Most Popular
Most Popular sponsored by
Blogs
Sat Sep 6, 12:54 PM
Fri Sep 5, 5:51 PM
Fri Sep 5, 8:18 PM
Fri Sep 5, 6:13 PM
Fri Sep 5, 3:53 PM
Fri Sep 5, 2:14 PM
Fri Sep 5, 2:56 PM
Thu Sep 4, 1:38 PM
Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Andrew Miller
7 p.m. Tuesday, April 22. 2 Cents Plain, 1114 Olive Street
7 p.m. Sunday, April 20. 2 Cents Plain, 1114 Olive Street
7 p.m. Saturday, February 16. Pop's, 1403 Mississippi Avenue, Sauget, Illinois
6 p.m., Monday, January 7. Creepy Crawl, 3524 Washington Boulevard.
8:30 p.m. Wednesday, November 28. Cicero's, 6691 Delmar Boulevard, University City
No related articles found
National Features >
SF Weekly
A blogger steals someone else's life story and calls it her own.
By Ashley Harrell
Westword
How William Orr's quest for better, cheaper gas became a crime.
By Alan Prendergast
Miami New Times
The family of a dead judge blames a creeping fungus in the federal courthouse.
By Tim Elfrink
The Pitch
I worked at Kmart with John McCain's director of strategy.
By Alan Scherstuhl
Xasthur
Defective Epitaph
Published on November 14, 2007
Xasthur's albums are like the musical manifestation of the dementors, the cloaked Harry Potter ghouls whose mere presence robs people of happiness, hope and, with extended exposure, their very souls. Malefic, Xasthur's California-based lone contributor, blends feedback-strangled psychedelic guitar leads, haunted-carnival organs, horror-score strings and white-noise clouds. He alternates between two unsettling vocal approaches: sporadic distant-sounding shrieks, like a prisoner's anguished cries muffled by thick dungeon walls, and feral digestive noises that conjure images of a primal feeding frenzy. Most songs start with a relatively fast-paced backdrop and gloomily tuneful downward-spiraling guitars, before slowing to a dull pulse that yields ominously to silence; these compositions feel as though they were tortured to death. Malefic uses real drums instead of programmed percussion for the first time, and he fumbles with a few early beats. However, by the third track, "Cemetery of Shattered Masks," erratic rhythms have become the least of the melancholy-infected listener's worries.