When
Randy officially joined Pentagram
he brought two Bedemon compositions with him
-- "Touch the Sky" and "Starlady"
(a Randy/Bobby cowrite). The latter was recorded
in the studio during a later Pentagram incarnation
(sans Palmer) and appears on the Pentagram 1973-1979
compilation record. After Randy left Pentagram
he asked Geof, Mike, and Bobby to help lay down
a couple more Bedemon tracks. The final 3 tunes
("Time Bomb," "Nighttime Killer,"
and a song written by Geof [untitled]) were
recorded in 1979. A later incarnation of Bedemon
(with Pentagram's Greg Mayne filling in for
Mike) recorded a new Palmer composition, "Night
of the Demon," and several older tunes.
This was in 1986, the last Bedemon session .
. . to date.
Now
Randy, Geof, and Mike have reunited as a result
of new fan interest in the Bedemon material.
Perry
Grayson (a writer/guitarist who appears
on the first 2 Destiny's
End albums) contacted the three "Bedemon-ites"
for interviews about Bedemon as well as Pentagram.
Perry's articles will eventually appear in some
metal fan magazines, including "Metal
Maniacs."
As
a result of Perry's interest, the newly-reformed
Bedemon recently took the original master tapes
of the 1979 sessions and digitally enhanced
them using professional-level computer programs
and mixing equipment. If response to this "Time
Bomb" EP is positive, Bedemon plans to
upgrade the earlier material and make that available
as well to an appreciative audience. The band
also hopes to recruit a new vocalist and record
some brand new doom-flavored material. (Bobby
is working on a new Pentagram
project.)
You
can keep in touch with what's happening with
Bedemon by visiting this website, and help determine
the future of the band's activities by participating
in the poll(s), writing in comments, and sending
bede-mail.
(Incidentally,
the band's name is pronounced Beh-DE-mon.)
Thank you for your support!
Bedemon:
The Origin...
The title “Bedemon” was concocted
more or less as a joke. Before Randy joined
Pentagram
in 1974, he wanted to make a recording of his
own metal material, but wasn’t interested
in starting a real band. He got together with
Mike Matthews, a pal from high school, and asked
for help from his friends Geof O’Keefe
and Bobby Liebling (who were already playing
in the “classic” Pentagram
lineup). After the first recording session,
Palmer wrote more material, and asked for help
again from the same team. By this time, whenever
the four of us were talking about recording
or playing this material, we kept referring
to “Randy’s songs” or “Randy’s
project.” It was cumbersome and a little
silly to keep referencing the material that
way, and eventually Bobby asked Randy, “why
don’t you come up with a name for this?”
Randy
toyed with a bunch of different band names,
including “Demon” (which was adopted
many years later by one of the NWOBHM [“New
Wave Of British Heavy Metal”] groups)
and “Behemoth.” But Palmer could
never decide on one particular band name. Finally,
at the 3rd recording session, Bobby asked Randy
point blank: “what have you decided to
call this?” Randy replied, “I dunno…maybe
Behemoth or Demon or something.” Bobby,
with big curls of hair clogging up his ears,
misheard the statement and said, “What?
Bedemehemon?” We all laughed and Randy
decided to contract Bobby’s faux pas,
so it went from “Bedemehemon” to
Bedemon. This is a true story, and it’s
really where the band name came from. It stuck
over the years because Randy never actually
decided on a real, honest-to-goodness band title
for his ongoing musical project.
There
is another historical inaccuracy that needs
to be clarified: the truth is that there was
never really any Bedemon “band”
as that word implies. Bedemon was only a project.
Randy never intended it to be a real band because
soon after the first Bedemon recording sessions,
he joined Pentagram.
Bedemon:
The Original Recordings
The very first Bedemon recording was made in
early 1973, when Randy, Mike, Geof, and Bobby
Liebling spent an afternoon learning and recording
Randy’s Sabbath-inspired compositions,
“Child of Darkness” and “Serpent
Venom,” along with a song Geof had written
called “Frozen Fear.” The four of
us literally learned, rehearsed, and recorded
those 3 songs in a matter of hours! This includes
the time allotted to lead solo and vocal overdubs!
The material was recorded on Geof’s Roberts
reel-to-reel tape deck, an extraordinarily well-made
piece of equipment that still functions well
to this day. Randy played rhythm and lead guitar
on all 3 songs using a Carvin guitar and a “Mike
Matthews Freedom Amp.” This had nothing
to do with Bedemon’s Mike Matthews; the
“Mike
Matthews Freedom Amp” was a very small
(but loud as hell!) amp designed by the Electro-Harmonix
Company, manufacturer of the legendary “Big
Muff Pi” distortion box. We have no
idea why they called it a “Mike Matthews
Freedom Amp,” but our Mike thought it
was a pretty cool name!
Mike
played bass guitar using equipment borrowed
from Pentagram
bassist Greg Mayne, and Geof played the drum
kit he used regularly in Pentagram.
In addition, Geof played the 2nd lead solo in
his tune, “Frozen Fear,” using a
Gibson Melody Maker guitar (which—believe
it or not—he still uses today!). Bobby
recorded vocals for by singing through Pentagram’s
Peavy PA system. (Although Bobby would continue
recording vocal tracks for Bedemon in this fashion
for the next few sessions, eventually he began
singing directly into the Roberts recording
mic, sans amplification. We all thought this
method provided a much cleaner and clearer vocal
sound.)
Several
months after the successful recording of “Child
of Darkness,” “Serpent Venom,”
and “Frozen Fear,” Randy asked Geof,
Mike, and Bobby to meet again in order to record
some new material. The second Bedemon session
produced 2 finished songs. The first one recorded
on that day was written by Geof, but he had
neither lyrics nor a title for it. Bobby offered
to sing the lyrics from one of his songs that
never made it into the Pentagram
repertoire, “Drive Me to the Grave.”
The lyrics seemed to fit okay but the real highlight
of that song is Geof’s guitar solo. (Randy
played only rhythm on “Drive Me to the
Grave.”) The 2nd song recorded that day
was a Palmer composition originally entitled
“The Zoo,” which Randy later decided
to re-title “Enslaver of Humanity.”
(Randy figured that since the song title never
appeared anywhere in the lyrics, it could just
as well be called “Enslaver of Humanity,”
which at least sounds cooler than “The
Zoo”) For this one song, Randy set the
reverb control on his Freedom Amp at the maximum
setting. It’s the only time he used the
reverb effect on a Bedemon song. In addition,
Bobby brought his Gibson SG to the session and
played “Feedback Guitar” in the
background of the song during the verses.
When
Randy wanted to record 2 more compositions some
months later, Mike Matthews was unavailable
(for reasons which none of us can recall at
this point!) and Bobby offered to fill in on
bass. He did an admirable job, considering that
he is left-handed and was playing a right-handed
bass upside-down! The recording session that
day produced “One-Way Road” (music
by Randy, lyrics by Geof) and “Child of
Darkness 2,” a song Randy would love to
bury and forget! The only reason he wrote it
is because he thought it was cool that a hard
rock band from 1968 called The Hook had written
a sequel to one of their songs! Believe us—“Child
of Darkness 2” will NEVER appear on a
Bedemon CD….! (And you will be glad of
this—take our word!)
By
the time Bedemon next recorded , Mike was available
again and brought in his first solo composition,
“Last Call.” We recorded it, along
with Randy’s latest, “Into the Grave”
(later retitled “Bloodshot Dreams”)
and “Dark Mind Dark Heart” (later
retitled “Through the Gates of Hell”—Palmer
does have a problem at times deciding what to
call his own compositions!). Because “Last
Call” was Mike’s song through and
through, Randy switched places with him, playing
the bass parts while Mike played rhythm guitar.
When it was time to record the solos (of which
there were 3, the most ever in a Bedemon song),
Mike played the first and third ones using Randy’s
favorite distortion box, the Big Muff Pi, while
Randy used something called a “Fuzz Phazer”
which made it sound as if his guitar was vomiting!
Randy played the solos in the other tunes recorded
that day using the Big Muff.
It
was during the recording of these three songs
that Bobby dispensed with using the Peavy PA
system, opting instead to sing straight into
the Roberts recording mic on Geof’s reel-to-reel
recorder! His voice sounded so much clearer
and cleaner when it wasn’t being pushed
through the Peavy amplifiers that Bedemon opted
to record all of his future vocals that way.
The
final 2 Bedemon numbers from the original sessions
recorded between 1972-74 were Randy’s
“Skinned” (originally known as “Skin”)
and “Touch the Sky” (later retitled…no,
only kidding. Oh, alright, originally Randy
called it “Days of Hell.” Given
the man’s penchant for retitling his own
songs about as often as Black Sabbath changed
band members, this song might appear on a new
Bedemon release under either title!)
Several
years passed, and in 1978, Randy, Geof, and
Mike got together one last time to record 2
more Palmer compositions, “Time Bomb”
and “Nighttime Killer,” along with
an untitled song of Geof’s. Mike was planning
on moving to Seattle, Washington, so we believed
this would be the final Bedemon recording. Randy
split lead solo duties between Mike and Geof,
giving Geof both of the guitar solos in “Time
Bomb,” as well as the 2nd solo in “Nighttime
Killer,” and handing Mike the “pretty”
solo in the quiet part of that song. “I
was more interested in just playing rhythm then,”
Randy pointed out. “It didn’t matter
to me who played the leads, as long as they
sounded good.” Could this be a musical
first? A guitarist with no ego…!??
Bedemon
‘86
Unexpectedly, in 1986, Randy, Geof, and original
Pentagram
bassist Greg Mayne got together and, with guitarist
Norman Lawson (who had earlier played in a band
of Geof’s called Sex II), performed instrumental
versions of “Time Bomb,” “Touch
the Sky,” and the previously unrecorded
“Night of the Demon” (the lyrics
of which were based on Randy’s all-time
favorite horror film, Curse
of the Demon). In addition, a song called
“Starlady” was also captured on
tape. “Starlady” was a song Randy
had co-written with Bobby while he was in Pentagram.
These 4 songs were the last Bedemon recordings…until
now.
2001
and Beyond
As mentioned previously, in the spring of 2001,
journalist and musician Perry
Grayson (former guitarist for metal band
Destiny's End and now Artisan) began attempting
to track down the former members of both Pentagram
and Bedemon in preparation for a series of articles
he was planning to write on these bands. He'd
heard numerous tapes and bootleg CDs over the
years and was a fan. After speaking with Randy,
Mike and then Geof, the three members begun
discussing the possibility of getting together
to record some new music. With Randy in North
Carolina, Mike in Arizona and Geof in California,
this wasn't a task considered lightly, but it
was strongly felt that it was time to record
some proper Bedemon music.
Fan
after fan worldwide kept crawling out of the
grave to tell the band how much they had influenced
their lives. "I used to have a great job
and loving wife," wrote one rabid follower,
"but now I'm hooked on smack and spend
my nights cruising downtown looking for teen
prostitutes. Thanks, Bedemon!" No, thank
YOU, Walter G. of St. Louis! And Chelsea of
Portland e-mailed us, letting us know that our
lyrics had inspired her to become a virgin sacrifice
for a group of loser Ecstasy-gulping misfits
at her high school. "After they've gang-raped
me and I feel that blade pressing into my chest,
I'll be humming a Bedemon tune as I race towards
the sweet release of death's dark promise. Any
suggestions?" Well, no, Chelsea, but don't
think we aren't honored! Maybe we'll write a
song about you ..."Chelsea Mourning."
Talks
among the three members soon led to a wave of
creative inspiration as new demos began to emerge
and plans were falling into place to get together
at Geof's Garageland Studios during the last
week of October. "We had planned to write
a new song collectively on Halloween,"
says Geof, "and then probably go out and
shake down kids for their candy."
In
addition to working on new material, it was
also decided to properly release the vintage
Bedemon stuff from the 70s. Explains Geof: "The
stuff that's been out there for a few years
was made off of 3rd generation cassettes at
best. The speed's off on some tracks and they
sound pretty bad. I have the actual reel masters
and a friend in the music biz in L.A. is working
on the tapes. We hope to release this with a
nice booklet with liner notes and the works.
No, no, not a syringe; I mean it will have a
lot of info about the sessions."
Unfortunately
(as explained in the News section), the October
sessions had to be cancelled due to a work conflict.
Says Randy, "This is good in a way, because
now we can concentrate on getting the old stuff
out first. The recording session for the new
material will take place in April of 2002, and
the extra time also gives us a chance to write
even more new songs." Bedemon: The Story
Continues.
Bedemon
2K2
As detailed in our periodic news updates, the
members of Bedemon got together in April 2002
and recorded almost an hour's worth of new metal
music. The rough mixes sound darned good (excuse
us while we pat each other on the back), and
we're more than happy with the result. Now comes
the hard part: finding a singer that the fans
will accept, who can reproduce the kind of vocals
we want Bedemon to have. Originally we had a
trio of potential vocalists to consider, and
now that number has been reduced to two. By
October 2002 we hope to have overdubs finished,
the album remixed, and everything ready to shop
to the labels.
So
what at will 2003 bring? If the fans like the
new Bedemon material, there's no reason why
guitarist Palmer, bassist Matthews, drummer
O'Keefe and vocalist "Mr. X" shouldn't
continue delivering lots more monstrous music.
Randy is constantly writing new tunes ("I've
got nearly 30 years of unused doom riffs in
my head that are just dying to get out")
so believe it when we tell you there's no lack
of material. And since Randy isn't interested
in changing the focus of the band, you can count
on Bedemon to keep delivering the kind of gloomy,
funereal riffage that it is known for.
August
2002
On July 31st in Northern Virginia, Randy was
a passenger in a car along with his fiancée
Taryn and her teenage son when they were broadsided
by a car running a red light. The impact was
on the side where Randy was sitting. While Taryn
and her son weren't seriously injured, Randy
suffered major internal trauma. He was in Intensive
Care for eight days before dying Thursday afternoon,
August 8th with Taryn by his side, a mere two
months after his 49th birthday on June 8th.
As
for the future, Randy had expressed a desire
to re-record the old 70s material in better
quality and to also get together maybe every
year or two and record new albums. Obviously,
these plans will never see fruition. Even though
all three members contributed to Bedemon, it
was entirely Randy's concept and vision. Although
Mike, Geof and Taryn all agreed that Randy's
music must reach the public, and have vowed
one way or another to get both the old and new
material out there for all to hear, there will
be no future Bedemon without Randy. There is
a possibility that beyond the reissue of the
70s stuff and the new album, a final album could
be assembled containing some various unreleased
tracks, demos and so on, but this is way down
the line if at all.