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The Locust 7 Ep Rare Test Press Gsl Punk Thrash Noise Rock Power Violence Moog

This item have been sold for $ 676.69

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Auction Details:
Code ID
#63850
Ebay Item #
236643320264
Sold Price
$676.69
Bids
47
Auction End date
26 Feb 2026
Seller Location
San Diego California
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Item Description

This auction is for the iconic and classic 7 EP by The Locust just Locust at the time of this release . This auction is for a limited test press 7 , which is limited to 5. The auction does not include the self titled 7 itself, only the test press. The 7 in the photo is only for reference as to which release this is.

Track listing:

A1Halfway To A Worthless Ideal Arrangement An Interlude To A Discontinued Sarcastic Harmony... Yea Whatever A2Prepare To QualifyA3Kill Roger HedgecockA4Pain RelieverA5Off By A Long ShotB1Cattle MutilationB2 99B3Head Hits ConcreteB4Hairspray Suppository

The Locust traverse, constantly cross and f ck the line between total chaos and perfect order. Genre-defying and boundary-blurring/destroyers, The Locust are proven to be masters at their craft. What that craft is still proves to be difficult to define Regardless, their lengthy discography speaks for itself.

Emerging from its incubation in 1995, The Locust released its first record: a split 10 EP with Man Is The B stard on King of the Monsters, following that up with a split 5 picture disc with Jenny Piccolo on Three One and then its debut self-titled 7 on Gold Standard Laboratories. Three years after the release of their 10 debut, GSL released The Locust s first full-length, a self-titled, 16-minute-long sonic cataclysm, which sold out the first pressing of 2000 in just a few days. In 2000, a split 7 with Arab on Radar on GSL was released.

Shortly after this split, The Locust cemented its difficult reputation by putting out a double 12 of electro/ drum n bass remixes of the song Well I ll be a Monkey s Uncle, on GSL, with folks like Kid 606, I am Spoonbender and Sinking Body turning the song s crazy noise bursts into even crazier electronic splatter paintings.

The band s final recording as a five-piece came in 2001 with Flight of the Wounded Locust on GSL a 5 track EP that was rereleased in 2003 on Erika Records as a jigsaw record, loaded with an additional 6 tracks.

Showcased for the first time as a four-piece on a split 7 with Tokyo s Melt Banana GSL , Pearson, Karam, Bray and Serbian offer a sound far removed from their grindcore-leaning past. The songs, as a whole, are fast usually under a minute brutally ultra-violent and drenched in sci-fi-noise, gruesome insectoid keyboards and herky jerky scream/ sing vocals described by one journalist as a car-wreck with vocals.

After this initial taste as a four-piece, The Locust released Plague Soundscapes on Anti- a sister label of Epitaph in June 2003. An album described as total insanity , noise pollution and gay a completely accurate description. This album solidified the markedly different sonic terrorism The Locust had begun to explore a cataclysm of synths and violent yelps arranged in the most strict and uniform sense. A juxtaposition almost paradoxical.

Almost exactly a year later, The Locust released an archive recording collecting the two tracks found on their split with Jenny Piccolo and the 4th volume of the Cry Now, Cry Later comp.

Safety Second, Body Last soon followed in 2005. A sort of warmup for what was to come This EP proved to be The Locust s most proficient record so far. As chaotic as Plague Soundscapes, but with menacing, dripping synths during interludes for an ominous piece of sonic obliteration. Swapping out grindcore blastbeats for the most tight-knit, unstable yet completely under control song arrangements recorded, The Locust had found their niche.

New Erections, the band s latest album, came out two years later in March 2007, perfected what was teased on Safety Second, Body Last. This album fine-tuned everything The Locust had done so well before. New Erections stands out tall as The Locust s most accomplished record. Sonic structures so complex, vast and intricate it takes more than a couple of listens to get it . If Plague Soundscapes seemed hard to consume, New Erections is like digesting concrete if only a little more rewarding.

After lengthy touring following the release of New Erections, The Locust went on hiatus. Another archive recording was released in 2010. This time, a legendary Peel Session recorded 9 years prior in 2001. This 16-track recording was the first time Gabe Serbian had started playing drums for The Locust finalising the lineup of Bobby Bray, Joey Karam, Justin Pearson and Gabe Serbian that has remained ever since.

-Bradley Moore


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