#Black Mountain #psychedelic rock #stoner rock #space rock #acid rock #alternative rock #Canadian #animated music video
After founding Jerk with a Bomb in the late ’90s, Stephen McBean had by the mid-2000s transformed the Vancouver area band into a group called Black Mountain. Drawing on blues, psychedelia, acid rock, and the Velvet Underground, Black Mountain’s sound was a cross between the darkness and grit of the Warlocks and Brian Jonestown Massacre’s trippiness. After debuting in October 2004 on Jagjaguwar with the 12” Druganaut, Black Mountain stayed with the label for an eponymous full-length, issued the following January. Joining McBean for the album were local players Matthew Camirand, Jeremy Schmidt, Joshua Wells, and Amber Webber, listed collectively to preserve the band’s communal ethic. (Black Mountain ran concurrent to and intermingled with McBean’s other band, lo-fi classic rockers Pink Mountaintops). From: https://www.discogs.com/artist/336341-Black-Mountain
A no-holds-barred psych-blues assault that interweaves space-age synths into its otherwise paleolithically savage goth-metal sound, the newest single from Black Mountain’s forthcoming album IV, “Florian Saucer Attack,” shows the band pressing their instruments, and thereby the song itself, toward some limit-point where eschatological destruction looms precipitously near. We start at the almost-cosmic height best articulated by Robert Plant in “Kashmir” — “Oh, baby, I’ve been flying / No, yeah, Mama, there ain’t no denying” — but, as soon as the track roars to life with a ferocious drum break, we’re plunging toward Earth again, inexorably, flames and and debris and trails of smoke marking the descent, and while it’s unclear what knocked us out of the sky in the first place, one thing is certain: there’s nowhere to go but down. From: https://www.popmatters.com/black-mountain-florian-saucer-attack-singles-going-steady-2495445091.html