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KHMER ROUGE NEW YORK - LONDON 1981-86 |
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Download release 2020: |
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Musicians |
Phil Shoenfelt | vocals, electric guitar, acoustic guitar, bass | |||
Barry "Scratchy" Myers |
bass, lead and backing vocals |
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Marcia Schofield |
keyboards, lead and backing vocals |
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Mick Meadows | drums | |||
Paul DiMartino | drums | |||
Claus Castenskiold | drums | |||
Paul Garisto | drums |
Availabilty |
CD sold out |
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Download: |
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Studio record |
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Live record |
Credits |
CD 1 - Studio recordings Track 1, 2 recorded and mixed at J&J Studio, New York City 1983 Track 3 recorded at Upstairs/Downstairs Studio, Brooklyn NY 1984 Track 4 DJ: Meg Griffin, 1982 Track 5 recorded and mixed at 39th Street Studio New York City 1982 Track 6, 7 recorded and mixed at The Apartment Studio, New York City 1982 Track 8 recorded and mixed at Weemeenit Studio, Barnet, London 1985 Track 9-12 recorded and mixed at Terminal Studios, London 1986, produced by John Leckie Track 13 phone message from Nat Finkelstein, 1983 CD 2 - Live recordings Tracks 1-9 recorded at CBGB's, New York City, April 1983 Track 10 recorded at CBGB's, New York City, September 1983 Track 11 recorded at The Ritz, New York City, November 1982 Track 12 recorded at CBGB's, New York City, March 1984 All songs written by Phil Shoenfelt except: "Sharpshooter" (B. Myers) "Parasites" (Music: B. Myers / Lyrics: P. Shoenfelt) "Shoot" (Music: B. Myers / Lyrics: P. Shoenfelt) "City Primeval" (Music: P. Shoenfelt / Lyrics: M. Schofield and P. Shoenfelt) All tracks mastered for CD by Scratchy at La Rocka Studios, Hornsey, London, February 2003 Front sleeve design: Scratchy / Layout and graphics: Volker Regner CD booklet design and layout: Jon Price @ Kadu Ink |
Press Release |
...not available... |
Video clip |
Khmer Rouge "New Assassins", video by Nat Finkelstein |
Reviews |
Gullbuy New Sound Review by James, August 2005 |
At the risk of backlash and
attacks on my musical knowledge, I admit that this band is relatively unknown to me. I
have heard the name of the band. Who could miss a band that had the audacity to name
itself after the Pol Pot's Cambodian Communist regime that was responsible for killing 1.7
million people. That must be a bold statement as to how this group must slay the
competition or perhaps this isn't rock 'n' roll? Maybe it is genocide. Is it just a play
on the rouge make-up employed by the female lead singer, Marcia Schofield, or the New Wave
era in which they emerged? The band slogan, "Liberation Through Militant
Rhythms" seems to lose the ironic edge of the times and make you cringe in the world
of post 9/11.
The fact that this two-disc collection of the band's work is the first
release of Mark E. Smith's (The Fall) Hip Priest record label bodes well for the
importance and interest of Khmer Rouge. Liner notes are written in a engaging personal
style. It is storytelling and reminiscing by the two members of KR who were the heart and
soul of the band, bass player Barry "Scratchy" Myers (WHBI-FM DJ and past member
of Rank and File) and Phil Shoenfelt (who conceived the band and played lead guitar and
vocalist). From reading their fond recollections it is a typical history with a different
spin. The rock cliche of a revolving cast of drummers, a wife joining the group (keyboard
player Marcia Schofield-left the band to play for The Fall) and the CBGB, NYC punk, noise,
"junk" scene. What makes their story unique is that there was no infighting. The
drugs destroyed the band but not in a seething hatred, just a drift in a fog that luckily
did not kill them. These two band mates have good memories of each other and a band that
had a dedication to working at making interesting music inspired by their punk/reggae
roots and post-punk leanings. No where near a commercial success, despite once opening for
The Clash and recording with John Leckie (The Fall producer), interest from CBS Records,
opening for big name acts, limited notoriety was there claim to fame and memories of
"crisp and powerful" performances and a place in rock history (circa NYC
1978-84). The songs are gingerly re-mastered by "Scratchy" Myers from his brittle old master tapes. Surviving through the mire to present day they are now secure in the digital age archives. Phil Shoenfelt observes that there is "energy and freshness" that rivals "any non-drug taking, straight edge punk band" despite their being strung out. Listening back on the tapes Shoenfelt says that the "political content of the lyrics is not so common for a bunch of whacked out junkies". The affection for what these two gentlemen have done to make this CD a reality makes one realize that whatever the resurrection of these tapes brings to a new audience this is a labor of love and reflection. The main players are still proud of what they created while not proud of what they did. "Scratchy" and Phil's affection for these recordings draws you in to listen. The first song, New Assassins seems familiar. Probably because I hear so many influences at work. After a brief grinding guitar Zoundz-like guitar intro the bass and drum are solid and similar to Life in the Glad House by Modern English, I hear the Philadelphia band Bunnydrums, and Joy Division. New wave-ish keyboards and out of place vocals hold the musical work back. A slight dated feeling adds nostalgia to an, undeniably, well arranged song with great rhythm and guitar work. Second from KR is Labyrinth. A tight reggae tinged, funky bright, jumpy track that is similar to the preceding, Assassins. They both are tight and have great musical moments but the vocals are not an emotional link to the lyrics and sound. Shoot comes in amazingly. Within 10 seconds my head spins when I hear and imagine all influences I am hearing and who this song may have, in turn, influenced. Gang of Four guitar work that mixes in to sharp edged, bright guitar sounds of early Simple Minds-Reel to Reel Cacophony. The funkiness and vocal arrangement is A Certain Ratio but there is too much reverb and echo to be just like them. I hear the vocal sounds and odd arrangements of Mark Stewart. This song is so good I can overlook the vocals that are not 100% "on". The musicianship is brilliant. Fantastic, stinging, funked up guitar with a rock solid rhythm and dead on arrangements. "Scratchy" and Phil were right. The music is truly fresh sounding and experimental at age 22. Between the next tracks you get the WNEW-FM Radio Announcement that is a great flash back to the band's beginnings. You can picture these guys making a cassette recording while hearing their band played on a late night, new artist program. The cassette recording trails off as the DJ finishes her "talk-over" the song, Hinterland. After the cassette fades out, enter the restored master tape. This is another fantastic bass and drum intro into guitar post-punk that funks itself into place. This is familiar sounding but with a unique effect to the sound that makes it edgy but dreamy. The vocals and the arrangement take wrong turn causing the song to die on the vine and contradict a dead-on intro. A sped-up Joy Division guitar and bass blend intros the next song, Africa. Again, blazing guitar soloing with great personalization through effects. Really great sound work that fizzles as it nears the end and the vocals just aren't cutting it. Joy Division is apparent another track, City Renewal. The muddy mix and echo effects helps the vocals sound more fitting than any other previous heard attempt but the song is so close to Joy Division it is a tribute. To remedy the vocal problem, which surely is becoming apparent to the band the song starts with Marcia Schofield on vocals and going into Phil's vocals. Marcia backs him up and it really helps. City Primeval is a decent track that seems to want to have commercial success. The Strangler's punk-pop guitar and whirling tremolo organ mixes well in, Age of Iron. Dual vocals are throughout with a third vocal added for more depth. The production and vocals work together but the song seems to have lost the nasty edge. This is an intricate song that is bigger but missing the funk, punk, reggae influence. I like this newer sound as a cohesive piece but the soul is different than prior material. It seems more approachable. There was something sneering and pissy about The Strangler's organ sound Khmer Rouge's is more upbeat and happy. Attempts at sampling are being infused into the sound now. Sharpshooter's start has the movie Frankenstein on the TV with guitar feedback for a bed and samples throughout. The vocals are more treated and effected and less present than ever before. The guitar is pure fuzz. There are smatterings a funky little guitar like prior post-punk sounds. This is basically an instrumental and the new, bigger sound is melding really well on this arrangement. When it gets to a longer vocal arrangement the music gets back to a hint of reggae influences as great guitar plays off the always solid drum and bass. What I also realize is that the keyboards are gone and - I like it. The sampling that was once so cutting edge dates the track but doesn't make it chintzy or campy. This is a well done. I referenced Modern English earlier and KR's Ghosts of Love is very similar to I'll Stop The World. Modern English were really good in their musical infancy and moved to that pop classic as there signature sound, like it or not. Perhaps this is the attempt of Khmer Rouge to be a commercial success. It is a well made song and the vocals were never more suitable. It is my least favorite song on the CD of studio material. The live bonus CD is 12 tracks. Half of the 12 songs don't appear on CD 1. The live tracks are well recorded for such old recordings and primitive recording equipment. The music is solid and Tunnel Vision started off great but the vocals stand out too much on the live cuts. The music is well performed but the production moves the vocals up front and the music is muddled in the back. It is not detracting. When you hear the music you realize what was said in the liner notes. These guys are pretty tight for a "bunch of junkies". Shoenfelt is an amazing guitarist but not a great singer. "Scratchy" sings on the song, Parasites. The sound is not saved from the plague of band vocals and the cut is much too keyboard driven while retaining that great bass and guitar interplay. Labyrinth and Shoot's second appearance as live tracks have such great guitar work and funky appeal. In between the detracting vocals are incredible sounds. Most of the live material has stretched-out, long, soaring instrumental jams. I wish I was at one of these shows. CBGB's 1983-84, sounds great and you get to experience it. It's almost like you are there. Khmer Rouge actually turn out to something completely different than I expected. The
liner notes made me think they were punk. Their slogan made me think they were punk. The
name made me think of mass slayings. I never heard punk in the music outside of an
influence. No wonder, I was confused. Did I remember this band at all? This is not
hardcore punk nor genocide. This is something better. My disdain for the vocals is
apparent but the music is really well done. The souring vocals also had me completely
ignoring the lyrics being sung. The time period this band started, 1981, and the amount of
fresh sounding material coming out in Khmer Rouge's era makes it hard to delineate the
line between who came up with the sound first and who did it second. All these bands were
taking from the old and each other and smelting each alloy into a new sound. The KR sound
is so big it is hard to imagine what you are hearing is essentially a trio with keyboards
added. The live material only adds to that amazement. There is obvious Khmer Rouge
influence in the music of the bands, !!!, The Rapture and Radio 4 who mine the late 70's
and mid-80's NYC sound and post-punk English sound. This is vital music. It is not perfect
music. I think the vocal sound was what held them back from major recognition. Khmer Rouge
was a band that was destined to influence the future but never be in the forefront. I
think that suits them well. They all cleaned up and have moved back to England and Europe.
All have moved on to other careers and look back with pride on the music they created.
Their music endures and I am sure with the release of this CD new bands will mine the
nuggets in Khmer Rouge's music.
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musicserver.cz by Honza-Prusa |
Dnes už
Žižkovák Phil Shoenfelt je v Česku poměrně oblíbený zpěvák i literární autor a
jeho kapely Southern Cross nebo Fatal Shore jsou tu docela známé. Známé je i
koncertní album s Tichou dohodou, ale o jeho projektech z dob, kdy žil v New Yorku nebo
Londýně, se příliš nemluví. Jedním z nich byla postpunková kapela Khmer Rouge, v
níž hrál spolu s Barry "Scratchy" Myersem, známým hlavně ze spolupráce s
punkovými The Clash. Khmer Rouge za dobu svého působení příliš věcí nevydali
(objevili se ale na kompilaci "White Column Noise Festival Tape" spolu se Sonic
Youth nebo Lydií Lunch), přesto se v roce 1994 podařilo uspořádat kompilaci z
dochovaných dobových nahrávek. Album "New York - London 1981-86" shrnuje
celou kariéru Rudých Khmérů na dvou discích, z nichž jeden je studiový a druhý
koncertní. Autorem naprosté většiny syrových skladeb se zastřeným zvukem
osmdesátek je právě Phil a většinou zpívá i hlavní vokál. A i když to není
nijak zásadní album, které by psalo dějiny rocku, jako studijní materiál newyorské
noiseové scény je více než příhodné. Nejlepší skladby: "Shoot",
"Labyrinth", "Hinterland", "Africa"
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Nuzz Prowlin' Wolf |
You may have
noticed that I’ve been running one of those widget ads for the Nikki Sudden and Phil
Shoenfelt album. A while back I posted a Phil Shoenfelt album, and said there was a link
between The Clash. Here’s the link; Phil Schoenfelt was a child of the 1977 UK Punk
scene. He relocated to New York in 1979 and immersed himself in the No Wave scene, were he
met up with Barry Scratchy Myers, a guy who was all versed in all things punk rawk, having
been The Clash’s tour DJ for their first 3 US tours. The pair recorded and gigged
together under the name Khmer Rouge, a reference to America’s foreign policy in Vietnam.
They had record company interest from former New York Dolls manager Marty Thau, but he
insisted the band had to change their name, he also had problems with the pairs heroin
use/abuse, so any proposed deals failed to happen, and subsequently very little was
released by the band, who remain to this day one of those ‘cult bands’ you wish you’d
heard more of at the time at the time. The band played with The Clash, Billy Idol and The
Fall, before disintegrating like their drug supply. Considering their dependencies the
bands recordings are remarkably together and positive. After Khmer Rouge ‘Scratchy’
served time in The Junior Manson Slags while Phil went solo and also recorded the Golden
Vanity album with Nikki Sudden in 1997. This compilation was originally released by Cog
Sinister, The Falls record label. It’s a 2 disc set with the studio stuff here [LINK]
and the live stuff there [LINK]. What’s the vibe? Well it’s like Joy
Division meeting PIL and the Gang of Four and The Clash. Compelling stuff that still says
something, after twenty + years; the groove and the message has aged well. I mean New York
band Radio 4 used the Khmer Rouge blue print for their mighty fine 2002 album Gotham.
Enjoy!
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amazon.co.uk customer review 26.09.2005 |
The
two main movers of the band Khmer Rouge are Barry Myers (AKA Scratchy)
and Phil Shoenfelt. Barry had up to that time had quite a varied career
which took in DJing, writing for British music paper Sounds and working
for bands like Dr. Feelgood and The Clash. It was while working for the
Clash that he acquired his nickname Scratchy.
Having found himself in the USA following a Clash tour Scratchy met up with Phil Shoenfelt and threw in his lot as bassist with Khmer Rouge. Musically he had previously been bassist with the band The Snivelling Shits. Khmer Rouge had previously been a part of the Art-noise scene that had grown out of New York. The original band had been a spiky four piece although with the addition of Scratchy the band had slimmed down initially to a duo and then with the addition of original drummer Claus behind the drum kit the band entered into a period of rehearsal. Unfortunately Clause decided to concentrate full time on his studies although he would re appear further down the road. A new drummer was therefore required and Paul Di Martino AKA Wacko had filled the drum stool by the time the Khmer Rouge MKII played their first gig at the famous Peppermint Lounge in New York in January 1982. Further comings and goings on the drum riser continued through 1982 although the band did manage to open for the Clash in front of 7,000 people again in New York and also a string of dates with Billy Idol. The band continued through the next two years where various members came and went around the core of Phil and Scratchy including Marcia (Phil's wife) and then a short-lived idea of recruiting Wayne Kramer although that union stalled when it would appear that the band would have to share billing with Wayne Kramer. At the end of 1984 the band decided to relocate to London from New York. Prior to their departure however the band went into the studio and laid down the track Shoot which is a highlight included on the studio disc of this two disc set. More line up changes ensued during the bands time in London, former 999 member Ed Case joined briefly although he didn't last long and some sense of normality was only regained when Clause shipped over to England and once more took his place behind the drum kit.
Further gigs took place in the UK and the band tried hard to secure a
deal without luck and the final straw would seem to have been Marcia
jumping ship to join the Fall. The band however have achieved cult
status and also some notoriety in that former New York Dolls and
Suicide manager Marty Thau refused to manage the band unless they
changed their name from Khmer Rouge.
This two CD compilation is divided into a studio disc and a live disc and while the studio disc contains a good cross section of the bands material the live album probably gives you a better idea of where the band were headed. |
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