Industrial pioneer and shock artist Monte Cazazza dead at 68 – Music News



Monte Cazazza, who coined the phrase “Industrial Music for Industrial People”, has died aged 68.

The American shock artist and Industrial music legend, who is said to have been the first to use the word “industrial” to describe heavy electronic music, passed away on June 29, after battling a mystery illness.

His collaborator Meri St. Mary confirmed the news on Twitter, writing: “It is With immense sadness and Love I had to let Monte go. “He was very ill and in pain so I take comfort in the fact that that part is over but I miss him already! Where ever it is we go off to I am certain He will be causing trouble in his own way RIP the One and Only Monte Cazazza. (sic)”

Monte is best known for shaping the genre by working with London’s Industrial Records in the mid-1970s.

He is credited for the noise collages and experimental sound manipulation the label was making that became known as industrial music.

Industrial music has harsh, mechanical, transgressive, or provocative sounds and themes.

And Re/Search Magazine’s Industrial Culture Handbook dubbed his work as “insanity-outbreaks thinly disguised as art events”.

One of his performances in 1975 was hailed a “Sex – religious show; giant statue of Jesus got chainsawed and gang raped into oblivion.”

Much of his artwork courted controversy and he was disruptor from an early age.

Monte attended the California College of Arts and Crafts and got expelled after creating a cement waterfall that disabled the main stairway of the building for his first sculpture assignment.

Later, he made a metal swastika and was known to bring a dead cat and formaldehyde (methanal) to set alight in front of friends.

Monte released eight solo albums, his final being 2010’s ‘The Cynic’.

He was also known for his work with the Industrial group Factrix from San Francisco and recorded soundtracks with Mark Pauline and Survival Research Laboratories.

Monte infamously sent out photos of himself in an electric chair on the day of convicted murderer Gary Gilmore’s execution, which mistakenly led to a Hong Kong newspaper publishing it as the real execution.

In 1977, Gilmore became the first person in almost a decade to be executed in the United States after being convicted of a double murder.

You can view the original article HERE.

Gina Brillon on How Grief Pushed Her to Pursue Comedy
‘Big Brother’ Star Christmas Abbott Dismisses DV Protection Against Ex
Star power! Chemistry! Sex! Why ‘the right ingredients’ helped turn ‘The Idea of You,’ ‘Anyone But You’ and ‘Challengers’ into success stories
Sasha Merci on How Comedy Has Helped Her Depression
Aisha Review | Letitia Wright & Josh O’Connor Stun in Riveting Asylum Drama
The Legend of Zelda Director Shares Challenge of Adapting Nintendo Franchise Due to ‘the Expectation Game’
Nothing Can’t Be Undone by a HotPot movie review (2024)
The Last Stop in Yuma County Review
You Lied About My Secret Daughter
Watch Bambie Thug proclaim “love will triumph over hate!” at the end of their powerful Eurovision performance
Last Photos Resurface Ahead of Biopic
Industry reacts as MPs recommend ticket levy on arenas and stadium gigs
Lewis TKOs Nascimento at UFC St. Louis, takes off shorts to celebrate
Nuggets bounce back with road blowout of T-Wolves
Mbappe confirms he’s leaving PSG at end of season
Cavs respond with Game 2 rout over Celtics to even series
Stephen Merchant Addresses The Office Spin-Off, Possible Return as Logan’s Mutant Tracker
Essential Viewing: 11 Jensen Ackles Movies and TV Shows You Must See
Only Murders in the Building Star Returning for Season 4
Blue Bloods Season 14 Episode 9 Review: Two of A Kind
Join Soul Artist Management’s First-Ever Model Search
Inside The Daily’s Unforgettable Trip To DAOU Vineyards
Your Glamorous, Chic Guide To Jewelry Gifts
Pratt Institute’s New Class, Charli XCX’s Fashion It-Girls,