Skyhigh 20 About Nastiness Inc. of Angry
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About Nastiness Inc. of Angry Interview for Skyhigh: Nastiness,Inc. Conducted November 9th 1995 by The Mistress. S= Skyhigh N= Nastiness,Inc./Angry S: Hello Barry, welcome to Skyhigh. Tell the readers something about yourself. N: Well my real name is Barry Pypers, 23 years old, originally from England but living in Holland for years. I started on this computer in 1986 with some tapes and in 1988 I started some pirate business with disks and tapes. Much later I really got into the scene out here and apart from my self-built groups I have been in The Ancient Temple, Genetix, Entropy & Avantgarde and now I am in Angry, also a self-built group. My scene jobs are editing The Tribune, leading Angry, composing and swapping. I am 1m75 tall, weigh about 2 kgs (Hm what's this, bk!) and do a lot to stay in shape. I am currently unem- ployed as I used to be a courier and my motorbike got stolen, but soon I hope to break through as a profes sional writer as I have been writing many novels, fantasy of late. I'm single but sort of a widower as my fiancee died at 19. I am living in the Netherlands now in the great city of Rotterdam but I might go back to the UK soon. S: How did you end up in this scene and how did you build "The Tribune"? N: Well "TT" used to be a commercial magazine for people who bought my pirated disks and my late fian- cee joined our little group WTG and she had about 80 contacts, among them Derbyshire Ram, she showed me much about the scene. So "TT" became a mag orientated more on the scene rather than the games which were going down anyway. My former group Entropy also did a lot to make "TT" work better, with a real outfit rather than some compiled pieces of code which made every chapter a runnable file with a load back the menu option. as our scene experience grew, so did The Tribune, and these days we can say we are one of the biggest mail scene based magazines today and ever, always active, big and ready to go a bit deeper. S: Some people believe that you have not released 54 issues of your magazine and that you are making up the number. What can you say about that? N: It sickens me. Years ago, Jerry/Triad came with this question and he asked me for all the back issues. Call The Studio and ask him. I miss a few copies but I can give you most back issues if you send me the disx I have always been straightforward with my readers, then why should I lie and risk the loss of the fun I have in this scene over a reputation? The Tribune is old, and we still go on. Anybody who doubts that and doesn't want to find the truth should get a life, pre- ferably one of their own. S: In "TT", you have always put up the strong profile of someone who has a big mouth and a strong opin- ion, making you many "enemies". How do you feel about that? N: I don't feel threatened by any socalled enemy, and there are some weak people around who moan about me simply because I caught their words. Most of the time nowadays it's other mageditors I caught with something and they nag about me just to be nagging because they know just like I know what I am talking about, most of the time, and some people think they are perfect. They feel their egoes hurt when I point out they aren't and so they attack me on every word i say. I'm beyond pity, if they want to ruin their own fun, that's not my problem. I'm here to have fun like most other sceners and from issue #1 of The Tribune I have edited "Nasty and mean" to right the wrongs in the scene so why would I stop that after six years? Let people moan all they want, I do what I do and no- body can stop me. After all, I'm having fun! S: One of the people you got involved with is Duke. How did this all happen? N: Old stuff, buh. well like most of us in Entropy I did not like Duke's texts, all this stuff about The Pulse being the only mag that was good for the scene, the perfect mag (that's a quote!) and so on so I criticized it like I always do. Some under-stamped disk came to me with a big mouth from the Dukester that he wanted apologies and that nobody should write about the almighty Pulse and the god Duke and so on.. I give him a big middle finger and considered the matter inte- resting enough to print Duke's note in my mag, just to show the readers what kind of an arsehole he was. Then came the other stuff, the war-call and silly stuff like that, and then came the wellknown addy matter, where it came out the pulse ripped addies to "right" a wrong claim made to me. Duke claimed he had twice as many addies as we did, I counted my textfile and saw to my big surprise we even had more, 84 to 107 if I recall correctly. next month the pulse had 232. Now the amount of addies is not a prestige- object to me but then came some contacts of mine who said they saw their addy in The Pulse while they never asked for that, and so things got on a roll and shortly afterward Duke quit the scene, because he wanted to train more for his football. Yeah, right. He came back, but for me the matter is done and his- tory and from Duke's words I take it the same goes for him. He has a few good editors behind him and I wish him all the luck, even though his attitude never changed. S: What are your experiences with the board scene? N: Nihil. I just called our Dutch board "Satellite" un- til the sys-op went PC and double-crossed me later. I am a pure mail-scener and I enjoy that. people in The boardscene have a different kind of fun and that is one I don't like much. There is more friendship in the mail scene so I hang around there. S: Some rumours go around about your stay in Avant- garde, some say you went and some say you've been kicked. What can you tell about that? N: The Truth. You must know I wasn't a very good mem ber of Avt, a group I still regard highly and where I have some good friends. I joined through some words with Deff and Derbyshire Ram and I was supposed to get them spreading and some originals. The latter failed, as my game supplying contacts delayed, and as a mageditor I jumped the gun on a private issue. I heard Avt and F4cg were to go into co-op in January 1995 and releasing my #49 at Herning I thought it wouldn't harm if I took the snoop and Deff didn't send in that time when I'd asked him if it was ok. After re- leasing in Herning I met Intruder and Jack Alien and they told me the co-op was off. Deff was mighty pis- sed at me, but shit happens. In January 1995 the active members of Entropy decided to spin off and I became the co-founder and leader of Angry, and be- cause I feel a group leader cannot have a second group I called Deff to tell him I left Avt. Just before that I heard from Spectator/Scs*Trc, who lives near by, that I would be kicked. Well when I called Deff he assured me this was not true. after all deff is Avt's organiser. Maybe some wanted me out but hey, guess my timing wasn't bad. I still swap with three Avt members and I count them among my best friends. I spent only a brief time in the group so I didn't know half the members. S: And few knew you as an Extacy member N: Right, because I worked under the handle "Nike". Neccy wanted to get the mag Extacy Land back on its feet after Darkman had quit and I offered him help and he didn't need Nasty text so I had to hide behind a friendly fake handle. Well, Neccy was lazier than hell and so I left Extacy after a few months. S: Beside editing The Tribune, you have also helped out some more mags. N: That's right, I co-edited Xtc land as I said above, and I also was a co-editor of Ingenious Brain that became Shout! I believe in magazines, and if they need help from a veteran like myself I'm willing to help. unfortunately, both mags mentioned fell into inactivity, and being used to deadlines, I had to quit the mags. But if any mag would like my assistance I would help them any way I possibly can. With restrictions, ofcourse, be- cause "TT" eats more time every issue. S: You have probably written more text than anybody else in this scene. How did you manage to hang in so long? N: I like writing. I started writing novels in 1984, when I was only 11, I made cartoons before that. I've writ- ten about- 30 novels both in dutch and english. Most of my contacts get very long notes. I like to express myself, it's a great outlet for common pressure. S: Though you are not in the charts, you are also making music. How does this go and do you have any plans? N: Apart from helping out the commercial and profes- sional Amiga hardcore label Space Seed, I have a nice past in music. I have been singing since i was fifteen, playing in a small commercial band that did Cliff and Elvis, then went to rock and metal. On the c64, how- ever, I didn't do much music. a music ripper named Warrior taught me how to remix some notes and I did two remixes in Voicetracker. I messed a bit with digi's and then learned how to make notes in an editor by a software costumer. So I did some technotunes in Dmc first 1.2 and through 3.0 to 4. Recently I discovered Dmc4 pro in quadro mode and this brought me great possibilities so I started concentrating on music a bit more. Maybe I'll do some octa-work in the future, right now I think my tunes are good enough to compete and who knows, maybe I will once hit the musician charts if my tunes get spread enough. But that's for hardcore techno-fans only because that's what I make. A guy from Space Seed couldn't believe this was actually done on a C64, you know, they work with an amiga and us$8,000 worth of equipment to get digital recordings. I also own an amiga 500, but mixing samples doesn't give me the same kick. S: You also edit fantasy books, along with your group mate Otaku. How is this going? N: It's going well, very well. In 1996 my first publish- ed novel called "The nasty one" should be on the shelves and I have a very good contract for that one. From an earlier novel: "War of the forgotten heroes" an animated movie is coming out on cd-rom and right now we're working on an arcade/adventure game based on this same novel. That's also why I plan to write for living. Currently I am working on two dark fantasy novels and one Dutch novel, though the latter is just for fun. S: What would your perfect group look like if you could pick anybody from the scene? N: That's not very tough, I would take all current Angry members as they are great friends, and I would add my best friends outside the scene. Avt would be raided as I would take Derbyshire Ram, Jack Alien, Intruder and Cupid and with Shuze we would have a solid cracking department with much spreading. Add an active Mr. Warp to code the ultimate outfit for the Tribune, and well, as an extra editor I might add some chubby Dane for good measure. (Erhm, god knows who he is talking about, he he - bk!) S: Today's talk is all about the Internet, what are your experiences on the net? N: Small. Sometimes I go to the Rotterdam university where I can have access on the net but I don't do much as people tend to find out I am not a student. But soon I might buy a pentium and then i'll go on the net. It has so many advantages, there is no way to stop it. S: How have you been active on other computers? What ones have you had? N: Well I started on the tv-tennis game when they first came out, then had the miraculous Philips Video pac G7000, a C16 and an Msx-1, then I got my first C64 and after that I got an Amiga 500 who broke down and I bought another one after that. I also have a small laptop PC, but that's just a 286. I use my Amiga for playing games and the PC for writing my books. I have never been interested in those other scenes. S: What are your favourites? N: Cracking group: Alphaflight 1970 Cracker: Derbyshire Ram Demo group: Byterapers Coder: Mr. Warp Magazine: This one Graphician: Whw Design, Mirage Musician: Jeroen Tel, Compod Swapper: D'ram, Shuze, Intruder Colour: Red and Black Motorcycle: Intruder (hi Stefan!) Girl: Erika, my Lithuanian girl Scene Country : Poland. activity rules! Cover Designer: FX, Zapotek S: Hey, why didn't you name The Mistress as your favourite girl? N: Erika doesn't turn my hair white and never gives me a headache. I know many people seem to think Tms and I are involved but we're just colleagues, we've been through too much together to seriously be in- volved. She swaps using my mailbox and we sometimes share a bed but that is really all there is. S: Do you have a funny story for us? N: Well I will tell you about this small little lamer who still wants to buy some pirated disks from me. I can always use some more cash, so why not. But this guy thinks he's some sort of a wiz-kid and he seems to be very lonely. Not strange with that attitude, I assure you. So he checks every sector on the disk and almost hits the ceiling when he finds a red sector, and then he calls me every day around 6 p.m. and starts talking, talking, talking. this guy is 15 years old! He would hang on for an hour a day if I wouldn't cut him off! One time he came for disks at 7 p.m. But I was working late and the disks were ready, so I left it to my grandparents to catch him and when I was finished at 8 p.m. I went out for a beer without coming home as I could use some beer after a 12-hour shift on the bike. I came home at eleven and there I saw lights burning. Then my grandmother told me this la- mer had just left fifteen minutes ago! He'd occupied my grandparents, who don't know much about the com puter, for three and a half hours! Duh, long live Bud- weiser! S: What are your other hobbies except the c64? N: I like to go to the pub and play billiards, cards, darts and snooker. I also train a lot on my physical condition with much running and more exercise. being a 3rd dan jiu-jitsu sensei I must stay in shape though i I look less in shape than I am. I've done much power training until I strained both biceps and had to stop lifting weights, and suddenly a belly appeared and never really went. I have also done some wrestling and taek won do, just for fun. I have also taught jiu-jitsu for a couple of years, with The Mistress among my pupils. At night time I write my books, as I have the most inspiration way after midnight. S: A lot has been said about satanism, and you are known as a sanatist. What do you think about what the people say? N: The people who have been talking about satanism in various magazine are people who don't know what they are talking about, they have seen too many mo- vies. They yell when satanist extemists burn a church or kill babies but they don't say that christian fana- tics also cut open babies or drown them because they fear they are possessed by the satan or a demon. I burned the bible, but that does not make me a mur- derer. I don't fight people because they're christians, as that is their fucking own business. and some crazy people say satanism is just as bad as nazism but they can't see the difference between religion and politics and that shows how dumb they are. I'm a satanist but I don't tell you to worship the satan or die, unlike the Jehovah's witnesses and other kinds of religious terrorists. I leave people in their own value and wish they could do the same. S: You have been on the other side of the interviewing desk a vast number of times, who are best to inter- view are who are the worst? N: That depends on the person, but in general mag- editors & swappers are the best people to interview as they talk the most, coders and musicians on the other hand don't say much. But even when the inter- viewed one is a swapper or an editor, it still doesn't guarantee a good interview. Many people make the mistake of not asking on, they just send the questions by mail and print the answers while some answers call for more questions. a good example of a good inter- viewer was Sgt. Pepper, he knew just what to ask. When I read interviews in some magazines I just shake my head and wonder why they didn't ask this and that. S: You say you live for magazines, Then why are you so critical about them? N: Probably because I have read more magazines than anybody else and because I have written so much my self that I really read the texts instead of just glancing over them, joystick held in the scrolling di- rection. It is not meant as an offense, it's just point ing out some small details, maybe it can help. S: Recently the matter came up again with your quar- rel with Cat/Excess, and in Nitro #19 we could read Cat's side of the story. how does yours sound? N: That is a matter of the past. Cat co-edited a fake Brutal Recall and insulted my late girl-friend in a tactless manner and I sent him an angry letter be- cause he rudely laughed because I was mourning the death of somebody I have loved for six years, much later he said he never intended to. Instead he got pissed with me for intending to break his bones and again he showed that he doesn't know what it is like to lose a dear friend. He thought it was strange we still gave text to her memory one year after her death. Well small surprise maybe but I mourn her loss still, three years later. In the mentioned article Cat apologized though it didn't exactly come from the heart and for me the matter is history. I just hope he learned, for if he had written equal pranks about another great scener who died last year people would have had his head by now. S: Think before you speak, that is the motto. Do you always stand behind your own texts? N: Most of the time of course, but if I see I made a mistake I have never been too proud to make a proper apology. Some people think however that they can be the only ones who are right and then they can shake it and screw themselves and I stand behind my text. and in Angry we have a group of friends so whoever touches one Angry member touches the group. Not as fanatic as the late Awt, and not as lame, but you get the point. S: So, do you have any final words before shutting down this interview? N: I guess I have. greetings to my great friends in Angry, Derbyshire Ram, Logan, Calypso, Intruder, The entire Skyhigh staff, Syntax, Madrom, Diverse, Cha$h, Deff, Jack Alien, Suicide, Spectator, Nightshade, Jer- ry, Acidchild, Fuben, Zapotek, Sonor, The Unlimited Gang, Case, Whw Design, Nasty Boy, Tpl, Space Seed, the rest of the dutch Scene (see you at X-'96 dudes!), Stan, Danzig, Vile Creeper, Lonely Spirit, Geggin and all the other partydudes I will hopefully see or hear from soon again. Let's all have some great fun in this eternal scene, C64 lives forever! signed: Nastiness,Inc./Angry