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Circle of Dust

Circle of Dust is an industrial music project from New York City created by Klayton, who later became known as Celldweller. The project was active as a band from 1988 to 1998 and then re-started in 2015 after Klayton gained back ownership of his old albums. The project has released five studio albums: Circle of Dust (1992), Brainchild (1994), a re-recording of Circle of Dust (1995), Disengage (1998), and Machines of Our Disgrace (2016).

Circle of Dust
Logo since 1992
Background information
OriginNew York City, U.S.
Genres
Years active
  • 1988–1998
  • 2015–present
Labels
MembersKlayton
Past membersDaren "Klank" Diolosa
John "og" Lopez
Jason Tilton
Chris Donahue
Rich "Wretch" Fantasia
Websitecircleofdust.net

History edit

Formation, Circle of Dust and Brainchild (1991–1995) edit

 
Klayton (the band's founder) in 2010

Klayton formed Circle of Dust in New York City after the disbandment of his former late '80s thrash metal outfit Immortal.[1] Signed to R.E.X. Records in 1991, Klayton self-recorded and self-produced all of the Circle of Dust material. The self-titled debut album, released by R.E.X. in 1992, has been described as "post-Pretty Hate Machine industrial pop".[2] That same year, Klayton, using the pseudonym Tox, teamed up with R.E.X. president Doug Mann that same year to create Brainchild and release Mindwarp, which featured music more intense than Circle of Dust's debut and showcased dark cyberpunk-esque lyrics[3] that were largely political in nature, and harsher, more thrash-influenced metal guitars. The now-defunct television show MTV Sports used part of the song "Deviate" for its long-time intro.[1] After the release of both albums, Klayton also produced the Metamorphosis compilation (1993), which collected outtakes from Circle of Dust, Mindwarp, and Living Sacrifice's Nonexistent, the latter of which featured Klayton's programming work. The compilation also included Klayton's own remixes of songs from each of those three albums.

In 1994, R.E.X. obtained a new distribution deal and pressed Klayton for a new release. As a stopgap measure, he re-recorded and remixed portions of Brainchild's Mindwarp album and re-issued it under the Circle of Dust moniker, altering the cover art to reflect the album's new status. R.E.X., however, urged Klayton, who was touring incessantly, to record a brand-new album; instead, Klayton opted to completely re-record the Circle of Dust's debut and album, the sonic quality of which he had been strongly dissatisfied with.[4][5] This re-issue (1995), with vastly improved musicianship and recording quality,[2] scrapped three songs and included four new ones, but retained identical artwork.[4] Circle of Dust toured heavily to promote both re-issues. The live touring band, by this point, included Daren "Klank" Diolosa on guitars, Chris Donohue on bass and keyboard, and Jason Tilton on drums.[6][7]

When the 1995 tour concluded, Circle of Dust made plans to write and record new material. Unfortunately, R.E.X. lost its distribution deal, slid into bankruptcy, and found itself unable to pay the musicians money they were owed. Even though R.E.X. was not solvent enough to distribute any new Circle of Dust material, the label refused to let Circle of Dust out of their contract to seek another label. As a result, Klayton opted to disband the touring lineup and put Circle of Dust on hiatus while awaiting the outcome of R.E.X.'s financial situation.[3]

Hiatus and side projects (1995–1998) edit

In between touring and recording for Circle of Dust, Klayton kept busy with a variety of other projects. In 1994, he contributed to and produced a side project with members of The Crucified called Chatterbox, which released Despite, its sole album. That same year, Klayton teamed up with friend Buka and began work on yet another side project, Argyle Park, under three pseudonyms: Dred, Deathwish, and Celldweller. Argyle Park featured a vast collection of guest collaborators, including Tommy Victor of Prong, JG Thirlwell of Foetus, and Mark Salomon (Stavesacre, The Crucified), and would go on to attain notoriety equal to that of Circle of Dust, losing the distinction of being a mere side project. In 1996, Klayton produced and programmed Still Suffering, the debut album of former Circle of Dust guitarist Daren "Klank" Diolosa. The unreleased songs Klank had written for Circle of Dust the year prior ended up on this album.[8]

After Klayton put Circle of Dust on hiatus in 1995, he worked with illusionist Criss Angel to work on theatrical music and a magic show called Angeldust.[9] It was during his work with Angel that Klayton changed his name from Scott Albert to Klay Scott, a nickname Angel gave him to denote his ability to "take sounds and shape them as if they were clay".[5] Klayton and Angel worked for over two years to finalize their multi-media show and released an initial album of music in 1998 called Musical Conjurings from the World of Illusion. During that same period of creativity, Klayton also recorded a posthumous Circle of Dust album as a formal gesture of farewell.[10]

Disengage (1998) edit

Released in 1998 by Flying Tart Records, Disengage marked the formal end of Circle of Dust and contained reworkings of earlier songs (1991-1995) Klayton had written, some of which he had intended to release back in 1995 on a new Circle of Dust album.[9] Klayton had rearranged and melded these older songs with new forms of music with which Klayton had been experimenting,[11] thus becoming hybrids of Klayton's older, faster, riff-based industrial-metal style and newer dance and ambient influences, with a stronger focus on songwriting. Thus the album was markedly different, musically, from the earlier Circle of Dust and Brainchild albums. Klayton closed the album with a selection of remixes, two of which were produced by Dan Leveler, who, it was later revealed, was Klayton's younger brother and who later became a solo industrial/electronic artist in his own right, recording under the name Level. The liner notes of Disengage contains excerpts of an interview in which Klayton explained why he had disbanded Circle of Dust and started anew with Angeldust.[citation needed]

Much like Klayton's experiences with R.E.X., his short deal with Flying Tart provided a number of frustrations. Although Klayton intended to release Disengage in 1997 and precede its release with an EP of Disengage remixes titled Refractorchasm, Flying Tart canceled the EP's release and delayed Disengage until 1998, requiring Klayton to tack the EP onto Disengage in order to ensure the release of the music.[12] The label also reduced the length of the album's art booklet, which Klayton self-designed. Within two weeks of signing his contract with Flying Tart, the label was bought out and dissolved, ensuring the album saw extremely limited distribution.[13]

Return and Machines of Our Disgrace (2015–2017) edit

In November 2015, Klayton announced that he had obtained the rights to the entire Circle of Dust catalog, including the Metamorphosis compilation and Argyle Park side project, and decided to revive his Circle of Dust moniker, stating on YouTube, "I ... decided to dive back into production as Circle of Dust for the new Celldweller album. I wanted to take what I'm doing now and reinterpret it in the way I used to produce. ... There is an official Circle of Dust remix of "Jericho" on End of an Empire. ... There's another track coming, brand-new, with Circle of Dust involved in the production, and it will be in your hands before the end of this year."[14] Klayton also announced the 2016 re-release (with bonus content) of the entire Circle of Dust catalog on his FiXT label.[15]

On March 4, 2016, Klayton released the remaster of the 1992 self-titled album,[16] which included a bonus track on the deluxe edition, "Neophyte", from the fifth studio album coming in December 2016.[17] Also included in the deluxe edition are instrumental demos, a remix on "Nothing Sacred" from Blue Stahli, an acoustic version of "Onenemy", and their instrumental tracks.[15] Circle of Dust's fifth studio album, Machines of Our Disgrace, was released in December 2016, on Klayton's own label FiXT.[18]

Reception edit

Circle of Dust was popular in Christian alternative metal circles during most of the 1990s. In writing the Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music, Mark Allan Powell refers to the band as "the quintessential Christian industrial rock group."[10] Unusual for an underground alternative Christian band of the time, Circle of Dust gained nearly as much exposure and appreciation in mainstream industrial audiences as it did among Christian audiences.[4] Circle of Dust, along with Argyle Park, are regularly cited as influences by modern-day Christian industrial, industrial-metal, and electronic rock bands. Continued interest had been sufficient enough that, in the early 2000s, a small independent record company called Retroactive Records obtained the rights to the old Circle of Dust, Argyle Park, Brainchild, and Metamorphosis albums, remastered them, and re-issued them in limited runs of 1,000 each. However, Retroactive Records produced the re-issues without the creative input or supervision of Klayton, who has expressed his displeasure at the fact that his old works were marketed again without his permission and without him receiving any royalties.[citation needed]

As early as 1994, Circle of Dust (along with Argyle Park) had been criticized heavily by some Christian music press and by numerous fans for not having religious enough lyrics.[4] These issues culminated in Klayton abandoning the Christian music industry entirely after the release of Disengage, a decision he explained at great length in a 1998 interview with HM Magazine.[13]

Members edit

Current edit

Former edit

  • Daren "Klank" Diolosa
  • John "og" Lopez
  • Jason Tilton
  • Chris Donahue
  • Rich "Wretch" Fantasia

Discography edit

Albums edit

Year Album Label
1992 Circle of Dust R.E.X.
1994 Brainchild (remastered 2016)
1995 Circle of Dust (1995 re-recording, remastered 2016)
1998 Disengage (remastered 2016) Flying Tart[19][20]
2016 Machines of Our Disgrace FiXT Music
2019 Circle of Dust (Demos & Rarities)

Other releases edit

  • Telltale Crime (1992 VHS release of "Telltale Crime" video)
  • Celldweller's End of an Empire – "Jericho (Circle of Dust Remix)" (2015)
  • Scandroid featuring Circle of Dust's "Pro-bots & Robophobes" (2016)

Music videos edit

Year Song Director
1992 "Telltale Crime"
2016 "Contagion" Klayton
2016 "Machines of Our Disgrace"
2016 "alt_Human"

Singles edit

Year Song Album
2016 "Contagion" Machines of Our Disgrace
2016 "Neophyte"
2016 "Machines of Our Disgrace"
2017 "Dust to Dust" Non-album single

Compilation appearances edit

  • Circle of Dust/Brainchild split 7-inch EP (1993, R.E.X.) – "Dissolved" (Circle of Dust) and "Telltale Crime" (Brainchild)
  • Metamorphosis: Brainchild / Living Sacrifice / Circle of Dust Remixes (1993, R.E.X.) – "Dissolved (Disintegration Dub)", "Consequence (Temporary Mix)", "Consequence (Eternal Mix)", "Self Inflict" and "Daraq"
  • I Predict a Clone: A Steve Taylor Tribute (1994, R.E.X.) – "Am I in Sync?"
  • Can You Dig It? III (1994, R.E.X.) – "Regressor (Aggressive Mix)" and "Dissolved"
  • Doom & Gloom: Visions of the Apocalypse (1995, Nesak International Records) – "Parasite"
  • Compe Noctem Volume 1 (1998, Bleeding Edge Media/Carpe Noctem Magazine) – "Goodbye"
  • Jack of All Trades - Master of None: An Unauthorized Discography of the Works of Klay Scott (1999 authorized bootleg) – "Refractor" (with interview intro), "Deviate", "Rational Lies", "Onenemy" (unreleased acoustic demo), "Heldweller" and a Klay Scott interview
  • Jack of All Trades - Master of None 2: An Unauthorized Discography of the Works of Klay Scott (2000 authorized bootleg) – "Nothing Sacred", "Descend" (Brainchild), "Consequence (Temporary Mix)", "Dissolved (Disintegration Dub)", "Consequence (Eternal Mix)", "Chasm", "Am I in Sync?" and "Goodbye"
  • Lightning Strikes Twice: A Retroactive Records Sampler (2006, Retroactive Records) – "Regressor"
  • Lightning Strikes Twice Again (Vol Two) (2006, Retroactive Records) – "Refractor"

References edit

  1. ^ a b Waters, Scott (2007). "Circle of Dust". No Life 'til Metal. Open Publishing. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
  2. ^ a b Torreano, Bradley (2007). "Circle of Dust - Circle of Dust". Allmusic. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
  3. ^ a b "Circle of Dust Biography". Automatapedia. Open Publishing. 2007. Retrieved October 13, 2007.[dead link]
  4. ^ a b c d Pyle, Josh. "Radio Free Wheaton interview with Circle of Dust". Retrieved April 8, 2009.[dead link]
  5. ^ a b . Archived from the original on July 8, 2011. Retrieved April 22, 2009.
  6. ^ . Gavin. Archived from the original on November 4, 1999. Retrieved April 22, 2009.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on April 15, 2000. Retrieved April 22, 2009.
  8. ^ . hardradio.com. January 14, 1997. Archived from the original on May 11, 2015. Retrieved April 11, 2009.
  9. ^ a b . The Garlic Press. 1997. Archived from the original on July 8, 2011. Retrieved April 21, 2009.
  10. ^ a b Powell, Mark Allan (2002). Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music. Peabody, Massachusetts: Hendrickson Publishers. p. 175. ISBN 1-56563-679-1.
  11. ^ Klay Scott: Jack of All Trades
  12. ^ . Transcendence. Archived from the original on June 19, 2002. Retrieved April 22, 2009.
  13. ^ a b Morrow, Matt. . HM Magazine. Archived from the original on February 4, 2012. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
  14. ^ ""Ask Celldweller EP.30: Official Circle of Dust Announcement and more!"". YouTube. Archived from the original on December 22, 2021.
  15. ^ a b Childers, Chad (February 19, 2016). "Circle of Dust, 'Contagion' – Exclusive Song Premiere". Loudwire. Townsquare Media. Retrieved May 3, 2016.
  16. ^ "Circle of Dust - Circle of Dust (Remastered)". Fixt. Retrieved May 3, 2016.
  17. ^ Frazier, Kelly (March 3, 2016). "First Listen to New Circle Of Dust Track "Neophyte", Bonus Track Featured on the Re-Release of the Debut Self-Titled Album from 1992". Huffington Post. Retrieved May 3, 2016.
  18. ^ "Circle of Dust - Machines of Our Disgrace". Fixt. Retrieved October 23, 2017.
  19. ^ [dead link]
  20. ^ McGovern, Brian Vincent (July–August 1998). "Album Reviews: CIRCLE OF DUST Disengage". HM Magazine (72). ISSN 1066-6923.

External links edit

  • Note: The band's official website was located at Creative Design Agency London and went offline in late 2002, but can still be viewed on The Wayback Machine.
  • Some Circle of Dust related info is available at Klay's Celldweller site: .

circle, dust, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, remove, this, message, until, conditions, august, 2019, learn, when, remove, this, message, industrial, music, project, from, york, city, created, klayton, late. The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met August 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Circle of Dust is an industrial music project from New York City created by Klayton who later became known as Celldweller The project was active as a band from 1988 to 1998 and then re started in 2015 after Klayton gained back ownership of his old albums The project has released five studio albums Circle of Dust 1992 Brainchild 1994 a re recording of Circle of Dust 1995 Disengage 1998 and Machines of Our Disgrace 2016 Circle of DustLogo since 1992Background informationOriginNew York City U S GenresIndustrial metal industrial rock electro industrial thrash metal Christian rock early Years active1988 1998 2015 presentLabelsR E X Flying Tart FiXTMembersKlaytonPast membersDaren Klank DiolosaJohn og LopezJason TiltonChris DonahueRich Wretch FantasiaWebsitecircleofdust wbr net Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation Circle of Dust and Brainchild 1991 1995 1 2 Hiatus and side projects 1995 1998 1 3 Disengage 1998 1 4 Return and Machines of Our Disgrace 2015 2017 2 Reception 3 Members 3 1 Current 3 2 Former 4 Discography 4 1 Albums 4 2 Other releases 4 3 Music videos 4 4 Singles 4 5 Compilation appearances 5 References 6 External linksHistory editFormation Circle of Dust and Brainchild 1991 1995 edit nbsp Klayton the band s founder in 2010 Klayton formed Circle of Dust in New York City after the disbandment of his former late 80s thrash metal outfit Immortal 1 Signed to R E X Records in 1991 Klayton self recorded and self produced all of the Circle of Dust material The self titled debut album released by R E X in 1992 has been described as post Pretty Hate Machine industrial pop 2 That same year Klayton using the pseudonym Tox teamed up with R E X president Doug Mann that same year to create Brainchild and release Mindwarp which featured music more intense than Circle of Dust s debut and showcased dark cyberpunk esque lyrics 3 that were largely political in nature and harsher more thrash influenced metal guitars The now defunct television show MTV Sports used part of the song Deviate for its long time intro 1 After the release of both albums Klayton also produced the Metamorphosis compilation 1993 which collected outtakes from Circle of Dust Mindwarp and Living Sacrifice s Nonexistent the latter of which featured Klayton s programming work The compilation also included Klayton s own remixes of songs from each of those three albums In 1994 R E X obtained a new distribution deal and pressed Klayton for a new release As a stopgap measure he re recorded and remixed portions of Brainchild s Mindwarp album and re issued it under the Circle of Dust moniker altering the cover art to reflect the album s new status R E X however urged Klayton who was touring incessantly to record a brand new album instead Klayton opted to completely re record the Circle of Dust s debut and album the sonic quality of which he had been strongly dissatisfied with 4 5 This re issue 1995 with vastly improved musicianship and recording quality 2 scrapped three songs and included four new ones but retained identical artwork 4 Circle of Dust toured heavily to promote both re issues The live touring band by this point included Daren Klank Diolosa on guitars Chris Donohue on bass and keyboard and Jason Tilton on drums 6 7 When the 1995 tour concluded Circle of Dust made plans to write and record new material Unfortunately R E X lost its distribution deal slid into bankruptcy and found itself unable to pay the musicians money they were owed Even though R E X was not solvent enough to distribute any new Circle of Dust material the label refused to let Circle of Dust out of their contract to seek another label As a result Klayton opted to disband the touring lineup and put Circle of Dust on hiatus while awaiting the outcome of R E X s financial situation 3 Hiatus and side projects 1995 1998 edit In between touring and recording for Circle of Dust Klayton kept busy with a variety of other projects In 1994 he contributed to and produced a side project with members of The Crucified called Chatterbox which released Despite its sole album That same year Klayton teamed up with friend Buka and began work on yet another side project Argyle Park under three pseudonyms Dred Deathwish and Celldweller Argyle Park featured a vast collection of guest collaborators including Tommy Victor of Prong JG Thirlwell of Foetus and Mark Salomon Stavesacre The Crucified and would go on to attain notoriety equal to that of Circle of Dust losing the distinction of being a mere side project In 1996 Klayton produced and programmed Still Suffering the debut album of former Circle of Dust guitarist Daren Klank Diolosa The unreleased songs Klank had written for Circle of Dust the year prior ended up on this album 8 After Klayton put Circle of Dust on hiatus in 1995 he worked with illusionist Criss Angel to work on theatrical music and a magic show called Angeldust 9 It was during his work with Angel that Klayton changed his name from Scott Albert to Klay Scott a nickname Angel gave him to denote his ability to take sounds and shape them as if they were clay 5 Klayton and Angel worked for over two years to finalize their multi media show and released an initial album of music in 1998 called Musical Conjurings from the World of Illusion During that same period of creativity Klayton also recorded a posthumous Circle of Dust album as a formal gesture of farewell 10 Disengage 1998 edit Released in 1998 by Flying Tart Records Disengage marked the formal end of Circle of Dust and contained reworkings of earlier songs 1991 1995 Klayton had written some of which he had intended to release back in 1995 on a new Circle of Dust album 9 Klayton had rearranged and melded these older songs with new forms of music with which Klayton had been experimenting 11 thus becoming hybrids of Klayton s older faster riff based industrial metal style and newer dance and ambient influences with a stronger focus on songwriting Thus the album was markedly different musically from the earlier Circle of Dust and Brainchild albums Klayton closed the album with a selection of remixes two of which were produced by Dan Leveler who it was later revealed was Klayton s younger brother and who later became a solo industrial electronic artist in his own right recording under the name Level The liner notes of Disengage contains excerpts of an interview in which Klayton explained why he had disbanded Circle of Dust and started anew with Angeldust citation needed Much like Klayton s experiences with R E X his short deal with Flying Tart provided a number of frustrations Although Klayton intended to release Disengage in 1997 and precede its release with an EP of Disengage remixes titled Refractorchasm Flying Tart canceled the EP s release and delayed Disengage until 1998 requiring Klayton to tack the EP onto Disengage in order to ensure the release of the music 12 The label also reduced the length of the album s art booklet which Klayton self designed Within two weeks of signing his contract with Flying Tart the label was bought out and dissolved ensuring the album saw extremely limited distribution 13 Return and Machines of Our Disgrace 2015 2017 edit In November 2015 Klayton announced that he had obtained the rights to the entire Circle of Dust catalog including the Metamorphosis compilation and Argyle Park side project and decided to revive his Circle of Dust moniker stating on YouTube I decided to dive back into production as Circle of Dust for the new Celldweller album I wanted to take what I m doing now and reinterpret it in the way I used to produce There is an official Circle of Dust remix of Jericho on End of an Empire There s another track coming brand new with Circle of Dust involved in the production and it will be in your hands before the end of this year 14 Klayton also announced the 2016 re release with bonus content of the entire Circle of Dust catalog on his FiXT label 15 On March 4 2016 Klayton released the remaster of the 1992 self titled album 16 which included a bonus track on the deluxe edition Neophyte from the fifth studio album coming in December 2016 17 Also included in the deluxe edition are instrumental demos a remix on Nothing Sacred from Blue Stahli an acoustic version of Onenemy and their instrumental tracks 15 Circle of Dust s fifth studio album Machines of Our Disgrace was released in December 2016 on Klayton s own label FiXT 18 Reception editCircle of Dust was popular in Christian alternative metal circles during most of the 1990s In writing the Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music Mark Allan Powell refers to the band as the quintessential Christian industrial rock group 10 Unusual for an underground alternative Christian band of the time Circle of Dust gained nearly as much exposure and appreciation in mainstream industrial audiences as it did among Christian audiences 4 Circle of Dust along with Argyle Park are regularly cited as influences by modern day Christian industrial industrial metal and electronic rock bands Continued interest had been sufficient enough that in the early 2000s a small independent record company called Retroactive Records obtained the rights to the old Circle of Dust Argyle Park Brainchild and Metamorphosis albums remastered them and re issued them in limited runs of 1 000 each However Retroactive Records produced the re issues without the creative input or supervision of Klayton who has expressed his displeasure at the fact that his old works were marketed again without his permission and without him receiving any royalties citation needed As early as 1994 Circle of Dust along with Argyle Park had been criticized heavily by some Christian music press and by numerous fans for not having religious enough lyrics 4 These issues culminated in Klayton abandoning the Christian music industry entirely after the release of Disengage a decision he explained at great length in a 1998 interview with HM Magazine 13 Members editCurrent edit Klayton Former edit Daren Klank Diolosa John og Lopez Jason Tilton Chris Donahue Rich Wretch FantasiaDiscography editAlbums edit Year Album Label 1992 Circle of Dust R E X 1994 Brainchild remastered 2016 1995 Circle of Dust 1995 re recording remastered 2016 1998 Disengage remastered 2016 Flying Tart 19 20 2016 Machines of Our Disgrace FiXT Music 2019 Circle of Dust Demos amp Rarities Other releases edit Telltale Crime 1992 VHS release of Telltale Crime video Celldweller s End of an Empire Jericho Circle of Dust Remix 2015 Scandroid featuring Circle of Dust s Pro bots amp Robophobes 2016 Music videos edit Year Song Director 1992 Telltale Crime 2016 Contagion Klayton 2016 Machines of Our Disgrace 2016 alt Human Singles edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message Year Song Album 2016 Contagion Machines of Our Disgrace 2016 Neophyte 2016 Machines of Our Disgrace 2017 Dust to Dust Non album single Compilation appearances edit Circle of Dust Brainchild split 7 inch EP 1993 R E X Dissolved Circle of Dust and Telltale Crime Brainchild Metamorphosis Brainchild Living Sacrifice Circle of Dust Remixes 1993 R E X Dissolved Disintegration Dub Consequence Temporary Mix Consequence Eternal Mix Self Inflict and Daraq I Predict a Clone A Steve Taylor Tribute 1994 R E X Am I in Sync Can You Dig It III 1994 R E X Regressor Aggressive Mix and Dissolved Doom amp Gloom Visions of the Apocalypse 1995 Nesak International Records Parasite Compe Noctem Volume 1 1998 Bleeding Edge Media Carpe Noctem Magazine Goodbye Jack of All Trades Master of None An Unauthorized Discography of the Works of Klay Scott 1999 authorized bootleg Refractor with interview intro Deviate Rational Lies Onenemy unreleased acoustic demo Heldweller and a Klay Scott interview Jack of All Trades Master of None 2 An Unauthorized Discography of the Works of Klay Scott 2000 authorized bootleg Nothing Sacred Descend Brainchild Consequence Temporary Mix Dissolved Disintegration Dub Consequence Eternal Mix Chasm Am I in Sync and Goodbye Lightning Strikes Twice A Retroactive Records Sampler 2006 Retroactive Records Regressor Lightning Strikes Twice Again Vol Two 2006 Retroactive Records Refractor References edit a b Waters Scott 2007 Circle of Dust No Life til Metal Open Publishing Retrieved October 13 2007 a b Torreano Bradley 2007 Circle of Dust Circle of Dust Allmusic Retrieved October 13 2007 a b Circle of Dust Biography Automatapedia Open Publishing 2007 Retrieved October 13 2007 dead link a b c d Pyle Josh Radio Free Wheaton interview with Circle of Dust Retrieved April 8 2009 dead link a b Klay Scott interview with RIM Magazine Archived from the original on July 8 2011 Retrieved April 22 2009 dusted com archive reviews Gavin Gavin Archived from the original on November 4 1999 Retrieved April 22 2009 dusted com archive live images Archived from the original on April 15 2000 Retrieved April 22 2009 Klank interview hardradio com January 14 1997 Archived from the original on May 11 2015 Retrieved April 11 2009 a b Circle of Dust interview The Garlic Press 1997 Archived from the original on July 8 2011 Retrieved April 21 2009 a b Powell Mark Allan 2002 Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music Peabody Massachusetts Hendrickson Publishers p 175 ISBN 1 56563 679 1 Klay Scott Jack of All Trades dusted com archive reviews Transcendence Transcendence Archived from the original on June 19 2002 Retrieved April 22 2009 a b Morrow Matt Klayton Circle of Dust on leaving R E X Records HM Magazine Archived from the original on February 4 2012 Retrieved October 13 2007 Ask Celldweller EP 30 Official Circle of Dust Announcement and more YouTube Archived from the original on December 22 2021 a b Childers Chad February 19 2016 Circle of Dust Contagion Exclusive Song Premiere Loudwire Townsquare Media Retrieved May 3 2016 Circle of Dust Circle of Dust Remastered Fixt Retrieved May 3 2016 Frazier Kelly March 3 2016 First Listen to New Circle Of Dust Track Neophyte Bonus Track Featured on the Re Release of the Debut Self Titled Album from 1992 Huffington Post Retrieved May 3 2016 Circle of Dust Machines of Our Disgrace Fixt Retrieved October 23 2017 1 dead link McGovern Brian Vincent July August 1998 Album Reviews CIRCLE OF DUST Disengage HM Magazine 72 ISSN 1066 6923 External links editNote The band s official website was located at Creative Design Agency London and went offline in late 2002 but archives can still be viewed on The Wayback Machine Some Circle of Dust related info is available at Klay s Celldweller site Klayton and Celldweller Current Info Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Circle of Dust amp oldid 1168037149, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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