A shoreline transformed?
The huge area covered by these mounds gives a sense of just how significant this erosion was. "The dichotomy boundary has receded several hundred kilometres," the researchers note....CHECK THE FULL ARTICLE BELOWđ
#dichotomy #Edge #eroded #Featured #Great #hundreds #kilometers #Mars #News #TechNews #technology
https://skylinenews.org/edge-of-mars-great-dichotomy-eroded-back-by-hundreds-of-kilometers/10376/
A shoreline transformed? The huge area covered by these mounds gives a sense of just how significant this erosion was. âThe dichotomy boundary has receded several hundred kilometres,â the researchers note. âNearly all intervening materialâapproximately 57,000âcubic kilometers over an area of 284,000âsquare kilometers west of Ares Vallis aloneâhas been removed, leaving only remnant mounds.â Based [âŠ]
By Dolphin Whisperer
Back when 2020 was turning the page to hopefully a better year, I caught a podcast of a little-spread act, Lizzard, and their freshly forthcoming album Eroded. They chatted with a nervous excitement about their fairly organic and elegant approach to producing a lush and layered form of prog-minded sounds influenced by memories of 90s radio rock. Memory can be fickle. I have plenty of memories of alternative radio from that time and the early 00s, most not particularly fond. If you wander through a neighborhood grocery store you can still relive these recordings, a gentle drop of an infectious yet placid Train chorus or forlorn, funky croon of Incubus or Radiohead. And though the predictable structure of this musicâthat is Mesh or some of its distant inspirationsâmay not seem readily appealing, the precise twists of tone or delicate experimentations that these aged tunes possess hold a certain charm that can often be missing in the resonance of todayâs rock music scene.
Thatâs not to say that Lizzard shares nothing in common with the sounds of modern progressive acts. The material off prior releases 2014âs Majestic or 2018âs Shift reveal the same kind of Tool-ish syncopations and gazey, post-leaning Deftones grooves that smatter about contemporaries like Wheel or Hippotraktor. But Lizzard arrives loaded instead with warm, vibrant guitar tones; well-framed, shifting rhythms; and crushing, sing-song bass rattling that comes together against hypnotizing and emotive refrains. Despite pushing an audible gloom, guitarist and vocalist Mathieu Ricou doesnât possess a powerhouse sadboi voice,1 falling into the Jonas Renkse (Katatonia) school of growth by iterative force, pushing the bounds of a crinkling pathos against glistening and glowing melodies (âHome Seek,â âMinim,â âThe Beholderâ). Mesh wears in plain sight the cracked color vocal palette of its inspirationsâthe fragile skip of Thom Yorke (Radiohead), the fluttering falsetto of Ian Kenny (Karnivool, Birds of Tokyo). Though, importantly, with that same lyrical atmosphere Lizzard rides the waves of their reverberating melancholy to brighter pastures with practiced aplomb (âElevate,â âHome Seek,â âThe Beholderâ).
The captivating strength of Lizzardâs lead drives gives Mesh the power to hook no matter the manner of attack. Whether amp-blowing riff (âUnityâ), nasally bass warble (âNew Page,â âHome Seekâ), or united rocking thrust (âBlack Sheepâ), each successive passage builds in subtle ways on the last. Itâs simpleâLizzard wears the verse-chorus-verse-chorus-bridge-chorus tried and trusted pattern well. This adherence to The Beatles method of elegant accentuations within the box of the AABA allows Ricou to step back and use looped or steady patterns to let Will Knoxâs wide bass slips and slides be a voice that flitters about in near harmony to Ricouâs poetic recitals (âNew Page,â âMad Hattersâ). And elsewhere, Knox and drummer Katy Elwell maintain a thundering pulse to allow Ricouâs tension-loaded scale explorations evolve into post-rock-inspired bright chord crescendos, with âThe Unseenâ even featuring a gaze-drenched-yet-snappy solo.
The consistency that runs through Mesh allows each songâs peaks and flairs to weave the experience into a cohesive whole. At first blush, itâs easy to parse Mesh as a collection of great songs. But in the presence of its individually structure nature, the cyclical flow of bursting intro to playful melodies to sweeping codas spills over into the atmosphere between each number. Hard-hitting, riff-loaded jams have full-brake resolutions (âUnity,â âBlack Sheep,â âThe Unseenâ). Other songs that steer with crystalline arpeggio hooks and cymbal-splashed ceilings segue with a shimmered reverb harmonic that maintains the somber mood. And the closing trio functions as one extended thought, with âThe Beholderâ intentionally starting with hard-panned bass and guitar to mimic the division of it all until the first chorus unites the duo.
Predicting that which will deeply resonate within our listening hearts stands as an effort futile, misguided by the things we want rather than need. I never could have predicted that 2021 would deliver me Lizzardâs Eroded, a modern classic in my head canon. And though Lizzardâs back catalog remains loaded with smart tune after smart tune, Mesh still had no guarantee of landing as a success. Mesh is not the definitive and downcast cry that drilled Eroded deep into my listening heart. But it is steady, lush, and hopeful. Mesh is not an album that revels in virtuosic spectacle or deeply layered narrative. But it is so finely woven in executionâexacting and exuberantâthat Mesh too has embedded itself as necessary progressive listening.
Rating: 4.0/5.0
DR: 72 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Pelagic Records | Bandcamp
Websites: lizzardband.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/lizzardmusic
Releases Worldwide: September 27th, 2024
#40 #AlternativeRock #ArtRock #BirdsOfTokyo #Deftones #Eroded #FrenchMetal #Hippotraktor #Incubus #Karnivool #Katatonia #Lizzard #Mesh #PelagicRecords #PostRock #PostMetal #ProgressiveRock #Radiohead #Review #Reviews #Sep24 #TheBeatles #Train #Wheel
Eroded Rubikâs Cube in the Netherlands
Eroded Rubikâs Cube at Scheveningen Harbour in the Netherlands. Know the artist? More photos? Update! Our readers have sent us in some great pictures: Photo by MichaĆ WyszyĆski Photo by MichaĆ WyszyĆski This is also in Scheveningen Harbour. A memorial site for five drowned surfers in May 2020. Comments: pic.twitter.com/ofQwjYTFbnâ STREET ART UTOPIA đŒïž (@StreetArtUtopia) April 14, 2022
Eroded Rubikâs Cube at Scheveningen Harbour in the Netherlands. Know the artist? More photos? Update! Our readers have sent us in some great pictures: Photo by MichaĆ WyszyĆski Photo by MichaĆ WyszyĆski This is also in Scheveningen Harbour. A memorial site for five drowned surfers in May 2020. Comments: pic.twitter.com/ofQwjYTFbn â STREET ART UTOPIA đŒïž [âŠ]
Eroded Rubikâs Cube in the Netherlands
Eroded Rubikâs Cube at Scheveningen Harbour in the Netherlands. Know the artist? More photos? Update! Our readers have sent us in some great pictures: Photo by MichaĆ WyszyĆski Photo by MichaĆ WyszyĆski This is also in Scheveningen Harbour. A memorial site for five drowned surfers in May 2020. Comments: pic.twitter.com/ofQwjYTFbnâ STREET ART UTOPIA đŒïž (@StreetArtUtopia) April 14, 2022https://streetartutopia.com/2024/04/02/eroded-rubiks-cube-in-the-netherlands/

Eroded Rubikâs Cube at Scheveningen Harbour in the Netherlands. Know the artist? More photos? Update! Our readers have sent us in some great pictures: Photo by MichaĆ WyszyĆski Photo by MichaĆ WyszyĆski This is also in Scheveningen Harbour. A memorial site for five drowned surfers in May 2020. Comments: pic.twitter.com/ofQwjYTFbn â STREET ART UTOPIA đŒïž [âŠ]