Folder

$100.00

Nytrix - ST

Format: LP
Label: private N 69
Year: 1985
Origin: Markham, Ontario, 🇨🇦
Genre: metal
Keyword: 
Value of Original Title: $100.00
Make Inquiry/purchase: email ryder@robertwilliston.com
Release Type: Albums
Websites:  No
Playlist: Ontario, 1980's, Metal

Tracks

Side 1

Track Name
Bad Boys Lovin'
Don't Believe in Tomorrow

Side 2

Track Name
No Need for Love
Breakin' My Heart

Photos

R 4231251 1406212544 1977

Nytrix - ST

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Nytrix - ST

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Nytrix - ST

Folder

ST

Videos

No Video

Information/Write-up

Nytrix were a glam-infused heavy rock band from Oshawa, Ontario, who came together in 1981 and carved out a brief but memorable presence on the Southern Ontario club circuit. Their first major break came in 1982 when they opened for Coney Hatch, an early high-profile gig that gave them instant credibility and set the stage for steady work across the region. Fronted by the soaring vocals of Klaus Small and driven by the twin-guitar attack of Dave Bene and Roger Xavier, with Mike Hunt on bass and Al Jervis on drums, the band blended the polished hooks of glam with the grit of Canadian bar-band metal. Earlier incarnations also featured guitarist Bob Schmahl, bassist Terry Tiller, and drummer Fred Collins, but by the mid-eighties the classic five-piece lineup was firmly in place.

In 1985 Nytrix documented their sound on a self-released four-song 12-inch EP, produced and engineered by Bob Gallo and recorded at Nova Sound in Toronto. Songs like “Bad Boys Lovin’,” “No Need for Love,” and “Don’t Believe in Tomorrow” captured their knack for driving riffs, layered vocals, and big, radio-ready choruses. The latter track, dedicated to the late Mike McGrath, became their signature piece and the song that pushed them beyond the Ontario club circuit when it was picked up the following year for Capitol’s Canadian heavy metal sampler Moose Molten Metal, Vol. 2. For many collectors and fans overseas, that compilation was their first exposure to Nytrix and helped secure the band’s reputation as part of Canada’s mid-eighties metal underground.

Despite the momentum, Nytrix never secured a major label deal and by 1986 had disbanded, leaving behind just the one EP, a compilation track, and a cult reputation that has only grown with time. Today their record is prized by collectors of Canadian private-press metal, a snapshot of Oshawa’s contribution to the glam-metal era and a reminder of the depth of talent circulating through the clubs of Ontario in the early to mid-eighties.
-Robert Williston

Klaus Small: lead vocals
Dave Bene: lead and rhythm guitars, vocals
Roger Xavier: lead and rhythm guitars, vocals
Mike Hunt: bass, vocals
Al Jervis: drums, vocals

Additional musicians:
Rick Ominski: VIO-Electra on Breakin’ My Heart
Bob Gallo: keyboards on Breakin’ My Heart

Produced and engineered by Bob Gallo for Emp-Hire Productions
Recorded at Nova Sound Studio, 210 Dundas Rd. #5

Photo by John Wheeler

Management by Warren Casselman Music, Suite 465, 3050 Woodbine Ave., Markham, Ontario L3R 3V7

Special Thanks To:
Scarey Mary, Irene & Mike Nowicki, Bill (Pleasure Palace), Steve Gosal, Frank, Claudio, Lee Warren of Steve’s Music and especially Bob Gallo for his patience & brilliance, and to a mass of friends too long to mention for their continuing support.

Don’t Believe in Tomorrow is dedicated to Mike McGrath: “The heart and strength of everyone he touched. He will be dearly missed.”

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