Nasenbluten

Nasenbluten
Origin Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia
Genres Hardcore techno, gabber, amigacore, cheapcore
Years active 1992 (1992)–2001 (2001)
Labels Dead Girl, Industrial Strength, Bloody Fist,
Past members Aaron Lubinski, David Melo, Mark Newlands

Nasenbluten were an Australian recording and performance group formed in Newcastle in 1992. The group were founded by three DJs, Aaron Lubinski (aka Xylocaine), David Melo (aka Disassembler) and Mark Newlands (aka Mark N, Overcast). They pioneered hardcore techno, gabber, amigacore and cheapcore music in the Australian market. They released six studio albums before disbanding in 2001.

History

Nasenbluten were an Australian recording and performance group formed in Newcastle in 1992. They consisted of three DJs, Aaron Lubinski (aka Xylocaine), David Melo (aka Disassembler) and Mark Newlands (aka Mark N, Overcast); and took their name from the German word, nasenbluten, which translates as nosebleed. This refers to the phrase "nosebleed techno" as used to describe the harder and faster variants of the techno genre.[1] Early in 1993 Lubinski founded the Dead Girl Records label (initially typset as dEAdGirL) in Swansea.

Nasenbluten created music on Amiga personal computers using tracker software in the MOD format and started playing house parties in Newcastle. They self-released a number of cassettes on the Dead Girl label starting with their debut album, Transient Ischemic Attack, which appeared in March 1993. On 31 July that year they recorded a gig, which was released as Live at Wobble. In late October they recorded another album, You're Going to Die. In mid-1994 following their Dead Girl cassettes they signed to New York City-based hardcore techno label, Industrial Strength Records. In August that year Newlands created Bloody Fist Records for local releases. Shortly after their debut LP, a sampler for Bloody Fist was released internationally by Industrial Strength featuring two tracks from Nasenbluten.

Nasenbluten inspired local musicians, leading to a thriving hardcore techno scene in Newcastle. In February 2005 Luke Collison (aka Dsico) acknowledged his major influences were "probably Nasenbluten and the Newcastle Hardcore scene. I grew up around there ... the radio show that Mark N used to do on 2NUR. Amiga 500 Hardcore was probably what got me into electronic music and especially making it".[2] United Kingdom DJ, Loftgroover declared "there's too much niceness in the rave scene ... Gabba is how I really feel – hard, angry".[1] He described "Nasenbluten-style extreme noise terror: 'punkcore', 'scarecore' and 'doomtrooper'".[1]

The band's emphasis on breakbeats, ironic audio samples and gangster rap samples became influential in the hardcore scene, most prominently with Australian artists signed to Bloody Fist. Due to their influence and the relatively small numbers of records that were pressed for earlier releases (including limited self-distributed cassettes), they have become popular with collectors. Bloody Fist Records provided "horrifically high-tempo electronic music that quickly became a thing of international legend. Specialising in breakcore, gabba and referential sample alchemy/exploitation".[3] According to Shaun Prescott at Mess+Noise, the band's 2× LP 100% No Soul Guaranteed (1995) showcased a "nasty marriage of power electronics shock tactics with vaguely danceable and purely psychotic electronic beats is one of the few genuinely sickening music experiences you're likely to have in your life".[3]

In 1996 Nasenbluten released a limited edition single, "Show Us Yor Tits" (often referred to as "Anna Wood" or "Fuck Anna Wood", from its sampled lyrics), on the Dead Girl label.[3][4] In October the previous year a schoolgirl of that name died after using ecstasy at dance club, she was given copious amounts of water upon her collapse and later lapsed into a coma.[5][6] Media reports sparked a moral panic surrounding rave parties and drug use at venues.[5] This brought about a hard-line approach from governments to rave and dance parties in Australia.[5][6][7] Jack Marx of The Age described how Wood's friends may have been influenced by the prevailing zero tolerance attitude and hence they were too afraid to take her directly to hospital.[8]

"Show Us Yor Tits" was not commercially available but only distributed by the band at gigs, they provided 50 vinyl copies, each individually numbered. The label had a picture of Wood with the phrase "I'm having the best night of my life!" and a picture of Dutch DJ Paul Elstak on the B-side with the words "I wanna see the rainbow high in the sky", a reference to the happy hardcore scene, its links to ecstasy, and to the song "Rainbow in the Sky" by Elstak.[4] Cat Hope described "Fuck Anna Wood" as featuring "controversial, sampled snippets from current affairs programs composed to form conversations, laid over with a gabba-style hard beat".[4] As "Show Us Yor Tits" it appeared on Nasenbluten's next album for Bloody Fist, N Of Terror, a 2× cassette, which had been recorded in April 1996.

Nasenbluten continued to issue material and toured Europe from November 1996 to February 1997 on their Christ This Is Dragging On A Bit Tour. While in Germany they recorded an EP, Cheapcore, for the local Strike Records label, which was issued in 1997. The group played their last gig on 30 September 2001, they issued a 3× LP album, Dog Control, in November and disbanded as the three musicians pursued their own projects.

Side and later projects

One of Aaron Lubinski's side projects was working as Xylocaine: he provided several releases on the Dead Girl and Bloody Fist imprints. David Melo created several tracks as Disassembler, including one record on the Bloody Fist label that was mis-pressed and never commercially available. Mark Newlands recorded under the alias Overcast, also on the Bloody Fist. The Overcast album, 3PM Eternal was the last 2x12" album release from the label. The 1994-2004 12" split album by Aftermath / Epsilon was the last vinyl release by Bloody Fist.

Discography

Albums

Extended plays

References

  1. 1 2 3 Reynolds, Simon (1999). "15 Marching into Madness, Gabba and Happy Hardcore 1992–97". Generation Ecstasy: Into the World of Techno and Rave Culture. Routledge. pp. 291–2. ISBN 978-0-415-92373-6. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  2. "Starting Afresh with Sydney's Dsico...". Australian Music Online. 7 February 2005. Archived from the original on 22 November 2005. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  3. 1 2 3 Prescott, Shaun (10 June 2011). "Aus Classics That'll Never Be on a Triple J List". Mess+Noise. Sound Alliance. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 Hope, Cat (2009). "Cultural Terrorism and Anti-Music: Noise Music and Its Impact on Experimental Music in Australia". In Gail Priest. Experimental Music: Audio Explorations in Australia. UNSW Press. p. 68. ISBN 978-1-921410-07-9. Retrieved 25 July 2013.
  5. 1 2 3 Cockington, James (August 2001). "Total Ecstasy". Long Way to the Top: Stories of Australian Rock & Roll. Sydney, NSW: ABC Books (Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC)). pp. 245–255. ISBN 0-73330-750-7.
  6. 1 2 "The Publicly Released Coroner's Report/Autopsy on Anna Wood's Death". www.erowid.org. Archived from the original on 5 May 2008. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  7. Gibson, Chris; Pagan, Rebecca (2006). "Rave Culture in Sydney, Australia: Mapping Youth Spaces in Media Discourse" (PDF). Youth Sound and Space. NSW: Division of Geography, University of Sydney: 16. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  8. Marx, Jack. "Bless the Beasts and the Parents of Dead Children". The Age. Fairfax Media. Archived from the original on 6 May 2008. Retrieved 25 July 2013.
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