Nonagon / Knife the Symphony Split 7″

Controlled Burn Records (Chicago, IL) and Phratry Records (Cincinnati, OH) team up for a Nonagon / Knife The Symphony split single. Limited to 300 copies. This record will never be re-pressed. When they’re gone, they’re gone!

The 7” comes with a download card that includes a bonus track from each band. Digital version available with physical copy only.

Nonagon’s “Tuck the Long Tail Under” was recorded by Matt Engstrom and Soren Pederson at Burn the Furniture in Chicago. Mixed by Matt Engstrom. Mastered by Bob Weston at Chicago Mastering Service. All of this was done while it was cold outside. 

Knife The Symphony’s “Devils II” was recorded, mixed and mastered by Mike Montgomery at Candyland Recording Studio in Cincinnati, OH. All of the music was recorded live, in one pass. Vocals were recorded separately. Recorded to tape by pressing buttons, pushing faders and turning knobs. 

Learning Things

Our first post included the vague idea that we’d post about stuff as we learned it – as far as running a record label goes.  

We’ve been bad about keeping that promise but there’s something that we did learn; it contains something like advice for someone thinking about starting a record label.

If you set up an actual company to do the label’s business then you’re going to have to pay taxes on the label’s income, as well as sales tax for sales in the state you’re based.  

Here’s the problem – there’s a bunch of helpful reasons to set up a company rather than just running the label as your personal income.  But hiring an accountant to do the taxes is going to run you a few hundred dollars at a minimum.  And given that we’re releasing 1-2 things a year, that means we’d basically be sending all of the label’s net income to an accountant.

Which is stupid.

So we had to figure out how to do the taxes, which meant figuring out the accounting on our own.  This was not easy. I am going to type that again for emphasis.  This was not easy.  

If anyone out there is reading this and faces the same problem (“I cannot afford to pay someone to figure out our accounting for me”) you may find this helpful: the key task was to figure out where the money was coming from and where it was supposed to go.

At the end of this long effort we have developed a database.  It can tell us at any given date how much money we have, where it came from, how much we owe and who we owe it to.  Corporate types call this a balance sheet.

You do not need a database; you can do this in Excel with some loss in gracefulness but a much smaller headache in setup.

I’d be thrilled to share deeper details if this, so contact me if you want to know more.  I would especially appreciate it if you have a time machine I can borrow so that I can go back into 2013 and tell myself what I learned to save a huge headache in figuring this stuff out.

= Justin

Polonium – Seraphim

Seraphim is a ten song CD from Polonium.

Before they became the Austerity Program, Thad and Justin decided to start a not-serious metal band for some reason.  Within a month they were serious.

A few months after that they were obsessed with double bass drum attack and screwed-up time signatures.  They recorded two batches of songs.  The first one was hit or miss.  The second was solid.

Here’s that second batch. Ten songs ranging from early-Melvins minimalism to the rolling bombast of Bolt Thrower.  We didn’t screw up the vocals, though; the lyrics are howled with the usual tortured seethe and the content is all about people in desperate straits.  If you like the pounding drum machine of the Austerity Program but aren’t with all that intellectualism, this record is for you.

Although the music was all written from 1993-96, Justin took the time to re-record all of it between 2013-2015. So you get a full drink of what we were thinking 20 years ago presented through all of the fancy microphones and tape machines we’ve gotten in the meantime.

Mastered by Carl Saff in Chicago.

The Austerity Program – Beyond Calculation

Beyond Calculation is an eight song LP (2014) from the Austerity Program.

Their latest and favorite. Guitar, bass, vocals and drum machine all cranked through 3500 watts of power and lots of speakers. Songs about a despised albino, vengeful minor-deities and self-immolation. You would think we each grew up Catholic.

Full analog recording and fingernail-pulling attention to detail. Like always.

Available in the following formats:

  • 12″ Vinyl (w/cd and download instructions) SOLD OUT
  • CD
  • Free download (via Bandcamp)
  • 1/4″ analog tape available in four speeds: 3.75, 7.5, 15 or 30 ips.

Nonagon to SF, the Austerity Program’s LP drops 6/17

Nonagon is playing the first ever West Cost PRF BBQ on Saturday, May 3 @ Leo’s in San Francisco.  Should be a preeeeetty amazing event, with Kowloon Walled City, Eugene S Robinson, the Gary, the Tunnel and others.

And the new Austerity Program record, Beyond Calculation, will be out 6/17.  More news on that in a bit, but if you live in/near Boston (4/26), Providence (4/27) or Brooklyn (5/7), you can go see them in the days ahead.  The Shows page has all the details.

This was the stuffing party for the new record. We kept insisting that everyone wash their hands.

What Do We Have Here?

Look at what arrived at CBR’s shipping department this week. If you guessed Time Life Books’ 28 Volume Series: The Civil War you would only be partially correct. That’s coming next week. What we have here is The Austerity Program’s record entering the final stages before its upcoming release. Soon.

The Austerity Program Is Recording Their Next Record

Thad and Justin have started putting songs on tape for their next record.  It’ll be 8 songs long and about 40 minutes long.  We’ll be putting it out next Spring.  

You can read more about the latest by going to the Austerity Program’s site and following the progress.  And the technically minded can always check out the pre-production journal that Justin’s been keeping.  He runs tests on which microphone is the best or which pre-amp sounds the most appropriate and that kind of thing.

And did you see that Nonagon show poster?  Damn, it looks nice.

= Justin