June 08, 2026

Doors: 7:00 PM - Show: 8:00 PM

All Ages

Bottlerocket + DLTSGDOM! present...

STYGIAN BOUGH: A BELL WITCH AND AERIAL RUIN COLLABORATION

with 40 Watt Sun

Bottlerocket Social Hall

1226 Arlington Ave, Pittsburgh, PA, 15210


Date & Time

Monday, June 08, 2026

8:00 PM

Location

Bottlerocket Social Hall

1226 Arlington Ave, Pittsburgh, PA, 15210

STYGIAN BOUGH: A BELL WITCH & AERIAL RUIN COLLABORATION

with support from

40 WATT SUN


$22 ADV / $25 DOS

7PM DOORS / 8PM MUSIC

ALL AGES

for fans of... Thou, Pallbearer, Sleep, Primitive Man

BIO:
In our human minds, according to the Law of Contagious Magic as described in The Golden

Bough by anthropologist James Frazer, contact between two objects creates an inseparable

thread between them. A gift from a dead friend forever holds this magic like a scar reflecting a

wound. Similarly, a piece of food that touches the floor is suddenly abject and rotten. Pairing this

notion with the Law of Similarity Magic, as described by Frazer, where an object resembling

another can share its power, a musical notion can be understood to serve as an unbodied

conduit of such magics; an emotional contact between the music and audience wherein such

sorcery threads an inseparable seam that, for a time, resemble each other.

Aptly named in reference to the aforementioned book, on Stygian Bough Volume II, the

collaboration between Bell Witch (Dylan Desmond, Jesse Shreibman) and Aerial Ruin (Erik

Moggridge) enlivens its unbodied presence resembling both collaborating projects as a conduit

in its own separate entity. In the course of an hour, four musical pieces set themselves apart

from the catalogs of both individual bands and branch into new territory all the while threaded to

the original encounter.

Over the album a cyclical world unfolds in which different perspectives of how various forms of

worship empower, eclipse, destroy and feed on each other is explored. "All four songs explore

different aspects of worship or awe—transcendent experiences in different contexts," vocalist &

guitarist Erik Moggridge says.

“Waves Became The Sky,” the opening track on Volume II, recalls “Rows (of Endless Waves)”

from Bell Witch’s debut album Longing. It was here that Bell Witch and Aerial Ruin had initial

contact. The song expands on the 2012 original’s theme pondering, as Moggridge says,

“the battle of scientific thinking compared to superstitious thinking.” And it wastes no time in its

approach; sonic waves form an immediate pulse well known to anyone familiar with Bell Witch

and Stygian Bough Volume I. The immediacy of Moggridge’s guitar and vocal choruses add

layer upon layer of harmonic depth with polyrhythmic melodies as they soar with Desmond’s two

handed method of bass guitar.

“King of the Wood,” quickly lurks into an abyss death-doom fans of Thergothon and My Dying

Bride will find familiarity in. On the track, Moggridge says it is “about rapture and confusion that

come from calculating scale, from the very small to the very large.” Shreibman’s drum passages

mirror the fluidity of the melodic instruments. But before an emotional pinnacle can be reached

the track slips into a swirling galaxy resembling the expansiveness of Tangerine Dream echoing

from far inside the black hole at its center. Soon Moggridge’s vocals return with a haunting

passage that Shreibman’s drums soon interrupt with the immediacy of a nuclear bomb.

Track three,“From Dominion,” opens to the power trio resembling the elements of Aerial Ruin’s

dark folk temperaments. With a voice one can imagine emerging from some forgotten dimension

in ancient Albion, Moggridge pulls thread as much enchantment as song. Soon enough the

brooding acoustics transform into soaring melodies with the dueling harmonic magic of a Thin

Lizzy guitar solo riding the rhythmic pounding of Shreibman’s drums. At its most tangible
moments, the song could almost be said to have been constructed with the repeating verses

and choruses common in folk music.


Moggridge states that “Told and Leadened,” the album’s closer and longest track clocking in at

just over nineteen minutes,“is about the cycles of power and how they eclipse and prop each

other up.” The song starts like a tide slowly returning after its preceding wave. Bass feedback

and a repetitious guitar rhythm foreshadow Shreibman’s drums once again exploding in an

urgency like that of early doom classicists Candlemass. The waves continue throughout,

recalling the rising and falling intensities in the song structures established on 2020’s Volume I,

which Blabbermouth declared "Contender for doom metal album of the year." In a harmonic

break in the composition, Shreibman embarks on a drum passage reminding one of the outro to

Neurosis’ Enemy of the Sun. Coincidentally, the album was also recorded by Billy Anderson in

Portland.

Anderson has worked on 3 prior Bell Witch recordings (Four Phantoms, Mirror Reaper, Clandestine Gate).

"There's a creative camaraderie that we have with him," Desmond says.
"He knows where we're coming from. He's worked with us on numerous other projects, but his

outsider's perspective is particularly valuable, like a filter system that helps me see it objectively,

rather than subjectively."


The separation of tracks, uncommon in Bell Witch’s modern era, remains compositionally fluid

between each piece. "This is as close to traditional songwriting as any of us have done

together” says Shreibman. "We gave special attention to a lot of polyphonic passages,”

Desmond adds, "which is a rarity in past (Bell Witch) records due to limitations of

instrumentation, a two piece band can only play so many instruments at once. This applies even

more so to the solo act of Aerial Ruin.”

The result is a commanding four songs steeped in mysticism, legend, and the examination of

"the connective threads that shape and influence the culture, mythology, and customs of all

human societies throughout time in unique, localized ways as referenced in the Golden Bough,”
says Desmond.

The cover features a stunning painting by acclaimed artist Denis Forkas (Behemoth, Wolves in

the Throne Room). The piece encapsulates the focused attention and emotional heft of Stygian

Bough Volume II.


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