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COULDRON (R.I.P.)



Last Updated: 11/17/2009

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Status: Single
City: Matteson
State: Illinois
Country: US
Signup Date: 3/20/2005

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Saturday, September 26, 2009 
Saturday, September 26, 2009 
It's official. COULDRON is dead. There is no COULDRON without Tariq and it is now official that there is no more Tariq. Tariq had been maintaining this page for the last year or so. Everything here will remain exactly as he left it. Rest in peace my dear brother. We will always remember you. We will always miss you. We will always love you. 

Funeral arrangements for our dear departed friend Tariq ALI are as follows... SUNDAY SEPT. 27, 2009 2PM-8PM: WAKE MONDAY SEPT. 28, 2009 AT 11 AM: SERVICES LOCATION: Krueger Funeral Home 13050 S. Greenwood Ave. Blue Island, IL 60406

Wednesday, April 08, 2009 


It's been roughly a year now since we've been drummer-less, just no progress to be had; we know exactly what we're looking for, and we won't settle for someone that's "good enough".

To reiterate our requirements:

We practice in the South suburb of Matteson in Eric's basement. It's free, secure and soundproofed with a bumping new PA - it's an ideal spot we won't relocate from. For you city dwellers it's an easy 15-45 minute drive (depending on your locale, traffic, construction); if you rely on CPT, both Andre and myself (Tariq) live within a minute of the Midlothian Metra station and can easily scoop you up.

We need someone that's comfortable and capable of playing double bass and faster tempos - no getting around it. HOWEVER, that can't be your entire repertoire; while we have a few parts in a few songs that are raging death/grind, the bulk of our material lies in that mid-tempo groove pocket - laid back, simple hi-hat/snare/single kick beats that get your head bobbing...think Bill Ward and Bryan Mantia, not Pete Sandoval or Derek Roddy.

We've uploaded demos of our two newest tracks on the player ("New Eric" and "New Andre") and to my personal MediaFire account; please download and learn those two songs BEFORE initiating a rehearsal.

http://www.mediafire.com/?tz2nftmlzoi

http://www.mediafire.com/?ozqomwm2zy3

couldronmail@yahoo.com
708-426-3603 (Eric's Cell)




Currently listening:
Souvenirs d'Un Autre Monde
By Alcest
Release date: 2007-08-20
Thursday, March 08, 2007 

SR.com

Couldron - Four Winds
Review by John Pegoraro (StonerRock.com)
Self Released
Release date: 2006

The EP follow-up to Couldron's self titled debut eases up on some of their more overt Jesus Lizard/Unsane tendencies and – stick with me – injects some melody. Not that the five songs on Four Winds are pretty, rather, the Chicago-based band is doing more than just relying on a sonic bludgeoning to get its point across. Song like "Four Winds," "The Witness," and "Fear for Waking" are heavy, but there's also a surprising amount of grace to them. "Accomplished" can come across as a back-handed compliment, but it's meant only in the positive in this case. The band's been lauded for being one of the underground's better known secrets, and while there's nothing quite as massive sounding as "Fallen" (from their debut) on Four Winds, there's also nothing here that's going to ruin their reputation.

 

Midwest Metal

Back in 2004 I was floored, simply crushed by the debut offering from Couldron. I remember it like it was yesterday as I love being blown away by a band I've never heard before. Well two years down the line I'm sitting here and wondering if I've got déjà vu because here we go again. 'Four Winds' picks up where the S/T left off, it's dense in delivery and the apocalyptic vibe still there, this band is really putting together some quality Metal. Similar in some ways to the classic Godflesh colder sound, Couldron definitely mix things up as their stuff while rooted in the Doom aesthetic is anything but simplistic or predictable.

 

Hensch's Hometown Heroes

Back in the early days of this column, Couldron were one of the first bands to sign up for a review, and (fortunately for me as a writer, fan, and friend) the group continues to make interesting, compelling metal that can withstand even the harshest of critcisms. If I had one single complaint with 2004's Couldron EP, it was that the band was young and trying to carve their own niche in the crowded sludge metal scene. Some could even say calling Couldron similar to bands like ISIS, Neurosis, Godflesh, et al. is not unlike the pot calling the kettle black so to speak; Couldron played their music well, but they still needed some growth away from their influences to find their own sound.

Maybe it's the lineup changes (new bassist Tariq joined early last year), but to these set of rather jaded ears Four Winds sees Couldron emerging from the darker recesses of sludge with a distinct identity full of exciting possibilities. Like I said earlier, the original Couldron EP was an excellent work of atmospheric sludge, well-crafted yet lacking in a sense of massive innovation perhaps. Four Winds rectifies this minor shortcoming, the band still being as in control of their spaced out meanderings as before, but new undertones of filthy rock 'n roll, thrash, and even harsh industrial noise popping up. It almost seems as if the band has developed a sense of advanced psychic understanding, as the entire disc has a psychotic sense of telepathy to it; for every surprise here, every intriguing nuance, Couldron make you believe they've had it planned from the get-go. It is this sense of drive that propels the EP forward, and makes it that much more devastating than its predecessor.

The EP makes this point apparent right from track one, "Four Winds." Be it the literal four winds (or perhaps the four bandmates themselves, remarking on their unity yet inherent differences) this track shows listeners just how much has changed for Couldron in two years. "Four Winds" kicks off right a way with a driving riff drenched in filthy scuzz, the kind of which is perfect for a sludge album. As soon as that riff expands into a open, billowing wall of noise and vocalist/guitarist Eric Ondo lets forth a mighty, caustic howl, you'll know for sure you're hearing a band who have genuinely expanded their already well-grounded sound. As the track continues forward, one can expect to hear gigantic riffs, noisy roars, and powerful slap-bass from Tariq. Tariq fills his new place in the band with aplomb, as from this song forward the disc is full of low-end funk notes from the bassist. Add in a blazing guitar solo leading into a passage of interstellar brain freeze and "Four Winds" will leave all of you dead on arrival.

"The Witness" kicks a whole lot of ass, it's sludge-y thrash riffing being both crunchy and gaseous at the same time. I thought that last time around vocalist Eric Ondo's roars, growls, and yells were perfectly tailored to the band's tar splattered sound, but on this puppy it is apparent that even he has upped the ante vocally. Over frantic double-bass, Ondo bellows with lungs that sound like flapping slaps of well-worn leather, the powerful frontman spewing forth pitch and bile again and again. "The Witness" is probably the tightest song on the entire EP in fact, and if you don't buy it, just wait for the end where the band manages to wrap a "blow-you-away" track in under four minutes.

Next up is the mighty song "The Behemoth," arguably the most expansive and well-fleshed out idea the band has had to date. "Behemoth" floats in on a cloud of noxious, ethereal, and atmospheric sludge; it's not unlike a really big, faint storm cloud coming to f*ck up your picnic. As the song slowly builds up momentum, one begins to question whether or not all the hypnotic metal going on is really getting faster, or just playing tricks on your ears; the massive breakdown shortly thereafter should convince you of the former. Excellently paced, the song next lets loose a glacial solo that shimmers in refracted light; melodic yet fiery, the slow burn of the brilliantly rendered notes strikes the perfect chord.

After a song that wicked, "Fear for Waking" is just slightly underwhelming, though still decent. Short and simple, the tune bombards you with a sulphur-tinged emission of mud rock at its finest. "Walk Away" slinks in with slicing up-tempo notes and bitter howls; things have an almost math/sludge fusion feel to them. Lacerating ears with megaton riffs and furious drumming, the band even goes so far to add effects to the drums on a soft bridge or two of sorts, making for some excellent electronic beats amidst the soil-caked guitar maelstrom. The song throws a few vague Iommi references in there, just before collapsing abruptly on itself like some dying black hole. Puzzled by the long track time, with a bit of patience through a minute or three of reflective dead air, fans are treated to a sinister slice of Godflesh worthy noise that grows, feeds on itself, shrinks, and dies. I had no idea Couldron were capable of tapping into such dark, disgusting recesses of their minds, and hopefully we'll hear more of this.

I can safely say Four Winds finds the band finally getting a breath of fresh air as their sound is evolved to a higher point of perfection. Everything that made the first EP so interesting (the faster, mid-paced sludge, periods of glowering atmospherics, and above all else filthy buzzing noise!) are better, and many new elements have been added for an ever more biting monster of a sound. Points of reference include a Yankee Deadbird, earlier Mastodon, non-punk Neurosis, and the heavier, scarier portions of ISIS and/or Godflesh. I'm speaking now as a reviewer and nothing else; try tasting the contents of this Couldron, you'll like what the band has cooked up. Highly recommended.

 

Metal Maniacs May 2007

Couldron is gritty, post-apocalyptic, post-metal that definitely seems traceable to Godflesh in heritage, but is also very AmRep-ish in many ways. The riffing and vocals have an early Helmet thing going on, while the double-paced, snare-flavored drum rollups work with the simple song changeups, melding into a sludgy ambience reminiscent of early Unsane and Today Is The Day. There's also a doom-fed boom to the amplification leading more to the ethereal, tone-heavy stoner collective. I'm sure I'd dig it quite a bit more if the demo didn't sound like the band recorded it in the room next to the one with the mics in it, as it's all quite muffled sounding. As numbingly simple as every sequence and structure of the release is, it's an entertainingly suffocating concoction that fans of Meatjack, early Crowbar, Rwake and the like should be able to digest.

Tuesday, February 13, 2007 

SR.com:

Couldron – Self Titled
Review by John Pegoraro (StonerRock.com)
Roacho Records
Available Now


Chicago really has one of the more fertile underground music scenes out there. It's not just based on the quantity of bands the Windy City produces, it's also the quality of those bands. In a list that includes Buried at Sea (RIP), Indian, Lair of the Minotaur, Pelican, Sweet Cobra, and Bible of the Devil, you should also include Couldron.

Predominantly, the band's a mutation of the Jesus Lizard-Helmet strain. The beats aren't quite as frantic and schizophrenic, but the temperament and jagged riffs are the same. While the majority of the songs follow the same speed, Couldron really hit their stride with "Fallen," an old school thrasher that's a cross between Unsane and Slayer. The closing instrumental track, "Stoner," has some doomy riffs and is another notable selection off of this seven song album.

As for production, I have only two words for you – Sanford Parker. The master of Volume Studios once again does an exemplary job. It's thick, mean, and meaty, the way heavy records should sound.

With Couldron, Chicago's got another example to show the rest of us how the heavy should be done. It's good, dissonant grind noise.


 

ThrashPit

by Mark Hensch

Of all the unsigned bands I've stumbled across in my life, I can safely say none have a pedigree quite like Couldron's. Like an analogy for it? How about this...

The year was 2001. Somewhere in Atlanta, Georgia, a five song demo was about to be released by a band few had heard of. Formed by several ex-members of seminal progressive hardcore act Today is the Day, the band was relatively unknown, and only the most diehard of TITD fans were truly excited for the release. Featuring obscure movie samples, twisting and angular progressive sludge metal, and the completely inhuman drumming of Brann Dailor, the little band went on to become one of the American underground metal scene's critical and commercial darlings. Now signed to Warner Brothers and with arguably several of the best albums in recent memory to the name, its ironic to think the band started off as a bunch of unknowns grouped under the name of a prehistoric pachyderm; Mastodon.

The above was meant to relate to the kind of things I feel Couldron could be capable of in the near future. This six song self-titled demo had me going in vivid flashbacks to the first time I heard Lifesblood. The similarities are (musically) few, but in terms of historical similarities many.

Formed in Chicago in 2001, Couldron wanted to (not unlike good old Mastodon) pay homage to Neurosis, as well as ISIS and Godflesh. After several years of jamming and solidifying their lineup (the band had a revolving door of bassists for awhile), Couldron recorded this album at Chicago's famed Volume Studios, the likes of which have seen such innovative bands as Pelican, Rwake, and Buried at Sea laying down tracks behind its doors. For doom fans, few place on Earth should have as much progressive history to them as Volume Studios does. Further amping the disc's name values, the demo was sent to West Side Music/Deko Music in New Jersey for mastering, the same studio that has mastered the like of Superjoint Ritual, Sepultura, and ahem, Mastodon.

When I stumbled across the band's credentials in the personal ads of Metal Maniacs magazine, I knew that they were probably something special. My one conclusion is that I cannot believe this band isn't signed. Couldron is a short but sweet ride through hazy sludge, the kind that manages to have the element of inspirational weight to it that the Melvins radiate all while mastering the art of rise/fall dynamics bands like Neurosis, ISIS, and Pelican have been peddling to major praise for some years now.

"Dune" opens the disk with patient, sludgey guitar licks and vocalist/guitarist Eric Ondo's exceedingly unique voice. Alternating in various shades of dull, lazy roar, Ondo's raspy yowls are one of the band's most defining (and interesting) characteristics. "Dune" sways between cascades of sonic assault and swirling passages of clean guitar; the bulldozer tune eventually builds up into a blazing solo of stoner metal bliss. "Before the Gods" opens with a movie clip (props if you know it folks) and a relaxed, confident guitar arrangement that slowly adds layer after layer of density to itself. "Fallen" opens with thrashier riffs slowed to a crawl, and the band proceeds to go through constantly expanding and contracting moods recalling the work of both (in a weird way) Mastodon and Deadbird.

"The Well" opens with spacey acoustica before transitioning into pummeling, complex sludge. A fantastic bridge mid-song is one of the disc's strongest moments. The inky "A Dark Era" bubbles with an intensity I'd expect from Nola metal bands like Eyehategod or Down while sounding like the thickest grunge rock ever committed to record. Closing instrumental "Stoner" mixes soaring guitars, dirty rock 'n roll, and stark space rock freakouts for a fantastic cut of innovative metal.

Muddy and massive, Couldron seem poised to make a big splash on the underground music scene. Upon showing them to my younger brother, he asked me what label they were signed to. "They're not signed? That seems wrong." Beyond the fact they sound like they deserve a record contract, Couldron are (thankfully) starting to turn heads. In March of 2005 the band saw "Dune" rearing its filthy head on the Daredevil Records metal compilation "Burn the Street (Volume IV)" alongside such class acts as the Mighty Nimbus, Entombed, and Mastodon. The Editor of Metal Maniacs has also gotten behind the band, giving them the honor of an interview/review photo spread in the November 2005 issue. Couldron have cooked up a real tasty stew on this disc, and I'm hoping someday soon a decent label allows them to take things even further. Interested parties should apply, and keep your eyes on this one.


 

Midwest Metal

Chicago based Couldron took me by surprise with the release of their six track self-titled disc as it hasn't left the stereo in like six fucking weeks! I'm not kidding, I must have listened to this album more than just about any other release this past winter and re-spun it recently to get some interview questions going and I'm hooked again. Regardless, if you like heavy but not dumbed down, Stoner-ish vibes and like Neurosis but do not being bombarded Couldron are   pure heavy rock that just play it straight and to the point and it fucking rules. Produced by Sanford (Pelican, Lair of the Minotar, Minsk) Parker, he does the band justice as their vibe comes through loud, clear and rather devastating. This is what it's all about kids.