Missing Foundation

Started by SKY BURIAL, January 13, 2011, 06:22:26 PM

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SKY BURIAL

This act was highly influential in solidifying my interest in industrial culture. They were an integral part of the magic and mystique of the lower east side of N.Y. in the late eighties where I was living. Their symbol (a upside down cocktail glass borrowed from the prohibition era) was EVERYWHERE as well as their slogans ("You're House Is Mine", "Burn Trees", "Steal Food"). During that time frame I remember seeing MF graffiti in every suburb of N.Y. as well as multiple European cities (MF was born in Berlin and brought to N.Y.). Their shows were legendary in N.Y. They were banned from each place they played for the damage that occurred. They set the stage at CBGBs on fire. During the late '88 the lower east side was a hotbed of political dissent. Due to MF's secretive nature and cryptic slogans/symbols, the we accused of being involved in inciting the Tompkins Square Park riot. The FBI raided their practice space (across the street from my apartment) thinking they were some sort of terrorist organization.

Some samples:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5svIHnv3gxk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TY8-SCRbDis


"New York City's Missing Foundation harked back to the sound and style of early industrial provocateurs like Throbbing Gristle and Einstürzende Neubauten, not just in their tribal percussion onslaught but also in their theatrical social-protest stunts. Led by Pete Missing, MF were a collective with several core members, several more auxiliary members, and a host of associates that swelled their ranks to as many as 20. Fueled by anarchist politics, the band favored agitprop slogans chanted over a cacophonous racket of metal, machinery, oil drums, garbage, and other found-object percussion, with guitar and other traditional instruments audible only occasionally. Their anti-establishment screeds took aim at a variety of targets, but what truly mattered were the group's incendiary live events -- destructive spectacles that provoked civil disturbances, histrionic media outrage, and citywide bans by nervous club owners. Even the band's logo -- an upside-down martini glass in the cryptographic Neubauten style that came to signify "The Party's Over" -- was the center of a widespread graffiti  campaign on New York's Lower East Side, a discomforting weapon used to devalue properties and slow the area's gentrification (in keeping with the band's special concern for the poor and homeless).

MF lead vocalist Pete Missing was born in the Bronx in the late '50s, and got his feet wet on the New York music scene with the punk band Drunk Driving, which was formed in 1980 and actually spawned the future MF martini-glass logo. Missing later moved to Hamburg, Germany, where he formed an early short-lived incarnation of Missing Foundation in 1984 with Florian Langmaack. Helped by several extra percussionists and members of KMFDM, this group did perform live but soon broke up. Missing returned to New York and started a new version of Missing Foundation in 1985, which also featured drummers Chris Egan and Mark Ashwill, as well as VKP and Adam Nodleman; Langmaack would later come to New York and rejoin as well, adding saxophone and sampling to the percussion-heavy mix. The group's early live performances, including a notorious appearance at CBGB, soon marked it as a chaotic and confrontational outfit whose fans couldn't be trusted to leave a venue intact. Missing took to singing through megaphones, in part because clubs would often pull the plug on the regular sound system.

With a core membership of Missing, Langmaack, Egan, and Ashwill, MF grew to encompass a variety of musicians, visual artists, and activists who contributed to the band's performances; some of them included Dave Kelly, Bones 23, and Mark Laramee, among many others. Missing Foundation's self-titled first album appeared in 1987 on the Purge/Sound League label, initially on cassette only. Their second release, 1988's 1933 -- whose title and concept linked the modern U.S. with Germany just before the rise of the Nazis -- was nearly as musically primitive, but made a much bigger splash thanks to a concert in New York's Tompkins Square Park that sparked a full-scale riot. Various members had been arrested for political demonstrations, mostly on the subject of housing rights, but this incident was directly related to the group's performance antics. In the wake of the riot, the FBI started tailing Missing, hoping to find evidence of violent criminal activity, and police raided his ex-wife's residence in search of weapons. New York's local CBS affiliate did a sensationalist three-part story (Cult of Rage) on MF, flinging wildly inaccurate charges of Satanism and building them up into a malevolent menace on the level of the Manson Family.

In the midst of the hubbub, the band formed its own label, Humanity, and completed its third album, Demise, in 1989. MF supported it with a European tour (American gigs were getting hard to find), and subsequently signed a contract with Restless Records, which reissued their first three albums in 1990. Also that year, the band released its proper Restless debut, Ignore the White Culture, a somewhat more accessible effort that many aficionados consider the band's best. They next undertook a Gulf War-themed tour of Europe in 1991, burning gasoline and American flags at every show to protest American policy. A final Missing Foundation album, Go into Exile, appeared in 1992; its title proved prophetic, as the group subsequently disbanded. Missing moved to Berlin in 1993 and stayed there until 2000; living in an artists' collective, he worked primarily on visual installations, but also collaborated on the occasional musical project. Langmaack also returned to Germany, while Egan -- who had done most of the band's photography -- became a photojournalist. Mark Ashwill died of cancer in 2000."


MF article written by my old roommate Sam McPheeter's of Born Against/Men's recovery Project:

http://loomofruin.blogspot.com/2008/01/men-screaming.html


Peter Missing is still active in the Berlin art and music scene:

http://www.humanityrecords.de

bitewerksMTB

#1
Great information & links! I have most of MF's discography on vinyl, cd, & cassette (Restless Rec's reissues)  I would buy on trips down to Austin. Most of their work still holds up after all these years too. I'd love to see videos of all their live destruction!

WATERPOWER

Quote from: SKY BURIAL on January 13, 2011, 06:22:26 PMSome samples:

Checked out their self-titled last time you posted YouTube link somewhere on the Chondritic Sound forum and I'm really happy I did. Probably an album I wouldn't have known about otherwise, so thank you.

ImpulsyStetoskopu

Very good band. Respect. I have got their all regular releases and all of them are top.

HongKongGoolagong

Always liked the nihilistic and paranoid album 1933 YOUR HOUSE IS MINE.

Adding to this thread to mention that Missing Foundation get quite a few misinformed paragraphs devoted to them as a possible malign influence on the cannibal murderer Daniel Rakowitz in a tacky old true crime book I read recently, 'Walking Time Bombs' by Joel Norris.

Andrew McIntosh

Hang on -

Quote
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IyouM_6BIYU
This video is no longer available because the YouTube account associated with this video has been terminated due to multiple third-party notifications of copyright infringement from claimants including:
Susan Lawly
Susan Lawly
Susan Lawly
Shikata ga nai.

Levas

I've smiled when I saw that too : )

HongKongGoolagong

Wildly sensationalist 1988 US news reports:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OcQrjp8Myjg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xm-frig3ldY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lbuW8Bga94A

God, what a band. "WE ARE NOT GOING TO ACT CIVILISED IN THIS FUCKIN' CITY"

bitewerksMTB

#8
I think it's Dais Records that has reissued MF LPs. I was going to order but after re-listening to 1933 I decided that they have not stood the test of time especially considering how their politics are now mainstream.

I remember having a vhs tape from Aes-Nihil that had the MF news reports on it  but the quality was really bad so it seemed so much intense than watching on youtube...

This is pretty awful:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FjVLZI1_X-4

tiny_tove

never heard of this, but definitely good stuff.
thanks!
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Peterson

Weird coincidence, I found a CS copy of 1933 the other day at a local thrift store, then this appeared the following day. I have to admit I wasn't into it.

bitewerksMTB

"Demise" still holds up. I have the orig pressing of it & I have Restless cassette releases of "Guilty of White Culture" & another one plus "1933" on cd. It is hit or miss, some still holds up. Some does not.

Too bad there's no really good quality video of their live performances...

HongKongGoolagong

0.55 in Part 2 of the Cult of Rage series for an interview with cannibal killer Daniel Rakowitz (with misspelled surname) before his arrest. He fed his girlfriend to the homeless! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Rakowitz

I remember trying desperately to find Demise when it was released but no copies seemed to make it to Europe.

The 2013 comeback show is pretty painful to watch and an idea which should have been forgotten. I guess it was just because Peter Missing was back in NYC for an exhibition. I believe Party's Over symbols have reappeared in NYC recently.

I once visited Tacheles, the famous huge Berlin art commune where he lived and worked for many years. Nice place. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kunsthaus_Tacheles

The connection with the sad story of kiddie-punk outfit Old Skull is fascinating. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Skull

Jordan

#13
Quote from: HongKongGoolagong on August 08, 2013, 04:46:11 PM
The connection with the sad story of kiddie-punk outfit Old Skull is fascinating. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Skull

I had no idea about that, or any what happened with those kids. I was just listening to C.I.A. Drug Fest at a friends a while ago. Weird.  

EDIT: Missing Foundation is, of course, amazing. I couldn't believe those Cult Of Rage videos! I'm so behind on everything, I should really use youtube more often.

blackoperations

love most of the missing foundation stuff (thanks to simon hongkong... for initially getting me into them). i can't belueve that 'cult of rage' 3 part news thing above. absolutely crazy that even exists really! i'd always known the name missing foundation for years mainly from, funnily enough, the old skull connection, because i'd bought their first album 'get outta school' when it came out in the late 80s (still got it!) and one review or advert said they were kids of members of missing foundation (JP and jamie were sons of vern toulon one-time missing foundation guitarist) and the tar babies (jesse collins-davies was the stepson of robin davies the tar babies bassist), so those names always stuck in my head as bands to check out. i was only a year or so older than old skull at the time and couldn't believe that a band around my age had a full length vinyl lp out! i was jealous as fuck! it's pretty grim watching this MTV feature now knowing that JP and jamie barely made 30 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F-W9P2FAZB4 jesse collins-davies was a drum n bass dj for a while and, according to his dad robin who once emailed me in response to a comment i posted on some blog about old skull, said he is now more into sport (cycling) than anything else these days. definitely a sad and dare i say ironic story though, especially with them ending up 'homeless' (their most famous song!) themselves. there's an interesting interview from 2010 with jamie by wfmu dj clay pigeon on this particular show (he often goes round nyc and interviews folk on the street) http://wfmu.org/flashplayer.php?version=2&show=37076&archive=63095