Brooklyn Vegan just unveiled a video for "Lazy Bones," a cut from Wooden Shjips' recently Zoned In (and repressed) West LP on Thrill Jockey. Directed by none other than New York electronic trio Black Dice, it offsets the Shjips' repetitious, open-road rocker with enough rapid eye stimulation to be deserving of an epilepsy disclaimer. --Emilie Friedlander, Altered Zones
MP3: Wooden Shjips: "Lazy Bones"
Pre-order a copy of the newly repressed West LP from Thrill Jockey
After three albums and more than ten EPs and 7"s, San Francisco's hypnotic groove wranglers have handed over the reins to someone else. Not just one, but three outside individuals are responsible for shaping Wooden Shjips' new West LP into a towering behemoth of sound. The surprising part is less who these people are than the fact that the band has finally allowed outside forces to affect the final punch of a Shjips record after years of recording, engineering, mastering, and, in some cases, distributing their records themselves. West is also the first album from the band to be recorded in a proper studio (SF's Lucky Cat Studios, to be precise), and their debut for Chicago's Thrill Jockey.
Not surprisingly, their sound remains essentially rooted in a trusted amalgam of Sabbath's rolling thunder, Loop's hypnotic trance, and Snapper's balance of noise and melody. As for those new hands in the pot, they've chosen wisely. Phil Manley, a founding member of Trans Am whose credits include records for Alps, Arp, and Mi Ami, steps into the producer/engineer chair; mastering duties are handed over to Sonic Boom (of Spacemen 3 fame) and The Lodge's Heba Kadry, who has worked with Thrill Jockey labelmates Eternal Tapestry and Liturgy in the past. The first name doesn't come too far out of left field, as Manley also recorded this year's Mazes, the sophomore LP from Moon Duo, Ripley's other psychedelic project. In the same way that Manley lifted their melodies from the muck, he brushes some of the dust from Wooden Shjips' sound, letting Johnson’s vocals roll over top of the band's sonic whirlpool with a road-weary sigh.
This clarity pulls some of Ripley Johnson's vocals into focus, allowing lyrical themes of the American West and the Manifest Destiny to boil up to the surface while retaining just the right amount of delay-dripping obfuscation. The frontman brings out country grit and gunfighter cool, sounding like a Johnny Cash running on eight cylinders as the grooves roll on and on, as heavy and hot as the roads they are meant to evoke. The band rolled into this one with some of the most powerful, enigmatic, and entrancing songs they've ever laid to tape. With the expanded team, they've shaken the mountain of the Shjips' sound, thickened and polished it to a hard gleam, and set West loose down the Coast.
West is out now in Europe, and drops next week in the US on CD and LP from Thrill Jockey
[From left to right: Omar Ahsanuddin, Nash Whalen, Dusty Jermier, and Ripley Johnson of Wooden Shjips; photo by Ripley Johnson]
By Andy French
MP3: Wooden Shjips: "Lazy Bones"
Since their inception in 2006, Wooden Shjips have focused psychedelic experimentation into tightly wound bundles of rhythmic furry. Their early days were marked by a strident DIY attitude, from recording their own albums to releasing singles compilations on their own label, Sick Thirst. I recently phoned guitarist Ripley Johnson, bass player Dusty Jermier, drummer Omar Ahsanuddin, and organ player Nash Whalen to talk about collaborating with Sonic Boom and producer Phil Manley on their forthcoming LP on Thrill Jockey, life as a "San Francisco band," and the mythology of the American West.
AZ: Early on, I heard a story that the "j" in your name is an homage to Swedish psych.
Ripley: Yeah, that's true. It really comes from Pärson Sound and Träd Gräs och Stenar. When I discovered those records, I think Subliminal Sounds released those on CD, and I got really into those. The first pressings were really small, and so that was the first time they were really available. I was talking with a friend who was half-Swedish, and we were joking about the spelling, so that's how it came about. It was one of those things that happened really off the cuff, and you end up explaining it for the rest of your life [Laughs]. I still like the fact that we have it but we're not like Swede-o-philes or anything like that.
SF psych-garage gurus Wooden Shjips just dropped their Miko Revereza-directed video for the upcoming album's opener, "Black Smoke Rise." Dragging a bottle across a chain link fence has never looked so badass. --Ric Leichtung, Altered Zones
Thrill Jockey is set to drop West on September 13th
--Previously
Wooden Shjips, San Francisco's leading peddlers of psych, have a new album coming out this September on Thrill Jockey. After being around for more than five years, Wooden Shjips is finally releasing their first studio-recorded full-length, West. Produced by Phil Manley of Trans Am and mastered by the recently profiled Sonic Boom, the album's main theme is appropriately said to be “the American West, and all of the mythology, romanticism, and idealism that it embodies." Here's the first track to drop from the California expats' latest, "Lazy Bones." --Ric Leichtung, Altered Zones via Stereogum
MP3: Wooden Shjips: "Lazy Bones"
West drops on September 13th on Thrill Jockey

