Boyd Blake Rice (born December 16, 1956) is an American experimental sound/noise musician using the name of NON since the mid-1970s. He is an industrial musician, writer, and photographer. Rice's music and art have been influenced by fascist ideas and aesthetics, and has often been accused of fascist sympathies.

Biography

Rice was born on December 16, 1956, in Lemon Grove, California. He became known through his involvement in V. Vale's RE/Search Publications. He is profiled in RE/Search #6/7: Industrial Culture Handbook and Pranks!

He first made the news for, at the age of 19, showing a skinned pig or goat's head to then-First Lady Betty Ford. He was arrested and interrogated by the US Secret Service, but was released.

Music

Rice creates music under his own name, as well as under the moniker of NON and with contributors under various other project names.

Rice experimented with sound and the medium through which that sound is conveyed. On his second seven-inch, he had 2–4 extra holes punched into the record for "multi axial rotation".

NON

In 1978, he formed NON as a duo with second member Robert Turman. Rice has recorded several noise music albums, and collaborated with experimental music/dark folk artists like Current 93, Death in June and Rose McDowall. Most of his music has been released on the Mute Records label. Rice has also collaborated with Frank Tovey of Fad Gadget, Tony Wakeford of Sol Invictus and Michael Jenkins Moynihan of Blood Axis. His later albums have often been explicitly conceptual.

On Might! (1995), Rice layered portions of Ragnar Redbeard's Social Darwinist harangue, Might Is Right over sound beds of looped noise and manipulated frequencies.

Other work

After dropping out of high school at the age of 17, Rice began an in-depth study of early 20th-century art movements, producing his own abstract black and white paintings and experimental photographs.

In the mid-1970s Rice devoted a great deal of time to experimental photography, developing a process by which he could produce "photographs of things which don't exist". He had a one-man show of the photos in the early 1980s at Richard Peterson's Pink & Pearl Gallery in San Diego, which was documented in the local press.

In the mid-1980s Rice became close friends with Anton LaVey, founder and high priest of the Church of Satan, and was made a priest, then later a magister in the Council of Nine of the Church. The two shared many views and had each been inspired by Might Is Right. In 1987 Rice and Nikolas Schreck founded the Abraxas Foundation, an "occult-fascist" think tank that also counted Adam Parfrey and Michael J. Moynihan among its members. During an interview, Rice described the basic philosophy of his foundation as being "The strong rule the weak, and the clever rule the strong".

Rice was for many years an advocate of Charles Manson, personally communicating with him in prison. This ended when Rice was arrested for bringing a bullet with him into the prison, which ended their relationship; despite this, in February 1989 Rice appeared rallying for Manson's release during Manson's parole hearing, wearing a sign that read "Guilty of Witchcraft? Manson Killed No One". Rice has documented the writings of Manson in his role as contributing editor of the 1988 book The Manson File.

Writing

Essays

In the mid-1980s, Rice contributed essays to a handful of independently published book collections such as Incredibly Strange Films, Apocalypse Culture, The Manson File, In the late 1990s and early 2000s Rice was a staff member at Modern Drunkard Magazine, and contributed numerous texts to the publication. He also penned essays for the books Taboo: The Art of Tiki and Apocalypse Culture II.

In the early 2000s, Rice began researching esoteric topics related to the pseudohistorical concept of the so-called "grail bloodline" and the Priory of Sion hoax (which he apparently was credulous of) and became a regular contributor to Tracy R. Twyman's "neo-Arcadian" 'zine, Dagobert's Revenge. He also published an essay on these themes for Richard Metzler's 2003 occult Disinfo collection, Book of Lies.

Books

Most of Rice's writings from the mid-1980s to the early 2000s were republished in Standing in Two Circles: The Collected Works of Boyd Rice, which was issued by the British imprint Creation Books in 2008, with a French translation from the Parisian publisher Camion Noir in 2009. Standing in Two Circles received mixed but generally critical reviews, and was never republished.

A collection of Rice's writings on "the grail bloodline" and related revisionist history topics was first published in Portuguese as Porto do Graal by Terra Fria, in 2005. The book was later republished in English as The Vessel of God: The Selected Grail Writings of Boyd Rice, by the Peruvian imprint Manus Sinistra, in 2024.

In 2009, the small American publisher Heartworm Press (run by Wesley Eisold of Cold Cave) released No, a collection of Rice's short essays. In 2011 Heartworm also published Twilight Man, a memoir of Rice's time spent working as an alarm agent in San Francisco in the 1980s.

In 2019, Rice self-published The Last Testament of Anton Szandor LaVey, an account of his memories of the late Church of Satan founder Anton LaVey.

Views

Since the 1980s Rice's music and art have been influenced by fascist ideas and aesthetics. The packaging for NON's 1986 album Blood & Flame, for instance, included a Wolfsangel and a quote from Alfred Rosenberg. He has often been accused of fascist sympathies as a result. He also cultivated connections with neo-Nazis such as James Mason (who he began corresponding with in 1986), Tom Metzger (whose TV show he appeared on in 1986) and American Front leader Bob Heick. He has described himself as an "aesthetic fascist". In 1997, he stated in an interview that:

In his first letter to Mason, dated April 1986, Rice states "I am completely of the Manson-Hitler thought & do whatever I can to further it." In 2025 Sunshine reported that in a later letter to Mason, Rice states that he was reading American Nazi Party leader George Lincoln Rockwell's book White Power and calls it "awesome", and that this letter was decorated with a swastika at the top of the page. He has also expressed support for elements of fascism in his writings, interviews, and public appearances.

Rice began to face a backlash for these associations in the late 1980s when Jello Biafra, Peter Christopherson, Frank Tovey, and V. Vale cut their ties with him. In the 1990s he began to disassociate himself from the far right and began to use fascist iconography with more irony. This led to debates in the late 1990s and early 2000s regarding whether or not Rice's use of taboo symbolism and his controversial statements made in interviews were sincere. In 2025, Spencer Sunshine, showed that Rice's "involvement [with actual white supremacists] was much deeper than anyone had previously guessed at, and [Sunshine's] new evidence more damning than that previously uncovered even by the most careful of researchers." In one 2012 interview he praised Arthur de Gobineau while adding, "I don’t think that to believe in the principle of natural inequality that necessarily equates to: you hate black people or you hate Jews or something." In another 2019 interview he described himself as "utterly apolitical." A 2018 art show was cancelled because of protests over Rice's fascist associations,

Personal life

Rice dated Lisa Crystal Carver, with whom he has a son.

Rice was arrested in 1995 for domestic violence, though never charged. Carver writes in her memoir, Drugs Are Nice, that he physically abused her.

Discography

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! Title

! Under

|-

|1976

| The Black Album

| Boyd Rice

|-

|1977

| Mode of Infection/Knife Ladder – 7"

| NON

|-

|1978

| Pagan Muzak – 7" with multiple locked grooves

| NON

|-

|1982

| Rise – 12"

| NON

|-

|1982 (rec. 1977–82)

| Physical Evidence

| NON

|-

|1983

| Sickness of Snakes / Nightmare Culture

| Boyd Rice & COIL / Boyd Rice & Current 93

|-

|1984 (rec. 1981)

| Easy Listening for the Hard of Hearing

| Boyd Rice and Frank Tovey

|-

|1985

| Sick Tour – Live in Holland

| NON

|-

|1987 (rec. 1983)

| Blood and Flame

| NON

|-

|1990

| Music, Martinis and Misanthropy

| Boyd Rice and Friends

|-

|1991

| Easy Listening for Iron Youth – The Best of NON

| NON

|-

|1992

| In the Shadow of the Sword

| NON

|-

|1993

| I'm Just Like You

| The Tards (8" single by Boyd Rice & Adam Parfrey)

|-

|1993

| Ragnarok Rune

| Boyd Rice

|-

|1993

| Seasons in the Sun

| Spell

|-

|1994

| The Monopoly Queen – 7"

| The Monopoly Queen (w/ Mary Ellen Carver & Combustible Edison)

|-

|1995

| Might!

| NON

|-

|1995

| Hatesville

| The Boyd Rice Experience with Adam Parfrey

|-

|1996

| Heaven Sent

| Scorpion Wind (w/ Douglas P. & John Murphy)

|-

|1996

| Ralph Gean: A Star Unborn

| Boyd Rice Presents

|-

|1996

| Death's Gladsome Wedding: Hymns and Marches from Transylvania's Notorious Legionari Movement

| Boyd Rice Presents

|-

|1997

| God & Beast

| NON

|-

|1999

| Receive the Flame

| NON

|-

|1999

| Pagan Muzak – 7" with multiple locked grooves Rerelease

| NON

|-

|2000

| The Way I Feel

| Boyd Rice

|-

|2000

| Solitude – 7" with locked grooves on B-side

| NON

|-

|2001

| Wolf Pact

| Boyd Rice and Fiends

|-

|2002

| Children of the Black Sun

| NON

|-

|2002

| The Registered Three

| Boyd Rice & Friends (C.D. Single)

|-

|2002

| Music for Pussycats: Girl Groups

| Boyd Rice Presents

|-

|2004

| Baptism By Fire (Live)

| Boyd Rice and Fiends

|-

|2004

| Terra Incognita: Ambient Works 1975 to Present

| Boyd Rice/NON

|-

|2004

| Alarm Agents

| Death in June & Boyd Rice

|-

|2005

| The Very Best of Little Fyodor's Greatest Hits!

| Boyd Rice Presents

|-

|2008

| Boyd Rice and Z'EV

| Boyd Rice and Z'EV

|-

|2008

| Going Steady With Peggy Moffitt

| Giddle & Boyd

|-

|2012

| Back to Mono

| NON

|-

|2020

|Blast of Silence

|NON

|}

Bibliography

Filmography

Film

  • Pranks! TV! (1986, VHS) (directed by V. Vale), RE/Search Publications
  • Tyranny of the Beat (1991), Mute Records
  • Speak of the Devil (1995, VHS) (about Anton LaVey, directed by Nick Bougas), Wavelength Video
  • Boyd Rice Documentary, Part One (1994), Joel Haertling
  • Boyd Rice Documentary, Part Two (1998), Joel Haertling
  • Pearls Before Swine (1999) (directed by Richard Wolstencroft)
  • Nixing the Twist (2000, DVD) (directed by Frank Kelly Rich), High Crime Films
  • The Many Moods of Boyd Rice (2002, VHS), Predatory Instinct Productions
  • Church of Satan Interview Archive (2003, DVD), Purging Talon
  • Baptism by Fire (2004, DVD) (live performance in Bologna, Italy), NERO2
  • Frank Tovey by Fad Gadget (2006) (documentary), Mute Records
  • Iconoclast (2011) (directed by Larry Wessel), iconoclastmovie.com
  • Modern Drunkard (directed by Frank Kelly Rich)
  • In Satan's Name (BBC documentary by director Antony Thomas)
  • In Satan's Name (Bob Larson's 31-episode television series), Trinity Broadcasting Network
  • Resort Beyond the Last Resort (music video directed by Kansas Bowling), Collapsing Scenery

Performance

  • Live in Osaka (DVD) (features a concert performance from Osaka, Japan in 1989, with Michael Moynihan, Tony Wakeford, Douglas P. and Rose McDowall; also includes Rice's films Invocation (One) and Black Sun)

References

Works cited

Further reading