Five Starcle Men (partially found noise music group discography; 1990-1997): Difference between revisions
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For the longest time, the only | For the longest time, the only Five Starcle Men material available were the aforementioned compilations and, eventually, ''Scunibro''. | ||
However, in late 2020, a musician who knew Five Starcle Men personally when they were active joined a Discord server dedicated to the band and posted flyers and pictures of cassettes he had in his possession. He promised to contact Luke to see if he could release them. Luke initially denied him permission, but eventually allowed him to upload small amounts of what he had. He uploaded the ''Sicicbral'' EP to Soundcloud alongside individual songs from ''Briskle Discal'' and a collaborative cassette with his own group, Bobeli. | However, in late 2020, a musician who knew Five Starcle Men personally when they were active joined a Discord server dedicated to the band and posted flyers and pictures of cassettes he had in his possession. He promised to contact Luke to see if he could release them. Luke initially denied him permission, but eventually allowed him to upload small amounts of what he had. He uploaded the ''Sicicbral'' EP to Soundcloud alongside individual songs from ''Briskle Discal'' and a collaborative cassette with his own group, Bobeli. |
Revision as of 10:37, 23 April 2021
This article has been tagged as Needing work due to its poor formatting, lack of clarity, and references.
Five Starcle Men were an electronic noise music group from the 1990s whose music consisted of heavily distorted and edited samples, dextromethorphan-fueled rambling, alien abduction testimonials, and circuit bent toys and other electronic gadgets.
The group was comprised primarily of two members, Luke McGowan and Glen Hobbs. After Hobbs' suicide in 1997, McGowan went on to be a professor of psychology at the California Institute of Technology.
Ever since the release of the posthumous digital compilation Gomba Reject Ward Japan, Five Starcle Men have been noted for being shrouded in mystery, with very little written about them beyond blogs and a brief mention in an article in the Village Voice[1]. They had a Wikipedia page at one point, but it has deleted due to lack of notability, despite Gomba Reject Ward Japan having 27,000+ downloads on archive.org.
There are two official digital compilations released via the Japanese label Lost Frog Productions (including Gomba), along with an unofficial bootleg cassette tape compilation called The Five Starclemen. The second digital compilation is called Only Kids of Nothing Star. Both of them are available on archive.org.
Known Albums
Release year | Title | Notes | Status |
---|---|---|---|
1992 | ISTINT | Lost | |
1993 | Briskle Discal | Partially Found (2) | |
1993 | Sicicbral EP | Found | |
1994 | Briskle Discal 2 | Lost | |
1995 | R/Eject Ward | Luke allegedly confirmed its existence, and called it his favorite from their later years. | Lost |
1995 | Scunibro | Only known vinyl release. | Found |
1995 | Beast 666 | Lost | |
1996 | Gomblasemba Lumbieca | Lost |
Misc. Media
The band was also featured in the inaugural and presumably only issue of the zine Whump!, with some audio of the interview existing on the 7" bonus record that was included with the magazine. There was also a live album released on VHS, Live + Dead, which has been reuploaded to YouTube.
Status
For the longest time, the only Five Starcle Men material available were the aforementioned compilations and, eventually, Scunibro.
However, in late 2020, a musician who knew Five Starcle Men personally when they were active joined a Discord server dedicated to the band and posted flyers and pictures of cassettes he had in his possession. He promised to contact Luke to see if he could release them. Luke initially denied him permission, but eventually allowed him to upload small amounts of what he had. He uploaded the Sicicbral EP to Soundcloud alongside individual songs from Briskle Discal and a collaborative cassette with his own group, Bobeli.
References
- ↑ Village Voice article mentioning Five Starcle Men. Retrieved Apr. 22, '21.