Killing Joke
is an English post-punk rock band formed in October, 1978 in Notting Hill, London, England. [1] However, several conflicting sources have stated that they formed in early 1979 [2] [3] [4] [5]. Founding members Jaz Coleman (vocals, keyboards) and Geordie Walker (guitars) have been the only constant members.
A key influence on industrial rock, [6] their early music was described by critics Stephen Thomas Erlewine and John Dougan [7] as well as industrial metal [8] and "quasi-metal ... dancing to a tune of doom and gloom," which gradually evolved over the years, incorporating elements of dance music, world music, gothic rock, though always emphasizing Coleman's "savagely strident vocals."
Finding modest commercial success, Killing Joke have influenced many later bands, such as Nirvana, Ministry, Amen, Nine Inch Nails, Napalm Death, Amebix, Big Black, Godflesh, Tool, Prong, Metallica, Primus, Jane's Addiction, Soundgarden, Foo Fighters, Faith No More, Blacklist, Shihad and Korn, all of whom have at some point cited some debt of gratitude to Killing Joke. [9] [10]
|
KILLING JOKE TICKETS
|
History
1978–1982
"Big" Paul Ferguson was drummer in the Matt Stagger Band when he met
Jeremy "Jaz" Coleman (from
Cheltenham, Gloucestershire) in
Notting Hill, London. In October 1978 (or early 1979), after Coleman was briefly keyboard player in that band, he and Ferguson left to form Killing Joke. They placed an advertisement in the music press which attracted guitarist
Kevin "Geordie" Walker and bassist
Martin "Youth" Glover. According to Coleman, their
manifesto was to "define the exquisite beauty of the
atomic age in terms of style, sound and form".
By September 1979, shortly before the release of their debut EP,
Turn to Red
, they began the Malicious Damage
record label with graphic artist Mike Coles as a way to press and sell their music;
[11] Island Records distributed the records, until Malicious Damage switched to
E.G. Records in 1980. The songs on Killing Joke's early singles were primitive punk rock sometimes mixed with electronic ("Nervous System") and ("Turn to Red").
Turn to Red
came to the attention of legendary DJ
John Peel, who was keen to champion the band's urgent new sound and gave them extensive airplay. They quickly progressed this sound into something denser, more aggressive, and more akin to
heavy metal, as heard on their first two albums,
Killing Joke
(1980) and the more abrasive
What's THIS For...!
(1981). They toured extensively throughout the UK during this time, and both fans of
post punk and
heavy metal took interest in Killing Joke through singles such as "Follow the Leaders" (1981).
Killing Joke became notorious largely due to the controversies that arose from their imagery. Typically the images that appeared on their records and on-stage while performing live were bizarre and potentially shocking and inflammatory. One promotion poster featured a photo of a priest walking among rows of soldiers offering Fascist salutes, which was later used for the cover of the band's compilation album,
Laugh? I Nearly Bought One!
. Shortly afterwards, the band was banned from performing a concert in
Glasgow, Scotland. At the same time, some journalists were suspicious about Killing Joke's image and wrote that "Killing Joke's music includes certain fascist tendencies...". This was a common misconception because, if anything, Killing Joke were politically apolitical or "meta-political" - with much of their disturbing imagery acting as ironic or cynical symbols for a world which they perceived was becoming ever more materialist, unjust and conservative. Killing Joke had various 'run-ins' with a number of music journalists at the time.
Killing Joke's third album,
Revelations
, produced by
Conny Plank, was released in 1982, and supported by a pair of performances on The
John Peel Show and by the singles "
Chop-Chop", "
Empire Song", and an unofficial release of "
We Have Joy". The LP reached #12 in the UK Top albums.
By 1982, members of Killing Joke, especially Coleman, had become immersed in the
occult, particularly the works of occultist
Aleister Crowley. In February of that year, Coleman, with Geordie and Youth following shortly after, moved to
Iceland to survive the
Apocalypse, which Coleman predicted was coming soon. While in Iceland, Coleman and Geordie worked with musicians from the band
Þeyr in the project
Niceland. After a few months, Youth decided there was no indication of the Apocalypse, and decided to move back to England. Youth then began the band
Brilliant with Paul Ferguson, but the latter defected and travelled to Iceland to rejoin Killing Joke with new bassist
Paul Raven (previously of
Neon Hearts and the rock / glam band Kitsch) in tow. After spending some time in Iceland, Killing Joke returned to England and began touring and recording again.
The new lineup soon produced, again with Conny Plank, the single "Birds of a Feather / Sun Goes Down / Flock the B-Side" and
Ha!
, a six-track 10"
EP of a live performance recorded in
Toronto in August.
1983–1988
Killing Joke's fourth album,
Fire Dances
(1983), contained music that, like that heard on the "Birds of a Feather" single, was artier and relatively calmer than before, which began a new direction. This was continued with the non LP singles "Me or You" (1983, b/w "Wilful Days") and "A New Day" (1984, b/w a dance remix or dub mix of the same), the latter promoted with a
music video.
Mixing their sound with a slightly
pop style, and with Coleman singing and not growling, Killing Joke had developed a variation of new wave on their fifth album,
Night Time
(1985). They achieved mainstream success with the single "Love Like Blood", which peaked at #16 in the UK and #8 in the Netherlands.
Night Time
was also supported with singles for "Eighties" (1984), "Kings and Queens" (1985) and "Love Like Blood (Gestalt mix)" (1985), which all reached the UK Top 75. The album itself reached #11 in the UK.
The music on Killing Joke's sixth album,
Brighter than a Thousand Suns
(1986), was mostly similar in sound and mood to "Love like Blood". While no less aggressive and heavy than their older work,
Brighter than a Thousand Suns
diverged musically in ways that lead to controversy among listeners. In this case, disagreements between fans and critics alike included opinions on whether the band was conforming with pressures from EG Records to develop a more commercial sound, to whether the songs were relevant for those listeners more comfortable with their proto post-punk beginnings. Those who are strongly approving of the work consider it a milestone - and quite intense - progressive rock album, and their most consistent work to date. Two singles were released from the album - "Adorations" and "Sanity" - and the band continued touring successfully until the end of the year.
In 1987, Coleman began plans for a solo record of unusual music, and he made demos of his songs, on which he performed with
Geordie's assistance. The project ran way over budget and so, despite Coleman's objections, the record company decided that the music would be released under the name "Killing Joke" in order to best recoup the costs. Attempts were made to include Killing Joke rhythm section members Raven and Ferguson, but it didn't work out, and tensions ultimately led to both being fired from the band. Session player
Jimmy Copley was then brought in to provide the drumming on the songs, along with percussion player
Jeff Scantlebury.
The resulting album,
Outside the Gate
(1988), is Killing Joke's most controversial album, with opinion ranging from admiration to total disgust, owing to its synth-led sonics (experimentally, and disagreement over the quality of the material. It is not signature-sound Killing Joke, being built around Coleman's orchestral keyboards instead of Geordie's distinctive guitar riffs. Had the album been released as "Coleman/Walker" (as the cover graphic implies) it might have been better received. Released as "Killing Joke" however, it was panned by confused critics and fans alike. Two singles, "America" and "My Love of This Land", were released from the album but did little to improve its fortunes. The video for the former features Coleman and Geordie with drummer
Jimmy Copley and session bassist
Jerome Rimson, who never actually recorded with the band.
[12] No live dates were played to support the album and the band spent much of 1988 in a legal battle as they tried to split from their management and record company,
E.G. This struggle resulted in Coleman suffering a nervous breakdown.
On
19 September 1987 Coleman had delivered a lecture at London's
Courtauld Institute outlining the thinking behind the then-unreleased
Outside the Gate
album, touching on
numerology and the occult. Geordie and percussionist Jeff Scantlebury provided a minimal musical backing at the event. A recording of the lecture was eventually released under the title
The Courtauld Talks
on Martin Atkins'
Invisible Records in 1989.
1989–1991
Towards the end of 1988, Coleman and Geordie decided to get Killing Joke up and running again as a live band, and they began looking for full-time bass players and drummers. First on board was drummer
Martin Atkins, who had gained notability in
Public Image Ltd. and later
Ministry and
Pigface. A suitable bass player proved more difficult, however. Former
Smiths man
Andy Rourke was hired, then fired again after only three days. Eventually the band settled on Welsh bass player
Dave "Taif" Ball, and played their first gigs in almost two years in December 1988.
[13] These were seen as a return to form, and featured the best of their 1980 to 1985 work, alongside powerful new material which alluded to the band's earlier, harsher sound. Nothing from
Brighter than a Thousand Suns
or
Outside the Gate
was played (and indeed, never has been since). Touring continued across the UK, Europe and the US until August 1989, when the band took a break to record its new material in Germany, and to allow
Jaz Coleman time to record
Songs from the Victorious City
with
Anne Dudley of
Art of Noise.
However, for reasons which remain unclear, the German Killing Joke sessions were scrapped and bass player Taif left the band to be replaced by old hand
Paul Raven. The revised line up began recording again, this time in London, and the result was Killing Joke's eighth album, the ferocious
Extremities, Dirt & Various Repressed Emotions
, released on the German
Noise International label in 1990. It included some of the heaviest, noisiest and harshest music ever to appear on a Killing Joke record, although the progressive musical spirit of the previous two albums remained as well. The many highlights included "Solitude", "Slipstream", "Age of Greed," and the single "Money Is Not Our God". Once again, the band toured Europe and North America, but by the middle of 1991 this promising new line up had imploded. Coleman emigrated to New Zealand to live on a remote Pacific island, and it looked as though Killing Joke was over for good.
Geordie Walker,
Martin Atkins,
Paul Ferguson,
Paul Raven and the band's live keyboard player
John Bechdel (
Ministry,
Fear Factory,
Prong,
Pigface,
Abstinence,
False Icons,
Ascension of the Watchers) added Scottish vocalist
Chris Connelly (
Finitribe,
Revolting Cocks) and continued as the short-lived
Murder, Inc., releasing a self-titled album in 1992.
1992–1996
thumb
A Killing Joke anthology,
Laugh? I Nearly Bought One!
, was released in 1992, and during its production, Geordie was re-acquainted with
Youth, who suggested that they reform the band with himself back on bass. That same year, two singles (on cassette and CD) appeared featuring the early songs "Change" and "Wardance" in several new versions remixed by Youth, by then a very successful producer.
Coleman had produced the 1993 debut album
Churn
by the New Zealand Band
Shihad and Shihad drummer
Tom Larkin played drums on some of the songs on
Pandemonium
. However, relations later soured between Coleman and Shihad due to a dispute over Coleman's production fee for
Churn
, and the fact that Shihad considered him a "megalomaniac". Shihad's second album, 1995's
Killjoy
, includes a song about Coleman and the dispute: 'Silvercup'. Coleman has also made a number of disparaging remarks about
Shihad in the media. Shihad singer and guitarist
Jon Toogood says his band have since put the dispute behind them.
Killing Joke also sued
Nirvana during this phase, alleging that the riff for the latter's song "
Come as You Are" was copied from the riff for their song "
Eighties".
The lawsuit was dropped after the sudden death of Nirvana frontman
Kurt Cobain.
[14]
The reactivated Killing Joke released two strong and well-received albums on Youth's
Butterfly Recordings label,
Pandemonium
and
Democracy
, which saw the band shift back to the simpler arrangements of their early albums whilst also (on 12 inch remixes) employ young talent, the likes of Waxworth Industries in order to provide an alternative inroad to the bands new and evolving sound.
Pandemonium
(1994) wove a metallesque ritualistic sound with mosh beats and loops and provided Killing Joke with a memorable
Top of the Pops performance for the single 'Millennium', which was a UK Top 30 hit (the album itself made the Top 20).
Democracy
(1996) successfully introduced acoustic guitar into the mix, as well as adopting more of a "live band" sound again. Much of
Pandemonium
and all of
Democracy
featured session drummer
Geoff Dugmore. He also played live with the band throughout this era.
Nick Holywell-Walker joined the band on keyboards and programming for 11 years from 1994-2005, notably on
Democracy
and
XXV Gathering (live)
. Youth bowed out of live performance early in the
Democracy
tour and was replaced by
Troy Gregory, ex
Prong.
After the
Democracy
tour, the band went on an extended hiatus. Jaz Coleman and Youth produced a string of well-received orchestral rock albums based on the music of legends such as
Led Zeppelin,
Pink Floyd and
The Doors. Coleman became Composer-in-Residence for New Zealand and Czech symphony orchestras.
[15] [16] He seems to have become something of a celebrity in the Czech Republic and made his acting debut with the main role in the film Rok dábla (Year of the Devil) by Czech filmmaker
Petr Zelenka (who later would direct the video for "
Hosannas from the Basements of Hell").
2002–2007
Coleman, Geordie and Youth reformed Killing Joke in 2002, and recorded their
second self-titled album with producer
Andy Gill, released to much acclaim in 2003 on the Zuma/Sony label - a powerful addition to
Extremities
and other visceral 1990s albums, and considered one of their finest recordings. The
War on Terror and the
invasion of Iraq were cited as major factors in their reforming, and this is reflected in the lyrical content of much of the album, based on themes of war, government control and
Armageddon. The album was their heaviest to date and spawned two singles, "Loose Cannon" and "Seeing Red". The songs are all credited to Coleman/Walker/
Glover/Gill, although
Raven's name is also on the list of musicians on the liner notes, marking his return to the band after more than a decade. It remains unclear who actually played bass on which tracks on the album, and in some interviews with Geordie, he hints that it may have been he who actually played bass on most of the songs, with occasional contributions from Youth. Raven played on the subsequent tour however, with Youth appearing to have retired from the band by this point.
Dave Grohl (
Nirvana,
Foo Fighters,
Probot), a longtime fan of the band, occupied the drum stool for all tracks. The original plan had been to use many different drummers on the album, including Grohl, but he was so enthusiastic about the material that he persuaded the band to let him do the whole thing. The album was accompanied by a tour of the United States, Europe and Australia in 2003/2004, with ex-
Prong drummer
Ted Parsons on board.
In February 2005, now with young Twin Zero and Sack Trick drummer
Ben Calvert, Killing Joke played two consecutive shows at London's
Shepherds Bush Empire to commemorate their 25th anniversary. DVD and CD recordings from these concerts were released in on
Cooking Vinyl in the fall of 2005 as
XXV Gathering: The Band That Preys Together Stays Together
.
In June 2005, remastered and expanded editions of their two 1990s
Butterfly Recordings albums,
Pandemonium
and
Democracy
, were released by
Cooking Vinyl. These were followed in July by their first four albums (
Killing Joke
to
Ha!
) on
EMI, who by then owned the
E.G. Records catalogue. (The second batch of EMI remasters would not appear until January 2008.)
In mid-2005, Frontman from Industrial band, INERTIA, Reza Udhin, joins the band on Keyboards and they supported the British leg of
Mötley Crüe's world tour and then began work on their next album in
Prague. It was at this time the contribution to the world of rock was recognised when they were awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2005 Kerrang Awards.
Opting for simplicity and raw energy, the band recorded the new album in the basement rehearsal space of Faust Studios, going for live takes with the minimum of overdubs. The result was
Hosannas from the Basements of Hell
, released in April 2006 on Cooking Vinyl.
Killing Joke began a European tour in support of the album in April 2006. However, bass player
Paul Raven abruptly departed after a few dates to tour with
Ministry and was temporarily replaced by
Kneill Brown. The tour included an appearance headlining the
MySpace stage of the Download Festival on
June 10 2006, which received four K's from
Kerrang!
magazine. Other highlights of the summer included a memorable set in Japan at the Fuji Rock festival where there were joined on stage by
Orb frontman
Alex Paterson (once a Killing Joke drum roadie) and headlining the Beautiful Days festival in the UK. The band's momentum suffered another blow however, when health problems caused the autumn leg of the tour to be cancelled.
In October 2006, it was announced that Coleman had been chosen as
Composer in Residence for the
European Union. As Composer in Residence he will be commissioned to write music for special occasions.
Early in 2007, Killing Joke released three archival collections via
Candlelight Records. The first,
Inside Extremities
, is a double CD of material taken from the band's preparations for the
Extremities
album: rehearsals, rare mixes, a previously unheard track, "The Fanatic," and a full live show from the
Extremities
tour.
[17] This was followed by
Bootleg Vinyl Archive
Volumes 1 & 2, each of which is a 3 CD box set of live-in-concert bootleg recordings originally released on vinyl in the 1980s, plus the Astoria gig from the
Pandemonium
tour which was voted one of the greatest gigs of all time by Kerrang.
[18]
In October 2007, the classic 1990 album
Extremities, Dirt & Various Repressed Emotions
, which had long been out of print, was reissued in remastered form on
Candlelight Records.
On October 20,
Paul Raven died of heart failure prior to a recording session in Geneva, Switzerland.
[19] [20] [21] [22] [23] [24]
On January 28 2008 the albums
Fire Dances
,
Night Time
,
Brighter than a Thousand Suns
, and
Outside the Gate
were finally re-issued in remastered form with bonus tracks by
EMI. Each of these carries the message "
Dedicated to our brother Paul Vincent Raven 1961 - 2007
".
2008-present
After the death of Raven, the original line up of Jaz, Youth, Geordie and Paul Ferguson announced they were to reunite. Coleman told Terrorizer magazine that:
"Everything came together when we all met at...Raven's funeral. It was funny the unifying effect it had on all of us. It made us realise our mortality and how important Killing Joke is to all of us." [25]
Although Coleman claimed in the same interview that there would be a lecture tour, their first port of call was a tour where they played two nights per venue. The first nights were dedicated to their first two albums,
Killing Joke
and
What's THIS For...!
, while the second night featured large parts of '
Pandemonium' plus some early singles released on Island records. The world tour began on September 11 in Tokyo and concluded in Chicago on October 14.
[26]
Killing Joke has released an album of radio session recordings, "The Peel Sessions '79 - '81", on September 8. 2008. This is the second time all 17 tracks were released in their live session form. According to
Discogs.com, the tracks on "The Peel Sessions '79-'81" were originally unofficially released as a CDr under
Pontiac Records, entitled
Unspeakable
.
[27] Legal distribution outside of concerts did not apply, and only 1000 copies were sold in 1985 at
Top of the Pops, when Killing Joke performed
Love Like Blood
.
The band continued its reformation by playing the
All Tomorrow's Parties festival in May 2009. They performed at the Sonisphere festival in Knebworth, UK on August 2nd
[28] and will next headline the Rebellion Festival in Blackpool,
[29].
Killing Joke performed in The Big Top Tent at the 2009 Isle Of Wight Festival after being hand picked by Tim Burgess, frontman for The Charlatans.
Discography
Albums
- Killing Joke
(1980) UK #39
- What's THIS For...!
(1981) UK #42
- Revelations
(1982) UK #12
- Fire Dances
(1983) UK #29
- Night Time
(1985) UK #11
- Brighter than a Thousand Suns
(1986) UK #54
- Outside the Gate
(1988) UK #92
- The Courtauld Talks
(1989)
- Extremities, Dirt & Various Repressed Emotions
(1990)
- Pandemonium
(1994) UK #16
- Democracy
(1996) UK #71
- Killing Joke
(2003) UK #43
- Hosannas from the Basements of Hell
(2006) UK #72
Singles & EPs
- Turn To Red EP
10" (October 1979)
- Nervous System
7" 12" (December 1979)
- Wardance/P?yche
7" (March 1980)
- Requiem/Change
7" 12" (October 1980)
- Follow the Leaders/Tension
7" 10" (May 1981) – UK #55
- Empire Song/Brilliant
7" (March 1982) – UK #43
- Chop Chop/Good Samaritan
7" (June 1982)
- Birds of a Feather/Sun Goes Down/Flock the B side
7" 12" (October 1982) – UK #64
- Let's All Go/Dominator
7" 12" (June 1983) – UK #51
- Me or You/Wilful Days
7" 12" (October 1983) – UK #57
- Eighties/Eighties Common Mix
7" 12" (April 1984) – UK #60
- A New Day/Dance Day
7" 12" (July 1984) – UK #56
- Love Like Blood/Blue Feather
7" 12" (February 1985) – UK #16, Germany #24, Ireland #30, NL #8
- Kings & Queens/The Madding Crowd
7" 12" (March 1985) – UK #58
- Adorations/Exile
7" 12" (August 1986) – UK #42
- Sanity/Goodbye to the Village
7" 12" (October 1986) – UK #70
- America/Jihad
7" 12" (April 1988) – UK #77
- My Love of This Land/Darkness Before Dawn
7" 12" (July 1988) – UK #89
- Money is Not Our God
CDs 12" (1991)
- Change: The Youth Mixes CD
(1992)
- Exorcism
CDs 10" (1994)
- Millennium
CDs 7" 12" (May 1994) – UK #34
- Pandemonium
CDs (July 1994) – UK #28
- Pandemonium in Dub
CDs (July 1994)
- Jana
CDs (February 1995) – UK #54
- Jana Live EP
(February 1995)
- Jana/Millennium
Double CDs (1995)
- Democracy
CDs (March 1996) – UK #39
- Democracy dif. Mix
CDs (March 1996)
- Love Like Blood/Intellect
(March 1998)
- Loose Cannon
12" CDs DVDs (July 2003) – UK #25
- Seeing Red
CDs (2003)
- Hosannas from the Basements of Hell/Afterburner/Universe B
CDs (April 2006) – UK #74
- Hosannas from the Basements of Hell/Afterburner (Alternate Vers.)
Limited 7" (April 2006)
Singles on cassette
- Adorations (The Supernatural Mix)/Ecstasy/Exile/Love Like Blood (The ’86 Remix)
(1986)
- Sanity/Sanity (Instrumental Mix)/Goodbye to the Village/Wardance (The Naval Mix)
(1986)
- Change (Re-Evolution 23 Mix)/Change (Spiral Tribe Mix)/Requiem (Malicious Damage Mix)/Requiem (Acapella Dub)
(1992)
- Millennium (Cybersank Edit)/Millennium (Cybersank Extended Remix)
(1994)
- Pandemonium (Cybersank Edit)/Pandemonium (The Dragonfly Mix)/Pandemonium (Waxworth Industries Mix)
(1994)
- Democracy (Album Mix)/Mass
(1996)
Live albums
- Ha!
10 inch live EP (1982) UK #66
- BBC in Concert
(1995)
- No Way Out But Forward Go
(2001)
- XXV Gathering: Let Us Prey
(2005)
- The Original Unperverted Pantomime
(2008)
- Live at the Forum
(2008)
- Requiem
(2009)
Compilations
- An Incomplete Collection 1980-1985
(1990)
- Laugh? I Nearly Bought One!
(1992)
- Wilful Days
(1995)
- Alchemy: The Remixes
(Remix Album) (1996)
- Wardance
(Remix Album) (1998)
- The Unperverted Pantomime
(2003)
- Chaos for Breakfast
(2004)
- For Beginners
(2004)
- Inside Extremities: Mixes, Rehearsals and Live
(2007)
- Bootleg Vinyl Archive Vol. 1
(2007)
- Bootleg Vinyl Archive Vol. 2
(2007)
- Rmxd
(2008)
- The Peel Sessions 1979-1981
(2008)
- Duende - The Spanish Sessions
(2008)
Videography
- Rok Dabla/Year of the devil feat. Jaz Coleman
Czech Rep. (2002)
- XXV Gathering: The Band That Preys Together Stays Together
[live] (2005)
Side projects
- Niceland
- Brilliant
- Pigface
- Murder, Inc.
- The Damage Manual
- Transmission
- The Fireman
Influence
- In 1982 the Canadian dark synthpop band named themselves Psyche after the B-Side of Killing Joke's "Wardance" single although the spelling on the single was Pssyche.
- Also in 1982, GC Green & Paul Neville first came together as Fall of Because, named after the first track on What's THIS For...!
and were later joined by Justin Broadrick, setting the foundations of Godflesh, who covered "Requiem" live, with Raven on bass. [30]
- Justin K. Broadrick cited Killing joke as an important influence in his use of melodies in his music.
- In 1987, Metallica covered Killing Joke's "The Wait" for their E.P. Garage Days Re-Revisited
. James Hetfield picked Jaz as one of his top 20 favourite singer for a poll in Rolling Stone. [31]
- In some early interviews, the members of Soundgarden cited Killing Joke as one of the bands they listen to most.
- In 1989, German gothic band Love Like Blood covered the name-giving track on the Love Like Blood
EP and on the Snakekiller
album.
- The main riff of Nirvana's song "Come as You Are" bears a striking resemblance to the riff of Killing Joke's single, "Eighties." The band, however, did not file a copyright infringement lawsuit, which, according to Rolling Stone
, was "due to personal and financial reasons."
- In 1993, Helmet covered Killing Joke's "Primitive" for the B-side to the single "Born Annoying".
- In 1993, Econoline Crush covered Killing Joke's "Psyche" (a B-side from their "Wardance" single) for their Purge
EP.
- In 1994, Hoppy Kamiyama used a looped sample from "Exit" that was used in his God Mountain Orchestra project on the track "Lebanon", released on the Japanese compilation, "Neu Konservatiw".
- In 1995, Icehouse covered "Love like Blood" on their album The Berlin Tapes
.
- In 1997, the Foo Fighters covered Killing Joke's "Requiem" for the B-side to the single "Everlong." Dave Grohl, leader and drummer of Foo Fighters, played drums for the recording sessions of Killing Joke's second self-titled album in 2003.
- In 2001, Amen covered Killing Joke's "Europe" during a session on BBC Radio One in 2001. The recording of this song was later the B-side for their single "Too Hard to Be Free."
- In 2001, The Mad Capsule Markets covered Killing Joke's "Wardance" on their album 010
.
- In 2002, Blacklight (Oliver Heydt, Olaf Wollschäger) made a double 12" with their five remixed versions of "Love Like Blood".
- In 2002, LCD Soundsystem released "Losing My Edge" which is based around b-side "Change". [32]
- In 2003, German band blackmail covered "Love Like Blood". It was released as a download track on their homepage and as a bonus track on the Japan edition of their album Friend Or Foe?
as well.
- In 2003, the German death metal band Disbelief covered "Democracy" on the album Spreading the Rage
.
- In 2004, Nouvelle Vague covered "Psyche" on their self-titled debut album.
- In 2005, Swiss band MXD covered "Pandemonium" on their album Frustration Is Fuel
.
- In 2005, Fear Factory covered Killing Joke's "Millennium" on their album Transgression
.
- Other professed fans of Killing Joke include Ministry, Amebix, Front Line Assembly, Tool, Nine Inch Nails, Melvins, Faith No More, KMFDM, The Complications, The Freeze, Born Dead Icons, Godflesh, Napalm Death, Jesu, Mr. Bungle, VX, Red Lorry Yellow Lorry, I Am Spoonbender, Primus, Queen Adreena, Jello Biafra, Prong, The Red Star Ritual, Burning Image, The Process Void, Big Black, Lycia, Shitakke Fiddlefaddle, Ikon, Morgoth, Project 86 and Soulwax.
References
- Killing Joke at Last.fm
- Contemporary Musicians. Profiles of the people in music / Volume 30
- We’re all gonna die!
- Conspiracy of two
- Nirvana Pay Back Killing Joke: Killing Joke : Rolling Stone
- Killing Joke
- Killing Joke > Overview
- http://www.bnrmetal.com/v2/bandpage.php?ID=KiJo
- Kashmir
- Haughty Culture
- Malicious Damage
- JEROME RIMSON: Bass Guitarist, Author of the book RENEGADE
- taif-bass: Killing Joke
- Interview with Killing Joke's Geordie
- Killing Joke
- Paul Raven
- Rarities release for Killing Joke
- A UK Heavy metal specialist publication
- Killing Joke bassist Raven dies
- Killing Joke - Official site!
- Paul Raven - Tribute Page
- Paul Raven - Bass player with Killing Joke, Ministry, Prong Dies in Geneva Aged 46 (Jan 16th 1961)
- MINISTRY/KILLING JOKE Bassist PAUL RAVEN Dead At 46
- Drummer TED PARSONS Comments On PAUL RAVEN's Passing
- Terrorizer May 2008 Issue 170
- Killing Joke reform and tour
- Unspeakable
- NINE INCH NAILS, ANTHRAX, AIRBOURNE, KILLING JOKE Confirmed For U.K.'s SONISPHERE
- Bands – SUNDAY 9th AUGUST 2009
- Godflesh covers Requiem
- Rolling Stone on The Wait
- Losing My Edge music video at YouTube