NEW ALBUM OUT NOW (NEW HEAVY SOUNDS)
‘Yn Ol I Annwn’,
Welsh for 'Return To The Underworld’, released in March is the third part of a
trilogy of albums from Mammoth Weed Wizard Bastard that began with ‘Noeth Ac
Anoeth’ in 2015 and 2017’s ‘Y Proffwyd Dwyll’ (which got them nominated for the
Welsh Music Prize in 2017). Now the band
have shared the expansive new video for 'The Spaceships Of Ezekiel’. The label
comment,
"We are stoked to bring you the latest video from MWWB,
only the third official video that the band have ever done, and we hope you
find it as intriguing and spectacular as we do. UFOs, druids and all sorts of
cosmic weirdness are contained within this homage to 80s science fiction. The
band are huge fans of film director John Carpenter's work and this video ... or
short film if you will ... is directly inspired by the maestro himself, and his
80s output in particular.
Check that 80s vibe, and see if you can spot the direct
references hidden in the piece. It is also truly a team effort, put together by
director/cameramen Rob Hoey (from Limb), Joe Ralph (of Beatnik Wolf
Productions), and produced edited by Ged Murphy (BAFTA nominated film editor of
the three 'David Bowie: Five Years' films, amongst others). So fans of the power
cosmic ... come and take a strange cosmic journey with Mammoth Weed Wizard
Bastard."
Guitarist Paul Michael Davies adds "'This is the video
we always wanted to make. A retro Sci Fi thing that had the vibe of a movie. We
tried to reference some of our favourite films visually but still have an
original concept. It took quite a while to make but it was a real in-house
affair, as in the whole thing was
designed and produced by our label and friends of ours. The band workerd on the
3D models and concept, 2 friends Joe and Rob filmed the various sections and
Ged from NHS (our label) put it all together in the edit suite over many a late
night adding visual FX and getting across the story. Without him and the label
it wouldnt have been made. It took a lot of work and was done on a micro budget
but we think its a cool piece that captures the vibe of the album. Space Rock
music, a Druid and a UFO encounter? Gotta be cool right? Hope the fans dig it.
Best watched on a big screen in full."
The eight songs that comprise ‘Yn Ol I Annwn’ sees the band
delve deeper into their collective influences, embracing full on space rock,
atmospheric film soundtracks, melancholic acoustic interludes, psychedelia,
cosmic moog’s and percussion, moments of introspection and light … and of
course, large helpings of doom. The fat riffs, big hooks and endless space
grooves are all present and correct.
And once again Jessica Ball’s voice glides over it all, both
sweet and melancholy, yet this time more assured. A myriad of stacked harmonies
and layered vocals weave in and out of the tracks, adding an ‘other-worldly’
melodicism to the songs. No one else is pushing the boundaries of heavy like
MWWB. Mammoth Weed Wizard Bastard sound like Mammoth Weed Wizard Bastard, full
stop.
‘Yn Ol I Annwn’ is out now and available on CD/DL and
limited edition double vinyl. Full download included.
Mammoth Weed Wizard Bastard upcoming shows:
15th August - ArcTanGent Festival
29th February 2020 - Chaos Theory Festival, London
MWWB are: Paul Michael Davies, Jessica Ball, Wes Leon, James
Carrington, Stuart Sinclair.
They just happen to be one of the most distinctive doom
bands in the UK
right now" – Metal Hammer
"They've already managed the near-impossible: finding
their own sound. The weighty, distortion-drenched riffs hunker down and trudge
like Windhand and Conan (or a certain other Wizard band), but the vocals—those
wondrous vocals!—erupt from the mire like a beam of light - Noisey
"Noeth Ac Anoeth blearily surveys the midpoint between
an Electric Wizard-style assault and knowingly cerebral drone evangelism."
- Classic Rock
‘A ferocious behemoth’ - Prog Magazine
'Truly stunning' - The Quietus
‘A deep, dark world that’s more than worth exploring' -
Drowned in Sound
'Mammoth Weed Wizard Bastard could become massive' - The
Arts Desk
‘Weaving crushing intensity and ethereal psychedelic’ -
Decibel Magazine
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