News / Site News
One Question Interviews: Halo of Flies, Nothington, In Defence, Punk Planet

Posted by Loren on May 28, 2013

One Question Interviews: Halo of Flies, Nothington, In Defence, Punk Planet
One Question Interviews: Halo of Flies, Nothington, In Defence, Punk Planet

We're proud to introduce a new series here at Scene Point Blank: One Question Interviews. Follow us at facebook and twitter and we'll post one interview every Monday-Thursday. Well, okay, we're still getting in the swing of things and it was Tuesday-Friday last week (and again this time around), but it will be four each week.

In addition, we'll post a belated wrap-up here at the site. Check out our quickie Q&As below with Cory Von Bohlen (Halo of Flies), Chris (Nothington), Ben Crew (In Defence), and writer Anne Elizabeth Moore.

Cory Von Bohlen (Halo of Flies)
SPB: What do you think of band’s playing an entire album as a touring concept?

Von Bohlen: I think its fine. considering everyone's fascination with the "glory days" of most bands and the times in which said records occurred, it makes sense. That, and I think we've all wished such and such band would only play the "good" songs. its cynical, and perhaps a little on the nose, but I'd rather hear At the Gates play "Slaughter of The Soul" than play older (not as good imo) stuff. Same applies to most bands, I suppose.

I can hear Reign in Blood in my head in order, so they might as well play it that way. Now if only Def Leppard would do a High and Dry tour..

Chris (Nothington)
SPB: How many vans have you had?

Chris: We have owned 4 vans. They usually die after about 2 US tours, and oddly enough they always seem to bite the dust in the last couple of days of tour. I guess that makes us lucky, because we've never been stranded 2,000 miles from home with a busted van.

Ben Crew (In Defence-vocals, Profane Existence Records)

SPB: Do you get nervous before you play a show?

Crew: No. Not any more. I use but that was back when I wanted people to like me. Now I don't give a shit what people think. I'm going out there to have a good time. I'm going out there for my own entertainment. I'm gonna have fun no matter what. If other want to join me, awesome. If not that's their choice.

Anne Elizabeth Moore (zinester, writer, former Punk Planet editor)

SPB: What do you miss about running a zine? What has changed the most in music since Punk Planet ceased publication?

Moore: For folks who've followed my work, they'll realize that since we folded Punk Planet in the middle of 2007 very little has changed about what I do except it has become WAY more exciting. I basically started doing self-publishing work in Cambodia, where I didn't manage a single long-running title like PP, but instead taught the first generation of young women to attend college as a group in the history of the country how to make their own zines. Considering the poverty and literacy rates in the country, it wasn't an easy sell at first, and once we made our zines we of course also had to invent a distribution mode, and find readers, and figure out all the other stuff about zne-making that we take for granted in the US because we have a semi-functioning media dissemination system. There, we invented it. It was really amazing and rewarding work, and the subject of my two recent books Cambodian Grrrl (2011) and New Girl Law (2013), both of which have been getting great awards and international attention, which makes me really happy. It's important to me that this work is not just for the white, male, American underground that was most visible back in the PP days, but that the important and useful stuff about self-publishing and freedom of expression can travel across boundaries of race and class and gender.

So, to your second question (which is a trick, because it really is two questions), I'd say that what's changed in music that I've been excited about is stuff like The Messenger Band, a group of former garment factory workers who tour around Cambodia singing songs about the international garment trade. Once you've roadied for folks like that—a gig I wrote about here—house shows don't have quite the same appeal, you know?

One Question Interviews: Halo of Flies, Nothington, In Defence, Punk Planet
One Question Interviews: Halo of Flies, Nothington, In Defence, Punk Planet

Related news stories

Final Nothington release, Europe dates

Posted in Splits on November 11, 2018

SPB exclusive: Bréag Naofa - II

Posted in Records on July 3, 2017

Related album reviews

Nothington

In the End
Red Scare Industries (2017)

Few things are stable in this topsy-turvy world. One constant has been Nothington. With the release of In the End, the San Francisco band’s fifth full-length, they’ve continued down the road they started with All In. It’s classic chord-driven punk with a working class, heart on its sleeve aesthetic. Early reviews compared them to Social Distortion, which isn’t horribly inaccurate … Read more

Nothington

Borrowed Time
Red Scare Industries (2011)

I’ll be honest, I missed Roads Bridges & Ruins, even after guitarist Chris Matulich said it would be quite a transition from All In. While I liked All In, for whatever reason I never got to its follow-up. 2011’s Borrowed Time is surely a reflection of the evolution in between. The Social Distortion influence is more tempered (though it’s still … Read more

Nothington

Roads, Bridges & Ruins
BYO (2009)

In what might be an early contender for "Most Improved Band of the Year," Nothington brings us their second studio album, Roads, Bridges & Ruins. Now, when we last left the band they released their debut record, All In. While it was a fun listen, it didn't carry much lasting value and I wore it out after a few spins, … Read more

Related features

Northless

One Question Interviews • July 16, 2018

Erik (Northless) SPB: How did you first get involved with (or meet) Halo of Flies?  Erik: I first met Cory from Halo Of Flies Records in about the year 2000. At the time, he was playing guitar in a local deathgrind band called Leval Blessing. I was a huge fan, … Read more

Vile Creature

One Question Interviews • July 16, 2018

Vile Creature SPB: What is your favorite (non Vile Creature) release on Halo of Flies? Vile Creature: Both of us find it hard to pick just one. Cory & Halo of Flies have done such an amazing job of curating an epic list of underground, thoughtful metal over the last … Read more

Halo Of Flies Records

Music • May 26, 2018

In hindsight, Halo Of Flies is one of the labels responsible for dragging me into dark hardcore music. I was already into metal of all kinds and was into stuff like youth crew and got into more and more diverse hardcore bands until I got into the underground world where … Read more