We’ve updated our Terms of Use to reflect our new entity name and address. You can review the changes here.
We’ve updated our Terms of Use. You can review the changes here.

Sunder Hawk

by Stern

supported by
Brenna
Brenna thumbnail
Brenna Everything from entitlement to black votive is incredibly strong dark prog and this is no exception. Incredible stuff, each release builds on each other but occupies different sound palettes. A terrible loss, RIP.
Danieljones147
Danieljones147  thumbnail
Danieljones147 The loss of Time of Orchids is so massively felt it leaves a hole that only the Stern catalogue can fill. Dreamy & dismal this is yet another very special work from a very, very unique talent. Favorite track: Transom.
/
  • Streaming + Download

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    Purchasable with gift card

      $7 USD  or more

     

1.
I could have lived Someone else did it for you
2.
Calendar sends shivers Cassandra, you warned and we died Marooned at the foot of the bed Where there were walls, interdimensional Belle of the ball, access to catacombs The primrose path, the last rock song A marked man, void of charge A blue light bandit, tooth and claw To drive a wedge Take your day out on them A watershed, hammer and tongs against The thirteenth chime, the last rock song Calendar sends shivers Cassandra, you warned and we died
3.
Hector 01:24
Some cracked eggs My first friend No more sideline cynic Garden slug Garbage truck Pouring lobsters into a crib Trembling knees, calcified legacies Shirking your responsibilities Weathered hunk Bear the brunt Gnaws you like a vole
4.
To give him good news Transmit warmth through the flue Pending revelations Cementing the case Glower from the dais This will prove unwise Detention satellite Depressed was the password Crosswise with the court Teeth are chattering Reduced to a river of vinegar Remorseful, processional The precinct's silk-and-silver vendors Unacceptable The precinct's deep midnight blue foyer Contemporary The precinct's red containment faction The precinct's troublesome souvenir Unclothe his closet Take manhood measurements Relieve the stress fractures Non-Euclidean
5.
Transom 04:43
Chum in the water Harpoon, jugular Kinky sympathy I will pay you handsomely Over the transom Spinning these yarns But the color is gone Claret gives you pause I will pay the ransom, here Over the transom I will place the purple bug Around the banister Otherworldly parentage Cozy, bucolic bookends
6.
We found a fisherman She was a puzzlement Undersea narrative Welcome dementia Vaunted, execrated Vacate the premises
7.
Clover 03:51
Land me in clover Down the old runway Richesse and hope chests Coming from good stock The turbo button
8.
Your time is up, no stamina The creature from the previous Your well is dry, and black is white So tout your wares, and take a hike Greasy tornado, laced into me So quick to temper, ready to pounce Alternate future, stamp of the house Weak as a whisper, bandied about Rendered so helpless, petering out Authentic etching of the earthling

about

"Sunder Hawk" is the seventh Stern release. It is a solo endeavor, as the first three were.

The album features Ellen Stern on piano ("Hector"), Erin Mount on vocals ("Transom"), and Kim Abrams on drum programming ("The Last Rock Song") and mastering. The music can best be described as high-brow, lo-fi dream pop of the prog variety.

"Following closely on the heels of 2018’s Missive: Sister Ships, New York-based Stern have returned with Sunder Hawk, an abstract rumination both on bandleader Chuck Stern’s personal oscillations between light and darkness, as well as a reflection on the current state of affairs in the United States, if not the world. Whereas the last three albums saw Stern assemble a full band, Sunder Hawk finds him going solo once again, and the result is a more introspective and personal affair.

Things start off with the short “I Could Have Lived,” little more than an organ swell draped in ambiance, which gives way to the first full song, “The Last Rock Song.” The title establishes the proper mindset required to hear the album. Stern burrows inside something resembling pop music, particularly that of a vein mined by Talk Talk and Japan, and injects a narcotic into it, making it ripe for deconstruction. Keith Abrams, who played drums on Missive: Sister Ships, contributes drum programming here, a complex set of patterns with an almost industrial feel, yet dub-like in its lethargy. The vocals are understated, weaving in and out of an angular guitar line.

The short “Hector” is next, sounding like an experimental reimagining of a torch song, like Alexander Von Schlippenbach accompanying Stern in a moment of intense longing. It is in fact Stern’s own mother Ellen Stern on the keys, displaying her own avant-garde acumen. “Crosswise with the Court” picks up where “The Last Rock Song” left off. Its languid pop sensibilities are invaded by more angular guitar figures. Stern’s vocals remain melancholy and meditative throughout. By its midpoint, the song threatens to collapse under the weight of its own grief. The feel almost nods toward doom metal with its oppressively slow tempo, yet replaces all the monolithic riffs with more unusual and uncomfortable textures, replaces metallic heft with the density of emotional vulnerability. “Crosswise with the Court” seems to whimper slowly out of existence, ending with the musical equivalent of a sigh.

While most albums utilize track structure to build things up, Sunder Hawk seems to slowly dissolve towards its final destination. “Transom” is like watching a slowly morphing ambient cloud, while “Silicon Shell” evokes the slow-motion collapse of a noir-ish cityscape. “Clover” centers around a harpsichord, and morphs from lullaby to nightmare during its four-minute duration.

The album ends with the oddly named “Greasy Tornado”. More jagged guitar creeps onto center stage to accompany another spare but effective vocal performance. The song hints at the ghost of Captain Beefheart, haunting a studio and playing with the synths. The track is as strange as it is mesmerizing.

Stern continues to excel at creating a listening experience unlike any other. Sunder Hawk‘s blend of pop influences with more outré techniques reflects a culture in free fall, where traditional worldviews no longer help us to navigate our current times. You can almost sense Chuck Stern’s unease building every time he sees the news. One can feel the oscillation between disorientation and bleakness. The pop elements tease the listener with the possibility of a comfort that is never there, like a rug being pulled out from under us over and over. This is the soundtrack to the world promised, versus the world we have."

—Burning Ambulance

"Whereas the previous feature provided the soundtrack for collective tragedy, Sunder Hawk is the soundtrack to a very localized and personal freakout. A low-key, slow-motion freakout, yet a freakout all the same. This is the seventh release by Stern, the mostly solo project of Chuck Stern (although some previous albums featured a full band including members of Psalm Zero and Kayo Dot). I’ve never known what to say about a Stern album. They’re all spooky and uncomfortable and insane, sometimes flirting with a damaged misunderstanding of pop music, at others plummeting into the depths of the formless avant-garde. Mr. Stern refers to Sunder Hawk as “high-brow, lo-fi dream pop of the prog variety”. Fair enough.

The primary instruments are voice, synths and drum machine, with the occasional guitar scratching out deranged deconstructions of rock riffs. The morose and half-tuneless vocals and chintzy beats, when combined with the warm analogue texture of the synths, evoke a sort of melting cold wave. Unease, cognitive dissonance; a mind lost in the drama of solipsism; memories of a functioning life collapsed into two dimensions and projected onto the charred carapace of a burnt-down high school gymnasium. Go ahead and dance if you want to. No one is watching. (They all hate you.)"

—Toilet ov Hell

credits

released January 10, 2020

license

all rights reserved

tags

about

Stern New York, New York

Lyrics included with each song.

contact / help

Contact Stern

Streaming and
Download help

Redeem code

Report this album or account

Stern recommends:

If you like Stern, you may also like: