Beyond the localized industrial music sites discussed here, there were dozens of other important artists and developments early in the genre’s history. Patrick Codenys of the Belgian EBM act Front 242 recalls, “You have what I called the ‘UFOs’—like Crash Course in Science from Philadelphia … Severed Heads from Australia. They came out of the blue like that. … They were isolated in the eighties, small units, self producing.”1
But the isolation in which most of these UFOs operated was merely a geographic one; a vital connection exists between early industrial music and the global network established through the Fluxus art movement, its outgrowth of mail art, and the cassette and small press cultures that arose in the late 1970s. These are the surroundings that we might take to be this network’s technocultural geography. This global communication system existed years before the online communities afforded by today’s internet, but nevertheless was in many ways an international virtual scene—one whose virtuality indelibly shaped the music it produced.
An important origin of this network lies in the democratizing art movement Fluxus. George Maciunas, whose family immigrated to the United States from Lithuania after World War II, studied art and design at some of the finest schools in the country, focusing in particular on the history and interaction of modernist movements. Driven by the belief that art can be more than merely the one-time manipulation of a stable physical medium by a single artist for a discrete audience, Maciunas turned his attention to the questions raised by John Cage’s writing and music. With a solid grounding in Dada and the movements connected to it (as well as a correspondence with some of its original progenitors, now much older), Maciunas and a growing cadre of intellectual troublemakers began organizing multimedia Fluxus “happenings” in New York, at the short-lived radical Black Mountain College in North Carolina, and across Europe (Maciunas had a job in the early 1960s at an American Air Force base in West Germany). Out of a desire to bring art to new audiences in non-elitist, mass-produced means, members of this network began to exchange what they called mail art.
Instigated in 1958, chiefly by New York artist Ray Johnson, mail art isn’t merely art sent via post to a specified recipient, but it takes the epistolary act as its artistic locus. Mail art might be a handmade collage postcard sent to a friend, or a single-printing fanzine of cryptic phrases passed through the post to a dozen recipients from one to the next, or it might be mass mailings of doll parts to entire streets of strangers meant to bewilder and shock. The act matters as much as the artifact, and an audience’s interpretation of the art is almost necessarily diffuse, with each sender, courier, or recipient possessing a partial understanding. By duplicating and forwarding art, adding names to ever-growing mailing lists, and incorporating new details—suggestive stamp arranging or addressing with “Do Not Deliver To”—the line between artist and audience eroded.
As discussed in Chapter 3, a variety of ideas from Fluxus influenced early industrial music, but the particular importance of its mail art wing cannot be overstated. It’s worth noting that mail art historically coincided with and was empowered by certain key technological developments. Media scholar Paul Théberge reminds us that “electronic technologies and the industries that supply them are not simply the technical and economic context within which ‘music’ is made, but rather, they are among the very preconditions for contemporary musical culture.”2 In the case of Fluxus, mail art, and industrial music, the preconditional new technologies include the photocopier and the cassette tape, which were developed in 1959 and 1962, respectively.* (Significantly, this is also a period during which popular music—especially hard bop and rock ‘n’ roll—attained more power than ever before to congregate youth subculture.) These reproduction technologies enabled the consumer-level mass distribution of images, written ideas, and recorded sound. Artists could create postcards, collages, and homemade pamphlets with visual panache using photocopiers and also new instant cameras—the folding Polaroid 100 series was introduced in 1963. By 1966, the confluence of rock music and all this technology allowed the self-produced newsletter to break out of the underground nerd network and into the public “cool” with the rags Crawdaddy and Mojo Navigator. Most of the early readers of these zines were obsessive fans in science fiction and garage rock communities, largely unaware of Fluxus, but artistic and radical leftist gangs had their own publications too. Independently printed specialized publications in art and politics date back more than a hundred years, but copy shops allowed faster, more anonymous, more parodic, and more radical zines and lit mags. In fact, the movement’s name is taken from Maciunas’s own Fluxus artist book, which made extensive use of Xerox techniques.
More directly relevant to industrial music is the huge network of cassette-based musicians and record labels that developed in the late 1970s and early 1980s all around the world. Nearly every active industrial musician in the world from 1975 to 1983 participated in this network. Although Northern England, Berlin, and San Francisco were geographical centers of the style, industrial music boasted a sparse, covert ubiquity nearly from the start. Its makers contributed to and were inspired by this underground cassette scene, itself the crossroads of cassette tape technology with the mail art submovement within Fluxus.
It’s important to understand how this network came into being, because it’s not merely a question of mail artists making music. Fluxus questions the fixity of art objects by allowing events and acts to be living, social art, but the rise of tape exchange networks began independent of Fluxus, like the rock and sci-fi zines mentioned above. The actual medium of the cassette inspires politicized networking. The core idea of this—that an artistic medium exists to be questioned, to be manipulated, and, as the site of communication, to be shared—resonated strongly with the work of Maciunas and Fluxus, and the movement’s cross-pollination with tape technology is a seminal moment in industrial music history.
Reel-to-reel magnetic tape recording as we know it was invented in 1933, but as previously mentioned, the portable and convenient cassette wasn’t developed until thirty years later. When that happened, hi-fi enthusiasts quickly learned how to copy music to tape from the radio, LPs, and other cassettes. Secretly taping concerts was now an enticing possibility to many fans. Overlapping significantly with the rock fanzine crowd, the bootleg circuit was coming alive. Into the 1970s, many bootleggers paid to have recordings cheaply pressed to vinyl by small manufacturing plants, in some cases packaging them to look official so as to fool completist fans into buying them. But in the networks of tape traders—Grateful Dead fans serving as the most famous example—there was no subterfuge as to what was going on: as soon as London’s Camden Market opened in 1975, tapes with hand-scrawled labels were sold alongside new major-label releases. America had done its part too, with a 1971 congressional ruling that amended copyright law to allow home taping, which meant a boom for the blank cassette industry. The entry of the Japanese brand Maxell into the tape market in the early 1970s was also a major turning point, as they offered higher-quality media, raising the bar for sound quality.
Not all tape mailing was musical: many people in the 1970s first received or mailed tapes during the Vietnam War, when some soldiers found cassettes an immediate, durable, and personal way to communicate with their families. The cassette letter became a phenomenon widespread enough that in the Netherlands post offices sold tape-and-envelope kits for the equivalent of $1.50.3 In other parts of the world such as India, the Middle East, and Eastern Europe, translocal and sometimes clandestine networks exchanged tapes of poetry, political speeches, and religious instruction. In the 1978 Iranian revolution, for example, this was instrumental in spreading the words of Ayatollah Khomeini to largely illiterate populations.
The cassette’s most immediate appeal was personal empowerment: it could immortalize a user’s experience and preserve the sounds and ideas of people’s lives. As with audio letters, early cassette music bore intimate personality. Tape scene veterans Rich Jensen and Robin James write that the cassette invites people to “record things that have never been recorded before,” and in doing so to forge a “new form of literature, beyond the illusion of theater and into reality.”4
Among the first self-distributing cassette-based musicians was Nashville native R. Stevie Moore, who as the son of Bob Moore, bassist for Elvis Presley and Roy Orbison, had grown up with access to recording technology. Moore had begun distributing his homemade cassettes to friends and family as early as 1968. In 1971, he left school to focus his efforts expressly on tape music making and distribution.
Another turning point in cassette recording came in 1973, when Virgin records (still very much Richard Branson’s maverick brainchild at the time) pulled the stunt of marketing German act Faust’s LP The Faust Tapes for only 49 pence. The record, which contained two long untitled tracks of spliced noisiness, declares on its sleeve, “These tapes been left exactly as they were recorded—frequently live—and no post-production work has been imposed on them.”5 Thanks to its ultra-low price, the album sold fifty thousand copies in the UK, giving a boost to the idea that music could be cheaply made, poorly recorded, and freely distributed to a nonetheless hungry audience.
1973 was also the year TEAC began manufacturing the consumer-level 2340 multitrack reel-to-reel recorder, which was still more expensive and complicated than most musicians were ready for, but some splurged for it. Others were simply recording their music live to stereo cassette tape. In these pre-1975 years, a few musicians such as English synthesist Paul Kelday and saxophonist Barry E. Pilcher began offering their tapes for purchase in small music magazines. Over the next few years, home recording began to expand as a hobby both for bookish experimenters and as a rehearsal for motivated pop hopefuls. In April 1977, the first Multi-Track Expo was held in Los Angeles and drew forty-five hundred participants.6
It was the public availability of the Tascam and Fostex four-track cassette recorders in 1979 that opened the floodgates of independent tape artists. Although reel-to-reel recording was intensive and expensive, these machines (at a steep but not prohibitive $1,000) used and reused simple cassettes and were more or less portable.
The cassette tape allowed curious intimacies and budding ambitions to cross boundaries, playing a role in “the plastic arts because it plays with space, and non-space,” as counterculture poet-publisher William Levy writes.7 This ability to transport environments was in fact the guiding impetus behind the first-ever tape trading network, a reel-to-reel penpal circle established in 1953 by media scholar Philip C. Geraci as “a nationwide club of tape enthusiasts who would record events indigenous to their localities and exchange the tapes by mail.”8 Ethnomusicologist Peter Manuel, who has studied cassette usage and trading networks in India, argues that the medium influences the music it contains, and that—as networks like Geraci’s and the later mail art-inspired underground illustrate—it can create significant new economies, virtual spaces, and “scenes”:
Cassette technology … constitutes a particular mode of production which is itself conducive to particular forms of control, and which has had profound effects on the production, distribution, consumption, and content of popular music. … It is most fruitful, then, to recognize cassette technology as constituting and engendering a set of modes of production, which themselves not only influence but constitute cultural phenomena, from the social relations of musical production and consumption to musical style itself.9
The cassette as a medium impels its users to create, to cut up. William S. Burroughs used a Philips recorder (and later a Sony TC) that, by virtue of its standard play/record, rewind, fast-forward, and pause/stop buttons, enabled the immediate reshuffling of time—a selective, fungible chronology. Of course academic experiments with tape splicing and collage predated all this, but the access that was due to the affordability, expertise-free physicality, and social translocation that these tools enabled was a revelation. In fact, one might argue that a key generative difference between proto-industrial pop and the musique concrète of Pierre Schaeffer and his cohort is precisely this consumerist, social dimension.
All of this contributes to what scholar John Corbett calls the “increased possibility for subversion provided by the ever-cheapening technology of cassette tape.”10 The cassette’s techno-history also boosts its antiauthoritarian power to steal entertainment and information through copying, as well as its ability to watch the watchmen, empowering users with evidence both of and against their surroundings; recall the damning tapes that unseated President Richard Nixon in 1974. So even to a singer who records linear songs in real time to two-track, these anarchic qualities could impart a sense of the experimental, a connotation of the proletarian underground. Unsurprisingly, though, most of the musicians in these networks weren’t simply singers and songwriters. As recordist and zine journalist Carl Howard writes of the tape scene, “As I look at the work of my most stalwart networking friends, their music has all graduated from the industrial model.”11 Not only is the rise of “cassette culture” and its attendant politics no mystery at all when one considers the cassette’s implied social bond taken in light of its medial manipulability, but the industrial music that thrived on these tapes is similarly consonant with these ideas. Burroughs in The Ticket That Exploded and cyberpunk author William Gibson in “Fragments of a Hologram Rose” both ally the physical acts of recording to and playing from tape with a dizzying, irrational future. In the 1980 song “All Stood Still,” UK synthpop act Ultravox situates the tape medium as dystopian: “Please remember to mention me in tapes you leave behind.” David Cronenberg’s industrial 1983 movie Videodrome is certainly the most famous extension of this idea to videotape.* Though the cassette tape is not deterministic of the content it holds, it was nevertheless understood as a strong wind through the period’s political, subcultural, and artistic climates, contributing to industrial music’s perfect storm.
Part of the encounter between the tape scene in the early days and Fluxus had to do with mail art’s mid-1970s proliferation, which owed in its own right to the ease of participation. Most of those in its network had an introductory moment similar to that of Boyd Rice of NON:
I was really interested in European art movements of the early twentieth century, particularly Dadaism. So somebody said to me one day, “Have you seen this ad in the local reader? Some guy wants to put out a magazine about Dadaism.” And I went out and I contacted this guy, Steve Hitchcock, and he knew all about the mail art scene. He was already in touch with all these people. He said, “Oh you should give me something to put in this,” and I gave him a clipping of the newspaper article about when I tried to give Betty Ford a skinned sheep’s head, and all of a sudden I got on all of these lists and I started getting these weird postcards from all over the world. I started getting invitations to send art to art galleries in Prague and you name it. So as a teenager, that’s pretty exciting, getting mail from all over the world with these foreign stamps.13
Because mail art was geographically diffuse and based as much on the receipt of a parcel as a gallery opening, it seemed a post-industrial egalitarian form par excellence: though quality certainly mattered, the quantity of art in circulation helped to subvert the bourgeois value of scarcity. The nature of mail art makes it hard to estimate how many participants there were, but Oberlin College’s collection alone contains the work of thirteen hundred artists, which one may presume constituted only a small fraction of the total. The expansion of the mailing lists was always a goal, to the point where insiders started calling the scene “the eternal network.” As a result, it was inevitable that mail artists and tapers started overlapping more and more. A lot of Fluxus artists had an interest in experimental music, but owing to technological limitations or to the ephemeral, living nature of performance art, they’d seldom previously recorded or distributed their music.14 Such was the case with Genesis P-Orridge and Cosey Fanni Tutti, who were involved with mail art even in 1971, well before they specifically committed to music.15 The same goes for Monte Cazazza.
By the end of 1976, though, punk was becoming common ground between art and music scenes; New York City’s hipsters had hinted at this years earlier when Andy Warhol teamed up with the Velvet Underground. With the emergence of punk music came zines such as Sniffin’ Glue, Punk, and V. Vale’s Search and Destroy. These publications were especially important to fans outside of urban areas, as they offered mail-order addresses and information about music that was otherwise inaccessible, sometimes oceans away. Mail art communities quickly tapped into these zines’ back pages, and curious tape scenesters connected that way. Included among these earliest isolated UFOs were French photographer Philippe Fichot, who launched his record label Bain Total and the seminal industrial band Die Form in 1977, and Vittore Baroni, an Italian artist who founded the cassette label Trax and would release music by Laibach and Lustmord.
Throbbing Gristle had sent their earliest tapes to “mail art friends,” and as Genesis P-Orridge recalls, they carried over the ideas of Fluxus to music.
When we decided to do TG we applied all those strategies to the band. We still use those strategies. So we, for example, in an album put a questionnaire.* No one was doing that at the time. We pretty much got them back one for one: we sold an album, we got back a questionnaire. We were getting all these back, and we thought, well, what do we do? Now people are thinking and reacting and writing. That’s a hell of a step, to get people that involved that they’ll take the effort. These are the people who really want to be involved. So what can we do to speak to them? Let’s do a newsletter like the Beatles used to do, take a tried and tested technique and warp it to your own particular end. … Then they started sending in these fucking cassettes, dozens and dozens and dozens.16
The glut of tapes came from fans looking for validation from Throbbing Gristle or musicians looking for a deal with Industrial Records. Chris Carter continues, stating that the unsolicited tapes were “far too many to listen to, or even reply to.”18 However, “we did ‘connect’ bands we knew and friends, but that’s just what you do with friends,” Carter adds. “When it came to fans what we did was to publish small lists of selected names and addresses in our IR Newsletters. They could then hook up with one another if they desired.”19
P-Orridge remembers, “That definitely had a huge impact we found out later. … There’s definitely a very good argument to say TG newsletters and the cassette network exchange really had a big influence and maybe even began the whole cassette label thing.”20
It’s not at all unreasonable to argue that Throbbing Gristle not only continued the introduction of cassette trading and mail art to one another but specifically brought their industrial fans and imitators into the conversation. We can consider this a crucial moment in the genre’s history.
This merging left the tape scene with more of a scent of Fluxus than the other way around: 1980s tape zines such as ND, U-Bahn, and Electronic Cottage readily covered nonmusicians like the extreme film collective Coup De Grace, while mail art continued (and continues) to exist largely irrespective of the tape scene—acknowledging it as part of the family, but leaving it to those who care most. This is probably the case because, first, the tape scene prior to the advent of the four-track cassette recorder was simply much smaller than the mail art scene, and second, it was at that point centered more around a technology than a credo.
The tape scene didn’t come into full swing until 1979, when Op magazine began publication, and starting in its fifth issue it launched the “Castanets” column, which reviewed all the tapes submitted to the magazine—something no other major publication dared. Most musicians who participated in the tape network as it’s remembered today got involved after an encounter with mail art, but they quickly adapted the ethics and aesthetics of the style, usually to highlight the materiality of the music or the ever-shifting roles of artist and consumer. Some gestures to this effect were subtle: Belgian noise act Etat Brut’s 1980 debut cassette EB001 states that the group “doesn’t have to [sic] the desire to communicate with anyone” just inches above their clearly printed address, as if issuing a dare.21 Other acts were more antagonistic: ambient industrial group Zoviet France packaged their tapes in sandpaper, tar, and porcelain, and Scott Marshall’s label Panic Records and Tapes (founded in 1984) “package[d] all its catalogue cassette sales in melted and wrapped junk LP records” so that each parcel “requires a small level of violence to break into.”22
This small violence, however, bespeaks an undercurrent of the industrial scene. The difficult aesthetics of many industrial musicians bore a nasty streak that ultimately led to tension both with mail art networks and with the law. In 1976, P-Orridge was put on trial for violating the 1953 Post Office Act by sending a collage postcard featuring pornography alongside a portrait of the Queen. His defense rested on the validity of mail art as an artform—an argument that the magistrate deemed “irrelevant” when she found him guilty and fined him £100. P-Orridge recalls:
I started getting fiberglass resin and making big parcels with mutant animals made out of bits of rabbits and chickens and I’d send them in the mail. And at one point [the recipient] nearly got prosecuted by the post office for receiving maggot-ridden, disgusting, stinking parcels … for all their so-called radicalism, they were incredibly conservative and very moral—they used to get really incensed at some of my pornographic collages—especially people in “mail art.”23
Ultimately, P-Orridge, Cazazza, Rice, and others like them largely abandoned the mail art network, finding it bland and bloated—not a surprise given that the 1963 founding manifesto of Fluxus demanded that art be “grasped by all peoples.” Thus, according to Hal McGee, founder of the Cause and Effect cassette label, “Everyone acknowledges the tape scene’s roots in mail art,” but many of its more confrontational musicians have appreciated their distance from the latter-day mail art scene and the comparatively sunny pockets it incubated with its democratizing imperative.24*
By the early 1980s, the idea of the cassette as a globally available medium that embodied culture cheaply harmonized well with the squat-based militant leftists in Western Europe, the ecologically minded anarchists in California, and even a few adventurous Eastern Bloc artists such as Slovenia-based noisemaker Mario Marzidovšek: the cassette helped to break down barriers between production, distribution, and consumption. It encouraged users to be fans, distributors, musicians, and journalists all at once. For example, Geert-Jan Hobijn founded Staalplaat, initially a cassette-only shop in Amsterdam’s NRC squat in 1982. Being plugged into the cassette network, he found it easy within a year to release Laibach’s tape Through the Occupied Netherlands, thus expanding Staalplaat into a label. After that, he would go on to record and release tapes of his own. He recalls, “If you were in the family, you would be an alien if you weren’t doing your own cassettes. You had to, in a way.”25
The tapes that circulated in the network contained all manner of homemade oddities. Hobijn continues, “Extreme noise was in there, but there were also people who were making synthpop music at home on their equipment.”26 In this burgeoning global community, autonomy and a collective stance against the perceived authority of major labels, government, and tradition mattered more than a unified aesthetic or even a common politic. Some tape acts were on the political right, notably UK-based Con-Dom and Belgian duo Club Moral, but liberal ideologies were more common. For instance, Nigel Ayers, a UK squatter for ten years and a highly active tape scene participant, created his industrial act Nocturnal Emissions from an explicitly antifascist “free festival culture” viewpoint.27 Many industrial acts, most famously Laibach, negotiate processes of signification that eschew simple distinctions like these—a topic to be addressed in Chapter 13.
The industrial scene was almost entirely male. Dejan Knez of Laibach says flatly that “girls are afraid of us.”28 This was also more or less the case in cassette culture as a whole. There were exceptions—Annea Lockwood, Amy Denio, Jarboe, Caroline Kaye Walters (of Nocturnal Emissions), Audio Leter’s Sue Ann Harkey, and Diana Rogerson (of Fistfuck and Chrystal Belle Scrodd)—but they were making music amid a network of thousands of men. The prevailing attitude hinted, in fact, that women actively hindered the scene. Hobijn says that his tape shop attracted “pale male types. If there was a woman, she was someone’s girlfriend, and they were like, ‘Are you ready yet? Is this going to take long?’ We considered making a special corner for them in the shop because they cost us because they were complaining.”29
The sheer amount of music being circulated was staggering—enough that it may well have had large-scale effects on the global music market. In 1979 and 1980, the major-label record industry experienced its worst-ever financial downturn. Although some blamed punk and its anticapitalism, and some disco (an easy target, as many felt it threatened their whiteness and heterosexuality), the industry fixed the crosshairs on the cassette business: young African Americans bought large boomboxes and were visible users of the tape medium—these were also the early days of breakdance and the hip-hop mixtape—and the underground taping network (entirely separate from the rap scene) was growing every day. In the United States, the RIAA attempted unsuccessfully to levy a significant tax on every blank tape sold. It didn’t matter whether tape users were copying albums illegally or making their own; as far as the record industry was concerned, they weren’t buying major label records, either way. “Home Taping Is Killing Music,” declared the RIAA’s campaign (in response to which tape zines declared “Home Fucking Is Killing Prostitution”). Though it’s hard to say for certain that the campaign backfired and directly inspired more home taping, it’s absolutely the case that the network grew in size and solidarity aggressively over the first few years of the 1980s.
The breadth of music and attitudes circulating in this network made for exciting collaboration, and so not only did musicians share space on split releases like Current 93 and Nurse With Wound’s 1983 Mi-Mort but they would also trade in-progress four-track tapes, each act contributing layers to the total, as was the case with the same year’s Action and Reaction (Critique of Leisure Consumption) by UK industrialists Attrition and Seattle’s erudite act Audio Leter. Germany’s P16.D4 helmed the scene’s most impressive collaboration album with Distruct, for which source material and sounds were submitted via post by Nurse With Wound, Nocturnal Emissions, Die Tödliche Doris, the Haters, and many others. And even though plenty of groups released albums and EPs on cassette, perhaps the network’s most emblematic tool was the compilation tape, on which ambient drone music, low-budget postpunk, appliance banging, free jazz, and noisy Throbbing Gristle wannabes all commingled. Most of the bands of this era have faded into total obscurity, but music by some of the compilation tape regulars has endured, largely through reissues and usually owing to the sheer quality or tenacity of the artist. Examples include English expat psychedelic goths the Legendary Pink Dots, New York–based noise act Controlled Bleeding, UK-based Bryn Jones’s curiously Palestine-centric act Muslimgauze (who rightfully earn a full study of their own in Ibrahim Khider’s scholarship), proto EBM act Portion Control, Factory Records artist Section 25, and Japanoise god Masami Akita’s Merzbow project. Other important tape scene acts already mentioned thus far were Zoviet France, Attrition, Lustmord, Test Dept., Whitehouse, and Coil. Still other musicians important to the scene remain less known but certainly deserve a listen, such as Colin Potter, Sleep Chamber, Bene Gesserit, Bourbonese Qualk, Konstruktivists, and 400 Blows.
A few of the compilations featuring bands like these have become classics in their own right, most notably 1982’s Rising From the Red Sand, which Third Mind founder Gary Levermore assembled as an extension of his zine, and 1983’s The Elephant Table, compiled by Sounds journalist Dave Henderson after writing his gigantic state-of-industrial-music assessment “Hidden Planet,” itself inspired by his marveling review of Rising From the Red Sand.30 Most tapes of the day were distributed in runs of twenty-five to two hundred, but these compilations sold thousands.
The compilations were not released just through the mail order cassette scene; they (and plenty of artists’ own releases) found their way into shops, and even onto vinyl eventually—for example, Flexipop magazine launched in 1980 and included in every issue a seven-inch record of experimental new wave, handpicked from the tape scene. Levermore recalls Rising From the Red Sand forcing his transition from zine enthusiast into label owner:
My idea was just to sell them on mail order and to sell some to the Rough Trade shop in London and maybe one or two other shops that might be interested. I think I sent out three promo copies. One of those copies was given a five star review in Sounds magazine … they published my address, which at the time was my parents’ house, and of course I started getting inundated with checks for four pounds fifty. So my lunchtimes were spent in the post office—of course I still had my job at the time—they were spent at the local post office, mailing out all these cassettes that people had ordered from me. But in the wake of the review, I also had a phone call from Rough Trade distribution in London, and they said … “Well how many have you got,” and I’d sent out some promos to the bands, and I said I had about two hundred. And he said, “Oh you’re going to need a bit more than that,” and it basically went from there.31
As some labels and artists attracted wider recognition and financial success, the otherwise egalitarian tape scene began in small ways to factionalize. In the early 1980s the growing cachet of new wave, industrial, and “downtown” classical music meant that there was demand for live performances (a rarity among tape artists) and higher-quality recordings. It started becoming clear that there was money to be made, though it lay beyond the limits of the cassette as a medium. Andrew Szava-Kovats of industrial bands Data-Bank-A and Dominion concedes in his tape scene documentary Grindstone Redux, “Making the leap from cassette to vinyl was important because that opened up a lot of doors that were closed to cassette, for instance the radio scene.”32* Indeed, whereas the tape scene fostered organizational autonomy, in the end every UFO steered its own course through the darkness.
Recall the definition of a musical scene as having centralized participation but an ever-changing cast. In the case of tape music, this managed to occur in the absence of a single location; the network spread across the west and also included a handful of musicians in Asia, Africa, and South America. Rather than hinder activity, however, the globality and facelessness of the network imbued it with greater cultural variety than an in-person scene, while simultaneously reducing the risk of interpersonal bristling through misunderstanding (to put it gently, social awkwardness frequently accompanied the reclusive collector mentality that encouraged participation in the tape scene). The scene was enduring, politically engaged—someone really ought to anthologize the era’s zine manifestos—and set on developing a new transgressive folk discourse, rather than rehashing old ones.33
Its audiences, producers, and distributors not only congregated and collaborated but perpetuated and encouraged music. What Phil Dink says about his own label, Home Recordings, in fact applies to the entire cassette label phenomenon:
A large number of local groups were formed which probably would never have existed without the label. … Of the groups that would have existed, few would have released anything. … Many of the musicians … actively participated in several ensembles, with more and more on the way. Entire projects can be shelved for extended periods of time and then resurrected at any later date.34
These practices apply to vibrant music scenes, and as we’ll see, several scenarios in industrial music history recapitulate them, particularly those involving the WaxTrax! record label.
The point here is that through this virtual scene and its interpersonal, musical, organizational, and technological facets, industrial music not only spread on the wings of airmail but rose up and coalesced in a variety of independent locales by the mere suggestion of artistic and technological possibility. This not only adds a rich new dimension to a mapping of the genre’s history but helps us understand—even outside of online communities—how local and global scenes can bear greater resemblance than difference.
Tracing industrial music’s aesthetic, ethical, and social inheritance isn’t a simple case of attributing working-class grit to Northern England or nihilistic aggression to Berlin. When ideas come into contact, they don’t just stack on top of each other; instead they interrelate in complicated ways. And we can’t forget, as this part of the book stated at the outset, that ultimately people are the ones making the records and playing the concerts, and a manifesto doesn’t accurately model what really happens in the social and pragmatic trenches of music making.
Returning to the big issue of industrial geography, it’s not just that industrial music responded to certain cities; it responded to a particular way of being in (and thus of perceiving) these cities and scenes, as portrayed in the selective histories and environments presented here. Whether with tape, guitars, synthesizers, or flame-spitting robots, industrial music’s responses to a modern landscape involve rejecting the politically shameful past, reviving the revolutionary spirit of modernism and socialism, celebrating the human body’s modalities, invoking new gods, publicizing the hidden while hiding the public, questioning the very worth of thought itself, and condemning the convergence of capitalism, technology, one-way media, government, and the military. Industrial music’s earliest tactics were both earnest and ironic, altruistic and self-aggrandizing, and at times premeditated, spontaneous, and retrofitted. This gray cloud of responses hovers over a very real map of motivations, and as it shifts from the early 1980s to the present, the shapes it assumes are recombinations—cut-ups—of these people’s work.
ICONIC:
Maurizio Bianchi – “Treblinka” (1981)
Iron Curtain – “The Condos” (1984)
Konstruktivists – “Andropov ’84” (1983)
Lustmord – “At Thee Mountains of Madness” (1981)
Severed Heads – “Dead Eyes Opened” (1983)
ARCANE:
Bourbonese Qualk – “Return to Order” (1985)
Data-Bank-A – “Group Six” (1984)
P16.D4 – Distruct (1984)
Romans – “Membrum Lucis” (1983)
Smegma – “Can’t Look Straight” (1979)