Guitar World

Haunted Shores

PERIPHERY MOONLIGHTE­RS MARK HOLCOMB AND MISHA MANSOOR DELIVER THE GOODS — AND THE SICK RIFFS — ON THEIR NEWEST OFFERING, VOID

- By Gregory Adams

WHILE THE PUNISHING, progressiv­e djent-thrash of Haunted Shores’ Void (3Dot Recordings) marks the first new music from the instrument­al duo since 2015, guitarists Mark Holcomb and Misha Mansoor haven’t been passively resting their wrists this whole time — of course, both members also shred heavy with beloved D.C. prog metal unit Periphery. Though it seemed as if they’d ghosted on Haunted Shores, the pair were quietly hanging onto some especially harrowing riffs before rematerial­izing with this latest full-length.

“We’re not one of those bands that just sits on our hands for years and then decides to write over a week; we always stockpile [riffs],” Holcomb says. “The fact that [Haunted Shores] has been dormant for six or seven years sucks, [but] it’s the nature of the beast with how demanding Periphery can be.”

That said, downtime arose for the guitarists in the spring of 2020 when the pandemic left Periphery’s tour plans in limbo. To combat the Covid blues, Holcomb dug into a strict work schedule at his Austin home, loading up on coffee and riffing for hours. Between the java coursing through his veins and the existentia­l mindfuck of the pandemic, much of what came pouring out of Holcomb during Void’s pre-production period was palpably perturbed.

“It’s a very pissed-off, dark, pessimisti­c record,” Holcomb confirms. “It sounds like a panic attack, and that word, Void, has always carried that energy for me.”

For proof, take the quixotic, Escher staircase-spiraling of “OnlyFangs,” which also modded a drop-C tuning in an ominously inkier direction by further dropping the fourth string to E minor. Mansoor also polished Holcomb’s piece with its achingly melancholi­c chorus trill, the pair’s longtime, ego-less relationsh­ip fostering those kinds of gut-checks.

“If Mark comes to me with really sick riffs — which he does — but if they don’t necessaril­y fit the song, I can say that and no one gets hurt,” Mansoor says of the swap, adding, “Arrangemen­ts are so sacred to me; everything has to flow.”

Compared to Periphery, both guitarists allude to the overall freeing aspect of not having to adapt Void’s wildest, knuckle-busting moments live, instead embracing the unfiltered zaniness they pulled out of the abyss. Holcomb puts it best: “[Haunted Shores is] just me and Misha in a room passing a guitar back and forth and seeing what makes us laugh — like, ‘Holy shit that’s ridiculous; let’s go with it’ — and then signing off. That’s it.”

“[Haunted Shores is] just me and Misha in a room passing a guitar back and forth and seeing what makes us laugh”

— MARK HOLCOMB

 ?? ?? Haunted Shores’ Misha Mansoor [left] and Mark Holcomb. “Arrangemen­ts are so sacred to me,” Mansoor says. “Everything has to flow”
Haunted Shores’ Misha Mansoor [left] and Mark Holcomb. “Arrangemen­ts are so sacred to me,” Mansoor says. “Everything has to flow”

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