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Storm Bugs - Supplementary Benefit album flac

Storm Bugs - Supplementary Benefit album flac Performer: Storm Bugs
Title: Supplementary Benefit
Style: Experimental
Released: 2007
MP3 album: 1982 mb
FLAC album: 1545 mb
Rating: 4.4
Other formats: AA TTA WAV VOC DMF WAV APE
Genre: Electronic

London, UK. Between 1978-81 Storm Bugs released two 7-inch records and a number of tapes. In 2002 the band were resuscitated with new recordings being issued including The Bugs Are Back EP and Certified Original & Vintage Fakes. In 2018 the band became known as The Storm Bugs.

Storm Bugs was formed by Philip Sanderson and Steven Ball in 1978 and have been described as "the spiritual forefathers to Oval. 26 October 2017 ·. Ashes & Diamonds followed by Terrain - 1980 Sanderson/Jackman.

Storm Bugs are a post punk band formed in 1978 in Deptford, London, by Philip Sanderson and Steven Ball who had met in the Medway Towns, England.

Storm Bugs ‎– Supplementary Benefit. A1 to A5 from "Table Matters" EP 1980 A6, A7 from "Metamorphose" single 1981 A8 supplementary. B1 from "A Safe Substitute" and "Snatch Tapes 1" cassettes 1980/1979 B2 supplementary. B3 from "Let's Go Outside And Get It Over" and "Gift" 1979/1981 B4 from "Let's Go Outside And Get It Over" 1979 B5 from "Dark Cuttings" cassette 1978 B6 from "A Safe Substitute" and "Gift" cassettes 1980/1981.

Supplementary Benefit. Release group by Storm Bugs. Supplementary Benefit. Type: Album + Compilation.

Storm Bugs - Supplementary Benefit (2007) Love this album. The tone and texture of the sound is perfectly DIY. This is a compilation of recordings from 1979-1982 that were originally released on cassette tape only and first here pressed on vinyl in 2007. Numbered out of 600. .87 0. 2 months ago. Record Of The Day: (The) Mudguards - On Guard LP.

Excellent album by Storm Bugs, the team of English ise cassette geniuses Philip Sanderson and Steven Ball, in the form of Certified Original and Vintage Fakes (SNATCH TAPES TCH 218), which contains 17 all-new substantial songs and tune. hey did it over six months in 2016, where they would collaborate on making a new download single every month . I don’t think we’ve really heard from Storm Bugs since the 2007 Supplementary Benefit record, itself a compilation of their shiniest moments from the late 1970s and early 1980s. On the other hand, some of their solo records have reached these shores in recent years – Philip’s Seal Pool Sounds, for instance, or the remarkable Hollow Gravity LP; and Steven’s conceptual-song work has been well represented, of which his Life Of Barrymore is probably the most successful example. Up The Middle Down The Sides.

Supplementary benefit will ensure an income equivalent to the basic state pension. Full benefit is equivalent to: For single beneficiaries: Basic state pension, high rate. You may be eligible for supplementary benefit if you are not eligible for benefits from other countries that are at least equivalent to the supplementary benefit. The benefit cannot replace other benefits. Notify of any changes.

Tracklist

A1 Cash Wash 1:41
A2 Eat Good Beans 1:59
A3 Make Customers Matter 2:09
A4 Window Shopping 2:06
A5 Our Main Objective 4:44
A6 Car Situations 3:20
A7 Tin 2:54
A8 Aboulia 19 1:09
B1 Hodge 6:41
B2 Slip Slap 1:36
B3 Hiemal (And She Blew) 4:51
B4 He Rose Up Again 3:08
B5 Slow Along The Wire 1:24
B6 Blackheath Episode 4:44

Companies, etc.

  • Manufactured By – Eldorado Media
  • Lacquer Cut At – SST Brüggemann GmbH
  • Pressed By – Schallplattenfabrik Pallas GmbH – 15687

Credits

  • Electronics [Scratchy Records], Performer [Sythi-bug] – PS* (tracks: B4)
  • Electronics [Sw Radio] – PS* (tracks: B1)
  • Electronics [Vcs3] – PS* (tracks: B1 to B6), SB* (tracks: B2)
  • Guitar – PS* (tracks: B6), SB* (tracks: B3)
  • Lacquer Cut By – K*
  • Percussion [Fast Forward] – PS* (tracks: A8)
  • Performer [Radio] – SB* (tracks: A1 to A5)
  • Performer [Storm Bugs Is] – Philip Sanderson, Steven Ball
  • Performer [Sythi-bug, Flumper], Guitar, Vocals, Electronics [Scratchy Records], Loops [Tape Loops], Xylophone – PS* (tracks: A1 to A5)
  • Recorded By, Compiled By, Remastered By – Storm Bugs
  • Vocals, Guitar, Bass – SB* (tracks: A6, A7)
  • Vocals, Loops [Tape Loops] – PS* (tracks: A6, A7)

Notes

Recorded by Storm Bugs in London and Kent.

Limited hand-numbered edition of 600 copies.

A1 to A5 from "Table Matters" EP 1980
A6, A7 from "Metamorphose" single 1981
A8 supplementary.
B1 from "A Safe Substitute" and "Snatch Tapes 1" cassettes 1980/1979
B2 supplementary.
B3 from "Let's Go Outside And Get It Over" and "Gift" 1979/1981
B4 from "Let's Go Outside And Get It Over" 1979
B5 from "Dark Cuttings" cassette 1978
B6 from "A Safe Substitute" and "Gift" cassettes 1980/1981

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Matrix / Runout (Side A - etched): VOD 44 A K SST ELDORADO
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B - etched): VOD 44 B K SST ELDORADO
  • Matrix / Runout (Side A+B - stamped): -15687-


Comments: (1)
Wenaiand
From: the Sound Projector 16th Issue by Ed PinsentAn extremely satisfying and coherent spin, this excellent LP compiles some of the finest Storm Bugs work released on vinyl and cassette during 1978- 1981. Some of the cuts have appeared on that previous CD compilation Let's Go Outside and Get it Over, but this LP scoops the prize for being more comprehensive and complete, and laying out the songs in a meaningful order. It also follows a schema of sorts – side B contains all electronic music, side A represents the 'clunky bedroom' side of the duo, Philip Sanderson and Steven Ball. The 'Table Matters' EP was released on vinyl by Loop Records in 1980; it's five tracks of edgy, clattering mayhem, made with a combination of electronics, radios, guitars, tape loops, percussion and much more. Effectively a Sanderson solo set, this EP displays wild and rugged invention compressed into short bursts of electrifying genius; four of the cuts are only two minutes apiece. Using found spoken word tapes and warped voicings, Storm Bugs deliver something that is not so much a critique of consumerism, as a semi-nightmarish distorted view of shopping in England in 1980, replete with Kwik-Save signs, shoddy goods, and futile attempts to keep customers happy. ‘Table Matters’ is almost their Santa Dog; it's a perfect cryptic statement, almost inexhaustible in content, transpires in less than 15 minutes and leaves you feeling troubled for days. Great! We also got both sides of the 'Car Situations' single, of which the flipside 'Tin' is something Sanderson refers to as pseudo-rockabilly using a percussion loop arrived at by very devious means. Yet 'Tin' is as catchy a pop tune as they ever recorded, with some delightful guitar riffing from Ball. Side 2 of the LP features six examples of their work with the VCS3 synth, the Sythi-Bug, and short-wave radio; these are rescued from cassettes released on Sanderson's Snatch Tapes label, including Dark Cuttings, Gift, Storm Bugs and A Safe Substitute. Generally longer than the 'poppy' material on the first side, these extremely strange instrumentals give the impression of something infinite and endless, cautious explorations made across foggy and unknown territories. Both 'Hodge' and 'Blackheath Episode' are exceptionally strong experiments in electronic music, but by the time you're stranded in the middle of 'He Rose Up Again', you will be feeling almost dizzy with the doubt, fear and sheer bewilderment that seems to be embedded in every minute of this music. Ball's abstract scrapy guitar work on 'Hiemal (And She Blew)' is most notable, and it's a shame there aren't more examples of that metallic guitar noise combined so effectively with the VCS3 work; it's one of those rare moments when the separate contributions of the Bugs are fused together perfectly. Sanderson's edgier guitar work is demonstrated on 'Slow Along the Wire', a 90-second miniature of trembling angst. File this alongside the estimable Snatch Paste compilation LP and we have an emerging picture of the Storm Bugs / Snatch Tapes aesthetic. There may not be much of this material available, but Sanderson and Ball are to be commended for the very inventive ways in which they explored their ideas, and they have rendered unique visions of the psychic underside of England, visions as palpable as the monochromatic photograph (by Ball) on the back cover which celebrates the horrors of suburbia with an enquiring eye.