Desert Spotlight: Yawning Man – Pavement Ends

When you talk about “Desert Rock,” you eventually end up talking about Yawning Man. For nearly four decades, the trio has been the sonic architects of the generator party scene, influencing everyone from Kyuss to various stoner rock bands throughout the world. Where their 2023 release, Long Walk of the Navajo, felt like a spiritual drifting across open sands, their latest offering, Pavement Ends, feels like the sun going down and the temperature dropping across the desert landscape.

Released earlier this month via Heavy Psych Sounds, Pavement Ends sees the legendary lineup of Gary Arce (guitar), Mario Lalli (bass), and Bill Stinson (drums) returning to the studio with a darker, heavier, and more cinematic intent. It is arguably their most “shoegaze” record to date—bleak, beautiful, and drenched in a tension that rarely resolves the way you expect.

The Sound of the End of the Road

The album opens with “Burrito Power,” a track that immediately signals a shift in tone. Stinson’s drums are muscular and punchy here, driving a doom-laden riff that feels surprisingly heavy for a band known for airy, reverb-soaked jams. It’s a grounded, gritty start that contrasts sharply with the ethereal floating of their past work.

However, the signature Yawning Man shimmer isn’t gone; it has just evolved. On “Gestapo Pop,” Arce’s guitar work takes center stage. It is less about the “surf” vibe this time and more about creating a melancholic, starry atmosphere. The interplay between Lalli’s deep, grooving bass and Arce’s shimmering delay creates a hypnotic loop that feels like watching a time-lapse of a desert night.

Emotional Undertow

The emotional core of the record sits in the middle with “Bomba Negra.” This track is a masterclass in tension and release. It digs deep into an emotional undertow, trading the “jam band” feel for something more composed and cinematic. It’s atmospheric, moody, and arguably one of the most beautiful pieces of music the band has released in years.

“Dust Suppression” lightens the mood slightly with a leisurely cosmic swagger, but it serves mostly as a bridge to the album’s massive finale.

The Final Stretch

The album closes with a one-two punch that might be the best sequence in their discography. The title track, “Pavement Ends,” stretches toward the ten-minute mark. It is pure desert hypnosis—a mid-tempo drive into nowhere that feels infinite. It captures that specific feeling of running out of road, where the physical world stops and the psychological landscape begins.

Finally, “Bad Time To Be Alive” wraps up the experience. Despite the cynical title, the track is strangely uplifting—a melancholic, introspective piece that feels like an acknowledgment of the world’s chaos, processed through the band’s meditative filter. It’s a poignant closer that leaves you staring at the horizon long after the needle lifts.

The Verdict

Pavement Ends is not just “another Yawning Man album.” It is a focused, disciplined, and emotionally resonant evolution of their sound. Arce, Lalli, and Stinson sound locked in, not just jamming, but conversing through their instruments.

If you are a fan of instrumental rock, this is essential listening. The pavement might end here, but Yawning Man proves they still have plenty of new territory to explore.

(Desert Spotlight) Big Scenic Nowhere – The Long Morrow

BSN is often described as a mix of stoner/psychedelic and desert rock, drawing on the desert landscape and rock music traditions of Southern California’s Coachella Valley. The Long Morrow is the band’s fourth release and, along with 2020’s EP Lavender Blues, is the output from recording sessions in 2019. For trivia buffs out there The Long Morrow was an episode of 60’s show The Twilight Zone, maybe an influence on the band?

The band is known for creating songs with extended jams that taken as a whole create a unique sonic canvas almost as if creating a concept album. Having said that, the songs here can stand on their own, while still fitting within the broader album. Murder Klipp might be considered a darker song on the album, with odd time signatures and more progressive rock stylings along with twin vocals. This track is heavier than the others on the album.

Defector (Of Future Days) is a short, direct, hard rocking track. This track is more of a straight-ahead riff-rocker without the familiar psych stylings. The vocal reminds me a little of Mike Patton era Tomahawk. Lavender Bleu opens with calmness and haunting vocals and the verses are in this style, while the choruses and solo passages are a bit heavier, making for a varied and quite satisfying experience. The fourth and shortest track on the album LeDu follows another straightforward desert rock tune for its near three-minute run time.

To close things out the band embarks on The Long Morrow, the near 20-minute trip through various sonic landscapes that include heavy riffing, organ flourishes, blazing solos and twin guitar attack riffing that complements all the sonic canvasses of the previous tracks on the album. With all of the various sections and vibes here you could turn this on close your eyes and see the desert, moon, cactus and really be transported there. This track has so many interesting elements I could see the band releasing it as a one track EP. The very definition of extended play!

In regards to the guitar playing, to quote Biggie Smalls, “If you don’t know, now you know”. Bob Balch and Gary Arce can shred in various styles and as much as you need. The closer has so many great riffs it’s really fun to listen to wondering where they go next. Throw in some phaser and reverb along with the metal solo riffing and you really get your money’s worth! Both players have their unique styles and really complement each other here. On a path to the end of all things is the last lyric to close out The Long Morrow before concluding with more guitar soloing to close things out.

Lineup:
Gary Arce: Guitar
Bob Balch: Guitar
Tony Reed: Bass/Vocals/Synth/Guitar
Bill Stinson: Drums

Track List

  1. Defector (Of Future Days)
  2. Murder Klipp
  3. Lavender Bleu
  4. LeDu
  5. The Long Morrow