STERILE RECORDS
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THE NOCTURNAL EMISSIONS TISSUE OF LIES LP (1980) When were you last in Control of your Dreams and Aspirations? Personnel: Nigel Ayers, Daniel Ayers, Caroline K This is a different recording from the version of Tissue of Lies released later on Sterile Records in a blue on white sleeve and from Tissue of Lies - Revised, released on CD by Dark Vinyl. |
AYERS: "What a completely bizarre record that is. It started of as an idea for a single - we hired a 4-
track reel to reel to record it, but I ended up cutting that up with a lot of material from improvisations,
endless, endless edits. When... is a pop song in the style of the Flying Lizards. This dissolves into a
huge patchwork of multiply effected guitar and violin textures, ghostly voices, hypnotic echoing Dr
Rhythm beats. The record is psychoactive. One side ends with a lock groove of Elvis Presley saying
"yes, yes sir thank you sir", the other's got a lock groove of a cat purring.
A good proportion of the lyrical content of Tissue of Lies was based on the writings of Joseph Sos . Sos,
who was apparently suffering from some kind of mental illness, had sent hundreds of bundles of
photocopied documents of his obsessive writing and collages to a massive list of Government agencies.
Nigel Ayers had retrieved a bundle of these documents from the dustbins at the
India High Commission in London.
"Amongst the many
instruments we used a EMS-synthi on this, a synthesiser that must have been designed for laboratory
use, its frequency range was far wider than any other available. Because of the extended rage of
frequencies, the record had to be re-cut several times before it could be pressed. We put this out in a
limited numbered edition of 500, which sold out immediately. Rather than re-pressing it, we used the
takings to put out our second LP a couple of months later."
I am told that Mr. Ayers holds a gold medal in skip-diving.
STERILE RECORDS |
THE NOCTURNAL EMISSIONS FRUITING BODY LP (1981)
Phase I: |
AYERS:
"We were now playing live as a regular thing. Whereas Tissue is more dreamlike, Fruiting Body is more your power electronics.
"The cover photos are of an electricity meter that has been wired for free electricity, on the back there's a
photo of the office block in Euston where the then-secret offices of MI5 were. A well-known
commercial radio station was based in the same building.
"Fruiting Body contains recordings of very
banal workplace conversations; and the packs of dogs that used to run wild down Lilford Road.
"The record's called Fruiting Body because the fruiting body of a dry rot
fungus was growing out of the studio wall at the time."
STERILE RECORDS |
MB SYMPHONY FOR A GENOCIDE LP (1981)
Treblinka The moral of this work: the past punishment is the inevitable blindness of the present. |
The joint-second vinyl release is labelled with an "SR2"
catalogue number. There never was a "SR1", but there is an "EMISS 001" and an "ION2".
MB was Maurizio Bianchi, a Milan-based experimentalist whose prodigious cassette output had to be
seen to be believed.
AYERS: "Maurizio wrote to me asking if I could put his record out in an edition of 100 copies. He
even sent the money to pay for it, so I thought "what the hell"!
"Symphony was a classic of the industrial
music genre, it has almost every cliché there. Maurizio's sleeve artwork was a photo of the Auschwitz
Orchestra, a group of concentration camp prisoners who were forced to play classical music as people
were herded into the gas chambers. On top of this was the MB "rune".
"The music was dense overdubs
of oppressive distorted Korg MS20s, a different track on both the left and right channel. I stumped up
the extra cash to make it an edition of 227.
"I lost contact with Maurizio soon afterwards. I'm told he
joined the Jehova's Witnesses."
STERILE RECORDS | LUSTMORD LP (1983)
Track titles unavailable. |
AYERS: "I met up with Brian Williams aka Lustmord at the Crypt performance. He was SPK's biggest
fan, living in Wales at the time and working the night shift at a paint factory. He was saving up to buy every
single Throbbing Gristle live tape.
"Brian sent me reports of the unannounced interventions he'd done at
local pub gigs, plunging the room into darkness and using a
hammer to beat hell out of a crash cymbal. After he sent me a demo tape of these "actions": which sounded like old train sound effects
record interspersed with the Phantom of the Opera and a Windmill in Old Amsterdam;
I decided he was the sort of individual who would be perfect for the Sterile label.
"For the LP, I hired a studio belonging to Robin Wood, who ran the EMS synthesisers
company and had built a few sound modules for us. Brian came down to stay with his friend Nigel who'd helped on the Lustmordekay cassette.
had helped on the cassette, and Geff Rushton - who Brian had roped in to play bass. Brian made one
rhythm track by pounding bricks together - the studio filled with a choking cloud of brick dust. Geff
was probably terrified by Brian's percussion technique and had to be cajoled into plucking randomly at
the bass guitar. At one stage Nigel took his headphones off and revealed that his ears were bleeding.
"I
no longer have the track titles, they came in an explanatory booklet which contained a pseudo-terrorist
manifesto written in a scrambled mixture of Welsh, TOPY-speak, and terminology from
postmodern cultural theory. This was transcribed by a Jamaican typesetter who wasn't very good at
spelling at the best of times. So the booklet was quite hard to understand.
"The finished LPs came back from the pressing plant stinking of dead fish, which suited the
project perfectly."
"Lustmord now works under various pseudonyms and has gone from strength to strenth."
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STERILE RECORDS | THE NOCTURNAL EMISSIONS DROWNING IN A SEA OF BLISS LP (1983)
Anthems of the meat generation. |
AYERS:
"By this time we were getting some positive notice in the music press. For me, the shock
tactics of the past few releases had become stale and I wanted to explore something subtler. This record
represented a turning point. On one side we had the harsh noise we were famous for; and on the other
eclectic rhythmic pieces, a tribal groove with lots of collaged sounds."
STERILE RECORDS | NOCTURNAL EMISSIONS BEFEHLSNOTSTAND LP (1983) The complete wreck of the Nocturnal Emissions
Segued Side: |
AYERS: "Nocturnal Emissions had just returned from a sell-out tour of Germany. I don't like to criticise former band members,
so let's just say the usual sort of stupid rock n' roll things happened and the band was in disarray. I was left with no instruments,
and all the debts the band had accumulated.
From 1984 till 1986 Sterile was contracted on a "manufacture and distribution" deal to the
Red Rhino record distribution company in York. This enabled the label to re-issue some of its
earlier releases, publish larger editions and to use colour printing.
"Fortunately I still had the back catalogue of previous Emissions recordings . I put the
Befehlsnotstand album together from various live tapes, emptied an old scrapbook to make the cover
and set up a distribution deal through Red Rhino.
"Befehlsnotstand means "I was only doing my
job". It was Eichmann's defence when he was on trail for war crimes. This was the best-selling NE release to
date."
STERILE RECORDS | NOCTURNAL EMISSIONS SONGS OF LOVE AND REVOLUTION LP (1985)
Power of Love |
AYERS:
"Pop songs! Full colour cover! Class War ranting! Eating disorders! They just don't make
them like this anymore! The CD re-issue's got Never Give Up as the first track - because it's the big
underground hit. I prefer the playing order on the LP, it flows better."
STERILE RECORDS | NOCTURNAL EMISSIONS NO SACRIFICE 12 inch EP (1984)
No Sacrifice |
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STERILE RECORDS | HERE WE GO LP (1985)
A celebration of the UK Coal Miners' Strike 1984-1985 The Larks "Maggy" |
AYERS: "This was a fund raising benefit album for striking miners and their families. One of the last
great battles against Thatcherism. I had a big list of famous groups who said they'd donate a track to
this album, and in the end didn't. But, ho ho ho, some of the tracks on this record are very famous
artists whose names still cannot be revealed for contractual reasons.
"Maggy is a pub rock song about
the woman herself. Fallout's Trojan Horse is in fact a spiritualist's recording of a band-from-beyond-the-grave made up of Jimi
Hendrix, Brian Jones, Bob Marley, John Lennon, Keith Moon and Nico. They are performing a cover
version of Tie a Yellow Ribbon. The Assassins are in fact the Assassins of Hope, which is a village in
Derbyshire. The Band of Holy Joy perform a final track from their early electronic period. Many
Happy Returns' vocalist is Larry Peterson, who I last saw many years ago being strangled by his
guitarist in the Old White Horse on Brixton Road. Nocturnal Emissions present a special
pneumoconiosis version of Bring Power To Its Knees - it's a big hit at the Miners' Welfare.
Language is a Walford Buchanon track. Max Closure and the Graves is another secret supergroup with
a singer called Dave. I think that might be my vocal talents on both the Qualk and the
Lustmord tracks.
Annie Anxiety calls herself Little Annie these days to avoid confusion with Anne Xiety, a stand-up act.
"The record ended up being distributed partly through orthodox record shops and partly through a
chain of wholefood shops."
STERILE RECORDS | NOCTURNAL EMISSIONS SHAKE THOSE CHAINS RATTLE THOSE CAGES LP (1985)
A Side B recorded live at the Ambulance Station, London 24 November 1984 |
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STERILE RECORDS | KONSTRUKTIVITS GLENASCAUL LP (1985)
Konstruktivits
Glenn Michael Wallis plays instruments and vocals. |
AYERS: "The idea was to have Chris Carter's name on the front, to attract time-travelling X-Files
fans. But the Chris Carter credit mysteriously disappeared after I sent the artwork to Red Rhino. Could
it be a conspiracy?
Note: Chris Carter is in fact the Chris Carter of Throbbing Gristle and Chris and Cosey fame.
"Glenn is one of the great survivors of the industrial scene, I enjoyed most of his
Konstruktivits work, though I don't think it ever really "caught on". He was once a member of the
shock-rock band Whitehouse. Rumour has it that he also became a born-again Christian, which pissed off his
pagan pals worse than anything. Is religious fundamentalism the curse of Sterile Records?".
"Konstruktivits" is nowadays spelled "Konstruktivists".
STERILE RECORDS | CONTROLLED BLEEDING HEADCRACK LP (1986) Track titles unavailable. |
AYERS: Controlled Bleeding was an American band headed by a schoolteacher named Paul Lemos,
who used to write to me frequently. The first version of this was a series of New Age acoustic guitar
pieces, alternating with tracks of bog-standard industrial noise. I didn't think the noise tracks were very
convincing. Not everyone can do noise properly, you know. So I put together a new version recycling
some of their "mellow" tracks from earlier demos, and sent it back to Paul. He wasn't too pleased, but
we settled for a new version which he put together; which became the finished product. I think the debate made for a better record."
STERILE RECORDS |
EARTHLY DELIGHTS - A STERILE SAMPLE LP (1986)
Eversione "Frontiera"
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AYERS: "Eversione were an Italian band, fronted
by a woman vocalist with a hard and heavy beat that made the studio speaker fall
off its stand when I played first played it. D-Box is Walford Buchanan
who produced proto-drum and bass ten years before anyone else did. Where is he
today? - I'd like to hear what he's doing. Whores of Babylon were an excellent
mostly-black, mostly-female punk band. Pornosectwas Andrew Burton and his
partner. Unknown to me, Burton worked as Michael Heseltine's secretary
at the Department of Trade. R& D 28 was Rock Wilson and Mick
Gaffney's band. Rock (whose real name really was Rock) edited the controversial
Apocalypso a Go Go fanzine which was regularly impounded by UK Customs.Fear
of Thought is one of our Danny's projects, and the rest of the album is
assorted riff raff and hangers-on.
"The idea was to follow this record up with individual releases, but most of
the bands fell apart shortly after its release."
"Looking back, it's incredible the huge number of people who were associated
with what was, despite its obvious influential nature, a very very small record
label. And so many of them did this anonymously and were never credited. If
this interview is ever published I'd like to thank the many people who helped
us along the way, they know who they are."
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