Samsara Joyride

Samsara Joyride

Samsara Joyride

  • 10/21/2022
  • Album
Samsara Joyride by Samsara Joyride

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"listening to these songs feels like you’re riding in the tour van with the band as they’re telling these stories, and it all feels so earnest and genuine." (noobheavy.com/album-review-samsara-joyride-the-subtle-and-the-dense/) "Rooted in bluesy riffing and stoner psychedelia, the band’s debut and self-titled album embodies the definition of samsara as it takes you on a wandering journey through the astral plains of psychedelic stoner music. Bringing in elements of the Palm Desert scene, Samsara Joyride is a blend of peaceful soundscapes that gradually evolve and flourish into fuzz-soaked riffs." (distortedsoundmag.com) "SAMSARA JOYRIDE is a narcotic album, but it is also an album where forcefulness appears in every song to remind us that heavy psychedelia is its main creative engine. His captivating vocal passages complemented by shamanic moments, seem designed for introspection and the encounter with oneself." (denpafuzz.com/) "desert vibration levitates omnipresent in all of 'Samsara Joyride', extending into its jam sessions of long guitar solos and that atmospheric oneirism that takes us to a dimension as unknown as it is paradisical." (lahabitacion235.com) "Samsara Joyride is quite adept at writing music that is both entertaining and interesting. The riffs flow like water, the guitar solos are incredibly tasteful yet exciting, and the vocals are some of the best that I’ve heard in this genre in quite some time." (tomsreviews.tumblr.com) "Anyone who likes melancholic, time-consuming Southern sound with influences from the 70s, blues and more will get an album from SAMSARA JOYRIDE with everything that belongs to the genre, but also with a very own, special feeling. Maybe soon more than just an insider tip." (earshot.at) "Trippy and psychedelic in places, even a little folk rock at times, it has the slow, heavy nodding beats of stoner rock, a touch of doom and a southern twist from desert rock. They are long songs (...) but with plenty of development, flowing from a drifting easiness to faster heavier rock outs and back again, they never become monotonous." (https://loudenoughmagazine.gumroad.com/l/Sample)Expand
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