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THE
EARLY YEARS
(by White Cross and War Cry)
Paul Speckmann was born on September the 28th, 1963, in
the North-West suburbs of Chicago, Illinois. From an early
age, he dreamed of playing music, more specifically Rock
'n' Roll. Originally, he was inspired by the heavy sounds
of Black Sabbath, Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin, among others.
At age 16, Speckmann discoverd the sweet leaf a.k.a. cannabis,
which he would reguarly smoke while listening to the aforementioned
groups. One day, while walking the halls of Forest View
High School (Arlington Heights, Illinois), Speckmann was
approached by Ronald Cooke, as Cooke had heard him singing
"All Good People" by prog-rock group, Yes. Ron
Cooke was a guitarist in the band White Cross, and asked
Speckmann to audition as singer. Speckmann agreed and, after
a rather shaky audition, he soon joined the fledgling band.
White Cross was mostly an all-covers band, performing songs
by Sabbath, UFO, Ted Nugent and Thin Lizzy. Trying his best,
Speckmann found encouragement as girls at school now looked
at him in a new light. During the first year in White Cross,
Speckmann began to take a serious interest in the bass guitar,
something which had caught his attention since he was a
child. Upon mentioning this to his band members in White
Cross, and his friends, Speckmann was greeted with laughter
and told that he would never be able to play. Determined
to prove them wrong, Speckmann searched for a bass guitar.
Around this time, he quit White Cross too, possibly because
he realized they would never get anywhere just playing covers.
(On a side note, after White Cross, guitarist Ron Cooke
joined a band called Thrust, a heavy metal group in the
Priest/Maiden-style, but they never achieved any major success,
despite putting out one album and a split live LP with fellow
Chicago act, Lazer).
Eventually, Speckmann found a bass guitar, in the form of
a cheap Epiphone, only costing around thirty dollars. (Funnily
enough, future bass player for Trouble, Sean McCallister,
had originally intended to buy the bass, and was upset that
Speckmann got there first. McCallitster would get his chance
though.) One day, while walking home from his latest "female
conquest", Speckmann bumped into an old friend from
grade school and Cub Scouts, Steve Ahlers. Steve revealed
that he was learning to play guitar, and Speckmann mentioned
his interest in the bass. The two began practicing on a
regular basis, as they were both fans of the same heavy
metal groups. Still in high school, Speckmann met Marty
Fitzgerald, a guitar player, in addition to being a year
older than Speckmann. Both being passionate fans of metal,
they agreed to form a band, along with Speckmann's friend
Steve Ahlers. Such was their passion, that Fitzgerald dropped
out of high school his senior year, and Speckmann followed
suit, dropping out in his junior year. They both promised
to start jamming together every day. Unfortunately, both
their parents forced them to get jobs. Not phased by this,
Fitzgerald and Speckmann began jamming a few nights a week
(along with Ahlers).
Next task was finding a drummer, and after some gruelling
work auditioning drummers over the course of 1982, the trio
settled on a drummer from high school, called Joe Iaccino.
Unlike the rest of the group, Iaccino did have some previous
experience. For everyone else, this was their first "real
band". Playing music in the vein of early Black Sabbath,
the bands sound was naturally rather doomy, and the group
suitably dubbed themselves "War Cry". After finding
vocalist Rich Rozek, the band begun to pen their own compositions.
At this time, the NWOBHM movement was in full swing, and
War Cry found large amounts of inspiration in other acts
from that movement, such as the great Witchfinder General
and Angel Witch. Their approach became even more doomy,
as a result of listening to those Sabbath-based acts. I
have to mention at this point that the Chicago scene really
begun to develop into something special around 1983. Emerging
power metal acts such as Witchslayer, Slauter Xstroyes,
Hammeron, Infra Red and Paradoxx were complimented nicely
by the aggression of Zoetrope, or the doom of the godly
band Trouble. A totally killer scene for sure, and one that
would only get better !
War Cry made the step up to playing live shows in 1983.
After calling the local club Haymakers (an infamous club
in Prospect Heights, Illinois), gigs became frequent and
after a while, better offers were given to War Cry. At this
time, War Cry were drawing in many people, and live shows
often consisted of covers of Sabbath, Priest, Angel Witch
and even Twisted Sister. They soon became a fave among many
people involved in the Chicago metal scene. In mid-83, War
Cry entered Open Reel Studios in Lynwood, Illinois to record
the legendary "Trilogy Of Terror" demo. The recording
cost around 500 dollars, and contained four tracks; "The
Executoner's March (Intro)", "The Executioner",
"Wicked Warlock" and "Forbidden Evil".
Needless to say, for the rather expensive price of 500 dollars,
the tape was well worth it ! To this day, that demo remains
one of the heaviest recordings ever to hit the metal scene,
and for many is a totally cult piece of metal ! The demo
never had a cover, and although War Cry had no clue how
to promote it at the time, copies of it rapidly spread through
the tape trading network, and War Cry achieved fame in the
metal underground.
By now, War Cry were opening all the big shows, such as
Joe Perry Project and Mountain. Nobody was jealous however,
as the Chicago scene (like many early scenes) had great
camaraderie. As expected, the oppurtunity to appear on vinyl
came calling, in the form of Brian Slagel's Metal Blade
Records. His prestigious Metal Massacre compilation series
featured many promising metal acts, and had helped to launch
the careers of Metallica, Ratt and Slayer, among many others.
By now, three Metal Massacre's had been released, and War
Cry were offered the chance to appear on the fourth, aptly
titled Metal Massacre 4. Metal Blade chose the song "Forbidden
Evil" from the "Trilogy Of Terror" demo,
to appear on the compilation, so War Cry recorded the track
specially at Pierced Arrow Studios, in Evansten, a suburb
of Chicago. Metal Massacre 4 featured War Cry's fellow Chicago
acts Trouble, Witchslayer, Zoetrope and Thrust (Ron Cooke's
band). It also included Sceptre, who would go on to become
Agent Steel. Apart from Trouble, none of the acts would
go on to achieve any major success, although Lizzy Borden
and thrash act Abattior both recorded albums (Abattior's
was quite good actually, though Lizzy Borden just suck).
Despite this, Metal Massacre 4 is really one of the more
consistent Massacre discs overall.
War Cry recieved good response, and the disc helped them
become noticed on the international scene. Future thrash
act Forbidden Evil even took their name from the War Cry
song (although the "Evil" bit was later dropped,
and the band became known as just "Forbidden").
Despite this success, drummer Joe Iaccino had quit War Cry,
and the search was on for another drummer. Bill Schmidt,
a drummer who had been jamming alone in his basement with
no previous experience, was eventually chosen (He had originally
auditioned for War Cry the year before, but did not get
the gig due to Speckmann being un-impressed with Schmidt's
style). Schmidt played his one and only gig with War Cry
at the infamous club Haymakers, before recieving marching
orders due to an altercation with Marty Fitzgerald. It was
clear he was a rather lively personality.
The Legend Is Born (Master and Death Strike)
It was around this time that the roots of Master would truly
take shape. During his time with War Cry, Schmidt struck
up a friendship with Speckmann that would prove to be the
seed of Master's formation. One day, Marty Fitzgerald played
Speckmann the classic Venom single "In League With
Satan". This changed Speckmann's and Schmidt's lives,
and rather ironically, would lead to War Cry's downfall.
Almost immediately, Speckmann and Schmidt wanted to play
music in a more aggressive (though none less heavy) vein
than War Cry. Coupled with the rising extreme metal movement,
which included acts such as Motorhead, Metallica and Slayer,
the two felt this was the way to go. As early as mid-83,
Schmidt began writing songs based around these bands, and
the beast known as Master was beginning to rear it's ugly
head.
Becoming tired with War Cry, and eager to play extreme metal,
Speckmann agreed to jam with Schmidt. He left War Cry in
late '83. Speckmann and Schmidt began to jam reguarly in
a storage unit located in Mt. Prospect, another small suburb
outside of Chicago (and also Paul's home). Although it was
only drums and bass at that time, energy and enthusiasm
was fuelling both Speckmann and Schmidt, as they worked
on many songs that were to become future classics. This
new band was dubbed Master, by Rick Manson, bass player
for Witchslayer. The name was taken from the line "You
made me MASTER of the world where you exist" in the
Black Sabbath song "Lord Of This World" (on the
album MASTER Of Reality).
Even though he had left War Cry, Speckmann was offered the
chance to open up for Twisted Sister and Queensryche (on
their U.S. tour), with War Cry, personally by phone call.
Not wanting to miss this oppurtunity, Speckmann called up
Marty Fitzgerald with this proposal, and fortunately Fitzgerald
agreed. The show took place in Palatine, Illinois, and is
generally the most well known gig War Cry played. What happened
to War Cry after that ? Well, apparently a deal was offered
to them by Metal Blade, but Rich Rozek (vocalist of War
Cry) never told the other members. He simply took all the
royalties form the song on Metal Massacre 4. Maybe if Speckmann
had known about the deal, he would have stayed ? Who knows.
War Cry soldiered on however, but it was really all over
by then. Speckmann had undoubtedly been a huge driving force
behind War Cry, and the two demos issued after his departure
were much more commercial in direction, fairly Motley Crue
inspired garbage. Their live shows also had a more commercial
direction. War Cry eventually came to an end in late '85.
Even today, War Cry are held in high regard by many, often
spoken of in the same breath as doom metal greats, Witchfinder
General, Trouble, Pagan Altar and Pentagram (U.S.A.). Speckmann
has kept contact with Marty and Steve, and they are still
friends today (ahh). It is clear that War Cry are a cult
act, and in fact Lee Dorrian quit Napalm Death in the late
eighties to do something in the War Cry vein. As we know,
he certainly succeeded, forming Cathedral, who have left
a lasting legacy on doom metal. It would be nice to see
all the War Cry material issued professionally one day,
with those unreleased songs "Lucifer" and "Punish
The Witches". This looks unlikely to happen though,
as Speckmann said not all of the master tapes remain from
the "Trilogy Of Terror" demo. Maybe someone will
make a bootleg of all the stuff, hey ? No matter what, War
Cry will always remain doom metal gods.
Anyway, back to Master. As 1983 turned into 1984, Speckmann's
and Schmidt's enthusiasm was gradually reduced.
Master began auditioning guitarists almost straight away.
26 (!) guitarists were auditioned, yet none of them fit
the style of Master, being either too rooted in the "traditional"
heavy metal style, or just not having a clue what extreme
metal meant. It seemed Chicago was a dead end when searching
for extreme metal musicians, no matter how great the doom
and traditional/power metal scenes were. 1984 proved to
be a good year for extreme metal though, and emerging acts
such as Hellhammer, Sodom and Bathory were truly pushing
barrier's with their primitive and ugly noise, that was
rooted in simple, d-beat rhythms. Speckmann has stated many
times that these acts were all great bands (as if that needs
saying, those acts fucking RULE). Also, the demo circuit
was truly flourishing, with bands like Death, Possessed
and Poison helping to shape death metal. Paul has also mentioned
how he feels Death are alongside Master in creating death
metal. Needless to say, Master had plenty of bands to draw
inspiration from, and listening to Master's early songs,
it is clear that this is what they did. Newer tunes, such
as Speckmann's "The Truth" and "Pay To Die"
were created in 1984, and Schmidt's songs (the ones he had
been writing in mid-83), the instrumental "Terrorizer",
"Master" and "Pledge Of Allegiance"
made up Master's small, yet powerful repertoire. Schmidt
took the vocal posistion, though no rehearsals were sent
out to the underground, as they would have sounded rather
silly with just bass and drums. A demo was out of the question.
Speckmann began to write many of the lyrics for the future
classics, and his lyric writing was quite different from
other metal bands, much more punk-like, dealing with political
and social issues such as war, religion and the negative
impact of the media on the mind. These lyrics would reveal
themselves to be absolute genius in later years, but for
now, only Schmidt and Speckmann knew of them.
By late '84, things were at a low. Speckmann's father had
died of a brain tumor, which must have been a pretty devastating
blow to Speckmann, and Schmidt had accepted an offer from
(later infamous) guitarist Louie Svitek (Zoetrope, M.O.D.,
Ministry, Mind Funk) to join local thrash metal band, Mayhem
(not to be confused with the Norwegian act). Nothing was
happening with Master, so Schmidt snatched the chance up.
Though Master had not been put to rest, Speckmann was on
his own and it was clear Master might not be erected again.
Master went on hiatus. Angry and frustrated, Speckmann realized
he would have to carry things on himself. Though it may
not have seemed it at the time, this would be a blessing
in disguise. Still wanting to carry on in the extreme metal
direction, Speckmann started looking through the Illinois
Entertainer, a music publication still in existence today.
It was a desperate last try. Luckily, Speckmann found an
advertisment looking for an aggressive metal outfit. The
ad was placed in there by none other than Chris Mittlebrun,
guitarist of the legendary Transgressor, another power metal
act from Chicago. Mittlebrun was one of the 26 guitarists
to originally audition for Master. At the time, he was still
stuck in the "twin guitar attack" of bands like
Judas Priest, with his guitar partner Hawk. The fact that
Mittlebrun had quit Transgressor and was now looking for
a heavier metal outfit was convincing enough for Speckmann,
and he called Mittlebrun immediately. Mittlebrun came over
and jammed with Speckmann, who then showed him the first
Deathstrike song "The Truth", one that Speckmann
had just finished working on. Mittlebrun liked it, and it
was clear to Speckmann that he had finally found the right
guitarist. Together, they opted for the very punk sounding
band name of Death Strike.
Enthusiasm was back again for Speckmann, yet he still needed
to find a drummer. Mittlebrun brought in John Leprich, a
drunk with little playing ability. He suited the raw attack
of Death Strike, a band where technical perfection was not
an issue. To further balance out the sound of Death Strike,
Speckmann chose second guitarist Kirk Miller. Speckmann
had known Miller since he used to go out with Miller's sister.
Miller was only 16 years old though, and lacked experience.
However, he was needed to give Death Strike's sound that
extra heaviness, and if he could play, he could play. Speckmannn's
own compositions "The Truth" and "Pay To
Die" became Death Strike classics, while Mittlebrun
proved his songwriting skills by penning the solid thrasher
"Re-Entry And Destruction". Fitting in with the
general Speckmann style was the political lyrics. Mittlebrun's
composition featured lyrics on nuclear war, with a rather
grim outlook of "survive will the strong". Speckmann
and Mittlebrun also penned a track together, and their songwriting
relationship would be one that would go on to provide many
classics for Master. The track "Mangled Dehumanization"
had music written by Mittlebrun, and lyrics (about a being
that destroyed everything around it) by Speckmann. Whereas
Schmidt was the planned vocalist for Master, Speckmann had
to reluctantly take over vocals in Death Strike. No-one
else fit his vision. The problem was though, what did he
know about singing in an extreme metal band ? His only previous
experience was in White Cross, singing Sabbath and Purple
covers ! This would prove to be another blessing in disguise
for Speckmann though. Using the dry and throaty voice of
Motorhead's Lemmy, the punk stylings of Venom's Cronos and
the aggressive attack of Slayer's Tom Araya as inspiration,
Speckmann carved his own voice, making it suit the political
anger of Death Strike.
Six weeks of intense rehearsals followed, and by early 1985,
the songs were ready to be recorded. Each song had become
fully developed, and Death Strike knew what they were aiming
for. In January 1985, Death Strike headed into Open Reel
Studios in Lynwood, Illinois (the same place War Cry had
recorded the "Trilogy Of Terror" demo) and laid
down four tracks. (In order): "The Truth", "Mangled
Dehumanization", "Pay To Die" and "Re-Entry
And Destruction". The recording was on a small budget,
and the band worked with an 8-track. Engineering and producing
the recording was Frank Weber. Problems arose though, when
John Leprich couldn't get "Pay To Die" down at
the first session. As back up, Speckmann called Schmidt
and asked him to help out Death Strike if Leprich didn't
pull the track off second time. Previously, War Cry had
recorded in one day, but it took Death Strike longer to
get their demo down, and this was annoying to Speckmann.
After trying for the second time, Leprich just barely pulled
it off. Schmidt didn't need to come in, but this marked
the beginning of communication between Speckmann and Schmidt
again. Schmidt was now aware of what Speckmann was doing,
and possibly realized some future was there after all.
Death Strike's cd featured a cover, with a black and white
photo adorning the front. The photo (taken by Janet Reif)
showed the band sitting on a car in a parking lot. Leprich
has a baseball bat in his hand, and the band are decked
out in black leather and black sunglasses. The picture actually
came off pretty well, and Death Strike did not look like
the sort of band you wanted to mess with. The bands name
was written in Old English font. The demo's title was to
be the rather brutal name of "Fuckin' Death".
It fit the music. This too was added to the cover in Old
English font. The layout was designed by Michelle M. Basso
and Speckmann. Two promotional pictures were issued, both
showing the band standing outside some sort of factory in
Chicago, still decked out in their black leather and shades.
One photo is in black and white, the other colour. The colour
one has Leprich with baseball hat in hand. Once again, the
band looked pretty menacing, especially the gigantic figure
of Paul Speckmann. The black and white photo was the most
well distributed one. From the pictures it is clear Death
Strike are older than most of their underground counterparts.
Bands such as Death and Possessed were all a few years younger
than Death Strike, and it was really the Exodus and Metallica
generation that were Speckmann's age. Speckmann's band however,
were playing music far more aggressive than those bands,
and he really was part of the first wave of the death and
black metal bands. The demo was the first available product
from Death Strike, as no rehearsals had been released prior
to it, and a live show was still far off (hence no live
tape). The band had given no interviews either (it was doubtful
anyone knew of them), so Death Strike were a little known
act for sure. Maybe followers of War Cry and Transgressor
had heard of them. But outside of the Chicago metal scene,
they were an unknown act.
This all changed in March 1985, when "Fuckin' Death"
hit the underground extreme metal scene. Almost immediately,
it was met with praise and favourable reviews in fanzines
(though glossy mainstream metal mags such as Kerrang and
Metal Forces wrote that Death Strike were a Slayer rip-off
! Idiots !), and became wanted by many tape-traders around
the globe. Through the tape trading network, Death Strike
became very well known, as "Fuckin' Death" passed
from person to person. Everyone was impressed, and it was
not hard to hear why. From the first few seconds of "The
Truth", the fury of Death Strike's music made itself
apparent. Here was a band that was so devastating and brutal,
that they had no contenders. Their sound was akin to a huge
fucking tank rolling over a city, obliterating everything.
They sounded like WAR. It was clear to the fans of the underground
that Death Strike could be placed with the other death metal
acts of the day such as Venom, Sodom, Slayer, Hellhammer/Celtic
Frost, Possessed, Mantas/Death, Bathory and Poison (the
black metal act from Germany). Death Strike's style was
a little different to those acts though, as Death Strike
had political lyrics. Anyway, the truly face-ripping production
gave the tape it's raw edge. The guitars were HUGE buzzing
noises, completely distorted and very vicious. Mittlebrun's
lead work was quite distinctive, differing from the metal
underground, and it is clear he too, showed much promise.
Speckmann's bass gave a strong bottom end to the sound,
with it's booming tone. Leprich's drums were solid sounding,
with no evidence of any weakness in his playing. His double
bass rolls were INSANE, and his style perfect for Death
Strike. In my opinion, he's Death Strike's secret weapon.
The highlight for many was Paul Speckmann's vocals, however.
No other metal singer sounded like him, and his singing
approach had a lot in common with punk acts such as Discharge,
Anti-Cimex and Crude S.S. His voice was full of hatred for
the system, and he was no doubt angry at his father's death.
The vocal attack on "Pay To Die" had a cry of
anguish at the end from Paul, and this is a simply spine
chilling moment for me. With his groundbreaking aggressive
vocals, Paul would go on to be one of the founders of the
death metal vocal style, along with Jeff Becerra (Possessed),
Kam Lee (Mantas/Death/Massacre), Chuck Schuldiner (Mantas/Death)
and Tom G. Warrior (Hellhammer/Celtic Frost). Morbid Angel
and Sepultura both asked Scott Burns (producer at Morrisound
Studios, Florida) about the recording techniques of Death
Strike (and Master), such as whether Speckmann used any
effects or how Mittlebrun had such a heavy tone. Barney
Greenway from Napalm Death cited Kam Lee and Paul Speckmann
as his two main influences. It is clear "Fuckin' Death"
had a big effect on the underground.
Another interesting (and different) aspect to Death Strike
was their punk sound. Their riffs were definitley solid,
METAL riffs, but their delivery was very punk sounding.
On first listens, Death Strike sounded more akin to Discharge
than death metal. This was because Speckmann had begun listening
to punk legends such as Discharge, G.B.H., The Exploited,
Minor Threat etc. Many metalheads probably found Death Strike's
style to sound quite new, but I'd recommend "Fuckin'
Death" to any punk fans. It's a shame the demo didn't
make it into the punk underground. 19 years after the demo's
release, the impact is clear. Death Strike were partly responsible
for the emergence of grindcore, and acts such as Terrorizer,
Repulsion and Napalm Death all cite Death Strike (and Master)
as a big influence. Terrorizer in particular, owe a lot
of their style to Death Strike/Master. In my mind, Paul
Speckmann never bettered the hate-filled fury of "Fuckin'
Death", and I highly recommend you hunt that demo down
and play the fuck out of it. An essential piece of extreme
metal history for sure, and my favourite release from Speckmann.
The Beginning Of The End (The re-formation of Master and
their eventual demise)
Just one of the many people impressed by the demo was Bill
Schmidt, who made sure to get his hands on a copy. Upon
listening to it, he no doubt was blown away and realized
that Speckmann had managed to capture the sound they had
originally intended to create with Master. A few months
after the demo's release, Bill called Speckmann and begged
him to let him join Death Strike. (On a side note, Schmidt
had been offered a place in Megadeth, but when he asked
Mustaine what he was in the music for, Mustaine said "you
know, the chicks". Schmidt hung up immediately. I bet
he regrets that now !) Death Strike were now hot property
in the underground, and Mayhem (Schmidt's present group)
had a smaller following than Death Strike. (Mayhem only
ever managed to issue a few demos, which were fairly good).
Bill was anxious to join Death Strike. Speckmann knew of
Schmidt's songwriting and drumming skills already from the
early Master days, and as John Leprich was a drunk and incapable
of delivering all the time, Schmidt was accepted into Death
Strike. Another change was kicking out guitarist Kirk Miller,
who was inexperienced to say the most, and really just a
session musician for Death Strike. On July the 4th (Independence
Day in America), Bill was let into the fold. In that time,
a 15 minute Death Strike rehearsal had been released (that
had been taped by Troy Dixler of Devasation (a Chicago death
metal band)) and spread around the underground. Death Strike
were on the map ! Despite this, the threesome decided to
re-name the band Master, as they felt this stood above Death
Strike. So Death Strike was put to rest. Master were back
!
Another side-effect of Death Strike's impact was the emergence
of extreme thrash/death metal act's in Chicago (Death Strike's
home). What had previously been a haven for power metal
bands now became a promising hot-bed of thrash acts. Bands
such as Mayhem (Bill Schmidt's former group), Macabre (pioneers
in the death/grind field), Mutilation, Aftermath, Solemn,
Natas (later called Not-Us, and thanked in the re-issue
of the "Fuckin' Death" demo on Nuclear Blast Records
in 1991), Orsis or the godly Devastation (who released the
classic "Creation Of Ripping Death" demo in 1986,
a totally killer death metal band to say the least), all
made up the thrash scene. Lastly, Terminal Death, who were
good friends with Master, Devastation and Mayhem. One of
their member's Shaun Glass would go on to trade a Master
rehearsal without Speckmann's permission. Cheers Shaun !
In a few years, ego's would come in to play and wreck the
scene, but for now, Chicago was booming.
With a line-up now in place, Master continued to write new
songs. Schmidt was eager to keep Mittlebrun in the band,
having witnessed his songwriting talent, and the classic
team of Speckmann/Mittlebrun worked together to come up
with new songs. Two new ones emerged from them, namely "Unknown
Soilder" and the classic "Funeral Bitch".
Schmidt brought his three tracks that he had wrote for Master
in the early days ("Terrorizer","Pledge Of
Allegiance" and "Master") and Speckmann planned
to use the Death Strike songs for Master, as both bands
were in the same style, and some Death Strike songs were
originally written for Master. Not wanting to record a home
made demo (as many death metal bands did. Those were the
days !), and wanting to keep up with the studio recordings
of Death Strike, Master opted for a more professional approach
(they were older than many death/thrash acts after all).
After Paul's father passed away, he had left Paul an inheritance
of quite a bit of money, and Paul chose to invest this in
Master. With the money, Master decided to record an album
in a proper studio, then wait for a deal from a label interested
in producing and releasing the album. Speckmann made Schmidt
promise to sign the first decent deal they recieved. The
band headed into the more professional Seagrape Studios
in Chicago, Illinois, and began recording tracks to make
up their debut album. The tracks decided upon were "Master",
"Unknown Soldier", "Funeral Bitch",
"Terrorizer", "Pledge Of Allegiance"
and the Death Strike tunes "Mangled Dehumanization"
and "Re-Entry And Destruction". In a stroke of
genius, Master released rough mixes of the tracks to the
extreme metal scene. The tracks could be bought from the
band themself, but once they got out, they were traded around
at the speed of light. Firstly, 5 of the tracks were released,
followed by the other 2 later on. Without a doubt, these
were the recordings that made Master in the underground.
Since their name change from Death Strike, people realized
that Master were the same band, and more fans were picked
up along the way. Once again, its easy to hear why.
These 7 tracks were the unchallenged ultimate in heaviness
and power, and no other band could stand up to the collosal
force of Master. In comparison to Death Strike, the tracks
were now slower, but this only made them heavier. Speckmann
realized that, rather than the all out thrashing aggression
of Death Strike, by keeping the hatred firmly under control,
immense power and heaviness could be achieved. "Re-Entry
And Destruction" became a limb-crunching monster, with
a HUGE booming bottom end. "Mangled Dehumanization"
seethed with new vigour. Bill Schmidt's drumming was far
superior to Leprich's, and actually quite different. With
his style, Schmidt created the classic "Master-Beat",
a head pounding rhythm that gave a solid backbone to the
brutality of the riffs. There were drawbacks however. As
the recordings were carefully laid down over a period of
a few months, some of the original fury in Death Strike
was lost as a result. That demo had been recorded in one
day with the adrenalin pumping. Master had as much time
as they wanted, so the music was bound to be less furious.
It was, but it gave Master time to develop their sound to
it's full potential. One let down though (for me) was Speckmann's
vocals. In Death Strike he sounded aggressive as fuck, angry
and hate filled. In Master, some of the aggression was missing.
His vocals were also recorded differently, double-tracked
in some cases, and his voice sounded akin to Jeff Becerra's
at times, while sounding like a low-tone growl like Kam
Lee's at others. There was no problem with this, I just
preferred the punk sounding Speckmann of Death Strike. Either
way, his vocals in Master (more so than Death Strike), were
massively influential to death metal.
Production was still raw, although Speckmann's bass was
buried a bit, merging with the drums (only making the "Master-Beat"
sound heavier). Mittlebrun's guitars were buried a bit too,
and once again, I preferred them on Death Strike ! This
time round however, he had created his own tone, which was
painfully sharp, almost razor-blade like. One hell of a
tone for sure ! The ultimate highlight was Schmidt's drumming,
which dominated the recordings, going boom-boom-boom-boom,
pounding as fuck ! He also contributed vocals on his own
tracks (excluding the instrumental "Terrorizer",
for obvious reasons), and came out sounding more passionate
than Speckmann and just as brutal. His voice is maybe overlooked
in the creation of death metal.
The catchy Funeral Bitch was immediately heralded as a classic,
and the lyrics were still political too. The song "Master"
dealt with being yourself, free of any boundaries imposed
by idols, church, state etc. Some inspirational stuff there.
The delivery was once again very punk sounding, though maybe
less so than Death Strike. It was clear Master were a metal
band. Mittlebrun's guitar playing was only better, highly
original and standing out from the metal pack. Master were
now the ultimate in heaviness, and I recommend you get your
hands on these tracks and play them loud, VERY LOUD. I garuantee
your neighbours will think a bomb has exploded in your house.
You have no idea about brutality until you play Master at
maximum volume. They are brutality in it's simplest, purest
form!
The impact of those seven tracks is what made Master famous.
Majesty (who's name is a piss-take on Master) featured a
HUGE Master influence in their demos. They later changed
their name to Terrorizer (taken from the Master song, yes)
and pioneered the grindcore movement, with their music heavily
in the Master-style. Their live shows often included a cover
of "Funeral Bitch" too. Napalm Death credit Master
(and are set to cover them on their Leaders Not Followers
Pt.2 disc) as an influence. Repulsion were inspired by Master.
Righteous Pigs, as fans of Master, helped Speckmann get
a deal with Nuclear Blast Records (but that's another story).
Benediction (check out their logo. Master, anyone ?), Carcass
(Bill Steer often praised Master in his Phoenix Militia
fanzine). Even Nihilist (later Entombed) from Sweden are
influenced by Master. Listening to Death circa October '85,
one can hear a large Master influence in songwriting and
vocals (although admittedly, those songs were later dropped).
Nausea (related to Terrorizer) are other Master followers.
Master's impact was largely on the grindcore genre, even
though Master play death metal.
All this would become apparent in later years though, and
for now Master continued to crush everybody with their awesome
power. Fanzines around the globe gave the band praise and
favourable reviews, after hearing the rough mixes. Eventually,
Don Kaye (later of Kerrang and Roadracer records fame) invited
Master down to his college radio show on WBCR in New York
to promote the advance tape of the LP. Master agreed to
come, and Speckmann and Schmidt made the journey to New
York in a broken down car without windscreen wipers. Unfortunately,
they were caught in a downpour. A friend Wally Hall tagged
along as he had family in Long Island, New York. While there,
Wally and Speckmann walked around town, but Schmidt opted
to sit in the car with a baseball bat ?! Anyway, halfway
through the radio interview, Master were escorted out of
the building for using too much foul language on air ! The
college police took them off the campus. This may have seemed
a loss, but it was not. After the interview, Don Kaye set
them up with Combat Records. It appeared Master had a deal
!
One of the major factors instrumental in Master's downfall
was their meeting with Kim Fowley. Fowley was a major name
in the music scene, having produced/managed/co-wrote songs
for bands and spotted many up and coming groups. He had
worked in many genres of music, but rock had remained his
big talent. The group The Runaways (featuring Joan Jett
and Lita Ford) were completely his creation. Alice Cooper
and Kiss had songs co-written by him on their albums. As
for the more aggressive side of rock, Fowley had produced
a live record for legendary punk band, the Germs. It is
still a wonder why he ended up working with Master, a brutal
death metal band. Anyway, through Seagrape Studios Master
were introduced to Fowley. Being a big name in the rock
world, this was no doubt pure luck for a band like Master
to end up with him. Fowley became friends with Schmidt (no
doubt impressed by Schmidt's rock star-like ego), and offered
to help manage Master, despite having no experience with
extreme metal. Rather suspiciously, Schmidt's mother entered
the picture here (probably because she realized her son
was going on to big things), and started working with Fowley
and Schmidt on Master. Odd, isn't it ? An intrusive mother/wife/girlfriend
always leads to a bands downfall it seems. It was also around
this point that Schmidt persuaded Speckmann to invest in
huge amounts of equipment with the money from Speckmann's
inheritance from his father. Leather, studs, a Simmons electronic
drum set, mikes, mikestands, headphones and a Tascam recorder
were bought with the promise from Schmidt that they could
jam in his mother's basement. It seemed Master were becoming
a professional band !
Around this time, Speckmann was also becoming aware of Master's
popularity across the world. The band were receiving letters
from all around the globe, each one filled with praise for
Master. It became clear to Speckmann, Schmidt and Mittlebrun
that they were part of the uprising death/black metal movement,
and key figures like Chuck Schuldiner wrote to him reguarly.
Acts like Kreator (Speckmann has said how old Kreator (the
best Kreator) is one of his fave bands), Morbid Angel and
Death were breaking boundaries with their extremity, and
it must have been pleasing to know Master were part of this.
On the streets of Chicago, people would come up to Speckmann
yelling "MASTER !". All this without having released
an album and played live. Thirdly, the band hardly did interviews
and no pictures were seen of them. The band were a bit mysterious
in ways. Unlike acts such as Death and Repulsion, who reguarly
released rehearsal tapes, Master never did. The only Master
rehearsal (like Death Strike's one) had been recorded by
Troy Dixler of Devastation when they were hanging with Master,
then traded around the underground. It's of note that the
tunes "Rabid Anger" and "Live For Free"
were on these tapes, tunes never heard in their studio versions.
The prestigious deal from Combat finally arrived on December
the 31st 1985. Master were on a high. The contract offered
Master a five album deal (incidentally, this was the same
contract Death signed the following year). However, when
Fowley read it, he saw that little money was offered to
the band for five albums, and he strove to change it. The
thing he didn't realize was this was an INDEPENDENT label,
and Master were an extreme metal band. They weren't about
to get a major label deal. Although they had a deal, one
problem that would have to be sorted was Chris Mittlebrun.
He had become too caught up with girls, dope and partying,
and seeing as Schmidt and Speckmann were doing most of the
work for Master, he was let go. By now it was 1986, and
a new death/thrash metal group were forming in Chicago.
The group featured Troy Dixler (ex-Devastation), Shaun Glass
(ex-Terminal Death) and Tony Ochoa (ex-Solemn). Mittlebrun
was invited to join them, and he did. As a result, the new
band, known as Sindrome, became a "super-group",
because all their members were already big names in the
underground. The band would go on to big things, issuing
two AMAZING demos, but never getting a major label deal.
(Ironically, Mittlebrun was kicked out of the group in '88,
as he was into partying etc.). With Mittlebrun gone, the
search was on for another guitarist for Master. It would
not be too hard to find a guitarist this time, as Chicago
had a booming thrash scene, not to mention thrash being
much more popular across the globe in '86, than it was in
the early days of 83/84. Finally, gutarist Alex Olvera of
the thrash band Assault was selected. Master said in an
interview that they knew Alex was the right guitarist for
Master for a while, but just kept it low. When the time
came, he would join.
(Personally, I think Mittlebrun rules his ass, and I think
Master knew that too.)
The new line-up were ready to record, but the deal still
hung in the air. Combat offered them a deal for an EP, which
would feature two of Speckmann's songs, and two of Schmidt's.
Due to good planning, Speckmann also owned the many songs
he'd penned with Mittlebrun, so they could be used later.
The idea was to shelve the recordings originally intended
for the LP/EP (the recordings now floating around the underground),
and record tracks for Combat specially, as they were going
to give them money to record. Then, the EP would be released
to build up a following (outside of the underground). Based
on how much it sold in each city, Master would know where
to tour. A tour of Europe was also in the works too. In
the meantime, Master planned to do one show in Chicago,
in which they knew EVERYONE would be there. The band hardly
ever practiced, but when they did, their live show was shaped
up. Master were now bigger than ever, young and hungry for
success.
The success though, would never come. Fowley, convinced
Master were being ripped off, added changes to the deal,
along with Schmidt and his mother. Schmidt, being an only
child with a big ego, believed Master could do better. When
the deal was presented to Combat, they laughed and tore
it up. Master had lost their deal. This didn't seem a problem
at the time though, as plenty of other record labels were
around. Master had created their own death though, as time
would prove. They were young, and had made a vital mistake.
Even if they were to look for another deal, the relationship
between Speckmann and Schmidt was worsening each day. Speckmann,
obviously bitter at Schmidt causing Master to lose their
deal, had also noticed that Schmidt was overly reliant on
him. When Speckmann's inheritance ran out, so did Schmidt.
Speckmann had been giving money to Schmidt's mother to keep
Schmidt residing at her house. Without a home, Schmidt wouldn't
be able to operate properly, and Master would be killed
! Secondly, Schmidt had mood swings that were that of a
manic depressant, and Paul had to keep a lot of pot on hand
for him. It all came to a head when Schmidt traded one of
Speckmann's power amps to the bassist of Iron Cross (another
Chicago act) for a quarter of pot. Speckmann, obviously
enraged at these problems, coupled with Schmidt having lost
the deal, decided to break Master up. (Another little known
factor was that people had sent money for the advance LP
to Schmidt, but never got it as Schmidt kept the cash. As
a result, Master lost some of it's credibility in the underground.)
In the fall of '86, Master came to an end. Looking back,
it was a mistake to get involved with Kim Fowley, but even
if they had not, Schmidt would still have caused trouble
later on, and Master would have ended there and then. The
large amount of money invested in equipment for Master was
lost. Despite this, Speckmann still says he believes Schmidt
is a genius when it comes to music, even if his ego gets
in the way.
One last mystery, and after-thoughts on Master's existence.
Master's break-up was not reported in the underground for
quite some time, as Master were never one to keep in contact
with fanzines. After a while though, fanzines accepted that
Master had broke up, even though no confirmation of this
ever reached the underground. In October of '86, a live
tape emerged, dating from Ocotber the 11th and at a place
called "The Warehouse" in Chicago. The line-up
was Speckmann/Schmidt/Mittlebrun, and it appeared the band
had reformed. Their set was a short one lasting only 35
minutes, and I still am yet to hear this tape so I can't
offer anymore info on it. The gig was supported by death
metal legends Devastation, with the place being (as predicted)
packed, with all the cool metal fans from Chicago attending.
To this date, this remains the only gig the original line-up
have ever played, so it's fairly legendary. A flyer with
a live picture on it had been spread around (only 100 copies),
and that picture is now a rather infamous one, featuring
Speckmann and Mittlebrun thrashing around on stage, with
Schmidt barely visible behind his drum kit. The Master mystery
would continue for the duration of the year, but by early
'87, it was once again clear Master were dead. Why the band
reformed to play the gig is still unsolved (anyone know
?), but what I suspect happened is Speckmann just wanted
this to be the swansong from Master, and what better way
to go out than playing a gig with the classic line-up ?
Master were gone for sure in 1987, and that marks the end
of the classic days of Master.
In retrospect, Master's influence is certainly overlooked.
They would eventually get their chance to record a debut
album, but it arrived in 1990, way too late to make any
impact on the death metal scene, as fans were engrossed
in Obituary, Athiest, Morbid Angel and Death. Throughout
the 1990's, Master stayed together, going through many line-up
changes and have managed to issue 5 albums to this date
(2004). If Master had managed to release their debut in
1986, they would no doubt be held in high regard. But history
is done, and Master's early recordings live on in the underground,
and perhaps it's better that way. Like ALL of their fellow
death metal acts in the first wave, the material Death Strike/Master
recorded in their early days remains their best. I strongly
recommend you hunt any recordings from 1984-1986 down, and
grab them without hesitation.
To sum up Master's impact, they helped invent grindcore
and death metal, and for many death metal bands (REAL death
metal bands, not the Cannibal Corpse clones), listing Master
as an influence is almost second nature. X-Ecutioner/Obituary
never hid their Master influence, and bands like NunSlaughter,
Exhumed and Pentacle all list Death Strike/Master as inspirational
to their noise. Majesty/Terrorizer/Nausea, Napalm Death,
Righteous Pigs, Repulsion, Benediction, Entombed and Obituary
all owe their bit to Master. Even if your not a fan of those
bands, if your a punk or whatever, have a listen to Master,
and I'm sure you'll like them. For fans of heavy, face-ripping
music, Master are mandatory.
DISASTER
WITH KRABATHOR
(from
Paul Speckmann)
Adventures
with Krabathor:
On July 11th I woke up about 7:30 am and proceeded to take
a quick shower and wash my hair. I waited as usual for the
other band members to arrive. We left the wonderful city
of Uherske Hradiste at about 11.00 a.m.. Our Soundman, Patrik,
and our drummer Skull, picked me up in a 1990 Peugeot. I
commented on how this car's interior and exterior, were
quite fabulous for its age. We picked up Christopher, and
we were on our way to Hungary, to play an outdoor festival.
I read The Witching Hour, by author Anne Rice, continuously.
I must say this book had me entranced. I think she could
have shortened the story, by about 500 pages, and improved
on the ending. The ending proved to be quite ridiculous,
from my point of view. Nevertheless, I will get on with
my story. After about 3 hours, we were in Hungary. Patrik,
and Christopher, decided they wished to go swimming. We
pulled off the highway and proceeded to a lake. Some gypsy
tried to extort money from us for parking, and we just left.
We arrived at the festival at about 6:30 p.m. I proceeded
to drink a beer with my Austrian friend, from Disastrous
Murmur. Within the hour, Disastrous Murmur, played to a
small reception. They were great in my eyes anyway. Many
of the groups at this festival wereplaying Deathmetal with
keyboards. I hated it. We went on around 10:30 p.m. The
crowd response wasn't so good, which happens from to time.
Every show is not a Command Performance. We had a few beers
and headedhome. I fell asleep just after listening to Epic
from Faith No More. I commented on the great piano piece
at the end, when the fish dies on the video. Many animal
rights activists had a problem with these scenes. I am very
much a fisherman, so I found this part interesting, and
quite clever on their part. The car stopped abruptly and
Patrik jumped out. I woke up Skull, and Christopher pulled
him out. I grabbed Christophers guitar, and threw it down
the street. He asked me what I was doing. Skull cleared
the jackets, bags, and my guitar out of the back-seat. Patrik
flagged down a few cars. They poured water on the hood,
and underneath the car. Within ten minutes, the car was
completely engulfed in flames. Patrik had previosly filled
the gas tank, sothere was quite an explosion. We managed
to save most of the equipment, except for Skulls expensive
hardware. I think we were just lucky to be alive. Unfortunately,
Skull, Patrik, and I lost our passports in the enormous
blaze. The fire department arrived about thirty minutes
too late. The police eventually arrived as well. The greatest
part was no-one could speak English or Czech. Communication,
was next to impossible. After the tow-truck removed the
car with considerable effort, we loaded half the equipment
into a police van. Patrik rode with the rest, in a fire
truck. I rode in the back of a patrol car, with two armed
policemen in the front. I had a very uneasy feeling, but
everything turned out ok. The officer in charge, bought,
coffee for everyone, which was quite cool under the circumstances.
We sat from 5:00 a.m., until about 10:00am, till they found
an interpreter. They called me first and asked various questions.
How long do you plan to stay here? Why are you here? etc.
One by one, they questioned us. We finally left for immigration
at 2:00 pm or so. Immigration stayed open longer especially
for us. By the time we got to Budapest, the American Embassy
was closing, and basically told me to go to hell. We will
see you Monday morning. We went to the Czech Embassy, and
they gave us the same answer. The Slovak Embassy was waiting
forPatrik. They also arranged for The Czech Embassy to come
in special for Skull, on Saturday morning. For being from
the supposed Greatest-Country-Of-The-World, I sure was treated
like shit. After six hours of bullshit, and the questioning
from some Embassy officials, I finally received a duplicate
passport. It was so interesting, how these people treated
me like a criminal, and theother embassies, were quite sympathetic
to the others. So much for being an American. What do we
learn from this? Keep your passport on your person at all
times, even if you have to wake up, at every Eastern country's
border. Also just because your an American, doesn't make
you a better person.
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