- Trudge · 1989
- Penetration · 1992
- Trudge · 1990
- Music for Gilded Chambers · 2018
- This Is Industrial · 1993
- Trudge · 1989
- Knees & Bones · 1985
- Penetration · 1992
- Penetration · 1992
- Penetration · 1992
- Darken My Fire - A Gothic Tribute to the Doors · 2000
- Penetration · 1992
- Songs from the Ashes · 1987
Compilations
About Controlled Bleeding
From the group's inception in the late '70s onward, New York-based Controlled Bleeding have remained one of the most prolific and unpredictable American industrial bands, exploring the extremes of both unchecked sonic fury and free-floating ambient dub. The group's output has varied wildly over the years, from the harsh noise of 1985's Body Samples to medieval-influenced releases such as 1989's Music for Gilded Chambers to the industrial dance of 1992's Penetration. The group explored ambient, dub, and jazz on subsequent releases like 1997's Gilded Shadows and 2002's Can You Smell the Rain Between. During the 2010s, a revamped lineup of Controlled Bleeding produced albums such as 2016's typically wide-ranging Lava Lumps and Baby Bumps. Led by singer and multi-instrumentalist Paul Lemos, a high-school English teacher by day, Controlled Bleeding formed in Boston around 1978 and soon relocated to Massapequa, New York. Their new wave-influenced debut EP, Wall of China Love Letter, appeared during the early '80s; a series of abrasive cassettes followed before the group issued its first full-length effort, Knees and Bones, in 1985. Following the typically aggressive Body Samples, also issued in 1985, the 1986 release Between Tides found the group -- consisting of Lemos, drummer Joe Papa, and keyboardist Chris Moriarty -- branching out into more serene, atmospheric work. The trend continued on Head Crack and Curd (both 1986), and by 1987's Core, the first Controlled Bleeding LP issued in their home country, the music had become virtually instrumental, peppered with jazz and even classical elements. As the group's appetite for change grew, so did its interest in melody, as evidenced by the track "Rings of Fire" from 1989's Wax Trax!-issued Songs from the Grinding Wall EP; however, the same record's lead cut, "Crack the Body," proved that Controlled Bleeding's fascination with industrial noise had not dimmed. Similarly, 1990's full-length Trudge covered a great deal of territory, including a stab at techno on "Crimes of the Body." Hog Floor, issued in 1991, collected remixes, rarities, and unreleased music dating back to Knees and Bones. As Controlled Bleeding continued to mutate some two decades after the band's inception, the mid-'90s found them focusing on dark ambient styles; Inanition, released in 1996, was a two-disc set in this vein. The full-length album Our Journey's End followed in July of 2000; two years later, Controlled Bleeding released Can You Smell the Rain Between on Tone Casualties. In the following years, the group released a number of compilations, including Shanked and Slithering (Hospital Recordings) and Before the Quiet (MVD Audio). Before the trio could resume recording new music, Moriarty passed away in March 2008. The following year, Papa died in November. Lemos forged ahead to form a new incarnation of Controlled Bleeding with drummer Anthony Meola and programmers Mike Bazini and Chvad SB. The new Controlled Bleeding lineup returned in late 2016 with Larva Lumps and Baby Bumps, a two-disc LP released on Artoffact Records. The remix-heavy double album Carving Songs followed in 2017. ~ Jason Ankeny & Paul Simpson
- ORIGIN
- Boston, MA, United States
- FORMED
- 1978
- GENRE
- Electronic