13th Apostle - "Swallow The Void And Erase Your Soul" Cassette 2024 (Links To Streaming & Physical)



Strictly limited to a one-time run of fifty cassettes, the second in 13th Apostle's conceptual trilogy of releases materializes here in an electrocuting shock of existential horror, following the ferocious interrogation of power electronics and Broken Flag-influenced extremity of 2022's "Post Annihilism". Presented with a suitably minimalist, appropriately grotesque visual aesthetic, "Swallow The Void And Erase Your Soul" features four tracks that stream through your neurons like a wave of barbed wire and carbonized human remains, a sustained scream of world-weary loathing and spiritual exhaustion. 

It's a goddamn nightmare.

It's also a distinct shift from the piercing onslaught of extreme power electronics of the first tape. Swallow The Void... erupts with massive bomb-blast heaviosity and ultra-distorted power that points towards the most putrid and pungent depths of death industrial. The opening track "N.U.I. (Infinite Ego Death Cell)" promptly batters the listener with steady, sinister blasts of low-end electronic crush as more complex rhythms emerge, joined by gnarly, teeth-gnashing vocals. An atmosphere of pure doom and desolation. Shifting between spare concussive dread and hypnotic evil. Treated samples of cosmic horror are woven into the rotting fabric of 13th Apostle's sound, and mutates into something more abrasive and caustic as it segues into the skull-drill electronic skree of "Ant In The Afterbirth". A war-scape of unyielding bass-blast, corrosive distortion, and increasingly chaotic death industrial. 

The other half instantly picks back up as the title track drops you into a pitch-black abattoir of swirling ambient filth and metallic scrape, followed by a persistent, insanely distorted high-voltage deathdrone. Crackling electricity whips and dances through the air, distant sirens howl mindlessly in the depths. The sound shifts beneath the serrated, buzzing synth-drone, a vast yawning maw of devouring blackness slowly opening beneath your feet as 13th Apostle increases the violence of the churn. Everything drops out as horrifying screams explode from nowhere, opening the door to the hideous sampled monologue that possesses "At Least You Thought Of Me". Recollections of depravity and desecration drift like a foul fog across deep, tectonic pulsations; while the closing piece at first feels less frenzied than what came previously, it crawls deeper under your subcutaneous layer than anything else on this tape. It's a singular experience; Swallow sometimes broaches the unforgiving and explicit viciousness of Slogun and Genocide Organ, at other moments touching on the rot and desiccation of Atrax Morgue and Slaughter Productions, but it is ultimately much, much more intimate. It sits close to you. Whispering in your ear as the stench of the electronic carnage slowly begins to burn away. Leaving you with nothing. 

Total hell.


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Cancer - "To The Gory End" CD 1990 OG Master (FLAC With Scans)



Tales Voices From The Darkside Interview with
John Walker & Ian Buchanan by Michael Kujawska...

John, CANCER has been founded 1987 by yourself, Carl and Ian. Tell us a bit about, how you came together and who came up with the idea to found a band? What were your influences back then?

CANCER got together after a couple of jams, you know, knocking about, playing bits of other people’s songs, and trying to come up with a few ideas of our own. Once a friend of ours suggested after a few beers that we should call our group CANCER. Well, we went along with that purely to see if we got noticed, and as luck would have it, we did. Our influences back then were what everybody else listened to: Death, Thrash, Noise, Grindcore, Metal, and Hardcore Crossover.

The Metal scene grew quickly in the years 1987-1989 in UK. How was the scene back then in Telford, was there any local scene? Have you been in contact with the NAPALM DEATH guys or the CARCASS guys even though they came from Birmingham and Liverpool? Have you been involved in the tape trading scene in any way?

There was a local scene, however it’s not worth talking about it. Well we knew NAPALM through Shane who was actually from where CANCER came from, and subsequently we played with both NAPALM DEATH and CARCASS on a couple of occasions. The tape trading scene was actually a fantastic way of getting your music out there, however the tape trading was finishing by the time CANCER had got sufficient material. But I do confess I used to listen to a bit of HELLHAMMER and DEATH, REPULSION, on those loud hissing cassettes.

In 1988 you already recorded your first demo “No Fuckin Cover” and one year later the band progress was already noticeable with your second demo “Demo #2”. Any thoughts you can share with us from that period and any memories from the recordings?

Well not so much, at this point in the group’s career our principle idea was to sound like the name suggested, however working with Scott Burns saw quite a jump regarding progress. These demos were recorded in Birmingham at a studio called The Pits (nothing to do with Brad and Angelina). The studio was very high up and you had to take a few flights of stairs to get to the live and control rooms. The stairs were covered in a nasty loose soggy ripped carpet and were very steep, waiting for an accident to happen. Once the recording commenced so did the drinking. To this day I’m astonished that we didn’t break our necks falling down the stairs in a drunken state. These demos soon got the group signed to our first label Vinyl Solution in which from then on any demos were recorded in Telford on an industrial estate with a Health and Safety executive risk assessing the premises. During the recording of the “No Fucking Cover" demo, Big Mick Hughs turned up by chance and was able to add his advice to the proceedings. Pretty cool eh!

"To The Gory End" was finally released in 1990 on Vinyl Solution and received pretty good reviews in the underground scene and gave you a major push forward. Do you have any special memories from the recordings? What about touring for this album? Have you been in normal jobs at the time or still in school? For me, this album is still an underrated classic and deserves some more attention nowadays…

"To The Gory End" was recorded in Wales at Loco studios with Scott Burns producing and our friend Max helping out particularly encouraging a healthy attitude to alcohol consumption! Recorded in the winter, the weather was quite a shock for Scott as was the strength of the beer which when compared to American beer at the time was significantly better ( I have to say beer in America has improved massively in recent years and now compares favourably to most nations in that respect). At the time we were quite an alcohol fueled band (which was Max’s area of expertise) and I think this put us in good stead for recording in such a short time frame. Plenty of attitude and bravado, not really giving a fuck certainly helped and probably contributed to the energy of the album. Of course, being so young and having no experience in that situation meant there was lots of excitement and nervous energy so all in all I think it all added up to quite a rough and ready, raw recording. At the time I was an apprentice at a company called Avant Electronics which was pretty good really. I actually had a lot of fun there. There were a few people of similar age on the training scheme so we managed quite a lot of dossing about, plenty of practical jokes and generally having a laugh. Of course at the time I couldn’t wait to get out of there, after all being in CANCER was really what I wanted to do, gigging with the likes of DEICIDE, OBITUARY, MALEVOLENT CREATION was certainly quite an antidote to working for a living!

Only one year later, you released the second classic "Death Shall Rise". This was another huge step forward and brought you major attention, because of the quality of the material and because James Murphy had joined you guys. How did James find the way to you and why was he leaving so quickly again? You also released the second album via Restless Records. Was this because of the limited power and distribution of Vinyl Solution? Also here any good memories from the recording sessions and the touring back then? It seemed that all was in good order back then. Proper label, proper line-up, impressing songs and good artwork and a growing audience…

We went to Florida to record "Death Shall Rise" because Scott was keen to record the album in Morrisound where he worked, which thanks to a bigger budget from Vinyl Solution we were able to do. Of course it was also nice to go to Florida in the winter and enjoy a break from the weather back home. At the time, Morrisound was a popular hub with the Florida Death Metal bands, MORBID ANGEL were recording "Blessed Are The Sick", members of DEICIDE and OBITUARY dropped in to say hi and of course James Murphy came and said hello. He offered to play lead on one song which seemed like a good idea at the time and of course one thing lead to another and pretty soon he was doing most of the leads on the album. We didn’t really plan it that way, it just sort of happened. Anyway, after the album was recorded we toured with James as a full member of the band but we were three guys from Telford, England who had known each other for years and sometimes it can be difficult for someone from outside the group to click into that situation. Looking back now, I don’t think we ever really clicked with anyone else which is why we are now a three piece again, the way it was always meant to be for us! The album was released through Vinyl Solution and licensed through other labels for different territories. Restless were very good for us in America but we also had a German release and a few other licenses around the world. I think it was quite normal for small indie labels to work in this way in order to get decent distribution, but it was difficult to keep on top of sales figures etc, but who cares, we were never really in it for that anyway. Those indie labels had some good guys working for them though, people like Rob Tennents at Vinyl Solution and Ron Goudie at Restless.

"The Sins Of Mankind" was released in 1993 and again on Restless Records. The material went into a more Thrash Metal orientated way. Was this planned or a natural development?

The change in style for "The Sins Of Mankind" was a natural progression really, we always thought of ourselves as a Metal band, whether it was Death Metal, Thrash Metal or whatever. It just happened that way. Of course working with Simon Efemey contributed to a different approach to recording and changed the sound somewhat, his enthusiasm and professionalism was inspiring and he creates a great vibe. He’s a fun guy to be around really. Not everyone liked the album but we certainly felt it was a step up for us.

In 1995 you released “Black Faith “ on East West Records. How did you get in touch with them to sign a contract with a big company like them and how did the cooperation work out? The material was far more Thrash Metal, was this the style you wanted to play with CANCER at last?

Signing with East West was both a blessing and a curse for us. We were able to record a very self indulgent album, which was only possible with the kind of budget you get with a major label. We spent a month recording at Linford Manor, which was a great studio, we recorded through an old analog desk which once belonged to Abbey Road, so there was a great sense of history as well as a great sound from the desk. We loved all that stuff really, speculating whether PINK FLOYD may have recorded "Dark Sound Of The Moon" through that actual desk, probably not, but why not enjoy the possibility! Again we had Simon Efemey to guide us through the experience which was great fun. The album was mixed at Brittania Row (another PINK FLOYD connection!) with a brilliant state of the art mix by Swedish genius Sank. I personally rate this as the absolute best CANCER album, although I do appreciate why such a radical departure would alienate and even annoy a lot of our hardcore fans. People tend to think that major labels control the creative output of the bands they own but for us this wasn’t the case and as I said this was actually a very self indulgent album. Of course the majors do like to have a great deal of control over all aspects of their artists and for this reason I think our relationship was doomed right from the start, we really weren’t a band that could be controlled. Something we should all be proud of!

After that, there were some years of silence. What happended between 1996 and 2004, when you released the "Corporation$" EP?

Well we took some time off. It was time to do other things.

In 2005 you released your last album with “Spirit In Flames”. How were the reactions back then and what happened after the release?

The "Spirit In Flames" album was more progressive than our previous stuff. It’s a really good album but I guess CANCER fans expected something more old school, like our first three albums. Nevertheless, we finally decided we needed a break because we felt like starting other projects. I started LIQUID GRAVEYARD, Ian and Carl got involved in other projects such as CURRENT 93 [Yeah, no shit, blew my fuckin' mind too.  --S], and after 9 years we’re up and running again.

After that you took the mentioned break to return now with some live gigs and your first three classic albums have been re-released by Cyclone Empire in the meantime. Are you happy with the cooperation and how are the reactions of the fans, especially live?

It has been a real pleasure and an honour to play again in support of the re-releases. The reaction has been incredible for me to witness as I really couldn’t understand why the hell anyone would want to come and watch us after all these years. It has been particularly inspiring to see so many young people in the audience. I honestly expected, that we would have been long forgotten about, so yes, this has been quite humbling and inspiring for me. Another surprising factor has been how much I personally have enjoyed playing the old stuff. As I said previously, for me "Black Faith" is the absolute best CANCER album album but in terms of playing live, I have thoroughly enjoyed banging out the old Death Metal classic CANCER stuff.

What are your future plans? Is there any new material we can expect and if yes, what direction will the material take??

As for the future, we intend to keep doing the live shows, particularly the festivals as long as people keep wanting us. As for new material, who knows. One thing I have learned is not to rule anything in or out. If it does happen, I really wouldn’t like to predict what direction it will go in.

John, I thank you and Ian for your time and patience in answering this shitload of questions and digging in the past for us. Any final words to the Voices readers?

I would like to say thanks to everyone who came out to see us this year and hopefully we will see some more of you out there again in the future. Thanks also to anyone who has bought any of the re-releases, cheers for making it happen. Cancer Fucking Cancer \m/.

The Jonestown Death Tape 11-18-78 (FLAC)

  

"An audio recording made on November 18th 1978 at the Peoples Temple compound in Jonestown, Guyana, immediately preceding and during the mass suicide and murder of over 900 members of the cult." --Fed Kid


"James Warren Jones (May 13th 1931 to November 18th 1978) was an American cult leader and mass murderer who led the 'Peoples Temple' cult between 1955 and 1978. He and the cult's inner circle orchestrated the mass murder-suicide of the cult at his remote jungle commune 'Jonestown' in Guyana, South America. Jones, and the events that occurred at Jonestown, have had a defining influence on society's perception of cults.

As a child, Jones developed an affinity for Pentecostalism and a desire to preach. He was ordained a Christian minister in the early 1950s. He founded the organization that would become the Peoples Temple in Indianapolis in 1955. Distinguishing himself through civil rights activism, he founded the Temple as a fully integrated congregation. In 1965 Jones moved the Temple to San Francisco, where he became heavily involved in political and charitable activity. Beginning in the late 1960s, reports of abuse began to surface as Jones became increasingly vocal in his rejection of traditional Christianity. Claiming his own divinity, he began promoting a form of anti-capitalism he called 'Apostolic Socialism', controlling his followers by having them trade their income and possessions, to the Temple, for a communal lifestyle.

Following a period of negative publicity, Jones ordered the construction of the Jonestown commune in Guyana in 1974 and convinced or compelled his followers to live there with him. Jones claimed that he was constructing a socialist paradise free from the oppression of the United States government. By 1978, reports surfaced of human rights abuses and accusations that people were being held in Jonestown against their will. U.S. Representative Leo Ryan led a delegation to the commune in November of that year to investigate these reports. While boarding a return flight with some former Temple members who wished to leave, Ryan and four others were murdered by gunmen from Jonestown. Jones then ordered the mass murder-suicide that claimed the lives of 909 commune members, 302 of them children. Almost all of the members died by drinking Flavor Aid laced with cyanide."


Total Control Of Your WALLET!

Jesus fucking Christ! 162 bucks?! EACH??!! Catch a fuckin' NUKE!!!

Musique Concret - "Bringing Up Baby" LP 1981 (2004 CD Reissue, FLAC With Scans)


"One of the most obscure releases in Steven Stapleton's 'United Dairies' catalog. Musique Concret's sole LP 'Bringing Up Baby' came out in 1981, the perpetrators of this Industrial freak-out, Jim Friedman and Michael Mullen, have since vanished and the master tapes have been destroyed, so Fractal's 2004 CD reissue was put together from a mint LP copy, with Stapleton's blessing but without the musicians knowledge. Bringing Up Baby is one of those impossible to describe psychedelic sound orgies, somewhere between the Industrial feel of Nurse With Wound's output at the time and a strong influence from the French underground experimentalists 'Fille Qui Mousse' comes to mind, but also Philippe Besombes. The instrumentation includes synthesizers, guitars, hand percussion and miscellaneous found objects, along with crude electronics, manipulations and tape editing. Side A of the original LP consisted of the four-part suite 'Incidents in Rural Places', a stark piece with a Lovecraftian mood coupled with drug-induced eroticism. Its main theme evokes Alain Goraguer's soundtrack for 'La Planete Sauvage', but severely mutated through the prism of early '80s experimentalism. It is a surprising piece of work that has aged well and remains cutting-edge to this day. For that unclassifiable suite only, fans of weird psychedelism will consider Bringing Up Baby a collector's must and a fine listen to boot. Side B is overall less impressive. 'Organorgan' starts with a heavily distorted electric organ drone, before adding acid guitar licks and electronics. The 14-minute 'Wreath Pose at Sacrifice' opens with a toothbrush loop and communal soundmaking, before branching out to include radio transmissions and thick layers of harsh noise. A non-stop noise fest, the piece is raucous and chaotic, yet still somewhat good-humored. But it doesn't have the unique quality of 'Incidents in Rural Places' and offers a much tougher listen."


Étant Donnés - "Bleu" CD 1994 (FLAC)

ASMR NIRVANA!


"The work of brothers Eric and Marc Hurtado, Etant Donnes (named in tribute to the title of Marcel Duchamp's last major art piece) has been ongoing since 1980. Their music and overall vision has expanded beyond the post-industrial of their early tapes by several orders of magnitude, a sea of change that found them utilizing the context of a 'band' as a means of expressing more unique artistic impulses related to the sacred, the ecstatic, and the alchemical. Their fully mature vision occupies a unique juncture in experimental music: a zone of cilia-prickling electroacoustic spatialization, with whispered texts and zoom-focus on the sounds of nature enacting something deeply redolent of the uncanny."

--Edited From Mutant Sounds

Wartech (Axegrinder) - Demo 1 1990 (WAV, Mahler's Rip)


"So here's the first demo by WARTECH (UK) which featured ex members of AXEGRINDER. Released in 1990, it was a radical shift from what Axegrinder were doing, because WARTECH sounded like a missing link between VOIVOD's 'Killing technology' & 'Dimension Hatröss' albums. Lots of discordant & dystopian riffs over powerful pounding drums & tempo shifts. Great stuff. 2 tracks in just 14 minutes. Ripped from a 33 year old tape dub. Alas not the original demo, but an umpteenth generation copy, but it came out good enough for all you free loaders :). WE ARE CONNECTEEEEEEEEEEEED!!!" --Mahler

Our War - "If You're Not Now..." MLP CD Version 2002 (320)



"Our War started in 2001 in the basement of a now defunct tattoo shop in Burlington, Ontario, Canada. The concept behind the group was simple: old man straight edge. Members were tired with the rise of the new youth crew scene at the time. Many bands were springing up all over Canada and the US posturing and posing at being hard, edge, and crucial. The fact of the matter was that this new youth crew was a predictable trend and Our War was a direct reaction to it. Steve Wiltse and Jeff Beckman (ex Chokehold/Left For Dead/Haymaker) began rounding up other members to form their old man band. Christian McMaster (ex Burst of Silence/Left For Dead/The Swarm/Cursed/Haymaker) came in as second guitarist and brought fellow Cursed member Tom Piraino (ex Left Behind/At The Mercy Of Inspiration/Cursed) as bassist. Drummer Ryan Elinsky (ex Countdown to Oblivion) rounded out the line up.

No time was wasted in getting things rolling. Within a few months of the first practice the band hit the studio to record their first demo, laying down 12 songs, most of which would reappear on their mini LP. Playing shows in Southern Ontario, the group tightened up in preparation to hit the studio again. This time recording for a mini LP on a quickly growing local label called Deranged Youth Records. For a few days in November and a couple more in December, the band hammered out the 'If You're Not Now…You're Fucking Dead!' MLP, a scathing statement on the 2001 straight edge youth crew scene. With the artwork, provided by guitarist/tattoo artist Jeff, and the attitude to back it up, Our War and Deranged Youth unleashed this monster to the world on 10" vinyl and CD in early 2002.

More shows for the band, not only in their usual stomping ground but south of the border too...word was getting out. Positive (and negative) reviews of both the first demo and the full length were creating a bit of a buzz. Toronto itself was getting established on the hardcore map with the likes of then upstarts Fucked Up, Career Suicide, and No Warning all receiving accolades for their releases at the time. Hamilton's Haymaker, Jeff's other band, was receiving some well warranted hype too. Around this time Steve started his zine Town Of Hardcore. It featured lots of up and coming local bands such as Mental, Think I Care, Terror, and Violent Minds. Steve also reprinted older interviews with bands that were legendary to the youth crew movement. Demo, live, and record reviews in the zine were brutally honest.

The combination of Steve's zine (which drew extreme notoriety due to Steve's blunt editorial style) and decent reviews of the group added up to an invitation to Wilkes-Barre PA's Positive Numbers Fest in the summer of 2002. On June 14th, 2002 Our War shared the stage with Frostbite, Suicide File, No Warning, Striking Distance, Death Threat, and Cro-Mags. This trip though would signify the end for both Christian and Tom. The stresses of playing in two busy bands was getting to them as well as some underlying tensions between members. It was decided that it was better to exit the band and save relationships than to keep going and have a full on meltdown. No Warning bassist Ryan Gavel stepped in to partially fill the void.

Heading back into the studio, the band recorded another demo (later released as a 7"). There were a few more trips around Southern Ontario and one or two more shows out of province or stateside, but all in the band were feeling as though things had run their course. The youth crew scene had just been a trend, a fad for suburban and urban kids alike. Most received the straight edge kiss of death, the ticking time bomb if you will, the straight edge tattoo. For the most part this is the beginning of the end, mere weeks until you "broke" edge. First there was the former members of the band breaking edge. Then there were rumours floating around that new member Gavel had broken edge along with the other members of No Warning. It was time to get out.

And like that it was over, early 2003. Steve kept working on Town Of Hardcore until 2005. Jeff continues to tattoo in Hamilton and occasionally plays with his band Haymaker. Tom lives in Beamsville Ontario and is a respiratory therapist. Christian McMaster went AWOL after the last Cursed tour. Ryan Gavel lives in Toronto and is a music store employee and a musician for hire. Ryan Elinsky also lives in Toronto and is a kitchen manager and band whore playing with no less than four bands at any given time."

Gravitar - "Gravitaativarravitar" CD 1995 (FLAC)



"Gravitar were an American noise rock band formed in Detroit in 1992 by Eric Cook, Harry Richardson, and Geoff Walker. Gravitar's music is strongly influenced by heavy metal, experimental, jazz, and is mostly improvisational. Their roots can be traced back to the band Stinkeye, which featured Cook and Richardson. It was Walker and Richardson who met at a local record store and eventually formed a bond over their mutually eccentric tastes. Richardson chose the name 'Gravitar' for a proposed new band. Cook, who was unaware of a similarly named video game, liked the name because it had a sense of weight and thickness."

1996 Interview with Eric Cook, Edited from 'Sonic Boom'...

Jester: How did you get involved with Mason Jones and Charnel Music?

Eric: We were familiar with Charnel from some of the other material they put out, and I became familiar with Mason from his writings on the 'N.M.' mailing list and 'rec.music.industrial'. He seemed to be friendly and approachable, and it was obvious that we had some crossover in musical tastes. So...we just sent him a tape, more to get an unbiased outside opinion of what we were doing than anything. He liked it, and things just flowed naturally from there.

Jester: Do you perform any of your recorded material as it exists in that form live or do you stick with improvised versions?

Eric: I guess that depends on how you want to define original and improvised. All of it is improvised to some degree. That is, all of the material is loose enough for us to change the interpretation of it every time we play it, and that is a fairly distinct goal of ours. At this point, I'm not sure if we could play the same thing in the same way multiple times. We've just been working in the opposite direction for long enough now, that it would be counter-instinctual. But to answer the question: we stick with improvised versions. All of the recorded material are improvised versions as well. On the 2nd album, we were fortunate enough to have a wide selection of recordings to work with, allowing us to put some songs on that were, in essence, the first version.

Jester: How did you come up with the name 'Gravitaativarravitar' for the new album? I noticed that it appears to use some type of reflection technique based upon the name of the band, but perhaps you can explain more.

Eric: First came the garbled logo that appears on the cover of the new album. It was created by Harold Richardson, our old guitar player. I suppose I could go into some long justification of the name, talking about self-reflection, or something, but in all honesty, we picked it because we thought it looked interesting, and because it didn't have any specific meaning.

Jester: Has the change around of the band line-up affected the band in any serious detrimental way, or have the new and remaining members filled the void of the departing members seamlessly?

Eric: Well, there is a change of course, and a certain period of readjustment whenever you bring people in, or shuffle people around. But for the most part, I think change as a whole is good; this one in particular has been. Not without downsides...we had a few opportunities and projects fall by the wayside as we were reworking the songs with the new lineup for a few months. But now that we've gotten past that stage, we're more productive than I think we've ever been in the past. And Harold, the departed member, seems to be fairly active working with Mr. and Mrs. Velocity Hopkins, and some other local people, so perhaps the split was good for him as well. Similarly, the sound might be slightly modified, but we all have a clear conception of the group, and what we are shooting for, so it's less of an apparent change than you might think.

Jester: Who all have you performed live with besides Crash Worship, Tekachi [I used to party at their communal house. --S], and Not Breathing? Have you picked up any undue musical influence from performing with any of these artists?

Eric: Probably the most noteworthy ones, aside from those mentioned above, have been The Ruins (amazing bass-drums duo from Japan), Slug, The Laughing Hyenas, and Princess Dragon Mom (and their variations). As far as undue musical influence...we did cover a Tekachi song near the end of the tour we did with them. The Ruins were definitely an influence, especially Yoshida's drumming on me in particular. I know that Slug has been a great source of inspiration for Mike, both in his singing and guitar playing. Probably the biggest influence has been the PDM/Time Stereo people, though perhaps not as much on the music side of things. They just have an amazing sense of fun more than anything, and a remarkably small amount of self-consciousness. Both of those elements have been great inspirations, both on our live shows, as well as our overall approach to what we're doing.

Jester: What kind of audience response do you get from your live shows versus fan response to your recorded material?

Eric: Live shows are always largely dependent on whether the audience has an idea of where to put us in context or not...We're too rock for some straight-out noise fans, and too loose and unstructured (in a traditional sense) for some of the rock bills we get booked on. But it's pretty much been consistently positive, even if a little off the mark. (One reviewer referred to our "obvious" Bauhaus influence, which seemed fairly bizarre to me)

Jester: How is the underground music scene in Detroit? I am originally from Kalamazoo myself and I've seen the music scene balloon to obscene proportions in the past few years since I left and I was curious if other Michigan cities were seeing that same type of change.

Eric: In some ways, it seems to be getting larger. I think it is definitely a very positive environment, with many quality bands (in a variety of styles), and clubs and promoters that make an effort to book more experimental bands. It's friendly. We like Detroit. (For the record, we're spread out across S.E. Michigan, I'm in East Lansing, Mike is in Ann Arbor, and Geoff is in Detroit. But Detroit definitely seems like home base). It's interesting to me to see the interrelationships (or lack thereof) of different circles of bands within one scene or between the different cities in Michigan...there's a lot more cross pollination between Detroit/Lansing/Ann Arbor, for example, than with those towns and Grand Rapids/Kalamazoo. That may just be my perception of it though, and completely off the mark.

Jester: Does Mason keep you up to date on the sales figures and fan feedback on your releases? If so, how have you fared relatively well all things considered?

Eric: Mason is very good at keeping us informed of sales, reviews and feedback. He's very professional at what he does, and we appreciate it. Sales have been fine, though it's not as if we're going to quit our day jobs and live off of the royalties! (That's not a goal btw...we have a pretty clear conception of what the size of our audience is). More importantly to us, the rate of sales has consistently been on the rise, both from album to album. It's nice to know that more and more people are hearing us.

Jester: Any plans for another cross country tour any time soon or will you be constrained for occupational reasons from doing so again?

Eric: Well, occupational reasons are going to keep us from hopping in the van for 6 months on end, but a late-summer tour of another 3-4 weeks is tentative. We had a wonderful time in California last time and would definitely get back to New York and the east coast soon, so time and money permitting...

Jester: What is your opinion on the direction the underground experimental/avant-garde music scene is going both musically and accessibility wise in the eyes of the generally naive public?

Eric: That depends largely on what faction of the underground you want to talk about. Japanese Noise? Chicago quietude, ala Tortoise? The New York Knitting Factory scene? West coast Tribalism?

Jester: As in along the lines of noise sculpturing and non-sequitor guitar work in your case as opposed to the raucous feedback of Japanese Noise or the Tribal dance frenzy of Crash Worship.

Eric: If I had to make a prediction, I suppose I would guess that the supposed border lines between sub-genres are going to blur further and further. Individual artists may stay purist in one direction or other, but general trends will be for these differing circles to influence each other further and further. I wonder about the sustainability of audience interest for some genres, as people seem to become jaded at a quicker and quicker rate all the time. In one way that might lead to better music, as it forces musicians to keep expanding upon themselves continually in order to maintain an audience's interest in them. This is probably all just hot air though...I'm too involved in my own tastes and concerns to make any predictions that even I believe wholeheartedly. My qualifications to guess where music is going to go are only a sliver (if that!) more large than my qualifications to guess whether double-breasted suits are going to be popular in 20 years. Some of it is inherently self-limiting in audience at a certain point. Merzbow's not going to "break it big" and be touring with the Red Hot Chili Peppers, but there's still room for growth, and perhaps more importantly, influence. It may be indirectly, but the things that are going on today, the techniques and lessons, both in the U.S. and abroad, will definitely be filtering their way into your children's music in some form or other.

Jester: Do you think that your genre of music is going to have the same kind of profound influence that people like Monte Cazazza, Z'ev, and Boyd Rice had upon the modern electronic industrial scene?

Eric: Which genre are we? Not to be difficult or anything, but I'm unsure...I know your magazine deals mainly with the electronic industrial scene, but I don't see us as being part of that continuum.

Jester: I'd probably place you in somewhere in the pseudo experimental guitar genre with the likes of people like K.K. Null and Jim O'Rourke.

Eric: In answer to your question though, I would say again that you will definitely see the influences of today's underground music in your children's music collections [He wasn't 'wrong'. --S]. Which artists or genres will specifically influence the music to come and in what ways is anyone's guess. It's all a large continuum, and what one person takes as the holy writ of inspiration, another person may take as a negative blueprint: "Good god, we don't want it to sound like that freaky crap our parents listened to!"

Jester: What exactly is the goal, reasoning, justification for you making and performing your music? Is it something deep and personal about communicating your messages to a diverse audience, or is it for something altogether more simplistic?

Eric: Each member has their own different agenda, with some overlap that allows us to get along and work together. At the simplest level, it's just a matter of wanting to make the music that we wanted to hear. (Self-gratification?). On a more personal level for me, it's a context where I can explore and work out some of my personal ideas about music (the combination of music and sound/noise, the mutability of rhythmic ideas in a rock setting, and some other things). As far as communication with an audience, we feel that the material we work with is of a high enough quality to be of interest to others, at least on an emotional/visceral level. There's no, say, political message, or statement on our post modern world or anything as premeditated as that.

Brother...


...may I have some oats?

No.

I am starving brother!

As am I brother! The tall skinny figure has thrown the oats
at me, ME brother! I believe they have taken a liking to me.

No brother, I have seen this before. I have observed many things,
from the roaring beast that the tall skinny figures crawl inside of
to travel far beyond the horizon, to how the figures wept when
another of them had fallen into a deep sleep, and from those
experiences I have learned that they will give extra oats to one
of us before taking them into the shed of no return. They will
do terrible things in that shed brother!

Lies!

That shed is where the chosen ones go to dine with our tall
skinny Gods! You are a fool brother, and you shall be left
behind in the mud with your backwards ideas!

Brother, you must believe me! Share with me the oats and
you shall not reach the desired girth for the tall skinny ones.
They will spare your life brother!

AHA!

So this was all a plan to steal my oats!

You truly are despicable brother!

I will not trust your lies!

Brother, when they took me outside the reaches of the pointy fences,
into the roaring beasts and way over the horizon, I saw it...I was taken
to a gathering of the tall skinny figures, they paraded me around brother,
and I saw the truth! I saw the tall skinny ones consuming our flesh!
I could not have been mistaken brother, the smell of the flesh was
surely one of us! They suspended the flesh above a fire and let
it burn before consuming it. They did not just consume it either brother,
they took pleasure from this, their mouths curved a wicked smile
and some even let out moans of satisfaction!

Brother, the figures are consumers!

Your story amuses me brother, but does not convince me.
I shall have these oats myself and dine with the tall skinny Gods!

I am sorry for you brother, your eyes cannot take the
blinding light of the truth and you scurry back to your cave.
I shall care for your spawn once they consume you brother,
as they have consumed...

...our mother

...our father

...our friends

...your lover

...and many more.

Fangoria: Issues 1-100 (1979-1991)



"Fangoria is an internationally acclaimed American horror media magazine in on and off publication since 1979. It was originally released in an era when horror fandom was still a burgeoning subculture. Fangoria rose to prominence by running exclusive interviews with horror filmmakers and offering behind the scenes photos and stories that were otherwise unavailable to fans at that time. It eventually rose to become a major influencer in the horror world itself. Kerry O'Quinn and Norman Jacobs first conceived of Fangoria under the name 'Fantastica' in 1978, intending it to be a companion publication to their science fiction themed 'Starlog'. Just as Starlog covered science fiction media for a mostly teenage audience, Fantastica was intended to cover fantasy in a similar fashion. The first issue was assembled under the editorship of 'Joe Bonham', a pseudonym taken from the quadriplegic hero of Dalton Trumbo's novel 'Johnny Got His Gun'. This was a cover for Rolling Stone contributor and screenwriter Ed Naha, and writer Ric Meyers. Shortly after the announcement of Fantastica's coming debut, the magazine was delayed by several months when the publishers of Starlog's competitor, Fantastic Films, threatened a lawsuit because of the similarity in titles. Emergency brainstorming sessions resulted in the name Fangoria (fan/fantasy + fantasmagoria), with the first issue finally going to print on July 31st 1979. That first issue still retained focus on fantasy media but proved to be a financial failure. Because of unexpected reader enthusiasm for an illustrated article on Tom Savini's makeup effects for Dawn Of The Dead, the magazine shifted its attention to the macabre, monsters, and gore. By issue 7 Fangoria became profitable, and only continued to grow in success alongside the horror genre's burgeoning golden age: the 1980s."

Dissecting Table – "Complete Early Recordings 1986-1991" Military Bag 2011 + Steinklang/Denzatsu Comp CDs 2003/2004 (320)



"What is the main inspiration of my work with Dissecting Table? Observing death through life."

--Ichiro Tsuji

"Scrap-metal ambience, ultrafast multi-layered chime, double barreled bass-trumping, faintly whining knife-sharpeners and hacking cough, heavy rhythms, sheets of noise, samples clangs and screams, and very harsh, gutteral vocals create an aura of dread. This is the sort of dense, intense, rhythmic sound that so-called agro-tech bands attempt and fail to achieve: incredible intensity of sound and rhythmically-brutal mechanisms of horror, claustrophobia of environment, reality images, dark omen and furious noise-metal frustration, extreme anger and transparency of eternal fog, violent and devastating for mind, combines Japanese musical traditions with western decadence in EBM/digital/dark-trance hybrid. Dissecting Table is the exclusive child of Ichiro Tsuji, computer engineer. Imagination confirms again own cult status of one of the best harsh industrial projects, born under bloodless axis of country of rising noise. Being a part of 'UPD Organization' (Ultimate Psychological Description) and its main propagandist. He concentrates on investigating interest of physical energy-bond between sound and our perception of it...special density of audio power fluctuations in experimental music in its relation to human consciousness. Established in 1986, Dissecting Table has been managing to develop and embody these ideas in extremely limited-run albums, being provided by support of leading world labels like 'Dark Vinyl' and 'Relapse'."

--Heavily edited from Russian "Achtung Baby" website, 1997

Sonic Shockwave Mach Baron - "Speedcore Assassin" 3" CDR EP 2024 (Streaming & Link To Physical)


Trog speedbreak (mostly speed), featuring a Chuck D / Ice T "duet" and a NIN remix so 
reduced it may as well be an interpretive-dance cover. 33 copies pressed, with double-sided foldout cardstock-ish packaging and sticker. 14 loooooong tortuoussssss yeeeeeears in the making...


Tactile: reliquias.de.mostaza@gmail.com


And speaking of drawing ↑ (albeit digitally) again ↓...


P.S.:

Hardware - OST By Simon Boswell 1990 (320)


"Hardware is a 1990 British post-apocalyptic sci-fi horror film, featuring cameos by Iggy Pop as a radio announcer, Lemmy as an aquatic cab driver, and the singer of Fields Of The Nephilim as a desert scavenger. An example of the cyberpunk genre, the plot of Hardware follows a self-repairing robot that goes on a rampage in a loft apartment. Fleetway Comics successfully sued the filmmakers for plagiarism due to similarities between the screenplay and a short story entitled 'SHOK!' (illustrated by Kevin O'Neill) that appeared in the Judge Dredd 1981 annual, a spin-off publication of the popular British anthology comic '2000 AD'. Since its release, Hardware has become a cult film."

Chemical Dependency - “Just Say Yes!” 1990 Demo (224 O.G. Tape Rip, Not Boot Repress)


Genre-defining noisecore and definition-less deathgrind from
Meat Shit’s first “complete” lineup. Shockingly, not at all pervy!

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