Pentaject Corporation


Here is the band circa late 1981 half-heartedly pretending hard to be businessmen
(l to r): Bob Z, John N and Bob B is all I know of their names. What I do know is
that the wood paneled wall behind John N looks swank like they all did in the late
70's; Bob Z kinda resembles early 80's Harold Ramis and his glasses scream creative
nerd (which is of course a good thing); and Bob B looks like he's about 15.
By request, here is a obscure and rare one from the Chicago area. Thanks to blog commenter C.S. for providing the rips! I do not have a vinyl copy of this record and not many people do, as it is rumored that only 200 copies were pressed and none had sleeves. The price reflects its rarity, as copies recently on the- ahem- "open market" have been priced between $200 and $400 (!).
I know nothing about the band and information on the internet is scant. The band has a MySpace page that was created in late 2007 (wonder what the impetus for that was), but they have not logged into it for almost 3 years the last time I checked. The MySpace page has some songs you can stream, and two of these were not on the EP. Somewhere else I stumbled upon the face that one of the band members also went by the name "Sid Hussein Hartha". Pentaject Corporation turned into a band called Scopdom Scop, which you can see on their MySpace page, was some experimental weirdness.
C.S. told me that Pentaject Corporation was apparently a cassette-only band (anyone have any of these?!?) and that this 4-song EP was supposed to be a "best of" from their cassettes. The band has been listed as being from Chicago, but I don’t know if they were actually from the Chicago city limits or one of the many suburbs in the Chicagoland area, as was the case with bands from the area in the late 70's and early 80's time period.
It turns out that there actually WAS a real company in the late 70's called Pentaject Corporation that holds some manufacturing patents- ha! They were located in a ho-hum Chicagoland suburb called Algonquin that's about 40 miles Northwest of the city.
Musically, the EP is a DIY-ish affair and it has an "outsider" kind of quality to it which is nice. The first track, "Blackmail Stretch", the shortest track on the record, is a slower affair and has some keyboards and a drum machine interspersed in the mix. The next track, "Clamp Is Up", is played with real instruments and is an interesting one with some subtle guitar noise that is kinda hypnotic. The most upbeat track on the EP comes next with "What A Day" and is the closest thing to what we call "punk" (it's my favorite song on the EP too). There is some great shouting and a charming, no-talent guitar solo in the middle of it that begs for more practice- I always love guitar mastery like this. The last track, "Shock Treatment...", has some catchy bass noodling and is in the same vein as "What A Day". Nice ender. I have no clue what the singer is saying throughout most of the record and this adds to the charm and mysteriousness of it all. As does the production value.
If you know anything about the band, please leave a comment and let me know. I am curious to find out more, especially what (if any) connection they had to the Chicago area punk "scene". Or maybe they were kings of their own basement and never played many shows (?). You tell me.
Blackmail Stretch.mp3
Clamp Is Up.mp3
What A Day.mp3
Shock Treatment (Is Too Much For Me).mp3




Hi, I don't know much more, but what I do know is that Bob B is Bob Brink and John N is John Nelles... maybe it helps.
Cheers
Burkhard
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Burkhard- this is great info and it helps, thanks!
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Digging the last two songs! Catchy-but-not-catchy somewhat in Electric Eels/Urinals style!
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Glad you enjoyed it! An obscure gem of a record, eh.
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A correction to your post, in the photo it is actually (left to right), Bob Brink, Bob Zasada, and John Nelles.
Bob Zasada left the group and they became Scopdom Scop who were active for around 20 years.
Video for shock treatment: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPd00lWYV6o
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I own all of the cassettes. Bob gave them to me a long time ago.
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The order of the people in the cover photo is Bob Brink (Far Left), Bob Zasada, and John Nelles (Far Right).
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In case anyone is interested in the songs from the Red Menace "Farewell Suburbia" EP, they are available to hear and to download on Grooveshark and Songzilla. For more info, check out the Bored Suburban Youths wiki and facebook. BSY was essentially the same band. "Annihilation" by BSY is from the "There's a Method to Our Madness" comp LP (Phantom Records). Follow the link to hear and download the song.
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