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In Dust - Nosebleed download free

Genre: Electronic
Performer: In Dust
Title: Nosebleed
Style: Industrial
Date of release: 1992
Country: Ireland
MP3 album size: 1275 mb
FLAC APE album size: 1163 mb
WMA album size: 1490 mb
Digital formats: AIFF AU AHX MP3 DTS VOC MP2
In Dust - Nosebleed download free

Tracklist

A1 Boredom Result
A2 They Must Be Leopards
A3 Legal Speed
A4 Sickener In A Sector
B1 Magnet Womb
B2 Fear Father
B3 Roy
B4 Powder Coat

Credits

  • Engineer – Gary Aiken
  • Producer – In Dust

Notes

Recorded @ Novatech Studios [Belfast].

Steve Nolan, Alex Finnegan, Ryk Irvine Are In Dust.

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
CDWALL 001 In Dust Nosebleed ‎(CD) Wallcreeper CDWALL 001 Ireland 1992
Discussion about In Dust - Nosebleed
Early Waffle
In the hope of encouraging disagreement, I'll say now that in my humble, In Dust were the best Irish band of the '90s. First saw them in '91 at the Art College in Belfast, and they stood out first of all visually as they were synth based - I swear that singer Alex was playing a star-shaped bass, though that could just be a fantasy on my behalf. They were good too, maybe notable for being 'interesting and different' on first encounter, but they went on to deliver. The line up was Alex Finnegan (vocals), Steve Nolan (programming/ keyboards/ vocals) and Ryk Irvine (guitar). In early '92, I guess, their sophomore 12" EP 'Bewildermental' was released on their manager's label Wallcreeper Records. It was an interesting and unfashionable mix of electronic post-punk/'dark' pop (All three were proud Depeche Mode fans), sometimes dramatic and nearly pompous, sometimes quirky, with Ryk's inspired death-metal-style solos and tremelo-arm abuse. There was one standout song, 'Focus', with it's dischordant electronic hook and the exhortation 'Concentrate your senses on what you desire!' By the time the EP was released though, their songs were getting heavier, more riff-based with harder rhythms, even wilder guitar solos and techno/acid style noise. Live they went for it with pure attack and a lot of people didn't know what to make of them. They were so exciting, the most over-the-top and the most inventive local band around and they were out there, putting records out and creating a cartoon hell onstage all over the place. One of my fondest memories of that era was when they asked the band I was in at the time, The Golden Mile, to support them in Letterkenny (15 May 1993 in case you were wondering). It was our first really good gig and In Dust just tore the roof off the place, a couple of hundred kids moshing and stage diving in the back of a pub, as opposed to the usual gigs by local bands attended by the core of scenesters and indifferent audiences of indie kids. Their album 'Nosebleed' must have come out in '93, after they toured Britain with their friends Therapy? when the latter were one of the most popular live bands in the country. The production on the album was disappointing, but it was still a good album which didn't sound like anyone else (Frank admission - I've not listened to those records for ages and my albums are currently packed in boxes. Now I'm wishing I had them to hand!). The only bands at that time that were melding 'rock' with sampling, programming and electronics successfully, if you'd have asked me, were The Young Gods (whom In Dust opened for in Belfast and Dublin in '94), New Zealand's Skeptics and Moonshake. They were part of a cool, creative crowd and they made a eye-fucking video for their never-released 'Hyperdeemic Nerdle' (I know - what a stupid title!) which mostly focused on Steve strapped to a chair, struggling and bleeding. Somebody! Put it on you tube! It's worth noting that Wallcreeper was, albeit briefly, the only independent label in Northern Ireland at the time, save for Good Vibrations, which had long since attained National Treasure, heritage status. The other releases on the label were a 12" EP by Repulse, a terribly dull sub-sub Godflesh outfit and the 'Desperately Seeking Satan' CD EP by local bon viveurs LMS who were just a little bit influenced by The Jesus Lizard and would antagonise audiences with rock-star posing and shirt/trouser removal at any given opportunity. They were fun and all about having a good time. There was a poster campaign for the EP in an attempt to bait the good Christian folk of Ulster, although I forget if there was a moral panic on a par with local legends Bleeding Rectum's 'Daniel O'Donnell Must Die!' posters. In Dust quietly left the building around '95 maybe, 'sick of soundchecking' and maybe having taken it as far as they could go. The various strains of weird techno and left-field dance music was the new noise for them and I think Steve put out a few 12"s when he moved to London after they finished. Hopefully someone can furnish me with a bit more information? [Thanks to Martin @ Swedish Nurse].
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