SOUNDTRACK: BILL RIEFLIN (September 29, 1960 – March 24, 2020).
Bill Rieflin is a musician that I’ve known of for as long as I can remember.
He played with the Revolting Cocks and then, how I knew him best, as the drummer for Ministry. I feel like his name appeared in dozens of places on the industrial scene. He helped to create Pigface and even played with KMFDM (as a drummer and keyboardist). He also played on the Lard albums and drummed with Nine Inch Nails and Swans.
With all of that industrial background it came as something of a surprise to hear that he was going to replace Bill Berry (as a hired drummer, not a band member) in R.E.M. (in live shows and on their last couple of albums).
He even played drums on Taylor Swift’s album Red (which is amusing given his later King Crimson connection).
He had been friendly with Robert Fripp since at least 1999. Fripp played on Rieflin’s solo album Birth of a Giant and had worked with him in various projects through the years. I didn’t know about that Fripp connection, so when I found out that he was going to be one of the three drummers in the 2014 King Crimson tour, I was really surprised.
I was also really impressed at his drumming and am now really happy to have seen him play. When Crimson toured again in July of 2017, Rieflin had taken a sabbatical but was now back. But since they had replaced him while he was away, he was now playing keyboards (which meant that Crimson now had eight members on stage). When I saw them again in November 2017, Rieflin was once again on sabbatical.
I assumed it was for health reasons (why else do musicians take sabbaticals), but his cancer was kept under wraps. (He’d evidently been fighting it since 2013).
So at least I was fortunate enough to see him play twice before he died.
Here’s the second drummer that I know of to die of cancer in 2020. Even while Coronavirus is getting the front page, cancer still does its dirty work.
[READ: December 2019] “Who We Are”
The December 2019 issue of the West End Phoenix focused on Indigenous People. Most of the writers were Indigenous and the news stories shone a light on Indigenous issues. Much of the presence of Indigenous peoples is seen through their art–whether through beads, paint or sculpture, the images are often quite striking. The issue even included a “colour me” page with a striking image from Taylor Cameron, a 23-year-old Anishinaabe artist from Saugeen First Nation (I can’t find an image online).
The issue also featured two full page graphic short stories.
The first features very clean illustrations from Scott B. Henderson. The lines are very crisp and yet the art is quite minimal, achieving a lot with very little.
The story is a true story. (more…)