- Expedient Demise [full Demo - 1991] | Psychic Pawn

As the final chord of "Phobic Entombment" vibrated through the floorboards, a strange silence fell over the room. It was the sound of four guys realizing they’d captured lightning in a jar—or rather, a storm in a magnetic strip.

It was 1991. The air in Arizona was thick with a heat that didn't go away at night, but inside the tracking room, it was ice cold. Psychic Pawn - Expedient Demise [Full Demo - 1991]

Seth sat behind the kit, his sticks blurred motions of kinetic violence. He wasn't just keeping time; he was hammering nails into the coffin of the decade prior. Beside him, the guitars churned—a thick, muddy wall of sound that felt like being buried alive in wet sand. They were recording Expedient Demise , a demo that felt less like a musical debut and more like a forensic report from the edge of the abyss. As the final chord of "Phobic Entombment" vibrated

"Again," the engineer muttered over the talkback. His eyes were bloodshot, reflected in the glass of the sound booth. The air in Arizona was thick with a

The neon hum of the 24-hour laundromat next door was the only thing louder than the tape hiss. Inside "The Vault," a basement studio that smelled of stale cigarettes and ozone, Psychic Pawn was mid-incantation.

The vocalist leaned into the mic. He didn't just scream; he exhaled a decade of repressed desert isolation. The lyrics to the title track weren't just words—they were a rhythmic countdown. Expedient Demise. The inevitability of the end, delivered with the technical precision of a scalpel.

They popped the master tape out. It was warm to the touch. In a few weeks, these tapes would find their way into the hands of tape-traders, moved through manila envelopes and zine reviews, becoming a cult relic of technical death metal. But in that moment, in the dark of a 1991 basement, it was just four souls and the beautiful, crushing sound of a fast end.