The Mark of Cain (band)
The Mark of Cain | |
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John Scott from The Mark of Cain at Brisbane's Livid festival 1995 | |
Background information | |
Origin | Adelaide, South Australia |
Genres | Hard rock, alternative metal |
Years active | 1984-present |
Labels | Dominator Records, Phantom Records, Ra Records, BMG |
Associated acts | Helmet, Tomahawk, Battles |
Website | Official site |
Members |
John Scott Kim Scott John Stanier |
Past members |
Aaron Hewson Campbell Robinson Rod Archer Roger Crisp Stuart Baguley Neil Guiver John Rickert Charles Lockey David Graham Gavin Atkinson |
The Mark of Cain is a hard rock/alternative metal band from Adelaide, South Australia. Their style has been likened to that of Helmet and Rollins Band, yet this band predates both of those groups and was influenced by the early work of Joy Division, Big Black and US hardcore. The Mark of Cain was formed in 1984 by brothers John (guitar) and Kim Scott (bass guitar), with Rod Archer on vocals and Roger Crisp playing drums. Before long, Archer had left the group and John Scott took on the vocal role; The Mark of Cain has remained a trio ever since. The Scotts have been the core of the band which has featured some 15 different drummers. Currently, that position is held by former Helmet member John Stanier, who is also concurrently with Tomahawk and Battles.
History
The band's first release was a single, "The Lords of Summer" issued by Sydney label Phantom Records in 1988. Following this, The Mark of Cain's drummer situation became reasonably stable for some time with the addition of Campbell Robinson and the band issued two albums on Adelaide label Dominator Records, Battlesick in 1989 and The Unclaimed Prize in 1991. The band's music came to the attention of Steve Albini, who produced their next release, the 1993 EP "Incoming". This was the recording debut for Robinson's replacement Aaron Hewson, who had joined the band shortly after the release of The Unclaimed Prize.
Albini's involvement with The Mark of Cain in turn led to Henry Rollins producing the band's breakthrough album, 1995's Ill at Ease. The first release on Sydney alternative label rooArt, Ill at Ease was also the first to win wide radio support, with Triple J giving the singles "First Time" and "LMA" solid airplay. A national tour followed, after which Hewitt left and Campbell Robinson returned. The next year, The Mark of Cain released Rock And Roll, a collection of remixes by artists such as Paul Mac and B(if)tek. The band also contributed some songs to the soundtrack of the Australian film Idiot Box including a cover of "Degenerate Boy" by early Australian punk band X. This was a minor hit. Robinson was replaced by Stuart Baguley in late 1998 but Stanier was mooted as a member from mid-1999. He was taken on to provide the drumming on the next album This is This which was produced by Andy Gill of Gang of Four, one of The Mark of Cain's early influences. This is This was released by BMG in 2001 with the announcement that Stanier was now the band's permanent drummer.
According to their official website, The Mark of Cain commenced recording in February 2008 at Broadcast Studios (Adelaide, Australia) with engineer Evan James & drummer John Stanier forming material for a new album set to be released in 2011. Mixing of the new album commenced in December 2010 in Melbourne Australia with Forrester Savell. On the 1st of December 2011 the new single ‘Barkhammer’ is played for the first time on Triple J Radio in Australia. A second single ‘Heart of Stone’ is released on the 18th of September 2012 and finally the long-awaited album ‘Songs of the Third and Fifth’ is unleashed on the 2nd of December through Fuse/Feel Presents earning favourable reviews.
As of 18 January 2013, the band have announced that they will be touring Australia in March '13 with Eli Green on drums, sitting in for John Stanier who is unable to tour due to his commitments with US band Tomahawk. They have completed further tours in 2014 & 2015 with Eli Green on drums.
Original member Rod Archer, TMOC vocalist from 1985-86 when they were a four-piece, died of cancer on February 26, 2016.[1]
- Timeline
Discography
The Lords of Summer
- Released: 1988
- Format: 7"
- Label: Phantom Records
- Tracks: "The Lords of Summer", "Can You See Now?"
Battlesick
- Released: 1989
- Format: CD
- Label: Dominator Records
The Unclaimed Prize
- Released: 1990
- Format: CD
- Label: Dominator
Incoming
- Released: 1993
- Format: CD
- Label: Dominator
- Producer: Steve Albini
"Tell Me"
- Released: 1993
- Format: CD
- Label: Insipid
- Tracks: "Tell Me", "Viet Vet"
The Killer Is Within
- Released: 1995
- Format: CD
- Label: Dominator
- Producer: Mick, Stuart, and The Mark Of Cain
"First Time" from the album Ill at Ease
- Released: 1995
- Format: CD
- Label: rooArt
- Writer: John Scott, Kim Scott, Aaron Hewson
- Producer: Henry Rollins
- Tracks: "First Time", "Details"
- Released: 1995
- Format: CD
- Label: rooArt
- Producer: Henry Rollins
- Singles: "First Time", "LMA"
"LMA" from the album Ill at Ease
- Released: 1996
- Format: CD
- Label: rooArt
- Writer: John Scott, Kim Scott, Aaron Hewson
- Producer: Henry Rollins
- Tracks: "LMA"
- Released: 1996
- Format: CD
- Label: rooArt
- Producer: Nick Launay, Tim Rogers, The Mark of Cain
- Singles: "Interloper"
"Degenerate Boy" from the album Idiot Box Original Soundtrack
- Released: 1997
- Format: CD
- Label: BMG
"Interloper" from the album Rock and Roll
- Released: 1997
- Format: CD
- Label: BMG
The Complete Recordings 88 - 98
- Released: 1998
- Format: CD
- Label: BMG
- Producer: Various
"[R] Retaliate" from the album This is This
- Released: 2000
- Format: CD
- Label: BMG
- Producer: Phil McKellar, Andy Gill
"Familiar Territory" from the album This is This
- Released: 2001
- Format: CD
- Label: BMG
- Producer: Phil McKellar, Andy Gill
This is This
- Released: 2001
- Format: CD
- Label: BMG
- Producer: Phil McKellar, Andy Gill
- Released: 2 December 2012
- Format: CD
- Label: Feel Presents
- Producer: John Scott & Tim Pittman
- Singles: Barkhammer, "Heart of Stone"
References
External links
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