TEI-031

High Priests
Spinning

formats: 12 inch, digital
release date: March 23, 2018

11-song 12″ vinyl pressed by Merchant Vinyl. Includes digital download card.

Tracklisting:

  1. Control
  2. Sell Your Clothes
  3. Night Train
  4. Ululu
  5. 10 Years
  6. Talking to a Cop
  7. Spinning
  8. More Than You Need
  9. Century Deprivation
  10. Drop of A Pin
  11. All You

Recorded and Mixed at Kildare Studios by Joe Gac
Mastered by Justin Perkins at Mystery Room Mastering, Milwaukee, WI
Design by Ian Floetl

All songs written and performed by High Priests

5 test pressings
200 on black vinyl with offset printed cover
50 on black vinyl with screen printed cover

Reviews

A minimalist approach to making heavy rock sees High Priests blast out thrilling noise. The filthiness that encrusts High Priests sound is one that truly gets under the skin. It’s a short album that feels even shorter as track after track speeds by in noisy rhythmic stomping. By time it reaches its conclusion the grit of the record will have left its mark. A great effort. 8/10

Edwin McFee

It's fair to say that Chicago's High Priests are unashamedly in the thrall of chug lord John Reis, specifically his on again / off again venomous project, Hot Snakes. However, while this debut album does purloin a few pages from the man sometimes known as Speedo's songbook – especially on 10 years – it manages to retain a feeling of freshness thanks to the explosive energy of their performances and it's a feast for the ears for those who love off-kilter rhythms, head-cracking riffs and crunchy post-punk. Powerhouse drummer Mustafa Daka is a revelation throughout the 11 tracks the former member of The Brokedowns calls to mind Dave Grohl in his prime during the likes of Control and Night Train. Ugly, arresting and uncompromising, High Priests' sonic sermons should earn them plenty of new converts over the next 12 months. For fans of: McClusky, The Icarus Line, Hot Snakes. 7/10

Edwin McFee

Rory Melough, Moshville Times

... If a High Priests’s live performance contains just a fraction of power that this album does, I would imagine that they’re incredible to witness in the flesh. This record is non-stop aural onslaught that will leave your head Spinning.

Rory Melough, Moshville Times

Russell Emerson Hall, Echoes and Dust

If I didn’t tell you High Priests are from Chicago, you’d probably guess correctly anyhow. The shadow of Midwestern noise-rock looms large over the galloping maelstrom of Spinning. And while accusations of Jesus Lizard worship may be rightly leveled against the trio, we’re not talking about blatant plagiarism here. Where The Jesus Lizard was sinister and slithery, High Priests are violent and bludgeoning — and covered with a layer of grime and filth. Listening feels like walking in bare feet on a kitchen floor that hasn’t been washed all winter.

The songs are underpinned by an absolutely monstrous bass tone. Moored to that anchor are skittery and abrasive guitar shards and hoarse, strident shouts. Here again a comparison to their spiritual forebears may prove illustrative: if David Yow was your creepy, alcoholic uncle slurring his way through an unsavory story, Mikey Alesi is your strung-out friend, on the edge of break down, explaining how unfair the world is. There’s no relief from the relentless lecture — no moment to catch your breath. You endure the imposition knowing that there must be a grain of truth in there. Somewhere in the distance a machine shop clatters and groans with jury-rigged parts. And then it’s over. Highly recommended.

Russell Emerson Hall, Echoes and Dust

Chris, Nine Circles

Sonically the whole album is a beast. Rather just a cascading sheet of sound, High Priests ensure each track has enough dynamics to let the riffs really catch hold and then breathe around Daka’s drum kit. There’s not a weak moment on Spinning, and the 30 minutes sprawls by so quick you want to immediately start it again.

Chris, Nine Circles

Thomas, PunkRockTheory.com

From the moment you get swept up by the manic, punky opener ‘Control’ up until the moment where you get tossed aside at the end of the mathematically precise ‘All You’, there really isn’t a lot more you can do than bow before these High Priests. - 7/10

Thomas, PunkRockTheory.com

Loren, Scene Point Blank

High Priests play punk that’s blunt and powerful, forgoing melodies and big choruses for brawling, blistering songs that hit heavy, hard, and fast. 7.5 / 10

Loren, Scene Point Blank