Dennis DJ (aka Lunarian) profile picture

Dennis DJ (aka Lunarian)

time is static and chaotic only number are change so...please don't tell me happy new year!!!....

About Me

[email protected]

or send me sth from a query:

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What Do you Think About My Style?:
Do you Like My Art?:
I wait for the time for digitalization of everything! This is not a nightmare or a curse. This will be the salvation of painfull and dreamly souls. Everyone will be which character he wants and and the environment will be more easy to modulate. I want everything will be equal. I don't know what character am I exactly, I don't know my origins,,, Maybe I am something fictional...from another planet...I come from Dionysis's childish Asperger syndrome...Dionysis was a melancholic child and he was crying very often. Children of the school were laughing at and they were knocking him. The consequence of these events were to drove psychic damages and really ENDLESS PSYCHIC PAIN. As result of this failed past I am here to depict this failed life with pictures, music, photographies, fetish, perversions and dreams...I am the last chance of Dionysis's delight. I'll be artistic, friendly, emotional, honest, representive of this failed past, dreamer and I will try to take my revenge for Dionysis's life rights. I don't believe in love and charity, only in justice, team working and unification in order to success better life quality. Right is with Dionysis's part and I'll try to strike for him back. I can make alliance with everyone in order to success (oath).

My Personal goals in this life is to survive, to promote myself with my art with the help of Digital Technology, to Digitalize and share myself as much I can, in order to be famous character and figure!!. My Social goals are to fight the Capitalistic anarchy in this society, expensiveness, Christianism, Moralism in order to promote more social and humanistic way of life.

I support straight edge healthy life and I will Fight against drugs, smoking alchohol a.o. unhealthy habbits. After death I want to donate my body to science or other non-speculative organisation because I don't want to pay my close people money for my burial. I consider that the Christian Funeral Agencies is a social and economical crime to the people (very expensive burial and ceremony prices.
Occupation / Job
I hope to work in the future as nurse not because I like just because to get some money from it and to survive into this earth. I hope so...because of unemployment rates are big in this country I hope to work somewhere there cause of high demand of this occupation. I hope...I want money only for survive...
Body Type / Characteristics
I am 1,80cm about. I have athletic body cause I exercise my body everyday. I do kickboxing almost 2-3 times per week and the other days I go running for better endurance. My skin is yellowish/bonze (not so pale). My eyes are honey coloured. My skeleton is medium/light weight. According to my physiognomy I seem to classify my ethnicity to white/caucassians and certainly mediterranean European. Blood Type: O+.
Character
I like the clear and brutal reality of life. I am 100% Realist and sometimes hyperrealist. I love Justice...I admire dedication and discipline in various sectors of life. Revenge and punishment are the fundamentals of law life and that's why I admire hard laws according to the Justice. I hate hypocrisy, I hate lies. I don't like Sloth in life. I am in the struggle against the drugs, against the smoking and alchohol. I am against prostitution cause sex is not for Sale...Sex must be free sometime...I hate high prices in various products and goods.
Personal Info & Lifestyle
My Details
Status: In a Relationship with Cybelle
Here for: Networking Friends
Orientation: Not Sure
Hometown: Athens
Body type: 5' 9" / Athletic
Ethnicity White / Caucasian
Religion Agnostic
Zodiac Sign Scorpio
Smoke / Drink: No / No
Children: I don't have money for kids
Education: Grad / professional school
Occupation: Nurse
Income Pocket Money From My Dad & Mum till I find a job
Psychic Health
Source Wikipedia Asperger syndrome (U.S. pronunciation / 'æspɚgɚ ˌ'sɪndroʊm/, also called Asperger's syndrome, Asperger's disorder, Asperger's or AS) is one of several autism spectrum disorders (ASD) characterized by difficulties in social interaction and by restricted, stereotyped interests and activities. AS is distinguished from the other ASDs in having no general delay in language or cognitive development. Although not mentioned in standard diagnostic criteria, motor clumsiness and atypical use of language are frequently reported.Asperger syndrome was named after Hans Asperger who, in 1944, described children in his practice who lacked nonverbal communication skills, failed to demonstrate empathy with their peers, and were physically clumsy. Fifty years later, AS was recognized in the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-10), and in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV) as Asperger's Disorder. Questions about many aspects of AS remain: for example, there is lingering doubt about the distinction between AS and high-functioning autism (HFA) partly due to this, the prevalence of AS is not firmly established. The exact cause of AS is unknown, although research supports the likelihood of a genetic contribution, and brain imaging techniques have identified structural and functional differences in specific regions of the brain.There is no single treatment for Asperger syndrome, and the effectiveness of particular interventions is supported by only limited data. Intervention is aimed at improving symptoms and function. The mainstay of treatment is behavioral therapy, focusing on specific deficits to address poor communication skills, obsessive or repetitive routines, and clumsiness. Most individuals with AS can learn to cope with their differences, but may continue to need moral support and encouragement to maintain an independent life. Researchers and people with AS have contributed to a shift in attitudes away from the notion that AS is a deviation from the norm that must be treated or cured, and towards the view that AS is a difference rather than a disability.Restricted and repetitive interests and behavior Those with AS often display intense interests, such as this boy's fascination with molecular structure. Those with AS often display intense interests, such as this boy's fascination with molecular structure.People with Asperger syndrome display behavior, interests, and activities that are restricted and repetitive and are sometimes abnormally intense or focused. They may stick to inflexible routines or rituals, move in stereotyped and repetitive ways, or preoccupy themselves with parts of objects.Pursuit of specific and narrow areas of interest is one of the most striking features of AS. Individuals with AS may collect volumes of detailed information on a relatively narrow topic such as dinosaurs or deep fat fryers, without necessarily having genuine understanding of the broader topic. For example, a child might memorize camera model numbers while caring little about photography. This behavior is usually apparent by grade school, typically age 5 or 6 in the U.S. Although these special interests may change from time to time, they typically become more unusual and narrowly focused, and often dominate social interaction so much that the entire family may become immersed. Because topics such as dinosaurs often capture the interest of children, this symptom may go unrecognized.Stereotyped and repetitive motor behaviors are a core part of the diagnosis of AS and other ASDs. They include hand movements such as flapping or twisting, and complex whole-body movements. These are typically repeated in longer bursts and look more voluntary or ritualistic than tics, which are usually faster, less rhythmical and less often symmetrical.Speech and languageAlthough children with Asperger syndrome acquire language skills without significant general delay, and the speech of those with AS typically lacks significant abnormalities, language acquisition and use is often atypical.Abnormalities include verbosity; abrupt transitions; literal interpretations and miscomprehension of nuance; use of metaphor meaningful only to the speaker; auditory perception deficits; unusually pedantic, formal or idiosyncratic speech; and oddities in loudness, pitch, intonation, prosody, and rhythm. Three aspects of communication patterns are of clinical interest: poor prosody, tangential and circumstantial speech, and marked verbosity. Although inflection and intonation may be less rigid or monotonic than in autism, people with AS often have a limited range of intonation; speech may be overly fast, jerky or loud. Speech may convey a sense of incoherence; the conversational style often includes monologues about topics that bore the listener, fails to provide context for comments, or fails to suppress internal thoughts. Individuals with AS may fail to monitor whether the listener is interested or engaged in the conversation. The speaker's conclusion or point may never be made, and attempts by the listener to elaborate on the speech's content or logic, or to shift to related topics, are often unsuccessful.Children with AS may have an unusually sophisticated vocabulary at a young age and have been colloquially called "little professors", but have difficulty understanding metaphorical language and tend to use language literally. Individuals with AS appear to have particular weaknesses in areas of nonliteral language that include humor, irony, and teasing. They usually understand the cognitive basis of humor but may not enjoy it due to lack of understanding of its intent.Other symptomsIndividuals with Asperger syndrome may have symptoms that are independent of the diagnosis, but can affect the individual or the family. These symptoms include atypical perception and problems with motor skills, sleep, and emotions.Asperger’s initial accounts and other diagnostic schemes include descriptions of motor clumsiness. Children with AS may be delayed in acquiring motor skills that require motor dexterity, such as bicycle riding or opening a jar, and may appear awkward or "uncomfortable in their own skin". They may be poorly coordinated, or have an odd or bouncy gait or posture, poor handwriting, or problems with visual-motor integration, visual-perceptual skills, and conceptual learning. They may show problems with proprioception (sensation of body position) on measures of apraxia (motor planning disorder), balance, tandem gait, and finger-thumb apposition. There is no evidence that these motor skills problems differentiate AS from other high-functioning ASDs.Many accounts of individuals with AS and ASD report unusual sensory and perceptual skills and experiences. They may have superior performance in tasks like visual search problems that require processing of fine-grained features rather than entire configurations. They may be unusually sensitive or insensitive to sound, light, touch, texture, taste, smell, pain, temperature, and other stimuli, and they may exhibit synesthesia, for example, a smell may trigger perception of color; these sensory responses are found in other developmental disorders and are not specific to AS or to ASD. There is little support for increased fight-or-flight response or failure of habituation in autism; there is more evidence of decreased responsiveness to sensory stimuli, although several studies show no differences.Children with AS are more likely to have sleep problems, including difficulty in falling asleep, frequent nocturnal awakenings, and early morning awakenings. AS is also associated with high levels of alexithymia, which is difficulty in identifying and describing one's emotions. Although AS, lower sleep quality, and alexithymia are associated, their causal relationship is unclear.Asperger syndrome appears to result from developmental factors that affect many or all functional brain systems, as opposed to localized effects. Although the specific underpinnings of AS or factors that distinguish it from other ASDs are unknown, and no clear pathology common to individuals with AS has emerged, it is still possible that AS's mechanism is separate from other ASD. Neuroanatomical studies and the associations with teratogens strongly suggest that the mechanism includes alteration of brain development soon after conception. Abnormal migration of embryonic cells during fetal development may affect the final structure and connectivity of the brain, resulting in alterations in the neural circuits that control thought and behavior.[29] Several theories of mechanism are available; none are likely to be complete explanations. Functional magnetic resonance imaging provides some evidence for both underconnectivity and mirror neuron theories. Functional magnetic resonance imaging provides some evidence for both underconnectivity and mirror neuron theories.The underconnectivity theory hypothesizes underfunctioning high-level neural connections and synchronization, along with an excess of low-level processes. It maps well to general-processing theories such as weak central coherence theory, which hypothesizes that a limited ability to see the big picture underlies the central disturbance in ASD.The mirror neuron system (MNS) theory hypothesizes that alterations to the development of the MNS interfere with imitation and lead to Asperger's core feature of social impairment. For example, one study found that activation is delayed in the core circuit for imitation in individuals with AS. This theory maps well to social cognition theories like the theory of mind, which hypothesizes that autistic behavior arises from impairments in ascribing mental states to oneself and others, or hyper-systemizing, which hypothesizes that autistic individuals can systematize internal operation to handle internal events but are less effective at empathizing by handling events generated by other agents.Other possible mechanisms include serotonin dysfunction and cerebellar dysfunction.ScreeningParents of children with Asperger syndrome can typically trace differences in their children's development to as early as 30 months of age. Developmental screening during a routine check-up by a general practitioner or pediatrician may identify signs that warrant further investigation. The diagnosis of AS is complicated by the use of several different screening instruments. None have been shown to reliably differentiate between AS and other ASDs. The current "gold standard" in diagnosing ASDs uses the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised (ADI-R)—a semistructured parent interview—and the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS)—a conversation and play-based interview with the child. Sexual Perversion Visions Such as Coprofilia, Sadism, Necrofilia, bondage ...etc... are great to me :-D
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My Interests



My NING Social Network Site that you can learn anything on me, to make company all friends there. (Violence and Nudes Allowed) and that you can make a free profile and to promote yourself.

http://dennisfanssite.ning.com

My Favourite Fetish (Scat sex - Human Toilet)has now it's network also!! Promote yourself there:

http://scatfetish.ning.com

My lovely interests are industrial music (mainly), Photography, Graphic arts, sex, sci-fi movies, computer, kickboxing, perversions, sadism.... I make music alone with my one project "Lunarian" & with Lefteris "Cybergoat" Here is a sample of my photography art:

I'd like to meet:

Anyone who likes a good companion, anyone who interests in dark music, artistic, emotional and want to donate me :-P...but I have also some (including me ;-)...hehehe :-)

Fun
I am enjoyable person and I make fun with my Friends:

"Dennis & Master Rex - Il Sultano Di Babilonia E La Prostituta!"



"Dennis, Lunarian - I Am Lunarian"


"Play Tic-Tac-toe For Fun" :-)


"Main World News"



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"Technology News"



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"Greek News"



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"Economy News"



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"Health News"


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"Entertainment News"


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"Science / Nature News"


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"Software News"


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"Other News"


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"Latest and Greatest Video Games New Releases"


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GO UP↑



Music:


Industrial Music - EBM - Aggrotech - Industrial Metal - Industrial Rock - Ambient Industrial - Coldwave - Techno -Bruitism - IDM - Trance - Psych - Synth pop - Futurepop - Glitcha a.o.

Some favourite Music clips and Pics: [:SITD:]
1000 HOMO DJs
16Volt
18 Summers
23 Skidoo
29 DIED
32Crash
400 Blows
5F_55
5F-X
8kHz Mono
A CHUD CONVENTION
A GRUMH;
A GUY CALLED GERALD
A Kiss Could Be Deadly
À Rebours
A SPLIT-SECOND
A.K.As (Are Everywhere!)
A7IE
Ab Ovo
ABORYM
Abruptum
Abscess
Abstinence
Absurd Minds
Accessory
ACID HORSE
Acid Ice Flows
Active Media Disease
Acumen Nation
Adema
Adult.
Advent
Aeon Drive
aerial
Aesthetic Perfection
Agenda: Entropy
AGHAST VIEW
Agonoize
Ah Cama-Sotz
Aiboforcen
ALBOTH!
Alice In Videoland
Alien Faktor
Alien Produkt
Alien Sex Fiend
ALLEGORY CHAPEL LTD.
Allerseelen
ALLIED VISION
Alpha Conspiracy
ALPHA OMEGA
Alphaville
ALQUIMIA
Alter Der Ruine
Altered States
Al-Wahaar Dhin
Amateur God
Ambassador21
Ambre
Amduscia
AMERICAN HEAD CHARGE
AMGOD
AMM
Ammo
An Albatross
Anal Cunt
ANAL KITTIES
Analogue Brain
Ancient Gallery
And Also The Trees
And Oceans
And One
Anders Manga
Andraculoid
Android Lust
Angel Theory
Angels & Agony
Angelspit
Anne clark
Annodalleb
Antigen Shift
Anti-Mechanism
APHEX TWIN
Apocalypse Theatre
Apocrypho
Apollo 440
APOLLYON SUN
Apoptygma Berzerk
Apparatus
Apparition
APRAXIA
ARCANA
ARCANE DEVICE
Architect
ARGYLE PARK
Arkam Asylum
Armageddon Dildos
Arseterror
Artbreakhotel/Graham Moor
ARTEFAKTO
Artica
As11
Asche
Ascii.Disko
Ashbury Heights
Aslan Faction
Asp
Asphalt!
ASSACRE
Assemblage 23
Asseptic Room
Astrea Redux
Astro
Astrovamps
Ataraxia
ATARI TEENAGE RIOT
Athamay
Atrax Morgue
ATTRITION
Aube
AUDIO PARADOX
Autoaggression
Autoclav1.1
Autoerotichrist
Autopsia
Autovon
Autumn’s Grey Solace
Avec-A aka Avec Aisance
Axiome
AXONAL WARFARE
Ayria
Azoic
Azoikum
Azure Skies
B! Machine
B-12
Babyland
Backandtotheleft
Backlash
Bad Sector
Baron von Mannsechs
Barry Lamb
Bastard Noise
BATTERY
Battery
Battery Cage
Batz Without Flesh
Bauhaus
Beautiful Leopard
Beborn Beton
Beefcake
Bella Morte
Belladonnakillz
BENESTROPHE
BERZERKER
Beta
Beyond Hope
Big Black
BIG BLACK
BIG CITY ORCHESTRA
Big City Orchestra
BIGOD 20
BILE
BIOPSY
Biopsyhoz
BioTek
Birmingham 6
Birthday Massacre, The
BIZZARRE SEX TRIO
Black Dice
Black From the Dead
Black Leather Jesus
Black Lung
Black Rain
Black Sun Productions
Black Tape For A Blue Gir
BLACKHOUSE
Blacklight
BLANG LUNG
Blank
Blank Audio
Blind Faith and Envy
Blixa Bargeld
BloodMachine
Blue Birds Refuse To Fly
Blue October UK
Blutengel
BOL
Boole
BORBETOMAGUS
Boredoms
Borghesia
BOURBONESE QUALK
Boyd Rice
Boytronic
Bozo Porno Circus
Brainclaw
Brave New World
Breathe
Brian Eno
Brighter Death Now
BRISE-GLACE
Broken Crotch
Brother Orchid
Bruderschaft
B-TON-K
Bunnydrums
Butterfly Messiah
Buz
C.C.C.C.
C/A/T
C17H19NO3
CABARAIT VOLTAIRE
Cacophony
Camouflage
CAN
Candy Spooky Theater, The
Can't
Carbon Haze
Care Company
Caroliner
Carphax Files
Cassandra Complex
Cat Hope
CAT RAPES DOG
Catastrophe Ballet
Caustic
Cdatakill
C-Drone-Defect
cell:burn
Celluloide
Cenotype
Censor
Centhron
Cephalgy
Cerebral Apoplexy
Cervello Elettronico
Cesium_137
Cevin Key
Cevin Key/Ken Marshall
Chamber
Charlie Clouser
CHEF'S EYE SHOP
Chemical Brothers
CHEMLAB
Cherrie Blue
Chiasm
Chirleison
CHRIS & COSEY
Chris Connelly
Christ Analogue
Christian Death
CHROME
Cinderella Effect
Cinema Strange
Circle of Dust
Circus of Pain
Claire Voyant
Clan of Xymox
Clawfinger
CLAY PEOPLE
Clayton Counts
Cleaner
Clear Vision
CLEEN
Click Click
Client
CLINIC
CLOCK DVA
Club Moral
COAL CHAMBER
COBALT 60
Cock E.S.P.
Code 64
Coil
Coinside
Collide
Colony 5
COLOURBOX
CombiChrist
Common Dream
Concrete Nature
Con-Dom
Conetik
Consolidated
CONSONO
CONSTRUGGLE TEST
CONTAGION
Contagious Orgasm
Controlled Bleeding
Controlled Collapse
Controlled Fusion
Converter
COP SHOOT COP
COPTIC RAIN
Cordell Klier
Corpus Delicti
Corrosion
Corvus Corax
Costes
Coup de Grace
COURSE OF EMPIRE
Covenant
CRASH WARSHIP
Crazy Town
CRISIS NTI
Crisk.
Croce Massimo (arte dei
Crocodile Shop
Cruciform Injection
CRUXSHADOWS
Cruxshadows, The
Cryo
Crystalline Effect, The
C-TEC
CTI
CTRL
CUBANATE
Cultural Amnesia
CULTURAL THUGS
Culture Kultur
Current 93
Cut.Rate.Box
Cyanotic
Cyber Axis
Cyberaktif
Cybercide
Cybernetik Termination
CYBER-TEC
Cyborg Attack
Cyclone
Cycloon
Cylab
CYRNAI
Cyrusrex
D' ADVANTAGEOUS
D.N.E
DAF
DANCE 2 TRANCE
DANCE OR DIE
Dandelion Wine
daniel ash
Daniel Menche
Danny Devos
DANSE MACABRE
Dark Illumination
Dark Runner
Dark Sanctuary
Darker Days Tomorrow
darling violenta
Das Ich
Das Praparat
Das Weeth Experience
davaNtage
Dawn of Ashes
Day-Glo
db9d9
De Mange Machine
De/Vision
DEAD VOICES ON AIR
Deadfly Ensemble
Death in June
DEATH IN VEGAS
Death Pact Internationa
Death Ride 69
DeathBoy
DEATHLINE INTERNATIONAL
DEATHSTARS
Decay transit
Decence
Decoded Feedback
Decree
Defcon
DefCon
Dein Schatten
Deine Lakaien
Dekoy
Delaware
DELAY
Delerium
Depeche Mode
Depths of Despair
Der Blutarsch
Der Eisenrost
Der Plan
Derma-Tek
Desiderii Marginis
Destroid
Detritus
DEUS EX MACHINA
Deutsch Nepal
Deutsch Nepal
Dev/Null
Deviant UK
Diablo Syndrome
DIAMANDA GALLAS
Diary Of Dreams
DIATRIBE
Die Farben
Die Form
Die Haut
Die Krupps
Die Sektor
DIE WARZAU
DIESEL CHRIST
Digital Factor
DIGITAL PEOPLE
Digital Poodle
digitalTRAFFIC
DIMENSION F3H
Din A Tod
Din Fiv
Dino Frenzy
Diorama
Dioxyde
dir n grey
Disharmony
Disinformation (art and
Diskonnekted
Dismantled
DISMEMBERED QUIETLY
DISSECTING TABLE
Dissonance
Distain!
Distorted Memory
Distorted Reality
Diva Destruction
DIVE
Diverje
Divider
DJ? Acucrack
DOA
DODHEIMSGARD
DOG MACHINE
DON DAVIS
Dope
Dope Stars Inc.
DOUBTING THOMAS
DOWNLOAD
Download
DRAWING POOL
Dreamside, The
DROWN
DRUG
Drumcorps
Dulce Liquido
Duncan Avoid
Dunkelwerk
Dupont
DUST OF BASEMENT
DX-13
DYSTOPIA ONE
E Nomine
E.S.R.
EACH DAWN I DIE
EBN
Echoing Green, The
ECONOLINE CRUSH
E-Craft
Edge of Dawn
Edgey vs Depth Error
Ehron VonAllen
EINSTURZENDE NEUBAUTEN
Eisbrecher
ELECTRIC HELLFIRE CLUB
Electric Six
ELECTRO ASSASSIN
ELECTRO COMP
Elijah’s Mantle
ELIZA WELCH
Elusive
Emergence
Emil Beaulieau
Emileigh Rohn
Emilie Autumn
EMPIRION
Empusae
Encoder
Endanger
Enders
Endif
Endraum
Enduser
Enemy, The (David Thrusse
Enfusion
ENIGMA
Envy is Blind
Epoxies, The
Epsilon Minus
Equatronic
Erben Der Schopfung
Erblast/Artwork
Ernesto Rodrigues
ESA
Escape with Romeo
Esplendor Geometrico
Essexx (Sara Noxx)
EVE PROJECT
EVIL MOTHERS
Evil's Toy
EVOLUTION CONTROLLED CCREATIONS & THE EVOLUTION CO
Excessive Force
Executive Slacks
Exillon
Exploding Meth Lab
Factrix
Faderhead
Faith & The Muse
Fantazja
Fatal Error
FEAR FACTORY
Fear Garden
Feindflug
Fektion Fekler
Fernn
FETISH 69
FGFC820
Fiction 8
Fictional
Fields Of The Nephilim
Fierce Culture
Filament 38
FILTER
FINAL CUT
Final Selection
Fini Tribe
FINITRUBE
FISH WALTZ
FISHTANK NO. 9
Fixmer/McCarthy
Flashbulb, The
Flesh Field
Flint Glass/Telepherique
FLUKE
FMTA
FOETUS
FORD PROCO
Foretaste
Forma Tadre
Forma4
Fortification 55
Fr/Action
Fractured
Francis Rimbert (France)
Freezepop
Front 242
Front Line Assembly
Frozen Plasma
Funker Vogt
Fushitsusha
Fusspils 11
FUZE BOX MACHINE
Garden Of Delight
Gasr
GASR
Gen 26
Genesis P. Orridge
Genetic Selection
Genevieve Pasquier
genitorturers
Genocide Organ
Geomatic
Girls Under Glass
glaze
Glis
God Is My Co-Pilot
God Lives Underwater
God Module
GODFLESH
Godhead
GODHEADS
Godkomplex
God's Bow
Goethes Erben
Gore Beyond Necropsy
Goteki
Gothsicles, The
Government Alpha
Grains Of Sound
Grandchaos
GRASHIOUS SHADES
GRAVITAR
GRAVITY KILLS
GRAYZONE
GREATER THAN ONE
Greifenkeil
Grendel
Greyhound
Gridlock
GROTUS
Guilty Connector
GX Jupitter-Larsen
H3llb3nt
Hafler Trio
Haino Keiji
Hair Police
Halo_Gen
HALOBLACK
Hanatarash
HANZEL UND GRETYL
Hanzel Und Gretyl
Harpy
HATE DEPT
HAUJOBB
Haujobb
Haven Sole
Headscan
Heart Heart Julia
Heart of Darkness
heart2heart
Heavy Water Factory
Hecate
Hecq
Heimataerde
Heimstatt Yipotash
heitotype
Helalyn Flowers
Heliosphere
HELISAU
Helium Vola
Henrik Nordvargr Bjorkk
HEPERDEX-I-SEKT
Hex Rx
HEXEDENE
Hexentanz
High Level Static
Hijokaidan
Himei Koukotsu
HINAS
Hioctan
HIV+
Hive Mind
HMB
Hocico
Hollow Earth
HOLOCAUST THEORY
Holon
Homicide Division
HOODLUM PRIEST
Horrorist, The
Hotei
HULA /td&gt

Movies:

Hungry Lucy
Hypefactor
HYPNOSKULL
I Forgot Them
I, Synthesist
I:Scintilla
IAMVIA
Ice Ages
ICHOR
Icon Of Coil
IDIOT STARE
Ikon
IMAGE TRANSMISSION
Images in Vogue
Imminent Starvation (ak
Imperative Reaction
Implant
In Extremo
In My Rosary
In Slaughter Natives
In Strict Confidence
In Strict Confidence Feat
In the Nursery
Incapacitants
Index AI
individual Totem
Individualdistanz
INDUSTRIAL HEADS
Inertia
infact
INFAM
Infectator com
Infected Mushroom
Infekktion
Informatik
Information Society
Injury
Inkubus Sukkubus
Insekt
Inside
Insurgent Inc.
Interlace
Intermix
Intra-Venus
Inure
Ionic Vision
IPECAC LOOP
Iris
Istvan Kantor
Iszoloscope
Ivan Arseich
Ivory Frequency
IVOUX
IWR
JADE 4 U
Japanther
Jega
Jerico One
Jesus And The Gurus
Jesus Complex
Jesus Of Nazareth
jido-genshi
Jim O'Rourke
Joachim Witt
John Balance
John Gerteisen
John Wiese
John Zorn
Joke Jay
Ju Ju Babies
JUDDA Juno Reactor
JUSTIN BROADRICK
K.I.F.O.T.H.
K.K. Null
K2
kagerou
Kaleidoscope
KALTE FARDEN
KAPITAL
Karjalan Sissit
Karlheinz Stockhausen
Kash
Kattoo
Keef Baker
Ken
Kenneth Atchley
Kevin Drumm
KEVORKIAN DEATH CYCLE
Kevorkian Death Cycle
KGB
KGC
KIDNEYTHIEVES
Kiew
Kill Switch...Klick
KILLING FLOOR
Killing Joke
Killing Ophelia
KiloWatts And Vanek
King Brothers
Kirlian Camera
Klangstabil
KLINIK
KLOQ
Klut?
Klutae
KLUTE
KMFDM
KMVSNI
Knew Them
K-NITRATE
Knurl
Kobold
KOMPRESSOR
KOVENANT
Kraftwerk
Kraken
Kutna Hora
Kylie Minoise
L.ife S.lowly D.ies
La Floa Maldita
LABRA FORD
Lacrimas Profundere
Lacrimosa
Laibach
L'ame Immortelle
Lamia
LARD
Lasse Marhaug
Lassigue Bendthaus
Last Dance
Last Influence Of Brain,
Lea Cummings
Leaether Strip
Leaf
Leakh
LEATHER NUN
LEATHER STRIP
Lee Ranaldo
Left Spine Down
Legendary Pink Dots
Legion Within
Leila Bela
Les Anges De La Nuit
Les Joyaux De La Princesse
Lescure 13
Lethargy
Level
Lexincrypt
LHD
Liars
Liar's Rosebush
Life Cried
Life Cried
LIFE GARDEN
Lightning Bolt
Lights Of Euphoria
LILITH
LIMBO
Liquid Black
Liquid Divine
LIQUID SEX DECAY
LLWYBRLLAETHOG
Locust Sympathizer
Lola Angst
L'ombre
London After Midnight
Loop Guru
LORDS OF ACID
Lore feat. Sean Brennan (
Loretta's Doll
Lost Signal
Lost Signal
Lou Reed
Love Is Colder Than Death
Love Like Blood
Lovespirals
Low Technicians
Lowe
LUC VAN ACKER
Lucyfire
Luigi Russolo
LUSTMORD
Lustmord
LUXT
Lycia
Lynx & Ram
M.S.B.R.
M2 412
MACHINE GUN KELLY
Machine In The Garden, Th
Machinegun Symphony
Machines of Loving Grace
Mad EP
Madonna Schizofrenica G
Magenta
Magik Markers
MAINESTHAI
MAINTENANCE OF ORDER
Malaria
Maldoror
MALHAVOC
malice mizer
Man Is The Bastard
Mana ERG
MANIPULATION
Mantus
Manufactura
Mariae Nascenti
MARILYN MANSON
Mark Nicholas
Mark Nicholas
MARK SHREEVE
Marsheaux
Martin John Callanan
MARTYR COLONY
Marx, Gary (Sisters Of Me
Mash Up Soundsystem
Masonna
Massiv in Mensch
MASTERTUNE
Matthew Bower
Mattin
Maurizio Bianchi/M. B.
MDFMK
Meat Beat Manifesto
Meathead
MEATHOOK SEAD
Mechanical Horizon
Mechanical Moth
Media Violence
Medusa's Spell
Megadump
Megaherz
Melek-Tha
Melotron
Melt-Banana
Memmaker
Memorandum
Mend
MENTAL DESTRUCTION
Mentallo And The Fixer
Mephisto Walz
Merry Thoughts
Merzbow
Mesh
MESH
Metalux
Michigan
Midnight Configuration
Midnight Syndicate
Mike Patton
Mila Mar
Militant Cheerleaders On
Milligramme
Mind.in.a.box
Mind.In.A.Box
Mind:State
Mindcease
Mindfield
Mindfluxfuneral
Mindless Faith
Mindless Self Indulgence
Mindware
Ministry
Miranda Sex Garden
Miriam
MISERY LOVES COMPANY
Mission The
Mission U.K.
Missouri
Mnemonic
Moctan
Modulate
MOER
MOEV
Monaco X
Mondblut
Monde Bruits
Mono Chrome
Mono No Aware
MONOCHROME
Monofader
Monoid
Monokrom
Monolith
monomoy
Monotract
Monstrum Sepsis
Monte Cazazza
Morgenstern
MORGUE
MORGUE MECHANISM
Mortiis
Moskwa TV
Mothboy
Moving Units
MOZ
MP-144
MURDER INC.
Murphy, Peter
Muscle And Hate
Muslimgauze
MUSLIMGAUZE
MUSSOLINI HEADKICK
MUTAGEN
My Life With the Thrill Kill Kult
Mystery Of Dawn
MZ 412
Nachtmahr
Naevus/Knifeladder
Namanax
Namnambulu
Narkoleptik
Narr!
Nasa
Nature Destroyed
Nautical Almanac
Nebula-H
Necessary Response
Necro Facility
Necrofix
Needle Sharing
Needles
Negative Format
Negativland
Neikka RPM
Neither/Neither World
Nenia C’Alladhan
Neo Hizumi
Neon Cage Experiment
Neon Horse
Neotek
Neptune
Nerve Filter
NEURAL NETWORK
Neuroactive
Neuropa
NEUROSIS
Neuroticfish
Neutronic
New Mind
NEW ORDER
Nic Endo
Nihilist Spasm Band
Nik Page
Nine Inch Nails
Nitzer Ebb
NKVD
noCore
Nocturnal Emissions
Noise Box
Noise Process
Noise Unit
Noisex
Noisuf-X
Noize Creator
NON
Norm
Northborne
Not Breathing
Nova
novakill
November Process
Novus
Noxious
Null Device
Nullvektor
Numan, Gary
Numb
Nurse With Wound
Nurzery Rhymes
Nvmph
O Yuki Conjugate
O.V.N.I.
Obscenity Trial
Obscyre
Obszon Geschopf
Oghr
Oh Ne
ohGr
Oil 10
Olhon
Omega Vibes
Omnibox
One Lucid Dream
ONEIROID PSYCHOSIS
Onnomon
OOIOO
Oomph!
Oonce Faktory
Oonce Faktory
Opaque
Operanoire
Operator X
Opium
OPTIMUM WOUND PROFILE-YOU
Orange Sector
ORBITAL
Ordo Rosarius Equilibrio
ORGANUM
ORGY
Orkus Magazine
ORPHX
Orphx
Orphx and the Infant Cycl
Otomo Yoshihide
Out Out
OUT OUT
OutCel
P.A.L.
P16D4
PAIL
Pailhead
Pain Jerk
Pain Machinery, The
Pain Station
Painbastard
PAL
Palais Schaumburg
Pan Sonic
Panacea
Panicsville
PANKOW
Panzer AG
Panzer Division
PARACONT
Parallel Project
Paralysed Age
PBK
PEACE LOVE & PITBULLS
Pearls of Dew
Penal Colony
Persephone
Peter Christopherson
Peter Rehberg
PHALLUS DEI
Phantom West
Phil Nyokai James
Philosopher’s Point
Photophob
Phylr
Pierrepoint
Pig
PIGFACE
Pile 3
Pilori
Pimentola
Pink and Brown
Pitbull Daycare
Pitchshifter
Plantaganda
Plastic
Plastic Noise Experience
Plateau
Pneumatic Detach
Polygon
Polyspace
Polytune
Pop Will Eat Itself
Porcupine Defense
PORNOSECT
POUNCE INTERNATIONAL
Pow(d)er Pussy
Predella Avant
PreEmptive Strike 0.1
Premature Ejaculation
Pride & Fall
Princess Dragonmom
Pristina
Proceed
PRODIGY
Project Pitchfork
Prometheus Burning
Proyecto Mirage
Prurient
Psyche
Psychic TV
Psychopomps
Psyclon Nine
PSYKLON 9
Psytekk
PTI
PUGMY CHILDREN
Pulcher Femina
Pulse Legion
Punch Inc.
PUNCTURE
Punish Yourself
Punto Omega
Puppy-Killing Machines
Purr Machine
Pygmy Children
Pzycho Bitch
Qntal
Qualia, The
QUANDO QUANGO
Rabia Sorda
Rafael Flores
Raindancer
Raison D'Etre
RAKIT
Rammstein
Ran
Randall, Chris
Rapeman
RAPOON
RAVEN & FOSSY
Ravenous
Ravi Binning
Razed In Black
Re Agent
RE/ACT
Re/Move (Spain)
Re/Work
ReActivate
Reaper
Recently Deceased
Red Flag
Red Moth
Regenerator
Rein-forced
Religion is the Falling
Reliquary
Rename
Renegade Soundwave
Reset
Ressurection Eve
Restricted Area
Retractor
Retrosic, The
REVENGE
Reversal Penetrations
Revolting Cocks
Revolution By Night
Rhea's Obsession
Rice, Boyd & Friends
Richard Ramirez
Richards, Monica
Rob Zombie
Rob(u)rang & Friends
ROBERT RENTAL
Robot Women
Rome
Rorschach Garden, The
Rorschach Test
Rosetta Stone
Rotersand
RSW
Run Level Zero
Rupesh Cartel
Russell Haswell
Rx
S.A.M.
S.E.M;I
S.I.N.A.
S.P.K.
S.V.D.
S:Cage
Sachiko M
Sado
Saints Of Eden
Saltillo
Samhain
sang.r?l
Sanguis Et Cinis
Sara Noxx
SAVAGE AURAL HOTBED
Savage, Conway
Scandy
SCAR TISSUE
SCARECROW
Scary Bitches
Schandtat Mensch
Schattenschlag
SCORN
Scrambled Schoolgirls
Scrap.edx
Scratch Acid
Scream Silence
Screaming Banshee Aircrew
SD6
Seabound
SECOND SKIN
Secret Meeting, The
See Colin Slash
SENSER
Sensory Mindfields
Sephiroth
Seraphim Shock
Sergeant Sawtooth
Serj Tankian
Sero.Overdose
SERPENTS
Seven Trees
Severe Illusion
Severed Heads
Shade Factory
Sheep on Drugs
Shemsu Hor
Shnarph!
Shorai
Sickness
Side 3
Side Line
Side-Line Magazine
Sieben
SIELWOLF
Sightings
Signal Aout 42
SIGNS OF CHAOS
Silence
Silent Promises
Silk Saw
Simply Dead's
Simulator
SINA
SINGLE GUN THEORY
Siniestro Sin (Spain)
SINMASTERS
SIRVIX
Sissy Spacek
Sister Machine Gun
Sisters Of Mercy
Siva Six
SIXTY CYCLE HUM
Skin Area
Skinny Puppy
SKOLD
Skorbut
Skoyz
SKREW
Skrew
SLAVE UNIT
Sleep Chamber
Sleepwalk
Slick Idiot
slow motion
SLUGBAIT
SMEE
Smegma
SMP
Snake Skin
Snog
Snow In China
SOCIETY BURNING
Soderberg, Ulf
SOIL & ECLIPSE
Soil Bleeds Black, The
Sol Invictus
Solitary Experiments (German
Solmania
Solypsis
Soman
Somatic Responses
Sona Eact
Sonar
Sophya
Sopor Aeturnus & The Ense
Soul Circuit
SPAHN RANCH
Spahn Ranch
Spakka
Spanking Machine
Specimen
Spectra*Paris
Spektralized
Spetsnaz
SPHERE LAZZA
SPINESHANK
SPK
Squaremeter
Star Industry
Stark
STATE OF BEING
State Of The Union
Statemachine
STATIC-X
Statik Sky
Staub
Staubkind
STEEVE REICH
Stendeck
Steril
Stiff Valentine
Still Life Decay
Stimbox
Stin Scatzor
Stochastic Theory
Strange Boutique
Stratvm Terror
Stromkern
Stump
Stupor
Sturm Café
SubSonic Symphonee
Substanz T
Suckdog
SUCKING CHEST WOUND
Suicide
Suicide Commando
Sulpher
Sunshine Blind
Supreme Court
Surfers For Satan
Sutcliffe Jugend
Swamp Terrorists
Swans
Switchblade Symphony
Sybreed (Switzerland)
SYNAESTHESIA
Synapscape
Synaptic Defect
Syntec
Synthetic Minister
Synth-Etik
Syrian
System der Dinge
System Syn
SYSTEMA
Szkieve
T.O.Y.
Tackhead
Tactical Sekt
Tactile Gemma
TALA 2XLC
Tamtrum
TankT
TANZWUT
Tarmvred
TatsuMaki
Tau Factor
TEAR GARDEN
TECHNO ANIMAL
Technoir
Telepherique
Telerotor
Temple of Tears (Australia)
Templegarden's
Tennhauser
Terence Fixmer
Terminal Choice
Terminal Sect
Terminal Sound System
TERMINAL WHITE
Terror Punk Syndicate
Terrorfakt
Terrorvision
Test Dept.
THD
The Ancient Gallery
The Boredoms
The Chaos Engine
The Clay People
The Cruxshadows
The Damage Manual
THE DAVE HOWARD SINGERS
The Elysium Façade
The Enders
The Fair Sex
THE FAIR SEX
The Gas Chamber Orchest
The Gerogerigegege
The God Project
The Grey Wolves
The Haters
THE JOHNSON ENGINEERING CO
The Legendary Pink Dots
The Long Emergency
the mad capsule markets
THE NEON JUDGEMENT
The Normal
The Parallel Project
The Raytownian(s)
The Retrosic
THE SECT
THE SHAMEN
the Start
The synthetic dream foundati
Theatres Des Vampires
Things Outside the Skin
Thirdorgan
Thirteenth Exile
This Ascension
This Fish Needs A Bike
This Heat
This Morn' Omina
THOMAS LEER
Thora
Thorofon
Threshold HouseBoys Choir
Throbbing Gristle
Thrussell, David
THULE
Tim Schuldt
TINFED
Todzug
Tolchock
Tom Wax presents Waxworx
Tomasz Krakowiak
Tonikom
Tor Lundvall
Toxic Shock Syndrome
Tracer
Trance To The Sun
TRANSMISIA
TRENCH
TRIBES OF NEUROT
Trifid Project
Tristesse De La Lune
Tropism
Tumor
Turmion Kätilöt
Tycho Brahe
Typhoid
Tyske Ludder
Ubel
Ultra
Ultramarine
ULTRAVIOLENCE
Ultraviolet
umbra et imago
UNDER THE NOISE
Underwater Pilots
Unheilig
Unit 187
UnKindness Of Ravens
Unter Null (US)
UnterArt
Unto Ashes
URANIA
Uranium USSR 1972
UV
V.S.B.
VACUUM TREE HAND
VAMPIRE RODENTS
Vanvett
VAST
Velvet Acid Christ
vesuvius
Violent Entity
Violent Onsen Geisha
Virtual Space Industrial
Virtual
VNV NATION
Void Construct
Vomito Negro
Von Thronstahl
Vox Celesta
W.A.S.T.E.
Wai Pi Wai
WAITING FOR GOD
Waldgeist
Wardance
Wave In Head
Way of All Flesh, The
Weena Morloch
Welle:Erdball
Werkraum
When
Whispers In The Shadow
White Zombie
Whitehouse
Winterkalte
Winterstahl
Wolf Eyes
wolfsheim
Wolfsheim
Wumpscut
Wynardtage
X Marks the Pedwalk
Xabec
XBXRX
X-Dream
Xenomorph
Xenonics K-30
Xentrifuge
X-Fusion
Xingu Hill + Squaremeter
Xinlisupreme
Xmal Deutschland
Xome
Xorcist
Xotox
XP8
XPQ-21
Xykogen
Xyn
Yavin 4
YEHT MAE
Yello
Yellow Swans
YELWORC
Yelworc
yelworC
Yendri
Y-Luk-O
Young Gods
Yuri Landman
Z Prochek (Sweden)
Zadera
Zanoisect
Zealous Veil (Scotland)
Zelle 40
Zeni Geva
Zentriert Ins Antlitz
ZERO DEFECTS
Zeromancer
Zombie Girl
Zombie Militia
Zonk’T
Zoppo
Zoviet France
Movies I like mainly Science Fiction movies such as Matrix, Alien, Predator etc
9th GATE
A

Television:


Abominable
ACTION MAN
ACTRESS
AGIRE
ALEXANDER
ALIEN col.
ALIEN VS PREDATOR
AMERICAN HISTORY X
ANACONDA
ANIMATRIX
APOLLO 13
ARMAGEDON
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
BABYLON 5 col.
Back To The Future
BACK TO THE FUTURE
BASIC
BATMAN
BIRTH OF A NATION
BLADE
BLAIRWITCH
CALIGULA
CATWOMAN
CRUSADERS
CUBE
DAGON
DANCER IN THE DARK
DAREDEVIL
DARK FURY
DARK WATERS
DEAD MEAT
DEAD OR ALIVE 3
DEMENTIA 2
DEMOLITION MAN
DOBERMAN
DOOM
DR. SLEEP
DRACULA
DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS
EINSTURZENDE NEUBAUTEN (1/2 MENSCH)
ELECTRA
ERASERHEAD
EXORCIST
FANTASTIC 4
FAST & THE FURIOUS
FAUST
FETISH, GUM & DIRTY VOL. 3
FINAL FANTASY
GARGOILS
GHOST OF MAE NAK
GIDOCCO
GI-JOE
GODZILLA
GOTHICA
GRAYZONE
GUINEA PIG
HAKAIDER
HALLOW MAN
HARI POTTER
HELLBOY
HELLRAISER
HULK
HUMIDE-69SECONDS CHRONO
INDIANA JOENS
INMA SEIDEN
INMU
INTERRACIAL SEX
INVASION
i-robot
I-ROBOT
IRON GIANT
IRON HEAD
ISLAND
KILL BILL
KILLJOY
KOJI DEMON
KRAFTWERK (DVD)
LESBIAN HARDCORE
LORD OF THE RINGS
LOST HIGHWAY
LOST IN SPACE
MAD MAX
MADHOUSE
MARILYN MANSON (LIVE IN ATHENS)
MARS WARS
MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE
MEPHISTO
METROPOLIS
METROPOLIS
MIMIC
MINORITY REPORT
MORTAL KOMBAT
MORTAL KOMBAT KREEYA
NATIONAL TREASURE
NECROMANTIK
NECRONOMICON
NECRONOMICON
NIKITA
NINJA TURTLES
NOSFERATU
OMEN
PAN'S LABYRINTH
PARIAH
PEACEKEEPER WARS
PLANET OF THE APES
POLICE ACADEMY
POWER RANGERS
PREDATOR
PRINCE OF DARKNESS
PSYCHO
PURE LOVE
QUEEN OF THE DAMNED
QUILLS
RAMBO
RAMMSTEIN
RAMMSTEIN CLIPS
RESIDENT EVIL
RING
ROB ZOMBIE (PAST PRESENT AND FUTURE)
ROCKY
RUNAWAY
SALO
SAW
SHAFT
SIBER RAIDER
SILVERHAWKS
SIMPLY FABULUS 4
SIN CITY
SPAWN
SPIDERMAN
SPIECES
STAR TREK
STAR WARS coll.
STIGMATA
STREET FIGHTER
SUPERMAN
TEKKEN MOVIE
TERMINATIOR
TETSUO
TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE
THE CELL
THE CHURCH
THE CUBE
THE DAY AFTER TOMORROW
The Dracula of Exarcheia
THE EMPIRE OF PARRION
THE FEAR
THE FIFTH ELEMENT
THE FLY
THE LEGEND OF UNHEAD HOSERMAN
THE MIASMA
THE MUMMY coll.
THE OMEN
THE PHILADELFIA EXPERIMENT
THROAT GAGGERS
THUNDERCATS
TOKIO DIVA EXPRESS 2
TRANSFORMERS
TRIPLE X
VIRUS
VODOCCO
VOLTRONS
VOLTUS
VR TROOPERS
WAR OF THE WORLDS
X-FILES
X-MAN
X-MEN
ZEIRAM 2
Television I watch TV rarely. I laugh with trendy and Neo-Turkish Baroque Greek mainstream music. I rarely care about News. I love to watch educational TV Programs.
Games I Love mainly Beat em' Up Games With Fictional Views mainly but some Action and Adventure Games also.

Books:

I love LaVey, DeSade, Masoch...I have to declare my tendecy to Sci-Fi Novels hehe... aoI cite the history of my favourite music movement "Industrial Music" from 2 credible sources: Source 1 Wikipedia Industrial music is a loose term for a number of different styles of experimental music, especially but not necessarily electronic music. The term was first used in the mid-1970s to describe the then-unique sound of Industrial Records artists. Since then, an extremely wide variety of labels and artists have since come to be called "Industrial."The first industrial artists experimented with varying degrees of noise, production techniques and what, at the time, were considered controversial topics. Their production was not only limited to musical output. It also included mail art, performance art, installation pieces and other art forms.Originally, the term solely referred to music created by Industrial Records and related artists. As time progressed, the term began to refer to artists either directly influenced by the original movement, artists using an "industrial" aesthetic such as imagery devised around mechanical objects and industry itself and, more distantly, artists who were only minimally, often not at all, influenced or inspired by Industrial Records and related artists. The broadening of the term's musical definition has led to an overwhelming number of sub-genres and lines of influence.TerminologyIndustrial was a term meant by its creators to evoke the idea of music created for a new generation of people, previous music being more "agricultural." A fatalist-but-realistic, slightly misanthropic and often intensely dehumanized or mechanical atmosphere was present in the music and the utilization of gritty, hands-on technologies and techniques, rather than any concrete compositional detail, was a common practice.On this topic, Peter Christopherson of Industrial Records once remarked, "The original idea of Industrial Records was to reject what the growing industry was telling you at the time what music was supposed to be."Luigi Russolo's 1913 work The Art of Noises is often cited as the first example of the industrial philosophy in modern music. After Russolo's Musica Futurista came Pierre Schaeffer and musique concrète, and this gave rise to early industrial music, which was made by manipulating cut sections of recording tape, and adding very early sound output from analog electronics devices.Also important in the development of the genre was the Dada art movement, and later the Fluxus and Surrealist art movements, as well as the 'found object' aesthetic of the Arts and Crafts movement.Edgard Varèse was also a major pioneer in electronic music. His composition Poème électronique, for example, debuted at the 1958 Brussels World's Fair in the Philips Pavilion.Industrial Records 20 Jazz Funk Greats by Throbbing Gristle featured contrasting imagery. The back cover features what appears to be the same image in black and white. A closer look reveals a nude male corpse now lying in the grass in front of the band. 20 Jazz Funk Greats by Throbbing Gristle featured contrasting imagery. The back cover features what appears to be the same image in black and white. A closer look reveals a nude male corpse now lying in the grass in front of the band.Industrial Music for Industrial People was originally coined by Monte Cazazza as the strapline for the record label Industrial Records (founded by British art-provocateurs Throbbing Gristle, the musical offshoot of performance art group COUM Transmissions).The first wave of this music appeared in 1977 with Throbbing Gristle, Cabaret Voltaire, and NON. These releases often featured tape editing, stark percussion and loops distorted to the point where they had degraded to harsh noise. Vocals were sporadic, and were as likely to be bubblegum pop as they were to be abrasive polemics.Early industrial performances often involved taboo-breaking, provocative elements, such as mutilation, sado-masochistic elements and totalitarian imagery or symbolism, as well as forms of audience abuse.Swedish rock act The Leather Nun, were signed to Industrial Records in 1978, being the first non-TG/Cazazza act to have an IR-release. Their only IR-release, Slow Death EP (IR 007, nov '79), rapidly climbed the alternative charts in the UK and was on power play on the influential John Peel BBC1 radioshow for two weeks in December '79. Re/Search #6/7: Industrial Culture Handbook collected numerous interviews from various artists involved in circle surrounding Industrial Records. Re/Search #6/7: Industrial Culture Handbook collected numerous interviews from various artists involved in circle surrounding Industrial Records.Bands like Test Dept, Clock DVA, Factrix, Autopsia, Nocturnal Emissions, Esplendor Geometrico, Whitehouse, Severed Heads and SPK soon followed. Blending electronic synthesisers, guitars and early samplers, these bands created an aggressive and abrasive music fusing elements of rock with experimental electronic music. Artists often used shock-tactics including explicit lyrical content, graphic art and Fascistic imagery; at the forefront of this were Croc Shop and Laibach. Industrial Records experienced a fair amount of controversy after it was revealed that it had been using an image of an Auschwitz crematorium as its logo for a number of years.Across the Atlantic, similar experiments were taking place. In San Francisco, shock/performance artist Monte Cazazza (often collaborating with Factrix and Survival Research Labs/SRL) began working with harsh atonal noise. Boyd Rice (aka NON) released several more albums of noise music, with guitar drones and tape loops creating a cacophony of repetitive sounds. In New Zealand, experimental / art rock groups sprouted from the underground such as The Skeptics, Hieronymus Bosch (NZ), Fetus Productions, Ministry of Compulsory Joy and The Kiwi Animal.In the rest of Europe, particularly in Italy, work by Maurizio Bianchi/M.B./Sacher-Pelz at the end of 1979/beginning of 1980, with some electronic/radiographic extreme works edited in a very limited edition ("Cainus", "Venus", "Cease To Exist", "Velours", "Mectpyo Blut" cassette-tapes, and "Symphony For A Genocide", "Menses", "Neuro Habitat" LPs).In France, early artists influenced by Industrial Records included Vivenza, Art&Technique, Pacific 231, Étant Donnés, Le Syndicat and Die Form.In Germany, Einstürzende Neubauten were performing daring acts, mixing metal percussion, guitars and unconventional "instruments" (such as jackhammers and bones) in elaborate stage performances that often damaged the venues they were playing in.Post-industrial developmentsThroughout the early to mid 1980s, the post-industrial movement began to emerge around the world. Coil, arguably the largest contributor to the evolution of Industrial music's original ideas, was formed by Jhonn Balance and Peter Christopherson after departing from Psychic TV in 1982 (debuting with How to Destroy Angels in 1984). Highly eclectic, through their career they touched on everything from acid house to drone music, the occult always a major influence in the group's themes and approach. Other acts like Skinny Puppy from Vancouver Canada (debuting with Back and Forth in 1984), Front 242, the pioneers of EBM from Belgium (debuting with Geography in 1982), and Foetus from Australia (debuting with Deaf in 1981) are some of the most notable second-wave artists who helped popularize and redefine the genre amongst the underground music culture (and laying the foundations for most future sub-divisions of the genre).In the early 1980s the Chicago-based record label Wax Trax! successfully helped to expand the industrial music genre into the more accessible "elektro-industrial" genre. At the forefront were bands such as Chicago's Ministry, My Life With The Thrill Kill Kult and Die Warzau as well as the German import, KMFDM. Wax Trax was one of the first labels to carry this new strain of punk-influenced Industrial music. It was one of the most widely respected labels of the genre.By the late 80s, the scene had grown considerably as the music became a staple of the club scene - artists were emerging from all over the world and record sales of key artists were increasing rapidly. One of the biggest contributors to the new brand of industrial music was Nine Inch Nails' comparatively commercially-structured Pretty Hate Machine, released in 1989. NIN performances began breaking the style into mainstream rock and punk culture at that point. Ultimately the band's accomplishments, alongside the likes of Ministry, led to the further development of not only the style as a whole, but of a number of rock and to an even greater degree, metal fusion sub-genres to later emerge.The genre enjoyed relatively popular mainstream attention throughout the mid 1990's. Thanks to the charting success of albums such as Ministry's Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed and the Way to Suck Eggs and Nine Inch Nails' Broken, eventually leading to the multi-million selling releases of Nine Inch Nails' The Downward Spiral and to some degree even Marilyn Manson's Antichrist Superstar. Soon thousands of new distantly industrial influenced musicians came onto the scene. They came to be popularly called simply industrial, despite sharing very little to nothing in common with the original string. In 1991 IndustrialnatioN Magazine was born and began documenting industrial music and culture. Subsequently, numerous new industrial labels appeared to accommodate the blossoming market, such as Pendragon, 21st Circuitry and Energy Records. However, like many of the artists (often solo-musician projects who aimed to emulate Nine Inch Nails' commercial success), these labels were short lived and by 2000 most had ceased to exist, with the exception of Metropolis Records.Post-industrial genresMain articles: Post-industrial (music) and List of post-industrial music genres and related fusion genresOver the years, the term 'post-industrial' has come to refer to music having the industrial aesthetic such as noise/power electronics, neofolk, death industrial, martial industrial, dark ambient, some IDM and occasionally old school EBM.

Source 2 Brian Duguid Research

"Industrial culture? There has been a phenomena; I don't know whether it's strong enough to be a culture. I do think what we did has had a reverberation right around the world and back." Genesis P. Orridge (Throbbing Gristle)I've often thought that somebody really ought to write a history of industrial music. After all, there are histories of reggae, rap, and countless rock, jazz, folk and classical histories. Unfortunately, the best books on industrial music (Re/Search's Industrial Culture Handbook and Charles Neal's Tape Delay) were both written when the genre was still fresh, still on the move, and neither tells us much about where the music came from. A more recent contribution to the field, Dave Thompson's Industrial Revolution suffers from Americocentrism, major omissions, basic errors and from a concentration on electrobeat and industrial rock to the near exclusion of all else. Still, this article isn't that history; that will have to wait for someone better qualified than I.Instead, I offer a prehistory, a look at heritage, tradition and ancestry. For all that industrial music set out to provide the shock of the new, it's impossible to understand its achievements without a context to place them in. Few, if any, of its tactics and methods were truly original, although the way it combined its components was very much of its time.Before the prehistory can be properly explored, we need to know what this "industrial music" is, or was. It would be hard to disagree with the suggestion that prior to the formation of Throbbing Gristle as a side-project of performance art group COUM Transmissions in late 1975 industrial music did not exist; and certainly the genre took its name from the label that Throbbing Gristle set up, Industrial Records. Monte Cazazza is usually acknowledged as inventing the term "industrial music", and the label used the name in a very specific sense - as a negative comment on the desire for "authenticity" that still dominated music in the seventies. Very few of the groups who were initially called "industrial" liked the term, although from the mid-80s it became a word that bands embraced willingly, to the extent that nowadays even quite tedious rock bands claim to be industrial, and the jazz / classical ensemble, Icebreaker, has even bizarrely been described as an "industrial" group. Rock and jazz groups don't waste much time worrying about the word used to define their genre, so for my purposes I'm happy to include in the "industrial" genre plenty of artists who tried to disown the label.The groups who were released on Industrial Records (Throbbing Gristle, Cabaret Voltaire, ClockDVA, Thomas Leer and Robert Rental, Monte Cazazza, S.P.K., with the probable exception of The Leather Nun and Elizabeth Welch combined an interest in transgressive culture with an interest in the potential of noise as music, and it's easy to see how groups like Einsturzende Neubauten, Whitehouse or Test Dept can be considered to share similar interests.Dave Henderson's seminal Wild Planet article presented a survey of the (mainly British and European) "industrial" scene as it was recognised in 1983, but with artists as diverse as Steve Reich, Mark Shreeve, AMM and Laibach cited it was clear even then that the borders of industrial music couldn't be clearly defined. Since then, the music has fragmented, most notably into a division between experimental and dance/rock-oriented artists (or uncommercial and commercial). The popular "industrial" musicians, such as Front 242 or Ministry, draw on the elements of early industrial music most amenable to the rock and techno arenas (sometimes this just means aggression and paranoia); the others have explored industrial music's relationships with ritual music, musique concrete, academic electronic music, improvisation and pure noise. In recent times, through the popularity of ambient music, several artists involved in this more "experimental" tradition have achieved more popular recognition than before.It's tempting to see the fragmentation of industrial music into popular and "underground" areas as just a recognition of the relative accessibility of different musical styles, but this would be extremely misleading. As with jazz and rock, it's another example of "a music of revolt transformed into a repetitive commodity ... A continuation of the same effort, always resumed and renewed, to alienate a liberatory will in order to produce a market" . As industrial music's history and prehistory will make clear, industrial music originally articulated ideas of subversion that go significantly beyond the saleable "rebellion" that the rock commodity offers. It was inevitable that the market would adopt only the superficial aggression and stylisms.It's clear that the label, "industrial music", is of no use in pigeonholing music, but it still serves as a useful pointer to a web of musical and personal relationships, a common pool of interests and ideas which every industrial sub-genre has some connection with. The uncommercial industrial tradition has frequently been labelled "post-industrial"; in contrast, this article attempts to identify "pre-industrial" music. However, as will become obvious, there are few meaningful boundaries between industrial music and its ancestors.Writing in Alternative Press, Michael Mahan attempted to define industrial music as "an artistic reflection of the de-humanisation of our people and the inexorable pollution of our planet by our factory-based socio-economic state". This is too simplistic; if industrial music were simply anti-factory music then it would encompass any number of reactionary Luddites. Mahan at least managed to identify some of the genre's important musical precursors, citing Edgard Varese, Karlheinz Stockhausen, David Vorhaus, Frank Zappa and Klaus Schulze as some probable ancestors. Jon Savage has elsewhere identified five areas that characterised industrial music: access to information, shock tactics, organisational autonomy, extra-musical elements, and use of synthesizers and anti-music. By examining each in turn, it will soon become obvious exactly what place industrial music has in the twentieth century cultural tradition.1. ACCESS TO INFORMATION "Today there is no reality, or everything is real and everything is unreal. Today the object no longer refers to the real or to information. Both are already the result of a selection, a montage, a taking of views ... Thus the control problem is not one of surveillance, propaganda or paranoia. It is one of subjective influence, consent and extension to all possible spheres of life" Graeme Revell (S.P.K.)Industrial music was fundamentally a music of ideas. For all its musical power and innovation, the early industrial groups were much happier talking about non-musical issues than about musical ones, a direct result of the fact that few if any of them had any real musical background or knowledge. The Industrial Culture Handbook is packed with contributors' book lists; titles listed by Genesis P-Orridge include books by Aleister Crowley, William Burroughs, Philip Dick, Adolf Hitler, the Marquis de Sade and Tristan Tzara; SPK's Graeme Revell shows a more "intellectual" background with titles by Michel Foucault, Samuel Beckett, Jacques Attali and Pierre Proudhon. Of those who list records, Boyd Rice shows his obsession with 50s and 60s kitsch; Z'ev turns out to be a fan of Peter Gabriel, Bob Dylan and Otis Redding; only Rhythm & Noise admit to any knowledge of the avant-garde music tradition, citing the likes of Todd Dockstader, Gordon Mumma, Michel Redolfi and Iannis Xenakis.Of all the "major" industrial groups, Throbbing Gristle were the most directly concerned with access to information, having accepted what had been obvious since the early sixties, that an increasing area of the world lives in an information society, and that military and economic strength are no longer the only important forms of power. Gristle's frontman, Genesis P-Orridge (born Neil Megson) took the view that control of information was now the most important form of power. This is on the not unreasonable grounds that if the average person does not believe (or is unaware) that a possibility exists, they are clearly not free to choose such a possibility. Although such a conclusion was a commonplace to the post-modern philosophers and political theorists, it was an unusually sophisticated concern for a musical artist. As Orridge has said: "The idea: to heal and reintegrate the human character. To set off psychic detonations that negate Control ... To exchange and liberate information ... We need to search for methods to break the preconceptions, modes of unthinking acceptance and expectations that make us, within our constructed behaviour patterns, so vulnerable to Control".Other industrial groups, particularly Cabaret Voltaire and S.P.K. espoused similar views. Genesis P-Orridge went .. the break-up of Throbbing Gristle to make the dissemination of information and the attack on information-based methods of control the focus of his work, through the group Psychic TV and the Temple ov Psychick Youth organisation. The general approach was simply to publicise the existence of transgressive literature on the grounds that the social definition of "taboo" or "transgressive" was just another method of control, of persuading people not to examine certain choices. Even for groups who weren't particularly interested in informing people about this sort of information (and ultimately this probably applies to the majority of industrial groups), the awareness of it clearly influenced their music.The literary counterculture, dating back through the Beatniks via Surrealism and mavericks such as Celine or de Sade is a major tradition that informed many of the industrial groups even if they weren't part of it. Experimental literature had peaked in the 60s, and the importance of the industrial groups' awareness of it was primarily their role as disseminators and popularisers. Obvious examples of this include Industrial Records' issue of a record of William Burroughs cut-ups, Nothing Here Now But The Recordings.Although their importance in publicising such literature, and other "unconventional" information, is undeniable, industrial music made no real contribution to the ideas of the counterculture. Genesis P-Orridge's writings mostly consist of borrowings from Burroughs, Crowley, and Leary, although the connections he has made between the cut-up technique, magick, and deconditioning are original.2. SHOCK TACTICS "They are men possessed, outcasts, maniacs, and all for love of their work. They turn to the public as if asking its help, placing before it the materials to diagnose their sickness" - press commentary on Zurich DadaThe main source of industrial music's ideas may have been the radical literary tradition, but a great debt was also owed to the avant-garde performance art tradition, dating back at least as far as Futurism at the turn of the century. Here was a tradition from which industrial music drew not just rhetoric but also the tactics and methods.Performance art as a means of provocation undoubtedly goes back as long as there were people who resented their culture and thought to change matters by creating shock and confusion. As an alternative to purer forms of song, dance and theatre it's history can be traced back through Renaissance spectacle, and medaeval passion plays to tribal ritual. In the nineteenth century, music hall performance came the closest to the mixed media spectacles that would resurface in performance art. Histories of twentieth century performance art often start with the twenty-three year old Alfred Jarry's proto-surrealist performance of Ubu Roi in Paris in 1896. Jarry's absurdist theatre provoked an uproar that would be echoed throughout the century's history of performance art. Filippo Marinetti, whose Futurist Manifesto was to be published in 1909, took up the provocationist baton in his own play Roi Bombance, written in 1905, and the desire to provoke played a major part in first the Italian Futurist movement, then successively in Dada and Surrealism.The politics may have superficially differed, but the basic thrust of these movements has many similarities to the later activities of COUM Transmissions, Whitehouse and others. All three artistic movements (Futurism, Dada, Surrealism) shared a disgust and contempt for the social common ground of the day. Their response varied. Futurism opposed tradition with an enthusiasm for dynamism, for technology, and for patriotic militarism, all of which ensured that fascist politicians would later attempt to claim the Futurist cultural heritage as their own (unlike more recent flag-burners, whose anger has been directed at their own society, the Futurists' flag-burnings of 1914 in Milan were of a foreign country's flag - Austria's).Their positive view of "progress" has few echoes among the early industrial musicians; even Kraftwerk, whose clinical embrace of the coming information age proved such a fertile resource for industrial music's exponents, leavened their technophilia with a sense of irony (at its clearest on their paean to the atomic age, Radioactivity). However, as the electronic beat tendency in industrial music drew on emerging synthipoppers like the Human League and eventually fed in to the cyber-culture of the late 80s and early 90s, the Futurists' uncritical fetishisation of technology and artifice re-emerged. Marinetti's celebration of the industrial revolution has a lot in common with the ill-digested cyber-fandom of some recent musicians. Certainly, the electronic pop of the late seventies New Romantics (such as Ultravox) betrays a lack of humour that the Futurists would never have shared, but it has the same uncritical adoration of technology. In general, industrial music drew upon a much more cynical view of science's contribution to history.The similarities between Dada and industrial culture are less ambiguous. Dada's anger was as much inspired by the First World War as by a more general revulsion against the general banality of society. Their reaction also had a lot in common with industrial art; it was an attempt to find an aesthetic where most of the audience only found ugliness. For Dada this consisted of primitivist, abstract painting, and at the Cabaret Voltaire in Zurich, performances including seemingly nonsensical sound-poetry. Industrial music also adopted the primitive, abstract approach, and like Dada, rejected conventional musical structures in favour of chaos and noise.From Richard Huelsenbeck's Dadaist Manifesto, written in Germany in 1918: "Art in its execution and direction is dependent on the time in which it lives, and artists are creatures of their epoch. The highest art will be that which in its conscious content presents the thousandfold problems of the day, the art which has been visibly shattered by the explosions of last week, which is forever trying to collect its limbs after yesterday's crash. The best and most extraordinary artists will be those who every hour snatch the tatters of their bodies out of the frenzied cataracts of life, who, with bleeding hands and hearts, hold fast to the intelligence of their time."Industrial music was very much of its time; you can hear the shattered dreams of the 60s in Throbbing Gristle's music, you can hear the defeatism and boredom that accompanied the decay of the welfare state. As in Huelsenbeck's prescription for "the highest art", this music (whether deliberately or not is irrelevant) addressed the important questions of the day; social alienation, media illusions perceived as reality, and the impossibility of morality in a culture where the traditional arbiters of morality were losing their power.The anti-art tradition that Dada embodied continued in various forms throughout the century. Its first successor was the Surrealist movement, which included artists inspired by their direct contact with Dadaists like Tristan Tzara, and it also owed a considerable debt to the absurdist French art tradition embodied in the work of Jarry, Raymond Roussel and Guillaume Apollinaire. The break between Surrealism and Dada has been presented as a clash of personalities between Andre Breton and Tzara, but some argue that it represented the replacement of a movement that had valued disorder, anarchy and confusion with one that, paradoxically, attempted to rationalise its irrationality.The Surrealist search for an escape from socially imposed reality certainly influenced some later industrial musicians; Nurse With Wound paid homage to the absurdist and hyper-realist tradition in much of their music, and more recently, composer Randy Greif has specifically said that he attempts to create a genuinely surrealist music (the Surrealists themselves took their figurehead Breton's dislike of music to heart, concentrating on visual art and literature). Others, particularly European groups like D.D.A.A. and P16D4 also show clear traces of surrealism in the way they treat musical collage as an opportunity for humorous juxtaposition.The Surrealist attempt to put the unconscious on display could be seen as part of a yearning for authenticity through primitivism that has been a major element in twentieth century art. As discussed below, its influence on performance art is one of the more important elements of the industrial music heritage, but several industrial musicians incorporated it more directly. As well as the "surrealist" elements in industrial music, "primitivist" attitudes appear in the work of groups like Zero Kama, Lustmord, Coil, Crash Worship and Zone (who share an interest in the occult, spirituality, ritualism). Organum's David Jackman, who has passed through the industrial fringes, is even more clearly interested in music's ability to evoke primal spiritual responses, creating drone-based, barely tonal music that owes a lot to non-Western ritual music.If Surrealism lacked Dada's provocationist tactics, later movements did not. Fluxus developed in the first few years of the Sixties in America, and combined the prank-events beloved of Dada with a specifically anti-bourgeois political ideology. They acknowledged their heritage; in 1962 Nam June Paik organised an event Neo-Dada in der Musik in Dusseldorf, for example. Some of the artists associated with Fluxus, particularly Terry Riley and LaMonte Young would later go on to develop music that, via popularisers like Brian Eno, would ultimately influence many industrial musicians, but Fluxus itself had little direct influence.However, Fluxus was only one element in a resurgence of performance art in sixties New York. Allan Kaprow's Happenings (from 1959 onwards) were some of the earliest and best remembered events, but they sprung from an ongoing history of performance that stretched back to the New York Dadaists (notably Picabia and Duchamp). In 1936, the Bauhaus's Xanti Schawinsky joined the three-year old Black Mountain College in North Carolina, introducing a performance element into the curriculum that would engage Merce Cunningham, John Cage, Buckminster Fuller, Robert Rauschenberg and many others en route to the Happenings.The growth of interest in performance art in America was paralleled by the activities of various artists at the same time in Europe. Amongst them, Joseph Beuys (a Fluxus protagonist) and Hermann Nitsch achieved particular notoriety and are particularly relevant to the heritage of industrial music. Beuys' work frequently involved the creation of very personal, meditative situations, isolating himself from humanity for days on end, or sharing an art space with only a dead or living animal. His interest in ritual as a way of recovering art's transformative function is much more personal than Nitsch, whose Orgies Mysteries Theatre performances took the form of reenactments of Dionysian rituals, social celebrations involving loud music and the disembowelment of animal carcasses.Many other artists have entered similar taboo areas. Chris Burden's performances have involved him cutting himself and being shot in the arm [4]; Stelarc and Fakir Musafar hang themselves from hooks carefully inserted into their flesh; Marina Abramovic allowed her audience to cut her clothes and skin with razor blades. The aim is to recover art's shamanic, ritual elements, to break psychological taboos and enter genuinely altered states. Genesis P-Orridge, later of Throbbing Gristle, was an escapee from this performance art tradition, first in The Exploding Galaxy, then via the experimental commune Trans Media Exploration in 1969 on to COUM Transmissions with fellow performer Cosey Fanni Tutti. COUM's performances centered on sex and ritual, culminating in the notorious Prostitution exhibition at the I.C.A. in 1976, which brought Throbbing Gristle to public attention (although Throbbing Gristle had been first used as title for a COUM performance two years previously).Throbbing Gristle were probably the only industrial group to evolve directly out of a performance art context, but the live art of the sixties and seventies developed several new ideas that later fed into the work of various industrial groups. Cabaret Voltaire's early performances sometimes included showings of surrealist films as the "support act". Percussionist Z'ev's performances have been compared to shamanic exorcisms, and proto-industrial group The Residents owe much of their live costume drama to the Dada / Bauhaus tradition [8]. Most notably, Test Dept, which began life as a music group very rapidly connected with avant-garde theatre; some of their spectacular performances are documented on the A Good Night Out and Gododdin albums. In 1992, they staged an event in Glasgow entitled The Second Coming, in a huge disused locomotive works; this involved three narrators, several dancers, several percussionists and other musicians, and a host of extras, such as flag-bearers and welders. Its large-scale non-narrative approach to performance owes a great deal to the work of people like Robert Wilson in the seventies, although its preoccupations are quite different.However, Test Dept were unusual among industrial musicians in that their disgust for the society they found themselves in led them to a politics of protest that directly embraced the ideas of the left; solidarity being the major one, leading the band through a series of concerts opposing the Conservative assault on the trade union movement, supporting the striking miners' unions, ambulance workers, print workers, and anti-poll tax campaigners. They remained sophisticated enough never to match their strong political feeling with simplistic and unequivocal support for any of the parties of the left, but nonetheless, their allegiances had little in common with most other industrial groups, who distrusted all conventional politics, of whatever wing. Groups like Throbbing Gristle, S.P.K. and Cabaret Voltaire all saw society as a whole to be too corrupt for conventional politics to be worth bothering with.In Gristle's case, their music and lyrics appeared to present an amoral face full of nothing but revulsion; their songs catalogued the horror of the modern world without attempting to pass comment. Inevitably, their interest in mass murderers, Nazism, and similar topics led to accusations by some that T.G. were more than interested, they were attracted to such ideas. Nothing could be further from the truth, as the surface amorality disguised a deep moralism. It was their hatred of pretence, hypocrisy, oppression and authoritarianism that led to their violent rebellion.Following the break-up of T.G., this hidden morality made itself most clearly felt through Genesis P-Orridge's group, Psychic TV (Peter Christopherson, also ex-Gristle, soon left to join John Balance in Coil), and its associated "anti"-organisation, the Temple ov Psychick Youth. Ostensibly an attempt to use the framework of a "cult" to decondition people's minds from social indoctrination, rather than to brainwash them, T.O.P.Y. never succeeded in getting beyond its own paradoxes. While it was on the one hand encouraging its members to think for themselves, to question and reject received ideas, it nonetheless insisted on set methods of achieving this de-conditioned salvation (e.g. ritual sex magick), suggested standards of behaviour for members to live up to (members who failed to toe the line were in some cases effectively ex-communicated), and, most importantly, relied on a hierarchical organisation that never succeeded in being in any way democratic or transparent. Its achievements (primarily the sense of community amongst like-minded misfits) were compromised by the fact that its initiators never freed themselves from their situation as role models and, if they ever understood the lessons of anarchist and liberationist political theory, never applied them in practice.Whitehouse's William Bennett appeared to decide that the moral amorality of Throbbing Gristle was doomed to failure, and his group stuck to its guns with unrelenting challenges to listenability and unrelentingly tasteless lyrics about Nazism, serial killers, rape and similar topics. According to one person who worked with William Bennett, Nurse With Wound's Steven Stapleton, Bennett is "only interested in upsetting people ... His ethic was 'Everybody who buys my records is basically a cunt'" [9]. However, Whitehouse's Stefan Jaworzyn has acknowledged Whitehouse's extra-musical influences: "I've always considered Whitehouse to be more like performance art ... in that Whitehouse is outside of rock, experimental music or whatever." [10] In this respect, Whitehouse continue a long tradition of attempting to outrage and assault the audience; there have certainly been other performance artists who have physically attacked their audience in the past. Notably, this contrasts strongly with the tradition of self-abusive performance that Throbbing Gristle were heir to.Whitehouse's own inability to articulate their motives has left them open to misinterpretation and opposition. Are they satirists, like Brett Easton Ellis? Whatever the case may be, the attempt to maintain such an extreme vision shows real single-mindedness. Whether or not this culmination of the Dadaist tradition leads onwards is open to doubt. One writer, Hakim Bey, is particularly critical: "We support artists who use terrifying material in some 'higher cause' - who use loving / sexual material of any kind, however shocking or illegal - who use their anger and disgust and their true desires to lurch towards self-realisation and beauty and adventure. 'Social Nihilism', yes - but not the dead nihilism of gnostic self-disgust. Even if it's violent and abrasive, anyone with a vestigial third eye can see the differences between revolutionary pro-life art and reactionary pro-death art".3. ORGANISATIONAL AUTONOMY / EXTRA-MUSICAL ELEMENTS "We were the first independent record company in England to actually release proper professionally made video cassettes" - Peter Christopherson (Throbbing Gristle)Independence was nothing new by the time industrial music was christened. Almost every genre of music that had limited commercial potential amongst mainstream Western audiences (jazz, reggae, "world" music) already had a history of pioneering independent record labels, such as Sun Ra's Saturn, or the improv label Incus. Even the mainstream had its nominal independents, such as Island or Virgin. The setting up of Industrial Records was clearly nothing new, but it was important. Unlike other forms of popular music, industrial music was (and remains) critical of systems of power and control, and this criticism clearly extends to the record industry. While several punk bands competed for a major record deal, none of the early industrial bands had much taste for the compromise involved.It has been argued that industrial music wouldn't have happened if punk hadn't freed listener's expectations; after all, groups like Suicide toured with the Clash, and bands like the Slits, with their complete inability to play instruments "properly" were arguably as Dada as anything that deliberately proclaimed to be so. Personally, I think industrial music would have happened anyway. The explosion in what was basically amateur musique concrete was the inevitable consequence of the collision between pent-up creativity and inexpensive outlets; and the subculture that was interested in "weird" music of various kinds predated punk and was already well established, if tiny. Certainly, the simultaneity of punk created an opportunity for "industrial" to be perceived as "popular" music, and thus reach a wider audience than might otherwise have occurred. Industrial music and punk shared for a couple of years a strong desire for negation, a strong desire to break (musical) rules and express disgust.Industrial Records were as independent as possible from the mainstream, although this probably owed as much to its being viewed by its founders as an "art project" as it has to do with ideological concerns. Although fated to last no longer than the "house" band, Throbbing Gristle, Industrial Records proved enormously influential. While Eno, Kraftwerk, Faust (and other industrial antecedents) had felt it necessary to work with relatively powerful mainstream labels in order to reach an audience and make a living, Industrial Records taught many budding musicians that you could operate successfully at whatever level you chose. If you wanted to try and sell your records to a mass audience, a recording contract was always available with a major label (for example, Cabaret Voltaire signed up with EMI for just this reason); if you didn't want to compromise your music or ideas, it was still possible to obtain distribution and reach some sort of audience.Some of the labels that began in the wake of Industrial have been long-lived and achieved some commercial success (Third Mind, Play It Again Sam), and some enormously successful (Mute). Others, like United Dairies and Side Effects have kept a lower profile, but still survive in mutated forms. Possibly more important than the record labels has been the so-called "underground" cassette network, the result of the discovery that it need cost next to nothing to record and distribute your music, thanks to the widespread and very cheap availability of home cassette recorders. Despite its ghetto nature, the network of cassette labels has allowed musicians (of the sort unsuited to live performance) to define goals other than fame or money. It encourages communication and cooperation between participants in different musical genres, and like the fanzine "world", provides an encouraging environment in which to make the transition from passive consumer to active creator.To Jon Savage, industrial music's most important adoption of extra-musical elements came in the form of its use of film and video. Clearly, this was also nothing new; in a popular context, film was used by groups since the days of psychedelia. However, industrial music coincided with the early days of pop video production, and industrial musicians were keen to have a go and experiment. Bad quality, colour bleeds and feedback were inevitable results of primitive technology, but at least for industrial artists they formed desirable elements in their aesthetic.Savage wrote in 1983 that the interest in video was important for more than aesthetic reasons. At the time, following the break-up of Throbbing Gristle, and a perceived end to the classic "industrial era", Psychic TV and Cabaret Voltaire (with their independent video label, Doublevision) were announcing to all who cared to listen that the next arena for their cultural activities would be television. Having tackled all they cared to of musical control, television seemed a far more relevant medium. Here, surely, was where the battle against indoctrination and manipulation had to be fought.Unfortunately, it was never to be. The technology and techniques of television were already far in advance of anything these industrial musicians could bring to bear, and an understanding of and opposition to the mainstream television agenda was already well-established, both on the political left and within the television establishment itself. These have ensured that although the TV mainstream (like pop music) has remained unassailable by its strongest opponents, severe criticism is still often forthcoming from industry insiders.4. USE OF SYNTHESIZERS AND ANTI-MUSIC "The trouble with avant garde music is that it has lost its original meaning and now has as many rules and cliches as country or rock & roll. If in 50 years time they will look back at the early 1980s, or whenever, and say that was the new avant garde era, that event must be avoided if we are to remain true" - William Bennett (Whitehouse)i. Use of New Musical Technology Mechanical instruments of various sorts date back several centuries. Clockwork musical boxes and hand- cranked barrel organs both date back to the eighteenth century. One inventor of the period, Jacques Vaucanson, even produced a musical box with mechanical figures on it who actually went through the motions of playing real instruments. However, none of these developments lent themselves to the production of creative music.Industrial music relied to a great extent on the use of electronic instrumentation, as well as on other technological innovations of the twentieth century such as tape recording. By the late seventies, this technology had long since passed from the province of academic composition into use by popular musicians, but with rare exceptions most rock-based artists made little attempt to really explore the technology's potential. For most pop bands, tape and electronic filters allowed them to clean up their sound, present an illusion of space or depth, and generally to ensure that very conventional music was shown in its best light. Where keyboards were used, they were most often employed like pianos or organs. In the eighties, the technology would become essential for most pop and rock music, but in the seventies, only pioneers like the dub producers, German cosmic bands, or Brian Eno, applied the lessons learnt by earlier avant-gardists to more accessible music.The use of electricity to produce sound can be traced back at least to 1837, when Dr C.G. Page of Massachusetts reported his accidental discovery of "galvanic music", a method of generating a ringing tone using horseshoe magnets and a spiral of copper wire. At this time, however, nobody successfully applied the phenomenon to the production of an actual musical instrument. The first genuine electronic musical instrument is claimed to be Elisha Gray's "musical telegraph", invented in 1874 (a two-octave polyphonic electric organ), and many others followed; William Duddell's "singing arc" in 1899 and Thaddeus Cahill's telharmonium in 1900, for example. This latter instrument was an extremely complex device, weighing 200 tons and 60 feet long. Although the telharmonium was unsuccessful, the mechanical principles it used were later adopted by the Hammond organ (first built in 1929).Commercial electronic instruments followed the development of the thermionic valve by Lee De Forest, and include the Theremin, the Ondes Martenot, the Spharophon and the Trautonium, all of which were available in the 1920s. Adventurous composers such as Edgard Varese, Darius Milhaud and Oliver Messiaen all wrote music for these instruments, seeing them as an opportunity to extend their sound vocabulary, but they amounted to little more than that. In addition, these instruments became quite popular in Variety and music hall performances, where as a source of particular amusement they were at least treated as more than just another orchestral instrument. In 1931, Leon Theremin produced a special keyboard for the American composer Henry Cowell, called the rhythmicon, which could produce repeating series of notes, and was probably the first ever sequencer. Cowell's book, New Musical Resources, had been published the previous year, documenting his search for new piano-based sounds, such as tone clusters, and effects produced by playing directly on the piano strings, and he remains one of the most important figures of the classical avant-garde in this century.By 1942, John Cage was prophesising the future, writing "Many musicians have dreamed of compact technological boxes, inside which all audible sounds, including noise, would be ready to come forth at the command of the composer." One of those was Edgard Varese, who told one interviewer: "I myself would like, for expressing my personal conceptions, a completely new means of expression. A sound machine." Varese's historical significance is due to his realisation that music need not just be a series of notes and harmonies, but could consist of any form of "organised sound", and although he considered musique concrete "simple-minded", this was one of the important changes in musical philosophy that forms part of industrial music's prehistory.It wasn't until shortly after the Second World War that composers really began to explore the potential of these new technologies as anything other than an adjunct to conventional orchestration. The significant event was the invention of the tape recorder.The first magnetic recorder had been patented in 1898 by Danish inventor Valdemar Poulsen. His device used a microphone (itself dating back to Bell's 1876 experiments in telephony) to drive an electromagnet which altered the magnetic pattern on a coil of steel piano wire. Steel-based recorders were superseded in 1935, when plastic tape coated with a magnetic iron oxide was produced in Germany, and as commercial devices appeared after the war, their potential for use in creating new music soon became evident. Musique concrete was introduced to the world in 1948 by French sound engineer, Pierre Schaeffer. His first composition, Etude aux chemins de fer, used recordings of steam locomotives, an interesting thematic link to the obsessions with modern industry of the futurists and perhaps even to the imagery that the words "industrial music" erroneously evoke. This work actually used record players rather than tape, but allowed the collage of separate recordings, changes in speed, repeating grooves, and backwards recording. (Others had already experimented with the use of variable speed record players to create new music rather than just record it, including Edgard Varese, Darius Milhaud, Paul Hindemith and John Cage). In 1950, collaborating with Pierre Henry, the Symphonie pour un homme seul was finished, again using record players, and representing a much more complex and powerful attempt to combine spoken voice, pre-recorded music, mechanical and natural sounds.As with the use of electronics to generate sound, the techniques involved encouraged several musical revolutions. Initially, in the hands of trained composers, it provided access to sounds that had previously been unavailable to music. It also allowed these sounds to develop over time in ways unreproduceable by traditional players of instruments. Finally, it laid the seeds for the production of music by the musically untrained; it was no longer necessary to practice an instrument or learn to read music in order to produce worthwhile music. It would be some time however, before musicians outwith the classical avant-garde began to realise the possibilities inherent in tape recording that musique concrete explored.Meanwhile in Cologne, Herbert Eimert, Robert Beyer and Werner Meyer-Eppler had founded the Studio for Electronic Music at Northwest German Radio. Their instrumentation was primitive, and it was only through the creativity and dedication of Karlheinz Stockhausen, who came to the studio in 1953, that their pure electronic music developed into something significant. Initially, the Cologne musicians concentrated only on electronically generated sound, but by the middle of the decade, the barriers between conventional instrumentation, electronic sounds, and manipulated tape recordings were broken, resulting in such seminal works as Stockhausen's Gesang der Junglinge (1956) and Varese's Poeme Electronique (1958).By the end of the fifties, early synthesizers had been developed, notably the RCA Synthesizer best known through its use by American composer Milton Babbitt (throughout the fifties, the activity in Europe was paralleled by work in America, by composers such as John Cage, Otto Luening, Vladimir Ussachevsky, Gordon Mumma and Robert Ashley). The Moog and Buchla synthesizers of the late sixties continued a trend towards more flexible, more portable, less expensive instruments that allowed musicians outside the classical realm to apply the new technology and techniques to their own forms of music. Although much of the early electronic music had met with indignant and outraged audience reactions, the sixties saw a process of gradual popularisation occurring. Notable milestones along the way included Louis and Bebe Barron's electronic soundtrack to the film Forbidden Planet (1955), Frank Zappa's Freak Out (1966), The Beatles' Revolver (1966) and Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967), and Walter Carlos's Switched On Bach (1968).The avant-garde musical tradition is fundamental to industrial music in terms of the techniques and type of music presented. Listening to almost any electronic or concrete composer from the 50s, 60s or 70s alongside industrial music by Zoviet France, the Hafler Trio, P16D4, Cranioclast, Strafe F.R. or Nurse With Wound, is an interesting experience. Not only are the techniques (electronic synthesis and processing, tape manipulation) identical, but the abstract nature of the sounds employed is too.Luc Ferrari, who has been an active composer or musique concrete since 1958, stands apart from other similar composers in his reluctance to process natural sounds into unrecognisability, allowing the mental associations provoked by the sounds used to create a kind of narrative drama. Works like Petite symphonie pour un paysage de printemps (1973), or Heterozygote (1964), share unmistakable similarities to the work that the Hafler Trio creates two decades later. Ferrari's earlier Visage V (1959) was notable for sharing the Futurists' taste for industrial (mechanical) sound, material which was also employed by Philippe Carson, in his dissonant Turmac (1962), and Luigi Nono in his political protest piece La fabbrica illuminata (1964). Ferrari's work is particularly interesting, because he showed clear awareness that musique concrete's real radical impact was to open avant-garde music up to the amateur, to the non-musician. "My intention was to pave the way for amateur concrete music, much as people take snapshots during vacations".Similarly, Bernard Parmegiani, one of the most prolific of concrete composers, shares much in common with abstract industrial musicians; not only did he have no formal musical education (other than childhood piano lessons), but as a result he adopted an intuitive, improvisatory approach to tape music, dispensing with scores and technical details in favour of a hands-on, intuitive approach. His works, such as La table des matieres (1979) and De Natura Sonorum (1975), tend to adopt gradual, transformative shifts from one sound texture to another, a form that finds favour amongst such industrial groups as Zoviet France, P.G.R. or John Watermann.What the composers of electronic music and musique concrete had done was to demolish the primacy of the score in "art" music. As Evan Eisenberg has written, "Suppose one wished to make music as directly as a painter paints. A painter would be outraged if he were asked to create a work by listing the coordinates of dots and the numbers of standard colours, which we could then interpret by connecting the dots and colouring by number. But that is what a composer is asked to do" [8]. As will be shown below, Ferruccio Busoni was one of the first classical composers to dream of a way out of the straitjacket of score-writing, and Edgard Varese's desire for the same freedom had caused him great frustration until tape music came along. From the beginning of the 1950s, the classical avant garde began to enjoy the freedom to create music like painters, intuitively.The industrial musicians, although in many cases aware of this avant-garde tradition, owe a more direct debt to the fringes of rock music, notably groups like Tangerine Dream and Kraftwerk, who combined "serious" composers' fascination with new sounds with an interest in accessible rhythms. In Britain, which it's not unfair to name as the main home of industrial music, the only interest that fringe-rockers seemed to show in electronic instruments was as enhancement to a more conventional rock instrumental line-up (Hawkwind and the Beatles are two possible examples) or as a means of replicating the grandeur of classical music (ELP, Yes and far too many others). In the early seventies in Britain, there seemed to be little interest outside the classical community in genuinely seeing what kind of new music the technology would create.Elsewhere the situation was different. In America, Frank Zappa's knowledge of classical avant-gardism had an enormous impact on his rock-based music, leading to mixtures of electronics and tape manipulation such as The Chrome Plated Megaphone of Destiny [9]. Other psychedelic bands, such as United States of America, also adopted electronic instruments and elements of avant-garde techniques [10]. Similarly, The Residents, from their beginnings in the early 1970s, created music that ignored and assaulted conventional notions of taste and quality, playing with tape technology and (on albums like Third Reich'n'Roll, a classic collage of sixties pop viewed through a very grimy lens) not only predating pop sampling controversy but doing a better job of it as well. In 1968, a New York duo called Silver Apples combined simplistic, machinelike electronic oscillators with psychedelic pop and pre-Can metronomic rhythms that foreshadowed the following decade's music from artists like Devo or Kraftwerk [11]. If you trace a line back from industrial music through Kraftwerk, you'll find that Silver Apples are their oft-ignored true ancestors.In Germany, artists like Tangerine Dream, Faust, Neu, Cluster, Klaus Schulze and Can (as well as many who never achieved quite such a level of fame) took the new, less expensive electronic instruments as a signal not for rock-based experimentation (which with groups elsewhere like Pink Floyd and Roxy Music was gaining more attention) but to create music that appropriated the ideas of the "serious" composers while stilling aiming at a popular audience. Can's Holger Czukay is one of the most obvious examples of how the technology (and the associated taste for musical experimentation) crossed from the elite to the popular. After studying with Stockhausen, Czukay and Irmin Schmidt took their ideas into the rock world, and Czukay's earlier experiments with tape collage can be heard on the Canaxis album. On their early albums, even bands who later moved towards tonality and clarity, like Tangerine Dream and Cluster, created music that thrived on noise, atonality and confusion.Faust demonstrated most clearly an attitude of total freedom to explore and experiment, utilising every new technology and quite capable of embracing noise, collage and a rock rhythm within a single album, if not a single track. Although Can, as the most popular of these German groups, are the most often cited by more recent musicians, Faust and the others had the most important influence on industrial music, by demonstrating that experimentation didn't have to be inaccessible, and that the willingness to try things was more important than instrumental proficiency.Kraftwerk's growing taste for a music that not only used the new technology but also stylistically mirrored their perception of that technology had resulted in two classic albums by the time Throbbing Gristle made their first recording; Radio-Activity and Trans Europe Express, both of which fashioned a clarity and beauty out of the sterile, repetitive sounds that electronic oscillators most readily produced. Having established a suitable aesthetic mirror for the developments that (at the time) had the greatest long-term impact on society, budding industrial musicians saw rhythmic electronic music as one of the essential elements in their own creations. Like Kraftwerk, they wanted to mirror their environment, but unlike Kraftwerk they were motivated by a comprehensively critical revulsion against that environment.Surprisingly, throughout the seventies in Germany, there was little evidence that the avant-rock groups and the avant-garde composers could work on common territory. There are isolated examples of serious composers who gained more popular acceptance, such as Asmus Tietchens. He had started producing serious electronic music in 1965, but it wasn't until 1980, when he briefly ventured into more accessible synthesizer-based realms, that he received any public recognition. Since then, he has collaborated with such industrial musicians as Merzbow and Arcane Device, without compromising his atonal concrete music. Tietchens' position is significant, as it shows how meaningless the distinction between "serious" composers and enthusiastic amateurs has become in the field of abstract electronic and tape-based composition. Perhaps industrial music's lasting significance will be recognised as its demolition of this outdated distinction.In Britain, perhaps the most important artist to have any real influence on industrial music was one whose aesthetic was quite opposed to it; Brian Eno. Eno's time as an art student had introduced him to avant-garde music by the likes of LaMonte Young and Philip Glass, and he happily applied these influences to rock music, first as a member of Roxy Music and then on his own. (The album No Pussyfooting, recorded with Robert Fripp, is basically a guitar-based reworking of Pauline Oliveros' electronic composition I of IV, for example). Most importantly to the budding industrial musicians, his concentration on the use of the studio, and his insistence that he was a "non-musician" inspired many who had no formal musical training to try it for themselves.Also important was the existence of the B.B.C. Radiophonic Workshop, Britain's equivalent of other institutionally-sponsored electronic studios such as the Northwest German Radio studio that Stockhausen used, or the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center. Unlike earlier studios, which provided facilities for the abstract explorations of avant-garde composers, the Radiophonic Workshop had a more prosaic role producing soundtrack music and special effects for radio and television, and as a result its electronic works were heard by a much wider public. Like earlier associations between electronic music and science fiction entertainment, the public found it difficult to disentangle electronics and imagery of outer space, but the Radiophonic Workshop ensured that potential future industrial musicians were well aware of the potential of electronic sounds.These threads don't just lead to industrial music of course. Bruce Gilbert and Graham Lewis (of rock band Wire) showed how the same musical influences as the industrial musicians weren't enough; they lacked the same drive to transgress and consequently their work as Dome (and under other names) is of more musical than cultural interest. Similarly, lacking any transgressive instinct whatsoever, there has been a very large number of artists who would take not just the technique of Eno, but also his limpid, passive style, combined in varying proportions with the spaced out attitude of the mostly-electronic "cosmic" musicians.It's also important to point out that several bands who were categorised as "industrial" drew influences from much more popular music than others. Funk and disco, via artists like Defunkt, Donna Summer & Giorgio Moroder, Chic and James Brown, all fed into the anti-soul dance music of Cabaret Voltaire, ClockDVA, 23 Skidoo, Hula and others. With hindsight, it's easy to feel disappointed that the loose-limbed, less uptight dance music that inspired such early industrial groups was replaced by a funkless rigidity in later industrial dance outfits.It took three decades for the technological revolution in music to truly make itself felt, as the new technology progressed first from the hands of the "establishment", and then from the hands of more

Heroes:

revolutionary; jazz, reggae and other genres had already introduced the independence that punk ideologues trumpeted so loudly, and for all punk's claim that it allowed people with no training or experience to pick up a guitar and get themselves heard, it still relied on an ability to learn basic chords; tape-recording and electronics have had a far more radical influence.ii.Anti-Music Although it would be nice to trace back the idea of using noise as an element in music to the futurist Luigi Russolo's manifesto, The Art of Noises, published in 1913 , there are earlier ancestors. The painter Russolo's manifesto was itself inspired by the writings of futurist composer Balilla Pratella, whose Technical Manifesto of Futurist Music (1911) includes the passage: "[Music] must represent the spirit of crowds, of great industrial complexes, of trains, of ocean liners, of battle fleets, of automobiles and airplanes. It must add to the great central themes of the musical poem the domain of the machine and the victorious realm of electricity" . Sadly, Pratella's own music was much more conventional than his aims might suggest.In the few years before these, better known classical composers were already struggling out of the straitjacket their musical tradition had placed them in. Ferruccio Busoni's 1907 Sketch for a New Aesthetic of Music asked: "In what direction shall the next step lead? To abstract sound, to unhampered technique, to unlimited tonal material" . (Busoni also praised Thaddeus Cahill's trautonium, recognising early on the potential of electronic music). The composer surely didn't realise quite what he was prophesying; the next step he imagined might appear to be the one taken by Schoenberg, Ives and Cowell, who between 1907 and 1919 worked through increasingly atonal approaches to music that rapidly increased in dissonance and (in Cowell's case) in their exploration of new uses for old instruments. However, Busoni's words could just as easily be taken to imply the diverse musics of artists like Asmus Tietchens, or Merzbow. When the classical composers first resolved to let noise enter their music, they didn't realise quite what it was that they unleashed.One of the aims of the Futurists was to oppose the classicism and romanticism that they felt dominated artistic expression at the time. Both art and music, the Futurists thought, were concerned with nostalgia, with the depiction of mythical past idylls. In opposition to this, they demanded that their art reflect dynamism rather than stillness, the future rather than the past, and the grinding noise of the machine rather than the pure, beautiful sounds that Romanticism produced.Russolo's instruments have long since been destroyed, and his music can now only be heard in rare reconstructions, but his importance lies more in his ideas than in the tiny influence that he actually had on other composers and musicians. The Art of Noises is notable because its aesthetic ideas comprehensively predate almost all the musical movements that eventually produced industrial music. Pierre Schaeffer and Pierre Henry paid tribute to Russolo when they created musique concrete, but they had little idea what his music actually sounded like: there is only one surviving recording of his instruments, and it wasn't unearthed until 1957.If Busoni had taken one faltering step towards musical freedom, The Art of Noises took a giant leap. According to Russolo: "In the 19th century, with the invention of machines, Noise was born. Today, Noise is triumphant and reigns sovereign over the sensibility of men ... Musical sound is too limited in its variety of timbres ... We must break out of this limited circle of sounds and conquer the infinite variety of noise-sounds ... Noise, arriving confused and irregular from the irregular confusion of life, is never revealed to us entirely and always holds innumerable surprises." Not only had Russolo set out ideas that would resurface in previously unimaginable areas of twentieth century music, but in his words about the "confusion" inherent in noise, he anticipated an idea of central importance to any aesthetic theory of noise music. Despite this, Russolo's manifesto also contains some highly conservative ideas, most obviously his proposal that noises be selected according to their pitch. I can't imagine how he intended to assign a pitch to noises like "explosions" and "death rattles", both of which he planned to create.Russolo created many noise instruments, such as the "Whistler", the "Burster" and the "Croaker", each of which had a limited ability to produce one type of noise, and according to his own accounts, early performances using them tended to degenerate in near riots, in much the same way as nights at the Cabaret Voltaire or the premiere of Stravinsky's The Rites of Spring did. More recently of course, the response to performances by groups like Throbbing Gristle, Cabaret Voltaire and Whitehouse has been similar. It's easy to exaggerate Russolo's similarities to the later industrial musicians; after all, for every occasional rumpus when Genesis P-Orridge took up his mike, there were ten at punk gigs in the late seventies.None of the people involved in industrial music seems to have thought much in a theoretical way about their use of noise elements, which is in keeping with the groups' general ignorance of musical matters. Perhaps the most interesting study of the topic is Jacques Attali's Noise - The Political Economy of Music. Attali wrote that: "Listening to music is listening to all noise, realising that its appropriation and control is a reflection of power, that it is essentially political ... The theorists of totalitarianism have all explained that it is necessary to ban subversive noise because it betokens demands for cultural autonomy, support for differences and marginality: a concern for maintaining tonalism, the primacy of melody, a distrust of new languages, codes or instruments, a refusal of the abnormal - these characteristics are common to all regimes of that nature". Attali's view gives the lie to those who think that music and politics don't mix; I agree with his view that what is political about music occurs at a more basic level than that of lyrics or presentation.Attali presents the history of music as a mirror of the history of capitalism, dividing that history into three stages (broadly, of "primitive" ritual music, scored music and recorded music). He points out correspondences between the rise of scored music and the rise of technocratic, bourgeois society, and also between the growth in recorded music and the transformation into a more classless, commodity-centred society. Attali presents a blueprint for a fourth stage in musical history, which he expects to prefigure wider social and economic transformations. A key element in this fourth stage (which Attali confusingly terms composition) is that musicians will again begin to create music not just as a commodity or text for exchange, but for their immediate personal pleasure (this has of course been an important trend in recent decades). Another key element is that the new music will operate outside the mainstream musical industry, but the most important component is that the new music will rediscover noise and violence as crucial for its ..he cites John Cage and free jazz as prototypes of this new musical stage).One musicologist suggested that punk or new wave was the first major sign of this musical paradigm shift. "Many of the original groups began as garage bands formed by people not educated as musicians who intended to defy noisily the slickly marketed 'nonsense' of commercial rock. The music is often aggressively simple syntactically, but at its best it conveys most effectively the raw energy of its social and musical protest. It bristles with genuine sonic noise (most of it maintains a decibel level physically painful to the uninitiated) ..." As is usual with academic commentators, there is a marked tendency not to be aware of anything outside a narrowly defined frame of reference, and it's tempting to suggest that much of industrial music fits this description better than the punk rock that inspired it. However, there are musical areas which fit Attali's ideas more closely (particularly free improv music), and industrial music should be seen as only one strand amongst many attempts to break free of this century's more reactionary musical trends.Clearly then, industrial music's attempts to smash received musical values and rules, to tear down conventional notions of taste and to seek pleasure in brutal ugliness, were part of an important tendency in modern music, a reaction against the political control that most music mirrored, both in its overall aesthetic and in its means of production. John Cage's understanding of the same ideas led him to seek to minimise his own control over the music he made; Brian Eno's control over his sound is much tighter, but he shows equal political radicalism in attempting to create a music that allows many different levels of attention for the listener, that presents a surface for the listener to investigate rather than a (party) line for the listener to follow. In free improv of the sorts pioneered by Evan Parker or AMM, the political message lies in how the group organises itself to create sound, rejecting one individual's programmatic vision in favour of sound that is spontaneous, cooperative, and above all, playful.As an aside, Throbbing Gristle may not be the first name that improv historians think of, but more than most rock bands, they relied heavily on an improvising approach. The recordings of their dozens of live performances are valued by fans for this very reason. According to T.G.'s Peter Christopherson: "Pieces were created more or less spontaneously, without any rehearsal or preparation other than Chris' privately made rhythm tracks and a general discussion about possible topics for a new lyric which Gen would use as inspiration for the lyric ... We had little idea of what was going to happen in any performance or recording session, and each of us contributed our share entirely on the basis of what was going on at that very moment." Given the personalities present in T.G., you could be forgiven for thinking that Christopherson is idealising what actually happened, but it's clear that the level of improvisation in T.G. and other groups went far beyond what happens in song-fixated rock groups.For a slightly less politicised idea of the importance of the noise element in industrial music, I find some inspiration in the writing of rock critic Simon Reynolds (for his part, he draws heavily on the ideas of post-modernist philosophers like Roland Barthes and Jean Baudrillard). Reynolds' view of noise relies heavily on its power to disrupt and intoxicate: "Noise then, occurs when language breaks down. Noise is a wordless state in which the very constitution of our selves is in jeopardy. The pleasure of noise lies in the fact that the obliteration of meaning and identity is ecstasy."Before industrial music there were certainly strong noise elements in music, but rarely in the way that there were afterwards. Russolo's noise instruments, for all their potency in their day, sound nowadays like mere sound-effects machines, and strangely subdued ones at that. Edgar Varese, lauded by John Cage as the "father of noise" in twentieth century music composed much that was radical by conventional classical musical standards, but little that matches the noise music of recent years. Iannis Xenakis, like Krysztof Penderecki and Gyorgy Ligeti, explored microtonality to create terrifying musical effects that are still powerful today, but the textures they created could in no way be considered "noise".Of all the avant-gardists of the first 60 years of this century, only John Cage can really take credit for producing music that even today's Gerogerigegege fans might find hard to listen to. As well as his percussion-oriented pieces for prepared piano, where the irregularity of the objects placed between the piano strings ensured a sound that was sometimes cacophonous, it was his live electronics pieces that delivered the healthiest dose of raw, obnoxious noise. Cage's insistence on chance procedures (for example, while some performers produce the sounds, others operate the volume controls, all in accordance with randomly-determined timings) ensured that his music would be unpredictable and chaotic. In a piece like Cartridge Music where much of the sound is produced by rubbing a record player's stylus cartridge against various objects and surfaces, the sound itself takes on a raucous, violent feel, with a shocking, harsh texture that some industrial groups never matched.In 1937, Cage had written: "Wherever we are, what we hear is mostly noise ... Whether the sound of a truck at 50mph, rain, or static between radio stations, we find noise fascinating ... [I intend] to capture and control these sounds, to use them, not as sound effects, but as musical instruments". Cage cited Russolo's The Art of Noises and Henry Cowell's New Musical Resources as important precursors, and his comments on the use of everyday noises as the constituents of music predate musique concrete. Pieces like his Third Construction, for a variety of traditional and "found" percussion instruments, predate industrial music's love of metal percussion by several decades. Unlike the futurists, however, Cage was not interested in simply reflecting modern technology in his music, but in gaining access the whole field of sound.Dig hard enough and you'll find other examples, as after all, white noise was as rapid a byproduct of new technology as pure tones were. So it is that even in 1973, a composer like John Oswald could create noise music almost indistinguishable from the post-industrial musicians, using an evolving swarm of electronically-generated white noise.Outside the "classical" world, however, there was a far more important source of inspiration. With the release of the Velvet Underground's first record in 1967, rock music had reached a turning point. For not only did the V.U. incorporate elements of the avant-garde tradition into their music (mainly thanks to John Cale's education in drone courtesy of La Monte Young , but they combined this with one of the most alienated, hostile attitudes rock had so far developed. If their art background (courtesy of Andy Warhol) and interest in sexual deviance (Venus in Furs, Sister Ray) had echoes amongst the first wave of industrial groups, perhaps it's no surprise.Singer-songwriter Lou Reed's post-Velvets career is mostly of no relevance whatsoever to industrial music, but his 1975 double-album, Metal Machine Music, remains an awesome landmark. Most of his fans fell for the story that this was a "contractual obligation" record, a successful attempt to piss off his label, RCA. Very few people took it seriously: it's been described as "unlistenable noise" by most writers who otherwise enjoy Reed's output. At the time, Reed's own comments were ambiguous, sometimes adding fire to the stories about arguments with his label, but at other times he stated that the album was intended as a serious composition. With hindsight, it's easy to see Metal Machine Music as the honoured ancestor of post-industrial noise, four sides of churning, screeching feedback that never let up for a moment. Compared to some of today's noise-makers it seems positively polite, and the interest in repetition and drone frequencies make clear that Reed had paid attention to his band-mate Cale's influences. Whether or not many industrial musicians had heard the record or not must be doubtful, but it still sounds refreshing today, even in the light of two decades of industrial and no-wave aural abuse.The development of further music that employed noise not just to distract from more conventional textures, or as a byproduct of conventional rock guitar aggression, had to wait until after the industrial music revolution, but it owed as much to Metal Machine Music as it did to the proof by people like Cage and the improv group AMM that a musical experience could be created from even the most unlikely materials. Many musicians have experimented with extreme noise; as well as artists like Non, Controlled Bleeding or the New Blockaders, Japan is recognised as home to much of the most powerful variety, thanks to groups like Merzbow, the Gerogerigegege, the Hanatarash and others. The motives of the musicians vary; some, like bungee jumpers, are just looking for an intense experience; others may have genuine loathing that they want to express; others just find a child-like fun in noise-making.Simon Reynolds recognises the symptoms that ensure noise music often goes hand in hand with other extreme subject matter: "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 world-view. This is why noise groups invariably deal with subject matter that is anti-humanist - extremes of abjection, obsession, trauma, atrocity, possession ..."Despite his lucid attempt to describe noise's revolutionary potential, capable not of destroying any external enemy but of demolishing internal mental power structures, Reynolds acknowledges that theory and noise are at odds. Noise resents being asked to have meaning, it refuses simple explanations and it is at its best when it just exists; deep and meaningless.As a response to society noise is the apotheosis of many of industrial music's aims. Throbbing Gristle and Cabaret Voltaire may have mirrored the faceless anonymity of post-industrial society in their drab, grey-stained rhythms but the noise elements in their music also reflected an anger, recognising their own alienation and loathing it deeply. In a society where people cross the road at the merest hint of violence, not out of fear (because television hyper-reality desensitises that emotion), but out of disinclination to be involved, where the powers that determine our freedom of action seem increasingly less concrete, less amenable to opposition, the sense of meaning is collapsing, and the appropriate musical response is obvious; the silent scream, brutal, oblivious burnout.The concern of earlier avant-gardists was simply to search for freedom from the will-to-power that Jacques Attali sees in all composed music; the concern of industrial music was to find an adequate response to a post-collapse society, a society that had yet to understand quite how empty its core had become. With industrial music, the power set in motion by Russolo had finally begun to realise some of its true potential.

Sources: Wikipedia and Brian Duguid Research
Heroes I really have some heroes...hmm...DeSade, Marilyn Manson, LaVey, Ancient Greek God "Dionysus" or "Sabazios" his subordinate "Pan" hehehe..., Genesis P.Orridge The Founder of Industrial Music...my fav. style of music ao .
Religion I should say that I don't care if there is god or not...my task is to take care in my life, to satisfy my carnal and mental needs as much as in order to save my health, money and not to harm anyone. I could say mysaelf as Atheist, Hedonist...I admire LaVey and his philosophy also.
Comics When I was 07-15 I often read many comics. I mainly choose Action and Fantastic Sci-Fi Comics such as spiderman, Superman, Capten america etc
Political Views My Political Views tend to moderate. I have to declare that the most important thing in the economy of one nation is the strong small-medium buisness. Nice public hospitals and strong economy is the main goal for a good biotic level.
Donate Me / Give Me Money! In order to continue my stupidity you can donate me in my bank account: 116-002101-219373 IBAN/SWIFT : GR30 0140 1160 1160 0210 1219 373 / CRBAGRAA
Or in my paypal:[email protected]
Daily Life / Attitude I establish Cyberpunk mainly appearance at my nightclub exoduses. I exercise my body almost everyday.
Kickboxing Running AerobicI study Nursing. I buy Cheap food From Supermarket LIDL and BAZAAR and from everywhere is cheaper. I suggest for your Shopping:


Promote Me / Make Me stronger


URL Profiles:
Anobii http://www.anobii.com/people/djdennis/
Bebo http://www.bebo.com/DionysiosM
Facebook http://www.facebook.com/people/Dionysios_Mantzakouras/713706 755
Friendster http://profiles.friendster.com/djdennis84
Blogger http://www.blogger.com/profile/15399360496483618988
Hi 5 http://dionisisart.hi5.com/
Hospitality Club http://secure.hospitalityclub.org/hc/travel.php?cid=mansondi on
Imeem http://profile.imeem.com/UaXQ972
Joy http://www.joy.gr/community/page.sx?id=Lunatic-X
Library Thing http://www.librarything.com/profile/DjDennis84
Linkedin http://www.linkedin.com/in/djdennis84
Me.gr http://mansondion.me.gr/
Myspace http://www.myspace.com/alexandrosarabpie
Myspace http://www.myspace.com/cybergoatgroup
Myspace http://www.myspace.com/darkdennislife
Myspace http://www.myspace.com/finettisticks
Myspace http://www.myspace.com/lunariand
Myspace http://www.myspace.com/dionisisart
NetLog http://en.netlog.com/MrDennis84
DennisFanSite http://dennisfanssite.ning.com
Dennis Scat Forum Site http://scatfetish.ning.com
Pathfinder http://profiles.pathfinder.gr/view/DjDennis84?rsKey=12040817 40
Reunion http://www.reunion.com/mansondion
Tagged http://tagged.com/djdennis84
Vampire Freaks http://vampirefreaks.com/Djdennis
Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:DjDennis84
Xanga http://www.xanga.com/Lunarian84
Software I use Emagic Logic for Creating Music I use Photoshop, WavePad, Mozilla Firefox (yeahhh), I want to Start using Linux instead of Windows cause Software must be opensource for all!!


Holidays

I have visited England Camden Town and Paris. I go often in Villa Mantzakoura at Pyrgos Hlia. (From Mantzakoura Families).

"Clubbing / Strolling"


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My Blog

My Essay to Mr. George

I have to write an essay for you Mr.George. I embrace these theories of human restoration to his ancestral physical emotions and carnal desires. You yearn and long for the man who were living in the c...
Posted by Dennis DJ (aka Lunarian) on Sun, 30 Mar 2008 07:13:00 PST

Internet Access Dial-Up Logins

Anacreontos 63 [email protected] / st2185Pontou 36 s/n: 2104558766 p/w: kcyhgL // [email protected]/b1286763Kythairwnos 25 [email protected] // b1286763...
Posted by Dennis DJ (aka Lunarian) on Wed, 27 Feb 2008 07:34:00 PST

Owings / Monthly Ownings Tasks

1. T.E.B.E. O.A.E.E. (Free buisnessmen insurance organisation)         2.076,81 euro (400euro advance) Settlement 13/12/07 sn: 25646      &n...
Posted by Dennis DJ (aka Lunarian) on Mon, 25 Feb 2008 04:57:00 PST

Daily Schedule

Morning WashHouse CleaningNursing SchoolEducationFitnessSatanic bible...
Posted by Dennis DJ (aka Lunarian) on Mon, 25 Feb 2008 04:49:00 PST

Inspirations

1;"Charlatans who Swelling Bags"2;"Thallassi"3;"Person Like Voldo"4;"Petersilia"5;"Robert"6;"Mathematic"7;"My Choreographies"8;"Living on Co-ordinates"9;"Wooden Grotesque"10;"The Time of Melting"11;"O...
Posted by Dennis DJ (aka Lunarian) on Tue, 19 Feb 2008 03:59:00 PST

mom!!!!!

mom!!! I am useless...I will be unemployent for all my life...klaps!!!...
Posted by Dennis DJ (aka Lunarian) on Wed, 20 Dec 2006 01:53:00 PST

my childish quotes

"Wake up my Lord  and forgive them... trust me and follow my smile... Come with me into the black abysses and eternal darkness... take my hand and I will show to you the trail... of eterna...
Posted by Dennis DJ (aka Lunarian) on Fri, 15 Dec 2006 12:00:00 PST

depression

depression theese days...that's why you don't see me very often at clubs..
Posted by Dennis DJ (aka Lunarian) on Mon, 09 Oct 2006 03:03:00 PST