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) Fatso Jetson – Archaic Volumes

Archaic Volumes is the seventh album from Fatso Jetson, released in 2010 and one of the best releases from the band. The expanded instrumentation with harmonica, saxophone and piano definitely provides the band a chance to flip seamlessly between surf, rock, blues and their signature time shifting break downs. The first track, blues/desert punk jam, “Jet Black Boogie” gets going with Vince Meghrouni’s harmonica layered above the opening guitar riff with great sax and guitar interplay on the outro of the song.

The album closer the moody, psychedelia infused “Monoxide Dreams” has some really great lyrical lines such as, “There’s so much money in those hills, it keeps the hungry coming back, dreams of coffee colored Cadillacs”. Track 5, “Golden Age of Cell Block Slang” has a rock/boogie/swing vibe and when the sax solo kicks in you really feel the groove and may need to get your dance shoes on. If you need your punk fix Track 6 the instrumental, “Here Lies Boomer’s Panic” might be your jam. You’ll get some SST style speed punk beats along with some heavy guitar riffs and some psycho sax lines. With 10 tracks and a run time of 41 minutes there isn’t time for fluff and overall this is a great release.

Track Listing

  1. “Jet Black Boogie” – 4:12
  2. “Play Dead” – 4:48
  3. “Jolting Tales Of Tension” – 3:17
  4. “Archaic Volumes” – 4:39
  5. “Golden Age Of Cell Block Slang” – 4:10
  6. “Here Lies Boomer’s Panic” – 4:52
  7. “Let Go” – 3:51
  8. “Back Road Tar” – 6:20
  9. “Garbage Man” – 3:28
  10. “Monoxide Dreams” – 3:37
  • Mario Lalli – Guitars, vocals
  • Tony Tornay – Drums
  • Larry Lalli – Bass
  • Vince Meghrouni – Harmonica, Saxophone, Vocals
  • Mathias Schneeburger – Organ, Piano
  • Gene Trautman – Drums (track 10)
  • Dino von Lalli – Guitar (track 9)