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Archive for the ‘Bazillion Points Books’ Category

Fårikål, by Jan Axel “Hellhammer” Blomberg of MAYHEM

Friday, April 22nd, 2011

Following our appetizer post featuring Chris Reifert of Autopsy’s Mummified Jalapeño Bacon Bombs, this sample recipe from Annick Giroux’s beloved Hellbent for Cooking: The Heavy Metal Cookbook arrives just in time for all kinds of religious spring holidays. No matter your stance on crucifixion, only the strict vegans among us can resist seeking salivation at the hands of Hellhammer from MAYHEM’s deceptively simple traditional Norwegian Fårikål. A few slices, a few minutes on the stove, and the keys to all seven gates of taste will open wide.

As Hellhammer explains: “This is the Norwegian national dish, and of course it’s my fuckin’ favorite food in the world. Want some real black metal food—you try this! It’s not for wimps!”

Click above to enlarge, expand, print, duplicate, share, and serve. For full info on Annick’s book, with its 101 recipes from 32 countries, including bands like Thin Lizzy, Trouble, Mayhem, Gorgoroth, Accept, Slough Feg, The Gates of Slumber, Anthrax, Sepultura, Gwar, Sigh, and many many more… CLICK HERE

And if you’re any kind of fan of Mayhem or Norway’s metal scene at all, you’ve probably already preordered METALION: The Slayer Mag Diaries, by Jon Kristiansen. If not, HERE’S YOUR CHANCE.

UPDATE: Bazillion Points offers 15% off the book through the end of Easter Monday 2011 using discount code BLOODYLAMB

 

The Meatmen/Tesco Vee/Touch & Go: April Showers on Bookstores and Punk Dives Across the West Coast and Texas

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

In 2010, Bazillion Points Books released Tesco Vee and Dave Stimson’s 574-page tour de force TOUCH AND GO: The Complete Hardcore Punk Zine ’79-’83, garnering hosannahs from the hoi polloi of hardcore and year-end kudos from Decibel, Spin, Pitchfork, Crawdaddy, and dozens more. This April, like a boogeyman leaping to life from the pages of an adults-only bedside pulp novel, the Dutch Hercules himself Tesco Vee and his merry band of Meatmen return to wreak havoc and return to action the primal offensive creative force that gave birth to Touch and Go magazine, Touch and Go Records, and the sweaty armpits of hardcore punk itself. For the entire month of April 2011, Tesco will be terrorizing West Coast book and record stores by day, telling the tales of Rollins, MacKaye, Danzig, and the dawn of the hardcore punk; and by night showing grimy punk dives how it’s done with full-color four-dimensional performances by Detroit daddies The Meatmen.In a time before hardcore punk had a name, when GG Allin still sang love songs, before S.O.D. were even stormtroopers, while Gwar were still in Antarctica, Tesco Vee and the Meatmen made sausage from sacred cows. Their horny rants and death dirges sparked protests from every manner of two-legged beast. Now in feather boas and Abba clogs, the platinum topped Tesco Vee still commands a fiercely funny presence with a bag of tricks, props, and costume changes that will make Henry Rollins blush and send Lady Gaga shopping.

Says Tesco: “It is extremely cockle-of-the heart-warming that I can further pimp the Touch and Go tome by day, and rock out with the Meatboys by night. This bestselling brick of a  book transcends one mortal man, but as half of the braintrust of this punk rock manifesto, who better than to lather the legend than me, Tesco Vee? I will give the punters what they want: Danzig anecdotes, tales of record collecting forays, invaluable autographs on their books, photo ops, illicit gropings, you name it!  Just bring your bad selves, your dad’s old toys, and a couple sheckles to these in-stores, and we’ll take it from there. As my man Don Cornelius used to say: ‘It’ll be a stone gas, baby!’”

TESCO VEE TALK BY DAY / TOUCH AND GO BOOK IN-STORE DATES

April 5, Denver, CO-Twist and Shout Records, 6PM
April 6, Salt Lake City, UT, The Heavy Metal Shop, 7PM
April 8, Seattle, WA, The Elliott Bay Book Company, 7PM
April 9, Portland, OR, Jackpot Records
April 12, Santa Cruz, CA, Streetlight Records Santa Cruz, 6PM
April 14, Los Angeles, CA, Vacation Vinyl, 7PM
April 15, Fountain Valley, CA, TKO Records, 6PM
April 16, Las Vegas, NV, Zia Records, 6PM
April 18, Phoenix, AZ, Changing Hands Bookstore/Hoodlum Music
April 21, San Antonio, TX, Hogwild Records
April 23, Austin, TX, Waterloo Records, 5PM
April 24, Dallas, TX, Good Records, 4PM
April 25, OK City, OK, Guestroom Records
April 27, Des Moines, IA, Finders Creepers 6PM

 

THE MEATMEN ROCK BY NIGHT / APRIL 2011 TOUR DATES

Tue. April 5 Denver, CO, Marquis
Wed. April 6 Salt Lake City, UT, Burts Tiki Room
Thu. April 7 Boise, ID, The Red Room
Fri. April 8 Seattle WA, El Corazon
Sat. April 9 Portland OR, Plan B
Sun. April 10 Oakland, CA, Oakland Metro
Mon. April 11 Sacramento, CA, Fire Escape
Tue. April 12 Santa Cruz, CA, Matty Hodel Building
Wed. April 13 Lompoc, CA, Wicked Shamrock
Thu. April 14 Los Angeles, CA, The Airliner
Fri. April 15 Long Beach, CA, Alex’s Bar
Sat. April 16 Las Vegas, NV, The Cheyenne Saloon
Sun. April 17 San Diego, CA, The Shakedown
Mon. April 18 Phoenix, AZ, Yucca Tap Room
Tue. April 19 Albuquerque, NM, Moonlight Lounge
Wed. April 20 El Paso, TX, Badlands Billiards
Thu. April 21 San Antonio, TX, The Nightrocker
Fri. April 22 Houston, TX, Walters on Washington
Sat. April 23 Austin, TX, Red 7
Sun. April 24 Dallas, TX, Doublewide
Mon. April 25 Ok. City, OK, The Conservatory
Tue. April 26 St. Louis, MO, The Fubar Angela Rana
Wed. April 27 Des Moines, IA, The Underground
Thu. April 28 Minneapolis, MN, Triple Rock Soc. Club
Fri. April 29 Chicago, IL, Memories

TOUCH AND GO: The Complete Hardcore Punk Zine ’79-’83, by Tesco Vee and Dave Stimson. [ISBN 978-0-9796163-8-9] is available now from Bazillion Points Books, America’s smallest but heaviest book publisher.

http://www.touchandgobook.com

METALION: The Slayer Mag Diaries Is Really Real

Friday, February 25th, 2011

A lot of people around here have been very busy for the past several years with a lot of things, and a very large part of that has been METALION: The Slayer Mag Diaries. Well, huge lakes of ink are now being drained and vast forests of trees felled in order to create the heaviest metal book of all time. There’s the cover above—here’s the sweet talk below. If you’ve been waiting patiently or impatiently for this, then thanks and go ahead and declare all of June as a reading holiday.

Here’s the scoop:

Bazillion Points Books has revealed the final cover artwork for METALION: The Slayer Mag Diaries, a mammoth 744-page hardcover journey into black metal, death metal, and beyond by Norway’s metal godfather Jon Kristiansen. “The greatest heavy metal story ever told” will be available June 6, 2011, wherever books are sold, and is available for preorder now with two bonus limited patches at this location:

METALION at BAZILLION POINTS

Part anthology, part memoir, and years in the making, METALION includes over 600 reproduction pages from every issue of Slayer Mag, spanning from the early 1980s through 2010. In addition, author Jon Kristiansen recounts his life’s story, from alienated outsider to central figure in Norwegian black metal to world-weary metal survivor. The book also features over 100 rare photographs, including two color sections and a portrait gallery of photographs taken by Kristiansen himself.

The astonishing combination of archival material includes scores of key historic interviews with the most revered  figures in extreme metal, including Mayhem, Emperor, Slayer, Kreator, Nihilist, Celtic Frost, Bathory, Cathedral, Entombed, Morbid, Napalm Death, Metallica, Opeth, Cradle of Filth, Sadistik Execution, Usurper, Nifelheim, Darkthrone, Sodom, Destruction, Morbid Angel, Deicide, Exodus, Dissection, Candlemass, Carcass, Sepultura, Gorgoroth, Death, Watain, Sadus, Satyricon, Enslaved, Pentagram, Jarboe, Immortal, Possessed, Overkill, Ulver, Dark Angel, and countless others.

“From the start, I made Slayer Mag as honestly and as well as I could,” says Kristiansen. “I never knew any other way. I hope that I have produced something that will stand the test of time.”

 

 

Swedish Sensationsfilms: A Sneak Peek

Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011

Here’s a look at the new book by Swedish Death Metal author Daniel Ekeroth:

Coming April 2011: ‘Swedish Sensationsfilms’ Book Reveals
Naked Glory of Pioneering Exploitation Cinema

Available April 1 in bookstores everywhere, Bazillion Points Books presents SWEDISH SENSATIONSFILMS: A Clandestine History of Sex, Thrillers, and Kicker Cinema (ISBN 978-09796163-6-5 US$19.95), a lavish and fiery 328pp retrospective of over 200 banned and cut films produced during the golden age of Swedish sin. “I was born into a rising whirlwind of madness,” says author Daniel Ekeroth. “As the ’70s came along, all limits were forgotten. Sweden was flooded with sexually explicit and violent films of every kind, and all morals were gone.”

Sweden’s sexy reputation was sealed the moment Ulla Jacobsson bared her breasts for One Summer of Happiness in 1951, crushing the Hays Code and igniting a mad race to make sensationsfilms! Produced in the backyard of the Swedish film industry, these sexually daring films form a canon of countless movies dealing with shocking or taboo subjects: street punks, sadistic mobsters, space aliens, unruly housewives, ruthless drug pushers, bloodthirsty ninjas, teen temptresses, lingonberry cowboys, bearded perverts, and drunken vikings.

Working far from the confines of Hollywood, the exploits of young director Ingmar Bergman, actress Christina Lindberg, ultra-villain Heinz Hopf, free-spirited Stellan Skarsgård, and American expats like Dennis Hopper, David Carradine, and Troy Donahue have spawned a legacy that inspired Stieg Larsson’s The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, Wes Craven’s The Last House on the Left, and Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill.

With dark humor and an eye for cultural quirks that will leave readers wondering whether these films are even real, Ekeroth paints the portrait of a national cinema run amok. Special sections include two historical overviews, a recollection by starlet Christina Lindberg, a list of essential sensationsfilms, a rogues gallery of directors and cast, and a hilarious guide to curious Swedish customs.

Why does John Waters cite Ingmar Bergman as a role model? What are raggare, and why do they hate punk rockers? Can taking the name “Marquis de Sade” really change a bachelor’s luck with women instantly? Why won’t France or Germany make films with Sweden any more? Ekeroth reveals all… in Swedish Sensationsfilms.

For more information, page samples, and to view film trailers, visit this location: http://www.sensationsfilm.com

Comprehending Infinity: Jeff Wagner’s Best Prog Metal (and Then Some) of 2010

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

This is the first in a series of 2,112 blogs by Jeff Wagner regarding all things related to the peculiar subject of his book, Mean Deviation – Four Decades of Progressive Heavy Metal.

German magazine Der Spiegel recently ran an interview with author and all-around intellectual smartypants Umberto Eco. His current exhibition at the Louvre (never heard of it) focuses on the nature of lists in human history and what list-making means. The headline to the article quotes the man: “We like lists because we don’t want to die.” Early in the interview, Eco asks “What does culture want?,” answering his own question with: “To make infinity comprehensible.”

I like that.

I like it because, sometimes, when I’m nestled in the dark of my music room (colloquially dubbed a “mancave”), inescapably tuned into a  particular album, that’s exactly what I feel like I’m doing: comprehending infinity. Or getting close. It doesn’t happen often, but the albums below helped me almost get there. The Anathema actually landed me right on Planet Infinity a few times.

I’d like to see your year-end album list. Here’s mine:

10. CynicRe-Traced — It may be an EP, and 4 of the 5 songs are re-imaginings of Traced in Air songs. Maybe that’s why I like this so much: Cynic moves everything forward and further (not just Aeon Spoke-izing these songs, as some critics have suggested), making old material seem completely brand new. Truly new song, “Wheels Within Wheels,” is great promise of future Cynicisms.

9. Canvas SolarisIrradiance — From what I understand, this may be the final Canvas Solaris album. If so, they’ve gone out in a blaze of, well, irradiance. Forget Scale The Summit, this is where it’s at.

8. Dax RiggsSay Goodnight to the World — Slicker and more produced than previous Dax material, including his pre-solo Deadboy & the Elephantmen stuff. Still think this guy should be Johnny Cash-huge…or at least Ryan Adams-huge.

7. EnslavedAxioma Ethica Odini — Despite my feeling that Enslaved have outgrown harsh vocals, and my hunch that they’re utilizing them only because they feel expected to, this album is one of the strongest in their huge discography. Its second half is the best group of songs in their catalog.

6. Deathspell OmegaParacletus – Still cannot imagine how mere human beings can come up with music like this. Truly progressive metal. A little less dissonant than their previous album, the songs are shorter, but no less epic. Mindblowing.

5. DeftonesDiamond Eyes — Never  had much use for nu-metal, but then Deftones haven’t been nu-metal for well over a decade. Got into 2000′s White Pony, then, for some dumb reason, didn’t pay attention to successive albums until this year, when a friend turned me onto this and the insanely brilliant Saturday Night Wrist. I am hooked.

4. Circa SurviveBlue Sky Noise — The almost psychedelic wash of guitars, commanding voice (as long as you like high-pitched male vocals, and goddamit I do), and ferociously infectious melodies on this album are undeniable. I’ve been interested since their first album, and they just keep getting better and better.

3. AtheistJupiter — You have to keep expectations low when any metal band from the old days returns, but Jupiter sounds to me like the fourth Atheist album might have done had it come out in 1995 instead of 2010. Of course, its production is modern, maybe too much so, but that doesn’t disguise the fact that this is 100% Atheist. I hope they add more dynamics and textures next album, because it’s almost too intense.

2. SolefaldNorron Livskunst — Although the preceding album, Black for Death, was fine, it seemed to signal that Solefald were running out of ideas. Not so. This, their seventh album, comes from a re-inspired duo who have written and recorded an album as vital and interesting as their lauded debut of so long ago. I’ve even been wondering if this might just be the best Solefald of ‘em all. Crazy…

1. AnathemaWe’re Here Because We’re Here — Right up there with the band’s Eternity and Judgement albums. I didn’t think they still had this kind of album in them, but they do. Far and away my favorite album of 2010.

But the problem with lists is they’re arbitrary. They can and will change. This one already has, in a way, because I’ve recently gotten very much into Minus the Bear’s Omni. And if Ihsahn’s After isn’t on the list, does that mean I didn’t like it? Nope. And maybe that Atheist album will lose some luster over time. These things happen. Stranger things…stranger things.

Next post: My unpublished interview with Nunslaughter’s Don of the Dead on the worth—or worthlessness?—of progressive metal… Or a list of my favorite Umberto Eco writings.

Feel free to comment below! —Jeff Wagner

What in Inga’s Name is a Swedish Sensationsfilm?

Tuesday, January 11th, 2011

After 100 years of film censorship, on Jan. 1, 2011, Sweden’s National Board of Film Classification officially disbanded, surrendering all hope of controlling the country’s cinema screens. In celebration, Daniel Ekeroth, author of the acclaimed Swedish Death Metal (Bazillion Points, 2008), declares victory with his scandalous new book Swedish Sensationsfilms: A Clandestine History of Sex, Thrillers, and Kicker Cinema.

Coming this March to bookstores everywhere, this lavish 328pp paperback offers a fiery retrospective of over 200 banned and cut films produced during the golden age of Swedish sin. “Into a rising whirlwind of madness I was born,” says Ekeroth (also known as bassist of Iron Lamb, Tyrant, and Insision). “As the ’70s came along, all limits were forgotten. Sweden was flooded with sexually explicit and violent films of every kind, and all morals were gone.”

Featuring a blockbuster cover painting by Wes Benscoter (Slayer, Black Sabbath), Swedish Sensationsfilms offers accounts by starlet Christina Lindberg (Thriller – En Grym Film, Maid in Sweden); scores of rare exhibition posters from works by Ingmar Bergman, Arne Mattson, and others; a glossary of curious Swedish customs; and an uninhibited cast of thousands, including: Stellan Skarsgård, Pernilla August, Lee Hazlewood, Dennis Hopper, Max von Sydow, David Carradine, Heinz Hopf, Harry Reems, Noomi Rapace, Marie Forså, Troy Donahue, Zinny Zan, and Ludde the dog.

Before Let the Right One In and The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, daring Swedish films in the 1950s helped break down censorship in Hollywood, and the country’s exploitation classics are praised to this day by directors like Quentin Tarantino. “I look back with genuine joy,” says celebrated cover girl Christine Lindberg. “I am so very happy I could be a part of the ’70s. I would never deny being in those movies. I know that a lot of people do so, but I just had a blast.

For more information, page samples, and to view film trailers, visit this location:

http://www.sensationsfilm.com

Mellodrama: The Mellotron Music, Soundtrack CD

Sunday, December 12th, 2010

The creative forces behind Mellodrama: The Mellotron Movie have united again and produced a sweet soundtrack CD featuring songs based on Mellotron, Chamberlin, and Optigan organs. The sweepy, sleepy tracks date as far back as original recordings of Harry Chamberlin demonstrating his tape organ invention, along with music (as mostly heard in the documentary) ranging from whimsical to moody by Michael Penn, Patrick Warren, Brian Kehew, Mattias Olsson, Dave Biro, and Bigelf.

Bazillion Points is offering the CD in a package with the Mellodrama DVD (scroll down to use shopping cart):

Buy the CD/DVD combo at Bazillion Points.

Or if you already have the DVD and just want the music, here’s some quick purchase code straight from the producers that I’m cutting and pasting to create a quick buy method:

Buy MELLODRAMA: The Mellotron Music CD (prices include first class shipping):

Here’s the track list:

1. “Welcome” by Mattias Olsson
2. Chamberlin Riveria demonstration by Harry Chamberlin
3. “Taped Tango” by Brian Kehew
4. “Long Way Down (2010)” by Michael Penn
5. “A Space Oddity” by Dave Biro
6. Excerpt from “Wizard of Kinderhook” by Dave Biro
7. “Winter Pumpkin” by Mattias Olsson
8. “The Evils of Rock and Roll” by Big Elf
9. “Mellotron Intro And Waltz” by Brian Kehew
10. “Make Your Own Kind of Music” by Johnny Largo (Optigan Archives)
11. “Dark March” by Mattias Olsson
12. “Chamberlin Ride” by Patrick Warren
13. “Sentimental Over You” by Harry Chamberlin
14. “Sweet Leilani” by Harry Chamberlin
15. “Timeless” by Brian Kehew

Touch and Go Replicas: A Punk Collector Candyland

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

Holy historical hardcore heaven… The crazed cultural curators at Presspop Japan—producers of the Raymond Scott doll and Dan Clowes’ Pogeybait doll, among other totems—have painstakingly reconstructed all 22 issues of Touch and Go fanzine and bound the bunch of them in a deluxe hard white textured box along with a unique CD compilation of tracks by Bored Youth, L-7, Negative Approach, Meatmen, Crucifucks, the Fix, Necros, and Violent Apathy.

CHECK IT OUT!

While the rest of us were celebrating the release of Touch and Go: The Complete Hardcore Punk Zine ’79–’83, by Tesco Vee and Dave Stimson, the Presspop people were busy taking great pains to replicate every staple, paper stock, size aspect, and printing method of the original American underground music zine. (Yes, the 4-page replica of the original 999 Times zine has a single staple in the upper left corner.) The book is a cultural artifact on its own now… and the original zines are unattainable.

From PRESSPOP:

To celebrate the release of the book, TOUCH AND GO: The Complete Hardcore Punk Zine ’79-’83, by Tesco Vee and Dave Stimson, Presspop announces the upcoming release of a limited edition replica box set of all 22 issues of the legendary indie and hardcore punk zine. Working with publisher Bazillion Points, we have meticulously duplicated the original printing, paper, and binding of the landmark fanzines, and packaged them together with the precursor “999 fanzine”, a book of historic Midwest punk flyers, and an exclusive “Process of Resurrection” CD compiled with the aid of author Tesco Vee and Touch and Go Records mainman Corey Rusk. The entire collection squeezes into a beautifully designed slipcase. Only 500 sets will be produced — get them while they last!

Touch and Go the Complete Fanzines Replica Box Set at PRESSPOP Japan

So sell a couple rare seven-inches and pick up Touch and Go, one floppy issue at a time… If you really want to recreate that great period of discovery, you can read each issue over a four-year period, exactly as the revelations unfolded in real time.

Now—each issue needs its own box set containing every record reviewed inside!

Mummified Jalapeño Bacon Bombs, by Chris Reifert of AUTOPSY

Monday, November 22nd, 2010

Since the release of Annick Giroux’s ingenious Hellbent for Cooking: The Heavy Metal Cookbook, a popular outcry has clamored for sample recipes from the book. Part of the problem with that has been selecting one stellar recipe from among the hundred-plus dishes on display. So here’s a simple solution—check out the lead-off recipe from the Appetizers section, the first blast of culinary warfare on display. Voila! Chris Reifert of AUTOPSY’s simple but deadly masterpiece: Mummified Jalapeño Bacon Bombs.

As Reifert himself says: “I usually manage to eat myself sick on these when they are around.” I can vouch for that on my end—at least three times I’ve exceeded the recommended dosage, and suffered happily.

Click above to enlarge, expand, print, duplicate, share, and serve. For more info on Annick’s book, with its 101 recipes from 32 countries, including bands like Thin Lizzy, Trouble, Mayhem, Gorgoroth, Accept, Slough Feg, The Gates of Slumber, Anthrax, Sepultura, Gwar, Sigh, and many many more… CLICK HERE for http://www.hellbentforcooking.com .

And while you’re struck helpless by Reifert’s masterful bacon bombs, squirm over to the resurrected Autopsy’s MySpace site for new music and info on their upcoming 2011 album, Macabre Eternal.

Mean Deviation in Decibel Mag: Death & the Florida Progressives

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

If you missed the October 2010 issue of Decibel, you’re probably also missing the current issue with a long mandatory interview with Newcastle’s own Misters Lant, Dunn, and Bray about the conception and creation of Venom’s Welcome to Hell LP. Get to work!

That October issue, the Iron Maiden cover, included a four-page preview/excerpt from Jeff Wagner’s upcoming book Mean Deviation: Four Decades of Progressive Heavy Metal. This section is all about the leaps and bounds forward made by Chuck Schuldiner and Death—and soon afterward by the likes of Cynic and Nocturnus. Here’s a reprint —look at it as an excuse to re-up your subscription to the only U.S. metal magazine that notices bands like Cynic, Atheist, Enslaved, Voivod, Fates Warning, Between the Buried and Me, and a few of the other 2,112 progressive metal bands Wagner champions in his soon-to-be-classic book. You read it here first! Unless you already read it in Decibel