German Army (band) explained

German Army
Origin:Los Angeles, CA, USA
Years Active:–present
Current Members:Peter Kris, Norm Heston

German Army is an experimental musical act from California centered around an American artist using the pseudonym Peter Kris (PK). Together with bandmate Norm Heston (NH), they release music prolifically and almost exclusively as small runs on boutique cassette tape labels. The group's variable sound is heavily reliant on analog electronic processing, particularly delay effects.

History

In 2003, Kris had co-founded the drone rock band Expo '70 together with his friend (and guitarist for Living Science Foundation), Justin Wright, while improvising together during a recording session in Los Angeles of Kris's noise rock project, SXBRS. The recordings were released together as a split CDR on Kris's label, Kill Shaman, and two shows were played live (with Parts & Labor and Tyondai Braxton, respectively). After creating another improvisational studio recording, Live July 18, 2004, creative differences arose regarding touring preferences, and PK began recording instead as German Army.[1]

Earlier recordings were produced together with two friends, Chin Genie and Meatball Maker, who ultimately had a falling out together, leaving PK to prefer recording alone. PK nevertheless considers NH, who also goes by GT, as his bandmate and tries to include him whenever possible. NH contributes drum programming and keyboards, as well as helping to repair pedals and providing the more vintage equipment, having collected drum machines and keyboards since high school. PK considers as essential to the band.

Regarding their focus on the cassette medium (over 90% of their 80+ releases, as of 2020) PK has commented: "Cassette is simply the format to experiment on. I wouldn’t expect any label to release all these records on vinyl. At this point there is simply too much material to even begin with."[2]

Music released under the name Peter Kris is reserved for more guitar-centric work, while German Army remains the outlet for beat-driven exotica and effects-driven experimental work.

The band uses pseudonyms to maintain separation between their artistic and vocational lives, as PK is an educator at an institution (presumably in Southern California), occasionally teaching history of U.S. foreign policy. Parallels have been drawn with the seminal, elusive avant-garde experimental rock band, The Residents.

Themes

The titles and themes of the releases often highlight indigenous cultures and their anti-colonial struggles with western nations—for example, internment of Japanese Americans in No No Boys (referencing the 1957 novel by John Okada), US military presence in Puerto Rico in Vieques, and American Indian resistance in Mangas Coloradas (named for the Apache chief, "Red Sleeves").

Many song titles also represent diverse regions, languages, and peoples from around the world. For example, "Wakhan Corridor" references the Wakhan, a rugged, mountainous area of Afghanistan; "Mzab" refers to the M'zab Valleyregion of Algeria; and "Kabyle" references a Berber ethnic group living in the Atlas Mountains in Northern Algeria. Many songs reference Bantu languages from Angola: "Kikongo", "Nganguela" (also known as Luchazi), "Umbundu", "Nhaneca", and "Chokwe".

Personnel

Discography

Studio albums

Compilations

Singles and EPs

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mitchell. Michael. Industrial Mission: An Interview With German Army’s Peter Kris. 2018. Stereo Embers Magazine. December 2, 2020.
  2. Web site: Mitchell. Michael. Industrial Mission: An Interview With German Army’s Peter Kris. 2018. Stereo Embers Magazine. December 2, 2020.