Bonnacons of Doom + Yoke at Crofters Rights
Headfirst Editor's Pick

"Twisting Gnod’s cvlt-like, trance-inducing psych into doomier forms; thee Bonnacons have crossed the astral plane with noise to melt your mind, your face and your ears."

Join the Headfirst mailing list for our unbiased recommendations.

See event details

A gig held at Crofters Rights on Thursday 28th March. The event starts at 20:00.


Extra Terrestrial Promotions & Velvet Echoes are proud to present Bonnacons of Doom - a masked collective specialising in hypnotically pagan doom unsuitable for the faint of heart. They traverse to Bristol in support and celebration of their new album ‘Signs’, a collection of songs which takes the band’s engagement with tradition and ritual to new realms. Support on the evening comes from newly formed and fellow Rocket Recordings band Yoke, whose thunderous and industrial noises shall commence proceedings.

CONSUME THE CROFTERS.

Bonnacons of Doom

Traversing the everyday in 2023, the need for catharsis only grows stronger. Enter Bonnacons Of Doom, progenitors of Trans Pennine hypnotic music. This mirror masked collective, amassed from across the North of England, have stepped up their mission accordingly on ‘Signs’ – their second album for Rocket Recordings.

Signs takes the band’s engagement with tradition and ritual on a new trajectory, tracking forward into our digital lives and exploring how our actions are shaped by the post-human environment. New rituals and behavioural patterning evolve in response to the dominance of digital flows and interactions. The desire to reconnect to the ancient and the mystic grows stronger as our daily lives become ever more enmeshed within waves of information and disinformation.

The accelerated course into the post-digital begs pause for thought on this new realm’s impact on human and ecological development. Building on the intimidating intensity of Bonnacons Of Doom’s self-titled 2018 debut, ‘Signs’ offers a sonic response to the tension between the urge to pursue continuity with our past and to adapt to our changing present. Hypnotic grooves and the monomaniacal intensity of the riff are fractured by digital interplay, electronics and the incantatory vocals of ceremonial leader Kate Smith, coalescing into a metaphysical force which stands defiant of easy categorisation.

“The past five years has really accelerated a sense of confusion” states the band’s Rob Strachan. “I think we’re in a period of post-digital decay and in a sense the album is naturally a response to that. I think everyone feels out of control and we’re all trying to make sense of a period where it feels like everything is falling apart. So I think culturally and politically there’s a tendency to look for emergent signs to explain things that are essentially chaotic. Pattern recognition is a key part of being a human so we all look for signs even if their interpretations are misaligned or totally out there”

“There was definitely a conscious decision to address the real world more explicitly on this record. It’s much more lyric based than the first album but still trying to channel something otherworldly or spiritual” reflects Kate.

“The idea of signs works as a multiple metaphor across the album” she adds. “Signs related to differing aspects of being human” The title track ‘Signs’ itself -which shoots the band’s elemental forces through a fragmented electronic prism to liberation and transcendence anew -“...is about looking for signs from the universe and wanting to feel connected to a greater whole”. ‘Facing’, meanwhile, the album’s opener - volleying forth with a riff-driven aural assault as graceful as it is steadfast-“...is about having to fight for everything. Standing when there are multiple obstacles in the way”

‘Signs’ marks both a portent of things to come, and a roadmap of the psychic pathways to survival. Within these otherworldly manifestations lurks solace in a place where the transcendent powers of heavy amplification, sonic explorations and forces darker and more unknowable can coalesce to cathartic and redeeming effect.

Yoke

If “the self-indulgent joy of stupidly loud amplifiers and feedback” is a sequence of words that gets your motor running, then Yoke might be your new favourite band - and when we say new we mean it. Their debut album, also titled ‘Yoke’, is the first recordings the three-piece have shared in public, and unless you caught one of the two (count ‘em) live performances they have so far undertaken in their home city of Newcastle, this slate will be as clean as their music is filthy.

Entry requirements: 18+

Other doom metal gigs

Kiran Leonard + Sunglasz Vendor at Sabrina 6 (Bristol Cruising Club)
— Sabrina 6 (Bristol Cruising Club)
emo alternative rock art rock folk experimental
SPECTRES + EX AGENT + JEROME at Rough Trade Bristol
— Rough Trade Bristol
noise rock shoegaze experimental noise
Sans Froid 'Hello, Boil Brain' Album Launch at Rough Trade Bristol
— Rough Trade Bristol
synthpop alternative rock noise rock art rock experimental
Maruja + special guests at Strange Brew
— Strange Brew
experimental pop rock psych experimental jazz funk
Beak> at SWX
— SWX
electro rock psych dark wave experimental