Asphyxia - "Wardrugs" Demo (320 O.G. Complete, Year Unknown)


Framtid/Gloom/Defiance side-crust... 

Visions Of War - Unreleased Demo April 1998


Belgian discrust with ultrafuckingbrutal grindcore vocals. Sounds very "L.A." to me...

Blood Robots - Demos 83-84 And Live (320 From WMA With Scans)


Irritatingly incomplete collection (ripper made a "best of" instead of a full discography) of Sned Flat Earth/Generic/Pleasant Valley Children/Health Hazard's very first band (M-E-G-A anarcho!)...

Brume - "Fuck Your Sun" Tape 1988 (With Scans)



"Before recording my 1st sound I played synthesizer in a jazz-rock big band. It was in 1978 and we were no less than nine musicians in this large structure called Uria. I must say that i was the only non-musician in the band. I was here only to make 'special effect' like wind, birds, noise of all kind to give the band a touch of weirdness. We did a lot of performance especially in south of France. The positive aspect of this musical experience made it possible for me to learn how to play keyboards, seriously speaking. But the negative stuff was all the wasted time during rehearsals, also I decided to leave the band in 1981 to compose alone. I must add that in the same time from 1979 to 1981 I started to experiment with poor equipment. I managed sounds with a cheap bass guitar, a very old Farfisa organ, a 2nd hand MS20 (I bought another 2nd hand SQ10 sequencer and a Boss DR55 rhythm machine) and a defective reel to reel recorder which died one year later.

During this period, I was interested in 'serialism' like early Steve Reich, Terry Riley, some stuff by John Cage, Krautrock, Magma, Heldon, Metal Urbain, the 1st Suicide, Fripp & Eno.

All these fabulous artists inspired me a lot to begin some basic experiments with two cassette players. I got the idea to open a cassette, cutting the tape in order to create a loop. I did many cassettes like that. It was fantastic because whatever you recorded on them, all sounds were automatically synchronised when you played together two of these tapes! Of course playing 1000 looped cassettes together would had been the same incredible result! So 1979 to 1985 was the theater of many experimentations: programming synthesizers, recording technic, cut-up and other tape manipulations...I bought a Revox reel to reel recorder with a speed of 38 cm per second and in the same time a Tascam 4-track cassette recorder, a 8-track mixing deck, some effects and a beautiful Korg Polisix synth.

As I already recorded many pieces of music, I decided to produce myself my 1st cassette called 'Frikture' on my own label 'Brume Records'. In 1985 this cassette included some old experiments and some new tracks. It was limited to 50 copies only! I got some good reviews on many fanzines in France and in Belgium. A 1st track was submitted for a compilation cassette on the Belgian label 'INSANE MUSIC FOR INSANE PEOPLE'. This fact motivated me a lot to continue to produce some new tapes and material available for eventual international tape compilations. The 2nd Cassette called 'Le Jour Du Cochon' was limited to 100 copies and made me accepted in the international mail-art cassette culture.

It was always in 1985 and I decided to do my 1st Brume performance. My old friend G. Guiggia (an old member of Uria, playing bass & guitar) and me found a nice place to perform. It was an old disused bus warehouse. Of course this performance was unofficial and we were arrested by the Police at 11pm. An extract of this performance was recorded on the 'Exit/No Use' cassette (50 copies). By the way I started to get some invitations to make whole Brume cassettes and more and more compilation by labels such as Old Europa Cafe and many others (both very obscure and well know labels). Finally I did about 45 whole cassettes from 1985 to 1999, mainly in USA, Germany, Italy, and Belgium.

I got a lot of fun, motivation, amusing and exciting state of mind! I must say that some cassettes were recorded in one week-end or during one night and one day. I was very happy to see that my work on tapes was sold very well. I answered a lot of interviews in fanzine & magazines. The tape culture made me discover a lot of music I didn’t know before and a lot of nice people. I got some real good relationships that I still have today! This medium opened the door to make some vinyls & CDs. But the most important stuff was the relations between some people from the entire world and me.

Today I notice that vinyls and cassettes create once again a new strong interest with people. That’s great!!! Anyway iI was bored to do CDs again and again. Cassette and LP are sensual objects, CD is cold! Also since 2011 I decided to release LPs and...some new cassettes ! To be continued..."

-- C. Renou/Brume, February 2012

Crudity VS Crude SS - Live '80s


"6 Years" Comp Tape 1986 (With Hi-Res Scans)


Half interviews, half musick (advanced darktronics and experimental-industrial) from Jonathan Briley, Seven From Life, Cult Ov Womb, The Mahcanik, Women Of The SS, Coup De Grace, Sleep Chamber,
 and Noizeclot...



4 "A"-Named Japcore Bands From The Golden Shower Age: Aka "False Love" Flexi 1986, A.T. Det "Last Child" 7" 1986, Anti-Septic "First Last" 7" 1985, Atomic Bomb "Hell's Story" Flexi 1986


A5 - "Kalte Erotik..." 7" 1981


2nd EP of Bremen "raw" wave. "Ice cream, everybody needs ice cream"...


203 Of Scruff's American 80's Flyers (Hi-Res, Partied On, Weirdly Misnumbered)



"A few months ago I stopped at an estate sale in my neighborhood and discovered a trove of vintage punk rock flyers in a dirty cardboard box in the back corner of the garage. The original owner's nickname was 'Scruff', he was a local Metro Detroit father and musician who had been in the punk scene his whole life. I also found out that he has passed in the prior year from cancer. It became clear to me that I had found something special and rare, and that this collection needed to be preserved." --Author/Date Unknown