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<item><title>Queen Elephantine - Surya (2008)  [1/0]</title><link>http://isohunt.com/torrent_details/112996781/Hawkwind+albums?tab=summary</link><guid>http://isohunt.com/torrent_details/112996781/Hawkwind+albums?tab=summary</guid><enclosure url='http://ca.isohunt.com/download/112996781/Hawkwind+albums.torrent' length='100055122' type='application/x-bittorrent' /><comments>http://isohunt.com/torrent_details/112996781/Hawkwind+albums?tab=comments</comments><category>Pics</category><description>&lt;h3&gt;Bit Torrent details:&lt;/h3&gt;Category: &lt;a href=&quot;/torrents/?iht=6&quot;&gt;Pics&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;Original site: http://thepiratebay.se/&lt;br&gt;Size: 95.42 MB, in 6 files&lt;br&gt;Seeds: 1 &amp;nbsp; | &amp;nbsp; Leechers: 0 &amp;nbsp; | &amp;nbsp; Downloads: 3&lt;p&gt;192kbps Mp3

1. Queen Elephantine
2. Ramesses II
3. Kabir
4. Plasma Thaw
5. Bison


Shelf classification:
Rock &amp; Metal / Doom / Stoner / Psychedelic / Experimental

Stonerrock.com:

Best described as a sprawling psychedelic space jam, Surya is the full-length debut of Queen Elephantine and a crushingly impressive follow-up to recent split-&lt;b&gt;albums&lt;/b&gt; with Sons of Otis and Elder. Queen Elephantine&apos;s formidable contributions to those records were weighty works themselves, but a mere sampling of what they could do on their own. Surya&apos;s five tracks stretch out to over an hour, as the band lives up to its name and presents a perfect soundtrack to the unwieldy march of a mystical elephant caravan across the celestial plains. They melt down the sounds of Black Sabbath, Sleep, &lt;b&gt;Hawkwind&lt;/b&gt;, Pink Floyd, early Monster Magnet, and a variety of other influences into a cosmic swamp all their own, populated by droning numbers like the self-titled lead off track and lumbering epics such as the 16-and-a-half-minute &quot;Ramesses II,&quot; which rumbles along almost religiously with its chanted lyrics and smoky atmosphere until the pace picks up for its swirling climax.

The Middle Eastern influence of the instrumental &quot;Kabir&quot; provides a trippy interlude before &quot;Plasma Thaw&quot; swings in on a monstrous groove reminiscent of the usual suspects from the &apos;70&apos;s and doesn&apos;t let up, definitely the catchiest song on the &lt;b&gt;album&lt;/b&gt;. &quot;Bison&quot; closes the record at a mammoth 27 minutes and 24 seconds, an expansive sonic journey that never gets boring or monotonous. The layers upon layers of hypnotic rhythms and molasses riffs, enhanced by the jammed-out feeling throughout Surya should please fans of bands like Sons of Otis, Mammatus, Acid Mothers Temple, Ufomammut, and Om. The band is still in search of a record label to release the &lt;b&gt;album&lt;/b&gt; as a physical entity, rather than its current digital format, but Queen Elephantine won&apos;t be denied for long as they continue their trek to the throne of heavy space-rock royalty.


Hellride Music:
Queen Elephantine is a group of young explorers in the world of heavy psychedelia, and &amp;#915;??Surya&amp;#915;?? is their first full-length, coming hot on the heels of various split releases and such in the past year or two. &amp;#915;??Surya&amp;#915;?? is a long, contemplative trip into the world of inner visions, a journey in which the devotional merges with the visionary to stake out a unique corner of the musical underground.

&amp;#915;??Surya&amp;#915;?? begins with &amp;#915;??Queen Elephantine,&amp;#915;?? a lurching, meditational drone with plenty of heavy, distorted bass; a recipe the group uses to its advantage throughout the &lt;b&gt;album&lt;/b&gt;. The song builds very slowly, offering visions that are somehow relaxed yet filled with anxiety, bringing to mind a space voyage with a crash landing on a far planet, where the alien sands drift quietly over blurry shapes both bizarre and sinister. &amp;#915;??Ramesses II&amp;#915;?? is a desert mirage of jerky military rhythms and monks offering devotional chanting that builds into the wails of lost souls. &amp;#915;??Plasma Thaw&amp;#915;?? is more rawkin&amp;#915;??, while the 27 minute &amp;#915;??Bison&amp;#915;?? is as thunderous as its namesake, with leaving-the-rails blues-based thrashing reminiscent of English cult doom/sludge outfit Ramesses. This tune pushes Queen Elephantine territory out further, with various plodding sludgy riffs creating a claustrophobic blues hell colonized by nasty Tibetan demons of every des c r i p tion.

Lovers of heavy psychedelic doom or drone as manifested by groups as wide-ranging as Sleep, Acid Mother&amp;#915;??s Temple, Mammatus, YOB, and even &amp;#915;??Saucer&amp;#915;??-era Floyd should climb aboard with these young musicnauts. It&amp;#915;??s not a comfortable or easy trip by any means, but it will reward your (lysergic) attention.</description><pubDate>Sun, 09 Mar 2008 22:14:16 GMT</pubDate></item>
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