I had several Iceburn albums (on Revelation and the one Victory album). I liked the idea of a band from that scene (and Utah!) willing to do 'out music' (separate from the NOU/Refused beatnik jazz posturing), but I can't say much of that music is great or holds up.numberthirty wrote: Sat Sep 07, 2024 6:46 pmPretty sure it was.OrthodoxEaster wrote: Sat Sep 07, 2024 6:12 pmSeemed kinda like that whole scene's version of a band like Brutal Truth or some of the Earache roster: heavy music owing a great deal to Zorn-derived avant-channel surfing. In this case, nth generation hardcore instead of death metal or grindcore at the base. It also seemed to take a page from some of the jazzier SST bands. I think they got much further out after that, but I wasn't exactly paying attention. I don't mean any of that to sound dismissive, as my memory of Iceburn is not particularly vivid.numberthirty wrote: Past that, I gotta ask...
If Revelation is a deal breaker, where are you at on Iceburn?
The only thing I can recall hearing at the time was a split album (w/Engine Kid?) and maybe whatever proper LP was concurrent w/that. Didn't make me want to turn it off, like say Sick of It All or Texas Is the Reason, but failed to really move me, as well.
That said, in my memory both of the Iceburn tracks were improvs based on themes from "The Rite Of Spring"
As far as the youth crew/Revelation stuff goes, I thought that shit was stupid and musically conservative, but the label signed decent stuff occasionally. I wouldn't expect many Shades Apart fans here (and the name sounds like it would be idiotic hardcore) but I liked them at the time. Excellent Milwaukee post punk band Call Me Lightning had an album on Rev.
Anyway.. RATM. Maybe refreshing to see live in 1992 but god I'd love to never hear it again.