
VIA PRESS RELEASE | Legendary post punk band mekons announced today that they will be re-releasing their 2025 album HORROR on June 12 in conjunction with an entire new album of Dub remixes, entitled HORRORble (mekons Vs. Tony Maimone In Dub Conference) by Pere Ubu’s Tony Maimone via Fire Records as a 2xCD, white vinyl and digital configurations and can be ordered here. The first single “Mudcrawlers featuring Benji Webbe (Version)” is out today as well. In support of the new HORROR/HORRORble (mekons Vs. Tony Maimone In Dub Conference) album, mekons will be hitting the road in the United States and elsewhere beginning May 30.
Last year, mekons released their first new album in five years titled HORROR. It was also their first album to be released by Fire Records. The mekons have a long history, and we could talk about these two albums all day. So, here’s succinct, yet poignant view. Formed in Leeds UK long, long ago in the olden days of ye punke the good ship mekon has sailed the seven seas of musical mishaps releasing 40 or 50 albums and countless singles on one fantastic record label after another.
The mekons maintain a collective approach to their art. They are not beholden to the whims and niceties of fashion or even nice sounding tunes—they do what they want to do and mostly have a good time doing it and encourage you to have a good time too. With band members currently spread thinly across the imperial core they are planning to relocate to Greenland in 2027. Back in the day “The personal is political” was their motto and while that still holds true it morphed into “The political is political.” Now along with everyone else it’s: “organize and resist.”
When the mekons went into Elephante Studios in Valencia, Spain in August of ’22 to record what would become HORROR, they didn’t need to bring their crystal balls … mene mene tekel upharsin … the runes were carved—it was obvious which way the wind was blowing but a more apposite title would be hard to find to describe the live-streamed slaughtered gaslit erased criminal senile perverted present moment.




Two long years passed before Boston released Don’t Look Back, amidst legal squabbles with Epic Records and Scholz’s legendary perfectionism. One gets the sense that, had he had his way, Don’t Look Back wouldn’t have seen the light of day until 2078. Anything less than one hundred years, in Tom’s view, and you were listening to a demo. As it was, the follow-up to Don’t Look Back, Third Stage, wouldn’t see the light of day until 1986, and something tells me the LP had to be pried from his fingers as he screamed, “There’s a note on track three I’ve been working on for two years and still can’t get right!”




The end of the 1980s was swiftly approaching, and the jury was still out on the music of Ornette Coleman. The temporary reign of compact discs was well underway, and it gradually became easier to actually hear (instead of just read about) the sounds that so divided jazz at the dawn of its most tumultuous decade. However, for my first two Coleman purchases I had to settle for cassettes. Until the CD reissues of Ornette’s Atlantic efforts began showing up in the racks (or more appropriately put, started getting listed in catalogs as being available for purchase), hearing the man’s groundbreaking early material was a struggle. Even the ‘70s fusion work with Prime Time and his ‘80s albums were difficult to locate.



It would be appropriate; has any major band ever been as associated with acid as Pink Floyd? (Yeah. The Grateful Dead, dumbo.) But not even the Dead managed to put out LPs (like 1969’s Ummagumma) that I would ONLY listen to while I was on hallucinogens, because they were unlistenable to anyone on the uninitiated side of the doors of perception. That said, I’ve since put on Ummagumma and found its first side to be bearable and its second side to be complete and unadulterated bullshit (“Several Species of Small Furry Animals” or “The Grand Vizier’s Garden Party (Entertainment),” anyone?). And while my recollections are hazy, I have come to the conclusion that the guy in the dorm who owned it was so far out there he’d only play side two while tripping balls.
Martin engineered and produced records for Sonic Youth, Swans, John Zorn, Afrika Bambaataa, and countless others across the no-wave and post-punk underground. We got into Martin’s life views, the relevance of New York culture, and the perils of capitalism.











































