Product Description
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2013 album from the award-winning San Diego power rock band.
From The Ages is their first studio album since the release of
2007's critically accled Rhythms From A Cosmic Sky. Earthless
prides itself on creating energetic, free thinking instrumental
music inspired by an eclectic mix of German Krautrock and
Japanese heavy Blues-Rock. The Californian trio has dedicated
itself to mastery of the mind-bending jam session, evoking the
spirits of Jimi Hendrix and Black Sabbath in equal measure.
Earthless' sound has been called ''A sonic kaleido of lava
and lightning,'' earning it the title of ''California's loudest
band.''
Review
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7.2 Earthless don't leave room for misinterpretation or error
concerning their mission: They are a long-winded guitar trio,
hell-bent on riding six electric strings directly out of this
atmosphere. No sooner than the drums unload their initial heavy
hit on the band's first album in six years the ridiculous ripper
''From the Ages'' Isaiah Mitchell takes his first solo, his
squealing lead slashing cleanly through a vacant gaze of cymbal
wash. The band soon digs back in, with drummer Mario Rubalcaba
and bassist Mike Eginton instantly st a sturdy pocket. But
it's Mitchell that almost always edges out front in Earthless. He
rides through a riff and races off into tangents for minutes on
end. After that lead burst during album opener ''Violence of the
Red Sea,'' he bends a theme a half-dozen different ways, whether
retracing his lead with a wah-wah moan here or a whammy bar
battle with himself there. Rubalcaba and Eginton don't pull
Mitchell back toward earth; they instead follow his ecstatic lead
everywhere, fellow travelers on his odyssey of enthusiasms. Since
Earthless' last album, 2007's ''Rhythms from a Cosmic Sky,'' its
members have been busy: Rubacalba has been behind the throne for
new old punks OFF! and out front for San Diego pounders Spider
Fever. Mitchell joined Howlin Rain for its Rick Rubin-helmed
catastrophe ''The Russian Wilds'' and started the blustery,
concise psych group Golden Void with some high school buddies and
his wife. Mitchell actually presaged Golden Void at the end of
''Rhythms'' with the swiveling Groundhogs cover ''Cherry Red'',
the shortest bit of Earthless' oeuvre by a quarter-hour. The
experience of getting back into bands playing discrete tunes
serves ''From the Ages'' well, as Earthless breaks the album's
hour-plus run time into four digestible tracks. ''Violence of the
Red Sea'' syncs well with ''Uluru Rock'', a smoldering tune
that's steadily fanned until it leaps into flames. ''Equus
October'' indulges a cosmic drift, with the bass leading the
Om-like way for circular drums and a twilit haze of electrostatic
ambiance. It's an uncharacteristically subdued side of Earthless.
As such, it only last five minutes. --Pitchfork
''To describe Earthless' music is a bit like describing a dream.
In fact, there's nothing altogether straightforward about the
band's sound except, well, that they f***ing rock. Yeah, let's go
with that description: f***ing-rock.'' --San Diego CityBeat
#8 20 Best Metal Albums of 2013 Despite their far-out band name,
Earthless sound born of the Third Stone From the Sun on their
third album, locking into Hendrix-inspired grooves and jamming
out in a way that's both heavy and somehow separate from the
lineage of Black Sabbath. The San Diego instrumental psych-rock
trio achieves a groove-y state of mind on each of the album's
four, epic-length songs. The 30-minute title track is a trip in
itself, if not just for the way it moves from locomotive riffs to
an exotic slow section, only to finish with a noisy, metal riff;
it's one of the heftiest heavy jams recorded this year. --Rolling
Stone, December 2013