Let’s
talk
about
Electronic
Cottage
for
a
minute.
This
was
your
self
published
magazine
about
the
underground
scene.
What
gave
you
the
idea
to
do
this?
It
must
have
been
a
tremendous
amount
of
work.
What
kind
of
satisfaction
did
you
get
from
it?
Or
frustration?
Electronic
Cottage
Magazine
was
“An
inside
look
at
the
Home
Taper
Phenomenon,
Cassette
Culture
and
Electronic
&
Experimental
Music”.
I
published
six
issues:
the
first
in
April
1989,
the
last
in
July
1991.
I
moved
in
to
my
sister’s
apartment
in
Apollo
Beach,
Florida
in
1988,
at
the
age
of
30,
and
I
felt
like
I
was
starting
my
life
over
completely.
My
relationship
with
Debbie
Jaffe,
with
whom
I
had
lived
since
Autumn
1981,
had
totally
disintegrated;
and
I
felt
a
deep
sense
of
frustration
that
near
its
end
Cause
And
Effect
had
totally
lost
sight
of
its
original
goals
and
purposes.
Apollo
Beach
is a
sailboat
bedroom
community
on a
man-made
peninsular
thumb,
sticking
out
into
the
east
side
of
Tampa
Bay,
20
minutes
from
downtown
Tampa,
and
essentially
“out
in
the
sticks”,
near
a
heavy
agricultural
area.
I
got
a
job
as a
cook
at
the
Holiday
Inn
down
on
the
beach,
just
down
the
street
from
where
I
lived.
The
mile
and
a
half
long
Apollo
Beach
Boulevard
was
the
one
route
in
and
out,
and
on
either
side
streets
branched
off
that
were
lined
with
apartments
and
houses
that
pretty
much
all
looked
the
same,
situated
on
canals
in
which
mullet
jumped.
At
its
intersection
with
U.S.
Highway
41
there
was
a
Winn-Dixie
grocery
store,
a
post
office,
two
or
three
other
shops,
and
a
handful
of
bars.
I
did
not
own
an
automobile,
so I
was
completely
dependent
on
friends
and
relatives
to
provide
rides
to
points
of
civilization,
the
nearby
large
cities
of
Tampa
and
Saint
Petersburg.
Aside
from
my
Miniature
Dachshund,
Kaffee
(pronounced
like
“coffee”)
and
Golden
Retriever,
Cosmo,
and
the
people
I
knew
at
work,
I
was
totally
isolated.
After
a
few
months
of
these
desolate
conditions
I
got
“the
itch”,
meaning
that
I
missed
getting
mail
from
my
friends,
missed
getting
cool
tapes
of
experimental
music
in
the
mail,
missed
being
involved
in
the
vibrant
hometaper
scene.
I
got
tired
of
going
to
my
mailbox
every
day
and
finding
nothing
in
it,
no
packages
containing
cassettes!
I
decided
that
I
needed
to
re-dedicate
myself
to
the
original
principles
of
the
do-it-yourself
underground
experimental
music
tape
network,
which
I
had
so
sadly
lost
sight
of
in
the
midst
of
the
madness
and
the
turmoil
of
my
last
year
or
two
in
Indianapolis.
I
wanted
to
serve
and
promote
the
scene
in
some
way,
in
some
relatively
unselfish
manner.
At
the
time
I
and
several
of
my
cassette
friends
felt
that
there
was
really
no
publication
that
was
covering
cassette
music
in
any
kind
of
consistent
fashion.
When
OP
magazine
ended,
and
splintered
into
Option
and
Sound
Choice,
serious
coverage
of
Cassette
Culture,
and
reviews
of
cassettes,
were
spotty
and
inconsistent.
It
seemed
like
there
was
an
emphasis
in
those
publications
on
vinyl
record
releases,
and
more
upscale
indie
labels
(especially
in
Option).
These
magazines
were
a
big
disappointment
to
me
and
a
lot
of
my
friends.
So,
I
decided
to
publish
a
magazine
that
would
report
on
and
take
Cassette
Culture
seriously.
This
is
similar
to
the
reasons
why
I
started
the
Cause
And
Effect
Distribution
Service
back
in
1985
--
because
nobody
else
was
doing
it!
---
because
nobody
else
was
taking
cassettes
seriously
as
an
art
form
the
way
I
thought
they
should!
In
what
must
have
been
late
1988
I
created
a
small
paper
photocopied
leaflet
announcing
a
new
zine
that
would
cover
the
cassette
scene.
I
stuffed
these
into
envelopes
that
I
mailed
to
my
friends
and
asked
them
to
spread
them
through
the
network
by
putting
them
in
packages
of
tapes
that
they
were
sending
to
their
contacts.
I
must
have
sent
out
something
like
5,000
of
those
leaflets.
I
solicited
the
help
of
my
friends
and
asked
them
to
write
articles,
interviews,
reviews,
artwork
and
editorials
for
the
first
issue.
Sue
Ann
Harkey
designed
the
Electronic
Cottage
logo
which
would
appear
at
the
top
of
the
front
cover
of
each
issue.
The
first
four
issues
were
published
in
the
format
of
8.5
inch
by
14
inch
folded,
stapled
sheets,
making
8.5
inch
tall
by 7
inch
wide
pages.
All
six
issues
were
offset
printed
at
Action
Printing
in
Tampa.
I
did
1,000
copies
each
of
the
first
four,
and
700
copies
of
the
last
two,
which
were
printed
on
8.5
by
17
inch
sheets.
I
typed
up
the
texts
on
my
dad’s
Macintosh
computer
at
his
architectural
office
in
Tampa.
I
remember
that
I
had
to
use
3.5
inch
floppy
disks
to
save
anything
on
that
computer,
and
I
had
to
keep
shuttling
disks
in
and
out
of
it.
I
printed
out
the
texts,
brought
them
home,
and
hand-pasted
them
together
with
the
ads
and
artwork
onto
8.5
by
14
inch
sheets.
I
got
the
printed
uncollated
sheets
back
from
the
printer
in
big
boxes.
My
mom
helped
me
collate,
fold
and
staple
the
1,700
sheets
that
made
up
the
1,000
copies
of
the
first
issue.
I
did
the
construction
of
the
zines
themselves
to
save
money.
That
was
a
lot
of
work!
The
64-page
Issue
One
of
Electronic
Cottage
featured
Al
Margolis,
“The
Cassette
Godfather”,
on
the
cover,
and
inside
were
editorials,
articles
and
label
and
zine
(ND
for
example)
overviews
by
myself,
Dave
Prescott,
Carl
Howard,
Miekal
And,
Amy
Denio,
Jeph
Jerman,
Al
Margolis,
and
Scott
Colburn;
and
in-depth
interview
with
Margolis
by
PBK;
and
41
reviews
of
cassettes
and
records,
plus
reviews
of
publications.
The
reviews
in
Issue
One
were
written
by
me,
Andrew
Orford,
Al
Margolis,
Chris
Phinney,
Dave
Prescott,
Bill
Waid,
Dan
Fioretti,
Carl
Howard,
John
Hudak,
Allan
Conroy,
John
Collegio,
Jeph
Jerman,
Roger
Moneymaker,
Robin
James,
and
Bret
Hart.
I
urged
all
of
the
reviewers
to
write
careful,
thoughtful
reviews
that
took
into
account
and
placed
the
reviewed
release
in
the
context
of
previous
work
of
the
artist.
Each
review
contained
the
postal
address
of
the
artist
or
label,
so
that
readers
could
acquire
the
tapes
directly
from
the
source.
Scanning
the
reviews
I
see
releases
by
Geoff
Alexander,
Algebra
Suicide,
Dennis
Andrew,
Prescott
and
If
Bwana,
Don
Campau,
City
Of
Worms,
Darren
Copeland,
Amy
Denio,
The
Dental
Conference,
Minoy.
Sue
Ann
Harkey,
IAO
Core,
Illusion
Of
Safety,
La
Sonorite
Jaune,
Le
Momo,
Mental
Anguish,
Nick,
Odal,
PBK,
Suckdog,
Terre
Blanche,
This
Window,
many
compilations,
and
more.
I
reviewed
10
publications
including
Bananafish,
Xerolage
14
by
Malok,
Photostatic,
Afterbirth,
etc.
There
were
tons
of
cool-looking
classic
advertisements
in
that
first
issue:
Jeph
Jerman’s
Big
Body
Parts
label,
Phinney’s
Harsh
Reality
Music
label,
Vidna
Obmana,
Sound
Of
Pig,
Ecto
Tapes,
Mike
Jackson’s
XKurzhen
Sound
label,
Myke
Dyer’s
John
Doe
Recodings
label,
Generations
Unlimited,
Gravelvoice
Records,
Projekt,
Intrinsic
Action,
ND
zine,
Lord
Litter’s
Kentucky
Fried
Royalty,
an
Alamut
Records/BBP
ad
for
a
Haters
release,
Jeff
Chenault’s
International
Terrorist
Network,
Artware,
Radical
Cunts
Anonymous
Records,
Carl
Howard’s
audiofile
Tapes
label,
and
many,
many
more.
I
recently
scanned
all
of
Electronic
Cottage
Issue
One
and
uploaded
it
to
the
Internet
Archive.
You
can
view
and
download
the
pages
here:
http://www.archive.org/details/ElectronicCottageMagazineIssueOneApril1989
The
68-page
Issue
Two
of
Electronic
Cottage
(September
1989)
featured
Chris
Phinney
(“Master
Of
Harsh
Reality”)
on
the
cover;
an
interview
with
Phinney
by
Roger
Moneymaker;
an
article
on
Pat
Andrade
by
Myke
Dyer;
an
article
called
“Home
Music
Projects
For
Kids”
by
Walter
Alter;
“Procedures
For
Success
In
Home
Recording”
by
Zan
Hoffman;
plus
editorials.
Electronic
Cottage
#2
had
lots
of
reviews
of
cassettes
and
records,
including
1348,
Alien
Planetscapes,
Arcane
Device,
Blowhole/Big
Joey,
Bwana,
City
Of
Worms,
Dave
Clark
&
Walter
Drake,
Richard
Franecki,
The
Haters,
Zan,
Eric
Lunde,
Morphogenesis,
NOMUZIC,
Odal,
Prescott,
PBK,
Rik
Rue,
The
Silly
Pillows,
Sponge,
Teen
Lesbians
&
Animals,
Warworld,
Gregory
Whitehead,
Zzaj,
and
more.
Plus
reviews
of
zines
such
as
Cargo
Cult,
Factsheet
Five,
File
13, Gajoob,
H23,
Metro
Riquet,
Photostatic,
and
Vital.
plus
lots
more
cool
advertisements
by
ROIR,
Dennis
Andrew,
Suckdog,
PBK,
AWB
Recording,
Ecto
Tapes,
Gen
Ken
Montgomery’s
Generator,
aT,
Hybryds,
J.
Niswander’s
Usward
label,
Turn
Of
The
Grindstone,
Michael
Horwood,
Intrinsic
Action,
Harsh
Reality,
more.
EC#2
also
included
letters
from
readers,
with
their
reactions
to
the
first
issue.
In
my
editorial
introduction
to
Issue
Three
of
Electronic
Cottage
(March
1990,
68
pages,
Dave
Prescott
on
the
cover)
I
wrote:
“ELECTRONIC
COTTAGE
is a
publication
dedicated
to
contemporary
independently-produced
electronic
folk
arts
and
culture.
It’s
all
about
audio
pioneers,
sonic
explorers,
contemporary
electronic
music
trailblazers
and
the
independent
do-it-yourself
spirit.
It’s
all
about
people
who
aren’t
just
content
to
sit
back
and
consume
what
the
mass
media
serves
up
on a
remote
control
platter,
but
are
producing
new,
exciting,
challenging
and
highly
personal
artistic
visions
in
their
homes,
much
like
the
folk
artists
of
the
past.
The
mass
media
is
running
scared
because
it
no
longer
has
a
monopoly
on
information
and
communications
systems.
More
than
ever
before
the
individual
has
the
power
and
freedom
to
create
and
communicate
in
his/her
own
way
and
share
that
vision
with
other
people
in
every
corner
of
the
Earth.
We
stand
at
the
threshold
of
an
exciting
new
age.
Art
is
now
more
democratic
than
ever
before
-
Art
for
all,
not
just
for
an
elite
few!
The
tools
are
there
-photocopiers,
cassette
recorders,
personal
computers-
waiting
for
you
to
utilize
them.
While
the
millions
of
the
couch
potatoes
in
the
world
rot,
thousands
of
adventurous
spirits
in
every
corner
of
the
globe
are
forging
an
exciting
new
scene,
reaching
out
to
listeners,
sharing,
synthesizing
and
cross-pollinating
ideas,
cultures
and
visions.”
Electronic
Cottage
was
certainly
not
without
its
controversies!
In
the
editorial
statement
above
I
referred
to
the
hometaper
movement
as
“independently-produced
electronic
folk
arts
and
culture”.
My
use
of
the
term
“folk”
and
my
notion
that
homemade
music
was
a
new
folk
music
drew
heavy
criticism.
It
is
worth
noting
that
recently
on
Facebook
I
got
a
detailed,
lengthy
discussion
going
on
this
topic,
and
that
there
was
not
nearly
the
opposition
to
the
idea
now
as
there
was
20
years
ago.
What
I
meant
then
as
now
is
that
we
have
used
everyday
consumer
level
technology
to
create
our
own
music,
and
much
of
that
music
reflects
our
experiences.
It
has
always
been
my
understanding
that
the
cassette
was
originally
developed
and
intended
as a
utilitarian
dictation
device
by
its
developers.
I
think
that
it
was
only
later
that
the
sound
quality
was
improved
so
that
the
portable
cassette
recorder
could
replace
the
bulky
reel
to
reel
deck.
Even
then,
at
best
I
think
that
the
cassette
was
only
intended
to
provide
snapshot-quality
copies.
In
this
case
it
was
intended
as
an
aid
to
music
consumers,
so
that
they
could
make
personal
copies
of
their
vinyl
record
albums,
which
were
difficult
to
transport
and
play.
Lo
and
behold,
some
smart
people
in
the
late
1970s
got
the
idea
to
make
copies
of
their
music
onto
cassettes
and
treat
them
as
audio
art
objects.
A
later
example
would
of
course
be
circuit-bending,
and
it
is
obvious
that
this
amounts
to a
re-appropriation
of
discarded
junk
technology.
There
are
plenty
of
ironies
here
for
me:
one
of
which
is
that
multinational
corporations
have
enabled
the
anarcho-democracy
and
DIY
individualism
that
we
are
discussing.
As
Don
Campau
once
said,
"folk
music
is
whatever
the
folks
are
playing".
The
homemade
experimental
music
and
noise
movement
is
in
every
sense
a
grassroots
bottom-up
participatory
egalitarian
anarcho-democratic
phenomenon.
In
the
letters
to
the
editor
section
(“Feedback”)
of
the
second
issue
I
drew
criticism
for
publishing
a
review
by
Jeph
Jerman
of
Terre
Blanche’s
“The
Sickle
Cell”
7-inch
record.
Lydia
Tomkiw
wrote:
“
...the
Terre
Blanche
review
offended
us
greatly.
It
supports,
advertises,
and
sympathizes
with
the
white
power
movement
and
attitude
despite
its
lame
disclaimer
that
the
reviewer
doesn’t
agree
with
Terre
Blanche’s
racial
standpoint.
Terre
Blanche’s
political
view
is
part
of
their
music,
because
they
want
it
to
be:
they
have
declared
it,
and
they
have
integrated
it
into
their
music,
and
their
intent
is
clear,
focused
and
deliberate.
One
cannot
separate
their
political
viewpoint
from
their
music
because
of
this...
We
are
surprised
that
a
magazine
as
fine
as
EC
would
print
such
a
review...”.
On
the
inside
front
cover
of
EC
#2
there
was
a
full-page
ad
for
AWB
Recordings,
which
released
“The
Sickle
Cell”
(along
with
two
other
releases,
by
Sigillum
S
and
Intrinsic
Action).
And
again,
there
was
a
full-page
advertisement
by
AWB
on
the
inside
front
cover
of
EC
#3!
And
again
on
the
inside
front
cover
of
EC
#5!
My
decision
to
print
a
review
of
an
underground
music
artist
whose
themes
were
clearly
racist,
and
my
insistence
on
accepting
advertising
dollars
from
this
same
racist
organization
drew
understandable
outrage
and
condemnation
by
many
members
of
the
underground.
Many
folks
who
had
supported
the
earlier
issues
eventually
withdrew
their
advertising
support,
and
there
was
widespread
grumbling
about
EC.
I
explained
that
my
position
was
that
Electronic
Cottage
reported
on
and
represented
the
hometaper
movement
as a
whole,
without
censorship,
warts
and
all,
just
the
way
it
was,
pretty
or
ugly.
Doug
Walker,
of
Alien
Planetscapes,
who
had
himself
been
a
member
of
the
Black
Panthers,
reluctantly
agreed,
with
strong
reservations
of
course,
that
my
decision
was
the
correct
one.
Would
I
make
the
same
decisions
if I
had
them
to
make
over
again?
I
made
what
I
thought
was
the
correct
decision
at
that
time,
based
on
careful,
deeply-thought-out
consideration.
The
decisions
I
made
in
this
regard
were
indeed
highly
questionable,
and
worthy
of
criticism.
But
criticism
is
not
a
bad
thing.
Nor
is
controversy.
I
have
always
hoped
that
I am
brave
enough
to
do
what
I
think
is
the
right
thing
to
do,
right
or
wrong,
regardless
of
how
troublesome,
regardless
of
the
personal
cost.
Today
the
reaction
to
my
decisions
back
then
might
be
even
worse.
Electronic
Cottage
was
a
public
service
project.
It
was
there
to
inform,
to
educate,
to
share
ideas,
as a
forum.
I
made
no
money
from
it
personally,
and
I
put
hundreds
of
hours
of
work
into
it.
I
did
what
I
thought
was
best
for
the
community
as a
whole,
even
if
that
was
“difficult”,
contentious,
controversial,
painful.
I
was
a
firm
believer
that
the
open
exchange
of
ideas
and
viewpoints
in
the
hometaper
community
would
enhance
its
growth.
There
was
heated
debate
and
discussion
and
fiery
disagreement
in
those
pages.
The
editorials
by
various
writers,
on a
multitude
of
topics,
got
people
fired-up!
At
least
they
talked
about
it,
aired
their
thoughts
and
anger
and
disappointments
and
differences
of
opinions.
How
is
this
a
bad
thing,
even
today?
To
fund
the
magazine
I
sold
advertisements.
Example,
for
the
second
issue
full-page
ads
were
$40,
$25
for
a
half
page,
$15
for
a
quarter
page;
and
classified
ads
were
$2
for
the
first
25
words,
$0.10
for
each
additional
word.
I
also
sold
subscriptions:
three
issues
for
$7.00
in
the
USA,
or
$3
per
issue.
The
first
four
issues
of
Electronic
Cottage
totally
paid
for
themselves,
and
I
made
enough
money
off
of
the
first
four
to
pay
for
the
next
issue.
More
controversy
in
Electronic
Cottage
#3!
After
the
first
two
issues
I
decided
to
not
publish
reviews
of
releases
any
more,
because
I
felt
that
reviews
served
as
mere
consumer
guides,
and
didn’t
serve
the
seriousness
of
Cassette
Culture
and
homemade
music.
This
totally
threw
a
lot
of
people
for
a
loop.
It
was
incomprehensible
to a
lot
of
folks
that
a
zine
covering
underground
music
would
not
contain
reviews
of
recordings!
This
caused
more
fallout
of a
sort.
What
EC
#3
did
have
was
a
wealth
of
in-depth
articles,
interviews,
and
editorials
which
went
into
detail
about
the
themes
and
ideas
behind
the
making
of
underground
music.
I
felt
that
this
served
to
treat
the
scene
with
the
seriousness
it
deserved.
EC
#3
contained
lengthy
interviews
with
Prescott,
Dan
Burke
of
Illusion
Of
Safety,
Takehisa
Kosugi,
Randy
Greif,
and
Rik
Rue;
plus
artist
and
label
profiles
and
essays
on
media
criticism
and
the
nature
of
noise
and
other
topics
--
including
Vidna
Obmana,
XKurzhen
Sound,
an
appreciation
of
Lawrence
Salvatore
by
Dan
Fioretti,
the
cultural
aspects
of
improvisation
by
Rotcod
Zzaj,
and
more
and
more.
Lots
of
reading!
Electronic
Cottage
Issue
Four
(72
pages)
was
published
in
July
1990,
once
again,
in
an
edition
of
1,000,
with
La
Sonorite
Jaune
on
the
cover.
This
was
the
second
full
issue
to
not
contain
reviews,
and
there
was
a
wealth
of
articles:
a
label
profile
of
Midas
Music
by
Chris
Phinney,
John
Wiggins
interviewed
by
Michael
Chocholak,
a
profile
of
the
Irre
Tapes
label
by
Dan
Fioretti,
Crawling
With
Tarts
interview
by
Bill
Waid,
“Chatting
Up
Little
Fyodor”
by
Jeph
Jerman,
an
interview
with
Jack
Hurwitz
and
Treiops
Treyfid
of
Poison
Plant
Music,
John
Gullak
interviewed
by
dAS,
and
the
main
interview
of
La
Sonorite
Jaune
by
Eric
Therer,
plus
an
essay
on
tape
trading
by
Dimthingshine,
and
an
article
on
Jorg
Thomasius
by
Dave
Prescott
after
the
Berlin
Wall
came
down.
In
EC
#4 I
placed
an
announcement
for
the
upcoming
Electronic
Cottage
International
Compilation
Series,
which
was
planned
to
be
10
compilations.
I
actually
ended
up
publishing
three
90-minute
compilations.
Any
and
all
styles
were
welcome.
In
many
ways
the
advertisements
in
the
issues
of
Electronic
Cottage
say
as
much
about
those
days
as
anything
else!
With
Electronic
Cottage
Issue
Five
I
started
publishing
the
zine
in a
larger
format,
of
11
inch
by
17
inch
sheets
folded
in
half,
folded
and
stapled,
making
8.5
inch
by
11
inch
pages.
EC
#5
and
#6
were
published
in
editions
of
700
each.
Electronic
Cottage
Issue
Five
(January
1991,
84
pages)
has
Don
Campau
on
the
cover
in
what
I
think
is
one
of
the
classiest
and
coolest
artist
pics
ever!
I
thought
Don
looked
so
cool
in
that
photo,
and
I
wished
that
I
would
be
that
cool!
In
this
issue
we
have
Ken
Clinger
interviewed
by
Fioretti,
Lord
Litter
interviewing
Rodolfo
Protti
of
Old
Europa
Cafe
label,
John
M.
Bennett
interviewed
by
Dimthingshine,
my
interviews
with
Carl
Howard
and
with
Doug
Walker
of
Alien
Planetscapes,
Carl’s
featured
interview
with
Campau,
Chris
Phinney’s
interview
with
Alternate
Media,
profile
of
V2
Organisation,
an
article
by
G.X.
Jupitter-Larsen
called
“Celebrating
Entropy;
the
conceptology
of
haterdom”,
plus
lots
more.
And
again,
lots
of
classic
ads,
including
one
on
the
inside
front
cover
by
the
AWB
label,
which
states,
in
big
letters
“AWB
RECORDING
ARTISTS
ARE
RACISTS”.
The
sixth
and
final
issue
issue
of
Electronic
Cottage
was
published
in
July
1991
in
an
edition
of
700.
On
the
cover
was
Torrance,
California
audio
artist
Minoy
(interviewed
in-depth
in
the
issue
by
Minoy
expert
Jack
Jordan).
This
was
a
great
issue,
containing:
Lord
Litter’s
report
on
the
hometaping
scene
in
Latvia,
Swinebolt
45
interview
by
Phinney,
King
Felix
interviewed
by
Dimthingshine,
a
profile
of
Bret
Hart
by
Rotcod
Zzaj,
L.G.
Mair
interviewed
by
Carl
Howard,
a
conversation
with
Walter
Wright
and
Michael
Herndon
by
Boyd
Nutting,
Jim
O’Rourke
interviewed
by
Jeph
Jerman,
an
article
titled
“As
It’s
Dripping
Down
My
Leg,
A
Story
About
Banned
Production”,
and
much
much
more.
How
many
issues
did
you
do
and
what
finally
ended
it
for
you?
After
six
issues,
enough
was
enough.
The
personal
toll
was
just
too
much.
All
of
the
correspondence;
the
collating,
folding,
stapling,
laying
out
of
the
pages
by
hand,
mailing
packages;
solicitation
of
advertising
and
subscriptions
and
keeping
track
on
the
money
situation.
Remember,
this
was
essentially
a
one-person
operation
aside
from
all
of
the
great
contributing
writers.
I
made
a
mistake
going
to
the
larger
format
of
EC
#5
and
#6.
It
increased
the
production
cost
of
the
magazine,
as
well
as
making
them
heavier
and
therefore
more
expensive
to
mail
out,
and
I
started
having
to
fund
the
magazine
with
my
own
money.
It
became
harder
for
those
who
had
advertised
before
to
raise
the
money
for
the
increased
ad
sizes
(and
prices).
Those
were
the
first
two
issues
that
did
not
pay
for
themselves
through
advertising
and
subscriptions.
Plus
there
was
the
emotional
toll
that
I
experienced
dealing
with
criticism
of
my
policies.
I
experienced
total,
complete
absolute
burnout
on a
personal
level.
Plus
I
had
troublesome
personal
issues
(most
notably
an
affair
with
a
married
woman
10
years
younger
than
me
who
worked
as a
waitress
at
the
hotel
where
I
worked)
which
precipitated
my
move
to
Gainesville
from
Apollo
Beach.
It
is
worth
noting
here
that
for
the
three
years
I
lived
in
Apollo
Beach
I
was
a
kind
of
hometaper
hippie
of
sorts.
I
grew
my
hair
to
my
waist,
and
smoked
marijuana
every
day
for
those
three
years
(as
I
had
during
my
last
three
years
in
Indianapolis).
All
of
the
pot
smoking
just
added
to
the
fatigue
and
confusion
of
my
situation
with
the
zine.
I
also
want
to
say
here
that
Chris
Phinney
and
I
recorded
several
cassettes
of
analog
synthesizer
music
together
during
this
three
year
period,
during
visits
by
Chris
and
his
family
to
Florida,
and
one
visit
I
made
to
Memphis.
These
were
initially
released
on
Phinney’s
Harsh
Reality
Music
label
and
my
Electronic
Cottage
label.
Phinney
and
I
did
trio
albums
with
Dimthingshine
and
Mike
Jackson.
I
also
recorded
Peat
(which
is
one
of
the
best
and
best-known
works
in
my
catalog)
with
Al
Margolis
in
1990
(during
a
trip
to
the
New
York
City
Area),
and
a
during
a
trip
to
Miami
I
recorded
a
tape
with
Dimthingshine
and
artists
down
there.
It
is
worth
noting
that
on
these
releases
I
used
my
own
name,
not
a
pseudonym
such
as
Dog
As
Master.
The
tapes
with
Phinney
were
billed
as
being
by
Phinney/McGee,
and
unlike
our
earlier
collaborations,
Peat
was
by
Margolis/McGee,
instead
of
by
Bwana
Dog,
or
by
If,
Bwana/Dog
As
Master.
It
is
also
worth
noting
that
during
the
Cause
And
Effect
era
I
did
not
release
any
solo
material.
Clearly
my
emphasis
during
this
time
was
on
collaborative
community-based
thinking.
Then
there
must
have
been
some
kind
of
break
but
fairly
soon
you
kicked
it
up
again
with
HALzine.
Why
did
you
do
this
rather
than
just
re-start
Electronic
Cottage?
How
many
issues
of
HALzine
were
there?
Actually,
I
completely
dropped
out
of
the
underground
music
scene
for
about
three
years,
from
1992
to
mid-1995.
I
moved
to
Gainesville
in
October
1991.
The
situation
there
in
Apollo
beach
had
gotten
too
difficult
on a
personal
level,
and
I
had
to
get
out
of
there
pronto.
I,
my
two
cats,
and
my
dog
moved
into
a
one
bedroom
apartment
with
my
dad.
I
was
unemployed
for
my
first
three
months
in
Gainesville.
In
January
1992
I
got
a
job
in
the
Food
and
Nutrition
Services
Department
of
Shands
Hospital,
where
I
have
worked
since
then.
Also,
I
moved
to a
new
apartment
at
1909
Southwest
42nd
Way,
where
I
have
lived
since.
In
1992
I
started
an
intensive
involvement
with
organized
religion
and
joined
the
Bahá'í
Faith,
which
stresses
the
spiritual
unity
of
all
mankind
and
racial
harmony.
I
need
not
go
into
any
more
detail
here
about
those
years,
except
to
say
that
I
devoted
myself
as
fervently
to
that
cause
as I
had
previously
to
underground
music
and
cassette
culture.
I
published
the
first
issue
of
HALzine
in
February
1997.
On
the
cover
was
a
photo
of
Brian
Noring
(of
F.D.R.
Recordings)
and
his
wife,
Kathy,
that
was
taken
during
their
January
1997
visit
to
Gainesville.
The
focus
of
HALzine
was
clearly
different
than
Electronic
Cottage
and
I
clearly
stated
the
differences
in
the
first
issue
of
HALzine.
On
the
front
cover
it
says
“artistzine”
and
“a
personal
zine
by
the
creator
of
Viscera,
Dog
As
Master,
Cause
And
Effect,
Electronic
Cottage
and
HalTapes”.
On
the
inside
front
cover
are
advertisements
for
my
va10
cassette
release,
and
Cry
Of
The
Banshee,
a
collaborative
cassette
release
I
had
done
with
L.G.
Mair.
On
the
first
page
in
small
typed
cut-outs
pasted
haphazardly
over
a
collage
of
images
of
my
face
were
clues
as
to
what
HALzine
was
all
about:
In
addition
to
notes
about
my
love
of
coffee
and
spicy
food,
riding
my
bike
to
work
every
day,
a
brief
note
on
where
I
worked,
and
the
facts
that
“I
do
not
own
an
automobile,
a
television,
computer,
microwave
oven,
telephone
answering
machine,
cell
phone
or
pager”,
and
that
my
living
companions
were
a
Beagle
and
three
cats,
I
state
that
“HALzine
is a
personal
zine.
It’s
meant
for
those
who
have
similar
interests,
which
is
to
say
--
hometaping!”.
Also,
significantly
“The
only
thing
that
really
matters
to
me
is
creating
my
own
homemade
electronic
and
experimental
music
audiocassette
recordings
and
sharing
them
with
my
friends
all
over
the
world!”
So,
the
focus
of
HalZine
was
much
more
specific,
on
my
personal
experiences
as a
homemade
music
audio
artist.
I
wanted
to
share
and
others
of
similar
interests
my
experiences.
I
felt
the
need
to
share
the
ideas
behind
what
I
was
doing
on a
personal
level
without
the
financial
responsibilities
and
all
of
the
work
that
came
with
a
much
larger,
more
universal
publication
like
Electronic
Cottage.
It
is
worth
noting
that
I
printed
HALzine
in
the
7
inch
by
8.5
inch
page
format
of
the
first
four
issues
of
Electronic
Cottage.
The
bulk
of
HALzine
#1
consisted
of
an
in-depth
13-page
label
profile
of
Brian
Noring’s
F.D.R.
Recordings
label,
based
on
interviews
I
did
with
him.
I
want
to
go
on
record
here
as
saying
that
when
I
re-surfaced
in
the
hometaper
world
in
1995,
a
lot
had
changed.
Many
of
the
people
that
I
had
associated
with
in
the
Cause
And
Effect
and
Electronic
Cottage
days
had
abandoned
the
cassette
format,
were
releasing
records
or
CDs,
were
trying
to
gain
notoriety
and
“success”
for
themselves,
had
moved
to
“bigger
and
better
things”.
Plus,
the
term
“Noise”
was
starting
to
come
into
common
usage.
Noring’s
F.D.R.
label
was
to
my
mind
a
shining
example
of a
mid-1990s
label
that
was
keeping
the
cassette
audio
art
form
alive
with
the
original
no-nonsense
true-to-DIY
roots
and
doing
it
in a
personal
way
philosophy
which
had
energized
the
tape
culture
in
its
early
days.
To
me
F.D.R.
was
the
quintessential
cassette
label
of
the
second
half
of
the
1990s.
Toward
the
back
of
HALzine
I
had
a
few
listings
of
“Hometaper
News”,
just
news
bits
of a
few
of
my
tape
trading
partners.
I
want
to
share
with
you
here
a
statement
from
HALzine
#1
that
pretty
well
sums
where
I
was
at
with
my
hometaper
activities,
what
was
important
to
me:
“There
are
innumerable
reasons
why
tape
labels
come
to
an
end:
the
tough
financial
demands
of
running
a
label;
the
demands
and
stress
of
day
to
day
living;
disappointment
and
frustration
and
feeling
that
nobody
cares.
We
have
to
do
these
hometaping
activities
first
and
foremost
for
the
joy
and
love
of
doing
it.
Sure,
you
always
want
other
people
to
like
what
you’ve
done.
But
you
have
to
do
it
for
yourself,
because
it’s
important
to
you
to
make
music,
sound
paintings,
noise,
etc.
Secondly,
it’s
important
to
keep
in
mind
that
probably
not
a
lot
of
people
are
going
to
like
what
you
do.
It’s
your
sound
art.
It’s
your
personal
artistic
statement,
with
no
compromises,
no
restrictions.
You
can
try
anything.
But
it’s
not
usually
a
money
thing.
I
don’t
even
think
about
“breaking
even”,
making
a
profit.
A
third
point:
it’s
important
not
to
overdo
it,
not
to
get
overambitious,
not
to
spread
yourself
too
thinly.
Keep
it
simple.
Set
yourself
simple
goals.
Achieve
those
simple
goals
consistently.
For
instance
in
1996
I
set
myself
a
goal
to
send
out
600
HalTapes
--
about
50 a
month.
This
gave
me
an
achievable
target.
By
the
beginning
of
December’96
I’d
already
reached
my
goal
of
600.
I
resisted
the
temptation
to
continue
sending
more
out.
I
spent
most
of
that
month
relaxing,
getting
organized,
listening
to
tapes
I
hadn’t
had
a
chance
to
get
to
yet,
etc.
I
picked
a
number
goal;
your
goal
can
be
of
any
sort.
So
many
of
us,
when
doing
a
label,
try
to
do
too
much,
plain
and
simple.
We
have
less
time
and
money
to
put
into
each
project
--
and
it
can
all
become
meaningless,
torturous
drudgery.
My
suggestion
for
anyone
wanting
to
do a
tape
label
is
to
put
out
mostly
tapes
by
yourself
or
your
close
friends
and
go
slowly
--
don’t
go
release-crazy.
And
it’s
not
a
bad
idea
to
take
a
break
of a
few
weeks
or
months
if
necessary.
If
nothing
else,
put
the
emphasis
on
fun,
on
personal
satisfaction,
on
meaningful
interactions
with
other
hometaping
artists,
on
the
“music”
itself.
Otherwise,
go
start
a
rock
band
and
send
out
demos
and
such.
The
point
is,
if
you’re
in
this
to
make
money,
uh,
well,
you
picked
the
wrong
endeavor.
You
can
take
all
this
free
advice
(or
tell
me
what
to
do
and
where
to
go)
from
someone
who’s
gotten
burned
out
badly
twice,
and
retired
once
for
four
years.”
I
recall
that
in
1996,
1997
and
1998
Brian
Noring
and
I
dueled
with
who
could
send
out
the
most
tapes
in
one
year.
It
was
always
a
close
contest.
I
think
that
the
most
either
of
us
sent
out
in
one
year
was
something
like
700
tapes.
You
can
view
scans
of
the
pages
of
HALzine
#1
here:
http://www.archive.org/details/HALzineIssue1February1997
On
the
cover
of
Issue
#2
of
HALzine,
over
an
obviously
blown-up
photocopy
image
of a
Normal
Bias
cassette
we
find
pasted
the
words
“radical
militant
hometaperism”,
along
with
the
promise
that
inside
we
will
find
a
“HALrant
on
hometaper
personal
politics
and
economics”.
Inside
is a
12-page
rant
detailing
my
thoughts
on
how
the
cassette
is
the
most
democratic
art
form,
what
I
was
paying
for
cassettes
and
where
I
bought
them,
various
and
numerous
complaints
about
the
Fostex
XR-5
4-track
cassette
recorder
I
was
using,
about
the
transition
from
my
previous
High-Bias
cassette
snobbism
to
Normal
Bias
cassettes
(out
of
purely
economic
factors),
how
I
dubbed
my
cassettes
and
on
what
gear,
etc.
While
admitting
that
“lots
of
hometapers
out
there
use
much
different
methods
and
equipment
than
mine”
I go
on
to
say
that:
“there
are
several
interconnected
personal
hometaper
‘political’
issues
which
radiate
out
from
the
points
I’ve
raised.
I
use
the
equipment
I
use
for
several
carefully
considered
reasons
and
motivations.
Also,
to
return
to
my
initial
point:
there
are
reasons
why
I
put
my
work
out
on
cassettes!
Some
basics:
1) I
record,
compose
and
construct
(almost)
all
my
works
on
cassette;
2) I
use
cassettes
to
make
duplicating
masters;
which
I
then
use
to
3)
make
copies
of
my
works
on
cassettes
to
send
out
to
people.
So,
here
is a
basic
point:
from
start
to
finish,
I
use
cassettes.
The
next
basic
point
is:
I,
as
the
artist,
have
control
of
and
utilize
“the
means
of
production”.
Pardon
the
socialist-sounding
rhetoric,
but
this
is
an
important
point
for
me.
I
value
the
fact
that
I
maintain
artistic
control
of
the
audio
works
I
produce.
I
try
to
produce
works
that
are
highly
personal
and
are
reflections
of
my
life
and
experiences.”
I
then
go
on
an
extended
tirade
against
compact
discs,
talking
about
how
they
were
essentially
“consumer
products”
because
of
the
high
production
costs,
etc.
One
quotable
quote:
“I
do
cassettes
rather
than
CDs
for
the
same
kind of
reasons
I do
not
own
an
automobile,
and
ride
a
bicycle
instead”.
I
won’t
go
on
here
any
further
with
a
description
of
this
rant.
Suffice
to
say
that
it
was
written
before
the
arrival
of
inexpensive
home
CD
recorders.
HALzine
#4,
July
1997,
is
notable
for
its
detailed
report
on
my
trip
to
the
New
York
City
area
where
I
recorded
with
L.G.
Mair,
and
Keith
Nicolay,
hung
out
with
Doug
Walker
of
Alien
Planetscapes,
recorded
with
Al
Margolis
in
Brooklyn
and
Carl
Howard
in
Jersey
City.
HALzine
#5,
December
1997,
reported
on
my
October
1997
visit
to
F.D.R.
Heaquarters
in
Des
Moines,
Iowa.
You
can
view
several
pages
from
that
issue
of
HALzine,
as
well
as
photos
and
documentation
from
one
of
the
recording
sessions
(for
the
Summit
cassette,
featuring
Charles
Rice
Goff
III,
Phil
Klampe
of
Homogenized
Terrestrials,
Shawn
Kerby
of
360
Sound,
Brian
Noring
and
myself)
here:
http://www.halmcgee.com/summit.html
All
five
issues
contained
news
from
other
labels
and
ads
for
my
newest
cassette
releases.
HalTapes
must
have
also
started
around
this
time,
or
was
that
earlier?
I am
not
exactly
sure
of
when
I
started
using
the
name
HalTapes
for
my
label.
The
earliest
actual
document
I
can
find
bearing
that
name
is
the
HalTapes
Summer
1996
Catalogue.
I
reissued
several
of
my
older
tapes
plus
all
new
material
under
that
name.
I
have
more
or
less
called
my
label,
or
project
of
releasing
music,
HalTapes
ever
since
then,
even
when
I
released
compact
discs
or
issued
my
music
online,
and
even
when
I
did
compilations.
I
have
used
that
name
for
my
label
activities
since
1995
because
that
is
kind
of
literally
what
my
releases
are.
Again,
I’m
assuming
this
was
to
house
your
own
music
but
soon
you
began
releasing
the
landmark
compilation
series,
Tape
Heads,
which
were
huge
international
pan
genre
collections.
Again,
this
must
have
been
a
lot
of
effort
and
expense.
Did
this
vastly
increase
your
international
contact
base?
How
did
you
put
these
tapes
together?
Just
pick
your
favorite
tracks
from
tapes
submitted?
I
produced
the
eight-volume
Tape
Heads
International
Cassette
Compilation
Series
in
1998.
Around
that
time
the
first
compact
disc
recorders
for
home
use
were
becoming
available.
At
that
time
I
was
convinced
that
this
spelled
the
doom
of
the
cassette
as
an
audio
art
medium.
I
wanted
to
pay
what
I
thought
was
going
to
be
one
last
tribute
to
the
cassette,
before
it
faded
away
altogether.
I
sent
out
10,000
paper
leaflets
through
snail
mail
announcing
and
open
call
for
the
project.
Anybody
and
everybody
could
participate
and
there
was
no
limitation
on
style,
just
as
long
as
they
sent
their
contribution
to
me
on a
cassette
and
it
did
not
exceed
five
minutes.
I
did
not
reject
any
contributions.
Note
the
term
“contribution”,
instead
of
“submission”.
I
added
the
contributions
to
the
90-minute
cassette
masters
in
the
order
that
they
were
received.
I
used
this
chance
process
method
of
determining
the
order
of
the
contributions
on
the
compilations
so
that
no
preference
would
be
given
based
on
any
personal
tastes
of
mine,
and
(as
a
statement)
to
show
that
I
valued
all
forms
and
styles
of
underground
cassette-based
audio
art,
noise,
and
music.
It
also
produced
some
interesting
contrasts
and
connections
and
correlations
between
lots
of
different
kinds
of
underground
music
styles.
As
soon
as
there
was
enough
material
to
fill
up a
90
minute
tape
I
put
out
a
volume
of
the
compilation
series.
A
big
part
of
the
reason
that
I do
compilation
projects,
and
I
have
done
several,
is
to
find
new
contacts,
new
allies
in
soundmaking.
The
recent
Dictaphonia
Microcassette
Compilation
project
brought
me
into
contact
with
several
audio
artists
who
I
now
consider
as
good
friends
and
collaborators.
I
also
do
compilation
projects
to
assess
what
is
going
on
in
the
scene.
In
the
case
of
Tape
Heads
I
wanted
to
find
out
just
how
much
interest
there
still
was
in
cassettes
as
an
audio
art
form.
Of
course
I
always
hope
that
compilations
will
help
to
connect
artists
who
were
not
previously
aware
of
each
other.
I
also
do
my
compilations
to
foster
cross-pollination,
to
hopefully
demonstrate
that
in
spite
of
differences
in
style,
underground
music
makers
can
find
common
grounds,
and
can
learn
from
one
another,
and
create
new
forms
based
on
the
influences
and
inspirations
derived
from
other
practitioners
of
homemade
audio
art.
The
Tape
Heads
compilations
contain
a
dizzying
array
of
experimental
and
underground
music
styles.
You
never
know
what
you
are
going
to
hear
from
track
to
track.
Many
of
the
artists
are
not
active
today,
but
there
are
many
who
are
still
around,
busy,
and
active
today.
You
never
know
what
you
are
going
to
hear
from
track
to
track.
See
how
many
of
these
names
you
recognize.
Tape
Heads
One:
Manster,
Hal
McGee,
Ruhr
Hunter,
Merrick
McKinlay,
Don
Campau,
If,
Bwana,
The
Implicit
Order,
Dave
Fuglewicz,
The
Violet
Grind,
Carnal
Hedon
Coitus,
Flatline
Construct
(Canada),
The
Teleflood
Project,
De
Fabriek
(The
Netherlands),
Napalmed
(Czech
Republic),
Eddy
Rollin
Band,
Dan
Susnara,
Worldhate
(Indonesia),
Wagstaff
(England),
Neandertal
(Italy),
Concrete,
HKO
(USA/Canada).
You
can
download
Tape
Heads
One
here:
http://www.halmcgee.com/tapeheadsvolumeone.html
Tape
Heads
Two:
Gruntsplatter,
Expose
Your
Eyes
(England),
Ceramic
Hobs
(England),
Brian
Ladd,
The
End
(Norway),
K.D.
Schmitz,
E H
I,
Ha
Ba
Da,
Brume
(France),
Art
Of
DEcay
(Belgium),
Monoid
(Germany),
Jeph
Jerman
and
Dave
Knott,
John
Netardus,
Angelica
Rosenthal
(Italy),
Diamond
Shamrock,
Ken
Clinger,
Michael
J.
Bowman,
Maisie
(Italy),
Joyce
Whore
Not
(Italy),
Lord
Litter
(Germany),
Mykee
Hates
Life.
Tape
Heads
Three:
Driving
By
Braile,
Matt
Frantz,
Wrong,
Stovepipe
Wells
(Germany),
Broca’s
Area,
Astral
Princess
(Czech
Republic),
Charles
Rice
Goff
III,
Deleted
(France),
Keim
vs,
No
(Germany),
Lefthanded
Decision,
Ski-Mask,
Chlamydia
Test
Cloud,
Gerbil
Bliss,
Isomorphic
Strain,
The
Odd
Man,
J
mUNdoK,
Bruce
Atchison
(Canada),
Post
Prandials,
Lode
Runner
(England),
M.
Nomized
(France),
Charles
Bascomb
(England),
Tender
Love.
Tape
Heads
Four:
Doug
Michael,
Joseph
Roemer,
Ring
(Norway),
Sonic
Disorder,
0781KT,
Pol
Silentblock
(Belgium),
Instagon,
The
Earwigs,
Moth,
Bruce
B.
Bolos,
The
Bran
Flakes,
Gaephayce,
Reynols
(Argentina),
Odal
(The
Netherlands),
Timo
(England),
A.1.
Waste
Paper
Co.
Ltd.
(England),
Murderous
Visions,
Elton’s
One
Man
China
Band,
Regicide
Bureau,
Dave
Wright
Tape
Heads
Five:
Ardisson
(Japan),
Lasse
Marhaug
(Norway),
Histeresis
Mozca
(Yugoslavia),
The
Local
Wise
Men
(Germany),
The
Rabbit’s
Hat
(England),
Mad
Monkey,
Homogenized
Terrestrials,
The
Hearing
Trumpet,
Il
Mestruo
Delle
Puttane
(Italy),
Billy?
(Japan),
Zanstones,
Lonely
Noise,
Hose
Monster,
Morgue
Pimp,
Einschlafhilfe
(Germany),
Troubled
Elixor
Fantasy,
Origami
Replika
(Norway),
Bargain
Basement,
Slowvent,
Flangerotronics
(The
Netherlands),
Tem
Oph
Ab
(Italy),
Sam
Dellaria
&
Adam
Sonderberg.
Tape
Heads
Six:
Turkey
makes
Me
Sleepy,
Jay
T.
Yamamoto,
BX6
Sitie
Orkistraw(e),
Ames
Sanglantes
(Canada),
Adam
Chao,
Azoikum
(Germany),
Frank
Peck,
Granny
Smith
(Germany),
Fckn’
Bstrds
(The
Netherlands),
Kummerlige
Forhold
(Denmark),
Mystery
Hearsay,
JABON,
R.E.
Bareaux,
Lahm
(Germany),
Impaxis/Equilibrium,
Bob
Marinelli,
Outermost
(Japan),
MPD
(Germany),
Kirchenkampf.
Tape
Heads
Seven:
Zwinter
(Germany),
John
Wiese,
Chancellar
Guild,
David
Cotner,
F.F.F.
(The
Netherlands),
Crudsocket,
Makita
(Germany),
Hjalmer
Geiger
(Denmark),
Herod,
Doctorhood
(Germany),
Deluge,
Static
Insect
(Canada),
Dog
In
The
Manger,
Mikroben
Krieg
(Portugal),
Daruin
(Japan),
Atonement
(Canada),
Robert
Clutter
&
Geordie
Thompson,
Grand
Facade,
My
Friend
George
(Denmark),
Mr.
Ebu
(Germany).
Tape
Heads
Eight:
K2
(Japan),
The
Dreadlock
Brothers
(Germany),
Atrophy,
Joe
B.
Vaughan
Jr.
and
Elton
Houck,
Andy
Willard,
J
Dog,
Flatline
Construct
(Canada),
Robin
O’Brien
and
Don
Campau,
Trip
Scope
(Germany),
Twitch,
Gaijin
(Germany),
Noring/McGee,
Mental
Anguish,
Dave
Fuglewicz,
Kunz
vs.
No
(Germany),
Ant
Corray,
Origami
Epeleptika
(Norway),
Courtis
(Argentina),
Jeph
Jerman
and
Doug
Theriault,
Lethal
Dose
50
(Belgium).
Have
you
transferred
many
of
the
older
tapes
to
CD
now,
or
to
the
Internet
as
sound
files?
Yes,
indeed
I
have!
I
must
admit,
however,
that
my
“discography”
or
“tapeography”
or
whatever
it
is,
is a
total
mess,
and
a
discographer’s
nightmare.
I
have
online
on
my
website
two
different
lists
that
the
curious
can
consult
for
information
on
my
releases
from
1981
to
the
present.
My
Old
Master
Catalog
list
includes
information
along
with
thumbnails
of
cover
artwork
for
every
release
that
I
did
from
1981
to
1992;
and
it
also
lists
every
full-length,
album-length
release
from
1995
to
2007
or
so:
http://www.halmcgee.com/Music/
A
more
current
list,
my
Master
Catalog
List
2010,
presents
a
much
more
complete
list
of
my
releases
and
includes
links
to
all
of
my
releases
that
are
currently
available
in
either
hard
formats
or
online
or
both:
http://www.halmcgee.com/halmcgeemastercataloglist2010.html
A
relatively
small
amount
of
my
releases
are
currently
available.
I
expect
that
this
will
change,
as I
want
to
keep
on
publishing
my
works
(old
and
new)
on
the
Internet
Archive.
Why
is
so
little
of
my
work
available
right
now?
Limited
resources,
for
one
thing.
I
only
have
so
much
time
and
money.
If I
didn’t
have
to
go
to a
job
four
days
out
of
the
week
-
and
no
complaints
here
- I
am
happy
to
have
the
job
that
I
have
-
and
I
have
a
sweet
schedule
of
four
10-hour
days
a
week
- I
would
have
a
lot
more
time
to
archive
my
past
works,
either
by
uploading
them
to
the
Internet
Archive
or
reissuing
them
on
tape
or
disc.
I
have
a
constant
struggle
between
the
old
and
the
new.
With
an
extensive
back
catalog,
the
upkeep
and
maintenance
on
past
recordings
alone
would
be
enough
to
keep
me
busy.
I am
also
constantly
producing
new
audioworks.
I
currently
have
a
backlog
of
unreleased
works,
all
collaborations,
or
collaborations
that
are
planned
for
the
future,
in
the
next
few
months.
I am
a
workaholic
when
it
comes
to
my
music
activities,
but
there
just
doesn’t
seem
to
be
enough
time
to
get
everything
done
that
I
would
like
to.
--
homemade
experimental
electronic
music
since
1981
http://www.halmcgee.com