Quote from: CMSFoundation on December 04, 2018, 05:50:38 PM
excellent overview of Speculum Fight in the final issue of Fordamning zine (#15).
Glad you liked it!
Apart from leaving some works out due to sounding too much alike, I also skipped some simply because I don't fancy them. Such as
Neutrophile (Banned Prod, 1994) for example.
Neutrophile really stands out in the Spec Fight discography. It's industrial rock with a spaced out vibe, basically. It's not that I don't like it, but it has me scratching my head rather than zoning out blissfully/clenching fists. But then it most likely was the first Spec Fight recording, and probably colored by his involvment in the sludgy band
Slug. It took off in many other directions after that one. It's quite astonishing to see the wide scope of styles he adapted over the few years he had this project, and I can't think of many other projects that changed and expanded soundwise the way Spec Fight did. From the mentioned industrial rock, through booming semi harsh noise (
Glass Giant), via restless sounding no input feedback experiments (the split w/ Lab Rat +
Electronic Air Purifiers), to heavily layered almost CCCC:ish noise (
White Elephant) and all inbetween, all in just five six years. The later albums like
Highball (WIN, 1997) and
Medium (P-Tapes, 1997), with their more stripped down droning approach, both hint at where he went under his own name a few years later.
The Speculum Fight highlights for me are:
Glass Giant C46 (GROSS, 1994)
Enormous recording, almost in harsh noise territory, but perhaps harsh drone is more accurate. Spec Fight is easy and cheap to collect in general, but this will set you back I think. Needs a reissue!
https://youtu.be/E4OLVRrnA9YSplit w/ Lab Rat C60 (Anomalous, 1994)
Very engaging and wonderfully buzzing recording. It spits and jumps and slithers for almost half an hour. Not a dull second! And what a sound! Roomy, yet still hitting hard.
Lab Rat's side ain't bad either, but I don't envy poor Mr Barber for ending up competing against Romero's juggernaut of a track here.
https://youtu.be/R3i3YQBONgoSwimming Pool LP (Volvolo, 1996)
Such a strange and brilliant album. It has a little bit of everything he's known for. There's drone, weird tape stuff, wild noise, found sounds etc, but it all sounds like it might just collapse any moment. Amazing looking LP, too. The track on youtube below is probably lifted from the version of the album that's on iTunes, which differs a bit from the actual LP. Some segments are only to be found on the vinyl and vice versa.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9EcpFxW7bAHighball CD (WIN, 1997)
As mentioned by both me and previous speaker, amazing record, and still available for next to nothing. You'll get a great scope of Romeros many moods on this one as well, but with a heavier focus on calmer and layered drone than on previous efforts. Worth getting for the opening track alone, but the whole album keeps on giving.
https://youtu.be/b8tFig3aNpA