A lazy observer could write off Black Mountain as a pile of classic rock clichés – just call them “Zeppelin and Sabbath riffs crossed with the synthesizers from Wish You Were Here” and be done with them. But stamping them with the stoner rock label merely marginalizes the many ways this
In 75 minutes at the Exit/In Monday,
It was all Canadian onstage, with openers Nordic Nomadic and Bon Iver. The latter overcame minimal instrumentation with aid from Justin Vernon’s soaring vocals that at times recalled a gruffer, earthier Chris Martin.
The pleasant, if sometimes slight, folk held promise, but Bon Iver isn't quite ready for headlining.
Near 11 p.m., the opening chords to
For as monolithic a sound as the band appears to produce, the show displayed their facets well. The acoustic waltz “Stay Free” broke up the menace shining through the rest of
(if you don't see the video above catch it here.)
The bands’s selections leaned on In the Future, their just-released sophomore outing. As it was, picking out songs from their albums was simple – anything from their debut sounded like musicians trying to outplay each other, but newer songs meshed more organically.
Seamless harmonies from Amber Webber widened
Even when the tempos eased up, the songs continue their slow burn and never shed a strand of muscle. All their droning dirges stayed fresh past their five minute marks. The epic “Tyrants” never dragged; it leaves the audience wondering how those eight minutes blew by so quickly. A blistering three-song encore felt much the same - the tightness and flow of the music never faltered.
You can find Black Mountain online at BlackMountainMusic.ca or MySpace.com/BlackMountainMusic
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