Record Label dealing in Industrial, Power Electronics, Harsh Noise, Experimental, Death Industrial, Drone, Ambient, Japanese Noise, Field Recording, Abstract, Musique Concrete and other related genres.
Wired for Unsound: Morton Subotnick plays Adelaide. Photograph: Alicia Canter for the Guardian
Last year, Adelaide festival’s electronic music strand Unsound caused a sensation by bringing the heaviest, loudest and weirdest elements of the avant garde to South Australia. People from as far away as Perth flocked to see the likes of Ben Frost and Hype Williams reduce the venerable Queen’s theatre, the first playhouse built in mainland Australia, to a shuddering mass of smoke and strobes. It was a total triumph, achieved against the odds, and this year it’s enjoying a victory lap.
Coming to see Unsound for a second year, the shock of the new has worn off, though it’s still disconcerting – then funny – to see once again that the queue for the gents is much longer than the queue for the ladies, such is the imperturbably male-dominated nature of this music’s fans.
First up is the UK’s Lee Gamble, who investigates and recontextualises the drops and spaces in the jungle and house records of his youth. The sound is familiarly warm and minimal, with dissonant keyboards, a thunderous kickdrum and all-enveloping sub-bass, before it’s interrupted by the kind of noise you get when the needle slips off the vinyl. It’s atmospheric and intriguing, though not the kind of DNA-reconfiguring performance last year led us to expect.
Following Gamble is Cut Hands, the latest project by William Bennett, prime mover behind Whitehouse, one of the most punishing bands ever, both sonically (white noise was a staple) and conceptually (so were scatology and serial killers). Cut Hands is Bennett’s percussion-heavy, African-influenced project, and it’s almost all polyrhythmical drums, the aim being to put the audience in a trance as they’re overloaded with the information that causes the feet to move. It seems to work on Bennett – he makes praying gestures and stretches his hands to the Queen’s theatre’s corrugated iron roof – but even at the front, a dancefloor frenzy never quite kicks off, despite Bennett’s intricate arrangement of bells, congos and thunderous bass drums. A film across the back amps up the voudou atmosphere, but what the music really calls to my mind is the raw-edged electro of early-80s New York.
Morton Subotnick is the next artist to scowl in the general direction of the plinth on the stage, although rather than a laptop like everyone else, he’s operating an old-style modular synthesizer, with wires poking out of it all over the place. Subotnick, 81, is a genuine electronic music pioneer, and it’s thrilling to hear his 1967 album Silver Apples of the Moon played in its entirety. It’s a record that starts with pensive rattling and moves through ambient sound-washes, rattling sounds, comforting drones and elegant chords. Almost 50 years since its release, it still sounds both otherworldly and absolutely contemporary and alive.
Topping the bill is Nurse With Wound, whose 1984 single Brained by Falling Masonry was memorably reviewed in Smash Hits at the time. The nom de disque of Steven Stapleton, they’re far more versatile and less industrial than that pipe-banging title might suggest, beginning tonight’s show with a clock counting down the time from one hour and a cluster of laptops emitting ominous whistles and drones. The ensuing performance includes a sonically thrilling sequence set to backwards-running film of mattresses being dropped into a field, and a singer who groans and wails to alarming effect. Towards the end, that most heretical of instruments – the guitar – makes an appearance, and the set culminates with the 1994 song Rock’n’Roll Station, which tonight boasts licks that could uncurl Jimi Hendrix’s afro. Finishing in a tempest of feedback, it’s elemental stuff, and another vindication of this extraordinary festival-within-a-festival.

DANCING AND LAUGHING PRESENTS:
STANDING AND LISTENING – A Long Evening of Noise and Power Electronics
– BLACK LEATHER JESUS
– SMELL & QUIM
– CON-DOM
– SVARTVIT
– BRUT
– NOW WASH YOUR HANDS
– ROASES
– ERSTE MAI
DATE: 10 May 2014 (Saturday)
TIME START: 1800hrs
TICKETING: £6
(http://www.skiddle.com/whats-on/Manchester/Gullivers/Standing-and-Listening/12108608/)
VENUE: GULLIVER’S, 109 Old Street, Manchester, M4 1LW, UK.
More Info At: https://www.facebook.com/events/1442382505993694/
BLACK LEATHER JESUS
SMELL & QUIM
CON-DOM
SVARTVIT

Current 93 is the type of band that alienates its listeners, and continues to be an enigma. David Tibet’s eclectic project isn’t really predictable. From roots in industrial and pioneering albums of dense neofolk, he fills his audiences with morbid fascination and the knowledge of what will come next is lost. Throughout a monstrously intimidating discography, it’s not easy to decipher what Current 93 is about, but oftentimes the music borders on beauty and horror. Once again Current 93, in their 2014 album I Am the Last of All the Field that Fell: A Channel, delivers an ever lingering and unsaid promise that you’re not going to predict their game plan. Ever.
I Am the Last of All the Field that Fell turns any preconception of Current 93’s sound on its head. What’s presented to the listener is a slab of avant-garde styled jazz—oftentimes minimalistic in sound but complex in structure. It still holds an essence of ghoulish neofolk within its tangled webs of thick, dripping and utterly engrossing compositions, almost unable to be pinned down by strict definition. The most notable presence in this release is John Zorn, another prolific pariah of music, performing saxophone. His contributions range anywhere from accessible and gorgeous harmonies to a jazz-hammer crash of caterwauling freeform perversions.
The opening track, ‘The Invisible Church’, perfectly displays the album’s split personality. It’s a darkly melodious piano composition accompanied by Tibet’s unnerving vocals and Tony McPhee’s off-kilter acoustic guitar pluckings dancing along in a lugubrious fashion. At the same time, Jon Seagroatt’s bass clarinet is low and conservative. As a whole, every little contribution seems minimalised. The drums play the same simple pattern made to accentuate the piano. The piano drones on with the same melody, and the guitar is there, but does not encroach on the piano. The guitar only adds enough so you know it’s there, and makes sure you can hear how wrong it sounds. The way all the minimalistic instrumentals are styled create a deeply complex and harrowingly intense experience, and it is something that needs to be heard to fully understand. It’s in this way that a lot of the album gains its “charm” and momentum. It doesn’t rely on bold crescendos and tell-tale climaxes, but instead builds atmosphere and more satisfying climaxes through subtlety and precise placement of specific sounds. Tibet’s vocal dynamics range from harsh whispers to almost obscene yelling in between more controlled and substantial crooning. Most of the time, just hearing his voice gives the listener chills.
A track that really displays the album’s use of truly frightening subtlety is ‘Kings and Things’. The song is primarily piano-composed and is truly stunning. Tibet practically talks his prose while the angelic Bobbie Watson (of Comus fame) sings in small bursts behind him. In the distance, you hear an extremely low but lingering noise, which you know is far away, but promises to come. And that is the true magic of the song—it’s the simple kind of claustrophobic fear that comes over you as this wailing train of electric noise draws closer and closer. The sound may be off in the distance, but you know it’s going to come hit you. It gets louder and closer, but instead of completely hitting you, the noise just circles around the music, dipping in and out, but still making you aware of its existence and disturbing cacophony. Other guest artists on the album bring the experience full-circle and make it worthwhile. Antony performs his theatrical vocals on ‘Mourned Winter Then’ and it marks the track as one of the album’s highlights. Nick Cave once again lends his voice to Current 93 on the closing track ‘I Could Not Shift the Shadow’. Maybe it’s just my inner Nick Cave fanboy talking, but the album couldn’t have ended on a more perfect note. Cave’s swelling and all-encompassing vocals utterly destroy the listener and leave them content. Finally, as the album closes, Zorn’s saxophone creates the perfect exit melody.
Perhaps one of the most cohesive and completely gelled albums I’ve heard in recent times, I Am the Last of All the Field that Fell isn’t just one of the best albums of 2014, but may quite possibly be Current 93’s crowning achievement within a monolithic catalogue of experimental classics. It doesn’t just border the line of beauty and horror; it crosses the line many times, while dancing back and forth. Yet, it is a majestically stable listen. Despite all its terrorising tensions and lax heavenliness, it maintains a careful cohesion that’s hard to imagine. From sweetly dark jazz/folk tracks to avant-garde jazz-fusion and jazz rock and every other little sound cemented between the cracks, Current 93 has redefined its sound once more, and delivers a deep, satisfying and complex musical experience. This one doesn’t beg; it demands to be heard.
(Source: http://mediasnobs.com/music-review/current-93-last-field-fell-channel/)

BAND NAME: BLACK LEATHER JESUS
BAND MEMBERS: RICHARD RAMIREZ, SEAN MATZUS, KEVIN NOVAK,
VANCE OSBORNE, SCOTT HOUSTON with occasional assistance by
THOMAS MORTIGAN & MIKE PAYNE.
COUNTRY: USA
GENRE: HARSH NOISE
DISCOGRAPHY:
Bondage Playground (split 7inch with Merzbow)
Sonic Destruction (split with MSBR)
Scrapyard (picture disc LP)
Trocar (LP)
First You Destroy their Faith (CD)
“United States of Persuasion” (CD)
“Prove to Me You’re more than Meat” (CD)
“Skuff” (CD)
“Decaying Behavior” (split CD with The Haters)
“A Purpose Not Necessary” (split CD with Incapacitants)
“Copsucker Strikes Again” (split LP with The Homopolice)
“Yes, Sir” (CD)
“Machofucker” (LP).
BAND WEBSITE: www.blackleatherjesus.blogspot.com
OTHER PROJECTS: Werewolf Jerusalem, In the Land of Archers, T.E.F., The Whitehorse, Last Rape, Priest in Shit, Bondage is the Future, RU-486, Murex, Respirator, A Lizard in a Woman’s Skin, Fouke.

FTR: Let’s start with your band name, what made you choose it for this project?
RICHARD RAMIREZ: Black Leather Jesus comes from a story of a woman held captive for seven years by a religious man who told her that he was god and controlled her life. He beat her, raped her, tortured her. She eventually escaped. He held her bound under his bed. It was a bizarre story. I started Black Leather Jesus in 1989. The name just came to mind after reading this story.
FTR: How would you describe your sound and working process?
RICHARD RAMIREZ: Our sound is harsh noise or industrial noise. We don’t record often all together. We at times have to resort to mail collaboration. We all live far from each other. We want to try to record together more often than previous. We also don’t perform live that much either. Our schedules are tough to do so.
[Black Leather Jesus Dead Audio 2009 Houston, Tx filmed by Hierchiss]
[Black Leather Jesus – Live @ Dead Audio Fest, 07.25.06, Houston, TX]
FTR: About the instruments and technology you use to produce the sound, do you constantly update them, or are old and cheap synths and the like still good for your purposes?
RICHARD RAMIREZ: I tend to use older equipment. The other members like the latest in equipment. We don’t use synths in our work at all. I’m not too fond of them.
FTR: With regards to electronic/experimental artists, which band did you discover first? How did you come across them?
RICHARD RAMIREZ: My first experience with experimental music were artists like Nurse with Wound, Non, Nocturnal Emissions, Strafe Fur Rebellion, The Haters, and Chop Shop.
FTR: Who or what influences you and your sound?
RICHARD RAMIREZ: Our biggest influences are Hijokaidan, The New Blockaders, The Haters, Whitehouse, and Emil Beaulieau.

FTR: Regarding the myspace noise culture/what could be seen as the myspace noise race, it appears there are an awful lot of releases coming out by a large amount of “noise” artists, spamming page after page throughout myspace with their 30+ album release this year. What are your thoughts regarding this rushed approach? (Asked before the death of Myspace!)
RICHARD RAMIREZ: Well, it depends. I do lots of releases. I cannot judge my own work. There are artists that put out stuff a lot. Some are good, some not. Then again, there are artists that don’t put out too much and sometimes it still sucks.
FTR: What is your opinion in particular of Japanese “Nipponoise/Japanoise” looking at their main artists like Merzbow, Masonna, and the most recent developments of today’s so called “power-electronics/noise” scene?
RICHARD RAMIREZ: Well, I am not a big fan of power electronics. I do like some like Mauthausen Orchestra, Con-Dom, Whitehouse, Discordance, Atrax Morgue. As for Japanoise, I’ve worked with Merzbow, MSBR, Government Alpha, Incapacitants, Guilty Connector, Astro, Forced Orgasm, and others. I like some not all. I was never a big Masonna, Aube, Thirdorgan fan. There are some newer ones that I do like: Soma, Molester, Cracked Mirror.
FTR: I would like to ask you if you are interested in which kind of people listen to your sound, I mean, how do you imagine him/her to be?
RICHARD RAMIREZ: It varies. Being openly gay, I get some gay fans that like artists like Coil, Death in June, Throbbing Gristle, etc. More gay oriented experimental musicians. I’ve been surprised by the amount of metalheads that have interest in my work. It’s hard to say what specific person listens to my work. There’s a wide range.
FTR: Women seem to be a main focus of noise humiliation – in the form of album covers, themes, and track titles, are you interested in deviated or perverted sexual behaviors? If so, what attracts you so much in sexual violence and sexist language?

RICHARD RAMIREZ: Well, I turned the focus onto men. I used men as the object, the subject, my interests. I use sadomasochism themes because it’s a part of me. It’s not a gimmick. I think some of my other projects (i.e. Last Rape) might be labeled as misogynist, but it’s based on Italian giallo films. That’s all.

FTR: Are you interested in serial killers? Do you think they are a typical product of 20th century society, and what is your opinion about in particular American “serial killer culture” ?
RICHARD RAMIREZ: I have some interests, but some thought my name, Richard Ramirez, comes from the serial killer of the same name. Richard Ramirez is my real name and is not uncommon in Texas. I’m not obsessed with serial killers like some. I love horror films. That is my obsession. Extreme horror films, not the b.s. of today.
FTR: If you could do a gig anywhere in the world where would it be?
RICHARD RAMIREZ: I’d love to perform in London. I’ve done shows around the U.S./Canada/Mexico, and also in Tokyo.
FTR: I’m really impressed with the sound projects coming out of the English, Italian, German scene, etc,etc. Is their any country in particular that inspire you more than others?

RICHARD RAMIREZ: Particular country that I like the most artists from? America. I think we have some of the best here. It’s not as pretentious as some tend to be. I do like artists from other countries too, but if I’m going to count my favorites, they’re from the U.S. I think U.S. noise artists tend to have a more raw sound than others. I don’t hear a lot of that from others outside here. It seems more polished. I don’t like polished sounds. It can be boring. Some of the best raw sounds from another country would be Smell & Quim and Fecalove. I love them!!!
FTR: Do you listen to different types of music? A secret Elvis collection perhaps?!
RICHARD RAMIREZ: Elvis? HELL NO!!! I do listen to other styles of music. I grew up listening to Skinny Puppy (hate their later work), Einsturzende Neubauten, Bauhaus, Siouxsie & The Banshees, Echo & The Bunnymen, Cocteau Twins, The Jesus & Mary Chain, a;GRUMH…, Chris & Cosey, Legendary Pink Dots, Swans, Patti Smith, Big Black, Germs, etc. etc.

FTR: What first, chicken or the egg?
RICHARD RAMIREZ: I guess we’ll never know. Or will we?
FTR: Forever to remain a mystery! Thanks for your time here Richard. Great interview.

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Band: BLACK LEATHER JESUS is a Texas-based harsh noise band that was formed in 1989, but did not release its first album until 1990. The band has included over 15 members over the years. The band was founded by Richard Ramirez.
Interview: Keith Mitchell [+FTR+]
finaltrauma@googlemail.com
2010 – 2012 + FINAL TRAUMA RECORDINGS +
The name Brian Williams (aka Lustmord) marks a certain period in the development of ambient music, and undeniably, spreads out far beyond the borders of the genre. Lustmord has come out with more than twenty albums since his start in the industrial music scene in the 80s, and calls Heresy his debut; he’s also been behind the sound design of numerous films, including The Crow, Stalker, and Underworld.
After taking a 25-year hiatus from the stage during the pinnacle years of his career, Brian has recently returned, making every performance a special event.
Photo: Elza Niedre
How did you start? You studied art; did that have anything to do with it?
I think it did. Even though I didn’t think so for a long time. While studying, I was really good at it. I don’t like the moniker “artist” – not in terms of its meaning, but as a definition of what it was that I was doing. It sounds too pretentious. At seventeen years of age, it was important for me to know where I fit in. School was nearing its end, and I had to think about a serious profession and looking for work. In truth, I was doing everything I could to stretch out this process. I didn’t want to go out into the big, wide world and work from payday to payday. At that age, teachers and parents put pressure on you. Especially if you come from a small town, alternatives to a regular job just aren’t allowed. I’m British, so consequently, no one really supported my dream of becoming an artist. We were constantly reminded in school that we had to be practical; we shouldn’t waste time fantasizing. We must concentrate on a real profession. At the time, I had the chance to study sculpture at the college where I had been accepted, but I didn’t like it there. I left after a year. I suppose I had an, ahem… attitude.
As if you don’t have one now!
Yes, but at least I’m charming (laughs). The thing is, when you’re trying to understand who you are, art school is a place that supposedly inspires and encourages you – be yourself, express yourself using any sort of instruments or palette. That’s all fine and dandy, but once you start doing that, suddenly someone says: “Why, not like that! You can’t do it that way!” Suddenly, everything is definite – you mustn’t do this, nor that! But aren’t we supposed to try and discover things? So, I really wasn’t doing all that great there, and shortly before the end of the course, we had a meeting and decided that I would withdraw.
When I was eighteen, the punk and industrial scene was developing. It was linked to the dire political situation in the UK at the time. Society was overcome with depression because of the raging inequality and the huge rift that had appeared between the rich and the poor. The unrest was growing, and there was the threat of drastic changes taking place. Everything that was going on at the time was both terrible and terribly interesting. Being in an environment like that, I started to really get carried away by music. One time as I was talking about this, I realized that instead of creating an image with colors, I was doing it with the aid of sound. I collected sounds; I combined them. By putting them together in indescribable, yet self-evident ways, I’d come up with an end product. In this sense, I can call myself an artist (even though I’m not quite comfortable with it) – because I appear to be painting with melody. It sounds cheesy, but it’s important for me to conjure up this physical feeling, this illusory place.
How did you come to the decision that this would become music?
I was into punk music at first. I went to concerts a lot, and that definitely influenced me. Everything was just starting then; there weren’t big crowds – about 50 to 200 people. There weren’t many groups formed yet, either. I went to see Throbbing Gristle – they were the ones that started the industrial movement. Meeting up with them at events, we became friends. I met SPK through them; later on, I was a part of their group for a while. [The industrial and noise collaborative SPK was founded in 1978, in Sydney, Australia; two years later they went to London to put out their debut album, Information Overload Unit. Brian Williams joined the group in 1982. – E. S.]
Chris [Carter] and Cosey [Fanni Tutti] from Throbbing Gristle, as well as the guys from SPK, came to me and said: “Why aren’t you doing this? You’ve got to try it!” And so I made this and that, and I enjoyed the process. Of course, they asked if they could hear some of it. “Not really. I’m just messing around.” But they insisted, and so I recorded a cassette that seemed pretty interesting to them. The cassette was passed along, and Graeme Revel from SPK showed it to Nigel Ayers from Nocturnal Emissions, who had their own label, Sterile Records. They offered to put it out as an album. “Oh, really? That’s quite nice,” I said. That’s life. How can you plan anything? Of course, you can try to plan and achieve something concrete, but mostly, everything happens unexpectedly. You need talent, skills and ideas, but luck plays just as big a part.
And having the right people around, isn’t that so?
I’m from a small town [Bethesda, Wales – E. S.], with a population of about 4000. Of course, nothing really happens there. Yes, I could go to a bigger city (which I later did by moving to London), thereby paving the road for bigger opportunities. You have to go towards them to meet up with them. If you sit and wait until someone knocks on the door, nothing is going to happen.
There were, maybe, three or four interesting people among these 4000. There’s probably just one interesting person per one thousand in London as well, but that means that, in total, there are already several thousand of them there…
How did your solo career arise?
Here in Riga we spoke to Stephen [O’Malley, from the group Sunn O))) – E. S.] yesterday, about working together.
I really like working together with other artists. Becoming a solo artist wasn’t a conscious choice; it just happened. There are several people I’d like to work with, but it’s not that simple. Everyone is busy working on their projects at the different corners of the earth, and planning something is more than difficult. There are also very many great and talented people, but with several of them, it’s impossible to spend any amount of time together in one room with them – because they’re simply terrible!
The creative process when working together is exciting – ideas are thrown back and forth; some are kept, while others are thrown out. I enjoy what I do, and I also like to do it on my own. The concept is the most important thing to me. Developing it is the most interesting part when starting on an album.
To tell the truth, from everything I’ve done, I’m most satisfied with my last album, The Word as Power (2013). It’s nice if others like what I do, but if they don’t, I don’t get upset because I know it’s a good album, and it turned out just the way I had hoped it would.
The Word as Power (2013) album cover
Your creative aesthetic gives the impression of being a timeless one.
Yes, that is the idea, but I can’t be sure if it will work. I have to use the old cliché – only time will tell. Perhaps not all of them, but definitely several of my albums could be timeless. Their sound may be familiar, but it’s not really possible to pinpoint what is making it, or what it consists of. Consequently, it opens up a world that is seemingly familiar, but still a bit strange.
It’s important to me that music doesn’t get stuck in the time that it was created. For example – so that something that I created in 1980 doesn’t sound like it’s from the 80s. I strive for this independent sound, so that it still sounds the same whether it’s the year 1990, or 2000. The only thing that can give you away is not the concept or its execution, but the technology. At times, you can easily sense the technical characteristics of a certain time period. But ever-more advanced technologies have appeared in the last few years, making it easier to avoid this problem. Technology helps to hide technology.
Is the fact that you don’t use lyrics, or text, part of this strategy?
Yes, but there are vocals in the first two albums because I was still searching for my mode of expression at the time. In my third album, Heresy (1989), I found the sound I wanted. It’s linked to the precursors of the “dark ambient” genre. My music definitely goes even further and broader. I wanted it to take you somewhere. In every album that I create, I have a clear idea of how it will begin and end. How it will turn back around. In this case, lyrics hinder. The objective is to have the listener search for their own words, not follow ones that have been given.
But the title of a song can serve as a kind of clue.
Yes, absolutely. Titles are, of course, partial clues. Every album contains numerous levels of meaning, but at the same time, they are full of obvious references. Details are important to me, but not always with the intent of standing on their own – rather, as irremovable parts of a whole. Some will discover these layers, others won’t. Everyone perceives differently, so I don’t even try to explain my music – then there wouldn’t be any point in doing an album. Listen and give yourself over to it. The same as with a painting – look at it and try to understand it.
I’d say that the titles of the songs are broad gestures that help one tune-in with a certain frame of mind. That’s why it’s rather funny that most people associate me with something dark. That’s not a problem, but it does get rather dull. You already know that everything is fine with my sense of humor! I approach what I do very seriously, but it also give me joy.
The term “dark” is more like a definition of the atmosphere that your music can create, rather than as the place where it comes from.
Probably. So it’s about them, not me. They go to some dark place. But for me, it’s a wide-open and faraway place.
Another factor is the fact that you used to record in slaughterhouses and catacombs. That had an influence.
Yes; I haven’t done that for many years now. I recorded on cassettes, and they don’t sound good when copied to a digital format. The equipment itself was pretty heavy – two or three suitcases. Very impractical. And I had to borrow it. It was exciting, but it wasn’t easy. And in the end, so much of it couldn’t be used.
The most important thing to me at the time was the concept – to capture a specific place. But often times, the place couldn’t fulfill the objective. I still sometimes use the better recordings – if they enrich the context. Over the last year, I’ve collected an unbelievable amount of sounds – a substantial collection – so I can simply not do that for awhile now. Now I use something called “convolution reverb”. It’s a rather complicated mathematical process that can record, for instance, a gunshot in your location of choice, such as in a cathedral. Running a sound element through an algorithm, it’s possible to create a deep and rich idea about a specific sound. The software is very expensive, but it’s completely changed the way in which I work.
Nevertheless, people associate you with this recording period.
That was so long ago, but yes. I understand what you mean. I’m interested in so many different things. But this dark image that I’m associated with – death, sexuality – they are the classic taboo subjects. So much is still being restricted in modern society; certain literature is hidden in the furthest corners of the libraries. It only appears that I concentrate on the dark. Why are we so fascinated with it? Death is a very good example. What happens when we die? I’m interested in the physical aspect, and not the metaphysical, because almost no one ever talks about what happens to the body after you die.
It’s strange that you concentrate on what happens specifically to the body, because most people are more concerned with what happens when, suddenly, there is nothing – the lights go out and you no longer exist. The body, and what now happens to it, is no longer relevant.
I’m an atheist, and I don’t believe in life after death. It wouldn’t be bad if there was, but the thing is, it is impossible for me to know if there is. One can, of course, philosophize about it, but that still won’t give us an answer, and there’s nothing you can do about it. We’ll all find out when the time comes.
That’s how people try to prepare themselves.
Yes, but I don’t feel as if I should prepare. I believe that there is intelligence behind our existence, but I don’t associate that with the idea of God. I’ve always been a skeptic, and I think that’s a good quality to have. If someone insists that God exists, I have an immediate counterpoint – “Show me! Where is he, exactly?”
Everyone has the right to chose in what to believe. If someone tries to get me to believe in God, then that can annoy me. I respect and support everyone’s choice, and I’d never go around proselytizing atheism. Just because I put myself into that group doesn’t mean that everyone else must as well.
From Lustmord performance in Riga. Photo: Roberts Vīcups
Atheists don’t have a tendency to aggregate and proselytize. Certain religions have been doing the exact opposite since the beginning of time.
That’s right. I don’t have anything against people with strong religious convictions, but if they come knocking on my door, I regard that as being more than rude. I would never go to someone’s house and teach them what to believe in and what not to. That would be very rude.
I’m fascinated with the cosmos, with the size of the Universe. It’s impossible to imagine, much less fathom. We try and theorize, but we can’t grasp it. That is partly reflected in my works.
Are we the only lifeforms in the Universe? If we’re not, well then that’s bloody wonderful. If we are, then that is also incomprehensible.
That’s something we’ll never find out.
Yes, it’s the same with a lot of things. Life is too short. One human lifetime is not enough with which to reach this sort of consciousness. In my opinion, it’s all quite inspiring.
The elements that intertwine throughout your music are associated with ritual practice, which is, in a way, linked to the framework of this world – and the study of existence. How do you look upon this?
The last album is, in a sense, linked with ritualistic music, but without any accompanying dogma. I’ve always been fascinated by not only this so-called “primitive” music – Middle Eastern-, Buddhist- and Voodoo chants – but also Gregorian chorals and gospels. Although they are religious, they tend to be very enticing and interesting. The focus that it reaches towards has great meaning. Even really bad modern-day Western church music (which is deathly depressing) manages to attain this. Just because I’m not a believer doesn’t mean that I don’t value it.
In terms of various other art forms – painting, poetry, film – music influences us in a completely unusual way. We remember tonalities, melodies get stuck in our heads, and most people have songs that remind them of certain events in their lives. Music can provoke irrational emotionality. You can also get these abstract feelings by looking at a painting or icon, but the way that music is perceived – its power – is the most exciting to me.
We perceive visual art with our eyes, but it seems as if music enters us through the whole body.
It’s possible that a certain part of the brain is responsible; I don’t know. But yes, it definitely takes over on an other level. Whether it’s a banal love song, or a great symphony, it has the power to create intimate feelings and melancholy, and to make us empathize.
Talking about rituals, from primitive aboriginal tribes in Australia to the Orthodox Church in Europe, music is an essential part of them. In creating musical works, I’ve used both the Australian Aborigine didgeridoo and the Tibetan thighbone trumpet, the rkang dung.
I’d like to think that my music touches upon something ancient; that it enriches this primeval feeling. It allows for the emergence of something that was here a long time before we arose, and it makes one think about where we came from. It literally allows you to come to this place, open some door, or maybe reverse this feeling of insignificance on a Universal level. In this way, we return to this base level; because I believe that in principle, we are still animals. We like to think that we are evolved and knowledgeable. We are, of course, but the carnivore still lives in us – the way we behave towards one another in our fight for power over this earth – we wage war, we have sex, we eat other species. Actually, a great part of our feelings and emotions are primitive, animalistic. It doesn’t hurt to be aware of this.
Your music can’t be background music for me. When I listen to it, I give it my full attention; it draws me in and, as you say, creates this parallel environment.
[This environment] reveals itself when the music is playing. When the music stops, the environment also disappears.
Of course, everyone can listen how they want to, but ideally, it should be done when alone, and with a sound system. Definitely not with headphones. They can’t handle it, and there’s a lot they can’t pick up. You know, I like a deep bass. Putting it on just in the background would be a waste of time. The sound must take over. It’s also not party music. I know a lot of people who take drugs to it, or have sex to it. When I performed in Sweden, someone in the audience was having sex. It wasn’t exactly in the middle of the crowd, but it still seemed pretty fun to me. Maybe they would have done it no matter who was playing, but I liked it.
Talking about playing live and visualizations, how did this all come about?
The greater part, about 90 percent, I did myself. Hiring someone else to do it costs a lot of money. I had pretty clear ideas, and I decided to learn how to do it myself. It took about a year. You’ll be able to judge for yourself tonight.
Of course, a couple of friends helped me. Adrian Wyer (London) was involved in one of the sections; he creates digital lava and water – rain and the ocean – for commercials and movies. He worked out a very specific animation which I then manipulate myself. It takes a very long time for the computer to process these images. Dominic Hailstone (London) also helped; he’s a terrific special effects artist and he made me some 20- to 30-second-long scenes which I then repeat and stretch out to three or four minutes.
Another friend, Meats Meier (Los Angeles), who also works with Tool and Puscifer, made an animation sequence that, when doubled, lasts about four to five minutes. All of these lads are my fans and they did the work for free.
Most of my friends are artists. Musicians and people from the art world, several of whom work with special effects. Some of the best sculptors in the world work specifically in this field.
How did you decide to create the corresponding visuals?
Live shows tend to be pretty boring; it’s not the same as listening to the album. Over the years, the studio had become my instrument; in that case, how does one then do a live show? How do you transfer a whole studio to the stage? And who the hell wants to watch me as I just stand there for hours and produce some sounds?
With computers becoming ever-more powerful, a whole studio can fit into them now. Now you can just put everything on your laptop and take it along. Nevertheless, watching “me at the laptop” still doesn’t sound all that exciting. I wanted to visualize things. It was important for me to create them in a way that is similar to how I work with sound. Of course, it is a very different process, but I wanted the images to be abstract enough. Like when you said that music pulls you in – it makes you lose yourself – I wanted to do the same thing with video.
The idea is very simple. They are templates. You know, people have always looked at fire, smoke, or the clouds, and have seen in them shapes that really aren’t there. Comparing ourselves, yet again, to the animal world, our brains have been created (that is, if there is a Creator) to recognize corresponding templates. If there aren’t any, the brain will create them itself – by visualizing ships and airplanes in the clouds, or connecting the stars into constellations. I wanted to do something similar. In the video of flames of fire, people see demons and angels, even though there isn’t anything like that there – they’re just flames. In this way, it relates to my music. Everyone experiences it differently. It’s funny how people often say: “How satanic!” Even though there’s nothing like that there; why do they think this?
Just like after my performance at the Church of Satan, everyone thought I was a satanist [the Church of Satan celebrated their 40th anniversary on 06.06.2006 with a High Mass. Lustmord was invited to play, marking his first live performance in 25 years – E.S.] How could I refuse such an offer? It was so amusing! I’ve also performed in several churches, but no one thinks I’m a Christian because of it; it’s pretty funny actually, isn’t it?
The loudest events are the ones most likely to get attention, of course.
Yes, and then you’re immediately labeled.
The unknown and the unknowable have always attracted people, just like the flames in your video.
Exactly! This is, again, related to the primeval, the incomprehensible. The bonfire has had great meaning throughout the development of civilization. Stories were created around it, rituals happened around it. The darkness surrounding it held horrors, so the fire was associated with safety, with being together. My visualizations, along with waves of sound, also create something hypnotic. But there’s a very fine line between being hypnotic and being boring.
Songs of Gods and Demons (2011) album cover
How about the album design? In which cases do you create them yourself, and when do you decide to work with an artist? I really like the album cover for Songs of Gods and Demons (2011), with the embroidery.
My wife made that. She has a whole series of embroideries with scenes of torment, and a great number of books on torture. They’re hers, not mine (laughs). Tracey’s [Tracey Roberts] first solo show was at the Museum of Death in Los Angeles. She’s great!
But in terms of the other covers – the layout is hugely important. When I started, I made everything myself; I always have a lot of ideas. However, it’s much easier if you have someone who helps. When I work with others, I can be quite critical because details are important to me. It doesn’t matter whether I’m working on an album or the soundtrack for a movie – I clean the audio of all clicks so meticulously, that many people think I’m crazy – because who’s going to notice? I’ll notice them!
The same goes for the visual layout and fonts. I’ll quibble about millimeters (laughs). I try to apply this to everything I do. I really like people who have this sort of approach to work, because if they don’t, you can immediately see the difference. It looks sloppy, unfinished. You have to be a bit crazy to do all of this. It takes up a huge amount of time.
What about Lustmord’s graphic identity – the hexagon? Does it have a specific meaning, or did you choose it on its visual merits alone?
That choice was pretty random; there’s no secret behind it. I wanted an indirect meaning, so it’s more of a graphic-design element. There are frequently things in my works that could seem like clues. I like this game with meanings. It creates an air of secrecy and evokes different reactions. They are instrumental albums; there’s no text. There’s nothing to tell you what to think. Whatever you feel, it’s of your own making. Without a doubt, how something is presented has great importance. Without the corresponding packaging, the music can be interpreted in diametrically opposing ways. But this is where the previously-mentioned templates show up again. I want to create the feeling that there is something hidden there that is more-than-meets-the-eye. Many won’t crack it. You need a key to turn. The main thing is that they do it themselves.
Many of my fans are artists that listen to my music as they work. They say that it helps them find additional inspiration, and that’s the greatest complement – to be part of the creative process in which something great is created. There’s nothing in my work that would make them create something specific; rather, it brings them to a certain state of mind. Getting to this previously described “place” is dependent on you alone.
If you don’t associate yourself with something dark, then why the name of Lustmord? Is that also supposed to be taken ironically?
Actually, that wasn’t a joke. That was a very conscious decision at the time.
It literally means “murder of a sexual nature”.
Yes, it’s “murder done for sexual gratification”. It can’t be called rape, really. This is a quite specific term, and there aren’t many examples of it. One of the best known is Peter Kürten [a German serial killer who was called “The Vampire of Düsseldorf”. He killed and sexually violated numerous adults and children in 1929. – E.S.] Most acts of violence (I wanted to say “acts of sexual violence against women”, but it’s clear that there are also male victims) are not about sex/rape, but about power. Consequently, most of the victims are usually women because men are more powerful, and they are the ones capable of unimaginably sick things.
I took this name in 1980, or ’81. I was around eighteen years old, and I wasn’t thinking about how it would sound thirty years later. If I had been older, I probably wouldn’t have chosen such a name. I couldn’t have known that it would turn out to be a life-long project. [Making music] was just something that I liked to do at the time. That time is very different from today. [The name] made me more likely to be noticed in a record store or in a magazine. That’s why I wanted a name that created intrigue; and also, it had various meanings. My choice was also based on the name’s visual quality – it had to look graphic. I didn’t think there would come a time where I’d be selling records all over the world, and that people in Germany would find out about it. Most people don’t know German or Swedish, so they don’t even read into it that way. A while ago, I regretted having chosen the name Lustmord; but it wouldn’t be logical to change it so late in the game. Everything is OK now, because it’s clear that my creative work is not about that.
Words and semantics have great power. I also touched upon this theme in my new album, The Word as Power. It’s the same with there being so many indecent words which are deemed unacceptable for saying out loud – and just because they are entwined in stereotypes. The word itself isn’t bad, it’s the meaning that has taken on the “bad” connotation.
Just like if someone doesn’t know the true meaning of the word Lustmord, they could take the English meaning for lust, and the German meaning for mord (murder), and come up with the rather lyrical name of “lust-murder”.
Yes; you yourself see these various meanings, but many do not.
Since you’ve begun performing again, you’re at it quite often.
Yes, I’ve had about 14 or 15 shows in eight years.
What is special to you in this process?
Playing live is completely different. The album is more about a concept. When performing, I use a bass that most people can’t reproduce at home. In this way, I reveal the true sound. A huge racket that lasts for 52 minutes (laughs).
I’d like to make longer shows. But people have bought tickets, and I don’t want them to be bored. That’s why I like to stop while they still want more. I always improvise, but there are a couple of things that I like to repeat because their sound is so effective. I was just at The Hague. Somewhere in the middle of the concert, I noticed that something was off – the crowd wasn’t picking up the hypnotic bass element. That’s the way it is with performing live – you never know if it’s going to go off without a hitch. The advantage with improvisation is that, at times like that, you can set the track in various ways. I like the fact it’s not just a matter of pressing “play”.
Does this somehow influence the way in which you work on your albums?
Not really, because the albums are in my head. I already had the idea for my last album twenty years ago. It’s the same with the next ones; I just have to find the time to do them.
Even though making sound design for movies and computer games is your main source of employment now, does the work still fascinate you?
Yes, definitely. I’d do it even if they didn’t pay me, and if often seems strange to me that someone actually wants to pay me for doing it (laughs). It’s a very slow and time-consuming process. Nevertheless, I’m lucky to be among those people who can make a living doing what they love, because it’s hard to get by with just music alone. The main thing is inspiration. If I happen to be working on some material and can’t find any inspiration, it’s not easy to get excellent results.
What inspires you in these cases?
I don’t have any good answers to this question, even though I’m often asked it. I’d have to say it’s life, and the experiences that life gives you. I’m inspired by conversations like this one, by meeting friends, by films and books. Everything. I go to the desert as often as I can. When I moved to America twenty years ago, I fell in love with the Southwest.
This may be a weak answer, but these are the details that make up something bigger. Like meeting with you. I won’t say it will inspire me to create an album, but that’s only because I don’t want to share my millions (laughs).
I cannot not make music; it simply comes out of me. Like the things I say. If you have nothing to say, then there’s no album.
That’s the answer I was waiting for, because that’s the way it should be. At the same time, there are people who don’t get inspiration from anywhere, which is why it’s important that you indicate that it is life itself that feeds you. You’re lucky to be able to see that.
Yes, that’s true, and I value it.
Many people ask me how do I achieve things technically, how do I get a certain sound. Often times, they’re interested in that because they want to reproduce it. I can, of course, show them; it’s nothing complex, it’s not magic. But what’s the point? The process is easy enough, and you can get really good equipment these days. But what you can’t teach is aesthetics and an individual approach. Because really, I’m just combining sounds in such a way that seems pleasing to me. When people want me to tell them how to do it, they are, in a sense, robbing me. It’s the same as describing a beautiful landscape – it’s obvious, but you can’t really explain why that is. It’s the same with sound. Clearly, some noises are awful, some are interesting, and others are wonderful. How to recognize which is which? You can’t teach that.
It’s similar to cooking. Just because you know the recipe doesn’t mean you’ll get the same flavor. It depends on whether you’re doing it by the numbers, or with love.
Yes, it’s the same with James Brown, who we have on in the background right now. Either you have funk, or you don’t have funk. You can show someone the steps, but that doesn’t meant that he will dance well.
Elīna Sproģe and Brian Williams (aka Lustmord). Photo: Elza Niedre

‘Extreme’ music and graphic representation online
Andrew Whelan
Faculty of Arts, University of Wollongong
awhelan@uow.edu.au
Abstract
Previously obscure musical genres, traditionally mediated by tape trading, mail order and the like, become relatively public as they migrate into online environments. The niche is now easily available in ‘pirated’ format: mp3 blogs post links to material which was previously only available on limited-run cassette or vinyl. Such material also circulates widely on peer-to-peer networks, and listeners can conveniently find each other and new bands through platforms such as Last.fm. One such genre is considered here: power electronics or ‘noise’. The textual and visual material around power electronics is presented as a limit case for considering the grounds upon which censorship operates in Australia.
Power electronics has a longstanding thematic preoccupation with transgressive content, and it addresses such issues from a complex and sometimes indeterminate position, ultimately leaving judgement with the listener. However, such material appears increasingly problematic where there is no grasp of the context of use, and no grasp of the often surprisingly nuanced approach taken by the artists and fans involved. Ambivalence is characteristic of the subtle orientations evident in power electronics, and this has in the past led to interpretive problems inside and outside of the subculture. Regardless of whether an argument can be made about the aesthetic merits of this genre, its increasing online visibility is inflected in the Australian context by a legal framework likely to criminalise it ‘on sight’. This is an imposition which obfuscates the meaning of the material, its social use, and most seriously, the broader societal context which gives rise to such material in the first place.
1. Introduction
Check out the skinny white kids from Boston who ditched their Converge hoodies when someone told them about Whitehouse. Now they roll with that new “shocking” noise scene, which is pretty much an ongoing, transparently calculated ploy staged by quite ordinary MySpace nerds and J. Crew shoppers. Gratuitous screeching, noncontextual use of the word “faggot,” and songs about child rape will earn you a super-scary rep when you get banned from the local art gallery, but to the rest of us it’s as safe, boring, and dumb as any football game. See you in a few years for your folk-rock phase, brohams [1].
‘Extreme’ is a generic designator, applied positively by participants within a range of musical subcultures, and used as a marketing feature by music magazines such as Terrorizer (“extreme music – no boundaries”), Zero Tolerance (“extreme views on extreme music by extreme people”), and Pit (“the extreme music magazine”).
As one may assume, ‘extreme’ does not refer to contemporary state-funded opera, although that music may be considered extreme by many people unfamiliar with it. It does refer to entire artworlds, such as death metal, black metal, industrial music, power electronics, speedcore and other musical subcultures.
However, there is a continuum of extremity as it were, and access to online materials renders relatively public what had been obscure genres, mediated by a private, backstage set of practices engaged in by enthusiasts: tape trading and mail order and the like. Where the aforementioned magazines sometimes feature breathless reviews of the ‘unlistenable’, the previously niche is now easily available in ‘pirated’ format: numerous mp3 blogs post links to material which was previously only available on often extremely limited-run cassette or vinyl. Such material also circulates widely on peer-to-peer networks, and listeners can easily find each other, as well as further musical leads, through platforms such as Last.fm [2]. The very form of digital distribution, combined with such capacities as folksonomic tagging on Last.fm and other ‘Web 2.0’ sites, is such that rare and obscure releases now become much more accessible: initiates simply pursue the trail (by searching, for example, for all releases tagged with ‘noise’).
This has some consequences for a number of popular music subgenres which have thematic and stylistic preoccupations with, among other things, death, violence, and violent sex. Two such genres are ‘grind’ or ‘brutal death metal’, a metal subgenre, and an industrial subgenre: ‘noise’, or ‘power electronics’, the focus of this paper. Noise as a genre marker is a broad umbrella term, now incorporating a wide variety of styles, but for the purposes of this paper, discussion will be restricted to those bands and artists who routinely address transgressive themes.
Grind and noise differ in their stylistic approaches to signification, and this has some bearing on the interpretation of the material. And where metal in general has repeatedly been the subject of media concern and moral panic [3], industrial has generally avoided such attention, often deliberately. As William Bennet has said of Whitehouse, the band most frequently credited with the emergence of the genre:
“the existence and the success of the group has greatly depended upon NOT being in the press and maintaining a very low profile. There could be all sorts of trouble otherwise, given the public climate towards some of the subject matters we specialise in – material like this can quickly blow up in your face [4].”
Neither grind nor power electronics can be said to seek the limelight; both routinely address subject matter which many might find unpalatable.
Comparing the two genres highlights the distinctive textual and sonic politics of each, and through such comparison we can see how the stylistics of each genre inform their interpretation. In the case of grind, the genre appears to use ‘formal’ thematics as genre identifiers, where these thematics do not ‘mean’ what they appear to mean, whilst in the case of power electronics, the approach to the material is such that moral attribution and judgement become even more difficult.
Where grind sometimes borders on the cartoonish in its preoccupations with spectacular violence and spectacular sexual violence, power electronics addresses issues such as serial murder, racial hatred, child sexual abuse, eating disorders, drug addiction, suicide, prostitution, and violent misogyny, from a complex position which customarily leaves judgement with the listener. The emphasis is commonly on the desperation and despair associated with such situations, alongside a usually, though not always, implicit critique of the situations that give rise to them.
For their audiences, it is likely that these genres constitute the principal social space within which such issues can be addressed, and their relative visibility and longevity is indicative of the fact that there is some felt need for these issues to be addressed in this way. However, such material, particularly when taken together with its artwork, becomes problematic to outsiders where there is no grasp of the context of use, and no grasp of the often surprisingly nuanced approaches taken by the practitioners involved – artists and fans alike.
Ambivalence and open-endedness are characteristic of the quite subtle orientations displayed by power electronics producers; this has in the past led to interpretive problems inside and outside of the subculture. Whether or not an argument can be made about the aesthetic merits of such material, the increasing visibility of these genres online means that possession of certain digital album cover images, for instance, likely constitutes a crime in Australia, an imposition which fails to grasp the meaning of the material, its social use, and most seriously, the broader societal context which gives rise to such material in the first place.
2. Transgression, noise, and musical meaning
‘Noise’ is a genre of experimental electronic music which has its roots in the post-punk industrial scene of the late 1970s. Noise is oriented sonically around texture and density; it is characterised by atonality, often harsh, granular static, feedback, and synthesised oscillations and pulses. There is a fundamental paradox about noise as a musical genre; the term ‘noise music’ is a contradiction. Noise and music are defined by their opposition; the very notion of music is predicated on its being differentiable from noise. The paradox of noise as a genre is that of formlessness within strict formal parameters. This paradoxical ‘anti-musical musicality’ or formal formlessness has been noted in other avant-garde or experimental music scenes, such as free improvisation in jazz circles [5].
In terms of its mood or affect, noise is associated with “decay, decomposition, disorder, helplessness, horror, irresolution, madness, paranoia, persecution, secrecy, unease and terror” [6]. As with any musical subculture, there are disputes among the cognoscenti as to the parameters and definitions of the genre, the appropriate designators for various subgenres (death industrial, harsh noise, power electronics, rhythmic noise etc.), and the constituent elements to be assessed when locating one or other piece of music within the genre spectrum.
Noise attempts to achieve certain things. It attempts to address issues which are taboo; it is transgressive. It aims at both a sonic and a discursive level to explore the limits of the conventionally explicable, the limits of the comprehensible [7]. In some accounts [8], it aims to simultaneously attack norms of musicality and norms of bourgeois respectability. These aspects: its thematic and audible ‘noisiness’, are inextricably linked, and in violating these standards, noise is predicated on their existence and perpetually bound to refer to and in some sense reinforce them.
These two conventions of the genre bolster each other; it is as though without one or the other, it would much more difficult to establish the preferred reading. Noise, like grind, could (at the level of discursive content, for example in lyrics, titles, or album artwork) be ‘about’ fluffy bunnies, cotton candy, and so on, and still meet its objectives as a critique of musicality. In fact, noise would arguably present a more forceful critique of the conventions of musicality where discursive content was minimal or indeed wholly absent. But noise in fact seems to require transgressive content:
The subliminal message of most music is that the universe is essentially benign, that if there is sadness or tragedy, this is resolved at the level of some higher harmony. Noise troubles this worldview. This is why noise groups invariably deal with subject matter that is anti-humanist – extremes of abjection, obsession, trauma, atrocity, possession – all of which undermine humanism’s confidence that through individual confidence and will, we can become the subjects of our lives, and work together for the general progress of the commonwealth [9].
That noise seemingly ‘needs’ to be about transgression in this way has broad and fascinating implications for understandings of musical meaning and of music as a vehicle for the transmission of meaning and of affect. However, it also has more immediate consequences in terms of the legal standing of the genre, and thus research into it and into music at large as such a vehicle.
Insofar as an explanation has been developed for the relation between noise as a genre and the routinely transgressive objects of its attention, the sonic experience of noise and the pleasures of noise are generally related to experiences of power and sonic manifestations of power. An approving review of the famously prolific noise musician Merzbow reads:
“The sound is an assault. It is total and annihilating, an unstoppable sheet of noise covering the listener entirely. The sound is grainy and flowing, the sonic equivalent of a turbulent ocean of sand, chaotic and powerful [10].”
The pleasure of the experience of noise lies at least in part in immersion in and submission to textured sound. Noise is power [11]. In submitting to noise, one can also take pleasure in this submission, and draw power from it. It seems logical enough, therefore, that musicians should choose to explore and articulate these dynamics through addressing transgressive and taboo material: through material which draws on real inequalities of power and real extremes in the exercise of power. Engagement with noise has consequently been likened to the sadomasochistic relation – it is unsurprising that Merzbow has released an album entitled Music for Bondage Performance (1991). The figure behind Merzbow, Masami Akita, has also published scholarly work on rope bondage and other aspects of BDSM culture. The thematics coincide and inter-articulate with the approach to sound itself – the genre is after all also called power electronics. At some level it is logical and consistent that abrasive noise should be associated with abrasive ‘meaning’, although the association is not necessary or automatic.
Noise thus coalesces or logically extends psychosocial and cultural tendencies and power effects present in all genres of music, and in fact in all socially produced sound [12]. This is what makes the genre of noise, as a cultural form, appear so compelling: noise seems to distil and concentrate an entire spectrum of contemporary concerns in an unnervingly targeted way. Yet the persistent movement towards extremity in noise, towards further thematic radicalism and transgression, generates a curious kind of semiotic deflation, where in order to innovate and maintain interest, new avenues of human depravity must be pursued as subject matter which is appropriately shocking. Notable here is the sense in which noise can be said to track and exploit mainstream concerns regarding whatever is the current nadir of horror. In researching noise – an activity not radically dissimilar to that engaged in by fans and especially novice fans [13] – one soon becomes embroiled in obscure histories, freeway killer biographies, conspiracy theories, alternative radical political histories, and what is referred to in some circles as ‘parapolitics’. Vagina Dentata Organ, for example, released The Last Supper in 1983, an album which consisted in its entirety of the ‘death tape’: the final recording produced at Jonestown immediately before (and during) the 1978 People’s Temple mass suicide. However, one also encounters material of such a nature that it is not immediately clear whether merely possessing digital copies of albums may be in violation of the law, independently of the more common infraction of violating, sometimes in a rather didactic and predictable fashion, conventional bourgeois decorum.
As an instance of the latter, in the work of Slogun, Deathpile, Richard Ramirez, Taint, Sutcliffe Jügend, Grunt etc., the figure of the serial killer looms large. Whitehouse named an early album Right to Kill: Dedicated to Denis Andrew Nilsen (1983), Deathpile produced an album called Dedicated to Edmund Emil Kemper (1997). The cover of Slogun’s Pleasures of Death (1997) is simply a list of the names of some serial killers, both infamous and obscure.
This is all-too-familiar territory: the serial killer, as sovereign übermensch ‘beyond’ morality, is a kind of experimental muse for exploring the limits of subjective experience and the limits of sense and musicality. Such topics are simultaneously transgressive and clichéd; the transgression is formulaic. Customarily, the serial killer is presented as an asocial enactment of repressed desires we are supposed to share, a symptom of contemporary spiritual bankruptcy, and an existential and moral lack or absence [14]. In the place of coherent motive one finds a grotesquely blank “negative economy of desire” [15]. We will (the story goes) be shocked out of our complacency in being challenged by this material, this shock will force us to confront our own complicity in the soul-destroying supermarket of Western capitalist consumer culture (etc.). This is rather like Adorno’s ‘art after Auschwitz’, and a well-worn avant-garde aesthetic strategy.
Other conventional themes in noise include violent ethnic conflict, as exemplified by much of the work of Con-Dom, and, with similar ambiguity, graphic political, religious, (and/) or sexual violence, such as the album cover for The Grey Wolves’ No New Jerusalem (1985).
The ‘confusionist’ ambiguity of such images, needless to say, is not clarified by the enclosed audio, and The Grey Wolves were allegedly obliged to spell out their political persuasions when neo-Nazis began appearing at their live shows. At the limits of meaning, ambiguity and the refusal of closure is open to (mis)interpretation in the mundane ways one would expect [16]. Criminalisation is just such an interpretive response.
3. Critique and criminality
For current purposes, the central issue around noise lies at the intersection of two institutional or structural phenomena. The first is that subcultural practices around niche genres are increasingly visible online. The second is that, in the Australian context, representations of certain kinds are criminal, and that it is furthermore extremely difficult to determine what kinds of representations are criminal or how they achieve such status.
For instance, one of the covers of Hated Perversions, a 2008 compilation album on Mikko Aspa’s Finnish label Freak Animal, features a digitally manipulated or ‘morphed’ image of a young girl, where the girl’s mouth appears to have been replaced by that of an inflatable sex doll. This image likely constitutes “pseudo child pornography” in Australia, making it an offence to possess [17]. Yet in browsing online noise ‘distro’ sites, the image is easy to stumble upon, and a cursory Google search for the album will return links to blogs and other locations where pirated copies of the album are freely available for download.
The Discogs database, an invaluable user-generated archive with cross-listed details for approaching two million musical releases, commonly includes digital images of album covers, including that for Hated Perversions. Music fans who regularly upload and download large quantities of audio on peer-to-peer may not even be aware they are in possession of such images, given their interest lies largely in music.
It is useful to contextualise the legal status of this image with reference to the controversy over the 1976 album cover for Scorpions’ Virgin Killer, which in 2008 resulted in some Wikipedia pages being temporarily blacklisted in the UK as “potentially illegal”. Needless to say, the controversy increased the visibility of the album cover, having the opposite effect to that intended [18]. The Hated Perversions album cover is similarly “potentially illegal” in Australia, meeting the (broad) definition of child pornography to the extent that it
depicts or describes (or appears to depict or describe), in a manner that would in all the circumstances cause offence to reasonable persons, a person who is (or appears to be) a child:
(a) engaged in sexual activity, or (b) in a sexual context, or (c) as the victim of torture, cruelty or physical abuse (whether or not in a sexual context) [19, emphasis added].
As of December 2009, when it was announced that Australia would proceed with mandatory internet filtering, material that is refused classification (RC) “includes child sex abuse content, bestiality, sexual violence including rape, and the detailed instruction of crime or drug use” [20]. At the time of writing it remains unclear how the scheme applies to an extremely wide variety of material beyond the scope of this paper, including for example educational material concerning safe sex or drug use, or sites concerned with euthanasia, which is illegal in Australia. The list of filtered content is to be drawn from lists maintained by “highly reputable overseas agencies”, alongside any content “that is the subject of a complaint from the public” to ACMA (the Australian Communications and Media Authority) [21].
The Australian legislative framework has ramifications for fans, musicians, and distributors, but also of course for researchers. The legal definition above is sufficiently broad that it is possible, for instance, that a detailed academic description of some of the material that circulates in noise circles would also be potentially illegal.
Within the current legal framework the distinction between the metatextual material (album covers and titles etc.) and the actual music is a moot point: the definition of child pornography above extends to non-visual descriptions [17], such that the entire audio catalogue produced by Nicole 12 (one of Mikko Aspa’s musical projects), for example, is also likely criminal. The facts of the increasing online accessibility of such material as circulates within the noise scene, combined with its increasing criminality; render some account of how this material is used and to what purposes imperative. But even the possibility of conducting research so as to present such an account is being foreclosed in the current climate. There are, however, historical precedents demonstrating the curious intersection of media criminalisation and subcultural activity: consider, as an example, Peter Sotos and his relationship with noise pioneers Whitehouse [22].
In 1985, Peter Sotos was arrested for obscenity and eventually found guilty of possession of child pornography: the first person in the United States to be found guilty of such a charge. He received a suspended sentence. Sotos was originally arrested for producing and circulating a zine called Pure. There are good reasons for considering Sotos and his work in light of his longstanding association with Whitehouse. Sotos was a member of the group from 1983. He left in 2002, with another member of the group citing “a notable difference in lifestyle attitudes” as the cause of the departure [23]. The piece “Ruthless Babysitting”, on the 2006 Whitehouse album Asceticists, is widely reputed to be about Sotos, and is unusual for the insight it furnishes into the noise scene’s internal political morality regarding the consumption of problematic media. It reflects the concerns of this paper and the written lyrics warrant attention [24].
In addition to his work with Whitehouse, Sotos has written prose, essays, and fiction, and produced a number of spoken word and audio collage albums. The spoken word album Proxy (2005) features Sotos chronicling a litany of sexual horrors, largely although not exclusively concerning the commercial sexual exploitation of children (usually from the perspective of a consumer). The audio collage album Waitress (2005), like some of Sotos’ other collage work with Whitehouse, as on Bird Seed (2003) and Cruise (2001), is assembled from audio interviews of children being interviewed about their sexual abuse, adults describing the sexual abuse they were subject to when they were children, and parents describing the circumstances in which their children were abused or abducted and killed. This material is culled from radio and TV talk-shows and documentaries.
Interestingly, the critical reception of this work, as in the following review of Bird Seed (2003), suspends its apparent referentiality, content, and implications:
The title track, sequenced right in the middle of the record, is a 15-minute sound collage comprised entirely of monologues delivered by victims of rape and sexual abuse. It’s some interesting stuff – and disturbing in an entirely different way than the preceding music –but ultimately doesn’t really stand up to repeat plays [25].
From a conventional politically progressive perspective towards the ‘meaning’ of subcultural texts, this review, like many other accounts of what is happening where noise addresses such issues, seems to elide the ostensible social and political implications of the collage and thus, arguably, the ‘meaning’ of the album of a whole, restricting it to being that of a solely aesthetic object which one may listen to, use, and re-use. If something ‘stands up to repeated plays’, it is a good (financial) investment, as its (artistic) value persists into the future. The review situates Bird Seed as something which either bears or does not bear the listener’s ongoing interest as an aesthetic experience. This doubling confusion between commodity, art and political statement (with its possible status as critique or salacious celebration yet to be determined) is something Whitehouse would no doubt relish. As it happens, the Sotos collages which feature on Whitehouse albums do have some moral context for their interpretation, in that the adjacent slabs of noise certainly signify, and the lyrical content and vocal delivery elsewhere certainly presents the performance of outrage for which Whitehouse are famous.
It is not so easy, however, to make a similar argument regarding the ‘meaning’ of Pure, which claims at the outset that it “satiates and encourages true lusts” [26]. As a text, as a career-making moment, and as an element in the history of the genre of noise, Pure gets us to the hub of a number of issues: around the circulation of problematic content, the criminalisation of such content, the relocation of documentary evidence of criminal acts in new contexts, and the role of context and interpretation in determining the legal and moral status of access to such content.
With Pure it is not so much the litany of cruelty which is at issue (these are the facts of the cases concerned: people were raped, tortured and murdered), but the manner in which they are presented. The most frequent topics are the documented actions of serial killers, and Nazi concentration camp atrocities. In Pure #1, for instance, conjectures are advanced around a transcript of the audio recording made by Ian Brady and Myra Hindley of the sexual torture of Lesley Downey, who was 10 years old at the time of her murder (Sotos evidently elaborated at length on this topic in the currently out-of-print Selfish, Little: The Annotated Lesley Ann Downey) [27]. The text dwells, for instance, on the consequences of child murder for the surviving families as an achievement on the part of the murderers: the grief of the parents is an “added pleasure” [26].
There are two conventional interpretations for what Sotos is doing:
1. Sotos is conducting a subtle critique of the hypocrisy in media representations of actual violence, and drawing out and exploring the pornographic appeal in such representations.
2. Sotos is a paedophile (and for good measure, a boring exhibitionist too).
As it happens, Sotos seemingly rejects both of these interpretations:
“I’m absolutely sick of the differences between intention and interpretation. I want to create an art that is ideally shored. One that can’t be misunderstood any longer. Not by the powers that want to see me jailed or by the fucking mice that pretend I’m doing something socially significant [28].”
This is all very ‘confrontational’ in the over-determined terms which provide noise with precisely the transgressive appeal the genre has. The parameters of these terms are in part given by their continual formulation in mass media descriptions, often of exactly the same crimes. Of course, we are not obliged to accept either of the above interpretations; it is also possible that both could hold. Part of the objective for noise as a genre is to refuse moral closure, to confront and disrupt the finality of interpretation.
Thus Sotos, or Nicole 12, say, do not account in any determinate sense for what it is exactly that they really mean: such meaning can only by guessed at or projected by the listener. The style of noise is predicated on a posture of nihilistic nonmeaning, of attempting to gesture towards meaninglessness. Thematically, noise is premised upon and draws much of its success from an extraordinary discursive gambit: it uses material which seems to have an absolute and incontestable meaning, to interrogate the idea of meaning itself. Such a gambit perhaps relies on the meaningfulness of the transgression raised as such; it may be a calculated ploy in claiming not to have one’s cake and eating it all the same.
This strategy is itself perhaps incoherent and morally problematic: such an interrogation of meaning relies in some sense on the transgressive content being meaningful and indeed shocking in the required way. The attempt to disrupt meaning in this way is parasitic precisely on the stability and abhorrence of that meaning. The claim to moral indeterminacy, be it critical or blank, is perhaps not made in good faith, but it succeeds to the extent that we can’t tell whether it succeeds. Indeterminacy is here success, and whether this is coherent or how it is to be understood, this is at least part of the appeal and pleasure of the genre. Not only does this make much noise difficult to defend in a political sense, it has the added critical benefit of making those who would defend it appear to the pro-censorship lobby to be advocating for ‘sick art’, and thus no doubt ‘sick’ themselves.
Noise musicians who address child sexual abuse hit a special nerve beyond the serial killer/war atrocity fare in this regard, because children commonly function in Western cultures as the absolute and incontestable benchmark of innocence, goodness, and purity. This make it even more difficult to talk about noise ‘rationally’, but it highlights the fact that the discussion is now so polarised that raising such work in the context of debates about censorship immediately runs the risk of being reductively subsumed into a “depravity narrative”, where questioning censorship is equivalent to supporting child sexual abuse [29]. The cultural anxiety around this sacredness of childhood is further evidenced by the fact that the need for legislation is invariably couched in terms of protection of children and families. It is virtually unspeakable to raise the mundane point that the greatest threat to children comes not from the internet, but from within their own families: most child abuse is of course perpetrated by someone known to the child concerned.
4. Media, meaning, and morality
For the purposes of this paper, the meaning or value of something like Pure is not precisely the concern, vexed though this issue is. The point, rather, is the function of Pure within the noise community, and thus its continuing circulation. The soap opera narrative of Whitehouse’s career trajectory, and thus the development of noise itself, is inextricably bound up with the recitation of the early arrest of Sotos; this arrest somehow signifies that noise works; that noise is transgressive and dangerous in the way it aspires to be, the way that validates it for scene members:
Sotos is an incredibly important figure within the power electronics community even outside of his contributions to Whitehouse … Bennett and Best both position themselves as critical intellectuals opposed to hypocrisies within the present modes of discourse, rather than the apparatus of discourse itself [30].
This description allows us to infer that Sotos is opposed to “the apparatus of discourse itself”, whilst the other members of Whitehouse are merely opposed to hypocrisies within that apparatus. This is a grand and interesting claim, but the noteworthy feature of this continuous iteration of the Sotos story (replicated also in this paper) lies in its consequences for fans of noise, particularly those beginning to investigate the genre. The constitutive role of such origin myths is well documented in anthropology, where “the myth briefly summarizes the essential moments of the Creation of the World and then goes on to relate the genealogy of the royal family or the history of the tribe or the history of the origin of sicknesses and remedies, and so on” [31].
That Whitehouse are so often advanced as the founding fathers of noise, and that Pure is therefore inscripted in the genre’s origin myth, effectively guarantees its continuing circulation. If it has any effect at all, its dubious legal status most likely renders it more rather than less desirable. Part of the point we run the risk of missing in relation to this is that it is precisely the rarity, obscurity, and potential criminality of such artefacts which feeds in to their desirability for scene members. Those who are ‘truly’ immersed can demonstrate such status through, for instance, exhibiting a copy of Pure in their peer-to-peer share, or posting links on Facebook, Last.fm, or elsewhere to where it can be found.
Where participation, belonging and cultural literacy within a given subculture continue to be articulated through possession of a collection of artefacts which instantiate and exemplify that subculture, and where these circulate freely in digitised form (thus increasing access and the potentials for participation), artefacts like Pure, constitutive of the counter-canon representing the subculture, will certainly continue to proliferate online. Pure is thus not consumed as a sign of or stimulus to criminal depravity, but as a fetish of subcultural commitment and expertise. In this sense, subcultural engagement within noise circles follows the “logic of mundanity” described by Kahn-Harris, where the circulation of transgressive texts is routinised; both illicit and quotidian [3].
Noise is a good example to consider when we look at the circulation of material subject to criminalisation, because of the conventional concerns and stylistics within the genre and the approaches to meaning elaborated within it. The problematic material ‘stands for’ something else: the mode of signification is complex; a perpetual underlying concern is the relation between violence and the representation of violence in a variety of media texts. The lack of fixity of meaning can be demonstrated by considering cases (such as The Grey Wolves, or relations between Whitehouse and Sotos) indicating that both inside and outside of the scene, there are periodic disputes about intent, meaning and morality.
These kinds of disputes are indicative of the negotiated and contextual character of meaning, and this negotiative aspect makes the legislative approaches to problematic content currently operating in Australia ill-advised, misguided, and potentially dangerous. That the aesthetic strategies of noise so often involve a refusal to answer in a morally unambiguous way oblige us to ask why we seek such answers so vehemently that we are prepared to risk silencing whole communities. Noise again refers us to the question of power.
The transgressive content and radical ambivalence of noise disrupts politically progressive sociocultural analysis in a profound way. As a set of aesthetic practices, an approach to sonic signification, and a mode of communicating about the very real horror that happens to people, noise has a lot to say to researchers interested in music, politics, subculture, and their contemporary intersections with networked technology. Pure, or the work of Nicole 12 and many other musicians, is not easily described as exemplifying an emancipatory, DIY subculture, such as those commonly interpreted as unjustly criminalised despite their offering spaces for autonomy and identity to vulnerable or marginalised youth [32]. Noise frequently contains or elaborates upon visual and auditory documentary evidence of genuine human suffering. It therefore presents potentially insuperable problems to that approach to cultural studies and the sociology of popular music which
validates affective experience only insofar as it can find unanimity with a commitment to political and structural transformation. Cultural forms invested in affectivities less easily assimilated into interventionist agendas, on the other hand, tend to be met with far less approbation [33].
Noise is an excellent example of such a cultural form.
The ‘meaning’ of the noise text, such as it is, lies more in its transgressive appeal than its actual content. There is of course an affective and musical pleasure in the sound of noise, which ‘direct’, literal readings obfuscate. Politically oriented critique of the sort commonly espoused in the academy imposes a monolithic ethical meaning, at odds with that engaged in by fans and practitioners within the genre, as does legislation which projects a singular meaning and use. Unfortunately, such legislation tends to discourage the development of more successful engagements on the part of researchers.
The applicability of law to the online circulation of this kind of material is evidence of DeNora’s point: “If music is a medium for the construction of social reality, then control over the distribution of the musical resources in and through which we are configured as agents is increasingly politicized” [34].
The breathtaking inconsistency involved in the criminalisation of certain kinds of representation can easily be gestured towards with any number of similarly ‘realist’ examples from mainstream media. There is of course a close analogue for noise in its interest in accounts and evidence of actual violence: true crime. The website of noise musician Slogun contains a true crime bibliography [35]; without true crime literature and everyday crime reportage the work of Sotos would be inconceivable; it could not exist.
The true crime genre of nonfiction has growing sales in Australia [36] and a long history internationally, bound up with the emergence of the mass press and with notions of free speech and civic responsibility [37]. But true crime is not thought of as a menace to society in the way that the cover of a noise release apparently can be. At worst, true crime is generally merely considered pulp; tasteless rubbernecking. But true crime simply elaborates on a constant theme in mainstream mass media.
Many will recall the interminable replaying of JonBenét Ramsey pageant footage in 1996, more recently there has been a great deal of interest in the Amanda Knox case, or in Dennis Ferguson as a personification of evil. Sexual abuse within the Catholic Church continues to draw international attention. In 2006, British media extracted great value out of footage of Anneli Alderton, one of Steve Wright’s victims, examining her reflection on the train to Manningtree, and Paula Clennell being interviewed by Anglia TV about the recent murders shortly before her disappearance, saying that she would continue to work (as a prostitute) as she needed the money. The CCTV footage of James Bulger being led to his death in 1993 is iconic.
That attempting to creatively address these cultural obsessions with real violence is effectively criminal, while we are free to both amuse ourselves with Dexter and Criminal Minds, and watch the last moments of Saddam Hussein’s life on primetime news, is surely evidence of a spectacular lacunae in the way these issues are thought. In May of this year President Barack Obama blocked demands by the ACLU and Human Rights Watch to have images depicting rapes and sexual assaults at Abu Ghraib and other locations released, on the grounds that their dissemination could put US military personnel at risk. The demand to view these images was put forward in the interests of freedom of speech, transparency, open government and the like, but no doubt these images can be put to other uses. This is precisely the point noise raises: ‘pornography’ is a matter of how some media form is used, and conversely, the apparently pornographic can be used to critique the moralistic position which is unable to acknowledge that. As with the common use of pornography as album covers in grind, noise suggests that what gets defined as ‘sick’ and thereby criminal is based on a massive and constitutive other of media representations which spring from and normalise an ostensibly repressed interest in violence. Consider Nick Út’s Pulitzer prize-winning 1972 photograph of 9 year old Kim Phúc fleeing the recently napalmed Trang Bang: the likely dismaying notion that there might be an exact equivalence between an image presented by liberals as a damning indictment of the military industrial complex, and an instance of child torture porn, arises in precisely the semiotic environment noise takes as a point of departure [38].
Noise musicians deliberately raise extremely complex issues about the meaning and uses of violence and references to violence in our culture. Where we are interested in challenging violence and the celebration of violence, noise obliges us to question the ubiquity of such representations. There is a cultural and social framework of remarkable and sanctioned interest in violent and sexual crime. The kinds of crimes noise musicians are interested in become so as a direct response to this remarkable interest: in fact, the media’s role in reflecting and magnifying this obsession is a central concern in noise. In some respects noise is an attempt to ‘culture-jam’ this obsession and highlight the discrepancies around these kinds of representations. It is unlikely that there can be a successful challenge to violence until these dots are joined up, until, for example, the violence perpetrated by the state and the violence perpetrated by sex offenders is understood to be linked, and our ‘prurient’ interest in such understood to be linked.
5. Conclusion
It is commonly argued that criminalisation of content merely drives the consumers of that content ‘underground’: the content continues to circulate in circuits obscured from view [39]. The ‘overground’ appearance of noise is a recent phenomenon; the genre remains niche and will likely continue to do so.
The argument elaborated here is rather different. Regardless of the legal status of specific album covers etc. within Australia, noise will continue to circulate here as elsewhere. Criminalisation would most likely have negligible effects; it may even have slight positive effects – ‘the Streisand effect’ as it is commonly known [40].
The emphasis here, therefore, is instead on the function or purpose of texts within the scene, as even within this extremely specific and closely defined context of use, ‘meaning’ remains a dynamic vehicle that is nonetheless tethered in a critical fashion to the meanings of such content as is circulated in mass media. Not only is there no straightforward way in the current Australian legislative system to explore this, but such routes as were available are increasingly being closed. To restrict access to these kinds of moving targets is to misidentify the problem, to violate rights of aesthetic practice and cultural critique, and to silence and marginalise dissent, however wilfully unedifying the expression of that dissent may be to hypothetical “reasonable persons” [19].
6. Acknowledgements
Thanks to Catherine Rogers, Chris Moore, Colin Salter, Caitlin Janzen, and the anonymous ISTAS reviewers for their comments on earlier drafts of this paper.
7. Notes
[1] S. Costes, “Worst Album of the Month: Twodeadsluts Onegoodfuck – S/T”, Vice Magazine: Music Reviews – The Homo Neanderthalensis Issue, available at http://www.viceland.com/int/v15n3/htdocs/records.php, n.d..
[2] N. Baym and A. Ledbetter, “Tunes that Bind? Predicting friendship strength in a music-based social network”, Information, Communication and Society vol. 12, no. 3, pp. 408-427, 2009.
[3] K. Kahn-Harris, Extreme Metal: Music and Culture on the Edge, Berg, Oxford, 2007.
[4] J. Howard, “William Bennett Interview.” Susan Lawly, available at http://www.susanlawly.freeuk.com/textfiles/wbinterview01.htm, 2000.
[5] J. Toynbee, Making Popular Music: Musicians, Creativity and Institutions, Arnold, London, 2000.
[6] K. Collins, “Dead Channel Surfing: the commonalities between cyberpunk literature and industrial music”, Popular Music vol. 24, no. 5, pp. 165-178, 2005.
[7] A. Whelan, Breakcore: Identity and Interaction on Peer-to-Peer, Cambridge Scholars, Newcastle, 2008.
[8] P. Hegarty, Noise/Music: A History, Continuum, New York, 2007.
[9] S. Reynolds, “Noise”, in Audio Culture: Readings in Modern Music (C. Cox and D. Warner, eds.), pp. 55-58. Continuum, New York, 2004.
[10] A. Straus, “The Multiplicity of Noise”, Anormal: Digital Sound Cultures Set 3, available at http://anormal.org/du/digsoundcult/multiplicity_of_noise.pdf, 2007.
[11] J. Attali, Noise: The Political Economy of Music, University of Minnesota Press, London, 1985.
[12] B. Johnson and M. Cloonan, Dark Side of the Tune: Popular Music and Violence, Ashgate, Aldershot, 2008.
[13] I. Maxwell, “The Curse of Fandom: insiders, outsiders and ethnography,” in Popular Music Studies, (D. Hesmondhalgh and K. Negus, eds.), pp. 103-116. Arnold. London, 2002.
[14] C. Picart and C. Greek, “The Compulsion of Real/Reel Serial Killers and Vampires: Toward a Gothic Crimininology”, Journal of Criminal Justice and Popular Culture vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 39-68, 2003.
[15] K. Donati, “Serial Killers in Love: Poppy Z. Brite’s Exquisite Corpse”, in Anatomies of Violence: An Interdisciplinary Investigation, (R. Walker, K. Brass, and J. Byron, eds.), pp. 16-25. University of Sydney, Sydney, 2000.
[16] B. Duguid, “The Unacceptable Face of Freedom”, ESTWeb Magazine, available at http://media.hyperreal.org/zines/est/articles/freedom.html, 1995.
[17] M. Walton, “Possession of Child Pornography”, NSW Council for Civil Liberties Background Paper, available at http://www.nswccl.org.au/docs/pdf/bp2%202005%20Possess%20Child%20Porn.pdf, 2005.
[18] Internet Watch Foundation, “IWF statement regarding Wikipedia webpage”, Internet Watch Foundation, available at http://www.iwf.org.uk/media/news.archive-2008.251.htm, 2008.
[19] Crimes Act 1900 (NSW) s.91H Criminal Code Act 1995 (cth) s.473.1, available at http://www.legislation.nsw.gov.au/fragview/inforce/act+40+1900+pt.3-div.15a-sec.91h+0+N?tocnav=y, 1995. “Child” here refers to a person who is, or appears to be, under the age of 18.
[20] S. Conroy, Measures to improve safety of the internet for families, Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, available at http://www.minister.dbcde.gov.au/media/media_releases/2009/115, 2009.
[21] Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, Mandatory internet service provider (ISP) filtering: Measures to increase accountability and transparency for Refused Classification material – Consultation paper, available at http://www.dbcde.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0020/123833/TransparencyAccountabilityPaper.pdf, 2009.
[22] It is worth pointing out that the renowned recording engineer Steve Albini produced a number of Whitehouse albums; he has also worked with Nirvana, PJ Harvey, the Pixies, Manic Street Preachers, and Bush.
[23] J. Howard, “Whitehouse Interview,” Susan Lawly, available at http://www.susanlawly.freeuk.com/textfiles/whinterview02.htm, 2003.
[24] P. Best, “Dancer in the Dark,” The Child Botanical, available at http://philipbest.blogspot.com/2008/01/dancer-in-dark.html, 2008.
[25] E. Howard, “Whitehouse: Bird Seed,” Stylus Magazine, available at http://www.stylusmagazine.com/reviews/whitehouse/bird-seed.htm, 2003.
[26] T. Blake, “Pure”, OVO Magazine: Mayhem, available at http://www.uncarved.org/othertexts/pure.html, 1991.
[27] Sotos also wrote the afterword for Brady’s The Gates of Janus: Serial Killing and its Analysis (2001).
[28] B. Stosuy, “Interview with Peter Sotos,” Fanzine, available at http://thefanzine.com/articles/features/39/interview_with_peter_sotos/3, 2006.
[29] J. Irvine, Talk about Sex: The Battles over Sex Education in the United States, Berkeley, University of California Press, 2002.
[30] A. Mozek, “Dumping the Fucking Rubbish”, For the Birds, available at http://imforthebirds.blogspot.com/2009/10/dumping-fucking-rubbish.html, 2009.
[31] M. Eliade, Myth and Reality, Harper and Row, New York, 1963.
[32] M. McLelland, this volume.
[33] M. Phillipov, “‘None So Vile’? Towards an Ethics of Death Metal”, Southern Review: Communication, Politics & Culture vol. 38, no. 2, pp. 74-85, 2006.
[34] T. DeNora, Music in Everyday Life, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2000.
[35] Slogun, Circle of Shit True Crime Pages, available at http://www.slogun.com/INDEX2.HTM, 2009.
[36] R. Smith, “Dark Places: True Crime Writing in Australia”, Journal of the Association for the Study of Australian Literature, North America vol. 8, pp. 17-30, 2008.
[37] A. Tucher, Froth and Scum: Truth, Beauty Goodness, and the Ax Murder in America’s First Mass Medium, University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill, 1994.
[38] The written version of the lyrics to “Ruthless Babysitting” includes “the genius at Tuol Sleng” among the “favourite photographers”, a reference to the Khmer Rouge’s Security Prison 21. This is omitted from the album version.
[39] The internet filtering scheme does not address such circuits: peer-to-peer or encrypted bulletin boards where real child pornography is distributed are not covered. See C. Lumby, L. Green, and J. Hartley, Untangling the Net: The Scope of Content Caught By Mandatory Internet Filtering, available at http://www.ecu.edu.au/pr/downloads/Untangling_The_Net.pdf, 2009.
[40] The ‘Streisand effect’, a term coined by Mike Masnick at Techdirt, refers to an incident in 2003 where Barbara Streisand unsuccessfully sued photographers who posted an image of her house online. The attempt to suppress the image backfired, with the ensuing publicity for the case ensuring that more people were aware of the image than would have been had Streisand done nothing.
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Harvest History Month
Regardless of how far we’ve come since re-opening our doors in the late Spring of 2011, we can never truly tear away from our roots. There are many reasons why we decided to keep the Heathen Harvest name alive instead of starting our own journalistic endeavor, but in the end, the fact remains that we collectively owe a massive debt of gratitude to the original Heathen Harvest for opening our eyes, or ears, our hearts and our minds. Most writers from the early days will tell you how much the website, and coincidentally being exposed to the vastly diverse array of dark music featured within it, changed us; it helped our artistic interests evolve far beyond those that we had when we arrived, and in my case in particular, it helped me survive an era of my life that I can only hope to never have to revisit — surely my darkest days.
Unfortunately, last year, the original website went offline, taking with it the vast majority of content that had accumulated over its seven-year run. There is still a “test shell” of a portion of the website connected to the forum, but it is buggy and was never meant for public visibility; it is likely to go offline in the short-term future. For that reason, and with the blessing of the original owner Malahki Thorn, we are declaring February our Harvest History Month this year, and we will be revamping, re-editing, and republishing a new collection of our most important articles every day throughout the month.
We are opening the month with an artist that really shouldn’t surprise anyone, as those familiar with our humble beginnings should know all too well how much Jhonn Balance, Peter “Sleazy” Christopherson, and their host of friends that ranged from Thighpaulsandra to Black Sun Productions’ Massimo & Pierce, influenced our creation. Coil is the very reason that we ever had a reason to exist at all, and with the following interview, it will go without saying how much the project influenced Malahki in particular as an openly gay man from his teenage years to this day. They are the reason for our “anti-censorship” core value, and they have been the engine that has driven our motivation and inspiration from the first day.
This interview was among the first articles to be featured on Heathen Harvest, and you’ll notice that it occurred only seven short months before Jhonn Balance was taken from this world. Now with Sleazy gone as well, we’ll never have another chance to see, speak to, interview, or otherwise interact with Coil as a physical manifestation. For all of these reasons and more, this is easily the most important article that we have ever — and are likely to ever — publish(ed). Included with the interview, you will find the few Coil reviews that we were able to write up in our time with the original. Each consecutive article will follow this format until the end on February 28th. Following February will be another month of remembrance and celebration for another, yet to be announced, important piece of our collective experience within the post-industrial underground. Enjoy, and thank you all for a decade of readership and support.
–Sage L. Weatherford
Heathen Harvest 1.0 PR Representative (2006-2010); Heathen Harvest Periodical (2.0/2.1) Co-founder (2011-)
Coil
Conducted by Malahki Thorn
(Originally published Thursday, April 1st, 2004 @ 07:44 AM PST)
Heathen Harvest: Coil has now been making music for two decades. Has the band met or exceeded your previous expectations? Did you ever expect that you would last this long and have such an impact on the music scene and its listeners?
Peter Christopherson: I don’t think I had ANY expectations — Coil was just something Jhonn (Balance) asked me to help with and was fun, so our success and longevity has definitely exceeded them!
HH: I recently visited the Black Sun Productions website where Massimo & Pierce have posted a “Coil” link that describes their relationship with both of you. In this information, they discuss what a deep influence the music of Coil had on their lives as young gay men. Does Coil realize the impact they have had on queer youth in “the scene?”
PC: I do think it’s incredibly important for young gay TEENS to have the chance to discover for themselves that the world is NOT the way their parents and school are telling them.
Jhonn Balance: That opportunity for me came when I found a copy of William Burroughs‘ The Naked Lunch in WH Smith’s in Pontefract, on a Saturday afternoon-release from boarding school. I must have been 14. Standing in the deserted book section at the back of the shop, Burroughs’ drug-crazed, gorgeously-crude words burned into me, and for the first time I KNEW somebody else felt and saw the world the way I did. Hopefully you know what I’m talking about ‘cos it has already happened to you — it is a fantastic, life-changing moment.
If Coil have had that same impact on anyone else’s life, I feel honored and humble.
Pierce and Massimo are sweet, talented (and handsome!) and if what they say is true then I am delighted to have sleazily affected their development.
PC: Seriously — Most of us are not likely ever to have the responsibility of helping our own kids grow up and make their way into the world, but I think we owe it to the fledglings who will come after us — our gay children if you like — to make sure that clues to the nature of the real world are out there; to give them the keys to release themselves from the ill-fitting box their parents put them in; to let them know they are not alone. That’s more than enough reason for Coil (and any honest artistic gay venture) to exist.
Jhonn Balance
JB: Again it was experiences such as bunking off from school and going to watch Pasolini‘s SALO with my friend Tom all on our own in a cinema in Oxford, or again, like Peter, discovering William Burroughs books (picked up in cheap paperback editions at jumble sales, the thrill and subversion of being sold these wonderful culture-bombs by the wife of the local vicar — one of her friends — making the exchange all the more enchanting). I was hugely and powerfully and completely overwhelmed and willingly succumbed and seduced and led astray, most joyfully seduced and enticed and molded and influenced and bent and shaped by these powers of transformation, information, inflammation and illumination. Dark angels whose shadows shine brightly still. I am aware that we can have an influence on people, especially those isolated by parents, or location, situation, orientation — those who feel they are drowning in the heavy tide of contemporaneous neglect, shallowness and inverted social values — If we can provide any kind of help, proof of survival, a glimmer of hope, a shock of recognition of the nude, by the very nature of our mere existence, then it more than justifies us having existed, been seen to exist, or created any work of art at all. When we play live, people demonstratively explain how we have changed their lives, and letters and emails occasionally and powerfully do the same. We do what we do — we would do it anyway. Having chosen to deviate we have no choice.
HH: Coil has been unflinching in drawing inspiration from the band members’ sexuality. Many songs, album titles, etc. deal with concepts of homosexuality and homoerotic spirituality. Have either of you ever felt a resistance from your audience when exploring such intimate themes?
PC: Fortunately there is some quality of music as an art form that does not engender resistance — if people feel uncomfortable, they just move in a different direction — Coil is certainly for the few rather than the many. We have occasionally had problems with “fans”, but generally they were people who felt “too much” empathy, rather than not enough.
JB: We may be “for the few”, but there’s more than quite a few of us. There have been a few occasions when I’ve noticed when I personally may have transgressed even the transgressive mindset, for instance when talking about eating human afterbirth.
HH: At one point in the band’s not too distant past, the lineup was stated as being comprised exclusively of homosexuals. I believe this was around the time Thighpaulsandra joined Coil’s ranks. How did such an exclusively queer lineup affect Coil, its music, and the intent of the band?
PC: I don’t feel there is any reason why Coil should be comprised exclusively of members of the same sexual persuasion — often it is not.
Maybe when it is, the tour bus leans dangerously the same way when we pass someone cute — that’s about it. Spiritual or philosophical empathy is more important to me in who I work with, than who you want to sniff.
HH: Coil invited Black Sun Productions on tour with the band during the recent blitz of concerts. Black Sun, Pierce, and Massimo are known for their live gay sex performances. Coil obviously ignored the controversy surrounding these artists and chose to work intimately with them. Can you tell us about Coil’s relationship with Black Sun?
PC: Pierce had been writing to us for years — since he was an underage prostitute in the some dark middle-European alleyway — that’s why we love him! To be honest, I was not particularly aware of any controversy.
Jhonn and I just knew from their letters that they were starting to make performance pieces together and invited them to come to our show at the Gotik-Treffen Festival in Leipzig. As soon as we met it was clear we all wanted to do things together… public and private.
HH: What role did Pierce and Massimo play in the recent concerts?
PC: The COIL LIVE experience constantly mutates — Jhonn and I have a very low threshold of boredom — so to have two naked Mohicans on stage with us was obviously an attractive proposition. We left what they did on stage up to them (with a few guidelines from Jhonn) and it seemed like a natural and beautiful accompaniment to the sound we were making.
HH: Coil was once known for never appearing live. In the last couple of years, the band has released a barrage of live concerts on CD. What changes brought about Coil’s recent tours?
PC: Thighpaulsandra, who we met in the late 90′s, suggested that we should play live again — If left to our own devices we probably would be far too reclusive for our own good — out of shyness and laziness mostly. He overcame the objections we had to the potential traumas of playing in front of an audience and to the rigors of travel. As it happened, computer technology had, at the same time, reached the stage where we could play our sort of music freshly each time, rather than repeat the same show over and over.
HH: I want to go back just a bit in time to discuss Jhonn’s struggle with alcohol and the move to the country. Many of our readers either live in large cities or have sought back to the land living as a remedy to big city gay life. Jhonn’s recovery from alcoholism and the move to the country seemed to coincide. Was his battle with alcoholism and his city life related? How has moving to the country affected his recovery?
Peter “Sleazy” Christopherson
PC: I will leave Jhonn to answer that as, ironically, he is currently enjoying living in London again, with artist Ian Johnstone. For myself, I had mixed feelings when we first moved out of the big city — as a kid, it had represented opportunity (for sex as much as anything), but having made the break, I now hate to go back. In the city, I feel pressure to achieve, and to console myself for the unpleasantness of being there, whereas in the quiet of the country I can get on with the things I enjoy (work included) without worrying… I don’t think my own particular addictive behaviors are affected by location one way or the other.
HH: Coil is known for their collaborations with queer artists such as William Burroughs, Derek Jarmen, Marc Almond and many others. It would seem as if Coil has interacted with every queer luminary in the underground. Have these colorations been intentional collaborations with other queer artists or coincidence?
PC: Obviously when you love someone’s work, as we do the artists you mention, you try to show your appreciation and to share you own work with them — sometimes this results in meetings, friendship, collaboration, sometimes not. Who can say how coincidence works?
HH: Has Coil ever felt acknowledged or accepted by the larger mainstream queer community?
PC: NO
HH: Can you give us a look into you crystal ball? Are there any new releases on the horizon Coil fans should be anticipating?
PC: The ANS box set will be out soon as well as LIVEDVDS. We will be working on new material soon. Some people have speculated that since Jhonn and I are no longer “boyfriends” and have been quoted in public as wanting to live at some distance (him in London and Cumbria — me in the Far East), that this may affect the future of Coil — well it obviously will in ways yet to be determined, but we have no plans for a Coil split and we continue to find stimulation and excitement in what we both bring to our musical collaboration, so don’t worry on that account. Coil endures.
HH: Can we ever expect Coil to embark on a North American or US tour?
PC: Having spent so much energy on touring this side of the world in the past few years, it seems unlikely that we will be embarking on any new major tours soon, although we are always open to special and individual invitations. Both of us love the American landscape and have many American friends, but from the perspective of here, it seems like the US, as a whole, is following a particularly non-Coil path right now, but who knows? Elections change things, people change things, things change.
HH: Lastly, I would like to invite you to come anonymously to one of our many Radical Faerie gatherings. It is a magical experience to join in spirit and autonomous community with like-minded queers. Check out the Euro Faeries at: Radical Faeries. We are used to celebrities in our ranks.
PC: Thank you, I’d like that!
In the past I have felt a very English Outsider reluctance to join in with any group or community, especially one with any kind of an “agenda”. Fortunately, the recent time that I have spent in the East has brought me to a place where I can now appreciate how important (and beneficial to me as well as others) sharing, encouraging like-minded souls can be.
Do you have a branch in Thailand yet? Maybe I can start one!
Luv Sleazy
(Source: http://heathenharvest.org/2014/02/01/harvest-history-month-pt-i-an-interview-with-coil/)

Photo: Ben Roberts
As a performance artist and founding member of Throbbing Gristle, Cosey Fanni Tutti helped permanently alter modern musical consciousness with sonic and visual transgressions rooted in electronic experimentation and socio-political confrontation. Together with Genesis P-Orridge, Peter “Sleazy” Christopherson and future partner Chris Carter, TG created the blueprint for the industrial genre and then spread the good word through their label Industrial Records, releasing such acts as Cabaret Voltaire and spoken word pieces by William S. Burroughs. Following the band’s initial break-up, Chris and Cosey (today Carter Tutti) would go on to become one of the most prolific and influential experimental electronic acts around. Thankfully, they have not chosen to rest on their laurels. In the Winter ’13 edition of EB Magazine, Cosey gave us her version of the alphabet; needless to say, it’s right up our alley.
A as in All Tomorrow’s Parties: Nico’s voice echoes in my head whenever I see this written down. I’m immediately transported back to my youth. My seventeen-year-old self chilling out with my friends. Dope, acid, mescaline times. A mind expanding era for me with Nico, Velvet Underground, Beefheart, and many more as the soundtrack.
B as in Bourgeois: I’ve never been a member of that club but oddly enough I’d class some of my friends as bourgeois.
C as in COUM Transmissions: It was then. It ended. This is now. But that’s not to deny the importance of my work with COUM.
D as in Death Factory: The music from the death factory came specifically from Throbbing Gristle working in the basement studio at Martello Street which was a factory built on the mass grave pits for the victims of the plague. So effectively we were more or less on the level of the burial grounds in a factory making music.
E as in Ethics: Imperative, yet sadly lacking in so many people.
F as in Fetishes: Wonderful fetishes, what would we do without them? My deepest fetishes are mine alone, except for whom I choose to share them with.
G as in Guitar: My sound weapon of choice. After more than thirty years playing guitar I “feel” it as an extension of myself. I still get such a buzz from playing, discovering, and generating new sounds with it. I can’t even remember what made me choose to play the guitar but I remember well getting Chris to cut down the body of a cheap and ugly seventies “Raver” guitar into a slick stick guitar to make it easier for me to handle. Then I gradually gathered my arsenal of effects pedals.
H as in Heartbeat: Little did I know that this word would come to have quite a different significance from when we used it as the title for the first Chris & Cosey album. The irony isn’t lost on me that my unpredictable heart condition, arrhythmia, is actually a rhythm problem!
I as in Industrial Records: The beginning of the industrial music genre. Founded by myself and the other three members of Throbbing Gristle in 1976. It was, and still is, an extension of TG and our related works.
J as in Jokes, bad: How many roadies does it take to change a lightbulb? One, two! One, two! One, two!
K as in Kitsch: I love some kitsch, and done well, or badly even, it is just so, well, kitschy.
L as in Love/Hate: I don’t buy into hate, neither do I agree with the saying that love is another form of hate. They are opposites, one positive and enriching, one negative and destructive.
M as in Making music with your partner: We fit like a glove. We have a wonderful symbiotic relationship, so making music, video, or doing photography together is second nature to us. There are very rarely any moments of conflict. Plus, we both have separate projects so we get some space to expand on our creativity individually. That in itself brings new life into the work we do together.
N as in Nick, MY SON: The best Chris and Cosey production… ever!
O as in Occultism: Occultism is a private issue, but I will say that my interest in occultism lies in the broadest sense of the concept. Certainly I’ve embraced spirituality and I feel that a deep sense of self is essential to fulfill one’s potential. This also goes for maintaining a connection to a seemingly hidden dimension that is possibly out of reach if one conforms to restricted notions and established modes of thought, expression and ways of living and communication. Having experienced my own death and resuscitation after undergoing a heart procedure some years ago, as well as the loss of so many dear and very spiritual friends, my thoughts on the subject now have shifted somewhat. When your light goes out you cease to exist. When we are vital organic life forms, our potential for ‘being’ is in our hands and is determined by our ‘self’. Whether one chooses to achieve that through occultism or other practices is a personal choice. But in my mind occultism—or, other channels such as organized religion, Scientology and so on—act as facilitators. Practices alone do not provide any given rite of access to our deep inner self. It’s understandable that some people seek the mysterious in this world of vast scientific discoveries and knowledge. But that’s a kind of “blind faith” when you think that at the same time as seeking mysteries and higher truths they so readily accept science and technology such as the Internet, or mobile phones to access information on the subject, or the science of aviation to fly to remote spiritual retreats and locations. That technology and science actually disproves some of what they base their “belief” on.
P as in Performance Art: I prefer the term “art action” to differentiate between a performance, like theater, and an action. It can be great, inspiring and profound and it can also be disappointing and devoid of meaning or power.
Q as in Quo vadis, Industrial?: As a genre “industrial” means something quite different to us, to TG. People take the meaning far to literally. It’s not just about hard sounds and driving rhythms. You just have to listen to all the different styles of music TG have produced over the years to figure that out. Our Industrial Records label is nearly thirty years old and still alive and kicking and doing very well. We have a series of unreleased TG projects planned for next year.
R as in Radical Politics: Although it can be incredibly divisive in either a good way or a bad way I guess it’s necessary even if just to emphasize that something is definitely very wrong. I despair at the human race, its ignorance and capacity for destruction and malevolence.
S as in Sex Pistols: I guess they were pivotal in their own way but they were essentially a manufactured boy band nevertheless. I’m just pleased John Lydon went on to do some good work in his own right. His Country Life butter ads on TV were so cutting edge and anti-establishment.
T as in Transgression: Always good and even better when it’s genuine and not done to gain attention or notoriety. My work’s often been described as transgressive but I never think to myself, “What can I do that’s transgressive?” I just am and I do what I feel best expresses my feelings and myself. I’m an innocent really—or as Chris always says “49% angel and 51% devil.”
U as in Utopias: Somewhere we dream of when we seek escape.
V as in Vicious ignorance: Far too prevalent I’m sad to say.
W as in William S. Burroughs: I’ve never been as interested in his work as much as the other members of TG were. I was “discouraged” from being involved on a personal level when meetings with Burroughs were arranged. I was told he was a misogynist. Or maybe it just wasn’t “cool” to have a woman with you when you go to meet and want to impress your hero.
X as in XXX Film: Oh yes, nothing like a good Triple-X! Although, as with music, my appreciation can be colored by over analysis.
Y as in Yearnings: All my yearnings are towards peace and quiet. Ironic… or maybe understandable considering the amount of time I spend making noise.
Z as in Zyklon B Zombie: Lest we forget, one of the lowest, most horrendous periods in human history. ~
– See more at: http://www.electronicbeats.net/en/features/lists/the-alphabet-according-to-cosey-fanni-tutti/#sthash.WcZ6tlm8.dpuf
(Source: http://www.electronicbeats.net/en/features/lists/the-alphabet-according-to-cosey-fanni-tutti/)

Sunn O))) can make a jolly good claim to be the most important metal band of our time. Since emerging from some mossy sepulchre in 1998, their tantric dronework has managed to boil the genre down to its logical conclusion while, at the same time not so much pushing the envelope as wax-sealing the envelope with a goats-head insignia and hand-delivering it directly to the address of ‘RESPECTABLE ARTY MUSIC’. And they do this, let us not forget, all the while clad confidently in those not-at-all-ridiculous hooded robes.
Sunn O)))’s success has opened the spooky, crow-adorned floodgates to a host of likeminded experimental metallers (Wolves in the Throne Room, Nadja, Locrian, much of the Southern Lord roster etc., etc.) and their influence now appears to be seeping out of their nearest neighbouring genres into unexpected areas such as electronica (see Haxan Cloak, Raime, and the Blackest Ever Black label). In fact, they’re so sonorously influential that their vibrations seem to be resonating throughout wider culture – or, at least, once you’ve been infected by the Sunn O))) virus, the whole world starts to look and sound a lot more Sunn O)))-tinted:
Robert Redford stranded helplessly on the ocean for 100 minutes is a little bit Sunn O))).
That red-lit film in which Ryan Gosling doesn’t say very much and refuses to ever move his face is a little bit Sunn O))).
Moody Scandinavian crime dramas full of unhappy light-switch-reluctant detectives are a little bit Sunn O))).
That American drama where advertising executives spend every waking minute inebriating themselves with booze and cigarettes to shield their own consciences from discomforting thoughts of their own moral vacuity and impending mortality is, somehow, a little bit Sunn O))).
Steve McQueen’s bleak films about physical and psychological incarceration are a little bit Sunn O))).
Reading David Foster Wallace’s The Pale King feels a little bit Sunn O))).
A railway journey to Huddersfield is a little bit Sunn O))).
The morbid waiting game the West plays with our probable World War Three adversaries China and North Korea is a little bit Sunn O))).
Tornados, earthquakes and mass flooding are all a bit Sunn O))).
The sun is a little bit Sunn O))), hanging up there in space burning, burning, burning… but for how much longer?
Sunn O)))’s previous long-player, 2009’s Monoliths & Dimensions, ended with a 16-minute nearly-serene orchestra-aided tribute to Alice Coltrane. Edging further down this path, Terrestrials sees the core duo of Stephen O’Malley and Greg Anderson teaming up with black-metal-turned-heavy-chamber-ensemble Ulver. This might be the closest you can get to ‘new age’ while remaining a heavily-tattooed riff-worshipper.
The record eases in with ‘Let There Be Light’, all ambient shimmering and sighing horns. As the track gradually unfolds, it feels increasingly like you’re sinking in icy quicksand while a half-speed Morricone conducts a death theme in your honour from the safety of firmer ground (instead of just throwing you a frickin’ rope).
The next section, ‘Western Horn’, is far more menacing. Anderson’s wearily morbid bass thunders along as a frightfully evil wind blusters through the air, blowing barbed-wire tumbleweed across a pile of infant corpses. Similar in terrorizing tone to past cuts such as ‘Decay2 (Nihils’ Maw)’ or ‘Aghartha’, it comes as a slight surprise that frequent collaborator Attila Csihar doesn’t leap out of a nearby thicket in a Mumm-Ra costume to throat-croak in Hungarian on the subject of mass impaling.
Concluding piece ‘Eternal Return’ has more of a tortoise-slow swing to it. It’s even kinda lounge-y (albeit a lounge furnished with lampshades made from human skin and a masked inbred round the corner with a chainsaw). After seven minutes of Bohren & der Club of Gore-esque doom-bop, ‘Eternal Return’ even dares to transform into something resembling a conventional song, complete with catchy keyboard hook and theatrical vocals. The most Ulver-y cut here, it becomes all Mike Patton-dates-John Carpenter, before being pulled back into disintegrative neo-classical drone.
Because it’s a collaboration, Terrestrials isn’t quite the ‘proper’ follow-up toMonoliths & Dimensions. Their least bowel-emptying tremor to date, it does make one anticipate Sunn O)))’s next move with both excitement and anxiety. I mean, I’m sure they’ll be fine. It’s just that, sometimes, if you’re not too careful, when you think you’re pushing the envelope into the letterbox of ‘RESPECTABLE ARTY MUSIC’, you suddenly realise you’ve got the wrong address altogether and have only gone and shoved all your mail into the light jazz pigeon hole.
(Source: http://drownedinsound.com/releases/18051/reviews/4147355)
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I can’t tell you why you should listen to Whitehouse, or that you really necessarily should. I can only tell you about the profound effect listening to their records and seeing them live over the years had on me. Formed in 1980 and with 19 albums and 178 self-declared “live actions”, William Bennett’s group created some of the most fascinating and intriguing work to ever be associated with industrial culture, electronic music and avant-garde sound. I first heard them via their MP3.com page 14 years ago after a friend had given me a ridiculous description along the lines of “it’s like Suicide, but with a bloke in a trench coat calling you a cunt.” Whilst this ended up being misleading, it still didn’t stop me from tracking down as many of their CDs as possible, which at the time could only be bought in London from the old Sister Ray shop in Berwick Street or Camden’s goth bunker Resurrection Records.
Here’s a brief guide for the curious and unfamiliar, though without wanting to sound like a patronizing wanker, it is advisable not to take some of the themes and content in the work you read about below at face value. Extreme electronic music; please acquire with caution!
START HERE:
BIRD SEED (SUSAN LAWLY, 2003)

I’d say you could almost define WH albums by the decade they were released in. The ’80s was dominated by piercing microphone feedback and crude noise; the washy, almost “ambient” synth work of the predominantly Albini-engineered albums ’90s; and the albums in the ’00s which explored digital technology, acoustic hand percussion and more complex lyrical content. Bird Seed features their most accessible track, “Wriggle Like A Fucking Eel,” and sees the first explicit use of polyrhythmic drum patterns which WB has continued to develop with his Cut Hands project. It’s rhythmic without being beat-driven and is possibly the only WH track to deploy an almost verse/chorus/verse/chorus structure; it’s an unbelievable piece of music. Other highlights are the borderline disturbing and difficult “Philosophy,” the sharp “Why You Never Became A Dancer” and the brilliantly tense “Cut Hands Has the Solution.” The latter being like no other piece in the Whitehouse catalog, consisting of vocals and a single drum beat.
THEN TRY:
QUALITY TIME (SUSAN LAWLY, 1995)

“Nothing happened?
Nothing happened?
His shit’s in your mouth and you’re saying nothing’s happened?”
The ’90s was a strange decade for Whitehouse, but in my opinion these albums are terribly undervalued within the catalog. There’s a greater deal of restraint in the sound than most of the material from the ’80s, leading to a more threatening and bizarre atmosphere overall. Quality Time is the strangest of the lot though. The last album to be recorded with Steve Albini, it sounds a lot drier than the albums that preceded it and features WB’s oddest vocal performance sounding almost like a cross between a cockney fruit & veg seller and Zippy from Rainbow on the title track. The record is also notable for featuring a return to vocals from Philip Best on “Just Like a Cunt” (containing lyrics appropriated from Bob Dylan’s “Just Like a Woman”) and the track “Baby,” which in the context of the album opens the door for many questions, without giving a single answer as to what is going on behind the scenes.
FOR SERIOUS FANS ONLY:
DEDICATED TO PETER KURTEN (COME ORGANISATION, 1981)

“A man has been charged with a ripper murder…”
The idea of a Whitehouse record being “for serious fans only” is an amusing one, but if you made it this far and you’re still listening then I guess you obviously qualify. This is my favorite LP from the early brutal and crude ’80s period. The songs here are fairly short and sequenced in relatively quick succession giving it more of a “punk rock” feel compared with other records from this time like Birthdeath Experience and Total Sex. The sound here is incredibly heavy on the high end and aside from the odd water and TV sample consists of little more than white noise, distorted vocals and piercing microphone feedback.
(Source: http://www.self-titledmag.com/2014/02/18/helms-guide-to-whitehouse/)
Michael Moynihan is not an easy fellow to peg down or pigeon-hole. On the one hand, various cultural critics have credited him with inspiring far-right fanaticism via his book, Lords of Chaos; on the other hand, I’ve never read an instance where he tries to promote the virtues of the “white race” over any other. Exactly where Moynihan stands on a variety of issues is never completely clear. He staunchly maintains his personal borders, never offering his personal life for popular consumption. This is demonstrated by how carefully he chooses his words. His is a precise and controlled strategy.
I’ve never met Michael Moynihan, chances are I never will. On again, off again, correspondence over the past decade has, however, left me with one distinct impression: Michael Moynihan is an autonomous elitist. In spite of whatever political, social, and cultural ripples may occur around him, that remains constant. In the end, Moynihan follows his will regardless, and in spite of, whatever his nation’s culture may think.

Annabel Lee and Michael Moynihan in Vermont | Photo by Carl Abrahamsson © 2003
(Conducted by: mrgreg23. Originally Published: Tuesday, May 24 2005 @ 07:00 AM PDT)
____________________________________________
Heathen Harvest: What’s your take on Marxist critiques of contemporary culture?
Michael Moynihan: Ever since I was about twelve years old and began thinking about such things, I have found myself agreeing with much of the Marxist or the hard-Left’s description of current problems, alienation, and so forth. In other words, they are often good at identifying and describing symptoms of the malaise. There is a large gap between mere symptoms and actual causes, however, and their solutions are no better than those coming from the people they vocally oppose. Not to mention the fact that people who loudly claim to be fighting for human freedom, but in practice behave like totalitarian thought police, naturally make me nauseous.
HH: I’ve found that it is far easier to identify, locate, and discuss problems than it is to come up with viable solutions. Many folks seem to think that if you can’t provide a solution you shouldn’t criticize a situation, relationship, or event; that’s always struck me as a head-in-the-sand approach to life. If you don’t have a solution, I think it’s safe to say, don’t try and offer one. The critique, however, is still important.
MM: Sure, and I have no problem with that. The problem comes when you realize that their critique is always informed — subtly or unsubtly — by the assumption that they hold the keys to the answer. In this regard, their track record is deplorable. So one just has to always keep that in mind.
A more fundamental problem with the Marxist critique is that it is entirely materialistic. This is really a dreary way to look at the world. Certainly economic relationships should be considered, but this is not a particularly useful universal explanation for how the world works. Marxism, like just about every other “ism,” functions like a surrogate monotheistic religion — they just happen to have replaced God with History and Salvation with Revolution. Reality, however, does not jibe with these sorts of “only-one-right-way” doctrines. There are many other, much more beautiful ways to interact with the world.
As an example of the sort of viewpoint that one is rarely exposed to these days, we’ve just published a great book of essays by English author and neoplatonic philosopher John Michell. He is the elder statesman of contemporary Earth Mysteries and geomancy research, not to mention an expert on sacred numbers and geometry, and a host of other arcane things. The book is called Confessions of a Radical Traditionalist, and consists of 108 of his short essays which originally appeared in an English magazine for the senior set called The Oldie. Although this really shouldn’t be surprising, the magazine contains some of the best writing published in Britain — I’ve had that confirmed from people in their thirties who dared to be so unhip as to take out a subscription to it.
Needless to say, Michell writes many scathing things about Marxists and other ideological buffoons in course of these witty commentaries on all sorts of intriguing topics.
HH: Is it fair to say you think Michell offers viable solutions to contemporary cultural or economic problems? Or is he directing his attention to other issues?
MM: He does offer solutions to these, and they are the kind of solutions that you would never hear anywhere else: solutions from an enlightened neoplatonist who claims no particular “belief” but is content to revel in the mystery of life. Part of his goal in writing his commentaries is to direct other people’s attention to a different perspective on the world — one that transcends typical either/or solutions.
HH: You appear to have healthy working relationships with older scholars like Michell and Joscelyn Godwin. Do you consider them to be mentors? How important do you think mentors / elders are in establishing a healthy traditionalist culture?
MM: I would not consider them to be mentors per se, although they both are exemplary people on every level so they positively influence everyone they interact with. That in itself is a good thing to emulate. Respect and veneration toward those with wisdom and knowledge is a central element of a traditional society — such people have a stronger link with the deep past, the mythic past, and the history of that particular social group.
HH: How does your spiritual/religious view of life, as opposed to a strictly materialist approach, impact your experience and decisions on a daily basis? Can you give an example or two?
MM: A primary one would simply be the fact that I don’t care about the sort of material objects that most people seem to find important. This means that I don’t waste my time trying to accumulate enough money in order to enjoy a standard of living that would allow me to eat in fancy restaurants, drive an expensive car, go on vacations, or whatever else normal people seem to have been programmed to yearn for. I have very few material vices, and no interest in costly new things. I can get by on very little money and would rather own my time than owe it to someone else in return for a paycheck.
This attitude also applies to the artistic or musical projects which I work on. They are not done because they will fulfill a certain profit margin or bring in desperately needed cash. They are created because we feel they are important and we strive to produce them in impeccable quality. Because we answer only to ourselves, we have far more freedom in this regard.
HH: You edited two of Julius Evola‘s books for Inner Traditions. Do you use any of the magickal / spiritual techniques / methods that he discusses? If so, which do you find most useful?
MM: The best technique that I know is to constantly challenge oneself, to apply diligence and willpower to increasingly difficult and more rigorous situations. Evola was a mountain climber, and would likely have concurred with this approach.
HH: As a new father what has changed most in your priorities? Have you found your cultural activities (Blood Axis, Dominion Press, Storm Records, etc.) taking less precedence than before? Or are they more important than ever? Do you ever feel embroiled in a broader cultural war?
MM: Greater responsibility is something that should come with age. Rearing a child is a major step in this dynamic type of development. Not only does one help to build the character of a new, living being, but your own character is also put to the test. In such circumstances one’s cultural relationships and endeavors — speaking in the broadest possible sense — do become more important than ever.
As for cultural wars, there are an unlimited number going on at any given time. This is inevitable in a culture that is largely loosed from any moorings. So we are all embroiled in a web of cultural war. Rather than getting bogged down in shooting matches, however, the best approach is to simply go forward and do things in the world — the fact that these things may be utterly out of sync with the predominant cultural tendencies does not make them any less important or worthwhile. To the contrary.
HH: What character traits and values do you and Annabel hope to instill in your son?
MM: Love of life. Independence of thought, perseverance, self-reliance, good cheer in the face of adversity and even death, impeccable politeness and manners.
HH: What do you believe are the most important traits for a man to develop and practice in this era of chaos and confusion?
MM: Love of life; independence of thought; perseverance; self-reliance; good cheer in the face of adversity and even death; impeccable politeness and manners.
HH: How do you see yourself, your family, as “Radical Traditionalists”?
MM: Insofar as we reject the superfluous and empty aspects of modern culture, and question the reasons why they exist. “Tradition” literally means something that is handed down or handed over from one person to another, and the word “radical” really relates to idea of roots or origins (it comes from the Latin word for root, radix). So a radical traditionalist’s frame of mind is oriented toward the most noble things — in a cultural, artistic, philosophical and spiritual sense — that have been inherited from the past. Such things have eternal, ancestral value.
HH: Where do you see yourself in terms of the radical traditionalist / neo-traditionalist movement in ten years? Twenty years?
MM: The time for movements is largely over. Things are too atomized now, and the requisite human material does not exist for a movement of quality to even get going. Besides, I have never been one who felt at home in movements, or even groups. Given the present socio-cultural situation, our work is often done in isolation. In modern times, this has probably always been true for contrary perspectives.
HH: Do you see yourself, your family, as practicing and protecting any specific spiritual lineage? Is so, what is it?
MM: We receive the various spiritual and ethical strands that have come down to us, directly or indirectly, and strive to uphold those we feel to be noble. In the West, Christianity intervened into almost all such lineages — although often only in a superficial way — but it loses more ground with every passing moment. The Christian interregnum will someday be seen for what it was: another minor exotic cult which briefly took hold of a few people’s attention before giving way to other forces.
Cover photo taken by: Ronny Bidmon

MAURIZIO BIANCHI Meets ROADSIDE PICNIC – Dictatorship of Dead Labour CD (4iB 006):
TRACK LISTING
1. Dictatorship of Dead Labour (24:27)
2. The Clearing (40:07) (Sample)
Details:
– CD in Jewel Case
– Individually Numbered
– Limited Edition 250 Copies
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MAURIZIO BIANCHI Meets ROADSIDE PICNIC – Dictatorship of Dead Labour
Dictatorship of Dead Labour is a collaborative release that features the imaginative efforts of Birmingham’s visual/installation/conceptual artist Justin Wiggan’s solo noise project Roadside Picnic and Maurizio Bianchi (M.B.), an Italian pioneer of industrial music. This intriguing project marries sound experimentalist Justin Wiggan’s immersed expedition of field recording, samples, treated loops and drones manifested through the calming nature of Maurizio Bianchi’s almost ambient soundscapes.
Placating murmurs are faintly obvious in the distant background of the first track Dictatorship of Dead Labour. Here, minimal layers of white noise, radio frequencies and field recording hums and hisses build up progressively over voices of rhythmic recitals in search of deliverance. The manipulative development of ambient noise soundscapes encapsulates the aural meditative environment, giving the track a much in-depth nuance around the realm of solace that has been built into the overall surrounding.
In The Clearing, there is still maintenance of the minimalistic approach to sound implementation. However, the static layers of textural electronic interference soon break apart as they escalate to a peak and then arrive to an abrupt burst of abrasive gut-wrenching white noise. The overall progressive build up of organic sound segments drowned under impending layers of textural organic loops manipulate the listener into an abysmal feeling of desolation amid complex sonic chaos. This eventual end of harsh industrial pandemonium shatters the peace and tranquility of the ambient trance-like aural echo. The final epiphany is how the line between art and music gets distorted through deeper exploration and discovery of space and void, demonstrating the disunion of parameters between sound and silence, everything and nothing.
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