Halo of Flies
Halo of Flies | |
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Background information | |
Also known as | H•O•F |
Origin | Minneapolis |
Genres | Noise rock |
Years active | 1986-1991 2007-present |
Labels | Amphetamine Reptile, Twin/Tone Records |
Members | Tom Hazelmyer John Anglim Paddy Costello Tim mac |
Halo of Flies was a rock band from Minneapolis. Named after an Alice Cooper song from Killer,[1] Halo of Flies was formed in 1986 by Tom Hazelmyer, John Anglim and Tim Mac. Over the next 5 years they released a series of 7 inch singles and mini LPs starting with a limited edition, hand numbered single called “Rubber Room”. These singles were released on Hazelmyer’s label Amphetamine Reptile Records and were later compiled on a CD (Insect Music for Insect Minds) in 1991. The band partially reformed in 2007 under the name H•O•F, and continued to release new material.
Life of Band
Sales of Halo of Flies records was assisted by a manufacturing/distribution deal with the popular Minnesota label Twin Tone records. Influenced by early punk bands MC5 and The Stooges, the band had a loud raw sound that was heavily guitar influenced garage rock. Halo of Flies stopped recording in the early 1990s but Hazelmyer kept Amphetamine Reptile Records in business for 20 years by releasing music by Boss Hog, Helmet, The Melvins, Cows, God Bullies, Helios Creed and Unsane.
Discography
As Halo of Flies
- Rubber Room 7", 1986
- Snapping Black Roscoe Bottles 7", 1986
- Circling the Pile 7", 1987
- Richies Dog 7", 1987
- Four from the Bottom cassette, 1988
- Garbage Rock! 12", 1988
- Garbageburn 12", 1988
- No Time 7", 1988
- Death of a Fly 7", 1989
- Singles Going Nowhere 12", 1989
- Winged 7", 1990
- Big Mod Hate Trip 7", 1991
- Mod Showdown! 7", 1991
- Music For Insect Minds, 1991 (compilation of all the previously released material)
As H•O•F
- split 7" with Wild Billy Childish and the Musicians of the British Empire, 2007
- A New Kind of Hate 7", 2008
- When I'm Loaded 7" (with Lydia Lunch), 2008
- F.T.W. EP, 2008
- Gay Witch Abortion Sessions CD, 2009
- Resurrect a Bad Idea LP, 2010
References
- ^ Earles, Andrew (September 2014). Gimme Indie Rock: 500 Essential American Underground Rock Albums 1981-1996. Minneapolis: Voyageur Press. pp. 141–142. ISBN 0760346488.