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UK / US
Album artwork for Drums Were Beating: Fort Apache Studios 1996 by Hypnosonics

Prior to founding the band Morphine, Mark Sandman launched Hypnosonics, built around a stripped down drum kit with no toms and a piece of plywood in place of cymbals, played by Jay Hilt. With funk in its heart, Hypnosonics was originally a five piece with Sandman on guitar and organ, Tom Halter and Russ Gershon of the Either/Orchestra on trumpet and sax, and Mike Rivard, who later founded Club d'Elf, on bass. After Morphine took off, Dana Colley joined Hypnosonics, Hilt added hi-hat cymbals to his kit, and the horn section started singing. In 1996, the same year that Morphine recorded Like Swimming at the legendary Cambridge, MA studio Fort Apache, Hypnosonics visited the Fort to play a live-in-the-studio radio broadcast on beloved local rock station WFNX. This album contains much of that session. We get to hear the band – known for its unpredictable live shows – stretching out a bit, as well as some choice snippets of Sandman's witty stage patter. A full recounting of this period of the band by Gershon is contained inside this package.

Hypnosonics

Drums Were Beating: Fort Apache Studios 1996

Modern Harmonic
Album artwork for Drums Were Beating: Fort Apache Studios 1996 by Hypnosonics
CD

$17.99

Released 04/16/2021Catalogue Number

CD-MH-228

Usually dispatched in 5-10 days

Album artwork for Drums Were Beating: Fort Apache Studios 1996 by Hypnosonics
LP

$26.99

Black
Released 04/23/2021Catalogue Number

LP-MH-8228

Usually dispatched in 5-10 days

Hypnosonics

Drums Were Beating: Fort Apache Studios 1996

Modern Harmonic
Album artwork for Drums Were Beating: Fort Apache Studios 1996 by Hypnosonics
CD

$17.99

Released 04/16/2021Catalogue Number

CD-MH-228

Usually dispatched in 5-10 days

Album artwork for Drums Were Beating: Fort Apache Studios 1996 by Hypnosonics
LP

$26.99

Black
Released 04/23/2021Catalogue Number

LP-MH-8228

Usually dispatched in 5-10 days

Prior to founding the band Morphine, Mark Sandman launched Hypnosonics, built around a stripped down drum kit with no toms and a piece of plywood in place of cymbals, played by Jay Hilt. With funk in its heart, Hypnosonics was originally a five piece with Sandman on guitar and organ, Tom Halter and Russ Gershon of the Either/Orchestra on trumpet and sax, and Mike Rivard, who later founded Club d'Elf, on bass. After Morphine took off, Dana Colley joined Hypnosonics, Hilt added hi-hat cymbals to his kit, and the horn section started singing. In 1996, the same year that Morphine recorded Like Swimming at the legendary Cambridge, MA studio Fort Apache, Hypnosonics visited the Fort to play a live-in-the-studio radio broadcast on beloved local rock station WFNX. This album contains much of that session. We get to hear the band – known for its unpredictable live shows – stretching out a bit, as well as some choice snippets of Sandman's witty stage patter. A full recounting of this period of the band by Gershon is contained inside this package.