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STEROID- Jism Harvester
( Kev& Tony Byker )
Listen
Low
Slung Autopsy
Spit
Jesu
Real
Time Evolution
True
Force
Protocolic
Countdown
Brains
For Higher
Ram
The User
**********************************************************************
Review
taken from Amazon by Kieran
!!!
GBOA ALERT !!!, July 28, 2005
Anyone who knows me, knows that I'm obsessed with the long-defunct grebo
outfit GAYE BYKERS ON ACID. I still listen to their music quite regularily,
even almost 20 years (!) after first hearing their mutated, dirty sounds.
One of the things that has kept them 'vital' to me is that, both during
and after the group's existence, a number of side-projects, alter-egos
and elusive single-releases slipped through the cracks (to a generally
disinterested audience, sadly). The thrill of the hunt, the slow determined
process of eventually finding each and every GBOA-related release... it
spurs me on, and keeps both the music-lover and the rabid-collector in
me happy.
STEROID
appears to be a project by some (at least one, maybe three?) ex-Bykers
in the early 90's. Not much info is provided on the CD-artwork, nor is
much info available on the internet as of yet.
The music on "JISM HARVESTER" is quite Byker-like, with the
hard overamp'd guitars, the vocal movie-samples, and the slightly dubby
asthetic.
Where it deviates from the GBOA-sound is in the song structure. A few
songs have vocals, but only 2 have vocals which are clear-enough to make-out
the words (or most of the words). And while the songs are long (the average
track length is about 7-minutes, with at least one track besting 10 miniutes!),
they often lack any sort of melody or standard set-up. Rather, they seem
to have found sounds that they liked, and structured them to repeat, overflow,
and repeat again with the occasional fill and sound-sample.
While that may sound like a damning statement, in fact it is far from
it. I find that the structure and quality of the sounds works, and works
very very well. It's a hard, abrasive album, the hard distorted beats
remind me of Skinny Puppy (very high praise indeed!), while the riffing
guitars and mutated vocals bring to mind industrial legends like Ministry.
And while the songs may seem to meander and wander aimlessly, it still
ends-up working brilliantly! In fact, I found myself floating in a bit
of a daze at times from the repeated beats and fuzzy aural highjinx.
A release
definately for Bykers fans (in fact, track #4 "True Force" is
like a companion piece to the PERNICIOUS NONSENSE track "Radiation",
including much of the same rhythm, guitar, and "Taxi Driver"
samples!!). Fans of the GBOA alter-egos Purple Fluid Exchange will find
much to love on this release, as it really is very similar to PERNICIOUS
NONSENSE in almost every way.
Highly
recommended, and good on Amazon for keeping this unheralded jem alive
and available.
BUY
THIS CD
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