The gothic, blood-red Dark Mofo has up and left Hobart for another year. You’d be hard pressed to have found a single street in the city which didn’t seem to participate, from banners adorning light poles, to the international tourists, or simply a red light shining through a window. Spanning two weeks in June, Hobart becomes an entirely different city once a year.

You can read our review of Dark Mofo’s first week here, and below for our recap of its final days.

Hymns To The Dead

The first gig we attended after the long weekend was Hymns to the Dead, a raucous six hour, five band heavy metal assault. Though it sounds like nothing short of a recipe for beer-soaked tinnitus, it was about as diverse a night as you can get when the mean volume is above 120 dB (earplugs were certainly a must). Mournful Congregation kicked off the funerary procedures with sombre, trembling doom that could be heard – nay, felt – at least a street away. The Adelaide group are well into their third decade as a band, and though their temperate tempo made for a perfect overture, they left a lasting impression and in my opinion, were one of the best bands of the night.

Barshasketh

Barshasketh

The literal pace picked up with New Zealand-via-Scotland black metal band Barshasketh, all hazy distortion and haunting melodies. The set was dynamic and powerful, with a heavy focus on double pedalling and sadistic growls. I love how much the band looked like they were having a great time on stage – you don’t see that all too often in black metal. Grave Miasma came next, and if I’m being completely honest, they left me bored as hell. I couldn’t find anything original or engaging about their music; they looked like a metal band and they certainly sounded like one, but I couldn’t help feeling like they spent far more time brushing their long, luscious hair and practising head-banging than writing interesting riffs. They put on a cool show and wore lots of spiky things on their arms, but I have no interest in ever seeing these guys again. Ho-hum.

Anaal Nathrakh

Anaal Nathrakh

The same cannot be said for Anaal Nathrakh, extreme metal legends who were undoubtedly the highlight of the night. Less than a year since releasing their blistering ninth LP The Whole Of The Law, the Birmingham duo and their touring band delivered one of the most high-energy sets I’ve ever heard. While Norwegian black metallers Taake headlined the night shortly after, there was no way they were going to live up to the sheer force that Anaal Nathrakh had attacked the crowd with prior. The gig may as well have ended there.

Hours and hours of metal is usually too difficult to swallow, but the diversity and energy of such a varied group of bands made it easy to enjoy. That MONA founder and all ’round Tasmanian devil David Walsh was in attendance the entire night, only made it that much sweeter. – LZ

Ulver

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Let me preface this by saying Ulver were far and away my favourite set of Dark Mofo 2017. I’ll also admit I’ve been late to the table on Ulver; I was introduced to the boundary-less Norwegian group only last year, but have since developed a deep love for their immeasurably diverse discography.

There aren’t many bands who begin their career with three of the greatest Scandinavian black metal records of all time, only to then move on to everything from theremin-laced ambience to fully orchestral compositions (they also performed their orchestral album Messe I.X-VI.X with the Tasmanian Symphony Orchetsra later in the week), and pounding post-rock.

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Their brand new album The Assassination of Julius Caesar can only be described as new wave for metalheads, all pounding synths, resounding percussion and dramatic vocals. Their performance this evening not only showed off the band’s sheer musicianship (each member played at least four instruments), but it was probably the the greatest light-and-laser show I have ever seen at a concert.

It’s hard to quantify just how stunning it looked; there were at least five laser projectors around the stage, with a long row of mirrors at the back to reflect and double up on the projections again. Bizarre, imaginative imagery was also projected behind the band – there was so much going on it was hard to know where to look. Still, in spite of the sensory overdose, it somehow fell together perfectly, all in all culminating in one of the coolest and most memorable concerts in a long, long time. – LZ

Einstürzende Neubauten

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I was curious about what this show would turn out to be. I’d heard a bit of the West Berlin industrial band before, but I was hardly well-versed on their catalogue. What I did know, however, was that they were loud, eclectic and highly experimental. Seeing them step out with the conventional guitars, drums and sheet metal may have looked rather normal, but the sounds they produced were anything but.

It seems as if the band has mellowed with age; those around me told tales of insanely loud gigs, where your eardrums were constantly assaulted to no end. This evening, the group delivered something quieter, more contemplative. Beginning with The Garden, Blixa Bargeld captivated us with his haunting voice, calling us to meet him amongst the foliage. The song was a nice and relaxing beginning to the night, with slow and languid music washing over the audience.

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That’s not to say that the set lacked power – quite the opposite. There was constant sonic tension, like the band was trying to break free of their own pace. This was all performed with remarkable unity and collectedness, dynamic yet well-rehearsed energy. It’s not easy task deliver a performance like that, where the power is implicit rather than blasted at the audience. This is a band who are playing purely by choice, not out of necessity for promotion. They wanted to be there, and so did you.

Their industrial sounds never devolved into gimmick or cheap showman’s tactic. Conventional percussion was often embellished by large pipes, or a sheet of steel, or dropping bars of metal from the top of a ladder. It was both fun to watch and amazing to hear.

Welcome Stranger

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I had less prior knowledge about Welcome Stranger than any other aspect of Dark Mofo. A bizarre and beautiful creation, the only information that we were given in advance was a point of entry (there were three three areas spread around two blocks of the Hobart inner city), a password (mine was Typical Mermaid), and a list of some of the artists playing – no set times though. I arrived at the Welcome Stranger Hotel (my entry point) at about 9pm, received a wristband and a map and waltzed inside. Inside was an eerie sight of switched off poker machines in and arcade games through a dimly lit entrance. Further in was a larger room with a DJ spinning ’80s vinyl hits, and a slot car table. There was a cool retro feel, with a karaoke bar upstairs that had a line spiralling down the staircase.

I moved to the Hobart Real Tennis Centre next (Real Tennis is a kind of indoor variation of tennis). Outside was a little courtyard and bar with dance music overhead, but inside was where the magic was happening. On court two players were giving people demonstrations, while a growing crowd were cheering and heckling the players. Next door, in a disused church, were more live DJs. Walking into the church was a great surprise, as it was a small but beautiful space, never usually open to the public. The music sounded great as well, as the grand arching ceiling gave the room brilliant acoustics. It was lit up fantastically, with yellow lighting positioned perfectly to give it a tangible sense of size and grandiosity.

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Next, I headed to the third and final area, a short walk around to a nice hall at Legacy House. Walking down the small alley and into the building, you could hear brilliant jazz, who turned out to be the Senegambian Jazz Band, one of the funkiest bands I’ve ever encountered. They crowd were moving and shaking from start to end.

Around the corner from Legacy was a room bathed in violet light and soothing music. Lining the room were a number of mattresses surrounded with laced curtains. Art porn was being projected onto a wall, while Dark Mofo staff were walking around handing out similarly NSFW magazines. Donning the glasses I’d been given, which turned all the lights around the room into hearts, I ordered a drink and explored the markedly relaxing room. A smaller enclave held a room covered with salt and featuring a massage table, which was in full use.

At around 1am I headed back to the Welcome Stranger Hotel, and managed to catch the tail end of Pussy Riot’s DJ set. That’s the downside of the whole “you’ll see what you find” aspect of Welcome Stranger; you’re never sure where or when a particular act is playing due to the total lack of set times, so you’ll probably miss a lot. Nevertheless, when I left at 3am, I was extremely satisfied with what Welcome Stranger had to offer.

Transliminal 

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The only aspect of Dark Mofo that I honestly could’ve done without was Transliminal, run by Red Bull Music Academy in conjunction with Dark Mofo. A quick walk from Welcome Stranger to City Hall was enough to clear my head, and when I arrived I was ready for a dance, and to check out the lasers and lights inside.

Stepping in, I was instead greeting with, well, nothing special. It was a typical nightclub scene in a much larger space and with terrible acoustics. There was little fun to be had. The lights were nice to look at for a while, but it was hardly enough to carry a night. The music was too loud to actually discern, and walking around the space, my shoes stuck to the floor. I’m sure it was set up well, and may have been fun earlier that evening, but it was a mess. I left after 30 minutes.

Xiu Xiu Plays The Music Of Twin Peaks

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I love both Twin Peaks and Xiu Xiu, and could barely contain my excitement for what would be my final show of the festival. Extremely tired after a night at Welcome Stranger, I was relived to see a sign announcing, “This is a seated show.” I rounded the corner to find rows on rows of chairs laid out facing the stage, which was packed with various synths. It was to be a relaxed show, the layout seemed to suggest.

And it kind of was. Coming out on stage, Xiu Xiu barely acknowledged that we were there. There’s not a lot to say about the show itself really, as they played their entire album start to finish, with absolutely zero interaction with the crowd until the final bow. The Odeon was a brilliant venue for it, as the near constant red lighting that bathed the stage added to the old theatre atmosphere. The tracks utilising guitar were especially brilliant, as the noise added an intensity only availed to a live show. Playing behind the band were ambient scenes from the 90’s hit show, but it never took attention away from the stage.

Ogoh Ogoh

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One of my favourite art installations throughout Dark Mofo was Ogoh Ogoh, a massive, demonic, tiger-like tribal installation at the back of Dark Park. Throughout the festival, attendees were given little pieces of paper to write down secrets, fears and anything they wished they could get rid of from their lives. I wrote something different down every day that Dark Park was open. You’d slip the pieces of paper inside the demon, via a little slot on its side.

On the final night of Dark Park, Ogoh-Ogoh was lit on fire and ceremoniously cremated to the sound of rumbling drums, symbolically taking your fears and secrets along with it. A beautiful ritual and a cleansing winter solstice sendoff. – LZ

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So there you have it. Dark Mofo is over for another year. A world of its own, there’s absolutely nothing like it. Hobart will now return to its normal state for another year – quiet, cold, but with a blood red glimmer in its eye. The most brilliantly unique, captivating and downright weird cultural event in Australia, it’ll make you want to stay forever. We’re already counting down the days until Dark Mofo 2018.

It’s video roundup time! Once again, Howl And Echoes are coming in hot with the freshest, most eyeball-stimulating music videos to be dropped by the artists you love and some of the artists you don’t know you love yet this week. We do all the dirty work and herd them all into one convenient web-based location for you to enjoy every Friday so that you don’t have to. Have yourself a good old gander at the latest offerings from:

Xiu Xiu – Into The Night

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FgBcmaRfxlE

Kicking off with the San Jose grown experimental noise pop trio Xiu Xiu and their enormous new single Into The Night. With their twelfth studio album Xiu Xiu Plays The Music Of Twin Peaks arriving today, an album that, you guessed it, sees the trio covering music from the Twin Peaks soundtrack. A challenging project given the show’s manically cult following.

At a gigantic 12-and-a-half minutes, it’s a sprawling opus of distorted noise and crosses the threshold of a litany of genres, making for some gripping listening. The video, directed by Diego Barrera, explores the creation of the alchemical siren, a union between masculinity and femininity. The visuals are like a confronting dream and are very open to interpretation, best to watch for yourself to get the best understanding.

Xiu Xiu Plays The Music Of Twin Peaks is out now via Polyvinyl.

Gonzo Jones – Misty Dreams

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu5AnZB8lWc

The latest Good Manners Records signee is Gonzo Jones and Misty Dreams is his debut single. Hailing from Cape Liptrap in Victoria, the singer-songwriter has kicked off his career with a beautifully melodic, cloud-soft rock tune in the vein of Mac DeMarco. Some of the easiest and breeziest listening you will do all this week.

The accompanying video is a sepia-tinged road trip in a Mustang convertible through sand and scrub, the late-60’s aesthetics striking. As auspicious a debut as they come, we’re looking forward to some very big things from Gonzo Jones.

Mitski – Your Best American Girl

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u_hDHm9MD0I

Popping over to Brooklyn next with the latest single from singer-songwriter Mitski. Part of the lead-up to her fourth studio album Puberty 2, she has released Your Best American Girl with its video this week and the results are pretty much stunning. Soothing vocals over a gently strummed acoustic guitar, before the amps turn on and the drums crash around grungy riffs and Mitski’s vocals lifting off. It will reach down as far into you as it can in pushing your emotional buttons, side effects include goosebumps.

The video is equally as striking, a young couple exchanging a passionate kiss with each other juxtaposed with Mitski having an equally as passionate exchange with her hand. It’s a metaphor for, as a Japanese American girl, not quite fitting in in white America.

Puberty 2 is out June 17th on Dead Oceans via Inertia.

SilentJay x Jace XL – Rockabye

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qyRHe6KWZjY

Joining forces once again on this next one are producer-singer tag team Silentjay and Jace XL. Part of the Hiatus Kaiyote ensemble, their newest track is Rockabye; a track full of soft RnB melodies, shimmering production and the soulful vocals of Jace XL weaving the narrative. Late night bedroom listening at its finest, this is a song that will warm you up with colder months ahead.

The video is as sensual as the song itself, a tender love story covered in a haze of smoke and lights both warm and inviting and the neon of the nightlife. Rockabye is part of the lead-up to the duo’s forthcoming debut EP but this is a pair that definitely needs to stick together.

Sacrifice is out next Monday April 18th via Rhythm Section.

Noonie Bao – Reminds Me

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vnjSkmMdm34

Lauded as one of pop’s greatest hidden talents (though we’re not sure how hidden you can possibly be when you’ve been nominated for a Grammy Award) is Stockholm’s Noonie Bao. Reminds Me is her latest single, a track that begins off-kilter with dreamy verses delivered like lymerics before building to a chorus that takes flight. Haunting and frantic, it’s easy to see why people rave about Noonie Bao.

The video, directed by Sebastian Mlynarski and shot in Death Valley in California is gorgeously picturesque, a collage of cut and pasted shots with the chorus finding her running across a desert highway in and out of the moonlight particularly striking.

Noonie Bao’s latest EP Noonia is out now via 2ManyFreckles.

Ash Koosha – Mudafossil

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6kSm7saCoXQ

London producer Ash Koosha has a brand new single this week. Mudafossil premiered on Adult Swim on the weekend just gone. Distorted and ambitious, the track features Eastern instrumentals and production that is as warped and fluid as the accompanying visuals.

Yes this video is a trip. We’ve seen quite a number of CGI-based videos popping up lately, but this one takes the cake as far as sheer trippiness goes. Conveying the overarching themes of his album I AKA I, the video merges the human body with technology using rippling, pulsating effects. Just watch and absorb yourself.

I AKA I is out now on Ninja Tune via Inertia.

Bibio – Light Up The Sky

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jgrgCaSo8e4

Next up is another English producer in Bibio and his latest single Light Up The Sky. A track that begins with big piano chords and 80s-style synths, it quickly melds into almost dripping tap percussion and some ethereal falsetto vocals. The video is a rainbow of colours and lights, a live performance with a twist with microscopic mineral imagery projected onto the instruments to breathtaking effect.

The effort and love put forth into this video cannot be understated, shot in three days and edited meticulously. It’s another stellar track from Bibio’s latest record A Mineral Love; out now on Warp Records via Inertia.

Kate Martin – Kintsukuroi

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9oSpl4CZ-fg

Back home for this next video, with Melbourne-via-Townsville singer-songwriter Kate Martin and her first single since 2013’s Awaken in the brilliant Kintsukuroi. Textured, beautifully layered with gentle guitars slithering across the track and rich, gentle vocals anchoring it all. The song crashes like a roiling wave in its crescendo.

The video is simple but effective, featuring Kate twirling in the darkness and playing her guitar, the focus solely on her as it should be. With a third studio album, Set My Life To Fire, on its way in Autumn of this year, amazingly prolific for an artist only 24 years of age, this is a very encouraging sign of things to come.

Catch Kate Martin on her Kintsukuroi single launch in May and June.

Elizabeth Rose – Playing With Fire (ft. REMI)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VmihmGgHi8E

Interactive music videos are catching fire in 2016, and Elizabeth Rose has teamed up with the good people at Google Play in crafting one of her own for her latest single Playing With Fire from her huge debut LP INTRA. The song mixes modern day trap beats with melodies and production that harken all the way back to the pop music that was commanding the charts in the late 90s and early 00s. REMI stops by to drop a hard-hitting verse to add a lot of extra depth.

We won’t spoil the fun for you, but you can literally play with fire (and apparently Elizabeth Rose’s own emotions) by going to https://www.elizabethrose.com.au/play/

INTRA is out now via Midnight Feature/Inertia

City Calm Down – Your Fix

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26AQCCQKkcc

One of 2015’s biggest breakout stories were City Calm Down. Releasing their Bibically-proportioned album In A Restless House and enjoying lauded spots on festivals and headline tours around Australia. They’ve not shown any sign of slowing down in 2016, just announced for Splendour, currently on an all-but-sold-out headline tour of Australia and this week releasing the video for one of In A Restless House’s standouts in Your Fix.

It’s a New Wave belter, driving synths and guitars over frontman Jack Bourke’s Robert Smith-reminiscent vocals. The video is awash in neon pinks and blues, the band playing the song on a rotating Lazy Susan stage and somehow not looking the slightest bit dizzy. Great stuff from one of Australia’s best bands going.

In A Restless House is out now via I Oh You. Catch City Calm Down on their In A Restless House tour now.

Record Store Day is right around the corner (April 16), and the list of exclusives and special releases just keeps on growing. It’s been about two years since we’ve had a new release from experimental/noise trio Xiu Xiu, but the band have now announced a new album: Plays The Music Of Twin Peaks.

That’s right: Xiu Xiu are released a covers album exclusively featuring music from the cult David Lynch show. With the original music composed by Angelo Badalamenti, the beloved series has almost become as well known for its soundtrack as it has the show itself.

The release was initially commissioned by the Gallery of Modern Art in Australia for a David Lynch exhibition which took place in April last year. The band has gone on to share their covers at a number of special performances around the world. Now, the studio album version will be made available as an RSD exclusive. Only 2000 copies will be available, on a 180 gram double LP in red and blue vinyl.

The album was produced by former band member Jherek Bischoff, who has also worked with Amanda Palmer and Ariel Pink, and was mixed by Greg Saunier of Deerhoof.

The album will be released as a Record Store Day exclusive via Polyvinyl and Bella Union.

Below, listen to the album’s first release, Falling.

Plays the Music of Twin Peaks Track List:

01 Laura Palmer’s Theme
02 Into the Night
03 Audrey’s Dance
04 Packard’s Vibration
05 Nightsea Wind
06 Blue Frank Pink Room
07 Sycamore Tree
08 Harold’s Theme
09 Dance of the Dream Man
10 Falling
11 Love Theme Farewell
12 Josie’s Past

Click here for the full list of Record Store Day exclusives

Image: Joan Chen