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Flaming Tusk releases “Old, Blackened Century” CD Digipak

Old, Blackened Century CD inside
High Water Media is proud to announce the physical release of catalog number HWM003. Flaming Tusk’s debut full length Old, Blackened Century is now available as a CD via the band’s website. The four-panel digipak features liner notes and a selection of lyrics rendered in a mysterious scribal notation.

Old, Blackened Century can be had in physical form or downloaded from music.flamingtusk.com.

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Old, Blackened Century gets Flaming Tusk rave reviews

The praise is trickling in for HWM affiliates Flaming Tusk and their new album Old, Blackened Century.

First out of the gate was Atanamar at Sunyata: Mindful of Metal who awarded the album an 86/100 and had the following to say:

I get the same satisfying sense of weirdness that emerged the first time I listened to Mardraum. Those feelings of curiosity, groundlessness and amazement are rarely invoked for me by metal these days. Old, Blackened Century has violently appropriated my attention, much like Cobalt’s Gin did last year.

The songwriting is superlative and certainly one of Flaming Tusk’s greatest assets…. Old, Blackened Century is sparse, raw and just what I need at the moment. Most new bands these days sound like poorly stitched Frankenstein monsters of metal methodology. Flaming Tusk are a fully evolved beast with a distinct and appealing sound. This shit just rocks. Old, Blackened Century is definitely worth checking out.

Atanamar has also posted a blackly glowing review of a live Flaming Tusk gig.

Metal blog No Clean Singing is super down with Old, Blackened Century too, saying (in a remarkably comprehensive review):

When we listen to Flaming Tusk, we’re reminded at different times of Cobalt, Tombs, Hull, Ludicra, Coalesce, early Mastodon, and — well, you get the idea. Like we said, hard to classify. They don’t really sound exactly like any of those bands, and we certainly don’t mean to suggest they’re intentionally modeling themselves on any of them, but drawing those comparisons is one feeble way of giving you an idea of what Old, Blackened Century brings to mind.

Maybe it’s enough to say that if you’re starting to get bored with the metal you’ve been cranking recently, and you’re after something out of the box, you should go listen to Flaming Tusk’s horrifyingly enjoyable opus. (But really, be forewarned about the last song on the album — “Icy River”, which clocks in at nearly 10 minutes — it’s like the sonic equivalent of being tied naked to your bed with a dozen giant, oily black centipedes slowly crawling toward your face.)

Old, Blackened Century is available as a pay-what-you-will download from flamingtusk.com.

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Flaming Tusk releases “Old, Blackened Century”

High Water Media is proud to announce the at-long-last release of Flaming Tusk’s first full-length album: Old, Blackened Century.

OBC

HWM is offering this album as a pay-what-you-will download to acknowledge that digital music has become an essentially uncontrolled, infinitely available commodity, and to highlight that this is an entirely independent production financed solely by the band. Supporters of independent music know what they must do; support it.

This widget will allow the curious to stream the album in its entirety:

<a href="http://music.flamingtusk.com/album/old-blackened-century">Anathema by Flaming Tusk</a>

Catch Flaming Tusk at any number of live shows coming up over the remainder of this winter and into the spring.

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Flaming Tusk’s “Old, Blackened Century” to be released 1/19/10

High Water Media will release Flaming Tusk’s first full-length album Old, Blackened Century via the band’s official website at music.flamingtusk.com on Tuesday, January 19th 2010 as catalog number HWM003.

The tracks will be available in a wide variety of digital formats, and the band will be asking visitors to “pay what you will” in order to download the songs.

The track listing of the album as follows:

  1. Anathema
  2. Cilleighfaern
  3. No Smiles
  4. I Nap In Blood
  5. Ichor
  6. Instability
  7. My Red Sun
  8. Icy River

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Flaming Tusk recording engineer speaks

Recording engineer Tom Beaujour took to his Nuthouse Recording blog recently to describe the “punishing task” of tracking the forthcoming Flaming Tusk full length:

“The absolutely massively named Flaming Tusk and their debut album was up next. Crazy-ass extreme underground metal. A smarter, more well-read bunch of guys you have never met. They are obsessed with bizarre spirits (of the alcoholic, not supernatural type) and had bottles of some of the weirdest shit I have ever seen (artichoke liqueur, anyone?) at the ready at all times.”

Read more about Tom’s further adventures recording Five Finger Death Punch, Mutiny Within and Upon A Burning Body here.

The new Flaming Tusk full-length will be out Januaryish.

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Flaming Tusk completes recording their full-length

Flaming Tusk have survived eight brutal days in the studio at Nuthouse Recording under the whip of Tom Beaujour.

The as-yet untilted full length album will probably be released in late fall or early winter, 2009, following mastering, the finishing of artwork and laying down the infrastructure necessary for worldwide dissemination.

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Flaming Tusk begins recording new album with Tom Beaujour

Flaming Tusk posted a notice on their website today announcing that they begin recording their followup to the Abigail EP this month, with producer / engineer Tom Beaujour behind the glass.

Beaujour is known for many things, such as engineering Nada Surf’s Weight Is A Gift, producing and recording Scale The Summit’s Carving Desert Canyons, and being the editor-in-chief of Revolver Magazine. The band is, reportedly, quite excited to get to work.

Tracking begins on September 11, and the album should be ready for release by early winter.

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Flaming Tusk’s “Abigail” EP in Decibel Magazine

High Water Media affiliates Flaming Tusk have received a brief mention in the April 2009 issue of Decibel magazine.

Decibel Magazine, April '09

Music critic Cosmo Lee of Decibel, Pitchfork, PopMatters, Stylus Magazine, and metal mp3 blog Invisible Oranges had this to say in the print edition of the magazine:

Astoria’s Flaming Tusk wins the odd bird award here. I have no idea what to call this. You Fail Me-era Converge, but sludgier, proggier and with black metal rasps? It’s messy, but melodic and strangely compelling. You can download it for free at the band’s site. Try or die!

The April 2009 issue, featuring Brutal Truth on the cover, is available on newsstands and at Decibel’s website.

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Flaming Tusk interviewed by Metal-Rules.com

Flaming Tusk has been interviewed by Canadian headbanger webjournal Metal-Rules.com. The interview was published yesterday, and can be read here (with pictures!).

An excerpt:

Q: ‘I Nap In Blood’ and ’26 Legions’ offer some other lyrical themes, namely gore and Satanism. Any thoughts on either?
A: 1) Gore is cool and 2) Satan is real. They’re two more classic metal tropes, and as a band we delight in the classic themes and aesthetics of metal… Musical grossness is perhaps an infinite frontier.

http://www.metal-rules.com/zine/content/view/1542/74/

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Flaming Tusk’s “Abigail” EP reviewed by Metal-Rules.com

The Canadian gourmands of metal at Metal-Rules.com have reviewed the Abigail EP, rating it 3 out of 5 (which translates to “recommended for serious fans” on their scale).

Metal-Rules says:

This five piece band from Astoria, New York plays an eclectic mix of death, black and thrash metal that draws as much musical influence from The Doors and Black Sabbath as Immortal, via Emperor and Deicide and Testament… Singer Stolas Trephinator mixes up tortured gurgles and screams with death roars to great effect, and the fact that I’m reminded of Schmier, Zetro Souza, Abbath and Glen Benton can only be a good thing. And it’s well worth you to taking the time to read their twisted lyrics, seeing as how ABIGAIL was inspired by the true story of Abigail Taylor (I won’t spoil it for you here but you can look it up on Wikipedia)… With the jagged, doom-ish riffing and the black/death vocals, ABIGAIL is a great debut effort. With the inevitable improvement on later albums in the lyrics department as the band matures, Flaming Tusk will be one to keep an eye out for.

Read the full review by clicking here

Download the Abigail EP.

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