North Carolinas sludge-doom sloggers Weedeater get their filth groove on with their debut album for Southern Lord, the drunkenly titled God Luck and Good Speed. The title track and "Weed Monkey erupt with their cultivated fuzz two feedback-drenched train wrecks of Acid King and old Melvins. And what sounds faithfully like Billy Andersons production is actually handled by renowned noisenik Steve Albini. The slower "For Evans Sake is more akin to down tuned Sleep, and Sheps guitar solo defines their Southern heritage even more so than their crusty, Six Feet Under-ish cover of Lynyrd Skynyrds "Gimme Back My Bullets. The acoustic eccentricity "Alone sits on the front porch like a Neil Young/Tom Waits tune, with banjo and Dave "Dixie Collinss sub-bass vocal utterances. "$20 Peanut and "Wizard Fight sling the Hawg Jaw muck with buzzing bass, while "Dirt Merchant taps into classic Electric Wizard for a swingin ode to mindlessness. As the album fades out with a piano loop, Weedeater have succeeded in bestowing welcomed variety in their well-weathered doom.
(Southern Lord)Weedeater
God Luck and Good Speed
BY Chris AyersPublished Aug 13, 2007