Die Warzau

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Die Warzau, (originally referred to as Die Warzau Synfony), is an industrial music band formed in 1987 by performance artists Jim Marcus and Van Christie. The band has operated on the fringes of that genre, creating a unique sound that is a genre-bending excursion into the soul of the music form. An ever-present and important part of Die Warzau's appeal is the socio-political lyricism and emotive vocals of Jim Marcus.

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[edit] History

Originally signed to Chris Parry's Fiction Records, the group released Disco Rigido in the late 1980s (distributed in the United States by Atlantic Records), which featured "Welcome To America", "Land of the Free" and "I've Got To Make Sense". Though the album falls solidly into the EBM genre, it contains hints of the experimentation and genre-bending that later recordings would feature (e.g. "Y Tagata en Situ").

A second album, Big Electric Metal Bass Face, built on the foundation laid with Disco Rigido and upped the ante with excursions into funk ("Funkopolis" and the live take of "Coming Down"). Contributors to the band at the time included Chris Vrenna and James Woolley, both members of Nine Inch Nails during the mid-1990s.

Engine, a 1995 release on Wax Trax/TVT, was a huge jump forward and found critical acclaim for its decimation of genre boundaries. Die Warzau could no longer be simply pigeonholed into the "industrial" category, as their music became more organic, rounder on the edges, yet still retaining their trademark knack for insistent rhythm and pure, unrefined electronic noise. "Liberated" and "All Good Girls" became trademark songs for the group. Related act Sister Machine Gun "inherited" an unused song from this period ("Hole In the Ground"), which they included on their Burn album.

Die Warzau as a group then went on hiatus for a number of years, with Marcus and Christie working on other projects. Jim Marcus founded the pure funk group Everplastic while Van Christie worked on Eco-Hed.

By 2005, though, the duo had reconvened and, together with new members Abel Garibaldi and Dan Evans, released Convenience on their Chicago-based label Pulseblack Records. The album was a continuation of the path they started on with Engine, featuring a somewhat more subdued and occasionally commercial sound.

[edit] Discography

  • Disco Rigido (1989)
  • Big Electric Metal Bass Face (1991)
  • Engine (1995)
  • Convenience (2005)

[edit] Trivia

Sonic Boom Interview

[edit] External links