INVISIBLE ORANGES – THE METAL BLOG

Triptykon @ Slim’s, El Rey Theatre

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Invisible Oranges Editor
Published: October 28, 2010Tags: akarim, clee, features, live, norway, post-metal, switzerland, usa
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Stories by Alee Karim and Cosmo Lee

. . .

Triptykon/1349/Yakuza
Slim’s, San Francisco
October 23, 2010

. . .

When I think of this rainy San Francisco night, and the metal these three bands wrought upon it, I can think of only one word: generosity. Some bands you can just tell are up there for themselves. Others may be playing for you, but in a really desperate, pandering way. More often than either case, I’m struck by how often bands generate an indifferent energy, to the point where you have no tangible idea why they do what they do. Triptykon, 1349, and Yakuza I felt each wanted to make us, the audience, happy in their individual ways. It was a virtually banter-free (nigh on mute) evening that united everyone under a banner of riffage.

Yakuza hit the stage promptly at 9pm (I’m noticing this more and more – are the days of the fashionably late-friendly start times done and gone?) They hit it with aplomb, integrating a super-diverse palette of post-metal colors and stepping up the game for that sphere of metal from the boring post-rock meanderings that tend to bog it down. If I have any criticism of Yakuza, it’s that their considerable musical dexterity would sometimes get lost in the maelstrom. I attribute this to a badly balanced live mix that plagued the night, mostly sacrificing the clarity and “cut” of the guitars. Yet literally any time I strained to discern an arcane bass-tapping figure during their set, a motif of face-melting simplicity followed to tell me what’s what again. Great, exciting, unpredictable music.

After I swooned over Yakuza’s dense and ambitious sonic world, 1349 reminded me of the merits in a more monochromatic approach. I don’t say “monochromatic” derisively: from note one, 1349 were a blackened death metal perfecting machine, churning, grinding, and pounding, with a few timely mid-tempo relents for mercy’s sake. Seriously, such a stunning force-of-nature metal performance I have not seen in some time. The aforementioned lack of cutting guitars was a problem here as well. I would occasionally look at Archaon’s hands and see him doing something fascinating, though all I could hear was a general churn. But, oh, that churn.

Triptykon came on a little late for a three-band show that started on time (11:30pm), so I was a little more flagged for them then I’d like to have been. However, hearing them open with “Procreation of the Wicked” at a sluggish tempo, those fat, burly guitars in perfect unison, I got a second wind. Someone figured their shit out by Triptykon’s set because, DAMN, those guitars were gloriously chunky, like the sonic equivalent of ground beef and peanut butter. Perhaps some specters of Valhalla carried Mr. Warrior’s tone on the riff-filled winds.

Whatever the case, this technical improvement enabled Triptykon to truly paint a sonic landscape. I say “paint”, because whenever I closed my eyes during their set, the imagery of H.R. Giger began emerging in my mind’s eye. Their brand of science-fiction metal makes me think of a Fear Factory that didn’t go off the rails after Demanufacture or a baroque sonic cousin to Selfless-era Godflesh. It’s a sound that never properly got on its feet quite as well as it did with Triptykon’s latest, and I am very thankful to Tom G. Warrior et al. for doing so. At one point, he expressed his thanks to the audience and alluded to circumstances that at one point made him believe a US tour could not have been possible. The sincerity in his voice was palpable as the netherworlds to which his riffs transport us. Thank YOU, sir, for gracing us with your sound.

— Alee Karim

. . .

. . .

Triptykon/1349/Yakuza
El Rey Theatre, Los Angeles
October 24, 2010

. . .

When the second-largest city in America can’t fill half a theater for the return of Tom G. Warrior, something is wrong.

I don’t know why Yakuza opened this tour. Triptykon and 1349, as inverses of each other – the former is about space, the latter is about filling it – are logical choices to co-headline a tour. Their dark energy demands a suitable opener. Jazzy technicians who can’t write songs don’t fit that bill. I enjoyed watching the members of Yakuza play their instruments. But I did not enjoy hearing their songs lurch about in search of a direction.

1349 headlined this night, but they were more bark than bite due to poor sound. Since guitar and vocals were nonexistent, they essentially put on a drum clinic, complete with clicky bass and vigorous headbanging. It was like watching some sort of avant-garde theater. Rendered mute, vocalist Ravn tried to speak through his body, bending back and forth with mighty effort. Drummer Frost was man and machine. Like Dave Lombardo for Slayer recently, he was 75% of the band. It is a tribute to his power that I enjoyed 1349’s set.

Triptykon were not only the story of the night, but also the year and possibly a lifetime. I will remember this set for a while. It was a perfect example of how albums, however hallowed they may be – and Triptykon’s debut should be hallowed – achieve new stature when presented at their full potential: stacks blazing, earth quaking, soul shaking. Headphones cannot replicate that. At home, you can listen to music loudly, but you will not enter that space, temporary and sacred, of performer and audience worshiping at the temple of doom.

This Triptykon/1349 tour is the most well-documented tour I’ve ever seen. Photos, videos, blogs, and social media have brought reports big and small. Yet this show surprised me, partly because reading about something (or even hearing its recording) is no substitute for witnessing it firsthand.

The surprises included:

How lively, relatively speaking, Tom G. Warrior was. He’s spoken about grave health problems, but he was not only upright but also animated – attacking his Giger Iceman with big flourishes, bouncing to his riffs, tapping his toes (which were shod in sleek, pointy boots; Warrior’s sense of style is underrated).

How much of a band Triptykon was. Warrior has spoken about this, but, again, to see it in action was something else. He made frequent eye contact with all his bandmates – guitarist V. Santura, bassist Vanja Slajh, drummer Norman Lonhard. Despite its darkness and heaviness, the set retained an air of rehearsal room camaraderie.

How good a bassist Slajh was. Not that her skill was ever in question, but she provided amazingly precise and supportive low end, given a very physical style that looked more like sawing than playing bass.

How important leads were. When V. Santura dug into the off-kilter melodies that coat Triptykon’s songs like a viscous film, time seemed to slow. The image came to mind of wounded angels singing.

The set list (see here) was half Celtic Frost, half Triptykon, and all of a piece. I appreciate the heavier, doomier direction Warrior’s work has taken. It’s both an acknowledgment of mortality and a push back against it. Primordial images flooded my mind – big bones creaking, rusty machines roaring. Good live sets consume you, so that details like song selection stop mattering. The set becomes pure ebb and flow, making one captive to its “now”. That was the case with Triptykon, who, like Krisiun several years back, brought metal so powerful and elemental that I could bypass my cerebral nature and access my animal instinct. Very few artists try to do this; even fewer succeed.

My animal instinct did yield once, for a brief flash of anger. It was not at the band, who was delivering 100%. It was at the rest of metal. How many inconsequential blastbeats and useless notes people have churned out! Yet Warrior made open strings sound like thunderstorms. Here was truth, an arrow into the depths of being – and so few had bothered to receive it.

Metal has become busy music. Blastbeats this, shredding that, technical riffs on YouTube. Such music is selfish. It leaves no room for the listener. Warrior’s riffs are black holes. They are yawning abysses into which the listener pitches headfirst. Light does not escape. Neither does the listener. The commitment is lifelong.

— Cosmo Lee

. . .

TRIPTYKON w/ 1349 & Yakuza
Remaining dates

10/28 – Ridglea Theatre – Fort Worth, TX
10/29 – Emo’s – Dalls, TX

. . .

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25 Comments

  1. Gaia
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 7:52 AM

    Aw man, your writing makes me want to like Triptykon. I just can’t get in to it. Having said that, Cosmo, you’re a dab hand at visuals.

    Reply
  2. Mike Owens
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 8:00 AM

    “This Triptykon/1349 tour is the most well-documented tour I’ve ever seen.”

    LOL. Whatever dude.

    Reply
  3. mitchkillem
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 8:03 AM

    It’s a shame 1349 were neutered when you saw them. I saw them in Tulsa last night, and the entire show was exceptional. According to the merch guy, people leave after Triptykon on nights when 1349 headline. It was true, and a total loss, because 1349 put on just as much of a show as Triptykon. Jesus fucking Christ it slayed!

    Reply
  4. mitchkillem
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 8:08 AM

    Also, hearing “Serpentine Sibilance” live gave it way more teeth than the album version. I’ll be revisiting “Revelations of the Black Flame” today.

    Reply
  5. Tom
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 8:32 AM

    http://deathstar330.blogspot.com/2010/10/triptykon-yakuza-and-1349-bottom-lounge.html

    1349 were completely ball-less in Chicago. They had to follow the bulldozer known as Triptykon and it wasn’t their night.

    Reply
  6. Graeme
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 9:03 AM

    I had to get up early for work the morning after this show so I was thankful that Triptykon came on first so I could get to bed at a reasonable time. I don’t regret missing 1349.

    One of the things that was really cool about when I saw them was when Tom G. Warrior mentioned on stage that Celtic Frost’s first North American show was in Montreal at the World War III fest, and there were people in the crowd who shouted that they were there.

    Reply
  7. Josh Haun
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 11:29 AM

    Unfortunately I couldn’t afford the roadtrip north to see these guys this time around… However I did manage to catch Celtic Frost on one of their last US tours back in 2006. Is there anyone out there that went to both, and if so, how does Triptykon compare to CF in a live setting?

    Reply
  8. Justin
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 11:56 AM

    @Alee — Did you see Celtic Frost when they played the Fillmore back in 06? I was at Slim’s for Triptykon but I thought Warrior’s sound was far fuller and richer in the Fillmore. Don’t get me wrong the band was amazing but Slim’s is much smaller and hence doesn’t allow the sound to breathe as much.

    1349 put on the best set I’ve ever seen them perform that night as well — tons of energy.

    Reply
  9. audi0phile
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 12:41 PM

    Dammit, thanks for the guilt trip. I saw 1349 earlier this year at slims whem they rolled through with skeletonwitch and cannibal corpse (wearing a tour tee right now) and they were definitely a wall of force to be reckoned with. Wish I could caught triptykon in there.

    Reply
  10. pseudonymous
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 12:52 PM

    Really like the dual review format of this post. Really makes me wish that this tour would have come somewhere near me. Maybe next time.

    Reply
  11. Wash Jones
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 1:14 PM

    I can tell you why I skipped the El Rey show: fucking Ticketmaster. The show was supposed to be $18, yet with convenience charge + facility fee + service charge + processing fee it came out to about $32. As much as I adore the Triptykon album (and could care less about Yakuza, and saw 1349 bore a room to tears opening for Cannibal Corpse just a few months ago)… it’s simply too much for a show like this. Seeing as the turnout sounded low they clearly missed the mark on pricing, which is sad indeed for both the fans who couldn’t go, and the bands who missed out on a far better show.

    Reply
  12. Invisible Oranges
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 1:50 PM

    $32! That’s just wrong. I wish that the powers that be were more aware of such things. They have a real impact. My press pass was evidently worth its weight in gold.

    Reply
  13. ShadesOHD
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 2:22 PM

    The date in my city was canceled. I was absolutely crushed, and am even more so after reading Cosmo’s review… the fates are sometimes very cruel.

    Reply
  14. TheWolf
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 2:29 PM

    @Wash Jones – I got my tickets for the El Rey gig at here: http://www.8thdaytix.com/

    They were about 24.50 and maybe only a buck more in charges. Keep your eyes on Moshking.com, they always post some of the cheapest ways to get tickets… including buying from opening bands (which I did for Immolation in Santa Ana and have done for the Watain tickets).

    @Cosmo – Ticket price… Sunday Night… hard to say why it was only half full. Might also have to do with Triptykon perhaps being unknown to some of the larger scene who do know Celtic Frost.

    Regarding 1349’s sound. Dude, I know you weren’t smoking up, but that’s not what I heard at all. I had ear plugs in and I could still hear the vocals and guitar. It was still nowhere near as good as Triptykon’s set, but hardly that bad.

    As for Triptykon, I’ve got nothing to add. You summed it up well what an amazing experience it was to see them live. Absolute one of the best performances of the year for me (up there with some from MDF).

    Reply
  15. Zosimus
    Posted October 28, 2010 at 6:48 PM

    I’m pretty surprised by your characterization of Yakuza, Cosmo. I’ve been absorbed by Of Seismic Consequence for months now.

    Reply
  16. Carlo
    Posted October 29, 2010 at 1:46 AM

    Oh damn I heard that former GameSpot writer, Harmonix community dude, and currently Screened.com writer Alex Navarro was at that exact show.

    Reply
  17. Carlo
    Posted October 29, 2010 at 1:58 AM

    Alex was at the SF show.

    Reply
  18. chitterling
    Posted October 29, 2010 at 11:28 AM

    TheWolf — would you happen to know of any ticket resources like these for the East Coast? Ticketmaster + NYC venues = Ouch!

    Reply
  19. TheWolf
    Posted October 29, 2010 at 1:19 PM

    I know Brooklyn Vegan keeps tabs on NYC shows, but no idea if they mention cheap ticket paths.

    One thing I’ll say, is any show you want to go to that has a local opening band (so a band not part of the tour) will usually (depends on the venue) have tickets on hand to sell cheaper than door or Ticketmaster price. So when you see a line-up like that it’s worth a shot emailing/contacting those bands to see if they have tickets.

    Reply
  20. Alee
    Posted October 29, 2010 at 3:20 PM

    @Justin – I didn’t see that show. That was the tour with SunnO))) I believe. I remember O’Malley saying somewhere that he realized SunnO))) were not a proper metal band when they saw the reactions they got on that tour…

    Reply
  21. Skull
    Posted October 30, 2010 at 2:09 PM

    @Josh Haun

    I saw CF at The Vic in Chicago supporting Monotheist (With 1349 and Sahg supporting them). Celtic Frost was incredible that evening and one of the best sets I had seen of any band to date. Triptykon however eclipsed that performance substantially. It’s been two weeks since I saw the Triptykon/1349 gig and it still consumes my thoughts. It was surreal. As usual, Cosmo’s assessment is spot on.

    Reply
  22. phyte club katie
    Posted October 30, 2010 at 8:58 PM

    Great reviews, guys. I wish I hadn’t missed the Slim’s show. Alee — thanks for bringing up the sincerity and generosity component. I don’t hear that critique too much and that sort of authenticity is really important to me when I go to a show, and I can be completely won over or totally turned off, in some cases regardless of the band’s sick riffs…..Thanks!

    Reply
  23. DK
    Posted October 31, 2010 at 8:58 PM

    Cosmo, thanks for nailing–in your usual colorful, articulate way–the audience reaction to this band and its set. I saw them in their first US show (NYC), and like other responders hereto, I’ve been all but consumed in thoughts about the show since then. Your words really do capture the power of this extraordinary band.

    If ANYONE reading your review were to fall victim to incredulity, I’d say, “Just wait ’til Triptykon is within traveling distance, and go see ‘em.” Impossible to be disappointed by this group.

    Cheers!

    Reply
  24. UA
    Posted November 4, 2010 at 2:04 PM

    >”Metal has become busy music. Blastbeats this, shredding that, technical riffs on YouTube. Such music is selfish. It leaves no room for the listener.”

    Oh God, Cosmo…

    Reply

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