Diagonal mascot Russell Haswell returns to the burgeoning label with his most accessible - and vitally danceable - tech-n0!se attack after exercising the daemons in 2014's critically acclaimed '37 Minute Workout' LP. Practically bursting at the seams with destructive energy, 'As Sure As Night Follows Day' can be viewed as a flashback to 30 years of aktion at the coal face of extreme/ electronic music. Recollections of Napalm Death and grindcore shows in the Black Country bleed into strobing reflections on megaraves at Coventry's Eclipse, whilst the traumas of besuited early '90s J-Noise scrap for space in the memory banks with irrevocable experience of witnessing Hood & Mills in their Hardwax heyday. Displaying his improvised instincts at their sharpest, it's hard to ignore the fact that this is Haswell's most incandescent, urgent work to date, thrashing from the concatenated blast beats of 'Let's Go' to the self-explanatory 'n0!se RAVE' via a stack of brain-thumping techno brutes gagging for the DJs and dancers, including the bucked bang ov 'Hardwax Flashback' and invasive psychoacoustic thizz ov 'Gas Attack', along with the crack'd BMB styles in 'Extended Industry Knowledge (for Oscar)' and a brace of more deviant material such as the electro-acoustic ballistics of 'In The Air Today' or the grey matter-melting acid froth of 'Interlude' - all primed for quick-handed and chaotic DJ sets. As Haswell's modular virus mutates, the contagion is more lethal, wickedly unmanageable with each new release, seemingly inoculating us in advance of the next dose. Don't proceed unprepared, take Haswell's medicine without delay.
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Diagonal mascot Russell Haswell returns to the burgeoning label with his most accessible - and vitally danceable - tech-n0!se attack after exercising the daemons in 2014's critically acclaimed '37 Minute Workout' LP. Practically bursting at the seams with destructive energy, 'As Sure As Night Follows Day' can be viewed as a flashback to 30 years of aktion at the coal face of extreme/ electronic music. Recollections of Napalm Death and grindcore shows in the Black Country bleed into strobing reflections on megaraves at Coventry's Eclipse, whilst the traumas of besuited early '90s J-Noise scrap for space in the memory banks with irrevocable experience of witnessing Hood & Mills in their Hardwax heyday. Displaying his improvised instincts at their sharpest, it's hard to ignore the fact that this is Haswell's most incandescent, urgent work to date, thrashing from the concatenated blast beats of 'Let's Go' to the self-explanatory 'n0!se RAVE' via a stack of brain-thumping techno brutes gagging for the DJs and dancers, including the bucked bang ov 'Hardwax Flashback' and invasive psychoacoustic thizz ov 'Gas Attack', along with the crack'd BMB styles in 'Extended Industry Knowledge (for Oscar)' and a brace of more deviant material such as the electro-acoustic ballistics of 'In The Air Today' or the grey matter-melting acid froth of 'Interlude' - all primed for quick-handed and chaotic DJ sets. As Haswell's modular virus mutates, the contagion is more lethal, wickedly unmanageable with each new release, seemingly inoculating us in advance of the next dose. Don't proceed unprepared, take Haswell's medicine without delay.
Diagonal mascot Russell Haswell returns to the burgeoning label with his most accessible - and vitally danceable - tech-n0!se attack after exercising the daemons in 2014's critically acclaimed '37 Minute Workout' LP. Practically bursting at the seams with destructive energy, 'As Sure As Night Follows Day' can be viewed as a flashback to 30 years of aktion at the coal face of extreme/ electronic music. Recollections of Napalm Death and grindcore shows in the Black Country bleed into strobing reflections on megaraves at Coventry's Eclipse, whilst the traumas of besuited early '90s J-Noise scrap for space in the memory banks with irrevocable experience of witnessing Hood & Mills in their Hardwax heyday. Displaying his improvised instincts at their sharpest, it's hard to ignore the fact that this is Haswell's most incandescent, urgent work to date, thrashing from the concatenated blast beats of 'Let's Go' to the self-explanatory 'n0!se RAVE' via a stack of brain-thumping techno brutes gagging for the DJs and dancers, including the bucked bang ov 'Hardwax Flashback' and invasive psychoacoustic thizz ov 'Gas Attack', along with the crack'd BMB styles in 'Extended Industry Knowledge (for Oscar)' and a brace of more deviant material such as the electro-acoustic ballistics of 'In The Air Today' or the grey matter-melting acid froth of 'Interlude' - all primed for quick-handed and chaotic DJ sets. As Haswell's modular virus mutates, the contagion is more lethal, wickedly unmanageable with each new release, seemingly inoculating us in advance of the next dose. Don't proceed unprepared, take Haswell's medicine without delay.
Diagonal mascot Russell Haswell returns to the burgeoning label with his most accessible - and vitally danceable - tech-n0!se attack after exercising the daemons in 2014's critically acclaimed '37 Minute Workout' LP. Practically bursting at the seams with destructive energy, 'As Sure As Night Follows Day' can be viewed as a flashback to 30 years of aktion at the coal face of extreme/ electronic music. Recollections of Napalm Death and grindcore shows in the Black Country bleed into strobing reflections on megaraves at Coventry's Eclipse, whilst the traumas of besuited early '90s J-Noise scrap for space in the memory banks with irrevocable experience of witnessing Hood & Mills in their Hardwax heyday. Displaying his improvised instincts at their sharpest, it's hard to ignore the fact that this is Haswell's most incandescent, urgent work to date, thrashing from the concatenated blast beats of 'Let's Go' to the self-explanatory 'n0!se RAVE' via a stack of brain-thumping techno brutes gagging for the DJs and dancers, including the bucked bang ov 'Hardwax Flashback' and invasive psychoacoustic thizz ov 'Gas Attack', along with the crack'd BMB styles in 'Extended Industry Knowledge (for Oscar)' and a brace of more deviant material such as the electro-acoustic ballistics of 'In The Air Today' or the grey matter-melting acid froth of 'Interlude' - all primed for quick-handed and chaotic DJ sets. As Haswell's modular virus mutates, the contagion is more lethal, wickedly unmanageable with each new release, seemingly inoculating us in advance of the next dose. Don't proceed unprepared, take Haswell's medicine without delay.
In Stock (Ready To Ship)
2 x white vinyl housed in soft-touch laminate sleeve - Back in Stock. Colour sold out, Remaining copies on Black Vinyl.
Diagonal mascot Russell Haswell returns to the burgeoning label with his most accessible - and vitally danceable - tech-n0!se attack after exercising the daemons in 2014's critically acclaimed '37 Minute Workout' LP. Practically bursting at the seams with destructive energy, 'As Sure As Night Follows Day' can be viewed as a flashback to 30 years of aktion at the coal face of extreme/ electronic music. Recollections of Napalm Death and grindcore shows in the Black Country bleed into strobing reflections on megaraves at Coventry's Eclipse, whilst the traumas of besuited early '90s J-Noise scrap for space in the memory banks with irrevocable experience of witnessing Hood & Mills in their Hardwax heyday. Displaying his improvised instincts at their sharpest, it's hard to ignore the fact that this is Haswell's most incandescent, urgent work to date, thrashing from the concatenated blast beats of 'Let's Go' to the self-explanatory 'n0!se RAVE' via a stack of brain-thumping techno brutes gagging for the DJs and dancers, including the bucked bang ov 'Hardwax Flashback' and invasive psychoacoustic thizz ov 'Gas Attack', along with the crack'd BMB styles in 'Extended Industry Knowledge (for Oscar)' and a brace of more deviant material such as the electro-acoustic ballistics of 'In The Air Today' or the grey matter-melting acid froth of 'Interlude' - all primed for quick-handed and chaotic DJ sets. As Haswell's modular virus mutates, the contagion is more lethal, wickedly unmanageable with each new release, seemingly inoculating us in advance of the next dose. Don't proceed unprepared, take Haswell's medicine without delay.
In Stock (Ready To Ship)
Diagonal mascot Russell Haswell returns to the burgeoning label with his most accessible - and vitally danceable - tech-n0!se attack after exercising the daemons in 2014's critically acclaimed '37 Minute Workout' LP. Practically bursting at the seams with destructive energy, 'As Sure As Night Follows Day' can be viewed as a flashback to 30 years of aktion at the coal face of extreme/ electronic music. Recollections of Napalm Death and grindcore shows in the Black Country bleed into strobing reflections on megaraves at Coventry's Eclipse, whilst the traumas of besuited early '90s J-Noise scrap for space in the memory banks with irrevocable experience of witnessing Hood & Mills in their Hardwax heyday. Displaying his improvised instincts at their sharpest, it's hard to ignore the fact that this is Haswell's most incandescent, urgent work to date, thrashing from the concatenated blast beats of 'Let's Go' to the self-explanatory 'n0!se RAVE' via a stack of brain-thumping techno brutes gagging for the DJs and dancers, including the bucked bang ov 'Hardwax Flashback' and invasive psychoacoustic thizz ov 'Gas Attack', along with the crack'd BMB styles in 'Extended Industry Knowledge (for Oscar)' and a brace of more deviant material such as the electro-acoustic ballistics of 'In The Air Today' or the grey matter-melting acid froth of 'Interlude' - all primed for quick-handed and chaotic DJ sets. As Haswell's modular virus mutates, the contagion is more lethal, wickedly unmanageable with each new release, seemingly inoculating us in advance of the next dose. Don't proceed unprepared, take Haswell's medicine without delay.