martes, 3 de diciembre de 2024

Internal Autonomy

Internal Autonomy were a Punk/Goth band from Frimley, heavily influenced by Black Easter, with the guitarist Al from Cyanide Scenario originally forming the band with others. In ’87 they released their first demo 'Song and Speech', followed the next year by 50 copies of the self-released C90 cassette 'The Cause of Liberty'. There were 13 tracks on the A-side; nothing was listed for the B-side, but it carried folk music and poetry. 

In ’89 there were two releases: 'Capitalism on Sulphate' and the '4th Demo'. Early in ’90 came the 'Tired of Sleeping' compilation EP. This, along with the earlier releases led to interest from German label Recordrom Records who released 'Inquiry' in ’90 and the 7″ single 'Love & Life' in ’91. That same year an LP release on WoW Records titled 'Hear in Our Hearts', with title track written by Andy Martin (lyrics) and Music & Elsewhere‘s Mick Magic (music), was planned but never made it to fruition. 

In ’92 the band were included on a number of compilations, including 'Agony of A Contaminated Society' and 'Mind Pollution'. The following year they changed their name to Automomex, but only after releasing the double EP 'Only You Have the Power' on the Profane Existence Records, the label for Dan Siskind’s DIY punk collective tat released anarcho-punk from bands throughout the world. 2010 saw the release on 'Discography' on Front Cover Productions, a 2xCD compilation of Internal Autonomy’s work.
 
From around 2013 some original members continued as Ferox / Feroxide, out of Neath, South Wales; where Alex Cable ran Raven Studios -which was moved from Camberley, where it was used by The Perfect Circles- until around 2018. [SOURCE: OUR SOUND SCENE

lunes, 2 de diciembre de 2024

Rondos

Between 1978-80, the Rondos played 50 live shows. They released their records on their own independent label, King Kong Records, and together with three other bands (Rode Wig, Tändstickor Shocks, and Sovjets) formed the Rotterdam music collective “Red Rock,” with whom they shared gigs, equipment, and rehearsal space. Punk for the Rondos obviously meant more than “entertainment,” hence their slogan “Punk = Resistance.” Their independently published fanzine Raket (“Rocket”) quickly became the mouthpiece of many Dutch youth who turned their backs on consumerist society. The Rondos operated from the house called Huize Schoonderloo, a building that they saved from demolition and turned into a living and working space. Here they operated a print shop, a rehearsal room, and the alternative bookshop “Raketbasis” (“Rocketbase”). The Rondos gathered a fanatic and devoted following, but unhappy with the fact that this devotion threatened to turn them into punk heroes, which had nothing to do with their own idea of punk, the Rondos called it a day. [SOURCE: PM PRESS]