Pathological Compilation CD Version 1989 (320)


Edited From "Ask Earache" 2007...

"In the late 1980s, Earache's leading grindcore bands were starting to breakthrough in the wider UK independent music scene, coming to the attention of noted London indy scenester Kevin Martin. Kevin fancied doing a compilation of the more adventurous UK independent groups around at that time...including a few from Earache's roster. He gathered the tracks and also did the art, but couldn't find the funds to press and distribute the release. Earache liked what he was trying to accomplish, so we took on the manufacture and marketing for him (a one-time press of 5000 copies). Afterwards Kevin carried on alone, retaining the compilation's title as the name of his label, as well as musically collaborating with Justin Broadrick."

Fearless Iranians From Hell 86-90 FLAC



Interview by Joe on September 18, 2009...

Some artists like to tell you what to think, and others make you meet them halfway. These provocateurs are both more artistic and more realistic than the others, who are usually using those bold political opinions to mask a lack of direction otherwise. Of the metal-influenced genres to exist, thrash (crossover between hardcore punk and metal) was the most playfully provocative, and of all the thrash bands, Fearless Iranians From Hell were the arch-jesters of making people think. During their reign in the 1980s, America freshly smarting from the OPEC debacle of the 1970s, was convinced its next big enemy was Islamic fundamentalism...while at the same time becoming more politically fundamentalist itself; it took some balls to tweak that self-righteous outlook by the nose, and even more to do so by mocking the American vision of democracy,  justice and history (by appearing to endorse Islamic fundamentalism from within America’s borders). We were fortunate enough to catch Omid (drums, guitar, art direction, producer, and co-writer of both music and lyrics) while he was cleaning his gold-plated AK-47 in San Antonio, Texas.

Rumor has it that members of the Fearless Iranians From Hell were in an early thrash band called The Marching Plague. Was your interest always in thrash and extreme hardcore, or did you get introduced to music through other genres?

Check out the Texas hardcore compilation that Gibby Haynes (Butthole Surfers) released in the 80’s called 'Cottage Cheese From The Lips Of Death', and the harder-to-find punk compilation on Matako Mazuri Records that Jeff Smith (The Hickoids) released called 'Metal Moo Cow'. You’ll find all of Fearless Iranians From Hell’s members previous bands there: The first Fearless Iranians From Hell line-up consisted of members of The Marching Plague and the future lead guitarist for the band Toejam (on bass). The Fearless Iranians From Hell line-up that recorded for Boner Records was comprised of ex-members of The Marching Plague, The Butthole Surfers, Prenatal Lust, and Toejam. The members of Fearless Iranians From Hell grew up listening to all kinds of music: pop, punk, synth, industrial, avant-garde, reggae, rap, classical, and especially disco. Many a disco party was held at Fearless Iranians From Hell headquarters. In fact, Fearless Iranians From Hell recorded, but never officially released a disco record called Dance for Allah. It’s pretty hard to find, though there are a few warbly cassette copies of it floating around out there. Although Fearless Iranians From Hell’s guitars are loud and often out of tune, and the vocals are shouted, you can still hear that pop sensibility in the songs.

In politics, we usually hear about 'The Other' of some form or another being a threat to our way of life. Rock music has traditionally grasped for authenticity by identifying itself with an other, whether African-Americans, drug users, gender-ambiguous individuals or criminality/gangsters. The Fearless Iranians From Hell seem to have inverted this formula, by embracing a larger-than-life vision of 'The Other' in order to show us more about ourselves. How did you hit on this doubly ironic technique?

We were influenced by The Martial Arts. Seriously. It was a Judo strategy: Turning your enemies’ power against themselves.

How do you feel when you turn on CNN or your favorite news service, and see headlines that could well have come straight from Fearless Iranians From Hell lyrics?

Not suprised, unfortunately. While the band was still together, we had the ultimate punk PR man: The Ayatollah Khomeini. Every time you opened the paper, or turned on the news, there he was, stirring up the shit. World News doubled as advertisments for our band.

You were appearing to endorse the Ayatollah Khomeini, radical Islam and jihad against Americans during the Reagan 1980s in the heart of Texas. How did people react? Were there differences based on their alignment in the political spectrum? Do people still react the same way?

How do you think they reacted? Hahahaha! They HATED us. Especially in the South. The more intelligent people figured out it was political satire, and that what we were doing was ridiculously over-the-top. But we were banking on the more thick-headed ones getting it wrong, being offended, thus drawing more attention to the band. We were attacked by police, protesters, skinheads, right-wing radio hosts, left-wing college boy bands who were too caught up in their seriousness to get what we were doing, gangs, religious organizations, promoters…hell, Fearless Iranians From Hell album covers were even featured in PTA slide-shows portraying the evils of rock ‘n’ roll. Mission accomplished. Political views varied between our band members, but Fearless Iranians From Hell didn’t have a specific political agenda. We did however have a common creative agenda. We purposefully garbled political rhetoric, so it was confusing to all ends of the spectrum. The band refused to do interviews at the time, which helped further the misinformation and confusion, and there was no internet, so it was a lot harder for people to get the facts straight about who we were and where we were coming from. We eventually went on tour, and did a few radio interviews in ’88 and ’89, and thought we had let the cat out of the bag. However, it appears many have remained uninformed. For instance, just a couple of years ago, some idiot posted a bounty on the heads of the band members on his web page. One of our lawyers had the site removed.

How did the fearless Iranians in your mythos (the world of characters created by your lyrics and cover art) end up being hash-smoking maniacs? Is this part of a satire of American artists who endorse drugs in their music?

The song “Iranian Hash” is a reference to Hassan-i Sabbah, who founded a group known as the 'Hashshashin'. Hassan-i Sabbah was a Persian Nizari Isma’ili missionary who converted a northern Iran community in the late 11th century. Part of his indoctrination technique was to keep his young assassins stoned out of their minds on hashish. Of course, it’s also a jab at Reagan’s 'War on Drugs'…a turn-of-the phrase, as the Hashshashin literally went to war on drugs.

You had four releases: a self-titled EP, the Die For Allah LP, Holy War LP and Foolish Americans LP. What were the differences between them, how did they “progress” if at all, and which is your favorite?

The 7″ EP was more mid-tempo punk. Lyrically, it was an almost rap-like introduction to the band, and featured the horrifyingly prophetic 'Blow up the Embassy'. The first album, Die For Allah, was like a soundtrack to a movie. Much harder hitting, and faster-paced. The second album, Holy War, was the most raw and explosive. Having played live together for a couple of years at that point, the band were at the top of our game and were pushing everything to its extreme both musically and lyrically. The third album was more studio-fied, verged on heavy metal at times, and along with the usual outrageous lyrics, contains some 'serious' non-tongue-and cheek songs like 'A Martyr In Every Home'. The band went into the recording studio knowing it was going to be our last album, planning to break up before we started repeating ourselves. Amir’s Farsi-spoken vocals on the last song, 'Decade', were decidedly our final words to the world. No favorites. I look at all the albums as one single body of work, to be listened to in order.

In an interview, you talked about an important concept: not taking music at face value. Face value, we assume, is what the music projects; are you saying that little in this world matches up to what it projects, or that its actual causes are different than what it tells you are its causes?

Americans, as a whole, have an underdeveloped sense of irony.

How did you get involved in playing and writing music?

We all came from different levels of musical appreciation and education. Our lead guitarist always had to tune our rhythm guitarist’s axe, because he never learned how. But that didn’t matter, because the music we were into at the time favored creative ideas over virtuousity. The Sex Pistols playing in our hometown, San Antonio, and the DIY punk aesthetic are what brought it all together.

How did the members of the Fearless Iranians From Hell meet?

Fearless Iranians From Hell’s first singer, Amir, moved to Texas with his family after the fall of the Shah of Iran, to flee the reign of the Ayatollah Khomeini. Amir made friends with the other outcasts in his American high-school, punk rockers who were in a band called The Plague. The Plague rotated lead vocalists a few times (Amir may have even been the singer for a show or two ) before settling on a line-up and changing their name to The Marching Plague. The lead singer for The Marching Plague appeared as the voice of Anus Presley on the first Butthole Surfers EP (the tracks 'The Shah Sleeps In Lee Harvey’s Grave' and 'The Revenge Of Anus Presley') and, after joking with Amir that he should have his own punk band, wrote the first Fearless Iranians From Hell songs. The first Fearless Iranians From Hell line-up, comprised mainly of Marching Plague members, would wear ski masks to both enhance the terror-rock concept, and so they could open for The Marching Plague without the audience knowing they were watching the same band twice. This line-up recorded 'Burn The Books' for the 'Metal Moo Cow' compilation, with Amir on lead vocals. Around this time The Marching Plague, having released an EP chock full of notorius, made-to-offend lyrics, took an about-face, and influenced by the more positive DC scene, headed in an emo direction. Shortly thereafter, the Marching Plague’s lead singer left the band, devoting his full attention to Fearless Iranians From Hell, calling on ex-members of Prenatal Lust and Toejam to fill out the roles of his ex-bandmates. Maximum Rock ‘n’ Roll magazine’s Tim Yohannan, who hated The Marching Plague’s un-PC lyrics, actually loved the live Fearless Iranians From Hell demo sent to him for review and recommended 'Get thee to a studio, or off with thy hands'. Fearless Iranians From Hell obliged, securing a record deal with the California label Boner Records, home of Fang, The Melvins, Tales of Terror, etc. Before Fearless Iranians From Hell entered the studio, Amir suggested he be replaced by a more capable lead vocalist. Amir stayed on board as a songwriter, manager, information source, and spokesman. Amir also contributed vocals (the ones that were sung in Farsi) to the 1st and 3rd album. Before recording our debut album, the bassist who played on the Fearless Iranians From Hell 7″ was replaced by the Butthole Surfer’s first bass player.

How do you think our society uses icons like the Ayatollah Khomeini to make us live in fear, how does it benefit from that, and how does using those icons in over-the-top satire (like Jonathan Swift’s 'A Modest Proposal') change how things are done?

It’s the age-old cult tactic of making people feel that they are in imminent danger. It’s an instrument of control, and an insult to our intelligence. The Ayatollah Khomeini was bad news. No doubt about it. But the danger is in mimicking his behavior in our own free country, villianizing an entire race, and simplifying complex issues into a battle between good and evil. I’m not quite sure if 'A Modest Proposal' or Die For Allah actually changed anything, or if we were just preaching to and entertaining the choir. You’ll have to find some Fearless converts out there to answer that one.

Do you feel genre is important, and that specific genres have specific conventions that make them distinct from others? What genre would you identify as that which encloses the Fearless Iranians From Hell? Did you call yourselves skatethrash, thrash, crossover punk or punk hardcore, or something else?

Conforming to a particular genre can be a good starting point…taking advantage of a popular movement to get people’s initial attention, but from that point you have to carve out your own identity and leave the genre behind. When Fearless Iranians From Hell emerged, the flavor-of-the-day was hardcore punk. It’s arguable that we were an art-rock band, but we definitely wouldn’t have classified ourselves as that at the time. Though I didn’t consider us skatethrash, half of the band were actually skateboarders, and our record label worked out a deal with Thrasher Magazine where you’d get a free Fearless Iranians From Hell album when you bought a subscription. We thought that was pretty funny: Fearless Iranians coming to America, getting infected by capitalism and selling out. It added to the confusion.

Did thrash music, which is what I’m calling the metal/punk hybrids like D.R.I. and Cryptic Slaughter have its own style and values that were separate from its ingredients, both metal and punk?

Living in San Antonio, which is known as 'The Heavy Metal Capital of the World' there was no escaping the influence of Heavy Metal. Being fairly isolated, the Texas punks took whatever info we could get on punk rock and often played it using the Metal musical vocabulary we were raised on, quite often parodying metal at the same time (as on the Marching Plague EP 'Rock And Roll Asshole'). So it was kind of a love-hate thing. Early Fearless Iranians From Hell, much like early DRI (circa The Dirty Rotten EP) didn’t have as much an obvious metal influence, but the Judas Priest-style riffing is still there. At the outset of Texas punk, the Punks, the Jocks and the Metalheads were all opposed to each other. I’m not sure if the fusion of the two genres/audiences was a good or bad thing. Maybe a bit of both, as Crossover brought people together, but resulted in a generic, cookie-cutter playing style for many bands.

What distinguishes art from entertainment, and if they overlap, is there a difference in goals between the two?

Funny you should mention that. At the time of the band, I was getting my degree in fine art, and approached Fearless Iranians From Hell as a work of art, so here’s the party line: Art can be entertainment, and entertainment can be art, but ultimately, art serves a greater purpose…well, at least that’s what the artist will tell you!

Do you believe music should be mimetic, or reflect what’s found in life, or ludic, and show a playfulness with life that encourages us to experience it in depth? Do the two ever cross over?

All of the above. Music should have no boundries in purpose, style, or subject matter. No rules.

In one interview, you say your goal is to insult every last person and every nation on earth; what did you hope to achieve with this act?

We did it for our own amusement.

Should people be less ready to get offended? Are you trying to innoculate them against being offended?

Good point. Maybe so. Perhaps people should become more aware of their 'buttons', and how easily they can be pushed, so they won’t be manipulated by the button pushers.

Do you think Muslims and Westerners share any values, and are they misunderstanding each other? Is fundamentalism more of a religion than the specific religion it inhabits, or is it just another way of saying 'conservative interpretation'?

Though there are obvious differences, I think we share more values than we’re often led to believe, however, it is convenient for many, particularly those seeking some kind of power, to perpetuate our misunderstanding of each other.

Did you ever study music theory or take lessons? Did this help you or slow you down in achieving your musical goals?

Our lead guitarist was taking Music Theory in college at the time. I had some formal training on guitar, but was a self-taught drummer. Our singer had piano training. The rest of the band were 100% self-taught. Since Fearless Iranians From Hell had both trained and self-taught musicians, there was always a tug-of-war between being a bit brainy, and keeping it simple. I think that yielded interesting results. Our basic concept was that any kid who picked up a guitar for the first time should be able to bang out one of our songs. The idea being that if you could play one of our songs on your guitar, you instantly related to our band, and felt like an insider.

Some have said that rock music is about individualism, or escaping the rules of society and nature to do whatever the individual wants to do. However, some have also said that heavy metal breaks with that tradition with its 'epic' and impersonal view of life. Where do you fit on the scale?

Our goal was to tip the scale over on both sides.

Will Fearless Iranians From Hell ever re-unite to play shows, tour or write more material?

Do we really need to re-unite? I’ve received emails from several modern punk groups with 100% Iranian-American membership who claim that we inspired them to start their own hardcore bands. Some of them even cover our songs. But, hey…you never know! We’ve been offered some pretty good money to re-unite, but at the moment, we really don’t need the money. We’ve become business owners (you’d NEVER guess which businesses), teachers (That’s right, P.T.A., the Fearless Iranians From Hell have now infiltrated your educational system and are directly influencing YOUR children), and doctors (hey, our lyrics still hold true: Your life IS in our hands!). Personally, I’m not a big fan of reunions. Especially punk band reunions. Who wants to see a punk oldies-but-goodies show? To me, it’s a contradiction of the punk aesthetic. Reunions are for bands like The Eagles. Fearless Iranians From Hell are a band from a certain time of history, about a certain time of history, but as you hinted at earlier, history keeps repeating itself, so our albums are still relevant today. Maybe even moreso than when they came out. Also, even though they deal with serious subject matter, the records have a sense of humor, and that has kept fans coming back to them over the years, as well as creating new fans.

Are you going to release the Fearless Iranians From Hell EP as well? Will the compilation of the 3 LPs stay in print?

Although Boner Records has not been putting out any new albums by new artists, it has continued to re-issue several of its top-sellers, so our first three albums can still be purchased on CD. For how long...I guess as long as they keep selling. All three albums and the Fearless Iranians From Hell EP can be purchased in MP3 format from iTunes, etc. Also an album of Fearless Iranians From Hell demos and outtakes called 'Peace Through Power' has just been released, and is now available from CD Baby and iTunes. Although there’s no talk of writing or recording any new material at the moment, there have been discussions about starting up an official Fearless Iranians From Hell website and selling t-shirts and other merch online.

Any plans to write books or articles about your experiences as the Fearless Iranians From Hell?

We’re being approached more and more often these days about doing interviews and telling our story, so who knows, if there’s enough interest maybe someday there’ll be an 'I Was a Fearless Iranian' tell-all book…available at Wal-Mart! Stranger things have happened.

"Open your chest welcoming death in the path of God and utter your prayer seconds before you go to your target. Let your last words be, 'There is no God but God and Mohammad is His messenger'. Then, if God wills it, you will be in heaven."  --Osama bin Laden


Sounds Magazine interview April 23rd, 1988...

The pop prophets of Fleet Street, ever anxious for a true story, appear to have found a new bete noire. Fearless Iranians From Hell, an aggressive American hardcore band from San Antonio, are the latest victims of the Street’s pop pundits, having tastefully titled their debut LP 'Die For Allah' and released it just in time for the recent hijack. The band aren’t doing themselves any favours. Song titles include the title track, 'Ultraviolence', and 'Blow Up The Embassy'. Lyrically too it’s hot, with lines like, 'You will see that terrorism is the key' and 'I’m going to hijack a plane...won’t do it for glory or fame...when they catch me they’ll say I’m insane'.

Are FIFH provocateurs or just plain insensitive? Amir Mamori, an Iranian exile and the band’s singer, explains
We want to show the Americans just how foolish they are. They want to see Iranians in a specific way and we’re taking their bigotry and stupidity and spitting it back in their faces. We may inadvertently be doing a lot of harm to the image of ordinary Iranians, by sticking so closely to the American stereotypical vision of them, but I’m not that worried. I have higher goals to consider.

Do you feel driven to this?

Definitely, I’m driven in the sense that there are points which I have to make. The funny thing is that people seem to think that we’re not really serious. In fact, we could hardly be more serious. At the moment there’s no bigotry in America that comes close to their feelings about Iran. Americans can’t understand or cope with the Iranian fanaticism and so they’re afraid of it.

What about lines like 'Terrorism is the key'?

I don’t think terrorism is the answer, but I would say that I think it goes on on both sides. Innocent people are killed all the time. But if all people believe that all Iranians are beasts, then we will give them their ridiculous stereotypes and sit back and watch them make fools of themselves.


N.M.E interview April 30th, 1988...

NME kinda wondered if there’s anything you can do to help us with regard to Mr Terry Waite’s continued captivity in the Lebanon?

'I suppose', muses the slightly foreign accent across the transatlantic phone-static, 'We could do a benefit gig for him…in Beirut'.

Whaaat???

Something’s gone sadly awry here. I rang Amir (main mullah of San Antonio’s Fearless Iranians from Hell)  fully expecting to be scorched by a Koran-crazed, hostage eating psycho-child of the Ayatollah...and now the bugger’s gurgling about bloody charity shows! The source of this confusion is the Fearless Iranians’ LP which Big Takeover Records have just released on an unsuspecting Europe. Its cover is dominated by the glowering features of the Khomeini-monster and the unambiguous title ‘Die For Allah’. The record itself, a procession of hardcore grunges with names like ‘Deathwish’, ‘Iranians On Bikes’, ‘Ultraviolence’ and ‘Blow Up The Embassy’, crystallizes the worst nightmares of Ronnie’s America; wave upon relentless wave of death-defying Iranians traversing the USA (on bikes and in 'Turbo Trans-Ams'), exploding in a ceaseless orgy of fanatical hatred and terrorism. It’s both mad and hilarious.
Could these guys, I trembled after a single hearing, be serious? Amir, Iran-born but US-educated, hoses down my wilder imaginings...

'Our stuff is not to be taken at face value. It’s designed to let an audience react in the predictable ways, to make fools of themselves'.

So you’re not the mad-eyed blood-caked Yank-slayers suggested by the record? Not even a teeny bit?

'No, not at all. We love what we do, but we don’t take it too seriously.'

Other people, however, most certainly do. A brief over-the-phone recitation of some of some of the choicer Fearless Iranian lyrics ('Nuke the people...Kill’em dead...Come on, Ronnie, give me head') elicited a frothing reaction from Tory MP Harry Greenway: 'They’re sick!…It’s an obscenity!…We don’t want them spreading their filth in Britain'. Same story with something called the National Movement Of The Iranian Resistance: .To find a so-called pop group promoting terrorism is just appalling and revolting. If they were ever allowed into this country, we’d seriously consider picketing concert venues'.

Amir sniggers sheepishly down the phone: 'So it sticks up people’s ass...that’s good. We have trouble over here, too. Americans are just so stupid. The Marine-types think we’re insulting their country and their president, the liberals think we’re insulting Iranians!”

So what’s the point of it all?

'Our ultimate aim is to insult every last person, and nation, in the world'.

Exploding Corpse Action & Dead Baby - Demo 1995 & Split 7" 1995 (With Scans For Split)


"E.C.A. played grind-death stuff that was influenced by the likes of Carcass. They used sci fi themes, and came up with cool fictional names for the band members. In reality The band consisted of one of my best friends Devon Cahill, who played in Monster X with me (he went on to replace Lee as the bass player in Dropdead). Also in the band writing some pretty brutal guitar hooks was Jim Kopta, who is no longer with us. Jim was a very talented musician and artist who was also in Hail Mary and the Browncuts Neighbors. Albany has always been a pretty incestuous scene for band people. At any rate E.C.A. did a split 7" with another local band called Dead Baby. From What I recall we had a full length LP that was supposed to be released on the Armageddon Label. For some reason this never happened, and there is a full LPs worth of unreleased stuff that has never seen the light of day. The production to that stuff is superior to this. Enjoy."  --Devoid Of Nate

Tozibabe/U.B.R. - Split Tape (320/Year?)


Why pay 115 deutsche marks for this post-2000s boot of mostly released, incompletely labeled live tracks when you can...

Pungent Stench - 1988 Rehearsal & Live 12-9-88


"Pungent Stench began in late 1987, but took until February 1988 to begin rehearsing. Barely a month in proper existence they had composed 10 songs, and by April recorded their first demo tape. Their drummer Alex was a guest at the mixing of Napalm Death's sophomore album at Birdsong Studios, after that he booked 2 days for Pungent Stench in the same studio (to record their 2nd demo). The band had plans to release this demo professionally with a printed cover and manufactured tapes, but before that process could begin they received a signing offer from Nuclear Blast. The trio achieved early prominence in the death metal scene due to their unique playing style and controversial lyrical content, which was a seamless blend of gore, paraphilia, and black comedy."

Pusrad - Discography 2012-2014 (Minus The Comp Appearances, 320 With Scans)


Two ex Raped Teenagers consensually copulate our ears with 84 songs (in 32 minutes) of adulterant-free PUREST/PURIST H-A-R-D-C-O-R-E!!! Expect redundancy, the "debut" tape was really an advance for over half of the other releases...

The Violence Youth Flak - Self Titled Flexi 1986 (With Scans)


"Experimental punk band from Hakata, Kyushu region, formed in 1984. Their later musical style
is a bit more in the metal-punk vein (ala Ghoul, Rapes or Zouo). SS Company label was operated
by their drummer Masa."

Esoterica Landscapes 7 - "Hokmah Nistarah" LP 1990 (With Scans)


Pre (and a far more diabolical) Voice Of Eye...


Yen Pox - "Blood Music" 2xCD Repress 2010



Interview By Musique Machine 7-5-2010...

Yen Pox are the American dark ambient duo of Michael J.V.Hensley and Steven Hall, and since 1993 they’ve been creating some of the most vast, effective and bone chill pitch black ambience around. With Malignant Records just reissuing their classic genre defining debut album “Blood Music”, and the band also just about to release their first new material in eight years in the form of mini album “Universal Emptiness” - I thought it was a very fitting time to catch-up with both Michael & Steven, who kindly agreed to give me an interview via email.

First off how did you both first meet, how did Yen Pox come to be formed and where did the name come from?

M: Steve and I met through a common friend, long ago in Indiana. A couple of years later, I moved closer, and we started hanging out more often, just about the time I started buying gear and experimenting with sound myself. Steve was playing bass in his rock band "Used", and I'd take my sampler and processor over to his place; at first to mess around with them, but later it turned into Steve and I doing more ambient based noise stuff. This was just for fun and experimentation at first; something to fill the hours and please ourselves. It wasn't until we'd gotten together a few times and recorded a bit that we realized it had potential, that it might be worth sharing. It was these sessions that turned into our first cassette release.

S: "Head Shot" was the first song we recorded and I remember being very enthusiastic about this first session and the resulting sound. Several of the early recording sessions seemed to effortlessly yield what I felt were some of the most amazing sounds I had ever heard. It was almost magical.

M: It was also during this time that I read "Junky" by William Burroughs, which Steve loaned me. I noticed the term "Yen Pox", which is the ash from smoked opium, and it seemed like an appropriate name for the blackened narcotic sounds we were creating

You've just reissued and re-mixed version your classic and genre defining album that is "Blood Music" - why did you decide to remix it? And how long did this process take?

M: We'd been thinking of re-issuing the first cassette release on cd for years, possibly doing it ourselves, but we never found the time. Jason from Malignant Records decided it was time to re-issue Blood Music, so we decided to make it a really special re-release by adding the cassette and a few other tracks; seemed like the right thing to do, to put as much of our earliest output in there as we could. Remixing Blood Music was my idea, for a couple of reasons. The first being, I was never happy with the mix and sound of the original release. I really didn't know what I was doing at the time, it was recorded on 6-track cassette, and mixed down to DAT in someone's bedroom studio, in just an afternoon, which didn't give me the time I needed to really do the job right. As well as being badly eq'd and never actually mastered, that's why the volume was so low on the original. The mixing of our tracks is a really important part, the song is often created in the mix down, and can go many ways. Which also made a good reason to remix it; to come at the songs from a different perspective, and give old fans a new listening experience. I was actually really excited to have the opportunity to breathe new life into these tracks with the small bit of knowledge I've gained over the years, and using some of the new digital technologies, which have finally progressed to the point that I've decided to catch up with them.

I noted from the remix that the track lengths have changed in most cases from the original released track runtimes - why has this occurred and have you added more elements in or taken away stuff?

M: Like I said, track mix down is a big part of the song creation; there's always a lot of sound recorded for a track that ends up mixed out or down to a barely audible level. When remixing these tracks, there were parts that were mixed out in the original that have greater presence in the new versions, and vice versa. Just because a track was 12 minutes on the original release doesn't mean it had to be, I could have mixed a 10-minute song or a 15-minute one. While I was remixing, I wasn't going back to the original songs to see how I could see how they "should" sound; instead, I started from scratch with the raw tracks, and pretended like I was mixing them down for the first time. And again, the songs did not always include all of the music recorded for them, they just ended up being as long as they felt like they should be. Also, time constraints had to be taken into consideration, with the added song. I ended up shaving a few minutes off of the entire project to make it all fit.

How long did the original recording of Blood Music take and where was it recorded?

M: I honestly can't remember how long it took, from start to finish, or even much about the actual recording. For some reason, the earlier cassette sessions are much more fresh in my mind; probably because it was all recorded leisurely at Steve's house. Blood Music was different, since I moved away about that time. I believe we recorded a bit before I left in '93, or perhaps when I came back for a visit the following year. It definitely had some of the "live" session work like the cassette, but we also ended up doing quite a bit separately, with Steve sending me tapes from Indiana, and me doing a lot of bedroom sampler sound creation in Denver. This works for us pretty well now, but it was not the optimal situation at the time. Obviously, it turned out ok, but I can only imagine that it would have been even better if we'd recorded it all together.

S: Usually we would put a mike in the room and run it through the processor, grab an instrument or object (a plastic milk jug half full of water comes to mind) hit the play button on the cassette multitrack and go. It wasn't free-form noise making; there was tune and pattern that would form and when we found that pattern, we would cary it through and build on it until we felt it was complete.

Blood Music is a very deep, multi layered, swirling and pitch black record with many sound elements at play. What kind of field recordings, sound textures and instrumental textures did you use to build-up the chilling sound soup?

M: What I remember is lots of bass guitar, our voices, viola, recorder, and my sampler. I think the only true field recording I did was at my parents place, with an old clock and bits of metal and such. I'd have to say that the most important part of our sound back then, from the cassette through "Mnemonic Induction", was my Ensoniq effects processor. It was really the only way we could create such infinitely deep, lush sounds, especially during those early years when the rest of our gear was fairly primitive. I only use it occasionally now, as it's become a bit buggy, and I'm more focused on synths, sampling and sound creation; but Steve picked one up and still makes good use of it, so it continues to be a big part of Yen Pox's sound.

What were your influences sound wise and inspiration wise when putting together Blood music?

M: Again, the passage of time makes that a difficult question to answer, it's hard to remember what I was listening to and looking at during that time in my life. I certainly listened to a lot more ambient and noise then than I do now, but I don't recall ever feeling inspired to sound like anyone else. I'm probably actually more inspired by music that's completely different than what we do; now, as then, anything I hear, watch or read that gives me a charge with it's creativity and greatness could be seen as an inspiration. What really drove me was the simple act of creation, and my mental state at the time, which was somewhat more focused on the grim and grotesque. The cold, seething angst of youth...as opposed to the bitter cynicism of age.

S: As Mike mentioned, I was in a rock band at the time, so what I was playing or listening to at that time probably had little influence other than possibly the very base doom-laden elements of the kind of deconstructed "rock" music I was involved in. If there was a specific example of music that had an impact on me it would probably be the music that our mutual friend, Joel Bender, was creating for his BELT releases.

The reissue adds on an extra unreleased track at the end of the first disc in the form of Beneath The Sun; I take it this track was from around the same time period as the rest of Blood Music? What are the track's origins and why hasn't it appeared before?

M: It was recorded with the rest of Blood Music, so it fits perfectly with them on the re-issue. There obviously wasn't enough room for it on the original, and it was supposed to be on a compilation that was never released. I was pretty bad at correctly labeling all of my multitrack cassettes, and I wasn't sure this was the correct track, as I hadn't heard it in almost 15 years; I had to listen to it and everything else a few times to make sure it was the right one.

S: I believe this was the track that was supposed to be on the Omega zine compilation "Europa".

On the second disc in the Blood Music set you've put seven unreleased tracks from before and around Blood Music, including your first ever release from 1993 - what are your thoughts about these first recordings now and have they being remixed or altered at all since the original recordings?

M: Actually, none of the other tracks are unreleased; the first five were on our first limited cassette. Most of those are in pretty much the same form with very little change to the mix, except for "Thin" and "Empty", which I mixed into one track, just because "Thin" was really short and I thought it sounded better that way. Recording and mixing those songs years ago was a new thing for me, and I think the raw state suits them. It didn't take me long to realize that any tinkering I did would only diminish their impact. And I'm really happy to put these out there for mass consumption, so that no one has to pay $100 for the tape again...The track "Hollow Earth" was released as a 7" in '96, and could have been longer than it originally was; we recorded more music for it. So that one's a more complete mix on the re-issue. The last song, "Summer Skin", was on a comp, and it's pretty much the same here, just a few minor changes to the mix; it's one of my favorite of our tracks from that era.

Who’s idea was it to not use the original Blood Music artwork & cover?

S: I think it was unanimous? Not that we didn’t want to use the original art, but since the material was remixed we thought it’d be good to have a fresh look as well, and putting that in someone else’s hands to see what their vision would become took a load off of Mike shoulders. 

M: Steve is being too kind regarding the original art, I really wouldn't have re-released Blood Music with it. The cover art was primitive and amateur even years ago when it was first issued; now it appears painfully so. I had zero design skills at the time (and only slightly more now), and the friend with a computer that helped me didn't either. I had some good images, but they were badly scanned and integrated, and the titles were too dark and out of place. A lesson hard learned, like most in my life...Now, though, we've got that amazing art by Andre Coelho, and I couldn't be happier with it.

Since you've reissued Blood Music have you any plans to reissue your second album New Dark Age and how do you personally compare the two records & what changed in the recording/composition process between New Dark Age and Blood music?

M: We have no current plans to re-issue New Dark Age; I'm not sure there are enough people out there that don't have it that want it. If the right label wanted to put it out, we'd certainly be interested, but we would also give Malignant Records the first option. Unlike Blood Music, it wouldn't be possible to do a special edition; there aren't any unreleased tracks from that time, and it was already mixed and mastered much more meticulously the first time. Though there's certainly potential for remixing, there's not the motivation; I'm quite happy with New Dark Age, and think it still sounds great. I really labored over it, and kind of hated it for a while after it was done, but I've come to love it over they years. For me, it's a completely different animal than Blood Music. We recorded it all via tapes in the mail, and, for my part, it was a much more sampler intensive project using new gear (except for my trust Ensoniq processor). I was living in a cramped apartment in Seattle, and felt pretty alone and isolated. I spent so long going over and over the songs, trying to get them mixed down just perfectly, that I became completely sick of them...

In 2002 you released the Yen Pox & Troum album "Mnemonic Induction" - how did this come about, and how was it composed/ constructed?

S: We have a long relationship with Stefan Knappe since the Drone 7” back around the time of the original release of Blood Music and we’ve always enjoyed Maeror Tri and Troum’s output, so it made sense for us to collaborate. As for the process, it was much like how Mike and I record; sending tapes back and forth until we felt the pieces were complete. 

M: I mostly remember that it took longer to finish than it should have, which was completely my fault. I'd taken responsibility for the final arrangement and mix, and I really had trouble putting it all together. But I always have trouble with that; all of the music I'm involved in is like putting a big puzzle together, and finding the pieces that fit together can be frustrating. I was also using new gear for the collaboration, and getting the mix down just right was trying; I spent way too much time listening to the same tracks over and over and over again, and could no longer tell what was good; it all just sounded like one big noise to me. That was a big problem with Mnemonic Induction and New Dark Age, and by the time they were finished I kind of hated them, it was hard to hear anything good in them at all. Oddly enough, now they're probably the two favorite things I've done up till now, and I'm really happy with the way the Troum collaboration turned out, a great mix of their sound and ours. I can listen to it now and find myself mystified by the sounds on it, as if I had no part in their creation.

Would you like to do any other future collaborations with Yen Pox? If so, who?

S: We do have an unfinished collaboration with Wolf Eyes from a year or 2 ago that we still need to complete, if the guys haven’t lost interest. The material that they sent to us is very powerful and the work in progress sounds great so far.

You're just preparing to put out your new mini album Universal Emptiness; can you tell us a bit about this new release and how you think it varies from your past work?

M: Yes, it should be out soon, on Substantia Innominata, as a lovely 10" album, two tracks, nearly 40 minutes long. Unfortunately, no cd at first, but we're set on making sure it comes out in some sort of digital format at some point. Personally, I'm really excited to get it out, I think it's some of the best music we've ever done. Which, of course, I'd have to say, but I tend to be pretty hard on myself...Universal Emptiness was the first thing we've done utilizing a computer extensively; not just for recording, but also for sound creation and processing, though Steve did provide an organic atmosphere with his bass and voice work. Despite this change, I think it still sounds like you'd expect Yen Pox to sound, just a bit more advanced and refined; deep, atmospheric, bleak and cinematic, just as dark and dreamlike as ever. Using the computer for recording and mixing down has been a huge revelation for me; there's so much control, it's really helped to perfect and evolve our music. Not that it's without it's pitfalls; when there's a problem, it's usually a mysterious and debilitating one. I've definitely felt like smashing it into a thousand pieces before...

S: According to Stefan at Substantia, it should be out late June or July.

Where there any particular influences (i.e books, movies, ect) you took on–board when making "Universal Emptiness" and how do you feel it compares to your other albums?

M: I wouldn't say that there were any particular influences, the music usually comes from a place inside, rather than the noise outside. I certainly might hear music that makes me think "that's really great, I would love to have that quality in my work", but at the end of the day, it ends up sounding the way it does, regardless of my intents and desires. I could be listening to nothing but Tiny Tim, or black metal, and the music created would come out the same either way. That can be frustrating, when I really want to break away and try something really different, but the Yen Pox "sound" can be too difficult to escape. In the case of Universal Emptiness, I honestly feel it to be some of our best work, I'm probably happier with it than just about anything else I've done. It really builds upon the sound of "New Dark Age", and refines and perfects it. It sounds much darker than I'd expected going into it...I thought that age might have dulled our angst, but apparently not. Fortunately, the way it was composed, I was able to get it mixed down fairly easily, without listening to it a thousand times and becoming fatigued by the process. It's always nice to be able to enjoy listening to one's own music, which is personally not always the case.

You talk about using computers for recording, mix and manipulating your new mini album "Universal Emptiness" - do you think you future material become more computer based & are you worried you’ll lose Yen Pox’s organic edge?

S: As for my input, I’m dead set on always using some kind of string instrument, vocals or other acoustic sound source, so that aspect probably won’t change. 

M: The new material I've been recording this year is the most computer-centric stuff I've ever done, yet, somehow, it's much more organic sounding than I'd intended or expected. Even more than Universal Emptiness, even though that actually contains more real instruments and sound sources. I think there's a way that I go about creating music that gives it a certain consistent quality, no matter what equipment I'm using. Though, I'm not as concerned with it having an organic edge, as I am with it just sounding good; if it ended up sounding completely electronic and unreal, it wouldn't bother me a bit.

Do you think it would ever be possible for Yen Pox to do a live show & would this be something you'd be interested in doing?

M: Anything is possible, but it would be quite difficult, and we'd risk disappointment. The big problem being that we live near each other, so there's no opportunity to practice and put together a show. It's difficult enough just performing myself; I'm just now, after so many years, equipped to perform live and have it sound the way I want it to. With Yen Pox, I think I'd want to take it further, and it would have to be perfect, with just the right venue, great sound, multiple video screens, and we'd need a space to practice for a couple of days before the show. I'd actually love to do it, but don't foresee us having the chance to do it right anytime soon. Someday, perhaps...

S: Let's hope so.

Both of you have solo projects as well; have either of you got any new releases planned? And when can we expect a new full length album from Yen Pox?

M: I'm finishing up a new CD right now, which will hopefully be out by the end of the year, but haven't decided on a label just yet. As soon as I'm finished mixing that down, we plan on moving right into putting together new Yen Pox. We've both been recording a lot separately, so it shouldn't take too long; I definitely want to have it finished this year. That would be incredibly fast for us, but I've been more productive lately than in many, many years. Must be the fear of middle age breathing it's foul breath down my back...

S: My intent is to finish up some long due VOS tracks for a split release and then concentrate my efforts toward the new Yen Pox material.

Have you set out any ideas for the New Yen Pox album yet?

S: Unless Mike has a concept in mind, we’re just engaged in the individual recording efforts at the moment. 

M: Yeah, I only ever think of concepts for our music in a very half-hearted way, and usually only in the final stages of recording...and then, it's more for the feeling that the music gives me, the imagery, to help define ideas for titles and possible artwork. And somehow, in my head at least, that half-formed concept usually revolves around either apocalypse or soul-crushing vastness of space and time and all that is unknown. Not intentionally, it's just where the music takes me. I do plan on using more bass, viola and voice than I have in a long, long time on the next Yen Pox, and I'm counting on Steve to provide a lot of real intrumentation as well. That doesn't mean I expect it to sound like anything else we've done, quite the opposite. There's no reason to repeat ourselves.

Are there any more modern dark ambient projects you enjoy?

S: The [law-ra] collective, Antlers Mulm, Fjernlys, Troum are a few that come to mind.

M: Steve definitely keeps up with this sort of music more than I do, but I've heard a few things lately I like; if you're talking true dark ambient, then Treha Sektori, Zoat-Aon, and Inade's newest come to mind, but if you're talking about bands with ambient qualities to their music, I like the recent work from Voice Of Eye, Oneohtrix Point Never, Emeralds, and the Pyramids/Nadja collaboration. There seems to be an increasing love of noise and ambience in music that lies far outside the pure forms of those styles; electro with deep ambient backdrops, hip hop acts like Dalek that create big sheets of atmospheric drone under their beats, experimental metal that's filled with noise and drone...there's a lot out there to appreciate.

S.O.B. & Hijokaiden - "S.O.B.-Kaiden Live 1-9 & 1-31 1988 Tokyo" DVDR (MKV)


The Japanese Youth Korps/Siege at their peak...and then DESTROYED
by collaborative noisician Hijokaiden ("Emergency Staircase")...