Showing posts with label Deranged. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deranged. Show all posts

''Dance of Death''



THE TRUMPET SHALL SOUND AND THE DEAD SHALL BE RAISED INCORRUPTIBLE AND WE SHALL BE CHANGED
(Message on reverse of sleeve)

Sleeve - Front

Vinyl - Side A: Repress on Left, Original Press on right - Repress has larger text

Vinyl - Side B: Repress on Left, Original Press on right - Repress has larger text




Sleeve Folded Out - Front

Sleeve Folded Out - Back
Flyer: 
Some copies have a small flyer advertising Deranged Records Releases, the above picture shows 3 examples.


Stats:

General:
Tracks: Dance of Death B/W Zezose
Released: 2004
Label: Deranged Records DER-52 (1st Press) DER-52 RE (Represses)
1st Press Matrix A: DERANGED YOUTH-52-A
1st Press Matrix B: DERANGED YOUTH-52-B
Repress Matrix A: DY#52-A    GOLDEN
Repress Matrix B: DY#52-A    GOLDEN

Pressing Info:
First Press of 1000 Nov 2003
Second Press of 500 Jan 2005
Third Press of 1000 Nov 2005 (same plates as above)
*8 Test Pressings for first press in manilla sleeve/numbered (1)
10 Test Pressings for repress
*Probably actually 7 - see pics at end.

Inserts:
Some (usually 1st press) also have Deranged Records flyer advertising contemporary releases (various designs)
    Variants:
    First Press
    Repress (Slightly different labels and matrix, see above)



    Notes:

    From promotional info:
    The title track features guest vocals by Ben Cook from NO WARNING, and VIOLENT MINDS (2)


    From Epics in Minutes CD notes:
    We wrote this at the same tome as ''Police'' but let it just incubate for a year and a half until Iron Maiden released an album of the same name. We went back to Audiolab and got Ben Cook From No Warning to come in and do back ups at 2am.


    Extract From MRR Interview with David Eliade (2004):
    OK switching gears, what is Dance of Death about?
    Well that song sort of deals with the same shit – its about like the imperialist lifestyle and how its been perfect and reproduced to such a dazzling extent, that people within it are convinced that it is the best way, and that they love it. Its like Stockholm Syndrome, when a captive begins to love and revered the captor. The Harbinger’s spiders laid their eggs inside all of our heads, and convinced us to keep dancing in the muck, because we love it. We love smoking and eating non-food, so we love cancer. We love making money and cheating, so we love crime. We love TV and novels, so we love being stupid. We love war and punishment so we love pain. We love life, so we love death. (3)


    Extract From Scene Point Blank interview (2006):
    It seems like a lot of your lyrics use a classic rhetorical strategy where you talk over an audience's head in hopes that they'll educate themselves. This is fairly uncommon in the broad world of punk, which is usually much more didactic; what's the rationale behind this and what kind of responses have you seen?
    10,000 Marbles: I just write how I'd like lyrics to appear. We don't want to tell anyone what to think, really, I just like my lyrics to rhyme, use interesting imagery and words, and be about interesting topics. I'm not in this to spread any particular worldview. And yeah, when we do have particularly objective topics, they're usually tucked inside a metaphor, so the song is more interesting and you aren't hit upside the head with rhetoric. I had militarism in mind when I wrote "Triumph of Life," and smoking when I did "Dance of Death," but I like being discreet, you know? (4)

    Sleeve Notes:

    Sleeve - Front: 
    From Essay by Evan Blanco: The cover is the Alfred Kubin sketch “Sterbendes Mädchen” [“Dying Girl”] from his Dance of Death series of sketches.14 The sketch shows a girl sitting in a chair with a downward glance as the spectre of death looms over her right shoulder. As death reaches out to clutch the left wrist of the girl, she offers no recourse nor wanting. She is totally complicit with the end of her own life. This relates to the message conveyed by “Dance of Death” in the sense that the individual is complicit with the death of their individuality or ability to self-determine. (5)

    Sleeve - Reverse: 'The Calavera of Don Quixote' by  Jose Posada 

    Jose Posada (1852-1913)

    Posada, Jose Guadalupe - Mexican engraver and illustrator. Born into a peasant family in Aguascalientes, he was an apprentice lithographer at the print shop of Trinidad Pedrozo. His first illustrations were for Pedrozo's radical weekly El Jicote (The Wasp, 1871), but after 11 issues the magazine was closed down by the authorities and Posada was forced to flee with his employer to Leon in Guanajato. Here he taught and published lithographs, and in 1888 was able to set up his own print shop in Mexico City. He began to illustrate Antonio Vanegas Arroyo's broadsheets of sensational news stories (accidents, executions and natural disasters) and urban myths (women giving birth to animals or turning into fireballs). In 1895 he began to etch on zinc, which became his preferred rnediurn. Despite a vast popularity; he died in poverty in Mexico City.

    Posada was a model for the Mexican muralists as a popular artist producing vivid and simple images in a distinctively non-European mode with strong elements of political satire. He is best known for his calaveras, witty images of skeletons performing the rituals and pleasures of everyday life. Often dressed in bourgeois finery, they mock the pretensions and vanity of the living. (6)



    Commodity Fetishism:

    Test Press 5/7 (First Press)
    Note 'Pickering Dot' below spindle hole, indicating these were probably pressed at the Pickering Plant in Canada
    Test Press 7/7 (First Press)

    Test Press (Re-press) 6/10
    Pressed by United, probably following closure of Canadian pressing plant



    (1) Looking For Gold Blog
    (2) Deranged 
    (3) MRR Interview - on Looking For Gold Blog
    (4) Scene point Blank Interview - on Looking For Gold Blog
    (5) 'The Hidden World: The Visual Culture of Fucked Up' Essay by Evan Blaco
    (6) The Bullfinch Guide to Art History

    ''Dangerous Fumes''

    (+ ''Humos Peligrosos'' & ''Fums Perillosos'')

    PUBLISHED BY LOLICON MUSIC INC. UNDER THE PROTECTION OF BILL C-41
    (Note from insert)

    Sleeve - Front: (Deranged First Press)
    Sleeve - Back: (Deranged First Press)

    Insert - Front: 
    All variants have same artwork, but printed on different paper
    Insert - Back:
    There are three variants, one from each label that put out the 7", see image below.

    Insert Variants:
    Dangerous Fumes was pressed by three different record labels; the reverse of each label insert is slightly different. The insert in the centre is the Hate variant, printed on heavier paper and so the artwork from the front side does not show through as it does on the other two.

    Left - Deranged: Matt off-white paper, has lyrics to 'Dangerous Fumes' & 'Teenage Problems.
    Centre -Hate: Glossy paper, lyrics to 'Dangerous Fumes' with Rosy Cross image below.
    Right - LVEUM: On matt paper, layout as Hate Version, but lyrics in Spanish.





    1. North American Pressings (Deranged Records)
    (For Fake / Promo Version, see ‘Two Fakes’)

    Stats:

    General:
    Tracks: Dangerous Fumes B/W Teenage Problems
    Year: 2006
    Label: Deranged Records – DY-82


    Matrix A: 
    • First Press:  DY-82-A GOLDEN  
    • Repress: DY-82-A R-26854 GOLDEN 
    Matrix B:
    • First Press: DY-82-B GOLDEN 
    • Repress: DY-82-B R-26855 GOLDEN 
    Pressing Info:
    Regular sleeve versions: 3500, or maybe two pressings of 3000
    Teenage Problems sleeve: 40(ish)

    Inserts:
    All variants have same insert - see above.

    Variants:
    First Press (Sleeve has Teenage Problems artwork on inside of sleeve - labels have silver text)
    Teenage Problems Sleeve (As above but  reversed, so that Dangerous Fumes artwork is on inside of sleeve - labels have white text)
    Repress Sleeve (No artwork on inside of sleeve, different matrix on vinyl to above)


    Deranged Variants:
    Sleeve - Front
    Left: First press on matt paper - muted colours, off-white text bar at top.
    Right: Repress on glossy paper - bright colours, pure-white text bar at top.
    Sleeve - Back
    Left: First press on matt paper.
    Right: Repress on glossy paper, slightly larger.
    Deranged Records Vinyl (Labels pressed on wrong sides of disks)
    Left: Dangerous Fumes 'B' Side label (on TP side of disk) Second press with white text
    Right: Teenage Problems 'A' Side label (on DF side of disk) First press with silver text
    Teenage Problems Sleeve:
    (Front & Back panels).
    The paper used for the first press is shiny on one side and matt on the other.  Teenage Problems artwork is printed on the shiny front (i.e. correct?) side of the paper and Dangerous Fumes on the matt back side; hence the poorer print quality of the DF artwork on the first press.







    2. European Pressings - English Text (Hate Records)

    Stats:

    General:
    Tracks:
    Dangerous Fumes B/W Fixed Race
    Year: 2006
    Label: Hate Records – Hate 10

    Matrix A: 
    First Press: FLV-205.612A K SST FUCKED UP - Side A 
    Repress: FLV-205.612A K SST FUCKED UP - Side A 3787871-01 A

    Matrix B: 
    First press: FLV-205.612B K SST FUCKED UP - Side B 
    Repress: FLV-205.612B K SST FUCKED UP - Side B 3787871-01 B

    Inserts:
    All variants have same insert - see above.

    Pressing Info: 1000

    Variants:
    First Press – (Sleeve has black ‘text border’ on sleeve, labels have silver text)
    Repress (Sleeve has white ‘text border’ on sleeve - labels have white text - different matrix on vinyl to above)


    Hate Variants:
    Hate Records Sleeves - Front:
    Left: First Press with white title strip (similar to Deranged version, but no logo)
    Right: Second Press with black title strip.
    Hate Records Sleeves - Back:
    Left: First Press with white title strip (similar to Deranged version, but with Hate logo)
    Right: Second Press
    Hate Records Vinyl:
    Left: 'A' Side - 2nd press with white text
    Right: 'B' Side - 1st press with silver text






    3. European Pressings ‘Spanish / Catalan Text’ (LVEUM Records)

    General:
    Tracks: Humos Peligrosos B/W Carrera Amanada
    Year: 2006
    Label: La Vida Es Un Mus (LVEUM) – Mus 018

    Matrix A: FLV-205.612A K SST FUCKED UP - Side A 3787871-01 A (All versions)
    Matrix B: FLV-205.612B K SST FUCKED UP - Side B 3787871-01 B (All versions)

    Inserts:
    All variants have same insert - see above.
    Fums Perillosos also usually comes with a gig flyer

    Pressing Info:
    Fums Perillosos – 30 (of above 500, but with different sleeve, sold at show in Barcelona)

    Variants:
    Humos Peligrosos - Regular sleeve
    Humos Peligrosos - Textured hard-stock sleeve
    Fums Perillosos



    LVEUM Variants:
    LVEUM Sleeves - Front:
    Left: Spanish sleeve - continues with 'black' design of Hate Records 2nd press
    Right: Catalan sleeve
    LVEUM Sleeves - Back:
    Left: Spanish sleeve - continues with 'black' design of Hate Records 2nd press
    Right: Catalan sleeve - stamped with date of Barcelona show and numbered out of 30

    Vinyl: All LVEUM variants have same labels & vinyl
    Left: 'A' side
    Right: 'B' side
    The LVEUM and  Hate second press share the same matrix; they were pressed using the same plates


    Fums Perillosos Gig Flyers
    These were made by the vocalist of Invasion, there were a number of different ones (maybe 8). They were randomly added to Fums Perillosos. Some are pictured below.












    Notes 1 (Dangerous Fumes):

    ''Couple Tracks'' -  Extract From Notes on Inlay / Insert (2009):
    The lyrics contain a bunch of words I don't remember the meaning of, and a cut verse that rhymed the words ''picayune'' and ''parvenu''. Talk about album material.
    (Dangerous Fumes was for a time intended to go on the Hidden World LP)

    Lyrically the song is confusing, dealing with some corrosion of society. There are also allusions to mind control and paints a picture ... "Smell the fumes that we smell and you're smiling / we want the world and the whole world is buying / you can't see straight you thought maybe we lied? / about the shit that we peddle / you're fucking stumped you've got nothing you're dumped / the fumes were too strong we got into your mind."

    Speculation:
    The lyrics also include: ''We should have listened to the birds'' Birds may be a metaphor for souls... Listen to birds and don't buy shit peddled via mind-control fumes. (This is what most Fucked Up songs are about)
     


    Notes 2 (Teenage Problems):

    DA: Like we have this song called "Teenage Problem," which Mike wrote, which is basically advocating paedophilia.
    AVC: Yikes.
    DA: Yeah. Wish we didn't have that song. I mean, we didn't write it as an anthem for paedophilia; it's more like us exploring the last taboo, but thankfully it was on a limited 7-inch that not many people heard. [Pauses.] Maybe that isn't taboo any more. Maybe in the wake of R. Kelly, paedophilia is now socially acceptable. [Laughs.] What a horrible world we live in.

    ''Couple Tracks'' - Extract From Notes on Inlay / Insert (2009):
    A few years ago we had a discussion in the van about what taboos were still left, which is what happens when ''artists'' get bored. We decided that it was paedophilia, and that we would write a song about it. We put it as the 'B' Side to Dangerous Fumes and Never talked about it again. The sample* is legit - its Maurice Chevalier. And by legit I don't mean we paid to use the sample, I mean its a legitimately creepy song about little kids by a weird French guy. We don't play this song live any more because it gives Damian weird vibes...

    * Chevalier sample appears on 7", not on CD



    Notes 3 (Fixed Race):

    ''Couple Tracks'' - Extract From Notes on Inlay / Insert (2009):I believe this was our first ever import-only bside song. Dangerous Fumes wasreleased in 4 regions, technically - North America, Spain, the Basque region (in an edition of like 50) and Germany / EU. It was written by Jonah and is a snappy little number. It has never been played live.



    Notes 4 (Fums Perillosos):

    I.N.V.A.S.I.O.N. (LFG Post -Aug 08 2007):


    Speaking of Little Darlings, last year we played a show in Barcelona that ended up being one of the best Fucked Up shows of all time. Like at one point Damian picked up a small woman, and the two of them were then both picked up and hurled off the stage.


    More pictures can be found here from that show. Anyhow, in addition to playing with top-notch bands Uber, Otan and Tension, we played with Invasion (pronounced Spanish-style). They have a new 12" coming out on Paco's label, and you should anticipate it feverishly. Guille (the singer) uses this delay pedal on his vocals live and even though he had just bought us the worst pizza to eat in the western hemisphere, it still broke all our brains watching it. Just look at the picture (its the one at the top).




    Links:
    Invasion / Destino Final
    Also:
    Una Bestia Incontrolable

    Una Bestia Incontrolable feature some of the members of some of the bands above and they are extraordinarily good.









    Sleeve Notes 1 (Dangerous Fumes)

    Cult mass suicide / Outcome of one of several (theoretical) CIA conspiracies.
    Follow the leader? (image used on DF lyric sheet).
    Rose Cross image used on lyric sheet
    He set upon him a yet stronger spell ...
    Illustration by Norman Ault, used on reverse of sleeve.
    Sorcerer attempting to raise fallen Knight?
    (note Rose Cross shield)

    Note: The images were mostly sourced from library sources by 10K; any references to secret societies etc are coincidental.





    Sleeve Notes 2 (Teenage Problems)


    'The Bathers' by Henry Scott Tuke
    ''Couple Tracks'' Announcement  on LFG (Dec 14 2009)

    This song is included in the compilation, but the songs existence as it's own 7" single release is half-dubious at best. Collectors will note that if you peer into the crevasse created by pushing a 7" sleeve inwards by its edges (in order to extract the vinyl, perhaps) you'll see another image, that of several young boys cavorting in the nude. Carefully dismantling this cover (with sweaty palms and a red face no doubt) either by heating the glue or just ripping it carefully by the edges will reveal a brand new 7" sleeve...


















    Commodity Fetishism:


    Hate Test Press

    Deranged Test Press:
    Left: Sleeve by Brian Walsby - comissioned by collector and featuring 'Damian Cauldron'
    Right: Test press with small hole, generic white labels and sleeve
    Sleeve 'opened' - includes 'half panel' back piece



    LVEUM Test Press - Front
    Left: Sleeve - grey or brown card with  'black mass' artwork, with cauldron emitting 'dangerous fumes'
    Right: Hand pasted labels, numbered out of 10, same design as used for Hoxton Cunts
    The LVEUM test presses also included the brown Goko print insert as above but not numbered
    LVEUM Test Press -  Back
    Left: Sleeve is fold-out design with half panel on back
    Right: Spray-stencilled FU logo on dust cover and record label
    LVEUM Test Press - As above but different colour sleeve:
    Some of the sleeves were printed on grey card, some on brown

    LVEUM Goko Prints
    These were included with some / most of the 'textured hard-stock sleeve':
    Left: Image used for Hoxton Cunts, numbered on reverse out of 16
    Right: 'When we have each other...' (Quote from Gunter Grass ' Dog Days'), numbered on reverse out of 20
    Both have 'naked bathing' theme, possibly referencing Teenage Problems artwork
    Nothing to do with Dangerous Fumes - Just included to continue the theme:
    This is a photocopy of another LVEUM goko print, again featuring bathing, but with Hard Skin lyric, from ''Cocks & Cunts EP'' (Hard Skin take on Hoxton Cunts)

    Artwork used for LVEUM test press



    DIY: Proofs & Prints from LVEUM

    Xerox of 'Hoxton Cunts' artwork - image used on some of the Goko print cards that came with some of the the 'textured hardstock sleeves'

    Original artwork for test pressing sleeve :- note 'Death in June' symbol (circular logo base of picture)

    Test pressing artwork: 
    Left- brown sleeve, open and folded (Death in June symbol cropped from artwork)
    Right bottom - grey version of sleeve, folded
    Right top - labels and artwork for TP insert


    Test Pressing Artwork: Note uncropped version of artwork on grey sleeve - also a blue version not used for the 10 test pressings (there were a handful  -maybe 4 - additional TPS, hand numbered in Spanish with blank centre holes - the blue sleeve was used on some of these)







    ''Epics in Minutes''

    (The Secret 'ish' 7'')


    ........ ........... ........?

    Sleeve:
     Generic white dust cover, most are hand-numbered in
    bottom left-hand corner.
    Detail:
    Most are numbered out of 1000



    Vinyl:
    Self released by band, labels same as Deranged releases, but without Deranged Logo

    Picture Sleeve - Front:
    Folded paper with photocopied image on one side. Various images were used - see below for more examples.
    Not all copies have a picture sleeve, some just have the dust cover described above. 

    Picture Sleeve - Folded out



    Stats:

    General:
    Tracks: Epics in Minutes B/W Search For The Words
    Released: 2003
    Label: Self Released - FU: 001
    Matrix A: REDHERRING-RED  RE1
    Matrix B: REDHERRING-HERRING   RE1

    Pressing Info:
    Believed to be 300, but numbered out of 1000, some have the fake epics vinyl...

    Inserts:
    No regular insert.
      Variants:
      Several different sleeves and covers, many are unique.


      Notes: 

      Most come with a generic white dust sleeve numbered out of 1000. Some also come with a fold-out photocopied picture sleeve, some are also personalised. There are various jacket pictures, some of the images have been used more than once, but may be cropped differently. Some of the images reference FU themes, others are random. A few examples are shown below.

      Given away, the name of the person receiving the record was (supposedly) recorded in a note book to deter flipping. Has 'Red Herring' message etched into run-out; see also 'Baiting with Epics Labels'. It's generally supposed that there were 300 copies; compared to the other singles, a lot seem to have been kept by the original owners.      

      Some disks may be fake?


      Sleeve Variations:


      #24/1000 - Man in medical mask


      #43/100000000
      # 55/1000 - 'Blonde woman in zip-top' - half panel of sleeve
      #59/1000 - 'Saddam Hussein with sword' - comes with ''stomp on a mod!'' stamped poly cover


      #? / 1000 'Stomp' stamped / type-writen sleeve (pic from FU instagram)
      #60/1000 - 'Mark Frechette'
      #61 & #65/1000 - 'Saddam Hussein with sword' - two records, same image on sleeve, but cropped and orientated differently
      #61 - Reverse of above (left) sleeve, image orientated 'landscape'
      #65/1000 - Reverse of above (right) sleeve, image orientated 'portrait'
      # 78/1000 - 'Blonde woman in zip-top' 
      #88 Hitler - Same copy as above, this one has had a few owners.
      Modern Nazis use the number 88 as an abbreviation for the salute Heil Hitler. The letter H is eighth in the English alphabet, whereby 88 becomes HH.
      # 98/1000 - 'Dance of Death' detail 

      # 119/1000 -  Re-used generic Artista sleeve. Dust sleeve personalised with typed text by JF for Eric Smith (former drummer in Career Suicide) 
      # 119/1000 - As described above
      # 119/1000 - As described above
      # 159/1000 - No picture sleeve 
      # 198/1000 - No picture sleeve (this copy has baiting the public vinyl according to Sarah's list)
      The following copies also do not have picture sleeves:
      # 106/1000
      # 164/1000
      # 166/1000 
      # 170/1000
      # 186/1000 
         
       # 203/1000 - ''Two figures 'wrestling' in front of a vehicle'' 
      # 207/1000 - 'Man walking past oriental text banner'
      # 228/1000 - 'Kid with cowboy gun' 
      #?/1000 - Bonnie 'fellating' a soda bottle. (Image of Faye Dunaway as 'Bonnie' From the movie 'Bonnie & Clyde')
      (Number info unavailable)
      #?/1000  - 'Two school girls in boater hats with a dog' Image used on 1988 Quantas airlines advert (number info unavailable)


      #?/1000  - Saddam Hussein with sword (number info unavailable)
      (as seen on ebay - same image as 59, 61 & 65, but confirmed as not being one of these)
      #?/1000 - Japanese communal bath (number info unavailable)


      Collection pic: The middle 2 records are 'Epics in Minutes' The left-hand one is #88 (yet again). The right-hand one (trees and a basket-thing?) will have to remain a secret for the time-being.

      Bottom left hand side is 'Baiting The Public' (Wrong label version)

      #?/1000 - Extract from rejected image for 'Epics in Minutes' CD (Josh smirking)

      See comment below
      #?/1000 - Woman in (hospital?) bed. Top pic cover opened, bottom cover folded



      #? - #? - A box full of epics disks before they got packaged up and numbered