Foundation Vinyl Newsletter
Welcome
Hello and welcome to this week’s Foundation Vinyl Newsletter! And there is lots to get stuck into…
- Featured New Arrivals from Foresight, Drill Sergeant, Adult / Planet B, and Squid Pisser
- Corrosion of Conformity: The Blind, Deaf, Numb Years
- Shows and Tours
- Coming Soon
Featured New Arrivals
‘Countless years of imposed will saying what is wrong and what is right, sick will to control and judge, cortege of broken lives’.
Foresight hail from Krakow and their debut full-length – In Search of Understanding – is an album that proudly wears its 1990s’ metallic hardcore influences from Unbroken to Trial via Culture. However, this is no pale imitation, but rather a stirring call-to-arms that reinvigorates its inspirations with contemporary vitality. Impassioned vocals and spoken-word interludes are skilfully meshed with gratifyingly taut, razor-sharp guitars and a ferociously precise rhythm section. They also explore highly effective flourishes of melodic chorus that put me in mind of Suicidal Tendencies’ Mike Muir. A brilliantly realised release.
‘On a constant race to the bottom, and we somehow seem to break through…’
Philadelphia’s Drill Sergeant return with a blistering EP follow-up to their excellent debut LP Vile Ebb. Skilfully marrying the rapid-fire stomp of 1980s’ US hardcore with the sludge-fuelled breakdowns of contemporary power violence, Drill Sergeant deliver four raging cuts. Venomous vocals are complemented by a viciously dynamic rhythm section and fierce guitar riffage. First-person lyrics explore the cognitive dissonance that fuels populist authoritarianism and climate change denial.
This intriguing collaboration sees Adult and Planet B combine forces to devastatingly infectious effect.
From their distinct vantage points, but shared sonic priorities, these two bands seamlessly combine to create a vibrant soundscape. Percussive power interplays with spectral melodies and dark dance-orientated programming, while a twin-vocal attack combines the otherworldly, enigmatic delivery of Nicola Kuperus with Justin Pearson’s (Swing Kids, Deaf Club) decidedly more visceral contribution.
Justin Pearson and Luke Henshaw of Planet B co-host an excellent podcast ‘Cult and Culture’ and Episode 24 features a really interesting discussion with Adult.
Savage, effects-drenched guitar and manically brutal drumming form the basis of Squid Pisser’s remorseless aural assault.
Each song features a guest vocalist from bands as diverse as Punch, Nekrogoblikon, and Melt Banana. And the crux of this LP’s success lies in the fact that none of these vocalists feels artificially bolted on – each song is singularly crafted to their vocal strengths, while remaining undeniably a visceral Squid Pisser construct. As a result, while every song displays its own defining characteristics, the album as a whole retains a powerfully unified sonic consistency.
Another episode of ‘Cult and Culture’ well worth checking out is Episode 18, which features a great interview with Squid Pisser’s guitarist, Brian Meehan.
Corrosion of Conformity: The Blind, Deaf, Numb Years
‘If the system had one neck, you know I’d gladly break it, they’ve got us where they want us – stuck in this sick romance, they need no chain – it’s in our brain’. Dance of the Dead, Corrosion of Conformity
Arguing about whether a particular LP is good or bad can clearly be fun but is largely an exercise in futility. Let’s face it, no one will ever change their mind. It’s not that I buy into the notion of it being an entirely subjective judgement. Some records are objectively bad. However, as these notes touched on a few weeks ago, the very way that music is performed can act to both include and exclude simultaneously, through both sonic and social ‘distortion’. And our aim here is to talk about music that we like rather than that which we don’t.
Having said all of that, I do feel that certain records can be misunderstood. Or perhaps, more accurately, yield new insights if considered from different perspectives. What stirred me into this thought process was Corrosion of Conformity’s 1991 full-length Blind. I was reading a piece by someone whose writing I usually find thoughtful and considered when he referred to Blind (and all COC releases that followed it) as forming part of COC’s ‘redneck music’ phase. I must admit to a quizzical eyebrow being raised. Now I’ll be the first to acknowledge that the Southern-tinged stoner-doom metal that the band have explored from Deliverance (1994) onwards hasn’t set my world afire – well-executed but just not my particular cup of tea. But Blind? Blind is a very different beast indeed.
Cards on the table, I loved Blind at the outset, and I still love it now. But from day one, it is an album that has polarised opinion. The band’s subsequent longevity has only served to amplify this. Let’s face it, it is hard to think of many bands who have not only been continually active for over forty years with a relatively consistent line-up (in various permutations), but who have also gone through such a fundamental musical transformation from seminal political hardcore band to purveyors of groove-orientated heavy metal.
So, for the uninitiated, where does Blind sit within this sonic spectrum? Think powerfully forthright but nuanced lead vocals that interplay with slab-like metallic riffs, which owe a debt in equal parts to thrash and doom metal. And all of it is underpinned by the supple fluidity of the rhythm section. It’s also delivered with a hardcore ferocity as military adventurism, class dispossession, cartel politics, religious oppression, ecological degradation, and racial segregation are tackled with blistering intensity.
Now my first exposure to COC was following new vocalist Karl Agell’s arrival. Sets supporting DRI and Sacred Reich at The Astoria in 1990 saw them beginning to try out their new material in a live environment ahead of recording the album. So, I came to it without too many preconceptions about what had gone before – I liked what I had heard, old and new. COC’s sound had already gone through a degree of metamorphosis from the straight-up hardcore of their earliest releases to the much more crossover thrash leanings of Technocracy (1987).
But how would I have reacted to Blind if I had gown-up release by release with COC? Now it is clearly more metallic and inherently heavier with cleaner vocals and an emphasis on power as opposed to speed. But equally, it undeniably still burns with political anger. And I continue to hear clear call backs to their earlier work. In other words, the album was a reinvention, but one that clearly evolved from what came before.
So, Blind as stoner metal album doesn’t fly for me. Nor does the second school of thought that tends to dismiss it as a ‘transition’ album. This has always struck me as a rather reductive interpretation. Now of course, there is an element of truth to it – Blind was the most metallic COC release to date and began to deploy groove more explicitly than on previous releases. These were aspects that post-Blind COC were to subsequently elevate to being the cornerstone of their sound. But politically, musically, and aesthetically, Blind holds much more in common with Technocracy-era COC than with the outright metal releases that followed. I maintain that it is best understood as a singular moment in time, an almost stand-alone release, and the only one to feature Agell and bassist Phil Swisher.
I saw COC twice more as they toured Blind in 1992, firstly supporting Soundgarden at the Town & Country Club (now the Kentish Town Forum) and then an utterly blistering show headlining The Marquee in December of that year. And as anyone who was present that night knows – whether embroiled in the swirling pit, in the waves of stage divers, or simply taking cover – that was unequivocally a hardcore show. And an avowedly political one too as an imperious Agell raged eloquently amidst the carnage.
As a quick aside, in researching this piece, I stumbled across an interesting site (metallipromo.com/coc.html) that tracks the gig histories of hardcore / thrash metal bands from the mid-1980s and early 1990s, including COC. Not only does it seek to catalogue each band’s tour history, it is also an absolute treasure trove of tickets and flyers, a few examples of which I have added below. What it emphasised to me, as is hinted at by my own COC gig history, was the sheer spread of bands that COC toured with over the Blind period – from Carcass to Megadeth, The Rollins Band to Iron Maiden, Danzig to Prong. Crossover in every sense of the word.
Shows and Tours
This section lays no claims to being a definitive listing! It is simply gigs coming up in London that catch my eye and that I think people who read this newsletter might be interested in. I will always try and highlight where a show forms part of a wider UK tour.
24th June Ribbon Stage, Ex-Void, R.Aggs (The Lexington)
9th July End It, Spy, Combust, Initiate plus more (New Cross Inn)
10th July Fuse, Dregs, Stingray, Antagonizm plus more (New River Studios)
18th July Doldrey, Harrowed plus more (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)
18th July Powerplant plus support (Moth Club / UK Tour)
19th July Diploid, Casing plus more (New River Studios / UK Tour)
20th July Iron Deficiency, Sentient plus more (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)
21st July Jotnarr, Wreathe, Cady (Bird’s Nest)
22nd July Kohti Tuhoa, T.S. Warspite, Antagonizm plus more (New River Studios)
24th July Faim, No Man, Dying For It plus more (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)
26th July Current Affairs plus support (The Lexington / UK Tour)
4th August Gag, Plastics, TS Warspite, Unjust plus more (New Cross Inn)
5th August Knuckledust, Nine Bar, Fifty Caliber plus more (New Cross Inn)
8th August Sacred Reich plus support (The Underworld)
14th August Chat Pile, Petbrick, Dawn Ray’d (The Dome)
18th August Cloud Rat, Bad Breeding, Golpe (Studio 9294)
9th September Big Brave, Dawn Ray’d, Ragana, Jessica Moss (Bush Hall)
15th September Cinder Well plus support (Moth Club)
Coming Soon
Consolation ‘Repulsive Reflections’ 7-inch (Crew Cuts)
ICD10 ‘Faith In Institutions’ 12-inch LP (Sorry State)
Isolant ‘Oblivion’ 12-inch (Social Napalm)
Savageheads ‘Service to Your Country’ 12-inch (Social Napalm)