Last Days of Humanity explained

Last Days of Humanity
Background:group_or_band
Origin:North Brabant, Netherlands
Years Active:1989–2006, 2010–present
Label:Bones Brigade, Machine Shop
Current Members:Rogier Kuzee
Hans Smits
Marc Palmen
William van de Ven
Past Members:Anne Van De Burgt
Bart Bouwmans
Bas Van Geffen
Boris Cornelissen
Dennis Dekkers
Erwin De Groot
Erwin De Wit
Glenn Jagers
Mark Snijders
Marty Van Sintet
Rutger Noij

Last Days of Humanity is a Dutch goregrind band From North Brabant, Netherlands. They were active from 1989 until 2006, Released 3 studio albums from 1996 to 2006, and then reformed in 2010. Their music is known for its nonstop sound and relentless blast beats, with regards to drummer Marc Palmen.

The band has been recognized as one of the most notable grind acts in the Dutch music scene, And one of the most well known Goregrind Bands ever.

History

Erwin de Wit and Hans Smits often came together in Soos Plock, where they socialised and saw bands like Blood, Agathocles, Dreft and other bands who were into grindcore/noisecore at that time. It also was the heyday of some other underground bands such as Fear of God, Sore Throat, Anal Cunt, and 7 Minutes of Nausea. These bands inspired them to go and start their own grind/noise band.[1]

Erwin was in a grindcore band called Fatal Error prior to joining Last Days of Humanity. When Erwin organized a gig with Drudge, Agathocles, and some other bands on December 30, 1989, in Plock, he saw the opportunity to add their own noise project to the bill, and Last Days of Humanity was born.

Last Days of Humanity at this time consisted of only two vocalists (Erwin and Hans). Their music was originally crafted by using two screaming voices that were deformed by a pitch shifter intended for the guitar. In 1990, a more traditional band setup was formed when the first real gig of Last Days of Humanity was planned. They were scheduled to play on October 6, 1990, together with Fatal Error at Soos Plock.

In 1993, the band went into the studio to record their second demo. In 1996, they got their first record deal. Afterward, they booked 2 studio days to record their first album. After one day of recording they only recorded approximately 12 minutes of music. Their label then informed the band that they had to come up with 18 additional minutes of new material in 24 hours, or the album would not be released. After this dispute, they quickly moved to Bones Brigade. The band split up in 2006.[2]

In 2010, Bones Brigade announced that Last Days of Humanity officially reformed. The band appeared at Bloodshed Fest 2010 at the Dynamo club in Eindhoven, Netherlands, Maryland Deathfest 2011 at Sonar in Baltimore, and toured the United Kingdom in December 2011. They also appeared at Hellfest 2011 in Clisson, France, and Obscene Extreme 2011 in Czech Republic.

In March Of 2021, The band Released their First Album in 15 years, "Horrific Compositions Of Decomposition."[3] their first album released in 15 years.

Members

Current members

Former members

Discography

Albums

EPs

Demos

Splits

Other

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Braindead Zine . Braindead Zine . 30 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190520143347/http://braindeadzine.net/interview-hans.htm . 20 May 2019 . April 2008.
  2. Web site: Chainey . Ian . The Month In Metal – February 2021 . Stereogum . 30 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211226194321/https://www.stereogum.com/2117598/the-month-in-metal-february-2021/columns/the-black-market/ . 26 December 2021 . 26 February 2021.
  3. Web site: Meyer . Gene . Blast Worship: Last Days of Humanity . Decibel Magazine . 30 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220130155054/https://www.decibelmagazine.com/2021/03/16/blast-worship-last-days-of-humanity/ . 30 January 2022 . 16 March 2021.