11/16/2023

Take A Journey Through Space + Time with Spiritual Poison on “Summon”

Take A Journey Through Space + Time with Spiritual Poison on “Summon

The song appears on Incorporeal, out tomorrow on Closed Casket Activities.

Watch a music video for the single and read a new interview with multi-disciplinary artist Ethan McCarthy via Treble.

Photo by: Peter Troest.

Akin to opening a portal beyond this mortal coil, music beckons us to step into other mindsets, realities, and worlds. In the same fashion, Spiritual Poison entices listeners to dive deeper via its cinematic drone punctuated by dynamics of jarring heaviness, numbing feedback, and unexpected melodic reprieve. 

The vision of artist, vocalist, multi-instrumentalist, and producer Ethan McCarthySpiritual Poison beckons us to step into other mindsets, realities, and worlds, akin to opening a portal beyond this mortal coil.  The project entices listeners to dive deeper via its cinematic drone punctuated by dynamics of jarring heaviness, numbing feedback, and unexpected melodic reprieve— this sound instantly captivates on Spiritual Poison’s 2023 debut, Incorporeal, which is out tomorrow on Closed Casket Activities

Ahead of the album's release, Spiritual Poison has shared an immersive new music video for Incorporeal's opening track, "Summon."  The near eight-minute track introduces Spiritual Poison’s visceral, venomous, and vital vision in widescreen.  “I wanted [the album] to sound like a long journey through an otherworldly doorway,” McCarthy muses about Incorporeal. “I think of spirituality a lot, so some of those ideas are present. Musically, there was so much emphasis on different instruments and trying things outside of the typical worlds of metal and noise.”  He continues, “'Summon' ushers you outside of the reality you’re currently in."  

Ethan McCarthy has continued to affirm his status as an underground luminary. Between Primitive ManVermin Womb, and Many Blessings, he has remained consistent, releasing music at a dizzying pace, touring, and earning tastemaker acclaim.  During 2022, he opted to shine a light on another side of his creativity with Spiritual Poison— under the influence of artists as diverse as Lawrence English and Tim Hecker. McCarthy not only sang and produced, but also handled guitar, synth, piano, and drums joined by a handful of friends on various instruments.  “I play in some really heavy bands that are nasty and gritty,” he goes on. “I wanted to make a record that’s the opposite of everything I’ve usually put out. It’s still challenging and dark, but I’m relying on harmony instead of dissonance.”

Recorded and co-produced by Andy Nelson at Bricktop Studios and mastered by Brad Boatright at Audiosiege, Incorporeal commences with rumbling guitar, sustained distortion and hypnotically haunting vocal transmissions that introduce Spiritual Poison's visceral, venomous and vital vision in widescreen.  The album plunges to lower depths augmented by the interplay of modular synths. Running drums through analog effects, the track layers an electronic rhythm above live drums, balancing rhythm and movement in contrast.

McCarthy continues, “It’s a stressful journey... you leave with all of this knowledge, but it’s going to destroy you. Hopefully, that’s the vibe of the record.”  In many ways, the name Spiritual Poison encapsulates this.  “There are a lot of things in this world that poison you spiritually, and it was on my mind going into this,” he notes. “If you’re rotten spiritually, you’re unable to be good to people or decent to yourself. You need to know yourself and be in touch with the real character inside your spirit.”

In the end, Incorporeal finds McCarthy taking heavy music into new territory.  “I hope you can listen to it while you’re driving, walking, meditating, or thinking,” he leaves off. “The goal was to make a solid experimental record.”

Incorporeal, cover art:

Incorporeal, track listing:

  1. Summon
  2. Tintinnabulum Key
  3. Passage
  4. Place of Peace
  5. Sheol
  6. Return
 

For more on Spiritual Poison / Ethan McCarthy:

Web | Bandcamp | Instagram

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All photos taken by Martin Worster