This murderous tree was documented by a missionary in Zululand, South Africa in 1882. It was said to be violently poisonous, producing not only a deadly, caustic fluid when its bark was cut, but also omitting noxious fumes or pollen, killing any creature which inhaled the air surrounding the tree. As such, the tree would poison and kill any people or animals that approached it, resulting in piles of rotting corpses surrounding the tree, fertilising its growth.
supported by 10 fans who also own “The Umdhlebi Tree”
As has (rightfully) already been said elsewhere, this band and album are "absolute fire."
Despite the doom-gloom cover art, this type of rock music is a positive force. Especially without vocals, which for me is a bonus. Dale Lloyd
supported by 9 fans who also own “The Umdhlebi Tree”
Bought End of Days, Primigenian, Planet Terror, Red Chariot and Orbiter in one hit, amazing music, great to have found the band, nice replacement for my Hawkwind, love all the albums debbieseven7
Big, clanging psych-rock from this Arizona outfit fuses monk-like vocals with slow-winding guitars for songs that feel like strange hymns. Bandcamp New & Notable May 2, 2016
supported by 9 fans who also own “The Umdhlebi Tree”
Another fantastic album, each track is a journey. There is clear storytelling here, despite the album being mostly instrumental in nature. Park's guitar-playing is evocative and the drone elements that made 2017's 'After the Earth Has Burned' such a success make a welcome return here too. Wonderful release leaveseclipse