Swallowing Shit

Swallowing Shit
Origin Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Genres Grindcore, anarcho-punk, punk rock, powerviolence
Years active 1994–1997
Labels G7 Welcoming Committee
Associated acts I Spy, Propagandhi, Head Hits Concrete, Kittens, Projektor
Members
Mike Alexander
Cory Koss
Todd Kowalski
Brian Dobson
Mike Koop
Steve Dueck
Jahmeel Russel
Mark Nowak
Dean Bruce
Dave Daley

Swallowing Shit was a short-lived Canadian grindcore band, active in Winnipeg, Manitoba in the mid-1990s.[1]

Contents

History

Swallowing Shit was formed in 1994 by vocalist Mike Alexander with guitarist Mike Koop of The Bonaduces, drummer Steve Dueck of The Undecided and, for one show only, bassist Dave Daley.

With Jahmeel Russel replacing Daley and Dean Bruce joining on second guitar, the band soon recorded and released a crude demo. Both Bruce and Koop left shortly thereafter, who would be replaced by guitarist Mark Nowek. Dueck then departed, being replaced by drummer Cory Koss. This lineup recorded a 7", the band's first proper release.

Shortly thereafter, Russel and Nowek left the band. This made way for what could be considered the "classic" lineup, featuring guitarist Todd Kowalski (ex-I Spy) and bassist Brian Dobson.

The band's aggressive, politically radical brand of punk was a popular draw on the Winnipeg punk scene. In 1997, Christians picketed a concert to protest the band's song "Pro-Abortion, Anti-Christ".[2]

The Alexander/Kowalski/Koss/Dobson lineup recorded an 11 song 7" on Spiral Objective Records from Australia, before disbanding in June 1997, playing their final show with J Church and The Weakerthans.

The band members subsequently moved on to other projects. Alexander would go on to play in Head Hits Concrete and currently Putrescence. Kowalski is a member of Propagandhi. Russell would also play in Malefaction, Kittens, Projektor, Hide Your Daughters and KEN mode. Koss was the drummer for Malefaction and is currently in the black metal band Of Human Bondage. Brian Dobson became an engineer and moved to Minneapolis.[3]

An album, Anthology, was released in 2000 on G7 Welcoming Committee Records to compile the band's recorded singles. Their song "If Assholes Could Fly, This Place Would Be an Airport" is featured on G7's 2005 compilation Take Penacilin Now.

Members

References

External links