Hello friends! Clockwork Karma, the new album from The Moths, whose debut album was produced using
UDIO in November 2024, is now available. This time, it was produced using
SUNO. We hope you enjoy listening to this album. We tried to capture a late 60s psychedelic rock sound. This may not have been perfect for every track. Following their groundbreaking 1967 debut "Midnight Seance," which invited listeners into a spiritual rite, The Moths return in 1969 with their sophomore album, "Clockwork Karma." This album is less a sequel and more an inevitable confrontation that follows an awakening. The band interrogates the soulless, mechanical cycle represented by its title track, questioning the individual's place within the system and placing at its core the invisible trap of the modern world, which they call "The Alchemist's Grid." This concept album takes the listener on a journey. The invitation begins with the hypnotic raga rock tones of "Invitation to the Labyrinth," giving way to an awakening through the mechanical and monotonous rhythms of the title track, "Clockwork Karma." While the arrogant garage rock energy of "The Seven Veils of Maya" chronicles the character's false ascent within the system, the album's dark and experimental heart, "The Loom of Fate," confronts the listener with cosmic dread. The album exposes the system's false prophets with the sinister dark cabaret waltz of "Hollow Idols" and unleashes the cathartic explosion of rebellion and destruction with the proto-punk rage of "To Break the Alchemist's Grid." The journey concludes with the atmospheric and ambient texture of "An Echo in the Astral Sea," questioning the great void that follows. With "Clockwork Karma," The Moths push the boundaries of psychedelic rock. Led by vocalist and poet Charles Morgan, the band has created not just a music album, but a philosophical manifesto. This rich sonic world, stretching from mystical Eastern tones to raw garage rock energy and theatrical melodies, perfectly captures the existential inquiries and social critique of the late 60s. "Clockwork Karma" is not merely an album to be heard; it is a cycle to be experienced. The only question is whether that cycle can ever be broken.
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