
OZENZA
Hear Was Here
LP
(fric-042)
180 gram Clear Vinyl. First Pressing of 500.

$12.95 Add To Cart
Tracks:
Side 1
01 Maximum
02 Your Small Hands
03 Black Box MP3
04 You Should Have Been On The Ground
05 Marble
06 Medium
07 Vanity
Side 2
09 Nick Fink
10 Minimum
11 Binders
12 Hot We
Distribution by www.vinylcollective.com
www.myspace.com/ozenza
www.frictionrecords.net
With the instantaneous everywhere at once of electric speed, many of todayıs buzz bands can be considered analogous with digital media, downloading themselves into the collective conscious,
only to be unloaded just as quickly. In an age when music is as disposable and transferable as a bad idea, itıs nice to know there are bands out there like Ozenza.
Take, for example, the bandıs debut full-length, Hear Was Here, a long-playing record of the bandıs three-year evolution from side-project to heavy music heavyweights,
recorded in part with analog equipment and pressed into 180 grams of clear vinyl, out now on Friction Records. From the foreboding tones of instrumental prologue
³Maximum² into the burrowing fray of ³Your Small Hands,² it is clear that the album, like the way it was created and disseminated, is a deliberate, swaggering
testament of a band committed to and comfortable in its own ominous vision.
Sprouting from the frozen ground of West Michigan during the first thaws of 2004, Matt Younker (guitar, vocals) and Josh Stacey (drums) first formed the group as an alternative to
their work in progressive-hardcore act and Grand Rapids-scene staple Ren the Director, taking up each otherıs instrument and working in the opposite direction of their precursor.
Where Ren the Director bowled over audiences with technical maneuvers, mashed-up timing and decorative riffs, Younker and Stacey built from the ground up, syncing guitar and
drum into a droning, bowel-shaking foundation that boasts more of its very existence than its essence. With the addition of Younkerıs then fiancé (now wife) Britt on bass
her first band and try at the instrument, Mike Brown (formerly of Testadura) on guitar and an enigmatic front-man known only as ³The Father,² the band started gigging,
quickly making a name for itself on the local scene and leaving its brain-rattling stamp on ear drums around Michigan. In the summer of 2005, the young band hit the road
for a week with sludge heroes EYEHATEGOD, opening shows throughout the Midwest.
The bandıs following was growing, but as it constructed a mighty tower of Babel, unified in sound and spirit, the gods grew jealous. Changes occurred. ³The Father² was called elsewhere.
Without his prophetic screeching and wailing, Younker and Brown were left to handle the vocals and develop a simpler, rhythmic style of delivery. In 2006, Brown left. Undeterred, the
band moved forward as trio, stripping down its sound to the bone but never seeming to lack for it. That same year Ozenza recorded ³Revelation/Revolution² for For The Sick, a tribute to
EYEHATEGOD, with Sanford Parker of Minsk and Buried at Sea. They continued writing, gigging and seeking collaborators. Soon Adam Duron (Gavin Black, Ren The Director, Testadura) came
on board as second guitarist. In spring 2007, three full years since its inception, the band started work on its debut album at Younkerıs home recording studio The White Lodge, a
converted pole barn outfitted with an impressive collection of microphones and analog tape machine. The band also brought on Christian Kremo (Morale, The Apostles) on guitar so
Younker could focus on singing. The band took its time, tweaking its songs until everyone was sure they had an album they liked. Whether anything else came of it, they did not care.
The end result is a measured assault that brings to mind some the best elements of fellow decibel masters High on Fire, The Melvins, Kyuss, EYEHATEGOD, Torche and Queens of the Stone
Age. Covering themes of war, attempted murder, vanity, fundamentalism and consumer gluttony, the record would be heavy even if played on acoustic instruments. Mastered by Al McAvoy,
the album is now available on vinyl and iTunes through Friction Records, and the band is scheduling regional tours.