WEDNESDAY NOV 13, 2019
Kilberth
Tiny Scissors
Two-piece instrumental math rock juggernaut from Atlanta. Sounds like Tera Melos jerking off Don Caballero in the back of Mad Max’s V8 Interceptor on the road to Valhalla. Russian Circles cranked to 11 on the stereo. The sound of frayed synapses firing at warp speed. A frantic scramble for sanity amidst a backdrop of unrelenting chaos.
Two-piece instrumental math rock juggernaut from Atlanta. Sounds like Tera Melos jerking off Don Caballero in the back of Mad Max’s V8 Interceptor on the road to Valhalla. Russian Circles cranked to 11 on the stereo. The sound of frayed synapses firing at warp speed. A frantic scramble for sanity amidst a backdrop of unrelenting chaos.
Duet for Theremin and Lap Steel
"The name of this Atlanta duo implies a proper classical recital, a rigid formality. But Scott Burland (theremin) and Frank Schultz (lap steel) don't do scripted, improvising not so much distinct sounds as evolving eddies of sound, vapors of tones that develop and transform gracefully. Hypnotic pulses and dreamy drones weave together to form a kaleidoscope of sounds and moods, ambient clouds and swooning collages that are as much about texture as they are timbre, like a long-lost soundtrack to a deep-sea documentary." -P. Wall, Columbia Free Times
"The name of this Atlanta duo implies a proper classical recital, a rigid formality. But Scott Burland (theremin) and Frank Schultz (lap steel) don't do scripted, improvising not so much distinct sounds as evolving eddies of sound, vapors of tones that develop and transform gracefully. Hypnotic pulses and dreamy drones weave together to form a kaleidoscope of sounds and moods, ambient clouds and swooning collages that are as much about texture as they are timbre, like a long-lost soundtrack to a deep-sea documentary." -P. Wall, Columbia Free Times