Quote from: FreakAnimalFinland on February 03, 2017, 10:41:20 AM
I think for BLJ, one can go for pretty much ANY old tape. If it is 90's and BLJ, it's most likely to be good. Same for Ramirez works in general.
I've been spending a lot of time with the 90's BLJ and RR material that's been re-issued recently and there is SO MUCH quality among these tapes. I'm also pleasantly surprised by the amount of variety between some of the releases. These have me just as excited as when Rodger re-issued the Macro tapes years ago. A quick overview of some of the releases that stand out to me.
The heavy hitters - I won't go into the subtle details between each release as it would be tedious to describe the varying levels of density that make each unique, but these are all essential listening. Each one is pummeling in the best possible way. These are the crack you over the skull heavy BLJ releases.
False Machinery Loaded - Top 3 for me
Sex in the Name of God - Top 3 for me
Gods of Ceremony Liar By WoundGauzeMore varied or dynamic releases:
BLJ/Richard Ramirez - self-titled split - Both sides on this one are excellent. I think the Ramirez side is one of my favorite solo RR tracks.
Werewolf Jerusalem - An undulating grating and grinding of excellent metal textural work. Fantastic release, would likely round out my top 3.
Crossburnt - mash-up style of recordings edited together in an almost Rodger Stella fashion. Solid!
Bacteria Culture - I like the contrast of dynamics on this one a lot. Side A is more minimal textural work that progresses and doesn't stagnant. Side B is very naked junk metal and feedback abuse with lots of space between sounds. Might not be to everyone's liking and not exactly essential, but I enjoy this one.
Event - 1998, I want to say Kevin Novak was on this release, but I might be wrong. Whatever the line-up is, there is a refined and dialed in sound between members that works very very well.