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Mach FoX: vocals Dbot: bass Paul K: guitar Marshal B: drums |
Interview with Mach FoX of Zwaremachine and Mach FoX by Dave Wolff
What new developments are happening with Zwaremachine and Mach Fox since our interview in September 2024? You referenced a new lineup, a new release, and an upcoming tour. What about all this do you want to share with the readers?
First of all thank you for your continued support for Zwaremachine and our independent music releases! It's always great to talk with you and we appreciate you sharing our news. As mentioned before the band has added two new members both from the Netherlands, Paul K on guitar and Marshal B on electronic drums. They will both be joining bassist Dbot and I for the EU tour dates this fall and we have also added K-Flesh on electronic drums and guitar for our USA tour dates as we are not able to schedule and predict international travel safely at this time for our Dutch band mates. We hope it will be possible for them to join us next year for some dates in the USA.
The new album which we discussed before has been abandoned as a Zwaremachine release and will now be released as a Mach FoX band album by Phage Tapes in October 2025. The songs all have the classic Zwaremachine trio of Dbot on bass guitar, Dein Offizier on surdo drum and myself on vocals, guitar and synth but as those songs slowly progressed and evolved in the recording and mixing process it became evident that these new songs did not fit the bands live sound. There were long periods of time when I just did not have the motivation to work in the studio after the passing of Dein Offizier and I also took this opportunity to experiment more and add guitars as a main instrument. Zwaremachine bassist Dbot and I decided it was best to release this as a Mach FoX band album and start over on the songs that will become the third full length Zwaremachine release. Many other Mach FoX releases have featured the Zwaremachine band members also as they were outtakes that were not included on Zwaremachine albums but we were still proud of the work and felt they should be heard.
I am excited about the upcoming Zwaremachine 2025 The Machine Comes Alive Tour dates and especially the EU concerts as it will be the first time we will perform as the full four piece band with Dbot and both Dutch members joining myself on stage. The Fall EU concerts start and end in Belgium and although we are performing as a trio for the first two Belgium dates we are very much looking forward to Dbot joining for the remaining shows in the Netherlands, Germany and Belgium. We then return to the USA for a few select dates in the Midwest and end our 2025 tour on October 25th in Chicago, Illinois.
Did you audition many potential musicians before settling on Paul K and Marshal B? On what basis did you hire them for full-time work?
I had known Paul K through his work with other bands and we became friends on the first European date I played as Zwaremachine in the Netherlands. In some of the more recent songs we had released I was recording myself playing the guitar parts but that didn't seem like the right way to perform live so I wanted to add a guitarist to the band as we were sort of starting over with a live lineup...so I asked Paul K and was lucky that he said yes to joining the band. Marshal B had just joined a friends band called Vuduvox around the same time that we were deciding how best to move forward and with what instruments so I asked figured if he is playing with Vuduvox I would ask him to join us for EU shows and was thrilled that he also said yes. There were no real tryouts for Paul K and Marshal B but we did do a set of Zwaremachine songs at a gig in the Netherlands as Mach FoX to see how it worked and if we all wanted to pursue this lineup going forward.
How effectively are Paul K and Marshal B working into the band for the live European shows? Do you expect they’ll contribute anything new to your performances once the tour commences? Do they have any prior live or studio experience?
They are both working hard to bring the energy up on stage and push the band towards a bit more industrial rock sound especially with the addition of Paul K on guitar. We will still keep the dark electro and ebm elements but can more easily fit onto bills with other rock and goth bands so we are not restricted to only ebm events. Paul K and Marshal B joined me onstage for the first time in February of 2024 in the Netherlands and we played a set of Zwaremachine songs but were billed as Mach FoX since none of us were sure how it would work out.
That show went great so I asked them both to join shortly after that and we have done 5 European shows together as Zwaremachine with the most recent being the “Waking The Night” single release show in Belgium in March of 2025. I was also able to record them both on a previous trip and they were included on the “Actions and Forces” song and video we released in August 2024 and will be part of the new album recording.
Both of them play with other bands and Paul K has been in the Dutch music scene for quite some time and is currently a member of La Lune Noire while Marshal B is also a member of Vuduvox which is the band that will be on most of the upcoming EU tour dates with Zwaremachine.
Were there any problems you encountered when it came to organizing travel for Paul K and Marshal B to the United States?
There were no problems but with all going on for travel and visas we decided it was best to postpone and we look at that for 2026 dates in the USA.
Had you known K-Flesh prior to his joining the band for the US tour dates? Who did he work with previously? What do you anticipate he will contribute to your performances when the American tour starts?
K-Flesh joined the band in April 2025 and played with Zwaremachine shortly after that in June for a Minneapolis show which turned out to be his first ever on stage performance! I was impressed and now he is also playing guitar on several songs for the upcoming tour dates. It was important for me to have some sort of consistency for the live sound of the band even though the members can be different for some shows and he has provided that. I had not known him prior to his joining the band and even though he is primarily a guitar player he was able to fit right in and quickly learn the drum parts.
Have you performed in countries like Netherlands, Germany and Belgium before? How wide spread are the audiences for the music your projects play currently?
We have done Zwaremachine concerts in those countries before and the audiences in EU are much more receptive to electronic style music like EBM, dark electro and industrial.
Have you been financing the forthcoming tours independently, or are you looking for support in certain areas?
We receive no tour support, but are able to cover most costs by careful tour management and it also helps to stay in the Netherlands and be close to the borders of several countries so hotels are not needed. We are currently focusing on booking tours around shorter travel distances for now and building up our audience in those areas. Traveling in central Europe is much different than the U.S. Where those distances become much longer.
What methods do you employ to promote your shows and tours and draw substantial audiences? Is it more effective to utilize printed or online advertising?
We use our social media pages and also have an official Zwaremachine (and related projects) Newsletter that we send out a few times a year to select online and print media. We also enjoy having relationships built up over years with publishers like yourself who support the band. That is very much appreciated as we produce and release our music independently.
Do sound files featuring your music, if any, goes out with your newsletters? Or do you include links to your streaming outlets like Youtube and such?
We often do a DJ Promo mailing and an official newsletter mailing and include links in both for music downloads and social media pages for the band.
Which zines and webzines, apart from Asphyxium, have you discussed your future plans with?
We have a promo mailing list that we send our Zwaremachine (and related projects) Newsletter to a few times a year to highlight releases and news so that includes many of our contacts we have built up over the years. There are too many to list!
Are there any tales of traveling through central Europe you want to relate to the readers? How was your experience visiting those locations?
We have been slowly building our following in Central Europe and try to focus on those areas. We are able to stay in a central location that makes it easier to travel and play shows in that region and often can get to concert locations that do not require hotels and long hours of travel which is much different than touring the USA. We will be starting and ending these EU tour dates in Belgium, and one thing I have learned is that they like to party there!
Can you share the bands' experiences recording the songs you plan to release? Did you collaborate with any mixers or producers, or did you handle those tasks independently?
On the Zwaremachine album Conquest 3000 I intentionally worked with two producers and a mixing engineer to achieve some goals with that release regarding the sound and overall sonics. I continue to work with mixing and mastering engineer Jason Orris from The Terrarium in Minneapolis to handle those duties but with the new Mach FoX album we decided to use my own studio mixes and he did the final mastering.
How would you describe Jason Orris' role in extracting your material throughout the recording process?
Jason owns and operates The Terrarium Recording Studio in Minneapolis, MN. And the studio is probably best known for work with rock and indie bands. You can check the website for a list of clients here: www.the-terrarium.com. When Jason mixed our Conquest 3000 album my main goal was to have it hit hard for DJs and the dancefloor and he was able to achieve that really well. I really needed his expertise in the low end and for a balanced mix with clarity since when I mix and produce it can be a bit cluttered...I can't really do anything minimally. He also has mixed the 3 most recent Zwaremachine singles we have released and many of the Mach FoX and related projects as well as the mastering. Most of the time I send him the instrument stems with and without my effects and include a reference mix from my studio which he can use to get close to my production. His mixes are always better and rarely need adjustments so I am thankful to have his ears and talent when it comes to my productions.
What can we anticipate from your upcoming collection of recorded works to be released under the Mach FoX name? Does it in any manner expand on Mach Fox’s earlier releases?
There will be a digital single for the song Biteback released on September 5th 2025 for free download on the Mach FoX Bandcamp site and the new Mach FoX album titled Chaos of Man will be released by Phage Tapes in October 2025 on cassette and digital. The seven songs that are on the new Mach Fox album were originally intended for the third full length Zwaremachine album and were written in late 2023 into 2024 and we started recording before our drummer Bas/Dein Offizier passed away. With the addition of new Zwaremachine members I decided to focus on a more guitar driven style of industrial rock music and though I am proud of the songs they just did not feel right to include in our Zwaremachine live set so it made more sense to release as a Mach FoX album and keep our Zwaremachine catalog more industrial/dark electro style. Those seven songs were recorded by myself on vocals, guitar, synth, programming and Zwaremachine members Dbot on bass guitar and Dein Offizier on surdo drum. The new Mach FoX album could be considered outtakes or an abandoned Zwaremachine album project and many times when we do have outtakes from album sessions and songs that do not fit our Zwaremachine style we have released as Mach FoX which is much more open to different genre styles. You can check out the Mach FoX Bandcamp page to get a better idea of those wider genres offered.
What are some of the genres represented at Mach FoX’s Bandcamp profile?
There are Mach FoX band and solo releases going back to 2005...so quite a number of styles are covered. A lot of experiments in song writing and recording end up under the Mach FoX umbrella for releases on that page and genres like electropunk, electro-industrial, noise, ambient, goth rock, experimental and more.
How long did those outtakes remain on hold before being selected for the new Mach FoX album? What prompted you to resurrect those outtakes?
The 7 songs used for the upcoming “Chaos of Man” album were almost finished in the mixing stage before we decided they were not a good fit and would be better suited for a Mach FoX release. I had been leaning that way since earlier in the recording process but wanted to see the songs through to a final mix before I made that final decision.
Where is Phage Tapes located and how prominent are they as a label? Are they effective in promoting and distributing their releases? Have you previously released anything with them?
Phage Tapes is a local Twin Cities based label that is probably known best for cassette releases in the noise/experimental scene. I think Zwaremachine – Be a Light was one of the first industrial/ebm style releases on the label and I have worked with them to release Zwaremachine, Mach FoX and related projects. I look for a label that we can partner with, meaning we would both promote the release. I don't expect a label to do all the work so it's important we both put forward an effort and Phage Tapes is always good to work with.
Are there additional genres you/re thinking about exploring for future releases?
I won't specifically write for a certain genre in general...but when I start writing new Zwaremachine material it will definitely lean towards certain tempos and sounds that fit ebm and industrial with plenty of dark electro. Those songs will be geared towards live performance and the dance floor.
What elements of Zwaremachine's material will be geared to your live performances? The songwriting, the atmosphere, the vibe, or each of these aspects?
For Zwaremachine it will be more about tempos and energy. We try to keep the energy up for live performances.
What ideas and themes do you intend to draw upon when you begin crafting new lyrics for Zwaremachine’s new material?
I think a lot of lyrics come from my subconscious and I tend to understand their meaning more after they are recorded. I am not sure what themes will come out when I start writing so we will see where the songs go.
Anything more you want to say about Zwaremachine and Mach FoX’s plans for the remainder of 2025 and into 2026?
We hope everyone who comes to a show has a good time and will follow the band or Mach FoX for future developments.
-Dave Wolff