Aftermath (American band)

They subsequently changed their name to Mother God Moviestar in 1998 after a trademark dispute with Dr. Dre in which the court found that both could use the name.

Celebrating 30 years since their formation, the band reissued their Eyes of Tomorrow debut album on Shadow Kingdom Records on September 4, 2015.

The remastered version by Paul Logus (Pantera, Anthrax) includes an expanded booklet and four bonus tracks.

In October, Divebomb Records reissued Killing the Future along with five bonus tracks and expanded booklet, once again remastered by Paul Logus .

The LP featured tracks from Leviathan (Chris Barnes (Six Feet Under) on vocals), Hobbs' Angel Of Death, Anacrusis & Atrophy.

By 1989, that change brought on by Lovette's writing and the band's musical tastes and stylings had slowed and matured as evidenced by the release of the underground classic demo 'Words That Echo Fear'.

The experience left the band reeling and forced them to issue the album under their own steam with the help of their manager through Zoid Recordings in 1994.

The album was subsequently re-released on Thermometer Sound Surface / Zoid and released yet again four years later on Black Lotus Records in a remastered version.

Area Death Productions remastered the record once again as part of their box set called 25 Years of Chaos released in 2011.

After the name change to Mother God Moviestar, they signed to Interscope for the eponymous electro-metal debut of March 1998.