “Speak Spanish Or Die” brought me right back to my thrash and skating days (Days. Rolled my ankle on the half-pipe and drove the crew to all the spots after that). Van Halen’s Loss of Control? A TOTAL surprise and I was elated! Ear to ear grins and giggles!

I came for the Melvins, Mike Patton and Dave Lombardo, but I left with a deep adoration for Spotlights and a 365-day calendar of “The Many O-Faces of Scott Ian” and that’s more than OK. I’m in love. Thank you, Scott, for fulfilling this schoolboy’s adolescent dreams, 30 years later!



Mr. Bungle Setlist

  • “Welcome Back” (John Sebastian cover)
  • “Bungle Grind”
  • “Eracist”
  • “Spreading the Thighs of Death”
  • “Loss for Words” (Corrosion of Conformity cover)
  • “Hypocrites”
  • “Speak English or Die” (Stormtroopers of Death cover) (changed to “Speak Spanish or Die”)
  • “Glutton for Punishment”
  • “Anarchy Up Your Anus”
  • “Methematics”
  • “Hell Awaits” (Slayer cover) (intro)
  • “True/Cold War/True”
  • “Raping Your Mind”
  • “World Up My Ass” (Circle Jerks cover) (with Michael Crain)
  • “Sudden Death”
  • Encore: “Loss of Control” (Van Halen cover)
  • Encore: “My Ass Is on Fire” (with PEP tag)

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All Them Witches & Blackwater Holylight: A Photographic Vision

~Photos by Drew Nesbitt~



It’s been a while since we featured the visual output of Drew Nesbitt of Njorodynphoto, who caught up with Nashville crooners ALL THEM WITCHES on their recent US tour with soulful doom rockers, BLACKWATER HOLYLIGHT from Portland. Along the trek, the bands paid a visited to an enthusiastic Texas crowd at the Mohawk in Austin on January 22nd, 2022, and Doomed & Stoned has the evidence! I’m tossing in the setlists and some live vids from the trail for your ocular and aural delight! (Billy Goate, Editor in Chief)



ALL THEM WITCHES






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Setlist

  1. Diamond
  2. 1x1
  3. Enemy of My Enemy
  4. 3-5-7
  5. Alabaster
  6. Rob’s Dream
  7. Charles William
  8. Everest
  9. The Children of Coyote Woman
  10. The Marriage of Coyote Woman
  11. Saturnine & Iron Jaw
  12. Swallowed by the Sea
  13. See You Next Fall
  14. When God Comes Back
  15. Blood and Sand/Milk and Endless Waters (encore)


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All The Witches at The Mohawk (Video by Chris Humes)



BLACKWATER HOLYLIGHT






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Blackwater Holylight at The Mowake (video by Chris Humes)


DOOM OVER PSKOV!

~By Anton Bryukov, Vladimir Alexseev, Сергей Мелихов~

Concert Photos by Фёдор Егоров
City Photos by Alexey Antonov

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Pskov is one of the oldest cities in Russia, the first historical mention in the chronicles date back to 903 AD. Through the course of many centuries the city of Pskov has been the center of many wars and conflicts, but only once the defense of the city was broken and Pskov was invaded.

After the founding of Saint-Petersburg, Pskov’s political and strategic importance in the western borders of Russia greatly diminished, and after Russia’s borders expanded to Riga (aka Tallinn, currently Estonia), Pskov has lost the status of a military and trade center. In the second World War, the city was under the occupation of the Nazis. Over three-thousand civilians tragically died during that time.

This city, filled with so many stories of sorrow, triumph, and pain, was ideal to hold Doom Over Pskov in the midwinter of 2022.

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Reflections by Vladimir Alekseev (frontman/vocalist, Neuropolis)



When we began to organize Doom Over Pskov, first of all we decided to see if there were any bands in the city which play in the doom metal genre, do they exist, how are things within the scene with gigs, and support from the fans.

We were sadly surprised to find out that (but for a few exceptions) Pskov’s metal scene is almost devoid of life, and the culture of metal gigs is almost non-existent.

Pavel Krasnov, leader of Inner Missing, had gathered a great line up for the festival – no doubt in that. The main question we asked ourselves was, Will the festival be of interest to anyone?  To make matters worse, the city was under semi-lockdown measures due to the ever-present COVID-19 infection. This created additional troubles and hardships for the organizers of the gig and the listeners alike.

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We were near an almost extinguished fire, with only a glimmer of hope to spark the interest of local heavy metal fans. There was a rather large promotional campaign to advertise the festival, and although we have used different strategies, the interest in the social media was not overwhelming at first.

But at some point, the old-school spirit and the anticipation of something unique took over. People began to show interest in social media and started asking questions. Then we understood that the festival would indeed gather its audience.

The concept of the gig’s lineup and sound was unconventional. The sound was like playing in an ancient dungeon, with an atmosphere of horror and existential dread.

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NEUROPOLIS opened the festival, the band having already become familiar to listeners of old-school death and doom metal. Neuropolis brings a unique interpretation of the death-doom sound.



The band continues to play live in various cities with their previous material and is working on new songs. In 2021, they played in Vyborg, Moscow (Doom And Stoner Halloween), Arkhangelsk, and of course Saint Petersburg.



In Pskov, the band succeeded in emotionally igniting part of the audience and preparing the rest to experience new and different sounds. The sound of melancholy, grief, and emptiness, the feeling which comes after hysteria, despair. The sound of sadness looming over the earth.

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INNER MISSING took the stage next at the Nora Club (Нора/Nora translates as “burrow”) to overpower the venue with the beautiful academic vocals of Melaer, which made the crowd go silent and full of bittersweet sadness.



Her voice was joined by the rare tones of Sigmund, who put the crowd in a trance, almost hovering over earth in some kind of limbo. The singing was accompanied by exquisite arrangements, which completed the feeling of deep immersion.



Fall out of the trance or leave the barren earth altogether? Where there are no more voices, only endless waves of cosmic sound, which lure you into the infinite depth.

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The music of ENDLESS OCEAN accomplished just that. First, there were no words to describe the full spectrum of emotions. Then came the realization that all words are dead and no one is to speak in the depth of space, and even when you are thrown back in the stratosphere, caressed by the cold winds you remain silent.



So what began with a brutal onslaught of growling death-doom continued as pure melodic Gothic-doom, culminating as a flight in the celestial abyss through the means of eclectic mix of post-doom, alternative, and even avant garde sounds.



It is hard to fully define the genre, the sound is so cosmically enveloping that it makes you forget about such things as genre tags. Missing one of the guitarists, Endless Ocean managed to engage the crowd fully, and got the last round of applause that evening.

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Reflections by Сергей “Blackknot” Мелихов (reviewer, Darkside)



A rare event in our desolate times. An entire mini-festival of sad music, ranging from the orthodox ‘90s soul-crushing death-doom and Gothic adventures to strict rhythmic post-doom.

This all happened at a time when underground life in Pskov was almost non-existent. Only the atmospheric black metal band Путь (Pathway) from Pskov tours Russia and abroad, and that is all that is present in the underground scene of the city today.

It was my first visit to the Nora. I usually attend venues only to listen to someone in particular and the gigs in this club were not my cup of tea. But Doom Over Pskov was perfect – cozy, friendly, and sad in a good way. I saw my old friends, had a few drinks. All the bands gave out a solid performance.

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Neuropolis stood out especially. Inner Missing performed as a duo with some pre-recorded instruments in the mix, and Endless Ocean were without their third guitarist and are an instrumental band.

The bands where different and together formed a logically complete event. The order in which they played was also logical, from brutal growls to a Gothic duo and ethereal instrumental post-metal.

Thanks to the guys in Pathway for introducing me to Neuropolis, with whom we have found a lot of common interests and decided to move towards the friendship of the underground movement of our cities.

We are waiting for them to return. Maybe another gig at Nora sometime would be great (the club is not as far on the outskirts of the city as some people claim). In these dark days, we are hoping for the best. We are waiting for Doom Over Neva!

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I would like to sincerely thank the staff of the Nora club and Anastasia personally, the bands Endless Ocean and Neuropolis, the sound engineer, photographers and all those who attended and supported our celebration of death. It was the first major festival outside of Saint-Petersburg I have organized, and if we take into considerations the risks that are present today, we have organized a successful, memorable event. I wish good luck to everyone, hope we will meet again in the future!

Pavel Krasnov aka Sigmund Краснов, Inner Missing


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I’ve attended the gig in the Nora club, it was entertaining It was a pleasant surprise for me to discover this genre. The sound was good and fat.

Фёдор Егоров, photographer


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Reflections by Anton Bryukov (bassist, Train to Elsewhere)



A few words about the past and present of the metal scene in Pskov. First, the present.

Путь (Pathway) are one of the finer examples of slow/mid-paced Russian atmospheric black-metal. Their style is unique; they sometimes use folk arrangements and instruments like the accordion.

The music may be compared to some post-black and atmospheric black acts like Panopticon or Wolves in The Throne Room, but yet has a distinct feel of early Katatonia (Dance Of December Souls era) and some influences from doom and Russian folk in their sound. The band began to make a name for themselves in Russia and abroad. Definitely the most successful band from Pskov.

Recommended albums: Песни Смерти (Songs Of Death) and Песни Смерти (The Vale of Sorrow) to get into there intriguingly atmospheric style of black-metal.



And now I will take a look into the past.

The now disbanded Артефакт (Artifact) band from Pskov recorded an album Дань прошлому (“A Tribute to the Past”) and release it in 2005. The album consists of some unconventional gothic-doom.

The more goth-sounding albums of Paradise Lost come to mind when listening to another band, Lake Of Tears. Their obscure and lo-fi production quality has a hidden catchy and melodic sound underneath. Themes of war, despair, darkness are in the center of the lyrics and narrative here. This doom-laden album was almost lost to time. Yet due to the efforts of Apostle of Doom and its administrator Boris Travkin was rescued from oblivion and is available for listening via vkontakte.

Apostle Of Doom is on a mission of finding, cataloging and publishing obscure Doom Metal from all over the world. Music which is otherwise lost to time. Lots of original, rare music here. Be sure to check it out!

There was another band that originated in Pskov and later moved to Saint-Petersburg. We Are talking about Burial Shades (also not disbanded). They played a mix of dark metal and doom-death with some symphonic overtones.



The sound is deep, depressing, lo-fi and massive at the same time. For fans of wickedly strange old-school doom-death.

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Sergej Bychkov (a member of Burial Shades) attended Doom Over Pskov and had this to say:

On January 8th, 2022, Pskov was submerged in darkness, due to a powerful performance of dark and angry guests from Moscow and Saint-Petersburg. Good and high quality music, the trademark of doom metal.

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In Russia, A Belated
Doom & Stoner
Halloween!


Review by Anton Bryukov

Photographs by Nadegda Holodnaya



Doom & Stoner Halloween took place on the 11th of December. The gig had been postponed due to COVID-related restrictions which were in effect in Moscow in late October.

The audience gathered at Peak Sound club to listen to some doom this cold, snowy evening. Desolate Music Promo Group organized the event. Desolate Music is well-known for organizing doom-metal festivals in Moscow.

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Soul Chariot



The first band to play was Soul Chariot, a relatively new name in the scene. They unleashed the thundering sound of traditional doom metal on the listeners. The drive and energy of the songs got the crowd moving. They ended the show with a cover of Pentagram’s “Forever My Queen.”



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Train To Elsewhere



The band in which I play – Train to Elsewhere – took the stage after that. We play a mix of traditional doom metal and gothic doom, focusing on the old-school atmospheric sound. We played some of our songs from the debut “Samhain” album and new stuff like “Hades” and “Blues.”



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heXenblatt



heXenblatt continued the evening with the mix of occult stoner-sludge doom which quickly filled the air with its presence. People slammed, moved to the music, and were in a hypnotic state on the slower parts of the performance.



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Autumn Woods



Next up were Autumn Woods, they performed a modern sounding mix of groove metal and doom-death. It could be called the earnings fastest performance bordering on faster styles of metal. A very technical, professional live set.




Neuropolis



Neuropolis from Saint-Petersburg stormed in after that. They were definitely the heaviest act of the show. The gloomy and dark sounding doom-death was matched by the superb theatrical performance of the vocalist. They performed songs from both the “Golem” album and the debut EP.



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Thunder Volt



The evening was closed by Thunder Volt who performed a unique mix of stoner-grunge doom. Having a lot in common with the music of the late 80-s and the early 90-s, the band has a tendency to play anthems and dirges of the doom-grunge fusion they are known for. This evening they have added a bit more sludge/hardcore punk into the mix.



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Credits:


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Now Playing:



Doomed & Stoned in
RUSSIA
Volume Two



As with any good sequel our team had a task to continue the formula established in Part I while bringing something new to the table. Part II is another look into Russia’s vast doom scene and contains bands from all over the country.

From the legendary heroic Viking myth of Scald to the dark pessimistic underground experiments of Voidwards, Part II contains the entire specter of doom metal. This time around we had quite a few sludge and stoner bands, and the darker side is represented by a few top-notch funeral doom contributions.

While containing some big “headliners” the overall compilation is more of an exploration of the underground. When gathering the material I noticed once again how authentic and honest our doom scene is. People who play Doom believe in what they do. That authenticity is what is most important.

We had people who recorded exclusive tracks and some tracks which have already achieved legendary status. We are especially grateful to Voj, who are arguably the first band in the world to play funeral doom, for contributing a track to the compilation – as we are thankful to every band who participated.

Alexey Sivitsky of Godlike Ikons continued the theme of the Russian folk tales and has contributed superb artwork depicting Kashchey the Deathless. This character is known to the listeners of classical music from the opera by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. This archetypal character may date back as early as the 12th century myths. The lore behind him makes this antagonist a perfect character for the cover art.

As a whole the compilation has more urban and stoner notes compared to a more northern and even folkish vibe that the first volume had. It may sound a bit heavier. But here remains the main task of documenting the Russian Doom scene which we set out to do in Part I.

At the outer reaches of weird cosmic worlds and in abandoned crypts and churches, in vast snowy fields and forests, in smoke filled flats and late-night bars, the integral lyrical theme of Doom remains the subject of the lyrics. This two-part journey has been quite a unique experience for our team. Getting in touch with all the people who make our favorite genre of slow heavy music possible, has led to the discovery of many new names and outstanding songs. We hope that the listeners of the compilation will as well discover something for themselves.

Anton Bryukov (Train To Elsewhere)
Project Curator, Doomed & Stoned in Russia


Editor’s Note: Be sure to check out the brand new live album by Train To Elsewhere, just released! It’s a fantastic introduction to the band’s sound and will give you a feel for their vibrant presence in concert. (Billy Goate)



Sun Burn
in the Land
Down Under!


Several weeks back, our friends at Doominati organized a special “lite” version of Sun Burn Doomed & Stoned Festival at The Basement in Canberra, Australia. The festival launched in 2019, with 2020 being an obvious year off due to pandemic constraints. We were happy to have Brad Nicholson from Lucifungus involved again in coordinating the event, with a fantastically doomy five band bill! This year, the festival was sponsored by Black Farm Records.


LINE-UP



    I. Master Leonard (00:00)

    II. Burn The Hostages (09:07)

    III. Lucifungus (20:58)

    IV. Potion (33:34)

    V. Pod People (52:09)


WATCH: Sun Burn Festival Lite


Video by Roy Torkington and Pat Cox.
Sound by Damien Blankley.



Explore the scene in more depth with our free compilation, Doomed & Stoned in Australia.



7 Great Moments From Ohio Doomed & Stoned Festival

~Festival Scrapbook~

Introduction by Billy Goate
Photographs by Randy J Byrd

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After we’ve organized a typical Doomed & Stoned festival, it understandably leaves us exhausted. We always intend to commemorate the event in these pages, but often time escapes us as we’re an all-volunteer crew with jobs and families. That’s why the festival scrapbook series was started, so we can revisit the past at any time and share those memories with you through words, pictures, and sound souvenirs.

The second annual Ohio Doomed & Stoned Festival took place in the baking hot summer, two days split between two stages on July 26th and 27th at Buzzbin in Canton, Ohio – home to so much of the area’s heavy nightlife. I mean, this line-up was insane.

Day I: Black Spirit Crown, Book of Wyrms, Bourbon Train, Brujas Del Sol, Cult of Sorrow, Forming The Void, Fox 45, Pale Grey Lore, Pillärs, Temple of the Fuzz Witch, Sparrowmilk, Supercorrupter, and Stillborn Prodigy.

Day II: Ancient VVisdom, Black Sire, Blind Scryer, Bridesmaid, Conjurer, Devil To Pay, Doom Christ, Doomstress, Drude, Frayle, Goosed, Maharaja, Monastery, Pistil, Reflex Machine, Sweaty Mammoth, Wasted Theory, and Weed Demon.

Talk about a heaping hot slice of Midwestern heavy metal!

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An ambitious effort by all accounts, we have team member Dan Simone (frontman of Monastery and Black Spirit Crown) to thank for the organizational logistics. I had the delight of spending the night in his haunted house, though I was far too tired by the end of the day to experience any ghosts. He had plenty of stories, though, which he shared on the ride to the airport at festival’s end (they still make my hairs stand on end)!

Cameraman and motorcycle enthusiast Randy J Byrd rode his bike some 430 miles all the way from Richmond for the occasion. Here are seven of his choice snaps encompassing an equal amount of bands from the 2019 event, which he’s also kindly captioned for us with his gut feelings. I’ve thrown in some raw footage captured by Eric Lenhoff, Emma White, and other attendees to give you a feel for the excitement of live.

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I. Ancient VVisdom


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Full on ritual.
Blurs the line between
pagan worship and showmanship.





II. Bridesmaid


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Brutal barrage of riff carnage attacking from all sides.
Duel wielding drums and bass – no guitars or vocals!





III. Monastery


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Got that real Sabbath feel.
Doomy groovy.
Launching into astral space.





IV. Forming the Void


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All out acid trip without the acid.
Super space. Beyond astral.





V. Pillärs


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Loud, proud. Everything to say.
They’re gonna say it and not care what you think.
Raw. Guttural. Fast-paced and super-laced.“





VI. Book of Wyrms


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Richmond hometown heros.
Second out-of-state festival seeing them.
They melt face!”





VII. Cult of Sorrow


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Old school cool. Straight outta Sabbath.
Heavy. Hard. Keepin your head bangin’.
Riffs never stop. Neo-retro delight.





BONUS: Band-by-Band Review



Big ups to Thralls of Metal for this awesome pair of videos reviewing Day I and Day II of the second annual Ohio Doomed & Stoned Festival!




Flashback to Sun Burn Doomed & Stoned Festival

~A Festival Scrapbook~


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Poster Art by Glenn Smith


It may seem hard to imagine now, but it wasn’t too long ago when live music was a regular Saturday night thing (and pretty much every other day of the week). Bands were touring the nations and small festivals were poking up left and right. Doomed & Stoned was having a blast in 2019, organizing Chicago Doomed & Stoned Festival, Ohio Doomed & Stoned Festival, Wisconsin Doomed & Stoned Festival, and to top of the year: Sun Burn Doomed & Stoned Festival in Australia! It was to be the first of two festivals, the second of which we planned on holding in neighboring country New Zealand and calling Wind Burn Doomed & Stoned Festival. That, of course, ended up cancelled due to the pandemic.

Today, we look back at Sun Burn Doomed & Stone Festival, which took place at The Tote in Collingwood, an inner-city suburb of Melbourne, Australia. Brad Nicholson did a yeoman’s job of organizing the two-day event, consisting of a pre-fest bash on Friday night, followed by an all-dayer on Saturday – both of which happened during summer in the Land Down Under. What I would have given to have flown away from the dreariness of late-season Autumn in Oregon to have been among my head banging brethren. Thankfully, Sally Townsend was there to capture the action, and Brad’s crew even got some decent live footage of the Doom Down Under!

p.s. We’re excited by the possibility of more Sun Burn events, Lockdown or no! Be sure to subscribe to the Sun Burn Festival page for news of upcoming events.



SUN BURN PRE-PARTY


Friday, November 29




THAW




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SWAMP DWELLER




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LUCIFUNGUS




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DR. COLOSSUS




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SUN BURN FESTIVAL


Saturday, November 30

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SLOVEN




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BURN THE HOSTAGES




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YANOMAMO




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REAPER




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POTION




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EARTH TONGUE




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WHITEHORSE




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PEEPING TOM




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POD PEOPLE




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WITCHSKULL




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