Grails / Doomsdayer's Holiday
Artist Grails
Album Title: Doomsdayer's Holiday
Album Cover:
Primary Genre Alternative & Punk: Indie
Format Vinyl
Released 10/07/2008
Reissue Date 10/14/2016
Label Temporary Residence Ltd.
Catalog No TRR 144
Bar Code No 6 56605 31441 9
Reissue Yes
Remastered Yes
Packaging LP Sleeve
Tracks
A1. Doomsdayer's Holiday (3:24)
A2. Reincarnation Blues (4:25)
A3. The Natural Man (4:41)
A4. Immediate Mate (5:43)
B1. Predestination Blues (6:20)
B2. X-Contaminations (4:56)
B3. Acid Rain (8:00)
Date Acquired 04/01/2021
Personal Rating
Acquired from Temporary Residence Limited Website
Purchase Price 15.00

Web Links

Discogs Entry:
All Music Guide Entry:
Wikipedia Entry:

Notes

Notes:
Remastered for vinyl.

Credits:
Acoustic Guitar – Wm. Zak Riles
Baglama [Saz] – Wm. Zak Riles
Bass – William Slater
Design [Art Design] – Alex Hall
Drums – Emil Amos
Edited By – Alex Hall, Emil Amos
Electric Guitar – Wm. Zak Riles
Flute – Erik Nugent
Guitar – Alex Hall, Emil Amos
Guzheng – William Slater
Keyboards – Emil Amos
Mastered By – Carl Saff
Melodica – Emil Amos
Mixed By – Jeff Stuart Saltzman (tracks: A1 to A3, B1 to B3)
Oud – Wm. Zak Riles
Piano – William Slater
Recorded By [Additional] – Alex Hall, Emil Amos
Recorded By [Basic Tracks] – Jake Hall (tracks: A1 to B2), Steve Lobdell (tracks: A1 to B2)
Sampler [Sampling] – Alex Hall
Steel Guitar [Lap] – Emil Amos
Synthesizer – William Slater
Synthesizer [Analog] – Randall Dunn
Tape – Emil Amos
Vibraphone – Jordan Hudson
Violin – Kate O'Brien-Clarke
Vocals – Emil Amos, William Slater

Companies, etc.:
Mastered At – Bonati Mastering

Barcode and other Identifiers:
Barcode: 6 56605 31441 9 (Sticker)
Matrix / Runout (Runout A): TRR-144 A 2016 Bonati Mastering NYC 27207.1(2)
Matrix / Runout (Runout B): TRR-144 B RE Bonati Mastering NYC 27410.2(2)

Reviews
All Music Guide Review by Thom Jurek:

The Grails have embraced open-ended, free grooving, psychedelic rock, open-toned Eastern modalism, assault-worthy hard rock, spooky dub, and even folk music in this heady, stoned out brew. The basic quartet of Emil Amos, Alex Hall, William Slater, and Zak Riles are still intact; they've augmented this set -- in places -- with Kate O'Brien Clarke on violin, vibist Jordan Hudson, Randall Dunn on analogue synths, and even Erik Nugent on flute. Alan Bishop makes a guest appearance as a vocalist on "Predestination Blues." While playing is one end of the spiritually tripped-out Grails' aesthetic, the other is post-production, with intricate dynamic touches, textural embellishments, dramatic flair, space, silence, and even ambience as one track segues seemingly endlessly into another -- this is becoming a real trademark in the way they record.

The title track opens the record with the sound of a far off scream that can mistakenly, at first, be taken for wind blowing through an open window. It is quickly followed by thudding tom-toms, waves of muted feedback, and guitars and violins worthy of Black Sabbath's fuzzed-out bass heaviness and the flanged out space guitar in the instrumental bridge of Robin Trower's "Too Rolling Stoned." It's all overblown, slow, and menacing. It's followed by the wailing power of an Eastern European violin with bass thudding, power-amped guitar riffage and wailing snares and cymbals in "Reincarnation Blues." There are dynamic stops and starts, making the listener yearn for that heaviness to continue. And it does, with slide guitars, electric saz's, and all manner of synthed out wonkiness. But then it changes again in the relative bliss of "Natural Man," where acoustic guitars, washed out synths, reverb, and what sounds like a cembalom (but is probably piano strings being plucked), enters in slow 4/4 before being adorned with minor-key flourishes by a strummed acoustic guitar and the pillowy beauty of a sonically treated flute, vibes, melodica, and tape delays. Taken together, these three cuts have already traveled immeasurable distances musically; they stretch the notions of time and space into pure drift. The astonishing thing is that only 12 minutes have transpired. The remaining four tracks are similarly ambitious and seamless: the incantory acid dub effects on "Immediate Mate," the beautiful speaker blowout in "Predestination Blues," the pure experimental soundscape ocean that is "X-Contaminations," culminating in the glorious and majestic psychedelia of "Acid Rain" (reminiscent in scope of "Echoes" on Pink Floyd's Meddle). The end of the album feels like the nadir of a particularly vivid dream that encompasses both true darkness and ecstatic light. The Grails have once more pushed their own sonic terrain, where all that is familiar to them is woven into a gorgeously textured fabric with all that could be envisioned by them at this point in time, with the listener as the true beneficiary.
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