Haymaker / Split


''Who are the Nazis and who are the rats?
(Mixtape 1 Side A)

Sleeve - Front
Sleeve - Back


Sleeve Folded Out - Front: Hitler Youth Rally & 'Rat Catcher'







Sleeve Folded Out - Back: The Rats




Stats:

General:
Tracks: Fucked Up @ Signal To Noise Studio 7/22/02 B/W Haymaker @ The Music Gym 2/31/02
Released: Feb 2005
Label: Deep Six Records DS#52

Matrix A: FUCKED UP R-19103 DEEPSIX#49-F
Matrix B: HAYMAKER R-19104 DEEPSIX#49-H

Pressing Info:
1st Press - 1000  (Comprising 200 White and 800 Black vinyl)
2nd - 500 Grey vinyl
3rd - 1000 Clear vinyl, labels on wrong side of disk
4th - ? Translucent 'camo green' vinyl, plain black labels
5th - ? 'Marbled'
6th - ? Green

Variants: 
Different vinyl colours as picture below.

Inserts:
No regular insert. 
Someone at Deep Six missed the memo about not doing variants...

Top L-R: White, Black, Grey (1st & 2nd press)
Middle L-R: Clear, Camo, Marbled (3rd, 4th & 5th press)
Bottom: Green (6th press)



Notes:

The Fucked Up tracks were recorded 3 years earlier in July 2002, during the same recording session as ''Police''. The notes below are copied are cropped from a  2010 "fake'' about the band's first CIUT session in 2001 and hopefully relate to three of the tracks on this record...

FU song title AKA's
1. Black Iron Prison  - AKA - "A Light That Never Comes On"
2. Dove of Wood - AKA - ????
3. Dove of Wood  -  AKA - "Red" - AKA - "The Lurking Fear"
4. The Black Rats - AKA  - "Quick"
5. Surrounded By Boys -AKA - ????

1. Black Iron Prison is a reference to the concept of social control described by Philip K Dick in his novel VALIS.  This track is a polished version of ''A Light That Never Comes On'' one of the songs included on their Demo tape. 
Dove of Wood (Track 2): Does this title just symbolise the opposite to a black iron prison? I don't know. Is there another recording of the song somewhere else under a different name? I thought it might be an almost unrecognisably improved and updated version of ''Sleep Tight'' from the demo, because both seem to have a line ending ''...life away'', but other than that it's a different song altogether and all the better for it...
Dove of Wood (Track 3): There are three different recordings of this song on the Epics CD comp, it was originally called ''The Lurking Fear'' but was later named ''Red''. There are 3 versions of it on the Epics in Minutes CD comp (Deranged version). Here it gets a 4th recording and a 3rd name, but it has to share it with track 2.
The Black Rats: FU have a long association with rats. They have also been associated a zine that had it's name changed to 'Quick', which is also what this song was called when played with less skill for the CIUT session.
Surrounded by Boys: Like track 2, this might be a version of an early song with new lyrics and music; something only it's mother would recognise in its mature form, to anyone else it first appeared here as a fresh new 2-minute wonder. 

Following, is another early song claimed to appear on this split under a fake name (see ''fake'' link above). See also tracks 2 & 5. See also history of fake claims made by FU.




Sleeve Notes:


The Rat Catcher
When the sleeve is unfolded, this panel is arranged with its upper edge meeting the upper edge of the  main sleeve image. In this context it can be read as a metaphorical reflection on the Hitler Youth Rally via the Pied Piper of Hamelin, with the Nazi's as self styled rat catchers who end up leading the children away.


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Commodity Fetishism:

Test press from first press

Test press, probably for one of the later presses, with 'Psychotic Little Man' hand-drawn cover by Jeff Beckman (Haymaker)



(1) LFG Blog 2010 Re CIUT session 2001

Two Fakes

(Fake Dangerous Fumes & Baiting with Wrong Labels)



Same Vinyl - Two Records

After the first press of ''Baiting The Public'', (a release designed to frustrate and confuse), the band received another 250 copies of the record; these new ones had accidentally been pressed with the same labels as ''Epics in Minutes'' - the so-called 'Secret' 7''. 
''Fake Epics'' Vinyl - Looks a bit like the Secret 7".

As any nerd knows, different record pressings can be identified by the unique matrix code in the vinyl run-out, near the centre of the record. However the Baiting 'mispress' came with (almost) the same matrix text as the 'Secret' 7'' and the matrix was therefore a red herring.


Both records came in a generic white dust sleeve;  in their original form they look identical. This could prove confusing - a cynical person might think this version of 'Baiting' was pressed with the intent of extending the original prank;  not so much a mispress, more a fake version of the Secret 7".  

''Fake Epics'' Generic sleeve, conveniently annotated
It seems the band were aware of the trouble this might bring and so after they'd given away a bunch of ''Fake Epics'' (maybe at the same time as the Secret 7'' and maybe inadvertently mixing the two up a little), they helpfully attempted to avoid further confusion by taking a bunch more and gluing new labels on to make the ''Fake Dangerous Fumes''. 
''Fake Dangerous Fumes'' Left: Photocopy sleeve showing 'uncropped' image used for Dangerous Fumes - the container in the foreground was cropped out of the final version.  Right: Disk with Litany labels glued over Epics labels

The real ''Dangerous Fumes'' was not released at this point, so for a while it was a fake copy of something that didn't exist. Also, because it didn't exist, they didn't have Dangerous Fumes labels, so they used the ones from ''Litany'' instead. The vinyl has a big hole and the labels have a small one so they are a bit flimsy in the middle...

''Fake Dangerous Fumes'' Sleeve folded out

Stats:

General:
Tracks: Baiting The Public (Split over two sides)
''Released'': ''Fake Epics'' - 2003. ''Fake Dangerous Fumes'' - 2005
Label: ''Fake Epics'' has the same labels as ''Epics in Minutes''. ''Fake Dangerous Fumes'' has the same labels as the first press of ''Litany''
Matrix A: REDHERRING-RED
Matrix B: REDHERRING-HERRING

Pressing Info:
250 in total, divided into two 'bunches':
Bunch 1: ''Fake Epics in Minutes'' looked the same as ''Epics in Minutes'' and given away.
Bunch 2:  Made into''Fake Dangerous Fumes'' and sold on first West Coast Tour (2005)

Inserts:
No regular insert.



    Notes 1: Fake Epics

    From FU Board:

    How were the ‘baiting with epics labels’ put to use? Was there a kind of Situationist thing going on where hapless folk were tricked into thinking they’d got hold of the ‘secret’ 7″ when really they just had a baiting the public disk, which paradoxically the actual vinyl was rarer than both epics and the regular baiting?
    #1829

    10k
    the epics baiting labels i think were a misprint because we got baiting and the secret 7″ pressed at the same time and some came back with misprinted labels so we gave a bunch of them away.



    Notes 2: Fake Dangerous Fumes

    From 'Couple Tracks' LP insert notes regarding ''Dangerous Fumes'' 7":
    This song has been kicking through the FU discography for a while. Nerds will note its first appearance as a fake 7" that we sold on our first west coast tour. It consisted of a ''Baiting The Public'' 7'' with ''Litany'' labels that we glued on, and a photocopied ''Dangerous Fumes'' Cover. 


    Sleeve Notes

    Dante's Inferno: Back image of Fake Dangerous Fumes is an extract of a picture showing Bertran de Born  ''who carries around his severed head like a lantern (a literal representation of allowing himself to detach his intelligence from himself)'' (1).
    The scene is from Bolgia Nine in the the Eighth Circle of Hell (Dante's Inferno). Significantly, the eighth circle is for those that commit FRAUD, also Bertran de Born is portrayed in the story as a sower of discord.




    vBig gap v






































    Fake: Big gap between 'Red Herring' & 'Red'

    Not Fake: Small gap between 'Red Herring' & 'Red'.
     'RE1' opposite - see top right