Phantom Pisser - "Beware The Phantom Pisser" Demo 2014, Live 2014, & Go Charge Zine '94/'95

C-O-S-I-G-N-E-D!!! Kyle/Radiation fronted this belligerently apolitical shitblurr outfit who sounded like a tightly welded construct of UK82 and Sore Throat. I think they've forgotten they have a Bandcamp page (or even remember doing the project), but they were such a delight to stumble across that I got a yeet out of Kyle to mirror the tracks here. Just as shitty and blurry and one-off was the Canadian zine "Go Charge", which was a loosely Scotch taped construct of Sockeye, Agathocles, Steveggs, and...I was already preaching to the choir at "Sockeye & Agathocles", wasn't I?


Melvins - Unrl '84-'09


"After a couple of months of selecting, compiling, ripping, restoring & remastering, I've finally finished this massive Melvins project. 32 unreleased live, rehearsal & interview sessions that span the bands career from 1984 to 2009. Culled from own collection since I discovered them in 1988, this compendium features many rarities, and now after being restored & remastered, the sound quality is overall fantastic. This is a hefty tome that's over 3 1/2 gigabytes, But you get 32 live shows, rehearsal sessions & interviews that have never officially seen the light of day before. Behold...THE MOTHERLOAD!" --Mahler

Sea Monkeys - Demo #1 1986

WELL! It seems Portland had noisecore by the boo boo a decade before Frenzy and Suss Law were even squatters in their dad's balls! The band is "tight" like Cyanamid or Nihilistics, but I think the guitar tone was actually a plaything of the cheap stereo it was amped through than a conscious decision to cosplay as Confuse. 6 songs, 8 minutes, no song titles, and the only pathetic proof of the group's existence. Why do I like unremembered mud like this? Why does ANYBODY like unremembered mud like this? I'm fuckin' glad Mahler does, because it's his rip and remaster! Grootste ups jong China!!!






Invisible Domains - Compilation CD 1994 & Audio Drudge Issues 2, 3, 5, 6, 7 1992-1996

After several years of editing the zine/tape combo-pack "Audio Drudge", creator Jason Mantis officially rebranded himself as "Malignant Records" with this compilation CD themed entirely upon Ebola. Powerfully curated, only darktronic royalty were invited to this petechiae party, with Vromb, Soldnergeist, Lull, and Voice Of Eye expectedly providing the most virulent tracks. Comorbid with this upload are hi-res scans of Audio Drudge, minus issues 1 and 4 (which are bizarrely impossible to find).

I loved the zine but never clicked with the tapes. The duplication quality was substandard, and the artists chronically submitted material that was poorly representative of their work as a whole. Starting with Invisible Domains, Jason settled for nothing less than superior sound in all facets of it's assembly and exhibition, quickly immortalizing the label as a global institution for only the "purest" industrial and associated genres. Pandemic indeed!