Genghis Tron was formed in 2004 in Poughkeepsie, New York. The initial lineup was a trio, with Hamilton Jordan on guitar, Michael Sochynsky on keyboards and programming, and Mookie Singerman on vocals and keyboards. All three were attending Vassar College when they began exchanging ideas, with their influences including the Dillinger Escape Plan, Ministry, Nine Inch Nails, and Squarepusher. After cutting a demo they titled Laser Bitch, Genghis Tron released a five-song EP, 2005's Cloak of Love, which was released by Crucial Blast Records. The EP and the group's live shows attracted the attention of the adventurous metal label Relapse Records, which signed Genghis Tron and put out their first full-length album, 2006's Dead Mountain Mouth. It was a striking exercise in what the band, with tongue in cheek, called "Nintendocore," and they toured in support. Their second LP, Board Up the House, followed in 2008; it received an enthusiastic review in The New York Times and was named "Album of the Year" by the British music magazine Rock Sound.
Genghis Tron's busy schedule of recording and touring began taking a toll, and in 2010 they went on hiatus. Between attending college, starting families, and working their day jobs, real life kept Jordan and Sochynsky occupied, but they continued to work on songs and exchanged musical ideas with one another. By 2018, Sochynsky was living in New York City, and when Jordan paid him a visit, the result was an impromptu songwriting session that convinced them it was time to start work on a third album. Singerman was not involved in the creation of the new material, and singer Tony Wolski and drummer Nick Yacyshyn took part in the sessions, which featured both live and programmed percussion as well as far more intricate layered arrangements than before. Dream Weapon, an album the group described as "more meditative, hypnotic, and maybe psychedelic" than their earlier projects, was released by Relapse in March 2021. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi