Spahn Ranch was an American
electro-industrial group from Los Angeles. Active from 1992 to 2000, the band played a subgenre of industrial music with its fusion of
electronic dance,
industrial and
gothic music.[1]
History
The band was formed in 1992 in Los Angeles by
Matt Green and his New York–based collaborator, Rob Morton. They collectively used the funds they had saved up to jump-start the band. Rob Morton had been Matt Green's musical partner for the 5 years prior. That same year in 1992, they signed to
Cleopatra Records and released their
self-titled, four-song
EP, with vocals supplied by Scott "Chopper" Franklin (later to become bass player for
The Cramps) Scott Franklin left another band to provide vocals for Spahn Ranch.
In 1993, they added vocalist
Athan Maroulis and recorded their debut album, Collateral Damage.[2][3] Their second album, The Coiled One, appeared two years later in the midst of Morton leaving the band due to creative and logistical differences.[4] After his departure, the line-up was expanded to include
Christian Death drummer David Glass, Screams for Tina guitarist Kent Bancroft, and Tubalcain drummer Harry Lewis. This offered a beginning of the fuller, more diverse, dark electro-industrial sound that Spahn Ranch would continue to pursue.[5] By 1997, Spahn Ranch had pared themselves down to the three-piece unit of Green, Maroulis and Lewis.
Spahn Ranch continued to release albums throughout the late 1990s. Architecture, released in 1997, featured contributions from
Killing Joke/
Prong bassist
Paul Raven and
Rockats/
Nancy Sinatra guitarist
Danny B. Harvey.[6] This album took an even more experimental approach to the Spahn Ranch sound, incorporating elements of drum and bass, dub and for the first time, live guitar parts.[7][8][9]Beat Noir, in 1998, followed a similar path even further and included work with
Bauhaus/
Love & Rockets bassist
David J.[10] The compilation Anthology 1992–1994 was released in 2000 and contained the band's first four releases in addition to previously unreleased material.[11]