Black Mountain's mixture of texture and force is a potent one, with the Vancouver collective drawing from a variety of heavy and pastoral sounds throughout their four LPs. Founded by Stephen McBean and Joshua Wells near the end of their previous project Jerk with a Bomb, Black Mountain evolved from a eponymous song from those early sessions into one of the most prominent of the prolific McBean's multiple projects. Their 2005 self-titled debut was a critical success, and set the template for the band (currently consisting of McBean, Wells, Jeremy Schmidt, Brad Truax, and Amber Webber), whose touring and recording was steady throughout the end of the decade. After some time spent on other projects, Black Mountain returned earlier this year with their fourth full-length album, the aptly-titled IV. "Mothers of the Sun" both serves as the album's opener and its thesis statement, a striding, miniature epic that maximizes the heavy efficacy every one of its eight minutes. Equally utilizing a sludgy main riff and eerily glowing atmospherics, the tune underscores the band's talent at balancing restraint with crunch – every element of the songs plays a distinct role, sublimely arranged with clockwork precision. (Or at least as much precision an eight-minute psychedelic jam can feasibly have, anyway.) "Mothers of the Sun" is a fantastic return, effortlessly capturing the band's best qualities and channeling them into a winding, expansive eight minutes. From: https://www.kexp.org/read/2016/5/4/song-of-the-day-black-mountain-mothers-of-the-sun/
DIVERSE AND ECLECTIC FUN FOR YOUR EARS - 60s to 90s rock, prog, psychedelia, folk music, folk rock, world music, experimental, doom metal, strange and creative music videos, deep cuts and more!
Saturday, September 6, 2025
Black Mountain - Mothers of the Sun
-
Uriah Heep - Live Japan 1973 - Part 1 Uriah Heep - Live Japan 1973 - Part 2 By early 1973, Uriah Heep had released five studio albums ...
-
Troubles in life? Michael Hutchence has got what you need. He doesn't give details, but he will take you where you want to be. Hutchence...
-
John Lennon wrote this as a tribute to staying in bed, which he liked to do even when he wasn't sleeping. The song is discussed in the D...
-
Rick: Categorize TTV’s musical style/genre for us. Heather: People tell us that it is not that easy to describe. A little this a little th...
-
"My Baby Just Cares for Me" is a jazz standard written by Walter Donaldson with lyrics by Gus Kahn. Written for the film version o...
