Foundation Vinyl Newsletter
Welcome
Hello and welcome to this week’s edition of the Foundation Vinyl newsletter! We are very much in the hands of Denver’s Convulse Records this week, with four rather splendid featured new arrivals to get stuck into.
We kick off with menace courtesy of the darkly metallic Parasite from Cell Rot and then the spiteful stomp of Histamine on Quality Of Life. Matters then take a slightly more off-kilter turn with the synth fuelled exhortations of No Separation from MSPAINT, before the angular agitations of Cruelster on Make Them Wonder Why.
We’ve also had a much needed refresh from Mendeku Diskak with the recent releases from Enemic Interior, Fuerza Bruta, and Zikin all back in stock, plus the brand new split from Haywire and No Guard, Shirts vs Skins. Click on the band links for the full-write-ups.

Col-lecció by Enemic Interior / Ecos De Chicago by Fuerza Bruta / Shirts vs Skins by Haywire and No Guard / Zatitxu by Zikin (clockwise)
As always, we have an updated London gig listing, with Wreathe and Faze playing this week and Cell Rot having just announced a UK tour for November (London 14/11). We end with a quick heads up on some of the great new records heading this way, including fresh hauls from La Vida Es Un Mus Discos and Feel It over the next couple of weeks!
Featured New Arrivals

Quality Of Life by Histamine / Make Them Wonder Why by Cruelster / Parasite by Cell Rot / No Separation by MSPAINT (clockwise)
‘Seedless fields, resource extraction, limitless yields, depletion inaction, betrayed by brothers, extinction distraction, consume the mother’ (Paradise / Parasite)
Growth. Always growth. And who is this growth for? It simply filters into the same overflowing pockets. It is a remorseless cycle that sees a planet and its people sucked dry by the bloated, parasitic pursuit of endless consumption. As political philosopher Nancy Fraser so evocatively suggests, ‘Like the ouroboros that eats its own tail, capitalist society is primed to devour its own substance’. Now, let Cell Rot be your guide to our ever-bleaker future.
Cell Rot, who feature members of Gather, Graf Orlock, and Reivers among others, have been building an impressive body of work since their 2018 debut, Violent Spirals. And Parasite, the Oakland band’s third 12-inch, sees them in typically uncompromising form. Their sound is rooted in darkly metallic crust, but it is also laced through with influences drawn from burly straight-up hardcore, power violence, and even a dash of anarcho-punk.
The lacerating guitar tone is cleaner, and yet somehow simultaneously filthier, than this description might typically allow and the rhythm section packs an enviable bounce amid the furious blast beat eruptions. Meanwhile, the demonically growled vocals unleash their desolate allegorical unpacking of cannibal capitalism and a world slowly being suffocated by greed.
From the tension dripping, feedback saturated opening to Good Morning that will have pits twitching in eager anticipation, the intensity doesn’t drop for even a moment from the bruising groove of Shadow People to the swaggering brutality of Earth-Eating Growth, before a vocal appearance from Mae Toon (Tørsö / Urban Sprawl) amid the sludge-mired climax to Nothing’s Coming brings proceedings to a wonderfully savage close.
‘Shovel time into the furnace, Human fuel keeps it burning, Ground down to dust, the cogs turn, You can never stop the turn’ (Churn)
Histamine have been a little quiet since their 2020 self-titled 7-inch. But they are back, and have no doubt, their first album, Quality Of Life, is an absolute bruiser. The Sydney band marshal slabs of hypnotic groove and plenty of spiteful stomp into a bulldozer of an onslaught. The hefty reverb drenched riffage jousts with the equally muscular, echo-infused vocals as they dive into the anxiety, isolation, and sheer desperation born of our ever more atomised times. And then, in an unexpected turn, crystalline melancholic leads and spiralling, metallic-leaning solos – the closer to It’s Not Hot is a particular banger – cut through with a piercing clarity.
The eight tracks are absolutely packed with drama. From the barrelling breakdown of Weeding Out to the insidious melody braided through Links To The Chain, and from the bass fuelled venom of Perceived Reality to the melodic flourishes that prime the roared finale to Gold Tools, there is no quarter is shown. And, quite frankly, you won’t be asking for any either.
‘I saw an angel last night, Dowsed in gasoline, Flowers grew from their skin, And withered in the fumes’ (Angel)
As the gilded few, facilitated by a deluded and self-serving political class, continue to rapaciously gut civic society, they point the finger of blame at those who are dispossessed and driven into ever more precarious insecurity by their relentless greed. MSPAINT’s new 12-inch, No Separation, is a rousing, yet thoughtfully constructed, call to confront his age of estrangement.
Having formed in Hattiesburg in 2019, MSPAINT spent time honing their distinctive guitarless sound, before releasing their debut album, 2023’s Post-American. And this latest EP, sees the band brimming with an even more assertive confidence. The rhythmic, hip-hop tinged exhortations of the vocals remain stridently powerful, and the soaring choruses are even more infectious, while the rhythm section has been imbued with a refreshed industrial muscularity.
Now, of course, a significant onus rests on the synths, and they prove more than up to the challenge. Indeed, in not seeking to directly replicate the guitars, they take things in some intriguingly unexpected directions. From ominous stabs of metallic dub to hazily hallucinatory swells, by way of the swirling Middle Eastern accented melodies, the palette is a rich one. It would be easy for such disparate elements to fall foul of a certain clunkiness, but such is MSPAINT’s command of their influences that they never feel anything less than entirely organic.
Lyrically, the darkly pulsating Drift (‘We were never free, Just cost effective, Paid in dirt, Bound to debt’) and Surveillance (‘Margins of profit will benefit evil, Structured around anything but the people’) challenge the warped economic consensus that is hollowing out our society. Meanwhile, Wildfire (‘Are you not tired of waiting, for nothing to save you?) and the title track (‘Skyscrapers are pollution, Reflecting sky, Reflecting light, Directly into your eyes’) call out our own complicity.
However, their message is not without hope. Throughout, it is underpinned with a fierce recognition of the power of community and collective organisation to act as a bulwark of resistance, and as a primer for social change. This culminates in the redemptive closer Angel (‘I feel like the problem, I feel in the way, But I’m staying present, This is just today’) that recognises that even the most entrenched system only seems eternal up until the very moment that it is not.
‘My kids have lived before a hundred thousand times, My kids have walked the earth on paganistic roads…Their faces are young and kind, Their brains are wild and ancient’ (My Kids)
Cleveland’s Cruelster make a welcome return some seven years after their debut album, Riot Boys. In the intervening period, members have been involved in a range of other projects, most pertinently perhaps, Knowso. Both bands share a penchant for taut guitars and agitated rhythms, but whereas Knowso lean into a certain discipline through restraint, Cruelster’s approach is an altogether more hyperactive one.
Samples galore, jagged riffs, catchy hooks, duelling vocals, Irish pipes, and surprisingly melodic choruses are thrown into the melting pot with an atavistic relish. That wholly formed songs emerge could provoke surprise where the level of focus and detailing that the band invest not so abundantly clear. The energy that permeates the whiplash twenty-one tracks is utterly manic, yet shards of lucidity suddenly, fleetingly, emerge through the chaos. The raucously layered Nuclear Word, the fiercely gyrating Now I’m Terrestrial, and the contagiously surging Mayor For A Day each land with a satisfying clarity.
As you would probably anticipate, this raw verve is matched by the lyrical themes as they plunge into a crazed labyrinth that takes in its stride, Julian Assange being in possession of nuclear launch codes, emigrating to Belarus to have a baby, and being under the control of a telekinetic mayor. What exactly this all means is arguably open to conjecture, but my guess is that it may well be suggesting that we are all absolutely screwed.
Shows And Tours

Crutches and Wreathe / Helgi’s / Tuesday 14th October

Faze and Stingray / New River Studios / Thursday 16th October
This section lays no claims to being a definitive listing! It is simply gigs coming up in London that catch my eye and that I think people who read this newsletter might be interested in. I will always try and highlight where a show forms part of a wider UK tour.
October
14th Crutches, Wreathe plus more (Helgi’s / UK Tour)
16th Faze, Stingray, Scab, One By One, Helix (New River Studios / UK Tour)
17th Me Lost Me, Mat Riviere (Dulwich Hamlet FC / UK Tour)
17th Zounds, Rites Of Hadda, Vegan Meat Raffle (Signature Brew Haggerston)
22nd Negative Blast, Street Grease, Going Off, Bullet (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)
23rd Warhead 97, Lost Cause, Beyond Human (Old Blue Last)
24th Fotocopia, Yaws, Skintern, Sex Germs, Crude Image, Castration (The George Tavern)
24th Defeater, Modern Life Is War, Crime In Stereo, Still In Love (The Dome / MLIW UK Tour)
25th Traidora, Mantis, Docile, Misgendered, Victim Unit (New River Studios)
25th Stampin’ Ground, Bun Dem Out, Life Of One, Fates Messenger (New Cross Inn / Sold Out)
30th AAA Gripper, These Towns, Shereen Elizabeth (New River Studios)
30th Godflesh (Scala / Sold Out)
31st 100 Flowers, The Yummy Fur (New River Studios)
November
3rd City Of Caterpillar, Cady, Incaseyouleave, Grim Harvest (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)
3rd Forever Grey plus support (The Shacklewell Arms)
7th Deep Bleak plus support (Biddle Bros)
8th Siyahkal plus support (New River Studios / UK Tour)
9th T.S. Warspite, Bulls Shitt, Stingray, Warhead 97 (New River Studios / UK Tour)
9th Deadguy, Silverburn, King Street (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)
12th Gag, Ingrown, Plastics, Ikhras (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)
13th Cosey Mueller, Disinteresse, Secrecy, Spike (Hootananny / UK Tour)
14th Cell Rot plus support (Venue tbc / UK Tour)
15th Under A Banished Sky Fest featuring Cady, Cassus, Grim Harvest, Hemiptera, Jotnarr, Neboas, Tenue, Wreathe (Signature Brew Haggerston)
19th Gorilla Biscuits, Terror, No Pressure (Electric Ballroom)
20th Dry Socket, Uncertainty, Good Cop, Flesh Prison, Sevy Verna (New Cross Inn / UK Tour)
21st Industry plus support (New River Studios / UK Tour)
23rd Svalbard, Cage Fight, Knife Bride (Oslo / UK Tour)
23rd Killing Time, The Mongoloids, Splitknuckle, Dynamite, Last Wishes, Impunity (The Underworld)
25th Rattle, Quinie, Es plus Snake Chain DJ set (Cafe Oto)
26th Me Lost Me, Marie Curie & The PGs, Dog Chocolate plus Normil Hawaiins DJ set (Cafe Oto)
27th Wiccans, Gimic, Second Death, State Sanctioned Violence (New Cross Inn)
29th Antisect, Agnosy, Calligram, Moloch, Dead In The Woods (New Cross Inn)
December
4th Blue Zero, Moist Crevice, Crude Image (The Ivy House / UK Tour)
14th Million Dead, The Meffs (Electric Ballroom / Sold Out / UK Tour)
January
16th-18th Reality Unfolds featuring Arkangel, Apothecary, Cassus, Colin Of Arabia, Endless Swarm, Street Power, Tension plus many more (New Cross Inn)
March
6th Incendiary, Desolated plus more (229 / Venue Change)
Coming Soon

Ameretat by Ameretat
October 21st
Ameretat ‘Ameretat’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus)
JJ And The A’s ‘Rhetoric Of Trash’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus)
Las Ánimas Del Cuarto Obscuro ‘Self-Titled’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus Discos)
Traidora ‘Una Mujer Trans Sin País’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus Discos)
October 28th
Citric Dummies ‘Split With Turnstile’ 12-inch (Feel It)
Maura Weaver ‘Strange Devotion’ 12-inch (Feel It)
Morwan ‘Vse Po Kolu, Znovu’ 12-inch (Feel It)
Optic Sink ‘Lucky Number’ 12-inch (Feel It)
Primitive Impulse ‘Piss It Away’ 12-inch (Feel It)
Why Bother? ‘Case Studies’ 12-inch (Feel It)
Early November
Astio ‘Tempio Inganno’ 12-inch (Agipunk)
Bootcamp ‘Time’s Up’ 12-inch (Convulse)
Haram ‘Why Does Paradise Begin In Hell?’ 12-inch (Toxic State)
Hellshock ‘XXV’ 12-inch (Agipunk)
Negative Charge ‘Negative Charge’ 12-inch (Neon Taste)
NYX Division ‘Midnight Lights’ 12-inch (Agipunk)
Psych-War ‘Psychotic Warmonger’ 12-inch (Agipunk)
Recall ‘EP’ 7-inch (11PM)
Top Dollar ‘Objects Of Misfortune’ 7-inch (11PM)
Who Pays ‘Hard Times’ 7-inch (11PM)
Late November
Catharsis ‘Hope Against Hope’ 12-inch (Refuse / Restock / 2nd Press)
Deaf Club ‘We Demand A Permanent State Of Happiness’ 12-inch (Southern Lord)
Earth Ball ‘Outside Over There’ 12-inch (Upset The Rhythm)
Fall Of Efrafa ‘Owsla’ 12-inch (Alerta Antifascista)
Flux ‘Peace Is A Lie’ 12-inch (Mendeku Diskak)
From Below ‘The Deeds Of Monsters’ 7-inch (Refuse)
Hedonist ‘Scapulimancy’ 12-inch (Southern Lord)
Home Front ‘Watch It Die’ 12-inch (La Vida Es Un Mus)
The Social ‘One For All, All For One’ 12-inch (Mendeku Diskak / QCHQ)
Venenö ‘Venenö’ 7-inch (Mendeku Diskak)