The founding document of industrial music is not a record. It is a performance. In 1976, COUM Transmissions — the art collective that would become Throbbing Gristle — staged an exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London called Prostitution. The exhibition included used tampons, pornographic photographs featuring Cosey Fanni Tutti (the group's female member, who had been performing in pornographic magazines as both artistic practice and economic necessity), mutilated dolls, and a performance by strippers. The Arts Council of Great Britain had partly funded it. The Conservative MP Nicholas Fairbairn, speaking in the House of Commons, called the group "the wreckers of civilisation."
Genesis P-Orridge — the group's conceptual centre — accepted this characterisation as a compliment. If the existing civilisation produced these social arrangements, the people who made visible what the arrangements concealed were indeed wreckers. The wreckage was the point.
Michel Foucault's Surveiller et Punir (1975) — published the year Throbbing Gristle formed — argued that the body is the primary site on which power operates in modern societies. Power does not primarily work through ideology (making people believe things) but through discipline: the organisation of bodies in space and time, the training of gestures and habits, the construction of subjects who police themselves because they have internalised the gaze of power. The prison, the school, the factory, the hospital, the barracks are all versions of the same architecture of control.
Industrial music takes this argument and makes it physical and sonic. The machine noise, the repetitive rhythms, the deliberate assault on the listener's comfort are not aesthetic choices independent of content — they are the content. The music enacts what Foucault describes: power operating on the body through the organisation of sound in time. The difference is that industrial music makes the mechanism audible rather than naturalising it. You cannot relax into it. That is the argument.
Throbbing Gristle — Genesis P-Orridge, Cosey Fanni Tutti, Peter Christopherson, Chris Carter — formed in 1975 and released their first record on their own Industrial Records label in 1977. The label's slogan: Industrial Music for Industrial People. The name was not metaphor. The group understood themselves as factory workers producing a specific commodity — sound — in conditions that reflected the industrial system they were examining.
Their recordings are genuinely difficult to describe because they resist the vocabulary music criticism uses. There are rhythms — often generated by Chris Carter's homemade electronics rather than conventional percussion. There are voices — P-Orridge's, sometimes Tutti's, often processed beyond recognition. There are textures that recall factory noise, medical equipment, shortwave radio interference. There are occasional passages of unexpected melody that arrive like a break in cloud cover and disappear just as abruptly.
The most important thing about the sound is what it refuses: it refuses to comfort. Not because comfort is bad, but because comfort is the mechanism by which the existing arrangement reproduces itself. A music that makes you comfortable in your situation is a music that tells you your situation is acceptable. Throbbing Gristle's music tells you nothing of the kind.
At early Throbbing Gristle performances, the stage setup included an oscilloscope displaying the waveform of the sound being produced in real time. This was not decoration. It was an argument: here is what the music actually is — not the emotional content you are being invited to experience, but the physical reality of compression waves in air, rendered visible as electrical signal on a screen. The music is a machine process. You are a body in the presence of a machine process. Be aware of this.
The oscilloscope also served a practical function: it allowed the group to monitor the sonic content of their performances in ways that conventional monitoring couldn't. But the visual effect — the green line tracing the shape of the noise in the darkness — became the defining image of early industrial performance, reproduced in photographs and eventually referenced in album artwork across the tradition the group founded. The waveform as logo. The signal as identity. Both are present in this series' visual design.
The industrial tradition transmitted itself almost entirely outside conventional music industry channels — through small labels, cassette networks, mail-order catalogues, fanzines, a circuit of art spaces and marginal venues that had no interest in chart positions or radio play. This is not incidental. The transmission method was part of the argument: a music about the alienation produced by industrial capitalism refusing the distribution infrastructure of industrial capitalism, circulating instead through gift economies and direct exchange.
Stephen Mallinder, Richard H. Kirk, and Chris Watson formed Cabaret Voltaire in Sheffield in 1973 — before punk, before TG's public existence, making tape-based experiments in a city whose industrial identity was still intact but whose future was already visible to anyone paying attention. Sheffield would lose a third of its manufacturing jobs between 1971 and 1981. Cabaret Voltaire spent those years making music that sounded like the industrial landscape in the process of becoming its own ruin.
Their method was collage: found sounds, tape loops, found voices from shortwave radio, processed guitar and bass stripped of conventional musical function. Their politics were more explicitly leftist than TG's deliberately ambiguous position — Kirk in particular engaged with the texture of political language, using news broadcasts and political speeches as sonic material in ways that anticipated sampling by a decade.
SPK — the initials stood for multiple things simultaneously, none of them officially confirmed: Sozialistisches Patienten Kollektiv (the actual German radical psychiatric patients' collective from Heidelberg, 1970–71), System Planning Korporation, Surgical Penis Klinik — formed in Sydney in 1978 around Graeme Revell and a rotating cast of members. They are the most important Australian act in the industrial tradition and the most completely forgotten, which is itself an argument about how the tradition has been retrospectively constructed.
Their explicit subject matter was institutional power over the body — specifically psychiatric and medical institutional power. The name Sozialistisches Patienten Kollektiv was not accidental: the original SPK had argued that mental illness under capitalism was not a pathology of individuals but a rational response to pathological social conditions, and that therapy was a mechanism of social control designed to make the patient functional within the system rather than to change the system. SPK's music made this argument sonically: noise, distress, machine sounds, processed screaming — the sonic texture of psychiatric institutions — over which political and theoretical statements were occasionally placed with deliberate clumsiness.
Julia Kristeva's Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection (1980) described abjection as the process by which the subject establishes its identity by expelling what it cannot integrate — bodily fluids, decay, death, the maternal body, the body's own materiality. The abject is what must be cast out for the subject to constitute itself as a coherent self. But the abject does not disappear: it haunts the boundary of the self, threatening to dissolve it.
Industrial music's preoccupation with bodily horror, decay, pain, and violation is philosophically serious in exactly Kristeva's terms. By making the abject — bodily distress, machine noise, the sounds institutional power makes when it processes human beings — into aesthetic material, industrial music refuses the expulsion that constitutes the comfortable bourgeois subject. It forces the abject back into the room. The discomfort this produces in listeners is not accidental and not merely provocative: it is the philosophical argument made physical.
Early SPK performances in Sydney involved medical imagery — slides of surgical procedures, imagery from psychiatric case files (obtained through means that were not entirely legal), sounds recorded in institutional settings. The performances were not designed to be comfortable and were not comfortable. Audience members left. Those who stayed reported an experience that was closer to being processed by an institution than to attending a concert — which was, of course, the point.
The Australian context gave SPK a particular kind of distance from the European tradition they were engaging with. Sydney in 1979 had its own deindustrialising working class, its own psychiatric institutions, its own mechanisms of social control — but the distance from the theoretical culture that was producing Foucault and Kristeva and the Frankfurt School simultaneously gave Revell and his collaborators a slightly different angle of attack: less theoretical scaffolding, more direct confrontation with the institutional reality itself.
Graeme Revell subsequently became a successful Hollywood film composer — scores for The Crow, Sin City, Daredevil. His trajectory from the most confrontational Australian noise act of 1979 to mainstream film composition is its own argument about how the tradition was absorbed, though Revell himself has been candid about the compromises this involved.
Einstürzende Neubauten — Collapsing New Buildings — take their name from the construction boom in post-war West Berlin: everywhere you looked, new buildings were going up on the rubble of bombed ones. The name inverts this: not the new buildings rising but the new buildings already falling, construction and collapse as a single process rather than a sequence. This is their thesis before they play a note.
Blixa Bargeld (born Christian Emmerich, 1959) is the central figure — vocalist, lyricist, conceptual engine. His voice is one of the most immediately distinctive in the post-punk universe: capable of extraordinary range, from near-whisper to shriek, from structured speech to what can only be described as organised screaming. He uses it as an instrument in the same way the group uses its construction equipment: as a sound-making object whose properties are explored rather than assumed.
The use of construction equipment as instruments is not shock tactics and should not be understood as such. It is a precise philosophical argument about the nature of musical sound and the social conditions that determine which sounds are considered legitimate.
Western musical tradition defines legitimate musical instruments as objects purpose-built to produce sounds within a specific frequency range and tonal quality — sounds that have been culturally sanctified as musical. A drill is not a musical instrument because its sound has not been sanctified, because the context in which it is heard (construction sites, factories, demolition) is associated with labour rather than art, with the working class rather than the concert-going class, with function rather than beauty.
Neubauten's choice to use drills, steel beams, oil drums, and construction equipment is a refusal of this sanctification. It says: the sounds of industrial labour are as valid as the sounds of the concert hall. The bodies that produce industrial labour — the working bodies, the bodies the industrial system uses and discards — are as worthy of musical attention as the bodies of concert performers. The line between noise and music is not natural; it is a social boundary maintained by class interest.
We were not trying to make music with unusual objects. We were trying to find out what music was. The drill was the question, not the answer.
— Blixa Bargeld, various interviews, paraphrased compositeSteel as a musical material has specific acoustic properties that Neubauten exploited with increasing precision across their career. When struck, a steel beam produces a sound with an extraordinarily long decay, a complex harmonic series that extends well beyond what conventional instruments produce, and a quality of resonance that changes depending on where on the beam the strike occurs and how. This is not random noise: it is a sonic system with its own logic, as complex as any conventional instrument's, simply unexplored by the musical tradition.
F.M. Einheit — the group's primary percussionist, who joined in 1980 — developed a practice of mapping the acoustic properties of specific metal objects before using them in performance, finding the resonant frequencies, the points of attack that produced specific timbres. This is not different from how a drummer treats a drum kit. It is the same practice applied to different materials with different, unexplored properties. The industrialism of the sound is surface. The musicianship is structural.
Einstürzende Neubauten's early London performances included the literal use of pneumatic drills on stage — not prop drills, actual working pneumatic drills powered by compressors, applied to the stage floor during performances. At the Hammersmith Palais in 1982, the group drilled through the stage boards during their set. The venue management stopped the performance. The audience, which included a significant portion of the London post-punk community, was divided between those who found this exciting and those who found it dangerous and pointless.
Nick Cave — who would later recruit Bargeld to the Bad Seeds and maintain a creative partnership lasting decades — was in the audience and described the performance as the most significant thing he had seen since arriving in London. The Birthday Party, Cave's band, were at a point of maximum confrontation themselves; what Neubauten offered was a confrontation that had moved beyond conventional rock music's parameters entirely into something that required a different framework to assess.
The electro-industrial movement of the mid-1980s represents a specific development in the tradition: the integration of the TG/Neubauten formal radicalism with electronic production tools — synthesisers, early samplers, sequencers — and a shift in emphasis from the institutional and political dimensions of body-machine interaction to the psychological and physiological. The body under surveillance (TG) and the body as construction material (Neubauten) becomes the body in pain, the body experiencing its own dissolution, the body as the primary site of a suffering that is social in origin but experienced as entirely personal.
Skinny Puppy — cEvin Key (Kevin Ogilvie), Nivek Ogre (Kevin Crompton), and later Dwayne Goettel — formed in Vancouver in 1982. Their subject matter was explicit: animal vivisection, pharmaceutical industry experimentation on human subjects, the treatment of mental illness, the body in institutional contexts of power. Their most important album, VIVIsectVI (1988), makes the connection between scientific experimentation on animals and the industrial system's treatment of human beings with a precision that no amount of theoretical argument could match — it simply presents the sounds and images and lets the comparison do its work.
Ogre's stage performance was the most sustained piece of performance art in the industrial tradition. He used extensive makeup — not the gothic glamour of the Batcave scene, but clinical distortion, the face as a site of violence and transformation — and a physical performance style that drew on contemporary dance, horror film, and the psychiatric case study simultaneously. He was not performing suffering for its own sake. He was demonstrating, with his body, what the systems being discussed in the music's content do to bodies.
Al Jourgensen's trajectory is the most dramatic transformation in the industrial tradition. Ministry began in 1981 as a synth-pop act — early singles were competent, fashionable, entirely uninteresting. By 1988's The Land of Rape and Honey, Ministry had become something genuinely alarming: a metal-industrial hybrid operating at volumes and tempos that recalled Neubauten's physicality while deploying a specifically American political fury that had no European equivalent.
The transformation was partly chemical — Jourgensen's drug use during this period was extreme even by rock music standards — and partly the result of a deliberate decision to pursue the logic of industrial noise rather than the commercial logic that his early career had followed. The synth-pop Ministry was a product designed for consumption. The metal-industrial Ministry was a weapon designed for impact. The difference in intention produced a difference in sound so total that early Ministry and late Ministry are barely recognisable as the same project.
I wanted to make music that felt like the country actually felt. Not what the country wanted to feel like. What it actually felt like if you were paying attention.
— Al Jourgensen, Ministry, various interviews, paraphrasedDuring the recording and touring cycle for Last Rights (1992), Skinny Puppy's live show incorporated footage of actual animal vivisection, obtained from research laboratory documentation. The decision was made deliberately and with an awareness of its effect: the footage was disturbing in a way that no simulation could match because it was real. Audience members were sick. Some walked out. Some stayed and wept.
Ogre's subsequent advocacy around animal rights — and Goettel's death from a heroin overdose in 1995, which effectively ended the original Skinny Puppy — gave the project a biographical arc that resembles, uncomfortably, Ian Curtis's: a body pushed to its limits by the demands of making visible what the system prefers to conceal. This parallel should not be romanticised. But it should be named.
Trent Reznor is the most formally intelligent figure in the electro-industrial tradition and also the one who most clearly demonstrates what the tradition costs when it scales. Pretty Hate Machine (1989) and The Downward Spiral (1994) are both serious records — in the sense that they have a clear formal argument, are executed with precision, and do not flinch from their subject matter. They are also records that sold in quantities that would have been unthinkable for TG or Skinny Puppy, which creates a specific kind of pressure on the argument they contain.
The Downward Spiral is a concept album — a complete arc of self-destruction, from the opening track's declaration of war against the self through addiction, sexual dissolution, rage, emptiness, and suicidal ideation to the closing track "Hurt," which is not a resolution but a reckoning. The album does not offer catharsis. It ends with the subject still in the position the album began with, only more completely trapped. This is a precise formal choice: the downward spiral is a closed loop, not a narrative with a conclusion.
Jean Baudrillard's concept of simulation — the replacement of the real by its representation until the distinction between the two collapses — is the unavoidable theoretical problem that NIN's mainstream success raises. At the scale of five million copies, is The Downward Spiral's portrayal of self-destruction still a document of genuine suffering, or has it become a simulation of suffering — a commodity that allows listeners to experience the aesthetic of distress without the distress itself?
This is not a simple question to answer and the honest position is that it cannot be definitively answered. Reznor has spoken about the autobiographical content of the album — the addiction, the isolation, the suicidal ideation — in terms that suggest genuine experience rather than calculation. The music's formal precision does not feel like the precision of someone managing an audience's emotional response from a safe distance; it feels like the precision of someone who needed to get something exactly right.
But at five million copies, the listener's relationship to the content is inevitably different from the listener's relationship to Kollaps or VIVIsectVI. The mass scale creates a context — the arena tour, the MTV rotation, the Rolling Stone cover — that the argument was not designed for and that the argument does not entirely survive. This is not Reznor's failure. It is the condition that mass cultural distribution imposes on any argument, however serious.
Trent Reznor recorded The Downward Spiral at 10050 Cielo Drive in Los Angeles — the house where Sharon Tate and four others were murdered by members of the Manson Family in August 1969. He rented the house specifically because of its history, which he described as wanting to work in a space where something genuinely horrible had occurred, to see whether the atmosphere of actual violence was different from its simulation in music.
The decision attracted the criticism it was presumably designed to attract: exploitation of tragedy, boundary violation, shock tactics. Sharon Tate's sister Patti Tate wrote to Reznor, and his subsequent response — he stated he had not thought carefully enough about the feelings of the Tate family and moved out of the house — is one of the few moments in the industrial tradition where the specific human cost of the tradition's preoccupations was directly named by someone outside it. He named the studio Le Pig. He moved. The album was finished elsewhere.
Swans are the necessary coda to this series because Michael Gira's trajectory contains within it the complete argument that industrial music was making, pursued to its logical conclusion and then beyond. Where TG stopped (1981), where Skinny Puppy effectively ended (1995), where NIN's argument plateaued — Gira continued. He did not compromise and he did not repeat himself. What he found, after decades of sustained confrontation with the hardest material the tradition offered, was something the tradition had not predicted: the possibility of the numinous on the far side of the punishing.
Filth (1983) and Cop (1984) are among the most physically confrontational recordings in the post-punk universe. The tempos are glacially slow — not the slow of ambient music, which creates space, but the slow of something enormous moving inexorably, which creates dread. The dynamics are extreme: the band plays at maximum volume, all the time, with no dynamic relief. There is no melody. There is almost no conventional rhythm. There is bass, there is percussion, and there is Gira's voice, which in this period is less a singing voice than a sustained act of vocal aggression.
The subject matter of early Swans is power — specifically the power dynamics of sex, work, and institutional authority. The lyrics are not subtle. Songs are titled "Power for Power," "Cop," "Weakling," "Slave." The positions being described — dominator and dominated, the body wielding power and the body being broken by it — are rendered in terms so unadorned that the music cannot be consumed as entertainment. It confronts. It does not invite.
Between 1984 and 1997, Swans moved through a series of transformations that parallel, in miniature, the arc this entire series has traced. The mid-period Swans introduced Jarboe — a vocalist and keyboardist whose presence shifted the project's dynamic substantially. The collaboration between Gira's confrontation and Jarboe's more melodic, emotionally wide-ranging voice produced albums of startling complexity: Children of God (1988), The Burning World (1989), White Light from the Mouth of Infinity (1991).
These albums are not comfortable Swans. They are not the Swans of Filth. But they demonstrate that the project was capable of development — that the punishment of the early records was a beginning, not a destination, and that Gira understood this even when his audience didn't.
Swans dissolved in 1997. Gira's statement at the time was that the project had run its course and that continuing would require repeating what had already been done, which was not something the project's internal logic permitted. He formed Angels of Light and made quieter, folk-inflected records for a decade. The absence of Swans was itself a kind of argument.
Swans reformed in 2010 with a completely new lineup — only Gira carrying the name forward — and began making music that departed from every expectation the name carried. My Father Will Guide Me Up a Rope to the Sky (2010), The Seer (2012), To Be Kind (2014), The Glowing Man (2016): four albums across six years that constitute the most sustained creative achievement in the industrial tradition's history, and perhaps in post-punk's history more broadly.
The music is long — The Seer runs two hours, To Be Kind nearly two hours — and it uses duration as a compositional tool in ways that recall minimalism (La Monte Young's drone, Reich's phase processes) more than it recalls industrial noise. The volume is still extreme in performance. The confrontation has not been abandoned. But something has been found on the far side of it: a quality that the industrial tradition never anticipated and that Gira himself described, carefully and without embarrassment, as the numinous.
Georges Bataille distinguished between two modes of human existence: the world of work, which is the world of instrumentality, calculation, and the subordination of the present moment to future utility; and sovereignty, which is the experience of the present moment as an end in itself, irreducible to any purpose beyond itself. Sovereignty, for Bataille, is the domain of eroticism, ecstasy, art, and death — all the experiences that exceed the logic of utility and that capitalist rationality therefore finds threatening and attempts to contain.
The arc of Swans from Filth to To Be Kind is, in Bataille's terms, a sustained attempt to reach sovereignty through art. The early records attempt it through confrontation — forcing the body out of its comfortable functional existence into an awareness of its own materiality. The late records attempt it through duration and volume and the specific quality of sound that Gira calls numinous — the overwhelming of the individual subject by something larger than itself, an experience that is simultaneously terrifying and liberating. The industrial tradition began with the body under the machine. Swans ended — provisionally, temporarily — with the body discovering what survives the machine. That is the series' conclusion. Not triumphant. Not resolved. But found.
The centrepiece of To Be Kind is a thirty-four minute track built around a single repeating figure that accumulates across its duration into something that audiences have described, consistently and across different performances and different countries, as overwhelming. Not overwhelming in the way early Swans was overwhelming — not the overwhelm of assault, of the body being pushed past its tolerances — but something different: the overwhelm of being in the presence of something that exceeds your individual framework for containing experience.
Gira has described the construction of these long pieces as a deliberate attempt to produce states in the listener that resemble, without reproducing, religious ecstasy — the dissolution of the individual self into something larger. This is Bataille's sovereignty, arrived at through thirty years of pursuing the industrial tradition's argument about the body to its absolute limit. The drill has become a kind of prayer. The construction site has become, if not a cathedral, then something that requires a vocabulary the industrial tradition was not built to supply.
That inadequacy of vocabulary is the tradition's gift to whoever comes next.
Margins & Frequencies · Series VIII · Corrosion
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