Album Reviews
No one
could have been adequately prepared for the sort of seismic
jolt set off by Sin Disease upon its release. Merciless,
brutal, neurotic, Tourettic, and consistently stunning,
Scaterd Few's debut didn't push the boundaries of rock -- it
annihilated them. Allan Aguirre's vocal delivery was
chilling: a wild, unconstrained howl that went from gothic
moan to banshee yelp within the space of a single lyric. He
sings like a man on fire, wild-eyed and crazy, yelping out
each dire prophecy as if every word might be his last. The
band's music is equally urgent. Scaterd Few summoned a
mad-scientist hybrid of dub, reggae, post-punk, and heavy
metal that outshone even visionary avatars like the Pop
Group. "While Reprobate" is a searing blast of white noise,
Omar Domkus' elastic bass bounding and snapping over Sam
West's machine-gun percussion as Aguirre (operating under
the infamous pseudonym Ramald Domkus) shrieks lyrics like
"Kiss me my sin disease contaminates!/Benevolent apathy
regurgitate!" The group's masterpiece, "Later (L.A. 1989),"
is bleak and sinister, bass line creepy and shivery as
spider's legs with Aguirre again playing prophet of doom.
It's a role he fills well -- the bulk of the record is given
over to horrific apocalyptic visions of a future where
violence and corruption has turned the human race into
rotting, staggering zombies. It's no great mystery why such
a bleak record inspired mass rejection and rancor, and it
was even less surprising when the band revealed that the
record's grotesqueries were conceived and recorded under the
heavy hand of marijuana. Sin Disease builds to a
phenomenally unsettling conclusion: after
15-and-a-half-minute bursts, listeners are treated to the
seven-minute "Kill the Sarx II (Apocalypse)," a grim sound
collage that begins as unhinged lounge music and very
quickly twists into terrifying horror movie shrieks and
moans, the product of some unhinged Bunuel fever dream.
Despite its initial rejection, Sin Disease was considered a
landmark alongside L.S.U.'s Shaded Pain and Undercover's
Branded, and Aguirre revived the group in 1994 (drug-free
this time) for the more commercial Jawboneofanass.
~
J. Edward Keyes
And rarely have I heard lyrics so blunt, yet so poignant
and sublime as on this album. Domkus pulled no punches,
and wasn't afraid to confront social issues or his own
spirituality with a refreshing openness. Whether proudly
wailing "I'd rather die than blame it on my God,"
decrying racial and gang tension ("unified we might
persuade our local terrorist blackened regime/heed the
cry of a scaterd few/like the brothers on the Berlin
wall, these walls need knocking too"), or voicing the
energy of youth everywhere ("take heed to my
reproof/don't reject me cause i'm young/we're here for
Yawheh's glory and to magnify His son"), rarely has any
band released anything this deep and provoking in an
album that just clocks under 40 minutes. A real gem that
hasn't lost it's energy after almost a decade, and whose
impact will probably never be known.
~
Jason Morehead
Scaterd Few(Homepage)
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