Electro Assassin
Also known asCrisis
OriginLondon, United Kingdom
Genres
Years active1990–1999
Labels
Spinoff ofJohnson Engineering Co.
Past members
  • Kevin Gould
  • Richard McKinlay
  • Ian Taylor

Electro Assassin was the music project of London-based composer Kevin Gould, known for his work with Johnson Engineering Co. Ian Taylor provided vocals to the project between 1990 and 1994. The group released three albums: Jamming the Voice of the Universe (1992), Bioculture (1993) and The Divine Invasion (1995).[1][2]

History

Electro Assassin was founded out of London in 1990 by Kevin Gould as an outlet for his solo compositions. Gould had previously performed in Johnson Engineering Co.[3] Electro Assassin released Jamming the Voice of the Universe in 1992 by Hyperium Records and Concrete Productions.[4][5] The second album was released in 1993 by Hyperium and titled Bioculture and represented vocalist Ian Taylor's final release with the band.[6] The band's third album, titled The Divine Invasion, was released in 1995 by Synthetic Symphony and Cyber-Tec Records.[7][8] In September of that year the album was reissued in the United States by Fifth Colvmn Records.[9]

Discography

Studio albums

Compilation appearances

  • FMCD Volume 8 - April 1994 (1994, Future Music)
  • Hy! ...To Hypersonic (The Hyperium Compilation | Part II) (1992, Hyperium)
  • Hyperium Promo-Sampler (1992, Hyperium)
  • Hy! From Hypnotic to Hypersonic (1992, Hyperium)
  • Electronic Youth Vol.1 (1993, Music Research)
  • Funky Alternatives Seven (1993, Concrete)
  • The Digital Space Between Vol. 2 (1995, Cleopatra)
  • Cyber-Tec America (1995, Invisible)
  • Untitled (1996, Infected, Cyber-Tec)
  • Industrial Virus (1997, Dressed to Kill)
  • Industrial Hazard (1998, Dressed to Kill)
  • Industrial Armageddon (1998, Age of Panik)
  • Sacrilege: A Tribute to Front 242 (1999, Cleopatra)
  • Industrial Meltdown (1999, Cleopatra)
  • Hardware (1999, MCT)

References

  1. "Thessalonians: The Black Field". Factsheet Five. Mike Gunderloy (52): 3. 1994. Retrieved September 5, 2020.
  2. Heckman, Dave (2005). "Electro Assassin". Metropolis Records. Zero Defect Design LLC. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  3. Bush, John. "Electro Assassin > Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  4. Riley, Matthew (1992). "Electro Assassin: Jamming the Voice of the Universe". EST. Hyperreal (3). Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  5. "Electro Assassin". Option. Sonic Options Network. 42–47: 94. 1992. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  6. Christian, Chris (August 1995). "Electro Assassin: Bioculture Mutation". Sonic Boom. 3 (5). Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  7. "Electro Assassin". Option. Sonic Options Network. 60–65: 126. 1995.
  8. Christian, Chris (October 1995). "Electro Assassin: The Divine Invasion". Sonic Boom. 3 (8). Retrieved September 5, 2020.
  9. Louche, Jared (1996). "Fifth Colvmn Records: On-Line Mail Order Catalog". hallucinet.com. Fifth Colvmn Records. Archived from the original on January 31, 1998. Retrieved September 5, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.