Death By Audio was a warehouse space on the first floor of an industrial building in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York.[1] The warehouse took its name from the boutique effects pedal company, Death By Audio, based in the space. The company was founded in 2002 by Oliver Ackermann, the lead singer of the New York City-based noise rock band A Place to Bury Strangers.[2]
The warehouse operated primarily as a work space for artists and musicians, but also functioned as a recording studio, effects pedal factory, as well as an art and music venue, which received generally positive reviews from critics.[3]
In 2007, the collective started Death By Audio Records in order to release material by the bands that practiced in the warehouse. Death By Audio Records began by releasing a cassette tape by Sisters and a double EP by Coin Under Tongue. The label released Rejoicer, the debut album by Grooms in 2009 before it was re-released on Kanine Records. In 2010, the label released albums by Brooklyn's Starring, French Miami and Minneapolis' Seawhores.
In April 2008 the venue received non-profit status.[citation needed]
In August 2013, an art book containing live recordings from 2012 at Death By Audio was released on Famous Class Records.[4]
In later 2014, Vice Media rented the building Death By Audio was located in, forcing them to shut the venue down. The last show held at the space was on November 22, 2014, headlined by Lightning Bolt.[5]
In 2016, Matt Conboy released a documentary about the space called "Goodnight Brooklyn - The Story of Death by Audio".[6]