Foundation Vinyl Newsletter
Welcome
Hello and welcome to the latest edition of the Foundation Vinyl newsletter! Last night I popped along to catch Diploid. I previously caught them a couple of years back at New River Studios and it is a gig that is still very much engrained in my mind – the sheer sledgehammer velocity of their performance that evening was truly something to behold.
When I realised that this visit would see them dicing with the potential graveyard slot of Monday night at the New Cross Inn, I must admit that I was a little concerned that this could serve to dilute their intensity. I needn’t have worried. You could put this Melbourne trio in an aircraft hangar and they would still totally eviscerate you.
Dead Name got my evening underway with their noise infused hardcore that isn’t ashamed to bring the swing. And then it was on to Diploid’s cathartically savage blend of chaotic hardcore and grindcore. Raw screams, demonic roars, utterly venomous riffage, and frenetically unhinged drumming all delivered with fierce conviction and good humour in equal measure. They play Nottingham tonight, Lincoln on Wednesday, and Bristol on Thursday. If you’re in the vicinity, do your best to catch them – you won’t be disappointed.
Turning to this week, we have a cracking slate of new arrivals to get stuck into. First up, Unlawful Assembly treat us to three fresh releases – the savagely coiled crust punk of Mock Execution on Democracy Shoved Up Your Ass, the lacerating frenzy of Democracy on Party’s Over, and the gothic draped hardcore of Porcelain Doll from Excess Blood.
Next, Phobia Records take up the reins with three new releases of their own – Hacker bring their contagious stomp on their discography, Memory Cache, before War//Plague and Svaveldioxid join forces on their split EP, Absurd Depravity, and then Cimiterium round things off with a stenchcore fuelled eruption on their latest 7-inch, Somnambulist.
Also, a quick heads up that I’ve added a few copies of Issue 3 of the Afterimage fanzine to the store. Afterimage is the work of Charlie Murphy (Freak Genes / Xanax) and includes excellent interviews with Wiccans, Decadence Comics, and Fotocopia as well as some thoughts on Under The Flag by Fad Gadget. Charlie is based in Penryn in Cornwall and recently penned a piece for MRR on the thriving punk scene in the town that is also well worth tracking down.
Next, as always, we have an updated London gig listing, which includes just announced UK tours for Cosey Mueller (London 17/07) and Dark Thoughts (London 03/10). We end with a quick look at some of the great new music heading our way, including next week’s haul, featuring new arrivals from Gimic, Hot Load, Indikator B, Non Plus Temps, and Prisão.
Finally, a quick note for my friends in the EU. The EU has imposed a new shipping tax on all exports into the trading bloc with effect from 1st July. For orders from Foundation Vinyl, this will equate to an additional EUR3 surcharge per shipment. This will all be handled at checkout, so there will be no additional hassles at customs, but unfortunately shipping costs have had to increase to mirror this additional cost. Any queries, please don’t hesitate to drop me a note at info@foundationvinyl.com.
Featured New Arrivals
Democracy Shoved Up Your Ass by Mock Execution / Porcelain Doll by Excess Blood / Party’s Over by Democracy / Somnambulist by Cimiterium / Memory Cache by Hacker /Absurd Depravity by War//Plague and Svaveldioxid (clockwise)
‘Austerity measures for the citizens, Mass deportations of “Illegal Aliens”, Build their walls, build their bombs, Can’t build nothing to save humanity’ (Anti-Climax)
We live in an age of dangerous democratic deficit. Our system of politics has been subverted to serve the interests of capital, moulding the system to serve its needs at the expense of all others. A self-serving cartel that limits debate to a predetermined technocratic consensus and disenfranchises the many, sowing the seeds of powerlessness for extremists to exploit.
Hailing from Chicago, Mock Execution tear into this stitch-up with an unbridled ferocity on their latest 12-inch and follow-up to 2023’s Circle Of Madness. They continue to hone a raw punk battery that draws on the influence of 1980s’ UK crust pioneers and their Japanese crasher crust successors with equal proclivity, while infusing their own distinctively psychedelic melodic spicing.
The dual flanged-out guitars unleash surging waves of metallic riffage, leaning towards being blown-out yet retaining a thoroughly satisfying muscularity. Meanwhile, the bruising, cymbal awash low-end rhythm section injects a surprisingly catchy swing, linking up in fierce synchronicity with the frantically rhythmic vocals.
Each of the five tracks is a savagely coiled eruption. I love the crunching riffage of Freedom For Sale, the squalling solo that flares during the manic Ain’t A Hope In Hell, the anarcho-fuelled vocals of Defiant Pose, and the choppy fury of You Gotta Be Obscene (To Be Heard). But, the killer blow is arguably delivered by the sledgehammer grooves of the closing track, Anti-Climax.
‘Guests dig their graves, With forks and knives, Laughter turns to fighting, Just to feel alive’ (Party’s Over)
This is the debut album from Democracy and follow-up to their 2021 demo, Western Relaxation. For recording purposes, the band comprises a duo whose roll call of projects includes Fashion Change, Innuendo, Nasti, and Necron 9. And that pedigree gives you a pretty decent handle on what to anticipate – raw, filthy, desperately fast hardcore.
Even amid the lacerating riffs and burly rhythms, the sheer bleakness of the vocals catches you a little off guard. A blackened spew, they drip with disgust at a society sleepwalking into ever more entrenched social oppression and climatic degradation.
The band control the dynamics of this merciless onslaught with an impressive dexterity. The stomping antagonism of Menace To Society and the limber instrumental, Healing II, deftly offset the rabid violence of cuts such as Cold Deep Water and the title track. Before Primal State brings proceedings to a suitably crushing finale.
‘Hope dies, My fates been sewn, Settling into my grave, I was stroking your hair of snake, That morning I was flesh and bone, By night I had turned to stone’ (Turned To Stone)
Porcelain Doll is the first 7-inch from Excess Blood. The Portland trio, who feature Trae Brown of Electric Chair, continue to revel in the propulsive, mournfully shimmering death rock that defined their self-titled 2024 demo. A gothically shrouded world of roses, graves, and darkening skies, but one that also seethes with a combative intent that belies its themes of loss, regret, and the unrequited. Think, perhaps, Human Trophy meets Koridor but with a dash of additional hardcore grit and that would be about right.
The title track kicks things off, brooding melancholy soon morphing into a surging escalation, before the barrelling Cathedral Park sees the drawled baritone of the lead vocals duelling with an altogether more abrasive support. My personal highlight is the darkly chiming, densely layered Turned To Stone, with Clamor Of Please rounding things off with a jagged brusqueness. A powerfully assured debut.
‘I am a cop for the forms that you will fill, for the lease that you take, the commission I make, I am a snitch with a line to the rich, I develop / destroy for my slice of the cake’ (Scammer)
Melbourne’s Hacker – who include members of Infinite Void, Phantasm, and Ubik among their ranks – are a band that revel in the stomp and they deliver it with a relish that is as infectious as it is bruising. Memory Cache captures their entire discography to date, bringing together 2019’s self-titled demo, 2021’s Pick A Path 12-inch, and 2024’s Psy Wi-Fi 7-inch into a single crushing slab.
A thunderous, swaggering low end supplies the perfect footing for the slab-like riffage as the band barrel from mid-paced groove to mayhem inducing breakdowns with an irresistible compulsion. Front and centre of the barrage are the rasping, growled vocals. Bristling with a rhythmic hostility, they confront themes of parasitical rentier capitalism, the exploitative reality of the gig economy, and the dystopian future born of rapacious natural resource extraction.
The 15 tracks are reordered and blended to maximise their impact as a single album. Yet, from the lurching savagery of Algorithim to the pneumatic fury of Deliverator, by way of the utterly seething Scammer, sight is also never lost of the band’s undoubted progression since the raw intent of that first demo.
Minneapolis’ War Plague and Stockholm’s Svaveldioxid join forces for a thoroughly uncompromising split 7-inch.
War Plague and Svaveldioxid have shared an enviable commitment to consistently releasing new music over many years. Indeed, last year War Plague released their fifth LP, The Rot Thickens, and Svaveldioxid, both a split EP with Destruct and their sixth full-length, Misär O.D (Misery O.D). And while every band works at its own pace, Absurd Depravity is proof that both these bands thrive on this productivity.
‘A silver spooned fascist, Power hungry addicts, There is no future, Our future’s the past’ (Hellscape)
War Plague kick things off with the searing Hellscape, marshalling muscular metallic crust riffage, with a soaring melancholic melodic motif, and typically cymbal awash drums. This is a momentum that the surging velocity of Pyre does not allow to go to waste for even a moment. Meanwhile, the savagely growled vocals survey a world being gutted by corporate greed and government complicity.
‘Man kvinnor och barn, Omringade i staden, Dödsdömda av varlden, Och skjutna av blockaden’ / ‘Men, women and children, Surrounded in the city, Condemned to death by the world, And shot by the blockade’ (Sarajevo ’92)
While War Plague’s metallic inclinations are filtered through an avowedly crust filter, Svaveldioxid’s downtuned buzzsaw riffage is immersed in the rhythms of Swedish käng. Their opening track, Sarajevo ’92, is built round an absolutely crushing opening and a venomous central riff, while Masspyskos (Mass Psychosis) sees the band let their pummelling mid-paced groove take centre stage. The semi-shouted, echo saturated vocals explore the horror of the world’s inaction in the face of the Siege of Sarajevo and the seemingly ceaseless spread of mass shootings.
‘Inaction, Empty gestures, Solemn apologies, Trending concerns, Here then gone, What’s the next diatribe? (Popular Causes)
Melbourne’s Cimiterium are back with their third EP and follow-up to 2024’s split with Slavery. This is another barbarously executed invocation to the spirit of late 1980s’ UK stenchcore. Crust fuelled slabs of crushing metallic groove, tautly jagged melodic leads, and an utterly remorseless rhythm section all locked into delivering steamroller power over speed.
The savagely oscillating title track opens with a menacing mid-paced gallop before building to a crushing climatic breakdown, while Popular Causes positively revels in the sheer heft of its swaggering riffage. The flipside comprises Stench And Death, which opens with an absolutely monolithic riff and then layers its ominous intent with squalling leads that grow in assertiveness as the track evolves with a pitiless brutality. The gutturally roared vocals can’t help but bring to mind prime Karl Willetts as they build connections surveillance capitalism, echo chamber politics, and a rigged economic system.
Shows And Tours
Mongrel Fest / Old Blue Last & New River Studios / Thursday 9th – Saturday 11th July
Shai Hulud / New Cross Inn / Thursday 9th July
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.
July
9th Tethered, Brach, Every Face Becomes A Skull (Calamity Tank)
9th Shai Hulud, Afraid To Die, Crowquill, Warden (New Cross Inn)
9th Mongrel Fest (Day One) featuring Bulls Shitt, Ikhras, Tormented Imp, No Ambition, Crude Image (Old Blue Last)
10th Mongrel Fest (Day Two) featuring The Chisel, T.S. Warspite, Last Affront, The Dogs, Total Con, Scab, Lost Cause (New River Studios)
10th Agnostic Front, D.R.I., Under The Influence (The Underworld / Sold Out)
11th Mongrel Fest (Day Three) featuring The Flex, Identity Shock, Blind Authority, Stingray, Hellbound, Frisk, The Social, Tramadol, Wits End, EZ8, Warhead 97, Nuclear Fear, Beyond Human, Backhand (New River Studios)
16th Ostraca, Cady, Jøtnarr, Carpenter (Piehouse Co-op)
17th The Osees, Cosey Mueller (EartH / CM UK Tour)
23rd Racetraitor, Hour Of Reprisal, Temple Guard, Afraid To Die (New Cross Inn)
25th Neutrals, Marcel Wave, Morreadoras, B Lager (New River Studios)
26th JK Flesh, Black Leather Jesus, Kleistwahr, Helm (Oslo)
August
1st Nic Krog, Afraidofmessages, Erotechre, Catholic Block (The Waiting Room / UK Tour)
5th Liberty & Justice, Mindless, The Razorpart, Positive Reaction (New River Studios)
7th– 8th United & Strong featuring C4, Combust, Cro-Mags, Demonstration Of Power, Despize, The Flex, Fury, Imposter, No Idols plus many more (Number 90 Lock)
9th Career Suicide plus support (New River Studios / UK Tour)
12th Harrowed, Mortuary, Commoner, Meltzer (The Black Heart)
15th Hot Load plus support (Venue tbc / UK Tour)
22nd Fiddlehead, Nothing, Dynamite (EartH)
25th Earth Ball plus support (The Lexington)
28th Lost Wisdom Fest / Day One featuring Marina Zispin, Sniffany & The Nits, Louis Gardner, Anrimeal (The George Tavern)
29th Lost Wisdom Fest / Day Two featuring Middleman, Bloody Death, Jimmy & the Boonies, Silica, Godzooki, Hoof (The George Tavern)
September
6th Fools Game, Last Wishes, Malignant Methods, Big Smoke (New Cross Inn)
12th Hellkrusher, Picasso Blot plus more (New Cross Inn)
15th Bulldoze, Kartel, Mindless, Ballkick (New Cross Inn)
19th Spy, Spaced, Dry Socket (The Underworld / UK Tour)
October
3rd Dark Thoughts plus support (New River Studios)
3rd R.M.F.C. plus support (The Lexington)
4th Maripool, Lal Tuna plus more (The Shacklewell Arms)
17th Avskum, Earth To Dust plus more (New Cross Inn)
22nd Stormo, Believe In Nothing plus more (The Black Heart)
November
9th Lágrimas, Cassus, Hemiptera, Sevy Verna (New Cross Inn)
14th Vicious Irene, Hiatus, Disciple BC, Commoner (New Cross Inn)
19th The Hope Conspiracy plus support (The Underworld)
December
19th Slift, Hey Colossus (Islington Assembly Hall / HC UK Tour)
Coming Soon
New Traditions by Gimic
Conditional Bunker by Non Plus Temps
July 14th
CIA Debutante ‘Trespass’ 12-inch (Siltbreeze)
Gimic ‘New Traditions’ 12-inch (Drunken Sailor)
Hot Load ‘Realized’ 12-inch (Drunken Sailor)
Indikator B ‘II’ 7-inch (Adult Crash)
Non Plus Temps ‘Conditional Bunker’ 12-inch (Siltbreeze)
Prisão ‘Nação’ 7-inch (Adult Crash)
Puppet Wipes ‘The Stones Are Watching And They Can Be A Handful’ 12-inch (Siltbreeze)
Shaved Ape ‘Loveletter To Hardcore’ 12-inch (Sorry State / Restock)
Later In July
Direct Order ’82 ’12 Song EP’ 7-inch (Refuse)
Fentanyl ‘LP2’ 12-inch (Convulse)
The Fulmars ‘The Fulmars’ 12-inch (Static Age)
Grotto ‘Targeted Solution’ 12-inch (Neon Taste)
Hemiptera ‘Until Every Flag Is Burned’ 12-inch (Prejudice Me)
Klatwa ‘Klatwa’ 7-inch (Refuse)
L.O.T.I.O.N Multinational Corporation ‘Machine Hallucinations’ 12-inch (Static Shock / Toxic State)
Mirage ‘2026’ 12-inch (Roachleg)
Morde ‘Morde’ 12-inch (Phobia)
Nerve Centre ‘Damage Is Done’ 12-inch (Refuse)
Nightfeeder / Verdict ‘Död Åt Tyranner’ 12-inch (Phobia / Restock)
Nothing Works ‘Bold Talk For A Burner Talk’ 7-inch (Refuse)
Poguba ‘Noč’ 7-inch (Autsajder Produkcija)
Soasstasphrenas ‘Eris’ 12-inch (Prejudice Me)
Splin ‘Type Of Love’ 12-inch (Refuse)
Tenue ‘Aros, Bóvedas, Pórticos’ 12-inch (Prejudice Me)
Totalis ‘Grief State’ 12-inch (Phobia)
Yambag ‘The Psycho’ 7-inch (Convulse)
August
Alien Nosejob ‘How A Mosquito Operates’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)
Consensus Madness ‘Endeavors’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)
Diät ‘S.O.36 Berlin Sept ’22’ 12-inch (Iron Lung)
Fake Dust ‘Decrepitizing Din Of The Cerebral Psyopticon’ 12-inch (Iron Lung / Restock)
Mesh ‘No Fun At All’ 12-inch (Feel It)
Odor Eater ‘But For Who?’ 12-inch (Feel It)
Soga ‘Corrosión’ 12-inch (Iron Lung / Restock)
Team Work ‘Somebody’s Got To Do It’ 12-inch (Feel It)
The Cowboys ‘Captain Easy’s Downfall’ 12-inch (Feel It)