Assück was an American grindcore band from St. Petersburg, Florida, active from 1988 to 1998. During their existence, they released two studio albums, numerous EPs, as well as various tracks on compilation albums. The band has been described as an influential touchstone for grindcore, with their second and final album, Misery Index, being cited as one of the best and most essential records within the genre. In 1987, Pavlovich (bass), Heritage (vocals), and two other friends formed a preliminary band called Toilet Birth. The band was intended to be fast hardcore punk with a crude name that was a blatant variant on Septic Death, a foundational influence for Assück. The boys were 16 and 17 years old at the time. Toilet Birth was short-lived, recording no material and playing only a small number of gigs and house parties.

Sometime in mid-to-late 1988, Proctor, Pavlovich, and Heritage played together for the first time. At the outset, Assück’s intent was to be absurdist and to play at chaotic speeds with unintelligible vocals.

Assück recorded their debut EP, Necrosalvation, with engineer Scott Burns at Morrisound Recording Studio on November 13, 1989. The session included five new tracks and six re-recorded tracks from the Born Backwards demo. Notably, that date also marks the release of Terrorizer's World Downfall album on Earache Records — which was recorded with the same engineer, at the same studio, and in the same room as Assück's Necrosalvation.

According to journalist Greg Pratt, "Assück were an incredible band with probably metal's best drummer, Rob Proctor, although no one ever mentions his name. They combined well-written poetic and political lyrics with catchy songs, insane musicianship and a short-fast-loud brutality that no one has topped since." In a retrospective article for Decibel Magazine, Pratt stated that despite the very short runtime of Anticapital, the album has "changed extreme music history." He explained that the record shows the failings of society though inspires change through its poetically despairing lyrics and charging bass drum leads.

thumb|200px|right|Assück performing in 1992

Jeff Terich of Treblezine listed their second and final album, Misery Index, as one of the most essential grindcore records, stating that the album "stands as a document of grindcore at its gimmick-free best" and describing the instrumental abilities displayed throughout it as "inhuman witchery".

Damien Beard of Reverb.com described Steve Heritage as an iconic and defining guitarist of '90s hardcore punk, noting the metal-influence and complexity of his riffing as Assück's best work. He deemed the band as a "behemoth of combination of crust-punk anger and heavy metal musicianship", emphasizing their sound as short bursts of blasting fury accompanied by skillful tempo shifts and breakdowns. Additionally, Beard characterized Rob Proctor as a "inhuman beast of a drummer" for his expertly timed stops.

Members

;Final line-up

  • Rob Proctor - drums <small>(1988–1998)</small>
  • Steve Heritage - vocals, guitar <small>(1988–1998)</small>
  • Jason Crittendon - bass <small>(1998)</small>

;Former members

  • Paul Pavlovich - vocals <small>(1988–1993)</small>
  • Daryl Kahan - vocals <small>(1993–1994)</small>
  • Dave "Spinach" Malinksky - vocals <small>(1994–1995)</small>
  • Pete Jay - bass <small>(1991–1992)</small>
  • Steve Kosiba - bass <small>(1992–1998)</small>

;Timeline

Paul Pavlovich

Paul Pavlovich (born March 3, 1970) is an American artist, graphic designer, and musician. Currently living in St. Petersburg, Florida, he is best known as the first vocalist for Assück, which he co-founded in 1988. In October 2008, IGN Entertainment named Pavlovich one of the '10 Best Death Metal Singers' stating "In terms of the guys doing the deeper or what some fans call "guttural" vocal style, Pavlovich is in an elite class".

Since his departure from the band in 1992, Pavlovich shifted his attention to visual art and design. After graduating from the Ringling School of Art and Design in 1994, Pavlovich spent a period of time in New York City developing his unique system of painting and image making. During his short residence in the Park Slope neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York, Pavlovich spent several months rehearsing with the band Cattle Press.

Pavlovich returned to the Tampa Bay area with a developed body of artwork which he began showing in group shows. In 2002 Pavlovich was selected to show several works at the Tampa Museum of Art. In 2004 Pavlovich was approached by curator Timothy Warner of the Covivant Gallery in Tampa who was interested in organizing Pavlovich's first solo exhibit of work entitled "Temporary Past Life" which received praise from national and local media. Pavlovich continues his visual work which has been widely seen in both print and web-media.

In late 2004, Pavlovich was asked by longtime friend and guitarist Sam Williams to contribute vocals to a recording project called Track the Curse. In 2006, the album The New Land was released by the Tennessee label Spins Good Records, and They've Taken Everything in 2007.

Pavlovich appeared as a guest vocalist on the 2014 album, Longhena, by technical grindcore band Gridlink, contributing on the track "Chalk Maple".

In 2018, Pavlovich founded his own label called Roman Numeral Records, and also formed a new grindcore band called Alphanumeric, whose debut EP was released in 2019 through Roman Numeral.

Discography

;Studio albums

  • Anticapital (1991, Sound Pollution)
  • Misery Index (1997, Sound Pollution)

;Extended plays

  • Born Backwards demo tape (1989, Liquified Tapes)
  • Necrosalvation 7-inch (1990, Rigid Records)
  • Split 7-inch with Old Lady Drivers (1990, No System)
  • Blindspot 7-inch (1992, Open Records)
  • State To State 7-inch (1992, SOA)

;Compilation albums

  • Anticapital / Blindspot / +3 (1994, Sound Pollution)
  • Discography 1989-1998 (2017, Blastasfuk Grindcore)

References

  • Assück biography on MusicMight
  • Discography on Discogs
  • Assück Metal Archives
  • Gig Posters Design Samples