GG King: Evoker 12"

GG King: Evoker 12"


Tags: · 20s · garage · hcpmf · melodic · punk
Regular price
$19.00
Sale price
$19.00

Vinyl version of our sold out Evoker tape that came with copies of "Remain Intact". This line up was paired down to the core of Greg, Ryan and myself and augmented with a guitar solo by Human Pony Boy Kelly Stroup. Includes a Television Personalities cover and a reworking of "Leigh" from Unending Darkness, reimagined by myself in my basement...added synth, words and a new end which is an Easter egg to another forth coming State Laughter release. At the encouragement of our boss at Total Punk, this project spawned our new entity Glittering Insects, based around the same trio that recorded this record. Self Titled LP is at the plant and should be out early next year.


Our take: Evoker originally appeared as a limited edition cassette that came as a freebie with some copies of GG King’s latest proper album, Remain Intact. The cassette garnered an enthusiastic reaction (including the offer of a future release on Total Punk experimental offshoot label Mind Meld Records), so State Laughter pressed up some copies on wax for us lucky GG King fanatics. On GG King’s main releases, they have a unique style I’d describe as classic punk stretched out with influences from black metal and krautrock, styles that provide a counterbalance to punk’s short and to-the-point songwriting style. Evoker, however, has an even more experimental and playful atmosphere. There are genre experiments like the pure second-wave black metal of “Evoker 2 (Circling Starmount)” and the hardcore punk of “Punxx Picnic Destinations,” a cover tune (the Television Personalities’ “Silly Girl,” which stretches that compact pop tune in drone-y and weird directions), and stylistic departures like “Leigh’s Castle,” a fuzz-drenched psych-pop song with a drum machine that sounds like it could have appeared on an early Guided by Voices record. There’s also more out-there experimental tracks like “Evoker 1,” an excellent atmospheric sound collage piece, and “Evoker 3 (Wotever Happens Next),” which channels the WTF qualities of Celtic Frost’s Into the Pandemonium, minus the self-seriousness. Perhaps there are people who like GG King’s albums but find this looser version of the group too weird, but given how quirky and unprecedented GG King’s sound is, I imagine that group is a pretty small subset of the band’s following. Thus, if you’ve followed our previous recommendations and gotten hip to GG King’s vibe, there’s no reason to pass over Evoker without a listen.