* En anglais uniquement
One of the pioneers of industrial music, Toronto, Canada's
Malhavoc picked up on the scattered transmissions sent out by formative acts such as
Throbbing Gristle,
Coil, and
Chrome, contributed to the genre's development throughout the 1980s alongside contemporaries like
KMFDM,
Skinny Puppy, and
Ministry, and thus pre-dated its effective, 1990s coming of age by several years. Formed by vocalist, guitarist, keyboardist, programmer, and lone mainstay James Cavalluzzo in 1983,
Malhavoc began making waves in the tape-trading underground with a slew of extreme metal-infused demos like The Destruction Starts (1983), The Destruction Continues (1984), Age of the Dark Renaissance (1986), and 1988's watershed, Shrine, which still mingled industrial basics with lingering death metal elements and ambient sounds.
Malhavoc's first official album, The Release -- featuring Cavalluzzo, guitarists Dave Kiner and
Rob Wright, and bassist Steve Jelliman -- finally arrived in 1990; but perhaps even more than his music, Cavalluzzo and co. first drew attention to themselves because of their penchant for shocking on-stage antics, whereupon bandmembers and assorted guests would infamously indulge in everything from theatrical displays of S&M and nudity, to role-playing violence and real self-mutilation. Additional programmer Steve Crowhurst was brought in for 1991's
Punishments EP (also featuring a guest spot from
Skinny Puppy's David Ogilvie), and this five-piece remained stable through the recording of 1992's
Premeditated Murder full-length, which met with some controversy when legal action from
the Rolling Stones led to the album's temporary withdrawal from the marketplace (a song called "Dead" unlawfully sampled "Sympathy for the Devil"). A retooled version, amended with a new and
Stones-free mix of the track, was released later that year, and the members of
Malhavoc busied themselves with touring, but change was on the horizon. The group's next album, 1994's conceptual Get Down, introduced a paired down lineup of Cavalluzzo, Kiner, Jelliman, and real live drummer John Carss, and pretty much closed the book on
Malhavoc's heavy metal influences (a trend which had been accelerating with every recent release) in order to embrace a fully techno/ambient industrial style. Unfortunately, this coincided with a period of mounting strife within the group that would result in the replacement of Kiner and Jelliman with new members Chris Scahill (guitar) and Justin Pearen (bass) before the 1995 sessions for
Malhavoc's ill-fated next opus, The Lazarus Complex: A Tale of Two Zombies. Initially delayed by business complications between the group and its record label, the adventurous techno-ambient project would only be officially released five years later -- five years of deafening silence for
Malhavoc (interrupted only by 1998's "Eat Me" single), yet busy ones for Cavalluzzo, who decided to shelve the band in order to collaborate with dozens of acts. Since then, Cavalluzzo has resurrected
Malhavoc only when his personal whims have dictated, such as for the release of 2004's Human Fly EP (containing covers of songs by
the Cramps,
the Cure, and
Depeche Mode),and for a tour in 2007. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia