Press Materials

Gambling on the Richter Scale LP — download mp3 files

Turk St EP — download mp3 files

PDF bio — download (right-click to save)

Recent Press

  • “They churn out an artery-stabbing style of noise/sludge akin to Unsane… but when you listen closely, you can hear the underlying dynamics where the interplay between left and right guitars is as scathing and noisy as it is masterful.”
    Outburn, Jan 2010
  • “Gambling on the Richter Scale sinks the band’s tremendous weight underground, then goes all tectonic on our asses. 8/10.”
    Decibel, Dec 2009
  • “This is the heaviest record of 2009… Nothing less than completely mandatory listening material. 9/10.”
    Lambgoat, Oct 2009
  • “If you’re in the market for some heavy, catchy as fuck, NOISE ROCK, okay, maybe call it metal, then Gambling On The Richter Scale is IT, and by the sounds of this record, they probably destroy live.”
    Aquarius Records, Oct 2009
  • East Bay Express (interview), Oct 2009
  • Guitar World, Mar 2009
  • Thrasher, Dec 2008 (pdf)
  • More Press

Listen to “Diabetic Feet”

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Bio

On Gambling on the Richter Scale, their first full-length (and first outing with Virginia’s The Perpetual Motion Machine), Kowloon Walled City add a touch of finesse to the grinding pummel introduced on last year’s Turk Street EP. Listen to the snaking guitar line opening “Paper Houses,” the brief solo on “Sleep Debt,” or the tremolo picking closing “Bone Loss” and you’ll hear it: Kowloon Walled City have discovered the guitar.

Not to worry, this is no wankfest; Kowloon Walled City (guitarist/vocalist Scott Evans, drummer Jeff Fagundes, bassist Ian Miller, and guitarist Jason Pace) won’t win any hot-licks, dick-measuring contests. It’s all about girth anyway, and the group’s always had that in spades, with Turk Street drawing comparisons to Neurosis, The Melvins and other low-end explorers, from the ‘90s AmRep roster to the current crop of sludgecore contenders.

It’s not just the guitars, either — “Diabetic Feet” is the closest Kowloon Walled City could ever get to a prog opus, and the nimble rhythm work on “Clockwork” showcases Fagundes as the band’s real secret weapon. Evans’ vocals are more varied as well, in both treatment and performance, adding further dynamics to the leaner, meaner KWC presented here.

Even the recording — captured once again by Evans in the band’s rehearsal space — reeks of refinement. Two years in and the band’s growth is apparent. There’s some wind in these sails, coming off a year of playing shows and songwriting, goofing with alter ego Snailface, playing NoisePop, and collecting great press from the likes of Thrasher, Terrorizer, and a slew of other publications and blogs.

Of course the rumble’s still there: the crushing heaviness, the churning and lurching, the tempos that drag like continental plates. Tectonics, as it happens, are a theme here. Note the album art, with smoke rising from the band’s hometown of San Francisco, freshly leveled by the 1906 quake. It remains a very real threat on the left coast, and a versatile metaphor at that — crumbling economies, deep tears in the social fabric, war and brutality, humanity’s blind march forward… take your pick. The further we get on our collective road to nowhere, the more heavy music becomes the most suitable expression. And as Thrasher put it last year, Kowloon Walled City is heaviness.

The curious can pick up Gambling on the Richter Scale on LP with included CD, or — like the Turk Street EP — download it for free.

Hi-Res Images

Gambling on the Richter Scale cover.

Turk Street cover.

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Live, Oakland CA, 2009.
Photo credit: Shannon Corr, shannoncorr.com

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Live, San Francisco 2008.
Photo credit: Peter Schafer

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