California's Ceremony began as a turbulent hardcore band with a brutal sound that owed as much to old-school punk as it did to the unpredictable outbursts of grindcore. As they moved through their power violence beginnings in the mid-2000s, the group's sound morphed into considerably more melodic and gothic territory. The frothing punk energy that defined their 2006 debut, Violence, Violence, was all but unrecognizable from their
Factory Records-indebted fifth album The L-Shaped Man, which arrived nine years later, and the more electronic touches of 2019's In the Spirit World Now.
Ceremony formed in Rohnert Park, a town just outside of the Bay Area, in 2005. Made up of guitarists Ryan Mattos and Anthony Anzaldo, bassist Justin Davis, singer Ross Farrar, and drummer Jake Casarotti, they were briefly called Violent World before settling on Ceremony. The band released a seven-song 7" entitled Ruined in 2005 and quickly returned the next year with their full-length debut, Violence, Violence, a 13-song, 13-minute set that found the group writhing in unfiltered aggression. The quintet followed with a pair of releases, 2008's Still, Nothing Moves You and 2010's Rohnert Park, released on
Bridge 9 Records. In 2011, Mattos left the band and was replaced by new guitarist Andy Nelson.
At this point, Ceremony began tempering their raw, aggressive approach with post-punk influences like
Wire and
the Fall. After a surprising move to indie giant Matador, the band debuted their new sound in 2012 with the release of their fourth album, Zoo. By the time of 2015's The L-Shaped Man, traces of their hardcore roots were all but gone in favor of a more melodic, brooding sound that recalled groups like
Joy Division and
Bauhaus. In addition to The L-Shaped Man, Ceremony also shared their demo recordings made as part of the album's process. Their next record didn't appear until 2019, when In the Spirit World Now arrived on new label
Relapse Records. The ambitious affair expanded their post-punk-leaning sound with electronic touches and guest vocal contributions from
Chelsea Wolfe and
Nothing's Domenic Palermo. The following year, a companion piece to the album was released in the form of the remix collection In the Spirit World Now (Synthetic Remixes). The set reworked multiple songs from its predecessor, replacing the guitars and live drums with even more electronic elements. ~ Gregory Heaney & Fred Thomas, Rovi