GLORIOUS TIMES (REVISED & EXTENDED EDITION) IS NOW TOTALLY SOLD OUT. WE HAVE NO MORE COPIES.

LEARN MORE ABOUT GLORIOUS TIMES BOOK HERE

Monday, January 31, 2011

GLORIOUS TIMES PRESENTS: MASTER

GLORIOUS TIMES PROUDLY PRESENTS:

MASTER

at Club Diablo in Buffalo NY

supporting acts:

LIGHTNING SWORDS OF DEATH
STRONG INTENTION
&
SEPLOPHILE

Tickets can be purchased from Glorious Times directly by writing to glorioustimesdeathbook@gmail.com

OR

By contacting SEPLOPHILE 

CANADIAN FREINDS TAKE NOTE!

There will be NO appearance of MASTER at all in Canada on this tour, your only opportunity will be to come on down to Buffalo for the show.

Tickets can be purchased in Hamilton, Ontario by contacting Dr. Disc

 
 
DON'T miss the experience of seeing one of THE pioneers of extreme metal - get your tickets now!
***UPDATE MARCH 3, FROM PAUL SPECKMANN VIA PESTWEBZINE:
"We arrived Tuesday morning in Holland and after intense questioning we proceeded to the eye and body scan machine. Along with the other passengers we proceeded to the plane. We arrived in Detroit and went to passport control. I waited for about two hours for any word on the guys. The police came to explain that the visa waiver program didn't apply to musicians. So they sent me to customs and proceeded to tear apart everything and sent me on my way. I waited for six hours to get on another airplane and return to Europe. Thankfully the lady at the Delta checkout counter was very helpful and confirmed that the guys would be on the next plane in the evening and I could return with them. The guys were escorted to the plane by four police officers and returned their passports when we arrived in Amsterdam. Since when are musicians and terrorists in the same category? Again I apologize to all the bands, organizers and fans of course.
I guess the CD cover of the Human Machine CD has become a reality!"
 
http://www.facebook.com/notes/paul-speckmann/expulsion-from-the-usa/129751643763764


Sunday, January 30, 2011

RESPECTING OUR DARK PAST

The demo. Something foreign to most younger people, especially in this form. (photo - Alan Moses)

SWAMP

NYARLATHOTEP(XAR.KAR.)
POUTETSI 10
45532 IOANNINA
GREECE




Too many times to keep a count of we've seen feeble attempts to be "retro" or some other less than salutatory action, meant in whatever way to be akin to the ways of old. What is being peddled as innovative is usually a sad watering down of an approach which lacks the viciousness of the original purveyors, or buys directly into a style that has been reconstituted into a somehow marketable form, some sort of musical soilent green.

The once glorious sounds and visionary assaults have become the cheap and tacky, two-bit nickel and dime glam poser attire and lacklustre muzak for the next degeneration, where innovation is OUT and plastique is IN (man).


What we used to sometimes call brutal jungle death or metal or whatever (ie: from Brazil) has escaped the clutches of the media merchants, with the exception of the style pioneered by Sepultura at one point in their time line, giving up to the lucrative allure of profit entrenched in the "stale area sound".

The sound and above all the attitude infected entire continents filled with pseudo compassionate 'fans' who'd just been breast-fed the poison milk from the glossy magazines. NOT SO WITH SWAMP!

Left alone for the most part has been the 80's era Brazilian and Greek elements from the demo phases - and while they've served as inspiration to many, the 'sound' and vibe of those bands basically remains underground, and indeed scorned in many cases. Back during the Glorious Times, you could tell just about immediately if a band was from Brazil or Greece, and with only one ear paying attention.


This tape is a time warp. (courtesy Nyarlathotep)

SWAMP, a band so low on the radar to be pretty much underneath it, has taken their respect for the old times literally and manifested that respect into a couple small releases which caused us to raise an eye brow of extreme interest as soon as we caught wind of it. And that wind is putrid, old and has an underlying reek of the old Greek and Brazilian 1980's completely underground, uncommercial, and unapologetic. It was this initial voice which spoke to us from our own collective pasts, even though this band is from a generation after ours!


Swamp, one of the rare images to exist. (Photo courtesy of Nyarlathotep)

With a keen eye on the past, following of all things vinyl album credits, it came to pass that decades after the fact, Nyarlathotep and his cohort Bill from www.myspace.com/deadfans, made contact with GT, and introduced us to the Swamp Family. This action fully illustrating that yet again, the concept of Glorious Times is a practiced one, and not just some nostalgic peek into former glories.

SWAMP out of the darkness. (courtesy Nyarlathotep)

The existence of the Swamp Family being a direct result of the times, in a practical and global sense.

 
Advertising insert which comes with the limited edition CD (scan - Alan Moses)

At the end of June 2010 GT had a chance to speak with Haris (aka Nyarlathotep), during a short window of opportunity that existed during his time in the Greek draft (we're looking forward to your release brother!)

GT: Can we have some details about both the demo tape and the ep?


NYARLATHOTEP: First of all, thanks Alan for your support to Swamp, it is a total pleasure for me. Well, "Praise The Goat"demo tape and "Nuclear Death"ep were recorded in rehershal room of Swamp called "Ypogas" studios. It's place who live 10 years ago.Only the drums are recorded in "proffesional" studio. Also the vocals of "Nuclear Death" were recorded in a cave in the mountains of EPIRUS. "Praise The Goat" was recorded in June of 2006. "Nuclear Death" ep was recorded two years after, but a few labels tell us lies about vynil release of this ep. However in 2010 my brother Thomas of Time Before Time records (Poland) helped us and released the demo and ep on cd.(Thanks a lot for support Thomas.)

GT: How long did these sessions take, to complete each project?

NYARLATHOTEP: No much time, because me and Splatter have the same ideas in style of Swamp songs.Also together we have a same music style and idols!!!and this is very good and easy to vomit a Swamp song!!


Swamp's Splatter with a total legend Mike (courtesy Nyarlathotep)

GT: How old are the songs on each project?

NYARLATHOTEP: The songs are not old. The demo songs were finished in 2005, and for the ep they were finished in 2007.


Image from the cave (courtesy Nyarlathotep)


GT: Doing the vocals inside that cave is a killer concept, can you share some details about that?

NYARLATHOTEP: In the winter of 2007-8 me and some friends took a trip to the mountains of Epirus. I take together a double-tape stereo to try some vocal ideas with true echo of a cave. The sound is exellent like the glorious times of the 80s! I recorded the vocals in double-tape stereo - from the first side of radio play the tape with nuclear death songs and from the other tape side I recorded the vocals up from the music because and two tapes play in same time!!!haha! Sorry for my shitty English!and in the end the vocals is ready!!!so easy!




GT: We need some background on your experiences with Varathron.

NYARLATHOTEP: Thank you a lot for your question. First hail and respect to my bloodbrotherStefan and mighty Varathron. I know this person years ago. We have a great friendship and support. More things keep us together such as: 1) Swamp and Varathron are from the same city IOANNINA (not Athens). BIG problems with members and studios! 2) We support together the underground spirit from this small town of Greece. Stefan have a radio station and supports bands from all the world. Demo bands. Me in the past release a zine called NIGHTLY KINGDOMS. 3) For the end. Never stop the ideology of undergound. Never stop to support the underground. Never support the bastard posers.VARATHRON AND SWAMP TRY TO KEEP THE BLACK FLAME ALIVE IN THIS POSER TOWN. Varathron is the big part of Swamp's music and ideology. Hail to these cult diamonds = Varathron.

FUCK OFF TO POSERS! FUCK OFF TO SHITTY DIRTY PEOPLE! WHO DRESSING THE METAL IDEOLOGY FOR MONEY AND PUSSY! SHIT ON YOUR GRAVES!


Respect. Defend. Create. (courtesy Nyarlathotep)


GT: What was the drive and inspiration to start Swamp in the first place?

NYARLATHOTEP: GREAT QUESTION. Well we started the band under the name POSER HOLOCAUST! and try to play music in occult style like Alastis, Mortuary Drape, Varathron, Necromantia,old Samael,etc and with P.H. try to start a tribute to these bands. But with Swamp try to comeback the old ideology and style of 80s music, because today more and more posers try to destroy the great past AND the great passion. Today people don't care about the underground. They only read the big magazines and check the new releases of DOLLAR bands who BURN CHURCHES IN THE PAST OR MURDERS etc. Don't support Dimmu-Burger and Cradle Of Shit. SUPPORT ONLY THE TRUE!BANDS!ZINES!AND DISTROS. HAIL TO IMPIETY, SOULSKINNER, BLACK GRAIL, VARATHRON, GOATVOMIT, NECROS CHRISTOS, ARCHGOAT, HEPTAMERON, COMMUNION, BESTIAL RAIDS. FOR THE END SWAMP MUSIC IS ONLY FOR TRUE MORBID HANDS!SUPPORT THE UNDERGROUND!FUCK THE BIG MAGAZINES!FUCK THE IDIOTS! THE MUSIC LIVES IN PAPER ZINES,DEMO TAPES,AND LETTERS!!! KEEP THE UNDERGROUND CLEAR AND ALIVE!!!!


Small package, BIG homage!

GT: The importance of the old scene, Greece and Brazil in particular, on YOU and the Swamp phenomena - we need some comments from you on that. Why don't people get it?, they want top production and haven't even understood Swamp saluting the old days with making music that is very much like the old times without being trendy or souless music, and it's still Swamp!

NYARLATHOTEP: GREECE-BRAZIL! TWO COUNTRIES WITH GREAT HISTORICAL BANDS!!! BANDS WHO TODAY SELL THE MUSIC FOR MONEY AND PUSSY! IS SO SAD TODAY PEOPLE DON'T LISTEN THE GLORIOUS PAST BANDS OF BRAZIL! AND GREECE! HOW MANY PEOPLE KNOWS SADISTIC NOISE OR AMMEN CORNER? ANYWAY...I know Swamp "Nuclear Death" cd take a big fuck for modern people who wait only to realease the new album of Nevermore, Opeth, Darkthrone. I don't care. That people forget the first day who listen the first Destruction/Sodom/Iron Angel works or Bulldozer!!! We live in 2010 and the stadards of production are too high!! BUT I DONT CARE AND FUCK OFF ABOUT THIS!! LOOK THE PRODUCTION AND DON'T LOOK THE FEELING!!!! ALSO MAGAZINES DON'T LIKE THE SWAMP IDEOLOGY BUT FROM THE OTHER SIDE THE SAME MAGAZINES SUPPORT RETRO THRASH BANDS OF 2000! HAHA! FUCK THE CLEAN PRODUCTION & FUCK THE MODERN! GIVE A SHIT TO THIS! EXTREME MUSIC DON'T NEED A GREAT PRODUCTION OR VIDEO CLIPS. EXTREME MUSIC NEED PASSION! AND SUPPORT!!! BACK TO THE ROOTS!!!! WAKE UP FROM THE DEAD SLEEP!!!!


Get this flashback NOW, if there's even time to!


GT: Any final words or stories from the Swamp camp you want to share pal?

NYARLATHOTEP: First thank you a lot for this interview Alan! Thanks to you who with Brian release this epic book! Thanks who support underground all these years. Thanks for all!! Sorry, my English is not good to tell these stories! Hahahaha BUT I send to you personally! For the end - DEATH TO FALSE METAL! R.I.P. DIO. Hail Sadistic Noise! Brian - Death Courier RULES! Hails to Dagon! With total pleasure Haris "NYARLATHOTEP"


Ultra-limited SWAMP shirts available from STORM DISTRO




THANKS TO ROBSON FROM STORM DISTRO FOR TAKING THESE IMAGES FOR US.








Thursday, January 27, 2011

REMEMBERING NONOS

Original Mutilator sticker (scan - Alan Moses)

GLORIOUS TIMES is proud to be able to re-connect with a long-time old friend who has done much to champion the extreme music scene, and stood firm for decades flying the flag for the French Connection, which at one time was made up of few but extremely dedicated individuals.

If you have any strands linking you to the beginning - you will rejoice with us in REMEMBERING NONOS!

Michel in Japan (courtesy Michel Dumas)

It's been a long dam time since we had contact (Alan and Michel). I dare say it's been 21 years by now, we were just teenagers back when we used to write to each other concerning Mutilator, and then Mutilated. The 'Psychodeath Lunatics' demo is now universally credited, all these years later, as one of the classic underground demo tapes. Do you still hold that same conviction that the material has stood the test of time?

MICHEL -Well, actually I truly have a great memories from that era but I also do avoid listening to this! The songs were good but our playing back then was so un-tight! And at this time, we exactly knew it lacked of professionalism and that we still had to improve our skills, but the purpose was to play Death Metal, wasn't it? That's also why we didn't want to record any album immediately. In order to leave ourselves time to grow up, musically. So I'd say those tracks are now to me more like a testimony from the past rather than a "true" musical masterpiece.

The legendary post-Mutilator demo (photo - Alan Moses)

You may not agree with this statement, that in general, the Mutilated material bore at least a little inspiration from the earliest days of Florida's Massacre. In the course of the decades to pass, which, if any, of the bands surviving those early years continued to play a part in your musical development and direction?

MICHEL - Maybe there was an influence from Massacre, as we were big fans of them, I don't know.. Any of the bands we'd listen back then may have had a influence anyway, I guess. I remember also Pentagram, Morbid Angel, Haunting The Chapel/Hell Awaits' era Slayer, Repulsion, and many more being part of our inspiration. As for nowadays.. hmm.. I have got rid of any direct influences, I do write songs in a way that I believe is more personal than before, just looking inside of my inner self and letting things flow out through my instrument. I think music really looks like handwriting: once you've learn how to make it and got years of practice behind, you can develop your own manner to draw letters. Same with music. That's why there are so many different ways to play the same song according to who's doing it.


After Mutilated, can you give a time line as to what you've been up to in music since? I am sure there is a lot to tell?


MICHEL - Just after the Mutilated days, I founded Abyssals who recorded a demo a few months later, then I kicked almost everybody out of the band and got a new line-up together but it was like I was the only one truly involved in this project, so after something like one year and a half we split up. Then, began a weird period of my life, on the personal side of things, and although I gave a hand to several bands here and there, I almost did nothing really concrete. But I was still keeping on practicing guitar on my own. After a few months I meet Vincent who I knew for some couples of years from the time his band and Mutilated were sharing the same rehearsal room, and he was on the process of searching musicians in order to play a one and only show with his one-man project band Akhenaton. He asked me if I could help him with this and we started to rehearse, but shortly after the idea aborted due to various issues, and I started progressively to replace the guitarist of his other band Winds Of Sirius, with who I recorded an album as a session member. Right after this I told Vince I would not keep on with the band, as I wasn't satisfied with the music and the line-up. Then, he decided to split up and we formed The Seven Gates, my current gang, and after a mini-cd and one full length album, we are still writing the suite of the history. That's it!

Advertisement for the then forthcoming debut (anyone got a copy of this DVD?)

Did you ever get married during those years Michel and if so, how has life been for you?


MICHEL - Yes Alan, I just got married last year and this is absolutely great! Wearing a necktie was a nice experience too! Haha!


Which, if any, of those early bands we hold dear still remain an influence - to any degree, large or small?


MICHEL - Yes, Black Sabbath's Tony Iommi is one of my all-times fave guitarists and was in my opinion the first to play solos the Death Metal's way. Frenzy, chaotic, yet fully mastered. But once again, I don't feel any direct influence from any band by now. Honestly said.


Was any demo officially circulated for The Seven Gates, or was it right into the studio after material was developed?


MICHEL - Yes, we released a mixed rehearsal for the purpose of getting a contract with a label, but although some peoples own it, we didn't spread it as a public demo.


Are your attitudes to recording and getting what you envisage musically still basically the same as when we were kids or are you a lot more strict and tenacious to squeeze out just exactly what you want the recordings to be like?


MICHEL - Well, yes I tend to stick to what I want a track to sound like, but I'm much more open to suggestions from any competent person. It's cool to try things out that I wouldn't have thought by myself, and if it makes it sounds better, fine! But if I don't feel any improvement, I turn it down radically. That's why we have so much arguments with Vincent, because he's a character with a strong personality and we do not agree all the time as to how a song or a riff should be supposed to sound like. But well, in the end we always find agreements we both are pleased with, so this is the main thing.

THE SEVEN GATES (with thanks courtesy of photographer)


The response to T7G has been like what? Do people realize the truly historical connection between the band and the earliest of times for extreme music? Not just from the French contingent, but as a top running musician from the old era on a global scale.

MICHEL - Not at all! Haha! Many people listening to my current band tend to say we are ripping off old-school Death Metal, which is really kinky! I mean.. Shit! We're not playing "old-skull" Death Metal, we ARE old chaps now and still not playing your trendy emo-deathcore shit in order to make one's fifteen years old girlfriend finding we're the hot band to be into just to be cool. On the other hand, the good thing is most of nowadays greenhorns do find it great, regardless on if it's old-school or not. Overall, the response was pretty good. We gained a strong reputation here, and are struggling to spread it worldwide, which is a helluva hard job.


Michel Dumas (courtesy Michel Dumas)


As a fellow "old-timer" (hehe) - and not having had communications for a long time - can you share the most positive and also the most negative things you've seen about 'the scene' on a world level, but also on a personal level. IE: the biggest enjoyment you've gotten and the biggest disappointments. You can apply this to the world scene and then to your personal experience as a musician.


MICHEL - Good question.. I'd say the negative things would be the deviance of the Death Metal movement's codes from people unaware of its essence who transvestite them into mere gimmicks because they found out it makes them look cool, or supposedly. This goes from clothes to music. I can not consider classic arpeggios played at 240 bpm as Death Metal just because it is fast, this is an empty shell. Fast, technical, whatever.. but empty.
 Also, on the personal side, playing with musicians whose mouths are full of promises first and who appear then to lack of motivation after a few months.. It's something I ended up finding utterly unbearable!

On the world scene level, the coming of Internet in our lives was both a good and a not-so-good thing: downloading spoils small bands from their money, but helps them getting spread, it also allowed more efficiency to get in touch with people much faster to book live shows, interviews (- ....no comment about my delay, Alan! haha! -), etc.. but it melts the good and the bad, every band get exposure, have their own site, etc.. while crappy outfit were more rapidly cast to oblivion in the hand-written mails' days, good and bad reputation were made quicker.

 And the nice one for the end, on the positive side: playing in front of large audiences is such a blast! I do enjoy performing live really a lot! Also I do so much love our work with The Seven Gates, the excitement is way above what it used to be with any of my previous bands! Writing a new song, watching it grow.. Tastes like fatherhood! Haha!



Have your toured much over the years Michel?


MICHEL - Actually, not as much as I'd have wanted, mainly because of recurrent line-up issues, but things should go better now.

 The infamously canceled Canadian 2010 Tour - dates seen here left many people devastated to miss legend.


A LOT of people in Canada were very very disappointed that the whole Canadian 2010 tour was canceled. It seems like the tour was just unorganized from the start (?). Do you care to reveal anything at all about that situation?

 MICHEL - Yes, we were really pissed off too. Actually, we were supposed to play 19 shows and among this, 3 of this venues were bars/clubs. And we needed work permits for those only 3 dates, and because of this they didn't allow us to enter the country, despite we proposed to simply cancel them. I heard the same thing happened to Monstrosity a few months ago. Canadian customs seem to be familiar with this fucked up way of doing. I was the only one of the band to then stay in New York City for one month, and got a job there, met new friends, hanged out with them at shows, did some evil parties and stuff.. In the end, on the personal side of things, it was rather funny but I regret not having had the opportunity to play in front of our Canadian fans. But this is only postponed, I can tell you!



What sort of stuff did you get up to since you stayed behind for an extra month in NY? Where did you stay and sight see and so on?


MICHEL - Well, once there we got in touch with the french embassy in NY and the girl we spoke to sent us to a friend of her who runs a hotel in Harlem. After a few days, the other guys decided to fly back to homeland, but I couldn't resign myself to leave and I decided to stay, despite I didn't know how to pay for a flat, food, etc.. As some members of my family live now in Pennsylvania, I first intended to get in touch and join them there, but couldn't reach them. So the hotel's owner offered me to work for her what I gladly accepted, and then I started exploring NYC on my spare time, because it's a city I've been loving since I first came here 12 years ago. Randomly walk and discover towns by myself is something I so much enjoy, NYC and Tokyo were my best experiences, as far as this feeling goes.

 In NY after news the Candian Tour was bust


For that matter - in keeping with the concept of Glorious Times - would you share a special experience or anecdote about your times in the glory days - anything at all is OK to speak about.


MICHEL - Oh well, there are plenty! But there was this guy from Japan who was craving for Mutilated pictures, and I told him since we didn't own any camera I couldn't send him new pictures of the band. And then a few weeks later, I receive his camera he has just sent me through mail in order for me to take Mutilated pictures! Haha! I believe this sums up the whole Death Metal spirit! "When there's a will, there's a way".. I think you guys say something like that in English.

 hehehe Nonos in Japan



What do you foresee as the current agenda for the band once you return to France?


MICHEL - We just got rid of our drummer and got another one into the band, so we're now currently rehearsing the old material with him and writing some new songs. And we shall be headlining a 2 days festival in Switzerland on the 15th of January. Then, we'll keep on working on an Eastern Europe tour, which should hopefully be set up by April/May 2011.

 Michel live in T7G (thanks to photographer)


You haven't seen Glorious Times (the book) - I don't think? But what do you think about the concept? How much have you heard about it from others and what is your impression of undertaking a book of the sort we have done (and are trying to get reprinted)? (editors note: by now of course the book was reprinted, in an extended and revised format)


MICHEL - Not yet, which is a shame, but I should get a copy through a friend quite soon. The idea is just brilliant! Death Metal has been a huge part of my life for more than a quarter of century now, and that's great to see someone releases a book on that matter! Moreover, we know each other since something like 1987 and you're definitely not a new-comer, so I know that you know what you're writing about. This is nothing less than a history book, and no history should remain ignored. Congratulations for your work and dedication to the scene, Alan!

FOLLOW THESE OMENS OF DARK FATE!

Links to The Seven Gates

FACEBOOK

MYSPACE 

REVERB NATION
(This is the label that released the debut T7G album)

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

COME ON DOWN TO THE FUNERAL HOME!....

GLORIOUS TIMES presents

Black Christmas in Buffalo, a night of extreme metal at the Funeral Home

UPDATE: Thanks to everyone who showed up, the bands that took part and the lads in Resist Control who make the Funeral Home available for all this!

Enjoy some video samples of the night's bands!! Thanks to the videographer for taking some killer footage. 








Friday, November 5, 2010

PRE-ORDER GLORIOUS TIMES REVISED & EXTENDED EDITION NOW!

DUE OUT MID NOVEMBER 2010!



After MUCH tenuous effort, we are extremely proud to announce that our revised and extended edition of 'Glorious Times' is currently finished, and now in the hands of our new printer.

Bigger and better than before! 160 pages of massively rare and mostly unseen photographs, tied together with sentiment and reflections from the very people who lived the era - the GLORIOUS TIMES.

Bands featured: Acheron, Autopsy, Baphomet, Brutality, Cannibal Corpse, Cryptic Slaughter, Dark Angel, Death, Deceased, Deicide, Derketa, Disharmonic Orchestra, Exmortis, Groovy Aardvark, Hellwitch, Hideous Mangleus, Immolation, Impetigo, Incantation, Incubus, Insanity, Lethal Aggression, Malevolent Creation, Massacre, Massappeal, Master, Morbid Angel, Napalm Death, Nocturnus, Nokturnel, Nuclear Death, Overthrow, Paineater, Possessed, Prime Evil, Revenant, Righteous Pigs, Ripping Corpse, Sacrifice, Slaughter, Soothsayer, Terrorain, Tirant Sin, Unseen Terror, Vomit, Wehrmacht and Where's The Pope?

Every band section is different, some in a small way, many in MAJOR WAYS!

You won't want to miss this!

*USA ONLY: PREORDER AVAILABLE NOW!


Price per copy is $30 plus $3 shipping and handling.
Payment can be made by PayPal to glorioustimesdeathbook@gmail.com

Get in touch FIRST if making orders of more than 1 copy.

DISTROS: get in touch with us about how many you want, and we'll give you the pricing details.

*OUTSIDE OF USA : Copies will not be available until we get the books back and can quote postage rates based on world region. For overseas orders, we don't know postage yet, but we do know that the more copies you buy the cheaper postage is per book, so if your friends are interested you should all put your orders together to be shipped to one address, you'll save a bunch. ex. for the 1st printing to ship one book overseas it cost $17.64 (book weighed 1.85 #), but to ship 8 books the cost was @ $60 (just under $8 a book).

DISTROS OUTSIDE OF USA: get in touch with us!






Friday, September 10, 2010

BOOKS OF ARMAGEDDON - PART TWO



 We continue the glory, as a testament to the times that were bonded by the selfless exploits of the individuals that made up the zine contingent. We'd originally intended to run a megaton blog, but the sheer volume of material that has come to hand by our friends and colleagues has been mind blowing, so we have decided to run this as an ongoing series as something a little different which adds to the flavour of the Glorious Times.

Zine specific artwork was another feature of the talented Bob Plante from Disturbed zine. This piece from 1987 created for Ed Farshtey's  The Book of Armageddon zine . (courtesy - Bob Plante)

There's no schedule to when we'll feature flashbacks from some of the men (and hopefully the women too) who took to propagandizing the pioneers of extreme music, it'll happen when it happens. For now, please enjoy the ultra rare images and stories, and gain yet more insight into what is was to be on the front line of the glory.

ED FARSHTEY from The Book of Armageddon zine:

 
Issue #1 of The Book of Armageddon. (courtesy - Ed Farshtey)


I first started The Book of Armageddon back in the summer of 1985 with my good friend Mark Sokoll. We both had the same musical interests and we also wanted to be more involved in the underground.Buying records and going to shows was great, but there was more of a calling to actually become involved in this growing scene.

At that time the only way to learn about new bands was through reading the few true metal magazines like Metal Forces, Kerrang, Aardschok, Metal Hammer, World Metal Report and then there were the independent fanzines that would turn up in your local record store that really exposed the underground to the world. Some of the originators were Slayer, D.O.D., Metal Warriors, Total Thrash, Blackthorn, and of course Kick Ass Monthly. So me and Mark decided to put our ideas together and The Book of Armageddon was born.


 The logo used for The Book of Armageddon #5. (courtesy Ed Farshtey)

The name was stolen from Venom’s ‘At War with Satan’ record, since it seemed the perfect name for a fanzine. The first issue came out late spring 1986. We had both been contacting some of out favorite bands and keeping correspondence with them, so we did some interviews, through the mail of course. That’s right, back then if we wanted to interview Tom Warrior we would send him questions in the mail and wait a month or 2 or sometimes longer to get them back.

Yeah! Even featuring Papsmear! The 3rd issue of The Book of Armageddon. (courtesy - Ed Farshtey)

After the first issue me and Mark didn’t see other as often, and as he was getting involved in the growing hardcore scene, I was still rooted in the underground so he only contributed a couple items to future issues and I continued on myself. I did only 4 issues, averaged 1 a year. Each issue got bigger and bigger and I managed to get the zine around the world and I am happy to say that each issue was very well received and respected in the underground. Back when I started the zine it was simply xeroxed at a local copy store. So it didn’t cost that much really.

 Ed 2010 with GT!

The first 2 issues were straight xerox jobs and I probably made half the copies at my dad’s office on the weekends. I would make an initial 200 or so up at the copy store and then make more as the demand increased. The later issues were more expensive since I started having the pictures scanned first and actually had them printed instead of just copied. The most expensive aspect of producing the zine was of course shipping costs. But that came with the territory.

The content was all about the underground. Each issue would feature the top thrash and early death metal bands from around the world as well as exposing all sorts of up and coming bands. The first issue had interviews with Bathory, Celtic Frost, Death, Possessed and of course Dark Angel. They were always a must. I did extensive interviews with Gene Hoglan in every issue. They were the greatest thrash band ever, so why not.


Dark Angel's Gene Hoglan, at the Dark Angel Altar, which was Ed's room! (photo - courtesy Ed Farshtey)

I would review countless new albums and demos that I got, whether I bought them, traded for them or they were sent as promos. I tried to be honest and I ripped into a lot of releases and praised anything I really liked. I used to take a lot of pictures back then so I always had photos for the zine.

 Issue #2 had interviews with Kreator, Slayer, Darkness, Razor, Cryptic Slaughter and both Death and Dark Angel again. Issue #3 had Dark Angel, Voivod, Deathrow, Necrodeath, Aggression, Napalm Death, Thanatos, and more. My final issue came out in 1990, it was my 4th issue and it was certainly my biggest and best yet, with interviews with Voivod, Prime Evil, Sepultura, Armoros, Num Skull, Gargoyle, Dark Angel of course, and more, plus countless album, demo, and show reviews. It was issue #4 that really took off. By that time I had firmly embedded myself deep in the underground and had made countless contacts so I ran through I believe 1000 copies.

Issue #4 of The Book of Armageddon. The issue that blew it all wide open. (courtesy - Ed Farshtey)

I was working on issue #5 when I started working at Roadrunner Records and I just didn’t have the time to get it completed. It was gonna be a monster issue with 18 interviews done including Autopsy, Deceased, Prime Evil, Malevolent Creation, Destruction, Immolation, O.L.D., Death, Ripping Corpse, Mutilated, Exmortis and more. I even had a massive 11 page interview with Dark Angel. I had done plenty of interviews and tons of reviews but it just started getting dated and I didn’t have the time to keep updating it, so I decided to put the zine to rest.

Because I would review anything that I really liked, I would often review demos I received through tape trading. Since I had been involved with trading since 1984, I was always getting new tapes with new demos.Reviewing these random demos led to many of my most cherished friendships from the time. The most important was with the band Prime Evil. I had reviewed their debut demo in issue #3 cause I loved it and after my zine came out, bassist Mary Ciullo wrote me and I instantly built a strong relationship with the whole band that lasted for years, and is still evident today. I ended up releasing their only 7” on my label Rage Records and wrote the liner notes for their cd that King Fowley put out.


Summer 1989 in DC at a Prime Evil gig. Left to Right: Beans from Curious Goods 'zine (holding The Book of Armageddon zine), Prime Evil's roadie, Todd from Prime Evil, Unknown, Gary from Prime Evil,  Jeff Vanderrklute  from Metal Meltdown zine, Ed Farshtey and Andy from Prime Evil. (photo - courtesy Ed Farshtey)

Mary even attended my wedding. Prime Evil I loved, a band that I openly hated back then was Nun Slaughter. I would rag on their early recordings, and because of my honesty, me and Don became good friends, and still are today. Thankfully as they improved I grew to really like them, but I remember sitting in my car back at a Morbid Angel, Acheron, Revenant show in DC listening to the newest Nun Slaughter and telling him I didn’t like it and him respecting that. It’s this honest relationship we all had that kept us friends and feeding off each others opinions and criticisms.

Mark Odechuck & Bob White (Paineater) with Rob Sexton - whom made up part of the Florida based band TORSO. Seen here in 1989 with copies of Bryan Daniel's Invincible Force 'zine. (photo - Bryan Daniel)

The relationships that formed back then are still the strongest of any I’ve ever had and have transcended time and distance. We were all a part of something new and for the first time in most of our lives, we really felt like this is where we belonged. There were a bunch of us around the world that wanted to spread the music through our writings. We weren’t looking for fame or riches, just to help support the scene. That was the time of the fanzines.


 Ultimatum zine editor Kim August (far right) with Chuck Schuldiner (in back) and HenryVeggian (far left). Outside the infamous Streets, New Rochelle, NY 1988 (photo - courtesy Henry Veggian)

Some of my early counterparts included Bloodshed, Cerebral Holocaust, Chainletter, Chainsaw Abortions, Chapel of Ghouls, Codcore, Curious Goods, Death Vomit, Decapitated, Decibels Storm, Disposable Underground, Emanzipation, Eternal Darkness, F.E.T.U., Final Holocaust, Infernal Bleeding, Invincible Force, Metal Meltdown, Metal Core, Metal Curse, Metal Frontline, Metallian, Metallic Butcher, Morbid, Mortician, No Glam Fags, Out of the Underground, Peardrop, Ripping Headaches, Screams from the Gutter, Sick Thrash, Skull Session, Ultimatum, and many more. We all supported one another by printing and circulating each others ads and there was no competition between us. It was all about promoting the music and carving a little niche for ourselves in the underground.


 


Long before the internet or cell phones or even faxes we had to put a lot of effort into keeping up with our correspondence and finding out about the newest bands, no matter what country they came from. And fanzines were the best way to get the info to the people. We were all drawn into the underground, helped form it, and helped it grow into the monster it became The bands created the music we loved and it was up to the fanzines to help promote them and spread their name around the world.

 Morrisound Studios, Tampa Florida 1990 during the Cannibal Corpse 'Eaten Back To Life' sessions - Left to Right: Bryan Daniel (Invincible Force 'zine), Alan Moses (Buttface 'zine) and Bruce Davis (Ripping Headaches 'zine). (photo - Francis Howard from Incubus)

CHRIS FORBES from METAL CORE:


One of the classic zine covers, in this case, Metal Core #3 (courtesy - Chris Forbes)


Way back in early 1986 I was going to some underground shows in Phila, PA seeing bands like Blacktask and Anvil Bitch at the Empire Rock Club and I started buying and then becoming friends with Scott Helig, who was doing a zine called Total Thrash. At one point he asked and I did a few interviews and a few reviews for his zine and at one point I was giving him so much material that he suggested that I start my own zine. I took that up as some sort of challenge and because I was buying demos, zines, etc I decided what the heck I can do this and decided to start my own. I ended up printing up 150 issues of my 1st issue, and I actually printed a couple extra copies, which I still have.

 Modern day: Chris Forbes with John Verica (Decaying Visions Video 'zine)

 Most of the music I covered, at least in the old days back in the 80's was mostly thrash and early death metal.My first issue came out in December of 1986. My first couple issues I interviewed such bands as Savage Thrust, Savage Death, Black Task, Dark Angel, Possessed, Machine Dog, Anvil Bitch, Faith or Fear, At War, etc. The early issues were pretty much basic stuff like interviews, demo and album (remember no such thing as CD's yet) reviews, zine ads, etc. I did 30 issues before, in 2001, I folded the print version as it was hard getting labels to commit to ads and with the internet becoming a huge thing, print zines at this time were few and far between.


 Metal Core #5, showing the variety of bands covered, and also the glowing fire of artist Bob Plante from Disturbed 'zine, whose work was being utilized around the zine world from Australia to Norway to here at home on US soil. (courtesy - Chris Forbes)

After issue 24, I made the zine free, so from issue # 25 till # 30 the zine was free and it was on newsprint and I was printing and getting rid of 10,000 copies. So I had to at least make a certain amount of money from ads and stuff to keep printing 10,000 copies. Actually when I went to newsprint and started giving the zine away, I easily got rid of 10,000 copies. I would drop off over a 1000 at a store in NJ called Vintage Vinyl and also get rid of a bunch at shows and at the Milwaukee and NJ Deathfest's in the late 80's and in 2000 and 2001. All the issues are long gone, but I think I have like 3 extra copies of issue 30 lying around. The zine has never ended and I just do it on line now.

The first issue of Metal Core which was made available free of charge, #25! (courtesy - Chris Forbes)

I explained that above and I was having a problem with coming up with a name and in early 1986 SOD (Stormtroopers of Death) and Overkill did a short 7 date tour that they dubbed the "Metal Core" tour so I thought that would be a cool name for a zine and so I stole the name from that tour he he.

Chris and Maria Abril at NJ Metalfest 2001 (courtesy - Chris Forbes)

Zines were one of the few ways you could discover new bands! There was no internet, no My Space and no big metal mags that were covering this stuff. I mean you had Kerrang and a bit later on Metal Forces, but zines were the way you could read interviews with unsigned bands and read reviews of unsigned bands from all over the world. The best mag I ever read was the sadly missed Kick Ass Monthly. Bob the editor of the mag (rip) was simply the best. I worshipped that mag. When I first started doing the zine I would go up to Rock N Roll Heaven in Old Bridge, NJ and buy every zine I could and then I would go and write (that's right...WRITE) and bands that had demos reviewed and would start requesting them to send me a demo to review.


Chris and Jenn Matthews from Metal Mafia zine at Milwaukee Metalfest 1998. (courtesy - Chris Forbes)

Another cool thing was flooding each letter I wrote with flyers I got from various bands and other zines. Old timers will remember those days as I would write letter after letter and stuff as many flyers as I could fit in a letter and back in the day I also made tons of flyers for my zine. Another thing I did was I was and still am very honest in my reviews. if I love you I will praise you, but if I hate you, I will trash you. I do not kiss ass....


Chris Forbes (Metal Core), Tom Wren (Metal Nightmare) and Chris from Bloodstorm. Milwaukee Metalfest 1998. (courtesy - Chris Forbes)

I'll never forget the first package I got and that was from Combat Records and they sent me Possessed and Dark Angel to review. It was great going to Lamour's in Brooklyn back in the day and seeing Slayer, Overkill, Carnivore, Savage Thrust, Biohazard, and many others. All the great shows I saw at City Garden's in Trenton and at the Slayer "Reign in Blood" tour I dove off the stage during "Chemical Warfare" and everybody moved and I hit the floor and almost didn't get up.


 Full of personal highlights, Metal Core #10 still ranks high on Chris' list. (courtesy - Chris Forbes)

Interviewing Metallica for issue # 10. Having Phil Demmel from Violence telling me I was the first zine to review their demo for issue # 2. Having Combat Records invite me backstage when they were doing the Ultimate Revenge 2 taping at the Troc in Phila. All those times after shows at Lamour's, G Wilkers, City Gardens, The Empire Rock Club, Bonnie's and other clubs trying to get people to buy my zine. Seeing 10,000 copies of issue 25 when I went to newsprint and wondering how in the hell I am going to get rid of all those copies. Going to those old Milwaukee Metalfest Shows and meeting people that I had only known from writing letters back and forth. Another thing is I was getting so much mail at one point so I got a Po Box and to this day I still get a thrill going and opening up my box and seeing a cd in there that some band or label sent to me to review.


METAL CORE IS STILL GOING STRONG 
 Check out one of the longest running underground zine legends:

METAL CORE FANZINE ONLINE

METAL CORE FANZINE OFFICIAL MYSPACE

METAL CORE FANZINE ON FACEBOOK


Seems like such a strange thing to the new breed, but this cover sums up the glory, borderless scenes where anything could happen musically - ushering in levels of creativity alien to today's plastic mainstream of cookie cutter, rehashed music resting on the shoulders of the cliques. Metal Core #2, our scene in a single drawing! (courtesy - Chris Forbes)