loading . . . New Video: BUĂUEL Returns with Bruising, Genre-Defying âA Killing on the Beachâ BUĂUEL â OXBOWâs Eugene S. Robinson, Afterhours and A Short Apneaâs Xabier Iriondo (guitar), The Framersâ Andrea Lombardini (bass) and Il Teatro Degli Orroriâs Franz Valente (drums) â is a transatlantic supergroup that specializes in heavy music thatâs been described as beautiful, merciless and unforgiving. Creatively, the band has always been led by instinct and the id-like impulse to expressed completely unfiltered and unvarnished emotion through song. And through their close musical alliance, theyâve displayed a seemingly innate ability to craft material that warps and buckles with complexity, freedom, tenderness and primeval energy â simultaneously. âBUĂUEL is a name that embodies a certain cultural and literary reference, which evokes an entire world,â the bandâs Franz Valente says. âLike his films, our Buñuel is surrealism. We take the listeners into a place thatâs suspended between dream and reality.â Eugene S. Robinson adds âWhat weâre doing with BUĂUEL is to carve out a very specific glimpse⊠partly into hearts of darkness, but more specifically into the depth of our secrets. Secrets we keep from each other, ourselves and whatever futures weâve imagined for ourselves. We are ultimately trying to communicate something direct and deadly about the human condition.â Released last October through SKiN Graft Records and OVERDRIVE Records the transatlantic supergroupâs latest album, the Timo Ellis-produced Mansuetude derives its title from an archaic word, which means âmeeknessâ or âgentleness.â Certainly, for a band known for being punishingly heavy, the title seems like an ironic juxtaposition. Firmly anchored in the bandâs long-held penchant for surrealism, the album sees the band taking every opportunity they can to stretch their musical tendrils towards discomfort and the deconstruction of tradition, all while reaching absolute abandon. Sonically, the albumâs material encompasses many moods â sometimes simultaneously â while blurring elements of post-hardcore, avant-noise, hard blues, post-industrial, symphonic thrash, metal and free-jazz, played at great cost. The record is, in Robinsonâs words âextreme but articulate.â The album also features guest spots from Convergeâs Jacob Bannon (vocals), The Jesus Lizardâs Tomahawkâs and The Denison Kimball Trioâs Duane Denison (guitar), Andrea Beninati (cello) and David Binney(alto sax, vocals). In the lead up to the album's release, I wrote about two of the album's singles âClass,â and "American Steel," which featured The Jesus Lizardâs, Tomahawkâs and the Denison Kimball Trioâs Duane Denison. Album single "A Killing on the Beach" is a feral and unhinged, genre-defying bruiser of a track, which features elements of post-punk, art punk, metal, No Wave and more that also serves as the perfect bed for an equally unhinged vocal performance by the band's Robinson. Directed by Annapaola Martin, the cinematically shot visual for "A Killing on the Beach" is a surreal and brutal fever dream shot in the breathtakingly gorgeous Basque Country. https://joyofviolentmovement.com/new-video-bunuel-returns-with-bruising-genre-defying-a-killing-on-the-beach/?utm_source=bluesky&utm_medium=jetpack_social