Career
After playing in the punk and alternative rock bands SNFU and The Wheat Chiefs between 1981 and 1998, Belke began a career composing music for film and television SNFU and the Wheat Chiefs (1981–1998)
The band was short-lived, but the three founded a new group called Society"s Number Fucking Use (better known by the acronym SNFU) later that year. With a rotating rhythm section, SNFU released four LPs and served as catalysts for the skate punk movement in addition to influencing the punk rock scene at large before disbanding temporarily in 1989.
After the group"s first breakup, Marc and Brent founded the Wheat Chiefs, whose sound reflected power popular and melodic hardcore influences not immediately apparent in SNFU"s material.
In 1991, offers for touring and significant record deals helped lead to SNFU"s reformation, and the two bands, now located in Vancouver, British Columbia, operated in tandem for the next seven years. SNFU signed to Epitaph Records, released three further studio and one live album, and toured extensively.
The Wheat Chiefs were less active, releasing only the Redeemer album in 1996. Belke left rock music in 1998 to focus on scoring in film and television, accruing university degrees in jazz and classical composition.
SNFU continued in his absence, while the Wheat Chiefs permanently disbanded.
Work in composition, recent activity (1998–present)
He performed a one-off concert with SNFU in 2001, and also played on one track on SNFU"s 2004 album In the Meantime and In Between Time, their only release after his departure. His newest project is Existential Angst Party, an experimental avant-garde group. They released a full-length album in 2005.