Jeff's Staff Pick: January 21, 2025

What’s up Sorry Staters?

This past weekend, Scarecrow played this benefit gig in Richmond. It was a benefit for a mutual aid organization called MADRVA. The space where MAD put together the show was on the 2nd floor of this big building, where there was this huge, open room with high ceilings and wooden floorboards, almost like an auditorium. It was pretty cool, and not at all what I expected. I remember saying to someone over the course of the night that the space felt like a venue where important shows could continue to happen in the future.

All that said, I think the show raised a good amount of money, and it was my first big social outing that involved travel since my injury back in November! I’ll be honest, just from the sheer amount of moving around, my knee is definitely feeling a bit sore now. Uh-oh. But it was so great to see friends I hadn’t seen in months at the show. I got to spend some quality time with my guitar-shredding better half Kai, as well as (mostly) the rest of Public Acid. Speaking of which, Public Acid is on the bill for this other benefit gig at Ottobar in Baltimore this coming weekend. I’m gonna let my knee recuperate, and hopefully I’ll be feeling stable enough to do this all over again successfully haha.

I wasn’t sure what to choose for my staff pick this week. I debated talking about that new unreleased Stalin 7” on General Speech, but I’m hoping maybe one of my colleagues will end up tackling that one. Instead, I decided to write about a record that I ended up taking home by accident, but have been jamming quite a lot. Every week, we make a big order to restock our new inventory in the shop to replace records that have gotten cleared out over the weekend. We get all these new records from a big one-stop shop distributor. For those unfamiliar, one-stops like this carry a wide variety of titles available from different record labels—everything from Michael Jackson to Napalm Death.

The other week, I re-ordered the latest reissue of Like An Ever Flowing Stream by Swedish death metal legends Dismember. It was on sale for a mere $12 wholesale. I don’t know if there was some karmic chaos affecting this record in particular, but as opposed to every other record in our restock order, this thing was just mangled. Creased, bent corners, shrink wrap already hanging off… And when I tore the rest of the shrink off, I discovered that the record also looked super warped. It was, of course, not sellable as a “brand new” record in this state. Rather than selling it “used” as a damaged record or going through the trouble of bugging Alliance to send it back and credit our account, Dom just suggested I take it home and check it out.

So yeah, the record is totally warped. My stylus surfs up and down on it quite a bit, but it plays through okay. Now, I’m by no means a death metal expert, but I’ve always gravitated toward the Swedish bands from the early 90s. That cold, brutal Sunlight Studios production is the stuff of legend. I’ve listened to Entombed’s Left Hand Path to death (no pun intended) since my teenage years, but I’ve spent much less time with Dismember. Recently revisiting this record Like An Ever Flowing Stream after not hearing it for many years, and having never personally owned a copy and only listening digitally… man, this thing just knocked my socks off. “Override of The Overture” has got to be one of the best opening tracks on any extreme metal record ever. That opening tremolo-picked guitar melody with sort of odd, swirling rhythmic timing in the note changes is so recognizable. It makes goose bumps bubble up and my hair stand on end.

I think that’s thing about Swedish death metal in particular: Obviously it’s heavy and brutal, but the Swedes also are so brilliant at incorporating these haunting melodies that really stick with the listener. Not to mention that a lot of these bands were only 18 or 19 years old when they made these records. That youthful ambition, man. Crazy. There’s this sense of epic grandiosity that I don’t gather when I listen to most American death metal bands. Sorry? I think it’s just a different stylistic approach to songwriting. But I mean come on! The incorporation of the title theme from Phantasm into this creepy, doomy riff in “Left Hand Path” by Entombed? Yet another stellar opening track.

Thinking about Dismember and Entombed, I randomly stumbled across one of these react videos on YouTube where this dude checks out a track by each of the “Big 4” of Swedish death metal. Without even really knowing, I could have guessed that the Big 4 would surely be Entombed, Dismember, Grave and Unleashed. I decided to go back and listen to all these bands. All 4 of them have something stylistically similar, but still each band brings something unique and distinguishable with their take on death metal. Kinda funny, looking at Discogs, all 4 of these bands’ debut albums were released in 1991—the year I was born! What a cowinky-dink. It’s also pretty cool to think about a time in extreme music when a fresh and powerful new sound was burgeoning—where the flood of activity in the metal scene near Stockholm was so potent that a gang of youngsters was able to organize quickly enough to result in 4 amazing debut records all released within the same year. That’s quite a statement.

Anyway, that’s all I’ve got for ya this round. Time to go binge some Swedish death metal. \m/

‘Til next week,

-Jeff


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