Goreaphobia
Goreaphobia | |
---|---|
Also known as | Infamy [1986–88] |
Origin |
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States |
Genres | Death metal |
Years active | 1988–present |
Labels |
Seraphic Decay, Relapse, Necroharmonic, Ibex Moon, Dark Descent |
Associated acts | Incantation |
Goreaphobia, formed in 1988, is the first death metal band from Philadelphia and one of the first to emerge from the east coast scene.[1] They never released a full-length record until after breaking up and reforming, only a demo cassette and 2 7" EP's.[2] Due to this fact, and their influence on later bands,[3] Goreaphobia has reached a cult status in the underground, with demand for their merchandise still very high. The band played many shows in the early 1990s, and toured with Immolation on their 1992 "tour of possession".
After Goreaphobia's breakup, drummer Craig Smilowski joined Immolation, and Chris Gamble went on to form Blood Storm. Guitarist Alex Bouks joined Incantation.
The band re-united after 15 years of separation in 2007. After reforming they released their debut release "Mortal Repulsion" in 2009.[4]
Members
- Chris Gamble - Bass / Vocals (Blood Storm,Absu)
- Alex Bouks - Guitar (Incantation,Master)
- Jim Roe - Drums(Incantation)
Former members
Drums:
- Craig Smilowski RELLIK(www.rellik.us),(Immolation),
- "Big" Mike
- Ken Masteller
Vocals:
- Kevin Brennan
- Jack Gannon
- Craig Pillard (Incantation)
Bass:
- Jay Lawrence
- Gary Gahndi
- Julian Lawrence
Guitar:
- Henry Piotrowski
- John Litchko
- John Arcucci
- Spencer Murphy
- John McEntee - Guitar (Incantation)
Releases
- Morbidious Pathology (1990) (demo tape - self released)
- Morbidious Pathology (1990) (7" EP on Seraphic Decay Records)
- Omen of Masochism (1992) (7" EP on Relapse Records)
- Vile Beast of Abomination (2006) (Necroharmonic)
- Mortal Repulsion (2009) (Ibex Moon)[5]
- Apocalyptic Necromancy (2011)[6]
References
- ↑ Rivadavia, Eduardo. "Apocalyptic Necromancy review". Allmusic. Retrieved January 29, 2012.
- ↑ Abominator, Mike (September 15, 2011). "Interview with Alex Bouks of Goreaphobia". Metal Maniacs. Retrieved January 29, 2012.
- ↑ Purcell, Natalie J. (2003). Death Metal Music: The Passion and Politics of a Subculture. McFarland & Company. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-7864-1585-4.
The American death metal underground expanded with much help from Ohio's Seraphic Decay Records, which released the EPs of bands that would become very influential, including Mortician, Incantation and Goreaphobia.
- ↑ www.roadrunnerrecords.com
- ↑
- ↑ Goreaphobia Signs To Dark Descent Records For Release Of "Apocalyptic Necromancy"