Showing posts with label 7". Show all posts
Showing posts with label 7". Show all posts

''No Pasaran''


A Stateless Society
Sleeve - Front
Sleeve - Back
Vinyl - A & B sides. Some have pure white labels, others have cream-coloured labels. One of each is shown here. 
Poster / Insert - Front
Poster / Insert - Reverse: Republican Posters and Photos + Lyrics




Three Insert Variants:

Above: Big & Small on glossy paper
Above: Big and small glossy again - the small one is single-sided
Xerox insert





Flyers: Some copies have a small flyer advertising Deranged Records Releases - two examples are shown above, the bottom one has the label-owners 'want list'.






Stats:

General:
Tracks: No Pasaran B/W Circling The Drain
Released: 2002
Label: Deranged Records D-030
Matrix A: DERANGED YOUTH-30-A
Matrix B: DERANGED YOUTH-30-B

Pressing Info:
First Press of 900 or maybe 1100 (Out of press)
Approx 50 with colour photocopied sleeves
Approx 20 with large spindle hole
7 Test Presses.

Inserts:
Three different inserts. 1.Gloss, double sided poster ('Regular' insert). 2.Xerox, double sided poster (same as gloss) 3. Small single sided Xerox paper. (1)
Some also have Deranged Records flyer advertising contemporary releases (various designs)
    Variants:
    Regular sleeve
    Xerox sleeve
    Large spindle hole



    Xerox Sleeve (RHS): Image is cropped a little differently and is more xeroxy. Also the "B/W" text band in the top right corner of the xerox version is all white, rather than white with black patches.





    Notes 1: No Pasaran

    ''The clip is from the movie Land and Freedom, the 2nd best movie about the Spanish Civil War, and is supposed to be a really stirring intro to the song about the same topic. We've played this song less than 10 times ever, the last being in Barcelona, where we thought it would be appropriate, but was actually just kind of tacky....we generally have weird feelings about this track now.'' (2)


    No Pasaran Documentary:

    No Pasaran / They Shall Not Pass from Yoav Segal on Vimeo.

    (Spoiler: Franco prevailed and replaced the democratically elected government with dictatorship, began executing his opponents and carried on doing so until his death in 1975, by which point Spain's economy had integrated into the western capitalist framework).


    Francoist Spain (Cropped from Wikipedia)Francoist Spain, also historically known as Nationalist Spain during the Spanish Civil War, refers to the period of Spanish history between 1936 and 1975 when the authoritarian dictatorship of Francisco Franco took control of Spain from the government of the Second Spanish Republic in the Spanish Civil War.
    The coup had the support of most factions sympathetic to the right-wing cause in Spain including the majority of Spain's Catholic clergy, the fascist-inclined Falange, and the Alfonsine and Carlist monarchists. The coup escalated into a civil war lasting for three years once Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany agreed to support Franco starting with airlifting of the africanistas onto the mainland. Other supporters included Portugal under Antonio Salazar, while the presentation of the Civil War as a "crusade" or renewed reconquista…

    The Francoists took control of Spain through a comprehensive and methodical war of attrition which involved the imprisonment and executions of Spaniards found guilty of supporting the values promoted (at least in theory) by the Republic - regional autonomy, liberal or social democracy, free elections and women's rights. The rightists considered these "enemy elements" to comprise an "anti-Spain" that was the product of a "Judeo-Masonic" conspiracy, along with Bolsheviks, which had evolved after the reconquista of Spain from the Islamic Moors, a reconquista that had been declared formally over with the Alhambra decree of 1492 expelling the Jews from Spain.

    For nearly twenty years after the war Francoist Spain presented the conflict as a crusade against Bolshevism in defence of Christian civilization. In Francoist narrative, authoritarianism had defeated anarchy and overseen the elimination of "agitators", those without God and the Judeo-Masonic conspiracy… This discourse obscured the social roots of the war and analysis of its origins. Many Spanish children grew up believing the war was fought against foreigners; the painter Julian Grau Santos has said "it was instilled in me and I always believed that Spain had won the war against foreign enemies of our historic greatness. (3)


    Notes 2: Circling The Drain

    From 2001 Interview:
    What is your favourite song from a lyrical standpoint and why?
    Mike: Mine is ''Circling The Drain'', which is a theme that developed from the summer I had. I just had the worst summer ever and whatever could go wrong did go wrong and things kept getting worse. (4)

    From March 2010:
    This song stood out for us because it was not fast. That's pretty much it. Also we still play this song almost 10 years later. (5)


    Sleeve Notes:

    Front Cover: Original photo-montage by John Heartfield.

    John Heartfield (born Helmut Herzfeld; 19 June 1891 – 26 April 1968) was a pioneer in the use of
    art as a political weapon.

    While living in Berlin, in 1917, he anglicized his name from "Helmut Herzfeld" to "John Heartfield," an English name to protest against the anti-British fervor sweeping Germany. In 1916, crowds in the street were shouting, "Gott strafe England!" ("May God punish England!"). (3)



    "No pasarĂ¡n. Pasaremos." (They shall not pass. We will pass) Two Nationalist vultures (i.e. condors), one with a swastika and the other with the Falangist symbol look out over Madrid. Republican bayonets point at them from below.







































    Heartfield's photo-montages satirising Adolf Hitler and the Nazis often subverted Nazi symbols such as the swastika, in order to undermine their propaganda message. (3)
    ''The Cross Was Not Heavy Enough''. Positive Christianity. Nothing to do with the ''No Pasaran'' 7", but included because it might be topical...




    More Heartfield images HERE.


    No Pasaran's reproduction of Heartfield in monochrome is also a nod to seminal UK band Discharge

    ''After the total disaster known as the first Fucked Up 7" which was a black and white mess, Mike has really improved his layout skills''
    (Damian speaking in interview with NOT A GAME Fanzine)











    Commodity Fetishism:


    Cassette - more info HERE


    Approx 20 were 'accidentally' made with large spindle holes.

    Test Press - blank labels + xerox sleeve

    Test Press - hand-written (misspelt) labels


    (1) Discogs
    (2) Notes from Fucked Up ''Couple Tracks'' LP
    (3) Wikipedia
    (4) Equalizing x Distort Zine Issue 1
    (5) Looking For Gold Blog

    ''Dance of Death''



    THE TRUMPET SHALL SOUND AND THE DEAD SHALL BE RAISED INCORRUPTIBLE AND WE SHALL BE CHANGED
    (Message on reverse of sleeve)

    Sleeve - Front

    Vinyl - Side A: Repress on Left, Original Press on right - Repress has larger text

    Vinyl - Side B: Repress on Left, Original Press on right - Repress has larger text




    Sleeve Folded Out - Front

    Sleeve Folded Out - Back
    Flyer: 
    Some copies have a small flyer advertising Deranged Records Releases, the above picture shows 3 examples.


    Stats:

    General:
    Tracks: Dance of Death B/W Zezose
    Released: 2004
    Label: Deranged Records DER-52 (1st Press) DER-52 RE (Represses)
    1st Press Matrix A: DERANGED YOUTH-52-A
    1st Press Matrix B: DERANGED YOUTH-52-B
    Repress Matrix A: DY#52-A    GOLDEN
    Repress Matrix B: DY#52-A    GOLDEN

    Pressing Info:
    First Press of 1000 Nov 2003
    Second Press of 500 Jan 2005
    Third Press of 1000 Nov 2005 (same plates as above)
    *8 Test Pressings for first press in manilla sleeve/numbered (1)
    10 Test Pressings for repress
    *Probably actually 7 - see pics at end.

    Inserts:
    Some (usually 1st press) also have Deranged Records flyer advertising contemporary releases (various designs)
      Variants:
      First Press
      Repress (Slightly different labels and matrix, see above)



      Notes:

      From promotional info:
      The title track features guest vocals by Ben Cook from NO WARNING, and VIOLENT MINDS (2)


      From Epics in Minutes CD notes:
      We wrote this at the same tome as ''Police'' but let it just incubate for a year and a half until Iron Maiden released an album of the same name. We went back to Audiolab and got Ben Cook From No Warning to come in and do back ups at 2am.


      Extract From MRR Interview with David Eliade (2004):
      OK switching gears, what is Dance of Death about?
      Well that song sort of deals with the same shit – its about like the imperialist lifestyle and how its been perfect and reproduced to such a dazzling extent, that people within it are convinced that it is the best way, and that they love it. Its like Stockholm Syndrome, when a captive begins to love and revered the captor. The Harbinger’s spiders laid their eggs inside all of our heads, and convinced us to keep dancing in the muck, because we love it. We love smoking and eating non-food, so we love cancer. We love making money and cheating, so we love crime. We love TV and novels, so we love being stupid. We love war and punishment so we love pain. We love life, so we love death. (3)


      Extract From Scene Point Blank interview (2006):
      It seems like a lot of your lyrics use a classic rhetorical strategy where you talk over an audience's head in hopes that they'll educate themselves. This is fairly uncommon in the broad world of punk, which is usually much more didactic; what's the rationale behind this and what kind of responses have you seen?
      10,000 Marbles: I just write how I'd like lyrics to appear. We don't want to tell anyone what to think, really, I just like my lyrics to rhyme, use interesting imagery and words, and be about interesting topics. I'm not in this to spread any particular worldview. And yeah, when we do have particularly objective topics, they're usually tucked inside a metaphor, so the song is more interesting and you aren't hit upside the head with rhetoric. I had militarism in mind when I wrote "Triumph of Life," and smoking when I did "Dance of Death," but I like being discreet, you know? (4)

      Sleeve Notes:

      Sleeve - Front: 
      From Essay by Evan Blanco: The cover is the Alfred Kubin sketch “Sterbendes Mädchen” [“Dying Girl”] from his Dance of Death series of sketches.14 The sketch shows a girl sitting in a chair with a downward glance as the spectre of death looms over her right shoulder. As death reaches out to clutch the left wrist of the girl, she offers no recourse nor wanting. She is totally complicit with the end of her own life. This relates to the message conveyed by “Dance of Death” in the sense that the individual is complicit with the death of their individuality or ability to self-determine. (5)

      Sleeve - Reverse: 'The Calavera of Don Quixote' by  Jose Posada 

      Jose Posada (1852-1913)

      Posada, Jose Guadalupe - Mexican engraver and illustrator. Born into a peasant family in Aguascalientes, he was an apprentice lithographer at the print shop of Trinidad Pedrozo. His first illustrations were for Pedrozo's radical weekly El Jicote (The Wasp, 1871), but after 11 issues the magazine was closed down by the authorities and Posada was forced to flee with his employer to Leon in Guanajato. Here he taught and published lithographs, and in 1888 was able to set up his own print shop in Mexico City. He began to illustrate Antonio Vanegas Arroyo's broadsheets of sensational news stories (accidents, executions and natural disasters) and urban myths (women giving birth to animals or turning into fireballs). In 1895 he began to etch on zinc, which became his preferred rnediurn. Despite a vast popularity; he died in poverty in Mexico City.

      Posada was a model for the Mexican muralists as a popular artist producing vivid and simple images in a distinctively non-European mode with strong elements of political satire. He is best known for his calaveras, witty images of skeletons performing the rituals and pleasures of everyday life. Often dressed in bourgeois finery, they mock the pretensions and vanity of the living. (6)



      Commodity Fetishism:

      Test Press 5/7 (First Press)
      Note 'Pickering Dot' below spindle hole, indicating these were probably pressed at the Pickering Plant in Canada
      Test Press 7/7 (First Press)

      Test Press (Re-press) 6/10
      Pressed by United, probably following closure of Canadian pressing plant



      (1) Looking For Gold Blog
      (2) Deranged 
      (3) MRR Interview - on Looking For Gold Blog
      (4) Scene point Blank Interview - on Looking For Gold Blog
      (5) 'The Hidden World: The Visual Culture of Fucked Up' Essay by Evan Blaco
      (6) The Bullfinch Guide to Art History

      PMP Shortlist Surprise

      (Split with Yamantaka // Sonic Titan)

      Sleeve-Front:
      The same generic sleeve was used for four different records, hence the surprise.
      Sleeve-Reverse:
      Similar to front, but with French text
      Vinyl - FU Side:
      Orange(y) with slight marbling.
      Vinyl - Yamantaka // Sonic Titan Side

      Stats:

      General:
      Tracks: What Would You Do? (For Veronica) B/W Queens (Performed by Yamantaka // Sonic Titan)
      Released: 2012
      Label: Polaris Music Prize PMP1008
      Matrix A: PMP1008-A R-26421
      Matrix B: PMP1008-B R-26422
      Pressing Info: 350 (From correspondence with promoter)
      Inserts: No regular insert
      Variants: No variants



      Notes:

      General:
      This was one of four different split 7"s, featuring some of the bands nominated for the 2012 Polaris Music Prize. The records all came in a generic PMP jacket, so you don't know which split you are getting. Given away in Canadian record shops as part of the PMP promotion.

      From Promotional Post on Polaris Blog (Aug 02 2012):

      Get Free Vinyl And A Chance To Go To The Polaris Gala

      TORONTO, ON – Thursday, August 2, 2012

      The Polaris Music Prize is pleased to announce the return of the surprise split 7” series, sponsored by Scion. Purchase any one of the ten 2012 Polaris Music Prize Short List artists' albums (cd or vinyl) at any of the participating retailers (listed below) and you will be given a surprise split 7”. The instantly collectible unmarked limited edition 7” will feature one Short List artist on each side.

      The releases will come in the following splits:

      Grimes / Handsome Furs
      Kathleen Edwards / Cold Specks
      Japandroids / Cadence Weapon
      Fucked Up / YAMANTAKA // SONIC TITAN.

      Dirtbombs / Split

      (Bruise Cruise Volume 8)

      Sleeve - FU Side
      Sleeve - Dirtbombs side
      Vinyl - FU side
      Vinyl - Dirtbombs side

      Sleeve - Folded Out:
      Sleeve printed on shiny card, blank on reverse.



      Stats:

      General:
      Tracks: I Hate Summer B/W If Can Can Can't We (Performed by The Dirtbombs)
      Released: March 1, 2012
      Label: Bruise Cruise Records BCR008
      Matrix A: U-66229M-A BCK-008-453-0/4
      Matrix B: U-66229M-B BCK/008-453-0/4
      Pressing Info: 800, or maybe 500
      Inserts: No regular insert
      Variants: No (known) variants




      Notes:

      ''I Hate Summer'' recorded live at KEXP Seattle 2009. Given away as part of Bruise Cruise holiday.

      From Insound:
      This year's new 4-record series promoting the Bruise Cruise. Each release will feature 2 artists performing on the 7-inch and is limited to 800 copies (300 to Cruise attendees - 500 available to retail stores).


      Promotional info, HERE includes rejected? sleeve art:

      From FPH Bruise Cruise Review:
      There were roughly 2000 passengers on board; only 500 were “Bruisers” who paid double that of the regular cruisers. The 500 consisted of: bands, press, and fans who have a reckless attitude toward their net worth. We were a strange upper-class, pressing every luxury forward. So, why did we do it?

      I had hoped for sociological theatre, but that didn't happen. From all reports, last year’s inaugural cruise had a much more mischievous stripe running through it. I suppose that most thought it was an enchanted one-off and treated it as such. If last year was about reckless conquest, this year was about nesting and making sure that we could all do it all again.

      The apathy of the other cruisers was welcome company to a crowd hailing mostly from the twitching hyper-informed city of Brooklyn, which was recently described to me as the “Hollywood of music”. I've also never seen bands look more content or relaxed. The weekend was , after all, a vacation from their tours.

      The most important thing to note is that there was virtually no phone service or Internet available for the entire trip, and I never heard anyone complain. This became what really made this festival truly special. The crowd was not watching the shows through a sea of raised iPhones, and then scrambling to post their “footage”; they were actually present, together, sharing an experience. This festival didn't need to be validated by the Internet; it was valid on its own.

      Relearning Web-less human interaction is pretty easy in a formalized setting that is built only for drinking, eating, fucking, swimming, and going broke. These are all themes that have a significant place in rock-and-roll culture. This irresponsible electricity in an exclusive environment, away from the bad noise of the world came to feel, for lack of a better term…punk.

      There is a heavy irony in the idea that independent music culture has become so over-saturated, dangerously accessible, and embedded in the marketplace, that one of the last places it can still get enough room to breathe is in the staged-and-staffed, faux opulence of a “luxury” cruise liner.

      The Bruise Cruise was a savage vacation that reminded me how great it is to see a show, and the human connection that makes me come back.








      Year Of The Pig

      (US, UK & Japan 7" versions)



      Punish the products but not the machine...
      Sleeve - Front (US Version)
      Sleeve - Back (US Version)
      Vinyl:
      All versions have WYR? labels on 'A' Side & Matador labels on 'B' Side

      Insert - Front:
      L-R: US, Japan & UK versions.
      UK & US versions on white paper; Japan version (centre) on off-white paper.

      Insert - Back:
      L-R: US, Japan & UK versions have respective lyrics on back.
      (See below for Ring image)




      Stats - US Version:

      Tracks:
      Year of The Pig B/W Mustaa Lunta
      Released: 2008
      Label: Matador Records & What's Your Rupture OLE 831-7
      Matrix A: OLE 831-7-A
      Matrix B: OLE 831-7-B Salt
      Pressing Info: (TBC)
      Inserts: Image of farmer and pigs, with lyrics on reverse
      Variants: No (known) variants


      Stats - UK Version:

      Tracks: Year of The Pig B/W Anorak City
      Released: 2008
      Label: Matador Records & What's Your Rupture OLE 830-7
      Matrix A: OLE 830-7-A
      Matrix B: OLE 830-7-B Salt
      Pressing Info: (TBC)
      Inserts: Image of farmer and pigs, with lyrics on reverse
      Variants: No (known) variants


      Stats - Japan Version:

      Tracks: Year of The Pig B/W For My Friends
      Released: 2008
      Label: Matador Records & What's Your Rupture OLE 828-7
      Matrix A: OLE 828-7-A
      Matrix B: OLE 828-7-B Salt
      Pressing Info: (TBC)
      Inserts: Image of farmer and pigs, with lyrics on reverse
      Variants: No (known) variants


      UK & Japan Sleeves:

      Sleeve - Front (UK Version)

      Sleeve - Back (UK Version)

      Sleeve - Front (Japan Version)
      Sleeve - Back (Japan Version)




      Notes:

      Mixtape 4 Side B (Damian discussing lyrical themes - starts at 09.20):
      We wrote it about soda pop and chips

      General:
      Whilst these are grouped together, they are actually three different records, each has a regionally specific edit of the title track and each has a unique 'B' side

      (Cropped From) Announcement on LFG (July 22 2008):

      Years of the Pig
      In case you are confused:

      US version: The aside is "Year of the Pig" edited by Eric Boucek, and a bside called "Mustaa Lunta" that G Beat wrote and recorded, and is very punk.







      UK version: The Aside features an edit of YOTP by the prodigious Carlos Hernandez, and the bside features our cover of "Anorak City" by the great Another Sunny Day.






      JAPANESE version: Features an edit of YOTP by Corona, anda bside called "For My Friends", which is a cover of the band Castlemusic, whose singer, you may recall, is the same Jennifer Castle, that does lead vocal on Year of the Pig.






      COMPACT DISK version: Compiles not only all these 7" singles, but also the original 12" release, and its own bside ("The Black Hats"):

      It is our belief that the bulk of each release will stay within its territory; it however, is also our belief that the effort must match the reward, in so much as the spoils are for the enterprising. It is unclear at the moment how many copies there are of each release. What is known is that 250 copies of the Japanese 7" currently reside in Barcelona, Spain.



      Sleeve Notes:

      The Three Little Pigs (From Wikipedia):
      The Three Little Pigs is a fable featuring anthropomorphic pigs who build three houses of different materials. A big bad wolf is able to blow down the first two pigs' houses, made of straw and wood respectively, but is unable to destroy the third pig's house, made of bricks. Printed versions date back to the 1840s, but the story itself is thought to be much older. The phrases used in the story, and the various morals that can be drawn from it, have become embedded in Western culture.

      The three little pigs leave their mother and go off to build three little houses...
      They defeat the big bad wolf (a generic archetype of a menacing predatory antagonist) and live happily ever after...
      In real life, things don't always work out the same as the fairy tales. This photo shows men taking a rest from hauling  the weight of  three pig carcasses.


      The Rhinemaidens & Alberich

      Illustration for Richard Wagner's ''The Ring'' by Arthur Rackham
      The illustration shows the three Rhinemaidens, the ring and the two dwarves, Mime and Alberich

      From WalkĂ¼repedia
      In the opening of the Ring Cycle, Alberich is mocked by the Rhinemaidens for his futile attempts to catch them. He steals the Rhine gold from the Rhinemaidens, and renounces love so he can craft from it a ring to rule a world. With the ring Alberich takes control of the Nibelungs and forces them to mine gold for him. He plans to eventually enslave the world with his army and force women to sate his lust



      Commodity Fetishism

      YOTP Test Pressings:
      Something odd about the one on the left - ''The Black Hats'' was the 'B' side to the 12"...