Paul "Hammy" Halmshaw

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Paul Halmshaw also known as "Hammy" (born 1965) is a British musician who founded Peaceville Records, which signed some of the most infamous death/black/doom metal and crust punk bands worldwide in the late 1980s and throughout the 1990s.

He was raised in Dewsbury, UK where he began playing drums at school and became a 'Punk[1][better source needed] Rocker'. He formed the band "Instigators" with his school friend Simon Mooney (Guitar). After Simon Bridgewater (Vocals) and Simon Elsey (Bass) joined they made some demo recordings at Lion Studios in Leeds. These collected demos became the first release on Hammy's then cassette only label, Peaceville Tapes in 1981.

As the tape label became successful it became obvious that a move into vinyl releasing was the next logical step and following his departure from the Instigators in 1985 he worked on making the label a profession.

In 1986 he released a four track 7" flexi-disc single, entitled 'Will Evil Win?[2]' followed by hard vinyl 7' singles by Deviated Instinct and Atavistic.

In 1987 he released the first album on the label, a compilation called 'A VILE PEACE' featuring Chumbawamba,[3] Sore Throat, Axegrinder, Electro Hippies, Doom, Deviated Instinct, Hellbastard and many more.

Expanding the label into a full-time operation he continued with full-length albums by Electro Hippies, Deviated Instinct, Doom and then venturing into metal for the first time with Toranaga.

As the label grew he signed more professional acts like Autopsy, Paradise Lost, My Dying Bride, Anathema, Darkthrone, At the Gates, Vital Remains and many others throughout the early 1990s.[4]

Coincidentally he also ran 'Vile Music',[5] which from 1988 was a music publishing company which signed almost all of the Peaceville bands rights. Eventually, in 1997 the publishing was spun out of the label as a separate entity and signed to Zomba for worldwide administration.

Hammy continued to run both Peaceville Records and Vile Music Publishing[6] until 2006 when he sold his holding in the record label to concentrate solely on the publishing company.

References