
Radar Men From The Moon - The Bestial Light
Standard edition on frosted clear vinyl. Deluxe vinyl on ultra clear vinyl in a hand-numbered gatefold jacket (hand-numbered /200).
Dutch experimentalists RMFTM are ushering in their tenth year as a band with their sixth full-length âThe Bestial Lightâ, due for release May 8th via Fuzz Club and marking yet another evolution in sound and line-up from the shape-shifting Eindhoven-based collective. Across their extensive back-catalogue and many collaborations (including with the likes of Gnod, The Cosmic Dead and 10 000 Russos, as well as the occasional art piece), the band have moved from expansive space-rock to avant-garde drone and industrial techno. Now, however, is the time for something else.
Bolstered by the addition of a vocalist and second drummer, the incendiary âBestial Lightâ LP sees the band move on from the electronic experimentations of the Subversive album trilogy (culminating in their most-recent LP, 2018âs âDe Spelende Mensâ) and last yearâs âBlissâ EP. Their new direction, instead, finds them journeying into a dissonant industrial punk sound thatâs EinstĂŒrzende Neubauten and early Swans by way of Neurosis and Godflesh. Fusing heavy industrial rhythm sections, biting post-punk vocals and crushing âacid metalâ riffs, the new incarnation of Radar Men From The Moon aka RMFTM is comprised of core members Glenn Peeters (guitar), Tony Lathouwers (drums), Titus Verkuijlen (bass) and Bram van Zuijlen (guitar/synth), with the addition of Joep Schmitz (drums) and Harm Neidig (vocals/saxophone).
Not long after recruiting the new members, the now-expanded RMFTM headed back into the studio with their long-term producer Bob de Wit (Gnod, A Place to Bury Strangers, Mudhoney), laying down the new album in 14-hour shifts over 12 days: âWe were constantly 100% on it so the process was quite intense but also very rewarding. You can definitely hear that on the record.â On the albumâs theme, borne out just as much in their creative approach as it is as the lyrics and instrumentation, they say: âWe wanted to write about everything instinctual in mankind, individual desires and true will. Transgression and the seductiveness of unreason.â
Unsurprising, then, that âThe Bestial Lightâ is such a primitive, borderline-depraved affair; one that constantly feels like itâs hurtling towards an edge that youâre never quite sure you want to look over.
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Description
Standard edition on frosted clear vinyl. Deluxe vinyl on ultra clear vinyl in a hand-numbered gatefold jacket (hand-numbered /200).
Dutch experimentalists RMFTM are ushering in their tenth year as a band with their sixth full-length âThe Bestial Lightâ, due for release May 8th via Fuzz Club and marking yet another evolution in sound and line-up from the shape-shifting Eindhoven-based collective. Across their extensive back-catalogue and many collaborations (including with the likes of Gnod, The Cosmic Dead and 10 000 Russos, as well as the occasional art piece), the band have moved from expansive space-rock to avant-garde drone and industrial techno. Now, however, is the time for something else.
Bolstered by the addition of a vocalist and second drummer, the incendiary âBestial Lightâ LP sees the band move on from the electronic experimentations of the Subversive album trilogy (culminating in their most-recent LP, 2018âs âDe Spelende Mensâ) and last yearâs âBlissâ EP. Their new direction, instead, finds them journeying into a dissonant industrial punk sound thatâs EinstĂŒrzende Neubauten and early Swans by way of Neurosis and Godflesh. Fusing heavy industrial rhythm sections, biting post-punk vocals and crushing âacid metalâ riffs, the new incarnation of Radar Men From The Moon aka RMFTM is comprised of core members Glenn Peeters (guitar), Tony Lathouwers (drums), Titus Verkuijlen (bass) and Bram van Zuijlen (guitar/synth), with the addition of Joep Schmitz (drums) and Harm Neidig (vocals/saxophone).
Not long after recruiting the new members, the now-expanded RMFTM headed back into the studio with their long-term producer Bob de Wit (Gnod, A Place to Bury Strangers, Mudhoney), laying down the new album in 14-hour shifts over 12 days: âWe were constantly 100% on it so the process was quite intense but also very rewarding. You can definitely hear that on the record.â On the albumâs theme, borne out just as much in their creative approach as it is as the lyrics and instrumentation, they say: âWe wanted to write about everything instinctual in mankind, individual desires and true will. Transgression and the seductiveness of unreason.â
Unsurprising, then, that âThe Bestial Lightâ is such a primitive, borderline-depraved affair; one that constantly feels like itâs hurtling towards an edge that youâre never quite sure you want to look over.















