HELMET: 'Seeing Eye Dog' Cover Artwork Unveiled; Audio Samples Available

July 3, 2010

Seminal rock band HELMET will release a new full-length album, "Seeing Eye Dog", on September 7. The band's first LP since 2006's critically acclaimed "Monochrome" and its seventh album overall will be made available on the indie Work Song label (with physical distribution by Redeye and direct-to-fan digital delivery by Topspin). The CD was produced by band leader, vocalist/guitarist/songwriter Page Hamilton, with additional production by Toshi Kasai and vocal production by Mark Renk.

"Seeing Eye Dog" track listing:

01. So Long
02. Seeing Eye Dog
03. Welcome To Algiers
04. LA Water
05. In Person
06. Morphing
07. White City
08. And Your Bird Can Sing
09. Miserable
10. She's Lost

Audio samples of the songs "Seeing Eye Dog", "Miserable" and "In Person" are available at the TheNewReview.net web site.

On songs that consistently cut deep, Hamilton's guitar is on fire as always and his vocals are as wicked as ever. The album’s 10 tracks include the title cut, "Welcome To Algiers", "White City", the mostly instrumental "Morphing" and a cover of THE BEATLES' "And Your Bird Can Sing". Hamilton is joined by drummer Kyle Stevenson, guitarist Dan Beeman and bassist Chris Traynor; HELMET's live bassist is Dave Case.

"The HELMET musical vocabulary is well established at this point, but I continue to work on a variety of musical projects that inevitably influence the HELMET songs," says Page.

"I've been working on movies with Elliott Goldenthal and co. for 17 years now and had never really experimented with incorporating these soundscapes (or shit sculpting as I prefer to call it) into HELMET songs.

"We had a much better recording situation in which I felt much less time pressure and was working with an engineer who was patient and very creative (Toshi Kasai) so away we went. I started layering upper parts of the chords and was digging the sound so I went with it."

He adds: "It's so important to have great musicians in this band as we track the music with my guitar and the drummer and then overdub the second guitar and bass. I can't stand the sound and anti-human feel of edited rock music. People have always commented that we sound like our albums live. This has a lot to do with it. Humans playing music will always be better than chop shop rock so one has to find the right players."

"Seeing Eye Dog" — as bracing as anything released by "a band that made important connections between indie-rock and metal…" (New York Times, September 12, 2004),is being issued in five formats (see below),each of which will include a bonus live album recorded in 2006 in San Francisco.

* Digital only (new album plus one live album)
* Two-disc CD (new album plus one live album) + digital
* Limited-edition double 180g vinyl (new album plus one live album) + digital
* Limited-edition deluxe: New album and one live album on two-disc CD, new album and one live album on double 180g vinyl, custom HELMET USB key with four more live albums, signed package + digital of new album + one live album
* Super deluxe: Same as deluxe but includes gold laminate/tour access component

Meanwhile, HELMET has just released a digital-only deluxe version of its third and much beloved 1994 album "Betty". It includes 14 original album tracks plus five bonus tracks ("Flushing", "Thick", "Pariah", "Biscuits for Smut [Pooch Mix]" and "Biscuits for Smut [Mutt Mix]"),all available through the HelmetMusic.com web site. The additional tracks were originally only available on the 10-inch double gatefold LP and 12-inch single for "Biscuits for Smut", released by Interscope in 1994.

Says Page of "Betty": "It was written on the heels of the 'Meantime' tour after a Grammy nomination and gold record, which were strange and totally unexpected for a Lower East Side band. The whole thing threw me for a bit of a loop; my life was in total upheaval after a split with my then-fiancée, now ex-wife." He continues, "It was a fuck-you to the music biz/mainstream that had discovered our indie world of Amphetamine Reptile, Sub Pop, Touch and Go, Discord, SST, etc. etc.

"I never considered myself indier than thou, but I never embraced the crap that grew out of HELMET or NIRVANA or FUGAZI or THE JESUS LIZARD or MELVINS etc.

"Anyway, it was a weird time, but the album holds up musically so it's being reissued."

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