Oblisk

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Tunnel of Phoenix 05:45 Tools
Around the Sound 04:05 Tools
Epicenter 05:33 Tools
On Radar 05:05 Tools
Time Dilation 04:54 Tools
Overcast 04:54 Tools
Tiger Fighter 08:27 Tools
Breathing Underwater 03:22 Tools
Silent Passenger 04:13 Tools
Blue Iceberg 03:15 Tools
Modern Day Villain 03:47 Tools
Visionary Gardens 04:12 Tools
Parallel 05:26 Tools
Ancestors 06:23 Tools
Broken Antenna 04:48 Tools
Beirut 03:30 Tools
Getaway Ride 04:08 Tools
Tune In/Tune Out 05:33 Tools
You're A Machine 03:28 Tools
Fifth Year 03:16 Tools
Big City Birds 03:42 Tools
Short Story 05:35 Tools
Married to the Sea 05:59 Tools
Python 07:37 Tools
Walking Through Walls 03:13 Tools
Empty File Reel 03:17 Tools
Empty Film Reel 03:16 Tools
Overcast Remix 02:23 Tools
sitting on the couch watching peep show 02:23 Tools
I've Got Polo Socks Ft. Gangus 02:23 Tools
-Epicenter 02:23 Tools
Drive 02:23 Tools
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Oblisk - Tune In/Tune Out (2008) "Major Tom revisited" (from Metro Times) Not unlike the mysterious pillar suddenly appearing before the apes in Stanley Kubrick's 2001, the Detroit-based Oblisk is at once unknowable and undeniably present. Sounding like an even more disaffected Dean Wareham, lead singer-guitarist Asim Akhtar intones distance over ghostly organ and skittish drums, while guitars pick out delicate melodies or cyclic, oblong riffs. More human than Hal, though, much of the time Oblisk is more like a musically fleshed-out version of Bowie's Major Tom — not the song in which he resides but the character himself, if he were given the opportunity to present his outer-space plight over the course of an entire album. He'd certainly still be de-Earthed and possibly on the verge of panic, but ultimately accepting of his disconnection with wistful abandon. And when the music here works best, Oblisk charges onward behind Akhtar, much like Tom's ever-hurtling spaceship — all roaring nitrogen, anti-gravity and sucking air. Musically, Oblisk hasn't forgotten the effectiveness of basic psychedelia; the left-right panning looped guitar of Empty Film Reel (yes, that's a name) has all the effect of a sizable intake of nitrous oxide (please put the headphones on for this one), and as the unintelligible (backward?) vocals mumble desperately just below the surface and microscopic shards of guitar start pinpricking the skin, it just gets weirder. But a moment later, the listener is suddenly encased in the churning, swampy title track, and the contrast has the effect of flailing one's way through cobwebs in the House of the Long Shadows, only to hit on solid pavement when something like a chorus comes along. Safe ground! And then those guitars start back up in a shimmering arc toward the moon ... It's that hazy unknowable quality that keeps the listener returning to these songs, as if there's some code to crack with just one more listen. It's likely, though, that in fact there is no code — just thick, webby psychedelia comfortably wrapped around some very good songs ... and far out of reach of Ground Control. Full length album available at www.myspace.com/oblisk Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.