The music and life of Paul Chain initially came to Disaster Amnesiac's attention through the late, lamented Pig State Recon blog. It was there that I was first appraised of Chain's fascinating musical journey from Death S.S. and its post Alice Cooper Heavy Metal to his own vision of a darkened and doomed Heavy Rock. While not exactly getting fully on board to the cult of Chain (too busy being a Lungfish/Pere Ubu/Saccharine Trust cult dude really), this listener always paid attention when Paul's sounds were mentioned and/or played. Happy to have copped Saturn Eye Records recent cassette reissue of Paul Chain Violet Theater's 1984 release Detaching From Satan, too. So often, these limited number releases are off of the perceptual radar within my own weird little world but thankfully for the ears not this time. This short album kicks off with Occultism and its sound is a fine calling card for the entire thing. Spooky metallic scraping is framed by minor key organ grind for a very Industrial mood until drummer Eric Lümen clicks in a brisk 4/4 and the riff begins. The verse part is a four on the floor stomp that leads up to a very expressive and liquid guitar solo from Chain. Apparently the lyrics are comprised of a made up language but as Disaster Amnesiac has listened they've just sounded like the normal Heavy Metal vocals. It's been often for me that the genre's lyrical content has been incomprehensible so really just kind of business as usual on that end. Next up, Armageddon begins with a chorus of male and female vocalists intoning with a Latin style, not Perez Prado mind you but, you know, Roman Latin. I gather this was intended to evoke feelings of Plague until the cutting guitar riff opens up, driven by pulsing bass guitar from Paul Dark and swift hi hat pushes by Lümen. This track is a Heavy Metal stomp rooted within the genre's original, initial moves and as such it's completely legit. Chain displays more of that colorful guitar tone when he takes the solo before pushing the big riffage again. Disaster Amnesiac still hears some kind of linguistic familiarity within the glossolalia but perhaps that's just because I'm stupid deep inside. Side two commences with Voyage To Hell and that's a trip that starts on a Heavy Metal guitar riff straight off. Arpeggio fly off of Chain's fret board while Dark and Lümen lay down some road-worthy stomping. It's no surprise when Paul Chain unleashes yet another killer guitar solo statement of course. He's a guitar hero that came up in the era of guitar heroes. Was Mike Varney aware of this album when it was initially released? The track ends with enticing synthesizer type drones before Detaching From Satan concludes with the mega Doom riff of 17 Day. For this last one, the band slows down and guest vocalist Gilas gets Heavy Metal dramatic with his vocal delivery. Disaster Amnesiac can swear that he's singing in English here, but, again, the lyrics and their intonation are of "purely phonetic la lingua cantata". More of that tripped out organ grinding goes solo before Chain splays out one more emotional guitar statement. Gilas speaks some of that lingua and the group chants atop the riffing as the whole thing winds down and the listener is left itching for more rollicking Heavy Rock from Paul Chain and his cohort. Disaster Amnesiac has read at an online forum how the title of this record was a veiled dig at his former Death S.S. co-conspirators. I guess there's no way of really knowing if that's the case but I'm certainly happy to get to know it as part of Paul Chain's documented works. Here's to hoping that Saturn Eye Records will lay more of it on the public in the form of reissue cassettes!










