Witchcraft Rebellion

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Witchcraft Rebellion album cover
Album Information
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Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 33:38

eMusic Features

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K Records

By Peter S. Scholtes, eMusic Contributor

In concert, Calvin Johnson will sometimes invite an audience onstage, or walk out into the crowd mid-song with his acoustic guitar. He'll float to the back of the room, expressionless, then walk right up to you and stare into your eyes. There's romance behind this rude gesture, which is also very funny. Among the 100 or so bands Johnson's released on K Records since 1982, you can imagine his wayward-foghorn croon sounds something like a… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Witchcraft Rebellion is easily the most consistent release to date from this raucous, ramshackle trio led by Arrington DeDionyso and featuring the Microphones’ Phil Elvrum on drums (who, by the way, is an excellent drummer; he’s not on board merely to add name recognition). DeDionyso’s singing falls somewhere between Captain Beefheart, Blind Willie Johnson, and Popeye. He screams, hollers, growls, whoops, and hollers throughout these 13 surrealistically bluesy songs. “Mystery Language” is one of the standout Old Time Relijun songs thus far. All the band’s trademarks and idiosyncrasies are there: a herky-jerky guitar riff that finds common ground between post-punk angularities and Delta blues, guttural vocals belting out bizarre couplets (“I can take off my head/And so can my dad”), and simple but powerful drumming. Elsewhere, such as “Vampire Sushi,” the band gives an absurdist’s take on the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion formula, while “King of Nothing” is a gritty postmodern rockabilly tune with a machine-gun rhythm. Witchcraft Rebellion can be a jarring ride at first, but once you are acclimated, it goes down as smooth as any classic R&B. – Jason Nickey

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