Hans Orifice

Hans Orifice is a drummer known as a member of Gwar.[1] Born Jim Thomson, in Alexandria, Virginia, he first took the name Hans Sphincter, and assumed his current name in 1987. Thomson left due to touring commitments with his main band, the Alter Natives, who released three albums on SST Records. Richmond drummer Rob Mosby of the Richmond, Virginia punk group White Cross then joined Gwar until 1989. Hans Orifice returned briefly in 1989 after Mosby left the group. During this time Thomson co-wrote Sick of You with the band and completed a U.S. and Canadian tour. After the tour Thomson left Gwar on good terms to tour with The Alter Natives. He was replaced by current drummer Jizmak Da Gusha.

Hans Orifice
Birth nameJim Thomson
GenresPunk rock
Shock rock
Occupation(s)Drummer, Record Producer, Label Manager, Band Manager, Production Manager, Concert Promoter
InstrumentsDrums
Years active1987, 1989
LabelsShimmy Disc
Metal Blade Records
DRT Entertainment
Slave Pit Inc.
Associated actsGwar
The Alter Natives
Bio Ritmo
Tulsa Drone
Plasmodium
CSC Funk Band
WebsiteGwar official site

In 2000, Thomson joined Bob Miller, and formed an experimental group called Plasmodium. The group released Clairaudience in 2004. Thomson joined Brooklyn-based CSC Funk Band as a drummer and percussionist in 2008. In 2010 he started Electric Cowbell Records, a boutique record label releasing mostly 7" 45RPM records for genre-bending music groups culled from his extended community and network of musicians and music producers. In 2011 The Village Voice voted Electric Cowbell Records the Best Spearheaders of the Vinyl Revival. The label released several acclaimed 45RPM 7" records for a variety of groups like Superhuman Happiness, Debo Band, CSC Funk Band, Talibam!, Cheick Hamala Diabate, Bio Ritmo, Mucca Pazza, Amazing Ghost, Greg Ginn, Spanglish Fly, Super Hi Fi, No BS! Brass, Chico Trujillo, Orquesta el Macabeo, Slavic Soul Party, Polyrhythmics, Os Magrelos, and Karthala 72.

Discography

  • With The Alter Natives: Hold Your Tongue (SST Records, 1986), Group Therapy (SST Records, 1987), Buzz (SST Records, 1989), Alter Natives/Carnival of Souls split 7" (L'Âge d'or Records, Germany, 1990)
  • With Hotel X: A Random History of the Avant-Groove (SST Records, 1992), Residential Suite (SST Records, 1993), Ladders (SST Records, 1994)
  • With Bio Ritmo: El Piraguero 7" (Merge Records), Que Siga La Musica (Shameless Records, 1995), Salsa Galactica (Permanent Records, 1997), Rumba Baby Rumba (Mercury Records, 1998)
  • With The Dave Brockie Experience: The Dave Brockie Experience (Metal Blade Records, 2001)
  • With Patrick Phelan: Parlor (Jagjaguwar, 2001)
  • With The Griefbirds: Paper Radio (Planetary Records, 2001)
  • With Pan American: Pan American (Kranky Records, Kranky 025)
  • With Anthony Curtis and Boom: Squint (Field of Sound Records, 1994)
  • With Trixie Delicious and the Lott Lizards: Bring Me Men (Don't Mess With Trixie Records, 2003)
  • With Broken Hips: Broken Hips (Self-Released, 2003)
  • With Tulsa Drone: No Wake (Dry County Records, 2003)
  • With Plasmodium: Clairaudience (Dry County Records, 2004)
  • With USA Is A Monster R.I.P. (Northern Spy Records, 2010)
  • With CSC Funk Band: Bad Banana Bread (Electric Cowbell Records, 2010), A Troll's Soiree (Electric Cowbell Records, 2010), Things Are Getting Too Casual (Fat Beats, 2011)
gollark: inefficiency/slowness at common operations and general badness for the majority of cases
gollark: linked lists bad.
gollark: Well, more money → more betterer, although of course diminishing marginal utility.
gollark: Well, I tried that, but honestly running 0.3% of the world's economy was quite hard?
gollark: Plus, nobody would listen to me if I talked about the [REDACTED] in 2026.

References

  1. In my room; Spin (Nov 2009); p26
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.