Asylum to Release 3-3-88 Sept. 28 on Shadow Kingdom

asylum

A little bit of tried and true Maryland doom history brought to light by Shadow Kingdom Records. Asylum guitarist Dale Flood and drummer Ronnie Kalimon went on to form Unorthodox, and though the band never had an album out, only a collection of demos, their reputation never really subsided. 3-3-88 isn’t the last recording Asylum made before the one band became the other, but it’s never been officially issued before, and you can stream it in full now at the bottom of this post ahead of a Sept. 28 CD issue. It sounds like it’s probably been cleaned up some from the bootleg versions — or at very least mastered — but either way you can hear the grit and roughness of the tracks as well as the bluesy atmospheric jams on songs like “Nowhere.” Killer vibe throughout, and clearly more than just one for archivists and scholars of Maryland doom, though that contingent should also be well pleased.

Info from the PR wire:

asylum 3-3-88

Pre-UNORTHODOX band ASYLUM to release lost recordings through SHADOW KINGDOM – streaming in full now

On September 28th, Shadow Kingdom Records is proud to present a special lost recording from cult Maryland doom band Asylum entitled 3-3-88. Circulated amongst diehard collectors for years via MP3 but now finally finding an official physical release on CD format, Asylum’s 3-3-88 is a crucial piece of doom metal history.

Doom aficionados are well familiar with the name Asylum by now. Begun in 1981 and crafting a handful of super-cult demos during the lean years of the 1980s, Asylum eventually became Unorthodox in 1992 and released their classic debut album, fittingly titled Asylum, that year on the pivotal Hellhound label. As such, Asylum had a big hand in shaping the Maryland doom metal scene that would come to fruition in the ’90s and sow its influence worldwide.

But, with the long-lost 3-3-88 recording now unearthed, we begin to see the full depth of Asylum’s eventual transformation into UNORTHODOX. This recording was indeed recorded on March 3rd of 1988, and was the last-known recording under the Asylum moniker. Across its 10 tracks, the listener can feel the full force of the band’s ever-expanding biker rock base, which would later become a hallmark of Maryland doom. Whereas so much doom to come would take heavy cues from Black Sabbath, Asylum instead had more of a Steppenwolf-gone-metal feel, and as displayed by 3-3-88, a penchant for jamming out into spacier realms, including touches of otherworldly synth. And yet, for all this increased ambition – four full instrumentals mark this recording, including the portentous “Unorthodox” – the band’s sound remained remarkably focused, with a clear vision and even clearer execution. You can drift off into far-away lands as easily as you can headbang to this.

Pulled from the original tapes and remastered, Asylum’s 3-3-88 possesses an enduring power which has made it such a highly-sought-after recording all these years. And whether they transformed into Unorthodox or not, this crucial document deserves its rightful place in the doom pantheon.

In the leadup to its CD release, the entirety of Asylum’s 3-3-88 is currently streaming in full HERE at Shadow Kingdom’s Bandcamp, where the album can be preordered. Cover and tracklisting are as follows:

Tracklisting for Asylum (Maryland)’s 3-3-88
1. World In Trouble
2. Mystified
3. Time Bomb
4. Road To Ruin
5. Psyche World
6. Forgotten Image
7. Nowhere
8. Funk 69
9. Indecision
10. Unorthodox

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Asylum, 3-3-88 (2018)

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2 Responses to “Asylum to Release 3-3-88 Sept. 28 on Shadow Kingdom”

  1. Ron Kalimon says:

    You are misinformed. Asylum was Dale Flood, Earl Schreyer and Ronnie Kalimon. Earl left in 1988. Dale and Ronnie continued as Unorthodox shortly thereafter, bringing in Jeff Parsons in 1990. The trio recorded Unorthodox “Asylum” in 1992. Josh replaced Jeff in 1993. Josh Hart was the bass player on “Balance of Power”. If you report on DC bands, please research, talk to band members, etc.. to get the facts straight before you post.

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