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Axis of Evol

Pink Mountaintops  

Axis of Evol

JAG083
Released: March 7, 2006

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  1. Comas
  2. Cold Criminals
  3. New Drug Queens
  4. Slaves
  5. Plastic Man, You're The Devil
  6. Lord, Let Us Shine
  7. How We Can Get Free
If you measure every human act or expression as some manifestation of our hard-wired propensity to have sex, survive and spread our genetic junk around, you could be labeled a darwinist. And they seemingly come in all sizes and shapes: economic and literary darwinists, evolutionary psychologists and biologists, and, paradoxically, creationist-leaning conservatives, to name a few. Unwittingly, then, those kind rock journalists out there who have summed up the music of Pink Mountaintops as being all about sex have fallen into the same age-old trap of oversimplification (for which we are partially to blame). The desire is for everything to be in a neat little box, much like the variously-configured darwinists out there would prefer that everything we do be explained by just one simple and powerful idea. But what is real and true in the world does not work like that, we humbly believe. Yeah, you may express, with a wink, that you know what the “pink mountaintops” are all about. Perhaps you can fuck them, both literally and figuratively. But we’d maintain that you can’t put your hands around these mountaintops. No, because these mountaintops are unreachable. You can’t measure them. You can’t know them or neatly dissect them. You can’t possess them. All you can do is look at them. And, hopefully, having gazed on them, you’ll come to the realization that you can think about them in more than one way.Pink Mountaintops is Stephen McBean (and also many of his friends when the full band is assembled to play live). McBean has been in numerous groups over the last two decades. As a thirteen-year old, he played in a band called Jerk Ward, playing hardcore influenced by the Neos, Discharge, Crucifix and whoever else was fast or the fastest. His other bands to date have been a straight out punk outfit, a crusty punk/metal band, and, most recently, a psych-tinged maximal rock group whose self-titled debut record, Black Mountain, captured a great amount of critical acclaim (and meteorically became Jagjaguwar’s best-selling title.) With Axis of Evol, Pink Mountaintops’ second full-length record, McBean has once again created something much greater than the sum of his influences. Axis of Evol begins with a forboding spiritual called “Comas”, the kind that McBean and only a very few other songwriters of this generation could pull off. It includes the tone-setting lyrical phrase “I have been wrestling a dead angry deer, and she is still with me after all of these years’. The record then almost immediately ramps up into a thumping, buzzing, blissful haze, at various parts sounding like the Velvet Underground or Spacemen 3 or the Jesus and Mary Chain circa Psycho Candy. And at the end, the album then segues into a hypnotic, Smog-like meditation called “How We Can Get Free”. Throughout the record, McBean sings about love and war, the love of war, and the war of love — on the body, on the mind and on the soul. Home-recorded and largely self-produced, Axis of Evol is a further testament to the vital prolificacy of Stephen McBean. His mind, body and soul have once again created something that can’t be simply measured, coded or decoded. Experience it, then think about it in more than one way.

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