Deliberation Press and
Iron Pages Books have just released the book
"Damn The Machine - The Story Of Noise Records", which tackles the complicated history of Germany's
Noise Records, one of the most influential European independent heavy metal record companies of the 1980s. The creation of
Karl-Ulrich Walterbach,
Noise was responsible for signing and developing the likes of
HELLHAMMER/
CELTIC FROST,
CORONER,
GAMMA RAY,
GRAVE DIGGER,
HELLOWEEN,
KAMELOT,
KREATOR, RAGE,
RUNNING WILD,
SKYCLAD,
TANKARD, and many more, assembling a roster whose impact reverberates throughout the metal scene today. Authored by American metal journalist
David E. Gehlke, the book features cover art by
VOIVOD drummer
Michel "Away" Langevin, and a foreword penned by
BLIND GUARDIAN vocalist
Hansi Kürsch. At over 500 pages, the book's inner design was handled by
EasyRabbit CreArtions, the team behind
HELLOWEEN's 2015 career-spanning
"Hellbook". For the first time,
Walterbach goes into elaborate detail on his experiences in the music industry. A self-proclaimed anarchist with no musical background to speak of,
Walterbach rose from the violent Berlin punk rock scene to the forefront of European metal after launching Noise in 1983.
Walterbach's gut instinct for signing new talent made him one of metal's first true label impresarios, but his abrasive personality and unwillingness to conform to industry standards made him an outsider in a business he grew to despise.
"Damn The Machine" takes the reader through
Walterbach's early days of getting
Noise off the ground, as the metal scene rallied around black/death metal progenitors
CELTIC FROST, power metal torchbearers
HELLOWEEN, and Teutonic thrash upstarts
KREATOR. The book chronicles Walterbach's A&R triumphs and failures, frustrating experiences with the era's major labels, and the social climate of running a record company stationed 15 minutes away from the Berlin Wall. And, it contains
Walterbach's no-holds-barred commentary on the bands and industry counterparts he did business with during his time running
Noise until 2001. However, a one-sided book this is not.
HELLHAMMER/
CELTIC FROST leader
Tom G. Warrior and his bandmates reflect on their humble Swiss countryside beginnings, where they worked diligently to change the face of underground extreme metal. Yet even though
CELTIC FROST was
Noise's first breakout band, they were met with regular opposition from
Walterbach. The band and label's relationship deteriorated during the making of 1987's legendary
"Into The Pandemonium", leading to one of metal's most controversial albums, the following year's hair metal-inspired
"Cold Lake". An exclusive excerpt from the book's chapter on
CELTIC FROST, as well as an interview with
Gehlke, can be found at
Noisey.
HELLOWEEN's
Kai Hansen,
Michael Kiske and
Michael Weikath detail the band's meteoric rise with the twin
"Keeper Of The Seven Keys" (Part I and II) albums. The combination of the band's speedy tempos,
Kiske's stratospheric voice, and an upbeat, positive sense of humor quickly made
HELLOWEEN the highest-selling
Noise act. However, the 1988 exit of
Hansen along with the arrival of
IRON MAIDEN's
Sanctuary Management put
Walterbach on the defense as he engaged in a grueling court case with
EMI Records over the rights to the band. Both
HELLOWEEN and
Noise were never the same.
"Damn The Machine" also breaks down the unlikely success of pirate metal outfit
RUNNING WILD, whose creative use of swashbuckling imagery earned them a devoted fanbase across continental Europe. It profiles the unstoppable work ethic of
KREATOR's
Mille Petrozza, who took his band out of the rough coal mining area of Essen and into the heart of the German thrash metal movement.
GRAVE DIGGER's
Chris Boltendahl and
Walterbach debate the band's controversial name change to
DIGGER for 1986's
"Stronger Than Ever", an album that immediately destroyed the band's career, while
RAGE mainman
Peter "Peavy" Wagner gets to the bottom of why the band was never a priority for the label in spite of their solid standing among critics and fans. Furthermore, the book demonstrates how deep
Noise's roster was throughout the '80s and '90s. It captures the lovable beer metal antics of
TANKARD, the rap metal explorations of
MORDRED, intrepid thrash leanings of
CORONER,
SABBAT,
VOIVOD and
WATCHTOWER, as well as the pioneering folk metal blend of
SKYCLAD, and melodic metal mastery of
GAMMA RAY,
KAMELOT and
STRATOVARIUS. With over 75 exclusive interviews from every main
Noise band member, manager, and industry personality, along with countless never-before-seen photos,
"Damn The Machine" provides a thorough, balanced look into a record company that helped establish mainland Europe as a global force in metal. Affordably priced at $24.95,
"Damn The Machine" is a must-have for legions of metal fans worldwide. The book can be ordered at
this location.
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