The History of Enticer
As told by Mick Keating

L > R: Rhett McCoullough, Mick Keating, George VelenikSerg, Steve
Sidhu, Serg Dimitrijevic
"Enticer was originally
formed in 1987 by myself (Mick Keating)
with Dave De Francesco and Steve Moore. Id met Dave through my previous band, Fallen
Saint. A newspaper ad found drummer, Steve Moore who was still at school at the time. My
memories of our first rehearsal was jamming on Dio songs at a Petersham rehearsal studio.
Further newspaper ads found another guitarist, Steve Burton. Now Steve was a great
guitarist and a sweet guy but otherwise unemployable. He sometimes wore a long-haired wig
after losing some hair in a mystery shrouded incident at a neighbours. He drove an
unregistered old Holden with a least a foot of rubbish on the floor. His equipment to say
the least left a little to be desired. He owned a rusty old distortion pedal that he found
on the side of the road. We nicknamed it The Cicada because when he would
press it to go into a solo it sounded like a chorus of cicadas on a hot summer day. Steve
was given the nickname Spunna because he said people who knew him thought he
was spun out. In the name of professionalism Steve eventually had to go.
Around this time John Gaughan joined on
vocals but his heart wasnt in it and after a few months of rehearsals he left. A
school friend of Steves, John Kyd joined on guitar. This was a stable line-up
although still short of a vocalist. Our set list at the time included Saxons
Power and the Glory, Maidens Flight of Icarus, Def
Leppards Rock of Ages, Judas Priests Rock Forever,
Strypers The Way and Turn Up the Night by Black Sabbath. We
had a couple of originals written at the time which would become mainstays of our early
live set, songs such as Daves Highway Burner and my Victory of the
Throne.
Playing live was still a while away as our
search for a vocalist continued. We eventually found Gregg Moore through contacts in the
local scene. Gregg, no relation to Steve, loved three things music, alcohol and
girls. Unfortunately, too often he let the last two interfere with the music. He had a bad
liver from drinking and his doctor advised him to give it up. But he loved his bourbon too
much to stop. I once found him in his flat, lying in a darkened room in too much pain to
move. As skinny as I was at the time, he was downright puny so I was able to carry him
down two flights of stairs and then to hospital.
With our line-up now complete we began
rehearsing twice weekly at Stage Door Productions rehearsal studios at Alexandria. Prior
to Gregg joining, not requiring a PA for vocals, we rehearsed often at Daves
dads factory at Botany. It was in an industrial zone so there was no noise
restrictions. I dont know how one of us wasnt killed though when we used the
various cranes and equipment for crazy stunts. Stage Door studios was one of the better
rehearsal spaces in Sydney and was used by many of the better local acts and visiting
oversaes bands. We would run into many known bands such as the Angels, Rose Tattoo. Jerry
Harrison of the Talking Heads, the Divinyls and Johnny Diesel. On a few occasions we saw
Jimmy Barnes and his band. He was probably the biggest Australian rock act at the time and
when he was rehearsing for the tour promoting the Freight Train Heart tour he would truck
in mountains of extra mixing boards and equipment and his wife would set up trestle tables
with woks cooking delicious Asian food for the band and crew. Jimmy would always have a
chat with us and give us encouragement. Ive met him a few times over the years most
memorably when he gave me a backstage pass at a Living Loud gig and I was able to hang
backstage with rock legends Bob Daisley, Lee Kerslake, Steve Morse and Don Airey. Just
last year Jimmy was kind enough to autograph my copy of Freight Train Heart at a Glenn
Hughes gig.
I was once at the counter at Stage Door
buying a Mars Bar and turned to find Peter Tork standing next to me. Ive always been
a huge Monkees fan and was speechless. I then met Davy Jones and then saw Micky Dolenz
sitting in the studios office. I came up behind him and said Hey Fuzzy
Wuzzy!. This was a quote from the Monkees psychedelic movie Head when
the red neck cop addressed Micky who at the time had a bit of an afro. Micky told me that
the movie was Jack Nicholson on acid (Jack being the movies director).
It was into 1988 when we settled on the
name Enticer which was suggested by Daves girlfriend, Alex. Our first
gig was September 16 1988 at the Three Swallows Hotel, Bankstown supporting Kizum. Kizum
were a Rush-like three-piece (Kizum being music spelt backwards, sort of ) . I
think we made $120 less the cost of the mixer plus I had to spend the afternoon loading in
the PA.
Our music at the time was not as heavy as
it was later to become. Our publicity photos however were quite glammy which is what
happens when you let girlfriends and sisters dress you for a photo shoot. The shoot itself
took place in Hyde Park in the centre of Sydney much to the amusement of shoppers, winos
and Japanese tourists. During the mid-1980s the look in the Sydney scene was a cross
between LA glam and leather and studs Judas Priest. These were the days before Metallica
and Slayer swept all before them and GunsnRoses made tattoos and piercings the
norm. Playing venues such as the Wagon Wheel Hotel at St Marys quickly put paid to
any glam fashion aspirations we may have had. Local drinkers there were known to poke
punters in the eye if they didnt like the look of them. Our stage gear quickly
settled into the standard metal look of tight jeans, white hightops and black shirts.

By early 1989 wed played about 10
gigs mainly at the Wagon Wheel Hotel and the Royal Hotel, Sutherland. Some fans even
started to turn up in home-made Enticer t-shirts. The Royal was a metal mainstay at the
time. Every Saturday night was metal night and as well as Sydney groups interstate bands
such as Blackjack from Melbourne and Vice from Queensland played there. Even DRI played a
show there once. Bands we played with included probably one of the last gigs by Lotus,
featuring their singer Dale in tight leather pants with the arse cheeks cut out and one of
the first gigs by thrashers Addictive who we were
to play many gigs with in the next two years. Addictive
absolutely blew me away the first time I saw them. Ive still got their demo Ward 74
which included songs that were later to appear on their first album Pity of Man. One memorable gig at the Royal
included headliners Apocalypse (later to become Redeemer), Enticer and the Sexations strip
show. There is nothing like loading into a gig while naked babes cover each other in
fluorescent paint.
At this time we decided to do some
recording. Our original music was becoming heavier as was our choice of covers which now
included Metallica, Holy Terror and Metal Church. We would go on to cover songs from the
first three Metal Church albums. In March 1989 we entered Sound Barrier Studios with
engineer John Hresc to record the EP Into Reality. This EP contained 5 tracks
Living Fast, Into Reality, Roll On, Danger Within and The Final Act. Living Fast was written by Dave with
lyrics by Gregg and was for a while our opening live number. Into Reality was a 10 minute epic
with music by Steve and lyrics by me. It told the story of a man realising hes
trapped in a mental asylum. It featured a lot of solo trading between Dave and John and
also a nice acoustic intro by John. Roll
On was as close as we got to a ballad. The music was written by Dave based
around a guitar lick he ripped off from a TV commercial that was on at the time. I wrote
the music and lyrics to the last two songs, Danger Within and The Final Act. Danger Within was about letting
your anxieties hold you back and The
Final Act was about nuclear annihilation. This was a time before the fall of the
Berlin Wall and the end of the Cold War and pretty much every metal band had a song about
everything going pear-shaped and the world ending in nuclear devastation.

After the release of the EP we played
another 9 shows through to July 1989. During this period we began to realise that maybe
Gregg wasnt the singer for us. It was sometimes an uphill battle to teach him
melodies and I vividly remember us trying to teach him the three part harmony in the
middle of Priests Rock Forever. His drinking was also interfering with
the band. We werent saints but we always were sober for rehearsals and gigs. Gregg
got smashed before our second ever show which was at the Wagon Wheel Hotel and made a
complete dick of himself. Not a good way to impress the fickle Sydney metal audience.
Matters came to a head in late June when we had a show supporting Precious Metal, a band
which specialised in covers from Bon Jovi, Whitesnake, etc. This band were originally Gold
Zeppelin who to my recollection was among the first tribute bands which would
spread like a cancer through the music scene. Great musicians though. It was getting close
to show time and there was no sign of Gregg. One of the hotel staff came into the dressing
room to say we had a phone call. It was Gregg and hed been arrested DUI. I knew he
already had one or two DUIs under his belt and wasnt surprised that they locked him
up. We decided that wed do the show as an instrumental with maybe Dave taking over
vocals for a couple of songs. We werent playing to a metal crowd anyway and the gig
was at Hornsby, hardly the metal heartland, so we thought why not? Somehow though Gregg
walked in as we were going on stage and we were able to do our normal set. But we needed
someone more reliable.
These were dark days for metal however. I
hear people now complain about the scene but those days in comparison were like living in
the Great Depression. This was before grunge made it cool to listen to heavy music. There
were enough guitarists to go around, but decent singers and drummers were scarce. We were
lucky to have Steve Moore, one of the best metal drummers in Sydney but we really needed a
new singer.
Luckily enough a vocalist fell into our
lap. We were contacted by a guy who was making a documentary on the Sydney metal scene to
be called Loud, fast and Angry. His name was Steve Sidhu and he was making the
doco for his college project. He came down to Stage Door Productions to film the inetview
and I recognised him straight away as Id seen him recently singing in a band whose
name escapes me but I do remember him billed as the air raid siren. Steve told
us that hed left that band so we hinted that we werent happy with Gregg and
Steve said he liked our band and so he was in. The next rehearsal Steve reshot the
interview with him as our vocalist. Steve joining gave us a real shot in the arm as he had
boundless enthusiasm (sometimes a little too much) and always gave 100%. He designed and
made the backdrop that you can see in some photos.
We thought that wed do something to
make a bit of money so we jumped on the tribute bandwagon. We thought we could learn a set
of covers and do that on the side to make some cash for recording. We became Angels
Tribute act Night Attack and learnt 20 Angels songs and a couple of AC/DC for
encores. Our friend Ben Frost who played in Lost Angels and The
Law was doing a sound engineering course and needed a band to record. So with the
free recording time we put down No Secrets and Coming Down. We
were hoping to use this demo to get work. We had a manager at the time named Reid Heath
(if he wanted to work for us and earn 20% of nothing then go right ahead) and he got us a
show at Ingleburn RSL. The show went fine and we probably made as much money that night as
we had thus far with Enticer but I think we realised that we wanted to do originals. I
dont know if we would have lasted in RSL land as that night we were banned from some
parts of the club because of the way we looked and dressed. We werent punters, we
were working there!
It was another 5 months before our next
Enticer gig. During this time however we lost John Kyd as our guitarist. For a while
hed been a bit disillusioned with our heavier musical direction so we split amicably
and continued to see him and play shows with him when he joined FU Roek as their new
guitarist. FU Roek were to say the least different. Their name came about when
they were registering their name and rock band was misspelt roek.
Their line-up included Bert on keyboards who was a balding, hilarious, funny-looking
Indian guy who would go on stage bare-chested wearing ugg boots and leopard skin tights
with literally a cucumber shoved down the front. Their drummer Arnold had a kit covered in
pornographic pictures and he would trash his drums ala Keith Moon at the end of, or during
the course of, every show. He would purposely not tighten his cymbals and would hit them
with an upswing causing the cymbals to fly across the stage or into the crowd. Ive
never seen a band care less about what audiences or venues for that matter thought of them
cared for them. They tried to get banned from certain venues and did so with aplomb. They
actually left Australia and toured the USA as Forced Underground. John Kyd is
still there to this day living in California as is Bert although he is living under an
assumed name to avoid warrants for unpaid fines in various counties.
To replace John we brought in Rhett
McCoullough who Dave met when Rhett was working at the Guitar Factory, Hurstville. The
Guitar Factory were always very supportive of us. They paid for half our t-shirt
production costs (they were advertised on the back) and gave us some guitars to donate to
the Starlight Foundation. Rhett fit in straight away and was completely happy with our
heavier, more technical direction. Prior to gigging with the new line-up we recorded our
single Reaper of
the Earth/Dying
Age. These songs showed the thrashier angle to our music. Reaper of
the Earth was about the Newcastle earthquake and Dying Age was
about the North Shore Granny Killer, a serial killer in Sydney at the time. We had seen an
ad in the local street press for a deal to record a single at Rich Music Studios. The deal
included studio time, mastering and pressing of the single. The single was pressed on
vinyl as CDs were still not used 100% of the time as they are today. In fact it was
pressed on red vinyl. We probably wasted a bit of studio time in the getting the special
effects that can be heard at the beginning of each song but it certainly made the songs a
bit different. To my delight I was able to use some knowledge Id gleaned from
studying The Complete Beatles Recording Sessions by Mark Lewisohn. On
Reaper we needed Steves voice to sound like it was coming out of a
telephone. I remember reading that Paul McCartney when recording the vocal line now
shes hit the big time in the song Honey Pie heavily limited the
track by chopping off the signals at both ends of the frequency range to make it sound
like it was coming out of an old phonograph. I told our engineer Craig Porter to use this
on the line there shall be only one reaper of the earth and it worked.
We launched the new line-up
and the single at the Seven Hills Inn on my birthday 20 April 1990. Id always wanted
to play the Seven Hills Inn as Id had great memories of seeing bands there over the
years like Godspeed, Azgard, Assasin and White Widow. Around 1986-87 it was always
Thursday night, St James Tavern, Friday night Royal Hotel Sutherland and Seven Hills Inn
on Saturday night. The new thrash direction and the single seemed to be going well. We
were interviewed on 2RRR and also on 2JJJs metal show with Helen Razor. However,
there were to be more line-up changes to come.

At his 21st birthday party Steve told us
that he was leaving the band. I knew Steve and Dave were not getting on. Even though it
stopped just short of fisticuffs it was clear the situation couldnt go on. Steve had
been helping out Redeemer on drums but left us to join Addictive. In hindsight it would have been better
for us to chuck Dave and keep Steve as soon after we sacked Dave. We felt he wasnt
putting in 100%. Rhett knew guitarist Serg Dimitrijevic from the Guitar Factory. Serg was
only 17 and still in his last year of high school. Hed only been playing a couple of
years but already was a prestigious talent. Steve brought in a drummer he knew by the name
of George Velenik. George was a big fan of Ian Paice and Dave Lombardo and he also played
in a Greek dance band which certainly gave his style a unique feel.
It was around this time that we took on new
management Kezra Lorenz and Firm Management. This certainly lit a fire under us but
at the same time it was the beginning of the end not that we knew it at the time. Kezra
had a colourful past and was the matriach of a dysfunctional household in Glebe. She had
been married to Chewy Lorenz, a six foot six Comanchero who was sent to prison
after the Milperra Bikie Massacre. She fled to London for several years after writing a
expose on bikie life and a contract was put out on her. Even years later when wed
play at the Lewisham Hotel shed hide in the toilets when shed hear the Harleys
pull up. Bikies were always a problem at the Lewisham Haunted Castle
Theyd never pay to get in, harass the women and pick fights with the headbangers.
One of them once had some poor sucker pinned against a wall and turned to my inebriated
friend Rob and said, call this guy an ambulance. Rob said, Mate,
youre an ambulance. The confused bikie let the lucky guy go.
In early 1991 we did a few shows with
Mortal Sin. Andy their bass player had reformed the band with our old guitarist, Dave and
three other new recruits. This line-up recorded the Rebellious Youth album for Virgin
Records but broke up soon after when they were dropped from the label. We also played a
few shows at the Kardomah Café in Kings Cross including the Megadeth concert after party,
not that anyone from Megadeth showed up. The Kardomah was a real sweatbox just off the
main drag. The ceiling mustnt have been more than 8 feet from the ground. It
wasnt a bad place to play but you werent allowed to load out after a gig and
had to come back the next day to collect your gear. The Kardomah carpet always had an
interesting smell the next day.
Someone had come up with a brilliant idea
for a gig that would really bring in the punters. Sadistik Exekution were a Sydney band
that had reached almost legendary status without ever having to play live through the
release of a few demos and through the distinctive artwork of their singer Rok. Someone
came up with the idea that if we got them to play live we could draw a massive crowd. Addictive at this stage were being handled by Firm
Management and FU Roek were also getting work through Firm. A meeting was convened at the
Friend in Hand hotel at Glebe and the Sad Ex boys were convinced to play live. The gig was
organised for June 8 1991 at the Mars Club at Darlinghurst. Bands played on the second
floor of the club above a lesbian bar. To add to the event it was decided to call the
night a festival. Doomfest was the initial suggestion but we soon
decided on Metalfest 91. Motorhead were touring at the time so the gig was
also advertised as the Motorhead pre-tour party. There were give aways including albums by
Motorhead, Sadistik Exekution,
Addictive, Frozen Doberman as well as t-shirts
from all the bands on the bill and Motorhead concert tickets. Top rock photographer Tony
Mott was brought in to take some promo shots of Sadistik, Addictive and Enticer. All in all the night was a
great success. 500 people showed up even though the capacity of the club was only about
350. Who knows what the lesbians on the floor below thought of it all. Metalfest was also
held in 1992 at the Hordern Pavilion with Addictive
headlining and photos from that night can be seen in their "Kick Em Hard" album.
The next week Metalfest was taken on the
road to Melbourne. We hired a luxury bus for $2000 and Sadistik Exekution, Addictive and Enticer and various hangers-on headed
south. Sound engineer Keith Barrows and FU and ex-Enticer guitarist John Kyd also came
down. The bus had a fax machine (which didnt work) and a VCR and on the way down on
Friday night we watched bootleg Celtic Frost videos as well as one of Dave Slave, Sadistik Exekutions bass
player destroy a bass on Hey Hey its Saturdays Red Faces.
The Melbourne show was at the Sarah Sands
Hotel in Brunswick. Local band Despised (who I thought were pretty good) opened then
Enticer, Addictive and headliners Sadistik Exekution. Rok
brought a mutilated Barbie Doll which he would thrust into the crowd, shouting who
wants to fuck my plastic woman? He was apparently a keen fisherman and would take
weird fish with long needle like teeth on stage. I thought we played okay but the
Melbourne crowd was not very receptive to the Sydney bands, even a bit aggressive.
Some members of the tour hadnt slept
since we left Sydney. On the return trip on the Sunday we were refused service at a
McDonalds and ended up at a roadside café. Wayne Campbell, ex Mortal Sin drummer
had come down on the bus with us (for some reason). He fell asleep at his table wearing
dark glasses and holding a menu. I remember looking over and seeing a waitress trying to
get an order out of him not realising that he had fallen asleep.
A week later Motorhead were playing the
Hordern Pavilion. Addictive were lucky enough to
get the support slot. They wanted to use some of our equipment and we were only too happy
to roadie for them on the night. The guys from Motorhead turned up at about 3pm for a
sound check and a photo shoot with Tony Mott. Their guitarist Phil Campbell was literally
carried in. Apparently hed misread his intinery and didnt realise he had a gig
on that night so he had really tied one on the night before. In fact he thought he was
still in Japan and wondered why all the TV shows were in English. But once his guitar tech
strapped his axe on him he was fine and played great. After Addictives set Rhett asked Lemmy what he thought and he
replied What would an old dinosaur like me know? I watched the show sitting on
a roadcase just off stage. Awesome!
June was a busy month. We recorded three
songs at Sun Studios in Sydney with our sound engineer Keith Barrows. Towers of
Silence was written by Serg and Steves lyrics were about funeral rites of the
Parsi people in parts of India where the dead are put on pedestals to be eaten by
vultures. I wrote the music to Intravenous Insecticide
and Steve completed it with lyrics about a spy living undercover. Feel My Pain
was a song that came out of a studio jam. Kezra had known bassist Bob Daisley, who played
with Rainbow, Gary Moore, Uriah Heep, Malmsteen and most notably Ozzy Osbourne, since the
1970s and we wanted to demo a few songs with the possibility of Bob producing an album for
us. Bob was producing the second album from Addictive,
Kick Em Hard, and we thought it would
be great for him to do the same for us. The difference though was that Addictive had scored a record contract which paid
their costs while we had to raise the money ourselves. Kezra knew that I was a huge fan of
Bobs so she organised for the three of us to go out together for drinks at the
Friend in Hand Hotel in Glebe. When he arrived at Kezras home we were watching a
documentary on the American kids who had committed suicide apparently after listening to
Ozzys Suicide Solution. Bob walked in and casually said, Yeah, I
wrote that song. Bob later gave me the strings he used to record the album No
Rest For the Wicked.
In August we entered Damian Gerard Studios
and recorded 5 songs again with Keith Barrows as engineer. We recorded alternate versions
of the songs on our single Reaper of the Earth and Dying Age.
Drugs Create was written by me with lyrics by Steve about the problems drugs
create in society. Surgery was a
thrasher written by Rhett with lyrics by Steve inspired by the movie Hell
Raiser. Jenkie was written by Rhett and Steve and Steves lyrics,
or more precisely those that could be understood and made sense, were based on the
House series of movies. The effects that can be heard on these songs were from
an effects tape that Keith had picked up with sound bites from an old Godzilla movie.
It was at this recording session however
that the band fell apart. Tensions had been building between the band and management for a
while, personal, business and financial. Georges back problem meant that he
couldnt play as well as he liked and our brand of music was very demanding on a
drummer. I think the final straw was the pressure to raise the money for the album. I had
more money than the other guys in the band and so it would have cost me my life savings
with the other guys contracted to pay me back. Not that I didnt trust them but I
just doubted their ability to afford to do it. How the final decision to break up the band
was made I cant remember but we decided to finish the recording session and call it
a day.
Enticers last gig was August 29, 1991
at Maxs, Petersham."
|