Scorn / Lull 7"s - "Lament" 7" 1993, "Silenced Outerbounds" 7" 1994, Split 7" With Delphium 1994, "Time Box" 2x7" 1995 (FLAC/320 Bundled)


Black Mayonnaise '92-'94 VS Paineater '89-09



Black Mayonnaise: Noun...
1. A toxic sludge found at the bottom of harbors and bays, often extending for miles
into the ocean, consisting of decayed sediment, sewage, and petrochemical waste.

First discovered occurrence: 1978, Atlantic Seaboard

Black Mayonnaise: Verb...
2. A sludge/drone doom bedroom-in-an-apartment act, known for its brutal,
torturous, haranguing, miserable, and absolutely crushing effects. 

First discovered occurrence: 1991, Ohio

"Tampa’s breeding-ground had an established template. If you were a band in the 1990s you followed this order: Singer, guitar, bass and drums. The slight variation being the additional guitar player. The Tampa death metal renascence was aggressively moving forward and all the bands practiced this orthodoxy. Then there was this dark, icy, mechanized vibration called Paineater. Mark Odechuck and Bob White effectively wiped this template clean. They made the choice to throw out this old formula in order to arrive at something less human. Literally. Mark and Bob show up accompanied by only a bass guitar and drum machine and proceed to crush. The drum machine and bass mournfully orbited one another. Mark paced back and fourth growling about the after-stench of a fallen world. It was unusual. Not because of the body-count but how massive Paineaters sound was.Paineater definitely lit my path towards electronic music. A hardcore punk listener at the time, no other band could have introduced the stiffly quantised sounds of a drum machine to me - the sheer noise, darkness and intensity moved towards a new orthodoxy."

--Paul Pavlovich (Assuck) 2013

Econochrist - "It Runs Deep" 7" 1988



"Ben, Markley, and Jon formed a band in Little Rock, Arkansas while the members were still in junior high, calling themselves 'Father Asshole'. That band was short-lived and played a few shows, including the Arkansas College anti-apartheid rally. In 1986 the three started a new band called 'Criminal Mischief'. Around this time things started to happen in Little Rock and a scene began to really develop. A guy named Robo started putting on hardcore shows at a venue called 'The Annex'. Many of the classic hardcore bands of the era came through and Criminal Mischief got to open most of those shows. Eventually their bass player was replaced with Andy, and they also changed their name to Econochrist. They played many shows around the Arkansas area as well as in Memphis. They released a demo tape and a 7" EP titled 'It Runs Deep' on Memphis-based 'Truant Records'.

In 1988 the band and many of their friends decided to pack up and move to the East Bay. In the East Bay scene Econochrist flourished, though Andy was replaced by Mike. This didn't bring Andy down though, as he went on to play with bands like 'Eldopa' and 'Samiam'. Econochrist joined the ranks of the Gilman Street punk scene and became much adored by the area's punk rockers. They continued to release records, play shows, and tour the country until 1993, when they decided to split up. The members of the band have all moved on to other things now: Ben is an elementary school teacher, after spending time counseling street kids at the Haight Ashbury Free Clinic. Jon is 'married' to his dog and working on a new musical project. Andy has been keeping a low profile but is surely still kicking ass somewhere out there. Markley drummed for Strychnine, which also featured members of fellow East Bay hardcore band Filth.

The thing about these guys was that they lived and breathed hardcore punk rock. They lived in shitholes, toured on a shoestring, but most importantly they played kick-ass music. They will be remembered forever by the fans and the many bands they influenced - their signature sweaty, hard-driving punk backed with clear and punchy melodic bass lines developed into the sound of the 90s East Bay scene, as also played by fellow locals Jawbreaker, Green Day, and Rancid (who in particular played house parties with Econochrist)." --Edited from Author Unknown

No Comment - EPs '87-'94 (320)


Pinocha Violencio
SoCal Heres(y/S)iege!


Eggs - "O.K. Now" Flexi 1987


Bastard? Systematic Death? Rocky & The Sweden?
Sounds nuthin' like 'em (same drummer)...these jingles JANGLE with soda poppy FIZZ!