Cover
TOC
TOC2
Backcover
Текст
                    
PRE ORDER NOW WWW.CALLOFDUTY.COM
“...BLACK OPS, AS A MULTIPLAYER ENTITY, IS ASTOUNDING” — 360 Magazine COMPETE–ALL-NEW GAME MODES, PERKS, CHALLENGES AND KILLSTREAKS CUSTOMISE– CHARACTERS & WEAPONS CREATE– REPLAY, MAKE AND SHARE MOVIES © 2010 Activision Publishing, Inc. Activision and Call Of Duty are registered trademarks of Activision Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved. KINECT, Xbox, Xbox 360, Xbox LIVE, and the Xbox logos are trademarks of the Microsoft group of companies and are used under license from Microsoft. All other trademarks and trade names are the properties of their respective owners. All rights reserved.

CONTENTS NOvEMBER 2010 Issue #211 42 DIMMU BORGIR “If you don’t gamble, you can’t win” JOHN MCMUR TR IE
CONTENTS NOvEMBER 2010 Issue #211 16 arthemis Crayzee Italians show there is a serious side to playing pop songs while dressed as women. 18 jurojin Hammer goes to Poland with the British, ethnically inspired progressive metallers. 24 holy grail LA quintet inject trad metal into their retro thrash for an awesome debut. 28 SONIC SY NDICATE THE DARK LORD SPEAKS.... EvIL MUSIC WINS T hat’s right, even 40 years after the band that would become Black Sabbath watched a Mario Bava film and fused their love of the AAA Candyfloss, dodgy burgers and street footy in Brighton with the London hardcore urchins. macabre with a sound that would lay the foundation of heavy metal, the darker discs of doom Guitarist Kirk Windstein takes us through the albums that shaped him. side of our world still serves to inspire and titillate. But at what point does that fascination go too far? To many, black The Norwegian black metallers are back with a new album.They are the genre’s biggest metal was the extreme expression of mainstream success. Sell-outs? Like fuck.They’re as real as it gets. that fascination – a fusion of extreme ideas with even bleaker sounds and a heavy dose of misanthropy. So Life’s not all a beach for these Aussie metallers. We explore the dark side of Deep Blue. what happens when a group emblematic of that scene decides to go big time – to We visit Jaz Coleman at home in Geneva to get to the blackened heart of the post-punks. swing the pendulum back toward the mainstream? Well, we’re witnessing it They were the hottest hit of the UK’s summer festivals. So who the fuck are they? p16 right now, because with Abrahadabra Dimmu Borgir have given a massive two-fingered salute to Guitarist Mark Tremonti tells all about how he’s a metal kid at heart. critics both within their world and outside of it with an album so bombastic and grandiose so as to forever sever Hammer gets trigger-happy with New England’s gun-toting unsung heroes of metalcore. their underground credentials, and in the wake of a near break-up no less.That takes big balls of steel, so we salute MY LIFE STORY The spacelord motherfucker returns from rehab and the them this month with a cover befitting a depths of depression to deliver an album to rival the classics. true act of sonic defiance. Plus, they’re wearing white now. I mean really, what SPANISH INQUISITION The beatdown kings get a visit from our the fuck? Read all about it in our truly cardinals and have a lighthearted chat about popping guys’ eyes out of their heads. demonic cover feature on page 42. It’s not all about darkness, though. From Aussie behemoths Parkway Drive STORY BEHIND THE ALBUM Cowboys… was the album that kickstarted hitting these shores with a sound their career. Listening to it 20 years on, it still makes you feel like the hardest bastard in the world. designed to level buildings, to TRC causing mayhem in the streets, to Killing Joke proving you can still find ways to annoy the fuck out of the man in your band’s fourth decade, to the 20th anniversary of Pantera’s Cowboys TATTS LIFE “So, Karin, you realise this photoshoot involves showing a bit of flesh, right? A little more… just a bit more… now if you could just…” *smack* 36 TRC 40 dOWN 42 DIMMU BORGIR 50 parkway drive 54 killing joke 58 kvelertak 60 alter bridge 64 all that remains From Hell and the birth of a sound that truly rattled bones around the world – this is a thrilling month for heavy music.And if you happened to make it to Ozzfest last month to witness the mayhem, then you’ll know that even the Double-O himself would seem to agree.The world he helped to create is all within these pages, and it’s bigger and blacker than ever. Hell yeah. STAY METAL! 68 monster magnet 72 unearth 74 pantera REvIEWS UNDER THE HAMMER THIS MONTH! TALES FROM THE DARK SIDE The Meads of Asphodel p96 Ozzy Osbourne rocks out The O2. CRADLE OF FILTH p78 Dani Filth’s latest encounters trouble and strife. SLIPKNOT p84 10th anniversary Download extravaganza comes to DVD. PLUS! DIO / FIREWIND / HALFORD / DIMMU BORGIR / HELL ON EARTH 32 HAMMER MERCH p112 English crusaders get star-crossed with Jesus Christ. MELECHESH p116 Holy Land exiles lay down Sumerian justice. TRIPTYKON p130 Inside the unforgiving world of Tom G Warrior. PLUS! ATHEIST / SÓLSTAFIR / WATAIN / THE WRETCHED END EDITÖR LOOK BAD-ASS AND BE THE ENVY OF ALL YOUR MATES. YOU’LL HAVE MORE SEX TOO! PROMISE. Warning! The sound card is not a toy. Do not dispose of batteries in a waste bin. Do not throw this card into a fire as it contains batteries. Supplied by Resource Gift Solutions, BA1 3AU. Please retain this information for future reference.

HOT SH THIS MON TH’S PI OT CTURE WO RTH A THO JUMP USAND H ORNS 4 OR HOW TW M E O T METALHEA A DEATH FO L DS DEFIED R CHARIT CERTA Y. * IN As the nom in ee s for the 20 Gods w 10 declared there announced, Evile Hammer Golden jumping… at if he won anythin guitarist Ol Drake Alexander in a cowboy outfit. H g, he’d go bungee M Evile would ilas agreed to join ammer Editor h walking aw n’t win shit. It didn’ im, ’cos obviously t to their woray with the Metal A work out that way, s near Lond d, the pair jumped Fuck award.True on of memory of ’s Tower Bridge last f a 160 foot crane raising mondeparted Evile bass month. Ol did it in Alexander ey for the British Luist Mike Alexander, d Up And Sh id it for cancer scre ng foundation. ou Dio.Why th t in the name of th ening charity Stand more info e costumes? Why th e late Ronnie James on donate, se the jump and the e fuck not? For arch Faceb ch ook for JU arities, and to MP4metal ALEX Ol Drake and Alexander Milas: two Amigos ANDE R MIL AS Contender! Ready! Hopefully th at Re will give him d Bull wings “Slayeeeerrr rr!” JAMES SHAR R OCK
ddersfi eld “I can see Hu from here!” MIGHT AS WELL JUMP! OL DRAKE ON HIS LEAP OF FAITH. HOW DID THE CHARITY BUNGEE JUMP COME ABOUT? “We were nominated for an award at Metal Hammer’s Golden Gods [this year].Considering the competition, I knew we wouldn’t win, so I said something equally unlikely: ‘I’ll bungee jump dressed as a cowboy if we win.’ But we did win! So I had to take the plunge. I’m clever.” AND WHY THE COWBOY COSTUME? “I honestly don’t know. I remember being on the phone to our press officer and she needed a quote about the awards [nomination]and what I’d said. I instantly thought a cowboy costume would be very appropriate. I don’t know why, though.” BUT HANG ON, DON’T YOU SUFFER FROM VERTIGO? “I have an incredible fear of heights, yes. I’ve been up the Eiffel Tower, but I couldn’t jump off it or anything. I have no idea how I did the jump, I just kind of accepted I had to do it, and jumped.” WHAT WAS YOUR FINAL THOUGHT BEFORE YOU JUMPED? “It was strange: I didn’t have any thoughts before jumping. It seemed like a split second, and my mind was very calm. I wasn’t thinking anything… but I was very soon after that!” WHAT WAS THE EXPERIENCE LIKE? WEREN’T YOU SCARED SHITLESS? “It was unbelievable, I can’t even put it into words. I would definitely do it again. I wasn’t scared after seeing other people doing it, so it was all good, and for a very good cause, so I concentrated on that.” MIKE WOULD BE PROUD… “Yeah, he’d be very proud, but at the same time laughing at me because I’m doing it. He’d be joking about new pairs of pants and diapers. But yes, I hope he’s proud wherever he is.” Evile’s Ol Drake: for those who are hopefully not about to go ‘splat’, we salute you METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 9
yep, that’s Kim Thayil: we exactly howhim remember Chris Cornell: OK, we’re ready to forgive you for Scream BACK IN BUSINESS JASON MER R ITT/GETTY SOUNDGARDEN SPEAK TO HAMMER EXCLUSIVELY FOR THE FIRST TIME ABOUT THEIR UNEXPECTED REUNION AFTER “AN UNNECESSARY 12-YEAR BREAK” OR FROM RUMOURS OF A REUNION GREW A REALITY. SO HAMMER STARTS THE FESTIVAL RUMOUR MILL HOPING FOR THE SAME… Hammer spoke to the promoters of the UK’s biggest metal festivals,Alan Day of Kilimanjaro (Sonisphere) and Andy Copping of Live Nation (Download), to see if either of them have bagged Soundgarden for 2011. Since April this year they played their first set together in Seattle, headlined Lollapalooza in August after a warm-up in Chicago at the Vic Theater, and played a low-key show in LA last month. Most reunions are invited to the UK festivals – from Limp Bizkit to Faith No More to Blink 182. So can we expect Soundgarden to follow suit? Andy – who is always very open about the people he’s talking to for Download – admits that: “There are no plans at the moment.” And Alan adds: “As far as we know they are not confirmed to play anywhere yet.” “It’s all speculation regarding all UK festivals,” continues Andy.“Shame, though, as it would be very cool.” Yes it would, as Alan concurs: “Of course we are trying to get them for Sonisphere. Badmotorfinger is a God-like classic!” We’re keeping our fingers crossed! I t was a Tweet a bleary world was not expecting to wake up to on New Year’s Day. Chris Cornell announcing the unlikely reunion of the longdefunct Soundgarden… or was he? Guitarist Kim Thayil and bassist Ben Shepherd have spoken exclusively to Hammer about their legacy, their reunion, and what’s coming up for the mammoth band that helped spearhead the Seattle sound. “There were stories flying around all over the place,” says Kim. “My friends were calling me up, my mother and father were calling and saying, ‘Why didn’t you tell us you were reuniting the band? ’ And I was like, ‘We’re not!’ And my mother’s saying, ‘I read it in a magazine, tell me the truth!’ And I’m like, ‘I’m your son, believe me!’ It was crazy.” Stellar as the reformation may be, the events leading up to Soundgarden’s reformation are less than Shakespearean. It’s been 12 years since they broke up, and 11 years had to pass before they decided to re-evaluate their catalogue and think about what their legacy might mean to a new generation of music-lovers who knew the name and not much more. Someone called a meeting to discuss their options, a meeting that Ben remembers fondly. “It was a sort of business meeting with Chris [Cornell] to see where we were at and we talked about the catalogue and stuff. I remember telling everyone, ‘OK, we basically have a dead hooker here. We could either let her rot up in a log cabin, or we could dress her up and sell her in midtown Manhattan.’” The fan club – The Knights Of The Soundtable – was reborn as a way of bringing the Soundgarden name back to life. On New Year’s Day Chris Tweeted to say as much and then all hell broke loose. Kim was semi-retired, Matt Cameron was the drummer in Pearl Jam, Ben co-owned a bar in Seattle and had been playing with other people including Mark Lanegan, and Chris had left Audioslave to be a solo artist again. It didn’t matter, the internet put two and two together and made five; the band were obviously getting back together. Then their phones started ringing. “We wanted to put our house in order,” says Kim, “sort the catalogue out and then the offers started coming in, there was this huge buzz and we didn’t know how to stop it. I was relieved when the band ended, but I always thought we were unfinished, that we had more to say.” For his part, Ben thinks the band should never have broken “I am not a member of Avenged Sevenfold” DRUMMER MIKE PORTNOY AFTER LEAVING DREAM THEATER 10 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK up. Taken some downtime maybe, but break up? That was just stupid. The label suggested another collection – Telephantasm – which Kim oversaw and the band revisited the Badmotorfinger sessions and dug out a song called Black Rain, which hadn’t resonated with them at the time. They reworked it, Chris sang a new vocal, Kim played some guitar, the whole band jumped in. “It was an outline, a sketch,” says Kim of the song. “Maybe with the perspective of time we were able to give it some sort of dynamic direction and once we were done, we were like, ‘Is that all it took? !’ It all seemed so natural, it still sounds like Soundgarden; we wouldn’t disappear for 12 years
5 Number of cities on A Perfect Circle’s ‘comeback’ tour. Tool frontman Maynard James Keenan’s ‘other band’ are back with a string of US dates. Number of people happy about their return? 145million. Ish. “i remember telling everyone: WE HAVE A DEAD HOOKER HERE. WE COULD LET HER ROT OR DRESS HER UP AND SELL HER” ben shepherd Soundgarden (clockwise from left): Ben Shepherd, Matt Cameron, Kim Thayil and Chris Cornell BU ZZ FRESHLY CUT PIECES OF NEWS! have *endMetallica celebrated the of the Death Magnetic touring cycle by releasing the Six Feet Down Under EP in Oz and via Metallica.com. Metallica say: “We came up with what we thought might be a fun idea: some live recordings from each time we have visited [Australia]. Then we realised we didn’t start making recordings until 2004! But the fans came to our rescue with some decent bootlegs and we trimmed those down to two songs from each tour in 1989, 1993, 1998, and 2004. Digging deeper, we had tracks that had never before been released as ‘live B-sides’ and that added to the adventure of pulling it together.” C*NT OF THE MONTH and come back and sound like Loverboy or Journey.” They played three shows, two intimate gigs, one at the Showbox in Seattle (Ben recalls the audience as being too reverential to the band), the Vic Theater in Chicago (“a little bit rusty,” admits Kim) and then they headlined Lollapalooza in the same city. “It was funny, it wasn’t odd at all; it seemed so natural going back up there,” recalls Kim. “I had some anxiety prior to walking up on stage, I think we all did, the butterflies and the nerves, and there were more of them because it had been so long and it was such a big stage, but once we struck the first few chords and I could hear the amps and see the crowd it was great, just great.” Neither denies European shows or a new album. Before then Kim’s compiling a B-sides album and expect a live record culled from their last US tour in 1996 at some point. Ben even musters some enthusiasm when the future of the band is brought up. “I would not be surprised if we came back to Europe and the UK at all. I think there’s the possibility of a new record; we’re all pretty jazzed on playing together again and working together. I care about the legacy and how people see us and perceive us, but I want to play. That’s why we’re here. We should have done this a long time ago.” TELEPHANTASM IS OUT NOW VIA ISLAND RECORDS 100 Percentage of heavy metal songs in Arsenal midfielder and Czech Republic captain Tomáš Rosický’s playlist for homeless charity Centrepoint. You can purchase the playlist from www.fairsharemusic.com and proceeds go to the charity. STEVENTYLER h, so Aerosmith are no more.” “Why? ! That’s bloody awful!” “I know, right! It’s because Steven Tyler has become a judge on American Idol.” “That awful cynical show where people ridicule each other and the winner gets 15 minutes of fame? ” “Yep.” “So what will Aerosmith do? ” “Audition on American Idol presumably…” “O The Pretty Reckless (left to right): Mark Damon, Taylor Momsen, Ben Phillips, Jamie Perkins BLONDE AMBITION IGNORE THE CELEBRITY TIES AND CUTESY LOOKS, THE PRETTY RECKLESS ROCK HARD! T he brainchild of 17year-old actress, model and musician Taylor Momsen, The Pretty Reckless have just released their debut album, Light Me Up. Most will know Taylor from US TV show Gossip Girl, but don’t be fooled by her red carpet smile; this kitten’s got claws… “Yes, I’ve had highs and lows,” she says. “But nothing I’ll discuss… If you wanna know about my fucking life listen to my fucking record!” Wary of her background, it’s no wonder Taylor is defensive about the focus being on her, not her music or the band. “Either people know me from Gossip Girl or they don’t,” she states. “I just hope people will listen to the music first before making their minds up – that’s what’s important. Yes, I’m an actor, but that has nothing to do with the music. I’m not just trying to sell ‘me’.” And this credibility shows in the rawness of the record. “I was raised on The Who, Bob Dylan, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Aerosmith, Rolling Stones… I was raised on the greats and that’s what comes out in the record. My management have been very supportive and when I signed to [Interscope] I was very clear that I had no interest in making a pop record – I wanted a real band. It’s no fun on the road when it’s just you.” It all started in 2008 when Taylor met guitarist Ben Phillips and producer Khandwala. She then fired her first band a year later because they “didn’t fit with [her] music style” and she formed a new band with Ben, bassist Mark Damon and drummer Jamie Perkins. Taylor is reluctant to explain specific song meanings, admitting that it’s all very personal but with stories hidden inside larger narratives. “I like autobiographical songs, but I want people to have their own take. Some sound literal but are actually metaphorical. It took two years to write the record so I don’t want to just say what the song means in a sentence.” So read what you will into songs from the album like Miss Nothing and Nothing Left To Lose and Blonde Rebellion and make up your own mind when The Pretty Reckless return to the UK in the new year. LIGHT ME UP IS OUT NOW VIA INTERSCOPE RECORDS “Slaaaayyeeeerrrr!!!” WHAT HAMMER EDITOR ALEXANDER MILAS SHOUTED AS HE DID HIS BUNGEE JUMP FOR CHARITY WITH EVILE’S OL DRAKE METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 11
NJ D< EK MP =L :B < K8 C% % ! N_\i\ ;Xe` =`ck_ ZXd\ `e k_\ c`jk f] ]Xdflj Jl]]fcb `Zfej%8 jX[ [Xp ]fi d\kXc_\X[j n_\e jfd\fe\ c`b\ ;Xe` `j [\\d\[ c\jj `Zfe`Z k_Xe X ZXd\c Xe[ X gXib% Dfm\ kf Efi]fcb# ;Xe`# pflËcc Y\ _`^_\i lg k_\`i c`jk% EldY\i f] jfc[$flk e`^_kj XZfljk`Z d\kXcc\ij If[i`^f p >XYi`\cX gcXp\[ Xk k_\ J_\g_\i[Ëj 9lj_ <dg`i\ `e )''.% ClZb`cp k_\pËi\ YXZb Xk k_\ m\el\ ]fi Ôm\ dfi\ e`^_kj1 Efm\dY\i )Æ.% ;> 6/;;3@ D@B< N<8K?<IC<P @J K?< =@IJK G<IJFE KF N<8I 8E @IFE D8@;<E K$J?@IK @E K?< ?FLJ< F= :FDDFEJ              9cXZb JXYYXk_ Xi\ i\c\Xj`e^ X c`d`k\[ Zfcc\ZkfiËj \[`k`fe f] Zfdgc\k\ XcYld Yfo j\kj _flj\[ `e X dXjj`m\ Zifjj n`k_ Yffbc\k ZfekX`e`e^ X Zfdgc\k\ (''$gX^\ Fqqp P\Xij ;`jZf^iXg_p Yffb fe Efm\dY\i ((% K_\ j\k `eZcl[\j k_i\\ iX[`f [fZld\ekXi`\j# X j\k f] ^l`kXi g`Zbj Xe[ X gfjk\i " 8gfZXcpgk`ZX _Xm\ X _Xi[Yffb knf$[`jZ \[`k`fe f] k_\`i e\n i\c\Xj\# .k_ Jpdg_fep# Ylk Y\kk\i jk`cc `j k_\ [`^`kXc \[`k`fe k_Xk Zfd\j fe X Z\ccf$j_Xg\[ LJ9 jk`Zb ?\X[ kf \dg$fec`e\%Zfd kf fi[\i pflij efn !   ElZc\Xi 9cXjk I\Zfi[j _Xm\ XeefleZ\[ k_\ mXi`flj \oZclj`m\ \[`k`fej f] ;`ddl 9fi^`iËj e\n XcYld# 8YiX_X[XYiX% M\ij`fej Æ [`^`kXc Xe[ kXe^`Yc\ Æ `eZcl[\ k_`e^j jlZ_ k_\ f]ÔZ`Xc >Xk\nXpj m`[\f# Yfelj kiXZbj >Xk\nXpj Æ FiZ_\jkiXc M\ij`fe# K_\ ;\d`li^\ Dfc\Zlc\ Æ FiZ_\jkiXc M\ij`fe Xe[ X ;\\g Gligc\ Zfm\i # ;\clo\ d\kXc 8ddf 9fo XZklXccp lj\[ `e YXkkc\ _Xe[$eldY\i\[ Xe[ c`d`k\[ kf *,' Zfg`\j `eZcl[\j Y\ck YlZbc\# [f^ kX^j# gfjk\i ÕX^# \oZclj`m\ k$j_`ik Xe[ X ^Xk\]fc[ m\ij`fe%  D`b\ N\Xk_\ic\p1 `e k_\ ?flj\% C`k\iXccp 1 fej\imXk`m\ DG D`b\ N\Xk_\ic\p nXj flk\[ Xj X d\kXc_\X[ n_\e k_\ :fej\imXk`m\ ?fd\ Ycf^ Zfej\imXk`m\_fd\%Ycf^j%Zfd `ek\im`\n\[ _`d% 8dfe^jk hl\jk`fej XYflk gfc`k`Zj# D`b\ jX`[ k_Xk _\ \eafp\[ c`jk\e`e^ kf È_\Xmp d\kXc# ]ifd @ife DX`[\e kf 9lcc\k =fi Dp MXc\ek`e\%É 9lk D`b\ N\Xk_\ic\p `j ef gXjj`e^ d\kXc_\X[ Xe[ Xcjf jX`[ k_Xk kf len`e[ _\ Èc`jk\ej kf m\ip cfl[ ifZb dlj`ZÉ Xe[ k_Xk _`j i\X[`e^ dXk\i`Xc f] Z_f`Z\ nXj pfli m\ip fne D\kXc ?Xdd\i Efk fecp k_Xk Ylk n_\e Xjb\[1 ÈK\cc lj fe\ `ek\i\jk`e^# leljlXc fi jligi`j`e^ ]XZk XYflk pflij\c]%É ?\ jX`[# È;f\j X kXkkff Zflek6 @k jXpj ÊC`m\ ]fi k_\ dfd\ekË%É >fe\ Xi\ k_\ [Xpj f] gfc`k`Z`Xej Y\`e^ jkl]]p Zcl\c\jj fc[ kfX[j `e ^i\p jl`kj% <m\e Kfep 9cX`i n`k_ _`j i\[ JkiXk j\\dj jkl]]p `e ZfdgXi`jfe kf k_\ kXkkff\[ \c\Zk\[ DG ]fi ?fm\ e\Xi 9i`^_kfe% ?Xdd\i jgfb\ kf D`b\ kf ^\k Xcc GXodXe fe _`j Xjj# Xe[ Xjb jfd\ [\\g Xe[ gifY`e^ gfc`k`ZXc hl\jk`fej% Jf D`b\# n_Xk [f pfl c`jk\e kf n_\e _\cg`e^ j_Xg\ k_\ ]Xk\ f] k_\ LB Xe[ k_\ ]i\\ nfic[6 ÈI`^_k efn @ Xd c`jk\e`e^ kf X cfk f] 9lcc\k =fi Dp MXc\ek`e\# <m\i^i\p# @ife DX`[\e# ;`f# L;F# JXofe# ;`jkliY\[ Xe[ 8`iYflie\%É D`b\ i\Z\ekcp [\c`m\i\[ X jg\\Z_ kf k_\ ?flj\ F] :fddfej k_Xk _\ ZXccj _`j ÊDX`[\e jg\\Z_Ë i\X[ `k Xk d`b\n\Xk_\ic\pdg%Zfd 1 efk fecp nXj `k _`j Ôijk kf k_\ ?flj\# Ylk _\ eXd\Z_\Zb\[ @ife DX`[\e È@ k_`eb `k nXj k_\ Ôijk k`d\ @ife DX`[\e _Xj \m\i Y\\e d\ek`fe\[ `e k_\ ?flj\ F] :fddfej Xe[ X]k\i @ d\ek`fe\[ `k# k_i\\ fk_\ij [`[ Xj n\cc% =fli k`d\j `e k_\ :_XdY\i `e fe\ [Xp `j ^ff[ ^f`e^ @ nXj ^f`e^ kf kip Xe[ ^\k X i\]\i\eZ\ `ekf \m\ip jg\\Z_% @ [`[ dXeX^\ `k `e dp Ôijk k_i\\% 8cXj# fe dp ]flik_ `k nXj m\ip j_fik Xe[ cXjk d`elk\ jf [`[eËk _Xm\ k`d\% È@ [f Yi`e^ jfd\k_`e^ e\n kf k_\ ?flj\ `e k_\ ]fid f] dp _l^\ gXjj`fe ]fi ifZb Xe[ _\Xmp d\kXc% 8 ]\n p\Xij X^f @ gc\[^\[ k_Xk @ nflc[ Y\ k_\ Ôijk D\dY\i kf n\Xi Xe @ife DX`[\e k$j_`ik `e k_\ :_XdY\i%É K_XkËj fe\ gfc`k`ZXc gifd`j\ _\ _Xj Xci\X[p [\c`m\i\[% ®/TbS` 7 [S\bW]\SR 7`]\ ;OWRS\ W\ bVS 6]caS bV`SS ]bVS`a RWR Oa eSZZ¯ ;WYS ESObVS`ZSg ;> :?<:B FLK D@B<ËJ N<9J@K< 8K NNN%D@B<N<8K?<IC<PDG%:FD ; D<K = 8C K< < JK< 7B ; N@ = K? K?< @ B@E / ; ?<C C GF 2 =%%% 7= 6/;;3@ AB3@3= L=6IÁH 6CCDN>C< 8A6HH>8 GD8@ I=>H BDCI= ;4C;8E4 50:478BC>AH ½Egd\gZhh^kZ! ^ciZaa^\Zci VcY Vh k^X^djh Vh V XdbeVhh id i]Z ZnZWVaa#¾ C4AAH14I4A Igdaa EVigda 3D1F0A C743D1C74F0A C74D6;H ½EgZ"H`^cYgZY 7Zc_^ LZWWZ  Xd ]VgY gdX` hiZVYn [gdb i]Z ZVgan YVnh#¾ 90<4B68;; Bjai^"Idda :H;4B0 B?8A0;B703>F 0;C4A1A8364 1A8=6<4C74 01888 7>A8I>= 01888 B>=6B5>AB8=6;4B C>A274 38<<D1>A68A ½7addYn hijcc^c\ Vaa gdjcY VaWjb i]Vi ^h _VbbZY ^c bn hiZgZd# Dc adde# 6i &&#¾ ½JcXaVhh^[^ZY WgV^c bZiVa [gdb i]Z eaVcZi L]V4 I]Z WZhi aZ\Va ]^\] h^cXZ 8ajiX]#¾ ½HiViZan! X^cZbVi^X! VcY ]ZVkn Vh [jX` » i]^h ^h cdi]^c\ aZhh i]Vc V XdadhhVa hiViZbZci d[ ^ciZci#¾ 0;C4A1A8364 01A070301A0 C74A48B074;; 14;84E4<48½E4B44=8C ½6 cZlan gZ[aZXi^kZ! ½I]gZZ fjVgiZgh hXj[[ZY YZa^g^jb d[ 8gZZY ^c i]Vi ZmeVcYh i]Z ¿gZVaan WaddYn \ddY ]ZVgi Vh lZaa Vh VaWjbÀ h]dX`Zg#¾ i]Z b^cY#¾ ½> ]ViZ id VYb^i ^i! Wji i]^h gjaZh# > hi^aa i]^c` i]Zn add` g^Y^Xjadjh! i]dj\]´¾ 9>=0C70=B4;I4A E0=4BB070A3B ;4F8BB><4AB20;4B GZk"zWZgadgY 20A4=681B>= 7VgdcZhh ;ZbWdi 8gVndc LVgg^dg 90<4B8B002B <jiiZg Hc^eZg 0;4G0=34A<8;0B 7a^c\ 8dbbVcYZg ½NdjÀkZ cZkZg ]ZVgY jh a^`Z i]^h¾ LE;<IF8K? =IFEKD8E JG<E:<I :?8D9<IC8@E FE K?< E<N 8C9LD N@K?FLK 88IFE >@CC<JG@<%      :4E8= =8G>= E< D :F 8 ?< D @E>
BU ZZ 0 Seconds of music in the first trailer for the new My Chemical Romance album. Well done, best way to promote an album: include no music. Says a lot really, doesn’t it… 14 Years since the last album from Accept.And five years since their hiatus was called.The German metallers are back with new album Blood Of The Nations, and live dates including Hammerfest. Slayer (Dave Lombardo far left): welcome to the jungle FRESHLY CUT PIECES OF NEWS! Trivium’s Corey Beaulieu has *spoken about how their follow-up to Shogun is shaping up: “Compared to the last couple of records, the intensity and the energy has really gone up a lot. We’ve been concentrating on making catchier songs. It doesn’t sound like Shogun, but it sounds like Trivium. It’s a lot more in your face – a lot heavier and a lot faster.” Reznor *thathasTrent revealed the longrumoured television series of Nine Inch Nails’ Year Zero album is coming along slowly.Trent told the LA Times: “We are working on a mini-series.” There are a lot of hurdles before things make it to TV.“It’s very much alive and incubating at the moment.” iamond David Lee Roth has said that a Van Halen reunion is only six to eight months off! Couple that with talk from Download organiser Andy Copping about the fact that he would “definitely consider” Van Halen and it looks like the UK may finally get its Van Halen show! DAVE TO RAVE DAVE LOMBARDO SIDE-PROJECT TO RELEASE DRUM’N’BASS-INSPIRED ALBUM. I n the early 90s, Slayer drummer Dave Pendulum or Roni Size & Reprazent, the latter being Lombardo discovered jungle/drum’n’bass a band that’s heavily inspired Philm’s sound. in the UK, and put together a band called “Back then I would go to Tower [Records] or Philm inspired by his discoveries. Now whatever and I would search for it,” he says of his hunt we can finally hear the fruit of his labour for the obscure music form back home in shops 5,400 of love in the form of a Volcom seven-inch miles away from its creative centre. “There would only vinyl including a cover of Black Sabbath’s Symptom be two little sections, but my first album was actually Of The Universe as well a mixtape. I will never as live footage on “I was fascinated forget, my son was just YouTube and the odd gig. born and he liked it!” by the beats” Hammer spoke to But don’t worry, the DAVE LOMBARDO Dave about rave. band is still a distance “I first heard the music back in ’93 or ’95,” he says, from the stadium rock’n’bass drum’n’core of in a voice that’s a million miles from the surliness Pendulum or Enter Shikari. suggested in every shot of Slayer since 1983. “There “It’s only an interpretation, we’re was an uprising in the UK, and I caught wind of it. I was inspired by drum’n’bass, not actually fascinated by the beats. I immediately absorbed it and drum’n’bass,” he adds. “We wanted to incorporate our roots as well, which is translated it in a… ‘Lombardo style’, ha ha ha! I like to blues and funk.” do that, take things and translate them… ‘How would He adds that the B-side has a I incorporate that in my style? ’” percussion piece called Drum Friction Drum’n’bass was often described as ‘impossible which “I wrote and that will be on my music’: funk and jazz drum samples played at drum solo record, Rite Of Percussion.” increasing speeds and diced and remixed into The band features Civil Defiance ever more elaborate shapes, grooves and loops. guitarist Gerry Nestler and War “As an acoustic drum player you can’t do all those electronic sounds, unless you’re playing to a backing bassist Pancho Tomaselli and it won’t take you long to find their track – which we’ll do in Philm’s future – but it music on YouTube for a taster. wasn’t hard to interpret.” Technology is already in a place where electronic THE PHILM 7 ”VINYL COVER OF SYMPTOM drumkits can play drum samples to further OF THE UNIVERSE IS OUT NOW VIAVOLCOM approximate the drum’n’bass of old – just ask RAVE METAL WHEN METAL AND DANCE MUSIC COLLIDE. NINE INCH NAILS With disco beats and synths,Trent Reznor took industrial to the masses. FEAR FACTORY Second-generation industrialists exploited the ghosts in the machine. PITCHSHIFTER Fear Factory dabbled in d’n’b; these Brits nailed it. THE PRODIGY Starting as a dodgy rave act, the UK outfit have become honorary metallers and drive rock crowds mental. PENDULUM The Aussie drum’n’bass crew are regulars at Download and Sonisphere, and loved by metallers as much as ravers. ENTER SHIKARI Trance metallers Shikari (left) combine metalcore songs, hardcore energy and dance’s synths and beats. “I was happy with it” LOSTPROPHETS FRONTMAN IAN WATKINS SUGGESTS THAT HE PHOTOSHOPPED THE PICTURE OF HIM APPARENTLY PERFORMING FELLATIO METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 13
W NE S* CO E MM NT *H V EA YF UC K M ING E TA L. 42 3, 000 Dollars offered for the return of two of Robb Flynn’s stolen guitars. On September 7 his home was broken into and four guitars were stolen, amongst other things. One of the guitars was used to record Machine Head’s first album, Burn My Eyes. g Bailey: sittin job down on the Number of seconds Tim ‘Ripper’ Owens stopped the set for when someone threw a full pint of beer at him in Norway last month. He demanded the guy be thrown out. Brutal. BU ZZ Josh hard at work FRESHLY CUT PIECES OF NEWS! s That’s a lot of button ok just to surf Facebo to www. *co.ukHead metalhammer. to view the ETA jan SY LOSIS 2011 THE 21ST CENTURY THRASHERS BRING THE HUMANITY AND HIGH CONCEPT FOR THEIR THIRD ALBUM. R eading’s Sylosis are just mixing down their It appears that this very human edge is something that the brand new – as yet untitled – album, and band have been mindful of throughout the recording of the album, frontman Josh Middleton tells Hammer despite its drawn-out creation. that it’s a concept album with a newfound “The main concern for the whole mix has been to make it raw ‘human sound’. By the time the album and intense. We thought the last album was pretty sterile. We comes out in January 2011 it will have wanted it to have production values more like High On Fire than been nearly three years since the release of Conclusion Of An Age, many other modern metal bands. We wanted it gnarly and grimy. an album that set the standard for all new British metal bands It’s still pretty consistent but we didn’t want to trigger up the who had their sights set on conquering the UK scene. In their drums and make it sound like a bunch of robots playing.” short life, Sylosis have become one of the biggest and best British It seems that the influence has come from a developing love bands of the last ten years with a solid grassroots fanbase, of bands like Baroness and Neurosis, as well as progressive critical acclaim and some world-beating festival performances. nuances inspired by the likes of Cult Of Luna and even 70s Hopefully the new album will further solidify their reputation as a proggers Yes and Rush. forward-thinking and relevant metal band “The new album is a lot heavier than the who never fail to deliver. And having taken last one but we’ve tried to incorporate over a year to make, you’d bloody hope so! some interesting and new ambient sounds “It’s been slow,” admits Josh. “We started and textures, experimenting with interludes.” a year ago with the drums but then we And have you got a concept for the had the Dragonforce tour. Then it was record like the prog rock greats? Christmas, then [producer] Scott Atkins “Yeah, the record is all about time,” he was recording someone else, then we did says. “It’s about a guy who lives in complete josh middleton guitars and bass, then we toured again. isolation for a lifetime. It talks about what We came back again for solos and then finally vocals.” being on your own for ages does to you. It’s got bookend tracks at As if all that wasn’t enough to set an album back, the beginning and end. The opening track sums up everything we earlier in 2010, frontman Jamie Graham left the band do really: it’s heavy but quite progressive with some majestic – another in a long list of people who have passed melody in there. It’s one of my favourites on the album.” through the ranks. Anyone who has seen Sylosis Before the band release the album they are on tour with since Jamie’s departure will know that guitarist Turbowolf, Exit Ten and The Defiled as part of the Jä germeister singer Josh more than makes up for the loss. But Music Tour, which runs from November 9 – 13. And who knows, what did this mean for the album? we may even get to hear a new tune. “I have a different vocal style. I’m more gritty, like Crowbar or Soilent Green, more snarling.” THE AS-YET-UNTITLED ALBUM WILL BE OUT IN JANUARY VIA NUCLEAR BLAST “The main concern has been to make it raw and intense” SOUNDGARDEN video trailer for new track Black Rain, if you haven’t already! In fact, LINKIN PARK are streaming their whole album, A Thousand Suns, at their MySpace page. Now it’s not just Devildriver! Former members of the Spookycore nu-metal band COAL CHAMBER have formed a new band called WE ARE THE RIOT. DEF LEPPARD frontman and all-round top bloke Joe Elliot has launched his own beer named Down ’n’ Outz after his side project of Mott The Hoople songs.The beer has “a pilsner style” that has “a deep, rich malt character, with generous hop bitterness”, apparently. ORBS is an American supergroup consisting of Dan Briggs of BETWEEN THE BURIED AND ME, Adam Fisher and Clayton Holyoak of FEAR BEFORE THE MARCH OF FLAMES and Ashley Ellyllon formerly of ABIGAIL WILLIAMS and now of CRADLE OF FILTH, and they have released their awesome debut, Asleep Next. The band began in the spring of 2008 as an online prog metaltinged project. “We’ll never write another Down With The Sickness” DISTURBED’S BASSIST JOHN MOYER ON THE BAND’S DEVELOPMENT. 14 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK
AMAZING ROADRUNNER CDs FROM £5.99 £5.99 36 CRAZYFISTS COLLISIONS & CASTAWAYS £7.99 GRAND MAGUS HAMMER OF THE NORTH £8.95 MURDERDOLLS WOMEN & CHILDREN LAST SPECIAL EDITION £5.99 £5.99 ALEXISONFIRE OLD CROWS / YOUNG CARDINALS £6.99 BLEEDING THROUGH BLEEDING THROUGH £8.95 KORN III - REMEMBER WHO YOU ARE £8.95 ALTER BRIDGE AB III £8.99 STONE SOUR AUDIO SECRECY SPECIAL EDITION COHEED AND CAMBRIA YEAR OF THE BLACK RAINBOW SPECIAL EDITION ORDER AT PLAY.COM/RR2010 PRICES CORRECT AT TIME OF GOING TO PRESS. SOME PRICES MAY VARY
NE WS *C O E MM NT *H V EA YF UC K M ING E TA L. “If you like metal, and want to hear it in all different shapes, this is your chance to do that” ANDY MARTONGELLI HOT L A T E M NEW RIFFS , F R ES H FORGE FROM THE W ITALY’S ARTHEMIS HAVE RECORDED AN EP OF POP COVERS ! EXCLUSIVE TO METAL HAMMER JUST TO PROVE THAT SERIOUS HEAVY METAL CAN STILL HAVE A SENSE OF HUMOUR. hile getting completely leathered in Ibiza after their Hard Rock Hell Ibiza Roadtrip show, Arthemis brought out their iPod and played us a song. The song sounded familiar, but also strange and new. Frontman Andrea ‘Andy’ Martongelli smiles as the realisation writes itself across our face. “It’s a metal cover version of Lady fucking Gaga!” we shout before joining in drunkenly with the ‘p-p-poker face…’ chorus and falling down an embankment. For some time now Arthemis (completed by frontman Fabio Dessi, bassist Damiano Perazzini and drummer Corrado Rontani) have been quietly (and not so quietly) making covers of pop songs (as well as their own metal songs) their ‘finish him!’ moment. The Italian band have – in one way or another – been around since 1994 working tirelessly at their own trad and power-infused heavy metal. June 2010 saw Arthemis release their sixth and strongest album to date, Heroes, as they marched slowly but surely towards the next level as career metalheads. For a perfectly shrewd self-appraisal of Arthemis, Andy says that the band are always inspired by “my favourite bands of course – Metallica, Judas Priest, Black Sabbath” but that their consistently progressing and unfolding sound is due to the additional influence of “newer heavy metal bands like Avenged Sevenfold”. The iPod plays more of Arthemis’s amazing covers and we want to cry with how great they are (that and the 38 Jä ger bombs we’ve downed). How many of these have you done, we ask? 16 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK “We’ve done… a lot!” says Andy. “We’ve done Boom Boom Pow by Black Eyed Peas – that was like Korn! Tik Tok by Ke$ ha, Bad Romance by Lady GaGa and we did Crazy In Love by… erm… er…” Beyoncé ? “Right, Beyoncé ! I can only ever remember her butt!” We caught up with Andy in the studio more recently. While Arthemis seem to eat, sleep, shit and laugh in the studio, today Andy is here to record a special Arthemis covers EP for Metal Hammer – which you can download now from www.metalhammer.co.uk. As proved in the Balearics, the band are no strangers to – and also terrific at – covering pop songs in a metal style. So how did all this madness start? “I never played in a covers band because I was determined to play my own music if I was going to be in a band at all. But with Arthemis we’d often slip a cover into our live show – Megadeth, Anthrax, Queen or something. And if it’s not metal we make it metal to have fun on stage. We’d often only play that song once, it was just a one-off, something to make the show special for people. “I’ve been working on covers for the Japanese market for a while,” says the Italian, his voice brimming with boisterous energy and schoolboy giggling. “There’s a really big company in Japan called Avex. They make CDs of covers of pop… but done in a metal way. And that’s my job, ha ha! I go into the studio and they say, ‘Make this song more metal, make it rock’. Sometimes we have to do three or four songs every day, but it’s easy for me because I’m a guitarist who improvises a lot so finding the riff takes five minutes. Then Fabio will sing on them. Sometimes we do them for compilations or video games or iPhone downloads, there’s lots of work.”
If you clos headbutt e your eyes and shake thisa wall you may ju st image ou t Arthemis (left to right): Fabio Dessi, Andrea Martongelli, Corrado Rontani, Damiano Perazzini Her Arthemis EP t . Downloa dto your free it no www.meta lh a mmer.co.uw from k Britney Spea rs La dy Ga ga – –Womanizer Paparaz Riha nna –D on’t Stop Th zi e Music Destiny’s C hild Michea l Ja ck –Survivor son –B Ma donna – ad Express You rself ALSO TRY ... POWERGLOVE It seems a very savvy strategy: many bands have enjoyed similar exposure from which to launch their careers, from Him (their cover of Chris Isaak’s Wicked Game helped their rise in the UK) to Apocalyptica and – ahem – Alien Ant Farm. And of course the tradition of covering your favourite music is a rock music badge of honour with bands from Metallica to Guns N’ Roses releasing albums devoted to them. “It’s really not a strategy!” he laughs. “We never thought about the commercial part, it just happened.” And with the impending doom-shaped future overcast by a gloomy recession, even metalheads want something to make them smile. “Exactly! Why not? ! Why do you have to be sad? If you like metal, if you really like it and want to hear it in all different shapes, this is your chance to do that.” It’s hard enough to make it as a successful metal band when you’re from Los Angeles, New York or London with their associated big-league reputation. So it wouldn’t be unfair to say that Italy doesn’t have the ‘coolest’ reputation in the world of metal and that metal bands struggle to get heard. Sure Lacuna Coil made it to the world stage, but Rhapsody Of Fire hardly have Dillinger Escape Plan’s cool factor do they…? WTF? FROM Verona, Italy. THEY SOUND LIKE Supercharged Italian trad metal with a power edge and youthful energy, a defi nite sense of humour and a cheeky way with a pop tune or two. FIND OUT MORE arthemisweb.com “Sometimes it’s pretty hard because some people say you might as well be from Africa!” he says, laughing heartily again. “We don’t care. We carry on. You don’t have to follow the rules to be good. And you don’t have to be from a certain place to be credible. We are a credible band. We live music every day. I see it as a mission, you have to bring your own shit. I really don’t fucking care if people like it or not. Honestly, I really don’t care. I mean, we’re crazy! You know that! People should remember that! Ha ha!” You’re an Italian metal band who cover 00s pop songs, how could we forget…? “We’re quite big in Italy, obviously. We’ve done all the things a heavy metal band can do in Italy. We’ve even done a TV spot for Fiat! I guess we’re still very Italian, but not in the fashion-obsessed way. We love food and wine and wherever we go we want to meet people and be in the crowd and create hell.” The band have just signed a deal with booking agent Factory Music and Andy hopes the band get to create hell in many more countries around the world. “It really takes time to grow as a band,” he says. “But now our hopes are high and we’re working in whatever way we have to to spread our music. Whatever it takes to get our music heard, you’ll find us doing that!” HEROES IS OUT NOW VIA HELVETE & HATE Powerglove are an instrumental American power metal band who play versions of classic videogame themes. The band is named after the Power Glove, a Nintendo controller accessory. Anyway, these loonies have a new album called Saturday Morning Apocalypse that will feature 11 power metal renditions of 80s cartoon themes including X-Men, Transformers, Inspector Gadget and The Simpsons. They’ve clearly run out of videogame theme tunes. Head to YouTube to hear their cover of Transformers. Bassil Silver Hajo of the Boston metallers says: “No matter what we write, we know all the comments will be about how bizarre we look, how ridiculous this track list is, and the fact that we somehow got Tony Kakko [Sonata Arctica] to sing the Poké mon theme for us. We would tell you how clown-rapingly awesome it is, but you can decide that for yourself when the album comes out in September.” Their previous albums include Total Pwnage (2005 and Metal Kombat (2007). Head over to www. myspace.com/powerglove for more information.
NE WS *C O E MM NT *H V EA YF UC K M ING E TA L. “i’ ve always had an interest in indian music” nic rizzi HOT L META R ES H NEW RIFFS, F FROM THE FO Jurojin (left to right): Francesco Lucidi, Nic Rizzi, Simran Ghalley, James Alper, Yves Fernandez RGE! JUROJIN WTF? O LONDON UPSTARTS BRINGING AN ESOTERIC WORLD EDGE TO PROGRESSIVE METAL. FROM London, England. THEY SOUND LIKE The bastard love child of MaynardJames Keenan and Ravi Shankar,with Mikael Å kerfeldt for an uncle andJaco Pastorius trying to break into the delivery room. FIND OUT MORE www.myspace.com/ jurojin 18 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK ver the decades Hammer has found itself in some pretty strange places after a night on the tiles.Yet when the vodka-induced haze clears to reveal that we are, in fact, deep within the bowels of a Polish sports arena, discussing the merits of early Opeth with a tabla player and a jazz bassist, questions have to be asked. On this occasion though, the bassist and tabla player in question happen to be two-fifths of London-based progressive metallers Jurojin, and things start to make a little more sense. Having just played their biggest show to date, a slot on the Korn-headlined Polish Metal Hammer Festival at the Spodek Arena, located in the rather Soviet-looking city of Katowice, it’s an exhausted yet justifiably beaming Jurojin that emerge to further tuck into a mountain of free sausages and beer as the strains of Katatonia shake an alarming amount of dust from the ageing venue’s walls. And beaming they should be, as while the UK has yet to fully embrace them, the Poles have proved willing early converts to the Jurojin message. “Y’know, our album was only released in the UK, Australia and Poland,” explains guitarist Nic Rizzi,“and the Polish people seem to really dig it; I’ve done way more interviews and promo work for the Polish market than anywhere else, so we’re really honoured to be asked to do a festival of this size, so early in our career.” “I’ll tell you what got me,” chips in vocalist James Alper. “There were these two guys, right at the front of the crowd – and bearing in mind that we’ve never played a gig in Poland before – these two guys knew every single lyric to every single song… Mental!” And believe us, it gets far more brain-twisting. Having only solidified their lineup two years ago, and with a daunting modus operandi of aiming to meld the deceptively complex groves of mid-era Tool with the progressive leanings of bands like Opeth – also on today’s bill – all imbued with a love of traditional Indian music and importantly tabla drums, Jurojin have, willingly or otherwise, managed to create for themselves a scene of one. So, c’mon, how the hell does a tabla player end up in a metal band anyway? “When I moved to London [from the US] I already had a real interest in Indian music,” explains Nic.“So I wanted to find Indian musicians to play with, and eventually I was introduced to Simran [Ghalley, tabla] through a mutual friend; we had a bit of a jam session, and I came away just thinking, ‘Wow! This guy’s on another level, if I need a tabla player, I know who my man is!’” And the jazz bassist? Simple, persistence. “Nic just wouldn’t stop calling me,” tells bassist – and, as it later emerges, recent Korn convert – Yves Fernandez. As night becomes day and the group and a few new fans decamp to a peculiar underground bar totally dedicated to one Polish punk band, it begins to hit home that rather paradoxically it is the total diversity of Jurojin that proves their unifying factor. Some members may be new to metal, their drummer might be an Italian Keith Moon (minus the animal tranquilisers) and although maybe not quite the finished article, Jurojin are belligerently pushing metal into territories that few others even imagine. “Ultimately, people are either going to ‘get’ our music, or they’re not,” James sums up.“But the fact that we’re even doing this interview… I mean, holy shit, we must be doing something right!” JUROJIN PLAY A CLUTCH OF UK DATES STARTING NOVEMBER 8
CHECK OUT! BAND INFOS, MERCHANDISE AND MORE: W W W. N U C L E A R B L A S T. D E
NE WS *C O E MM NT *H V EA YF UC K M ING E TA L. Fuck With Your Fans Axl Rose Yeah, way to go, ginger bollocks. Having already made your fans wait 15 years for a new album that turned out to be 80 per cent bumdribble, you now seem to think it’s OK to arrive on stage hours late, thus ensuring that everyone is bored and angry by the time your latest hired hands plod through GUILTY! Welcome To The Jungle. Refund, please! The Misfits Everyone seems to be reforming these days. Everyone except the sodding Misfits, that is. It’s been 27 years since Glenn Danzig and Jerry Only last hit the stage as part of the insanely cool horror punk crew they formed back in 1977 and generations of punk, rock and metal fans – not to mention everyone from Metallica to Volbeat – would chew their own legs off for a chance to see them in action. Stop lurking around in graveyards and GUILTY! bury the hatchet, you spooky bell-ends. Marilyn Manson Dear Brian… what happened? You used to be awesome and now you’re rubbish. The last time you played in the UK you were so twatted you could barely stand. At Download 2009, you made Fred Durst look graceful. How about a bit more quality control and respect for the punters and a bit less of the magical nosewonga next time, yeah? Cheers, Bri. GUILTY! K C A B K C A IN BL SALUTING METAL’S RETURNING HEROES! “What’ s the point in sounding like Edguy, Blind Guardian or all the rest?We are Firewind” GUS G FIREWIND THE GREEK POWER METALLERS PROVE THEIR STAYING POWER. W hen Gus G relocated to the US from Greece at the end of the last century, the 16year-old guitarist’s love of tight jeans and long hair earned him the nickname of ‘The 80s Guy’. How times change. Having played with several bands including Arch Enemy, Dream Evil and Mystic Prophecy, Gus is the brains behind Firewind and a member of Ozzy Osbourne’s band. We caught up with him: AFTER SIX ALBUMS WITH FIREWIND, THE STYLE OF MUSIC YOU WERE RIDICULED FOR PLAYING AS A YOUNGER MAN IS FINALLY IN VOGUE. “I guess so. It’s good to stick to your guns. Back in 1998, there was no heavy metal in the US. The scene was full of Limp Bizkit and shit like that, ha ha! I’m just being honest.” SOME SUSPECTED THAT BEING HEADHUNTED BY OZZY WOULD SPELL THE END OF FIREWIND. THAT WASN’T THE CASE… “Our loyal fans did express a lot of concern at the time, but there’s nothing to worry about. Why would I abandon a band with almost 10 years of history? I’ve plenty of time to do both.” FIREWIND’S NEW ALBUM, DAYS OF DEFIANCE, FEATURES SOME POLITICALLY AWARE SONGS INCLUDING THE ARK OF LIES. WHAT WAS IT THAT COMPELLED YOU TO WRITE THEM? “Seeing so many bad things on the TV. There’s no money, no jobs, the world’s ending and everyone’s gonna die. Look at Greece: it went bankrupt and all hell broke loose due to the corruption. People don’t trust their leaders anymore. I don’t really think of such things as political, it’s more to do with everyday life.” THE NEW ALBUM SOUNDS LESS FLASHY THAN PREDECESSOR THE PREMONITION. IS THAT WHY YOU STEPPED AWAY FROM FORMER DREAM EVIL BANDMATE FREDRIK NÖ RDSTROM, WHO PRODUCED IT? “Fredrik is a fantastic producer, but this time we wanted something much less compressed. What’s the point in sounding like Edguy, Blind Guardian or all the rest? We are Firewind.” THE OZZY CONNECTION MUST OPEN DOORS FOR YOU AND FIREWIND… “Yes, it’s great there’s a lot more exposure” SO WERE FIREWIND INVITED TO BE ON THE BILL OF THE LONDON OZZFEST? “I have no idea. It’s not really my position to make demands like that. I’m not going to complain because we didn’t get to play.” BUT ZAKK WYLDE USED TO DO DOUBLE DUTY WITH BLACK LABEL SOCIETY? “Oh, listen. Ozzy is Ozzy and Firewind is Firewind – they’re very different sounding and I look at them as separate things.” SO WHEN DO FIREWIND GO ON TOUR? “There are some US shows in November and we’ll be in Europe in January, also hopefully again in the spring. There’s a lot of demand.” DAYS OF DEFIANCE IS OUT OCTOBER 25 VIA CENTURY MEDIA what? Power metal with strong melodies and blistering guitar solos. for fans of Symphony X, Sonata Artica, Dream Evil. musthave classic Forged By Fire EMI, 2005 fi nd out more www.firewind.gr

NE W C S* OM ME N T* A HE VY FU C G KIN ME TA L. L THE WAYS TO GET HAMMERED THIS MONTH! BEHOLD, OUR EMPIRE… The Metal Hammer Magazine Show on Rock Radio is hosted by none other than Metal Hammer editor Alexander Milas and goes out on metal Monday from 8 to 11pm.The show includes three hours of the best in classic hard rock and heavy metal music.The Dark Lord (that’s what we callAlex in the office… well, you would) will be airing exclusive interviews with Dimmu Borgir and Times Of Grace.Listen every Monday on 96.3FM in Scotland, 106.1FM in Manchester or at www. rockradio.com from 10pm-1am. MHTV Dyed-in-the-wool metalhead filmmaker Eric Braverman brings his expertise and energy to MHTV’s The Greatest Music Ever Created,And How It Ruined Our Lives. Every week, a new episode is aired and shows have included the likes of Corey Taylor,Chuck Billy and Dave Lombardo.Each instalment is brought to you from the arid desert outpost of Phoenix,Arizona by Eric, who’s teamed up with his Overseas Production Executive and metal author and journalist Mark Eglinton to bring you a refreshingly new series of shows from the very coalface of heavy metal at www.metalhammer.co.uk/mhtv. Download the weekly podcast for free in iTunes or direct from the site for an hour of news,reviews and polemic about the most controversial bands and the most contentious views.Are GN’R fucked? What’s next for Slipknot? And should Portnoy join Avenged? 22 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK Municipal Waste: in a rare contemplative moment Revoker: local boys COME, SEE, CONQUER! HAMMERFEST III FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT: DATES, TIMES, BANDS AND A ROMAN THEME. H ammerfest III is taking place on March 17-20 2011 and the first bands to be announced are Biohazard, Municipal Waste, Mutant, Revoker and Attica Rage. As always, the event takes place up at Pontins, Prestatyn, North Wales and will feature 50 other bands over the weekend – tickets are on sale now at www.hammerfest.co.uk. The theme for Hammerfest III will be all things Roman! As with the awesome Hammerfest II, there is an extra night on Thursday to get the party started early. This comes included in the VIP package and has proved very popular at Hard Rock Hell festival where VIP packages sold out in five days flat! VIP tickets for Hammerfest III are already over 65 per cent sold, however there is a Gold Plus option which also caters for early hunters on the Thursday night, if you haven’t purchased your Thursday night tickets yet. Tickets are for two or three nights: VIP and Gold Plus include the Thursday night, while all other packages are for two nights with the option of adding an extra night for as little as £ 30, including accommodation. Early Bird tickets are the same as 2010 prices and start from £ 105 (based on seven people sharing a seven-berth Silver chalet) which includes accommodation, free car parking and entrance into all arenas. For immediate reservations or further information, ring 08700 110034 or book online at www.hammerfest.co.uk. Last year’s Hammerfest sold out two months in advance, so be sure to get your tickets as soon as you can to avoid disappointment. Heavy metal and hardcore punk legends Biohazard are celebrating their 20th anniversary with a new album and now a one-way ticket to blast the fuck out of the UK with a rare appearance. Couple that with American nu-thrash loons Municipal Waste and we’re off the blocks at speed and heading to a crash called party. From the UK, fellow thrashers Mutant will join Welsh metallers Revoker (who have just signed to Roadrunner) and returning Hammerfest heroes Attica Rage from Scotland, who are just about to release their second album. Keep your eyes peeled on www.metalhammer. co.uk, where all Biohazard’s Evan the latest bands Seinfeld grabs his big and other imaginary head announcements will be revealed as and when they are confirmed. HAMMERFEST III TAKES PLACE MARCH 17 -20 2011 AT PONTINS, PRESTATYN, NORTH WALES
OPINIONS FROM METAL’S FRONTLINE TUNE IN, TURN ON, ROCK OUT! SCUZZ’S NEW AND UPDATED METAL SHOWS ON TELLY! T he only music channel worth its weight in metal – as we all know – is Scuzz, and now they’re bringing us a load of new and updated shows to fill our ears and eyes. Scuzz overlord Alex Herron says: “We do a show called Metal Midnight Mass. So if one more fucking idiot emails in saying we don’t play metal I’ll personally track them down and punch them because not only do we play the heavier stuff after 9pm but this show will blow you away with everyone’s requests and our favourite brutal music. The show is on every single night so come and get your ears pummelled by the heaviest bands on the planet.” Alex says we can expect videos from Obituary and Cannibal Corpse to Whitechapel and Despised Icon. He also explains that while new bands can find it very hard to get their videos aired on music channels, Scuzz is offering a platform for bands to showcase their talents to thousands of viewers on the brand new show Scuzz Underground. “Scuzz is sifting through tons of videos, not just from the UK but pretty much the whole world,” Alex explains. “And we’re not just playing any old crap! We’re looking for bands that have something to shout about – we want bands that we’re proud to associate with Scuzz TV!” Scuzz Underground launches in November, so if you think you’re worthy of being on TV, then send a link and a short bio over to contact@scuzz.tv And Alex reassures us: “I won’t really punch anyone.” HEAD TO SCUZZ.TV FOR MORE INFO GIGWATCH Sonic Syndicate’s Karin Axelsson: hell’s belle ALL THE BEST HAMMER-APPROVED TOURS AND DATES IN THE UK from November 24 to December 10. HEIGHTS, FLOOD OF RED and HOUSE VS HURRICANE tour from November 4 to December 7. ARCH ENEMY take GRAND MAGUS, MALEFICE and CHTHONIC around the UK for four dates from November 23. BLEED FROM WITHIN, CALIBAN support ALL THAT REMAINS and SOILWORK from November 28 to December 1.AS I LAY DYING, SUICIDE SILENCE and HEAVEN SHALL BURN tour the UK from November 25 to 30. Middle Eastern metallers ORPHANED LAND return to the UK for three dates in November. PARADISE LOST, DILLINGER ESCAPE PLAN, ROLO TOMASSI and THE OCEAN play Damnation Festival on November 6, and the latter three bands play dates from October 27–30. WINDS OF PLAGUE, STICK TO YOUR GUNS, FOR TODAY and MONUMENTS play six dates from November, 8–13.THE SWORD have announced dates between November 29 and December 12. WHERE HAVE ALL THE HELLRAISERS GONE?AND WHERE ARE THE NEW BREED OF LEMMYS, OZZYS AND SIXXES? The seasoned punk veteran takes a look at Ministry’s upcoming documentary – and in particular the band’s colourful ringleader,Al Jourgensen – and asks,where have all the hellraisers gone? OK,some retire, get clean or,as is too often the case leave this mortal coil,but where are the next generation of insatiable rock fiends with a passion for self-destruction and intoxication; wine,women and the odd song? NOTHING’S SHOCKING. WELL NOT AN OLD MAN IN TIGHTS… 2010 S Dom Lawson ascertains whether Bring Me The Horizon will ever earn the love and respect of‘tr00’metallers.Yes their album is heavy,metal and awesome, but is that enough for the bullet belt massive when BMTH look like trendy models and own clothing companies? Is it more to do with tribal divisions or age boundaries than it is to do with headbanging? Cannibal Corpse: devils at a midnight mass Sylosis bassist Carl Parnell YLOSIS, EXIT TEN and THE DEFILED have been announced for the Hammer -sponsored Jä germeister Music Tour. Dates are: London Islington Academy November 9 (with NEVER MEANS MAYBE), Liverpool Academy 2 10 (with CARCER CITY), Newcastle Academy 2 11 (with LAVOTCHKIN), Glasgow ABC 2 12 (with MADMAN IS ABSOLUTE), Birmingham Academy 2 13 (with GUNDOGS). SONIC SYNDICATE are in the UK WILL BRING ME THE HORIZON EVER BE LOVED BY THE DENIM AND LEATHER BRIGADE? Welsh newcomers ANTERIOR play Swansea on October 31. ANNOTATIONS OF AN AUTOPSY, JOB FOR A COWBOY,TRIGGER THE BLOODSHED and WHITECHAPEL are all on the same tour round the UK from November 4–10. COLISEUM, BISON BC and KVELERTAK tour from November 17–21. BULLET FOR MY VALENTINE take BRING ME THE HORIZON and ATREYU on tour from December 6, ending at London’s Wembley Arena on December 12. Rob Zombie is finally coming back to the UK to play us some songs. As such,Mick Wall asks what he and the likes of Alice Cooper and Marilyn Manson have to shock us with anymore? Yes we still love ’em but is tearing a Bible or being dismembered onstage shocking or just a panto? Who is really shocking in rock today? And are they doing it onstage or is it the backstage antics that labels and managers are so keen to keep under wraps the real shocker? GET IT ALL AT METALHAMMER.CO.UK METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 23
NE WS O *C E MM NT *H V EA YF UC K M ING E TA L. Holy Grail (left to right): Eli Santana, Blake Mount, James-Paul Luna, James Larue, Tyler Meahl WHAT THE INDUSTRY’S GOT ITS SIGHTS ON THROATS OLIVER MITCHELL MANAGER (EX-JOHNNY TRUANT) HOT L META NEW RIFFS, F R ES FORGE! H FROM THE “We don’ t want to be pigeonholed as part of this throwback retro world” I’ve been following this band for some time and its incredible how far they have come. There is no bullshit with Throats. They’re a totally real band playing honest heavy fucking music. It’s depressing how fashionable and boring the copycat bands in England are these days. Throats are one of the few bands pushing the genre and doing it for the right reasons. Get to one of their shows or fuck off. WWW.MYSPACE.COM/THROATSOFGOLD James-Paul Luna HOLY GRAIL P ONLY A YEAR AFTER FORMING, THE FUTURE THRASHERS UNLEASH THEIR DEBUT. WTF? FROM California, USA. THEY SOUND LIKE If 3 Inches Of Blood liked Slayer and Overkill a little more than they do earlyJudas Priest. FIND OUT MORE www.myspace.com/ holygrail 24 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK asadena metallers Holy Grail have been on our radar since we heard their stunning EP late last year, and now they’re about to release their debut, Crisis In Utopia, via Prosthetic. We spoke to the guys when the EP, Improper Burial, came out, and as the quintet awaited the start of their Road To Download tour with Rise To Remain and Download festival itself. We catch up with frontman James-Paul Luna only to find that their revved-up thrash sound has had an injection of modernism. “The album is a step in a new direction,” he says.“While at the same time also taking us to the next level.” James explains that the raw breakneck sound of their EP has been pushed forward: the songwriting is more developed, making the musicality of the songs denser, and the sound has been modernised to make it as urgent and relevant as any band reaching for the future. James adds that a change of guitarists in no small part helped move the band up to the next level. The band are currently looking for replacements for guitarist James Larue and bassist Blake Mount; the rest of the band is completed by guitarist Eli Santana and drummer Tyler Meahl. “The solos are more complex, the choruses bigger, the riffs more complex. The lyrics are more developed too, because I worked with Tyler on almost every song. We planned out different concepts and then pared them down to our favourite ones.” The band have a rich blend of influences in evidence on the album, out October 25. Balancing the light with the dark is always important for an ambitious band, but the most important factor for Holy Grail was the future versus retro balance – they had to strike it right or risk being just another revivalist band destined to become a part of the past quicker than anything that inspired them. “We were conscious of the balance between old and new because we don’t want to be pigeonholed as part of this throwback retro movement – I don’t think it has much of a future. We really want to keep playing for as long as we can, 10–20 years down the road. Our guitarists and drummer listen to lots of modern metal, so that helps to balance it out with me because I throw in the retro ideas. “Each guy has their own inspirations,” says James.“I’m the ‘retro guy’ so I’m inspired by the greats like Dio, Rob Halford and Paul Di’Anno but the others are into stuff like Nevermore. There’s Lamb Of God-style riffing, Marty Friedman-style [ex-Megadeth] guitar solos and a lot of Yngwie Malmsteen. Eli has death metal influences: early Death, Carcass and Cannibal Corpse so a lot of his riffs gave a more tech edge than the EP.” Holy Grail come from the roots of heavy metal and thrash but have updated it for the new generation who need it fresh as well as the old guard who know their history. CRISIS IN UTOPIA IS OUT OCTOBER 25 VIA PROSTHETIC TRACES RUSS RUSSELL PRODUCER (NAPALM DEATH, THE WILDHEARTS) I’ve been listening to some new demos from these guys and I’ve gotta say they’ve got massive potential: symphonic blackened metal with a twist. Hopefully I’ll get to do some work with these guys next year. WWW.MYSPACE.COM/TRACESMETAL MAN HANDS STUART GILI-ROSS GALLOWS BASSIST/ MANAGER (TRC, FEED THE RHINO) I think everyone who likes really fast, heavy-as-hell hardcore should check out Man Hands from Kent. This is Gareth from November Coming Fire and a bunch of guys from some old notable UK hardcore bands making a glorious racket! For fans of Das Oath, Give Up The Ghost and November Coming Fire. WWW.MYSPACE.COM/MANSHANDS
NEW ROCK ANTHEMS FROM THE US LEGEND! THE SPACE LORD IS BACK! ALSO AVAILABLE AS A LIMITED EDITION DIGIBOOK INCLUDING 2 BONUS TRACKS! SPECIAL EDITION DELUXE BOX SET INCL. USB STICK OF EXTENSIVE BONUS MATERIAL AND LIMITED COLORED 2LP GATEFOLDEDITION INCL. ALBUM ON CD AVAILABLE AT WWW.NAPALMRECORDS.COM RELEASE DATE: 01.11.2010 MONSTER MAGNET ON TOUR! 18.11.10 CARDIFF / MILLENIUM MUSIC HALL 20.11.10 SHEFFIELD / CORPORATION 21.11.10 READING / SUB 89 22.11.10 SOUTHAMPTON / UNIVERSITY 23.11.10 BIRMINGHAM / HMV INSTITUTE 25.11.10 MANCHESTER / MOHO LIVE 26.11.10 LONDON / ELECTRIC BALLROOM KATRA - Out of the Ashes FEJD - EIFUR A Finnish gothic metal jewel! Medieval folk for fans of genuine Nordic sounds! release date: 01.11.2010 release date: 01.11.2010 iTUNES ORDER ONLINE TODAY AND RECEIVE A FREE 17-TRACK COMPILATION CD FEATURING A PREVIEW OF THE LATEST FROM NAPALM RECORDS: WWW.NAPALMRECORDS.COM
NE WS O *C E MM NT *H V EA YF UC K M ING E TA L. Spiritual Beggars: Zero tolerance DEFENDER FAITH METALLERS WHO TURN IT UP TO 11! K C A B K C A IN BL SALUTING METAL’S RETURNING HEROES! Patricia Thomas B lack metal may be full of curious characters, but few are more so than British-born Patricia Thomas.An elegantly attired lady of advanced years, she may look like she’s more suited to the opera, but she’s actually the manager some of the most infamous characters to have emerged from the scene, counting the likes of Shining’s unpredictable livewire, Niklas Kvarforth – a man known for onstage bloodletting and the snogging of bandmembers, and who once disappeared amid rumours of suicide for six months – and Skitliv vocalist and former former Mayhem frontman Maniac amongst her charges. Having worked as a Rolling Stones and Zeppelin-loving PA to an Arab prince and as a city admin professional, Patricia’s fi rst foray into the world of black metal was her discovery of Cradle Of Filth, but deciding to explore further, she found herself in contact with the owner of a Norwegian black metal store owner who introduced her to Maniac.After offering a helping hand, she soon became the genteel steer for large, erratic swathes of the Scandinavian underground.“Like Maniac says, black metal has nothing to do with age or gender,” Patricia explains, regarding her incongruous place in the scene.“It touched something inside me that was more than just music… I felt like I’d come home, really.” As for her handling of diffi cult individuals, her ability to play mother is surely an advantage: “Sometimes it’s nailbiting.You wake up some mornings and think,‘Oh my God, how am I going to cope with this?’ But there’s nothing you can’t handle.” Black magic woman: Patricia with Maniac “I’ m just a self-taught player and it’ s 100 per cent feel” MIke AMOTT SPIRITUAL BEGGARS ARCH ENEMY/OPETH SIDE-PROJECT RETURNS WITH NEW ALBUM AND FIREWIND’S FRONTMAN. I t’s taken them five years, but Spiritual Beggars are finally back with another great record, Return To Zero.What began as the indulgence project of Arch Enemy supremo Mike Amott in 1993 has become one of the most revered hard rock/ trad metal bands around, and currently features fellow Enemy Sharlee D’Angelo, drummer Ludwig Witt, Opeth keysman Per Wiberg and – replacing Grand Magus frontman JB – Apollo Papathanasio of Firewind.We got the lowdown from Mike: WE ASSUME THAT JB HAD TO LEAVE BECAUSE OF COMMITMENTS TO GRAND MAGUS NOW THAT THEIR CAREER HAS KICKED UP A GEAR. “Yes, and he was being sexually harassed, ha ha! No, it was exactly that. He was always positive about coming back, and I’ve stayed in touch, but I think he felt the pressure. It’s sad in some ways because he’s such a cool guy but Grand Magus has a momentum and I don’t want to interfere with that.” HOW DO YOU SEPARATE ARCH ENEMY RIFFS FROM SPIRITUAL BEGGARS RIFFS? “Arch Enemy is more extreme and Beggars is more trad metal, inspired more by Deep Purple, Rainbow and Sabbath. I grew up with punk and hardcore then Slayer and Metallica and Megadeth, so it was only after that that I went back to UFO, and so on. After grindcore, there was a feeling of ‘I’m getting a bit sick of this’. I wanted to see what was going on before that and I discovered Thin Lizzy and Uriah Heep and these great bands that then inspired me to start Beggars in 1993. I’ll know quite quickly if a riff is Beggars or Enemy – Beggars is more blues-based, I guess. To me, I’m just a self-taught player and it’s 100 per cent feel.” WHO WRITES THE LYRICS? “I wrote the lyrics before Apollo joined. As with JB, he didn’t want to contribute too much; he just enjoyed coming in and singing. I’ve written a few lyrics over the past five years and put it together for this album. There’s a theme through some of the lyrics of moving on to the next phase. When Ludwig and I were in the studio, we had no management, no singer and no label but we had some killer music so we felt we were really starting from scratch again, hence the title, Return To Zero.” SO WHAT DID APOLLO BRING? “Apollo had a lot of positive creative ideas. He embellished them and took it to the next level. It’s great that he’s local too, so he could come and work on things more than JB. It was fun.” WHAT’S IT LIKE HAVING YOUR GIRLFRIEND, ANGELA GOSSOW, MANAGE THE BAND? “It’s great. She’s been doing Arch Enemy for the last couple of years, it keeps it in the family. It was really simple – I could take my mind off worrying about negotiating new deals. Trust is a big part of it as well. I know that she has our best interests at heart.” HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT PEOPLE WHO SAY SPIRITUAL BEGGARS ARE BETTER THAN ARCH ENEMY? “To be crass, it’s a win-win for me!” RETURN TO ZERO IS OUT NOW VIA INSIDEOUT what? Hard rock/trad metal side-project proves bigger than the sum of its parts. for fans of Grand Magus, Clutch, Fu Manchu. musthave classic DEMONS SPV, 2005. fi nd out more www.myspace.com/ spiritualbeggars
The new album from CRADLE OF FILTH Darkly, Darkly, Venus Aversa Available from November 1st www.peaceville.com/cradleoffilth SPECIAL OFFER: £2 OFF AT Enter the promotional code DDVA2010 to buy Darkly, Darkly, Venus Aversa for £6.95 at www.play.com* *Subject to availability. Offer ends 08/11/2010 23:59:59.
NE W C S* O E MM NT *H V EA YF UC W K M ING E TA L. TATTS LIFE MORE INK FROM THE WORLD OF METAL hich was your first tattoo? It was the one I have on my leg. It’s a treble clef in the shape of a dragon and a rose. Actually, our singer Richard designed it. I wanted something that symbolised music and also I love roses, so I thought his design was really good. I got it done when I was 20, so I got my first one pretty late. SONIC SY NDICATE Karin Axelsson T ell us about the bass headstock on your arm: That one’s by a guy called Marcus – he has a website called www.funnyfarmtattoo.se. The headstock is from the first bass I bought myself, an ESP S404. I told the guy I wanted to have my bass and something around it and to do whatever he wanted. I didn’t actually see the design until the day I went in to get it done; I knew that he was a good artist so I trusted him. I said I’d sit for as long as it took – and that was five hours. It’s the tattoo I’m most proud of. W hat came next? Next I got the Aries symbol at the base of my back. I’m not really into horoscopes, but I’m quite a typical Aries. I’m pretty fierce and I get mood swings, I know what I want and I’m stubborn with it too. Afterwards, I got the tribal bits around it done by someone else T ell us about your right flank: That was all done in one four-hour sitting by a Danish guy at a Swedish studio called Darkside Tattoo. I had a picture of a tattoo that I liked and he drew a version straight onto me, free-hand. I was in a lot of pain. He told me to stop whining – just lie down and shut up! because I wanted it to look better, I don’t think the guy did it very well. Just to prove it, when the next tattooist did the tribal bits, he said that he needed to fill in the Aries sign again as well. A W ny future ink plans? I think I’m going to have some more colour. Everything is black apart from my bass, so I’m thinking of something to fill the roses in a bit. Also something on my foot, flowers of course. I thought I might also get the Sonic Syndicate logo, but I can’t decide where. I don’t want to have a lot of tattoos just for the sake of it. hich is your favourite? I love the bass headstock on my arm. I also love the bass clefs on my wrists. They’re the most recent. A nd why roses? I love roses. I realise I have quite a few tattoos with roses. I’m not sure what it is about roses, I just really, really love them for some reason. I think it’s an art thing. I have some on my side too. F AN TATTS T he best of readers’ band ink ✯ Billi/ Metallica 28 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK TATT-DOS AND TATT-DON’TS MICK HUTSON ✯ Danny/ Heaven & Hell/Dimebag ✯ Marksy / Slipknot I think that people should print out an image of what they want and put it on their wall and look at it for six months to see if they still want it after all that time. You shouldn’t get something quickly for the sake of it. I’m very conscious about what I do and worried, so that’s what I did with mine. I made sure I wasn’t going to get bored of them.
DÅATH AVAILABLE NOW THE CROWN - DOOMSDAY KING The return of THE CROWN – now feat. Jonas Stålhammar from Utumno / God Macabre on vocals. Available as standard CD, ltd. Digipak incl. bonus-disc (4 bonus tracks), 180gr vinyl + entire album on CD and digital download Available from 18th October - ‘Dååth’ Dååth’s much anticipated self-titled third full length album co-produced by the renowned Mark Lewis (Trivium, Devildriver) and Eyal Levi (guitars) available on CD & digital download www.myspace.com/daath www.myspace.com/thecrownonlineswe T R I P T Y KO N THE STUNNING NEW ALBUM AVAILABLE FROM 25TH OCTOBER ‘DAYS OF DEFIANCE’ TRIPTYKON - SHATTER FEATURING GUITARIST GUS G available from 25th October ON LTD CD DIGIPACK / CD / LP / DL www.myspace.com/firewind All-new 5-track / 28-minutes EP “Shatter” available on CD & digital download Includes 3 non-album songs from the sessions of TRIPTYKON’s acclaimed “Eparistera Daimones” debut as well as 2 live cover versions of Celtic Frost Celtic Frost’s “Dethroned Emperor” features guest lead vocals by Nocturno Culto of Darkthrone/Sarke www.myspace.com/triptykonofficial www.centurymediashop.com
NE WS O *C MM EN T E *H AV YF UC G KIN ME TA L THE BIG QUESTION SHOULD DREAM THEATER CALL IT A DAY? T he easy answer, is, of course, no, as the band are already intent on carrying on without Mike Portnoy. Obviously the news has come as a shock in prog circles, more because of what Mike Portnoy stands for in the progressive rock world. And while that is unlikely to change, the absence of the garrulous New Yorker from the Dream Theater ranks might prove more problematic, more for what he did outside of drumming for the band, than his musical input. It is perfectly feasible, given the talent on offer from the likes of John Petrucci et al, that they’ll come up trumps with a new Dream Theater record. How the fans react is a different matter of course. There’s absolutely no reason why Mike’s departure should affect Dream Theater’s popularity. However, Hammer’s recent online poll suggests the metal fraternity have other ideas. In prog-world there seems to have been less of a knee-jerk reaction as fans seem to have taken a step back to see how Go online to order your FREE 180-page EMP catalogue, packed with over 10, 000 items of wicked heavy stuff! things pan out. This in itself is unsurprising given the multitude of prog-related endeavours Mike is involved in, so there’s a ‘more the merrier’ attitude from the ever-eager prog fans. And whilst there’s a gut feeling at Prog Towers that Mike Portnoy will return to the Dream Theater fold in time, one can only wonder how AX7 are feeling. For although Mike has clearly stated he’s not joining the band fulltime, M Shadows is in Classic Rock Presents Prog this very month extolling the virtues of both Mike Portnoy and Dream Theater. Talk about timing! Mike Portnoy: Dream turned nightmare? JERRY EWING, CLASSIC PROG EDITOR W W W. E M P- O N L I N E .C O.U K HAMMER ANSWERS Y OUR WAR CRIES! BOOKSSELL… When my new Metal Hammer came the other day, I had a look through the Dave Mustaine book, and saw that I could get a signed copy of A Life In Metal because I’m a Metal Hammer reader. This pissed me the fuck off, because I’d bought it the day it went up for pre-order, and after buying a ticket for Korpiklaani (who were fucking amazing at Bloodstock) I’ve no money. I did get the awesome Children Of Bodom to sign some stuff at Bloodstock, though – I guess some signed stuff is better than none. Also, meeting Alexander Milas and being jizzed on by Hitler during GWAR at Bloodstock was awesome! Fucking love the mag! BEN DONALDSON, EMAIL We hope you enjoy the Mustaine book, Ben. Maybe you can get him to sign it some day! METALCASE I have been buying Metal Hammer for over two years and it is single-handedly the best metal resource on the planet. I don’t think metal music would have such a profound following in the UK if it wasn’t for your magazine, so thank you! 30 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK GOODDAMNED The two The Damned Things demos on MySpace sound awesome, combining all the best bits of their other bands – Anthrax, Fall Out Boy and Every Time I Die. FOB have three talented members, it’s just a certain someone gives them a bad name. DAN TURNER, EMAIL We just hope it doesn’t take as long to release as the forthcoming Anthrax album! JAMES JEFFERIES Thanks, James, it’s responses like this that TEXTOFFENDER make all the blood, sweat and bubble jet ink spills worth it! Thank you for your loyalty! Dave Mustaine invented Devin Townsend. JOE TURNER People can bang on Ozzy all they want. Truth is, he still owns and will forever be The Prince Of Darkness! TOM LESTAD BERRY BRINGTHEHATE I’m not a Bring Me The Horizon fan, nor am I a ‘hater’. To be honest, I really couldn’t care less about them. But your pathetic way of trying to make them somehow credible by getting people you perceive to be ‘true metal’ to say they’re good and hope a fan will suddenly like them was ridiculous. People can choose whether they like them or not and don’t need to have it rammed down their throat. Besides that, good magazine. readers respect can hear that it’s a) metal, and b) really rather good. IHAVEADREAM I’ve been a Dream Theater fan for a long time, and whilst it’s Mike Portnoy’s ‘baby’, John Petrucci was a huge part of the writing process as well. I think they should just take a nice few years off to really get the juices flowing and return with a storming album with Portnoy back behind the kit. TERRY, MANCHESTER LEE MACBRIDE We played it to people like Obituary to prove that people judge Bring Me The Horizon by their appearance and that people Hammer Dream Theater have released at least one album every three years since 1989 – we’re sure they wouldn’t mind a break either! Ozzfest was so fucking good! Loved getting cummed on by Ozzy’s hose. Anyone else get their boobs out for Steel Panther? LAUREN GULWELL
KORNTOBEWILD Ozzfest was epic! Skindred were amazing and Steel Panther were hilarious. Murderdolls were brilliant but Korn definitely stole the show. Ozzy Osbourne himself was legendary. For someone who had injured his back he didn’t show it. His intro video was hilarious and made everyone laugh. ‘Vampires are pussies, I’m the prince of fucking darkness’ lol. Loved how he did Road To Nowhere in tribute to Dio. DVD, please! HAYDEN, EMAIL What a great day it was: great to see a return to form for both Korn and the Prince Of Darkness. THICKANDTHIN I’m probably one of the biggest Avenged Sevenfold fans and I want to say that A7X are the strongest people I’ve ever seen. They went through hard times and I love to say that they don’t give a fuck about what people Noli me vocare, ego te vocabo respect them. If only Iron Maiden and Metallica would drop by. Hopefully Ah Wee with Heaven with all the FREDERIQUE Shall Burn’s Marcus bands BLAIS-POULIOT, coming EMAIL over, more people will start A7X deserve every ounce of listening to metal and maybe praise for being a band who we could even have our own metal radio station. have not only taken heavy music to the masses and AH WEE, SINGAPORE persevered through tragedy but touched so many fans’ It’s great to know that even lives in positive ways. after 40 years, metal is still spreading around the world! think about ’em. I’ve done many things wrong, and had dark thoughts because of Jimmy’s death, but they saved my life. FARBEAST I live in Singapore and recently there’s been an influx of metal bands playing, which is always good news for the metalheads here. Slayer, Linkin Park, Megadeth and many others have all played here. These bands all play to bigger crowds in the US and Europe yet they are willing to stop by this little island nation and play to hundreds of people. For this, I really ONENIL I most certainly cannot claim to be a fan of either Slipknot or Avenged Sevenfold but Philip Malone (p31, issue 210) is a complete fucking troglodyte. “Slipknot are as metal as a paper cup” – are you fucking serious? You fascistic, elitist snob. Frankly it’s a fucking disgrace that Malone calls himself a metal fan because doing so cheapens the very existence of all those genuine metal fans who understand the meaning of ‘each to their own’ and ‘live and let live’. Malone, stop chatting shit about something you clearly have no understanding of. BAZINGA, DARTFORD We have to say we wondered if he’d sent that letter to the wrong magazine… pop-rock in Hammer? Where?! PHILROUND2 Phil fucking Malone! Saying Metal Hammer isn’t metal? What a load of shit. He is your classic closed-minded elitist. I buy Metal Hammer because it’s the only magazine that truly represents a wide variety of metal! Even stuff that isn’t metal. It’s people like this Phil Malone who give us metalheads a bad name. ADAM PIRMOHAMED, EMAIL …7, 8, 9, 10 and he’s out! Ding ding! Thanks, Adam. Ask jurgen! SEND DEATH THREATS TO WWW.MYSPACE.COM/JURGENTOKSVIG bottle of Viking Marauder poppers, we went out to have a look. I decided that I could see the cover of Dawn Of The Black Hearts on the path and while getting on my hands and knees to point this out, Nils leapt on top of me and rode me up and down the path like a bucking warhorse. My guttural and necrotic ululating caused the fat man to come to the door aghast. Nils put his mind at rest by shouting: “I know! Who’s going to come first –me or the police? ” It was less amusing when he had to repeat it in front of a local magistrate five days later. Dear Jurgen, Why do metalheads get such a shit time from people who listen to shite? Why do we get called emo twats, for instance? And what would you recommend for paving the way over these cum-stain pricks? MATTHEW LARGE, VIA MYSPACE Jurgen says: Aiiieeeeeee! My neighbour, a fat bald man who is always complaining about the noise of Darkthrone emanating from our flat, awoke me and Nils from our slumber with the sound of a jackhammer on Saturday morning as he was having crazy paving laid outside his house. That night after three litres of Jä ger and a What’s with the elitism? Unite under the banner of heavy metal. And kill MCR. ALAN SHARIF Dear Jurgen, How did you and your unholy cohorts celebrate the Pope’s visit to the UK? CAUSTIC REIGN 666, VIA MYSPACE Jurgen says: Listen hard, British weaselfucker. In fact, get on your knees, open wide and take my giant Norwegian balls of truth deep in your mouth while I beat out a message of righteousness in Braille on your forehead with my throbbing spam wand. Nils and I reformed our old band to cover the Dead Kennedys and Napalm Death classic Nazi Punks Fuck Off, but with the lyrics changed to ‘Nazi Pope fuck off,’ in honour of Pope Benedict XVI, a former member of the Hitler Youth. Thinking about it… I wonder if he likes Burzum… For those who doubt Slipknot, you all shall be punished. JAMES YOUNGBLOOD Enough of Linkin Park, the real disaster is Mike Portnoy leaving Dream Theater. DAVID PACHOLOK Dear Jurgen, On your MySpace profile it says you like Cradle Of Filth and Children Of Bodom. Isn’t it actually the case that you’re not actually into black metal and it would be more correct to say that you’re a fan of rubbish pop music? AGORAPHOBIC POPEBLEED, VIA MYSPACE Jurgen says: Aiiieeeeeeeee! Listen to me, you goat-rimming thundercunt. Bodom shred hard and girl group Cradle Of Filth all look so sexy and hot in their cute little leather dresses. Mmmm, Dani Minogue from Cradle… Aiiieeeeeee! Nils! The squeegee, there’s a spillage! Dear Jurgen, I was looking through my sister’s fashion mag recently, searching for a page suitable for me to wipe my true metal arse on when I came across a picture of some giggling model buffoons in a London photoshoot… wearing black metal t-shirts. Why can’t these fuckpigs leave our shit alone? RAY, VIA MYSPACE Jurgen says: Well said, friend. Nils concurs. I don’t know what the answer is. Burn down a church? Explain, in detail, why Bring Me The Horizon are not metal without mentioning their image. You can’t. WIL DARRAN JONES METAL HAMMER, 2 BALCOMBE ST, LONDON, NW1 6NW EMAIL chainmail@futurenet.co.uk FAX 020 7042 4619 Editorial EDITOR ALEXANDER MILAS alexander.milas@futurenet.com DEPUTY EDITOR (FEATURES) CAREN GIBSON caren.gibson@futurenet.com PRODUCTION EDITOR VANESSA HARDS vanessa.hards@futurenet.com EDITOR AT LARGE (INCOMINGS & WEB) JAMES GILL james.gill@futurenet.com REVIEWS AND SUBTERRANEA EDITOR JONATHAN SELZER jonathan.selzer@futurenet.com ONLINE EDITOR TERRY BEZER terry.bezer@futurenet.com MANAGING EDITOR ALEX BURROWS alex.burrows@futurenet.com PUBLISHER CHRIS INGHAM Art ART EDITOR JAMES ISAACS james.isaacs@futurenet.com DEPUTY ART EDITOR LEWIS SOMERSCALES lewis.somerscales@futurenet.com Contributors: Ryan Bird, Toby Cook, Malcolm Dome, John Doran, Jerry Ewing, Kat Halstead, Dom Lawson, Dave Ling, Gillen McAllister, Joel McIver, Ken McIntyre, Greg Moffitt, Mö rat, Dayal Patterson, Natasha Scharf, Mick Wall, Philip Wilding, Nik Young. cover: Steve Brown,John McMurtrie PHOTOGRAPHERS: Joe Giron, Mick Hutson, Tina Korhonen, John McMurtrie, Alonson Murillo, Naki, Sam Scott-Hunter, Ester Segarra, James Sharrock, Neil Zlozower. SENIOR CREATIVE TEAM CREATIVE DIRECTOR BOB ABBOTT DESIGN DIRECTOR MATTHEW WILLIAMS EDITORIAL DIRECTOR JIM DOUGLAS ADVERTISING SALES DIRECTOR MALCOLM STOODLEY T 020 7042 4156 E mstoodley@futurenet.com AD SALES DIRECTOR ENTERTAINMENT GREG ASKEW T 020 7042 4106 E greg.askew@futurenet.com BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT MANAGER IAN WILLIAMSON T 020 7042 4102 E ian.williamson@futurenet.com SALES EXECUTIVE JOHN BISCOMB T 020 7042 4255 E john.biscomb@futurenet.com SALES EXECUTIVE CLAIRE ADAMS T 020 7042 4104 E claire.adams@futurenet.com CLASSIFIED SALES EXECUTIVE SUSHMA SHARMA T 020 7042 4261 E sushma.sharma@futurenet.com ADVERTISING PRODUCTION ALEX SAINT T 01225 732 4347 E alex.saint@futurenet.com DIRECTOR OF INSERTS NICK WEATHERALL T 020 7042 4155 E nick.weatherall@futurenet.com FUTURE 360 SNR PROJECT MANAGER CLAIRE PURSGLOVE T 020 7042 4134 E claire.pursglove@futurenet.com MARKETING & DISTRIBUTION GROUP MARKETING MANAGER PHILIPPA NEWMAN T 020 7042 4051 E philippa.newman@futurenet.com PRODUCT MANAGER DANIEL RIDLEY T 01225 442244 E daniel.ridley@futurenet.com BRAND MANAGER HELEN MORRIS T 020 7042 4057 E helen.morris@futurenet.com TRADE MARKETING MANAGER SALIMA MERALI T 020 7042 4052 E salima.merali@futurenet.com MARKETING CAMPAIGN MANAGER SENEL ALI T 020 7042 4053 E senel.ali@futurenet.com PRINT & PRODUCTION PRODUCTION MANAGER RALPH STRINGER PRODUCTION CONTROLLER KEELY MILLER ADVERTISING PRODUCTION NATHAN DREWETT FUTURE PUBLISHING LIMITED MANAGING DIRECTOR ROBERT PRICE CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER SIMON WEAR EDITORIAL DIRECTOR JIM DOUGLAS GROUP SENIOR EDITOR AUBREY DAY EDITOR IN CHIEF SCOTT ROWLEY ADVERTISING DIRECTOR CLARE DOVE TRADE MARKETING DIRECTOR RACHAEL COCK HEAD OF INTERNATIONAL LICENSING TIM HUDSON SUBSCRIPTIONS T 0844 848 2852 E music.subs@futurenet.com For annual subscriptions to Metal Hammer, see p.77 NEXT ISSUE ON SALE NOVEMBER 17, 2010 PRINTED BY WILLIAM GIBBONS DISTRIBUTED BY SEYMOUR DISTRIBUTION LTD, 2 EAST POULTRY AVENUE, LONDON, EC1A 9PT TEL 020 7429 4000 Want to work for Future? visit www.futurenet.com/jobs AmemberoftheAudit BureauofCirculations 41,777 01Jul2009-31Dec2009 Future produces carefully targeted special-interest magazines, websites and events for people who share a passion. We publish more than 170 magazines and websites and 100 international editions of our titles are published across the world. CHIEF EXECUTIVE STEVIE SPRING Future plc is a public company NON-EXECUTIVE CHAIRMAN: ROGER PARRY quoted on the London Stock GROUP FINANCE DIRECTOR: JOHN BOWMAN Exchange (symbol:FUTR). T+44 (0)20 7042 4000 (London) T+44 (0) 1225 442244 (Bath) WWW.FUTUREPLC.COM © FuturePublishingLimited2010.Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthismagazinemaybe usedorreproducedwithoutthewrittenpermissionofthepublisher.FuturePublishing Limited(companynumber2008885)isregisteredinEnglandandWales.Theregistered offi ceofFuturePublishingLimitedisatBeaufordCourt,30MonmouthStreet,BathBA1 2BW.Allinformationcontainedinthismagazineisforinformationonlyandis,asfaraswe areaware,correctatthetimeofgoingtopress.Futurecannotacceptanyresponsibilityfor errorsorinaccuraciesinsuchinformation.Readersareadvisedtocontactmanufacturers andretailersdirectlywithregardtothepriceofproducts/servicesreferredtointhis magazine. Ifyousubmitunsolicitedmaterialtous,youautomaticallygrantFuturea licencetopublishyoursubmissioninwholeorinpartin alleditionsofthemagazine,includinglicensededitions worldwideandinanyphysicalordigitalformat throughouttheworld.Anymaterialyousubmitissent atyourriskand,althougheverycareistaken,neither Futurenoritsemployees,agentsorsubcontractors shallbeliableforlossordamage. Wearecommittedtoonlyusingmagazinepaperwhichisderivedfromwell managed,certifi edforestryandchlorine-freemanufacture.Future Publishinganditspapersuppliers havebeenindependentlycertifi ed inaccordancewiththerulesofthe FSC(ForestStewardshipCouncil).
2 # 1 # NT 3 # NT FRONT FRO FRO NvEailWab!le NEW! able Also avaoilodie! as a h A ! as hoodie 1 # 2 # K BACK 3 # K BAC BAC 4 # NT FRO 4 # K Hoodies available in zip-up and pull over! Also available in white! BAC ONLY 6.66! £ FA C E IT – band shirts are so last year! What you really need across your torso to pledge your allegiance to rock’n’roll is an über-swanky Metal Hammer t-shirt or hoodie. You’ll be the scourge of the Daily Mail readership by wearing your rockreading credentials proudly on your chest. SUPPORT YOUR METAL NATION! All t-shirts and hoodies are available in medium, large, x-large and xx-large, and the t-shirts also come in girly fit. See the website for prices. To order, simply point your mouse at w w w .me t a lh a mme r me r c h .c o m or call 01273 604 300. Make sure you’re the darkestdressed metalhead around with abrand new Metal Hammer shirt! +44 (0)1273 604 300 W W W .META LHA MMERMERC H.C OM W W W .MY SPA C E.C OM/META LHA MMERMERC H

VITAL STATISTICS! INNOVATIVE 5 WATT VALVE AMPLIFIER 1 X ECC83 AND 1 X 12BH7 VALVES UNIQUE PUSH PULL POWER AMP DESIGN AWARD-WINNING HT PEDAL PREAMP TWO FOOTSWITCHABLE CHANNELS TWO 1 X 10-INCH CELESTION SPEAKER CABINETS ENHANCED TONE CONTROLS PATENT-APPLIED-FOR INFINITE SHAPE FEATURE (ISF) FULLY EQUIPPED FOR STUDIO OR PRACTICE SPEAKER EMULATED OUTPUT WITH 1 X 12 OR 4 X 12 VOICING EFFECTS LOOP WITH EFFECTS LEVEL SWITCH FOOTSWITCH INCLUDED Y OU FEELIN G LUCKY , P UNK? WINAFIREWIND GUS G BLACKSTARAMP! GET all fired up! H ammer and Blackstar Amplifiers are happy to give one lucky person the chance to win an HT-5s Mini Stack as used by Firewind guitar whiz Gus G – whose new album Days Of Defiance is out on October 25. The HT-5s is the ultimate studio and practice amp, packing all the great tone and innovative features of the award-winning HT valve pedals into a twochannel, footswitchable valve combo. The patent-applied-for ISF (Infinite Shape Feature) circuit gives you infinite adjustment over the characteristics of the tone control network and takes you from the USA to the UK and anywhere in between. Now you can effectively design your own tone and finally find ‘the sound in your head’. All you have to do to enter is answer the following poser correctly: WHERE ARE FIREWIND FROM? A) Greece (text Blag10 A to 87474) B) Turkey (text Blag10 B to 87474) C) Poland (text Blag10 C to 87474) TEXT ENTRIES: SEND THE TEXT MESSAGE BLAG WITH THE COMPETITION NUMBER AND LETTER PRINTED NEXT TO WHAT YOU THINK IS THE CORRECT ANSWER. FOR EXAMPLE, IF YOU THINK FIREWIND COME FROM POLAND, SEND THE TEXT BLAG10 C TO 87474. POSTAL ENTRIES: BLAG IT 211, METAL HAMMER, 2 BALCOMBE ST, LONDON, NW1 6NW. ENTRIES CAN BE RECEIVED AT ANY TIME BETWEEN OCTOBER 18, 2010 AND NOVEMBER 23, 2010. TEXTS WILL BE CHARGED AT £1 EACH, FOR CORRECT OR INCORRECT ANSWERS. By sending your entry you agree to these competition rules and you confirm you are happy to receive details of future offers and promotions from Future Publishing Limited and carefully selected third parties. If you do not want to receive information relating to future offers and promotions, please include the word STOP at the end of your text message or at the end of your postal entry. The winner will be drawn at random from all correct entries received by the closing date. Only UK residents aged 16 years and over may enter this competition. No employees of Future plc or any of its group companies or the employees of any entity which has been involved with the administration of this competition or any member of their households may enter this competition. No responsibility is accepted for entries delayed or lost in the post. Proof of postage will not be accepted as proof of receipt. All prizes are as stated above and there is no cash alternative. We reserve the right to replace any competition prize with one of a similar value. If you have any query or complaint in relation to the prize, you should contact Metal Hammer. If you are a winner of the competition you accept that Future Publishing Limited has the right (without additional payment or seeking permission) to use your name, address and likeness for the purpose of announcing the winner of the competition and for elated promotional purposes. All entries must be received by the closing date. No purchase necessary. Future Publishing Limited, 30 Monmouth St, Bath, BA1 2BW. 34 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK
NEW ALBUM OUT NOW EXCLUSIVE PREORDER PACK GET YOUR MOST FAVOURITE MERCHANDISE AT


NE Some might suggest that the road might be a little busy, especially after Mike catches one female pedestrian on the arm, another car on the bumper and a guy who joins in to great applause. Oh, and the police roll past to puffedout chests from the bands. Cocky? Definitely. WS *C OM ME NT *H EA VY FU CK ING ME TA Chris was still angry about being forced to do ‘the dancing game’ T he prospect of ramshackle punk rock from Lower Than Atlantis and a vicious assault of British beatdown metal is clearly a combination that people relish, and members of The King Blues, Architects and Dead Swans have joined fans to watch. “Some people have said it’s a strange pairing,” says Chris.“We sound pretty different but we’re both from the same place, our music shares the same roots.” Lower Than Atlantis sidle self-consciously onto the stage in signature fashion. As ever, Mike just can’t bring himself to go through the cliché d motions of saying ‘Hello Brighton, how’re you doing? ’ introducing the band, asking people to buy a t-shirt and so on. Instead they batter through their brief set with short breaks in-between songs as they retune. Bassist Dec looks white as a sheet and sways as if on the verge of passing out. Just after treating the crowd to a new song, guitarist Ben involuntarily vomits on himself, his guitar and the floor. He looks as surprised as we do. Meanwhile, Mike is in the crowd and has headbutted someone in the front row. ady A Dead Swan heckles “Who does he think he is? ” TRC: shters charac to which Mike retorts,“I will come over there and punch you in the face, mate.” Immediately after playing, Dec nips off for a quick vomit too. Should have gone for the Maltesers… Whereas a few people are still dubious about how to take Lower Than Atlantis, everyone knows exactly what to do when TRC hit the stage (and the floor – the six-piece are spilling off the small stage). The pit opens up and a handful of two-steppers lead the charge on one of the most brutal and vicious sets Hammer has ever seen. Chris owns the room like a Greek hero: when he says ‘jump’, we say ‘how high? ’, he and Ant bouncing and flipping in and out of couplets. Onstage, TRC guitarist Charlie brings some heavy metal flair with some perfectly scattered solos and fellow guitarist Ben’s right hand becomes a blur of riffs. The whole show is a whirling, charging, frenetic attack of tourniquet-tight tunes and a cocksure swagger that delivers with every guttural scream and ranted lyric. TRC are a perfect explosion of hardcore violence with a British metal musicality and Pantera-esque grooves. They don’t look like the metalheads of yore. But that’s because they’re not interested in the past, they’re pushing into the future with a sound to match. They look like the guy in the Audi TT who tried to chat up your girlfriend, despite the fact you were right there. Cocky? Do you need to ask? All too quickly it’s over and we’re outside assessing the damage to our eardrums. The answer is ‘lots’ as the bands pile back into their vans and, after a few more drinks, head back home to London through the night. The rest of the tour stretches out in front of them like the line of cats’ eyes vanishing into the darkness of the unlit motorway. Though quiet earlier, Charlie is alight with chatter now, explaining how important ‘integrity’ is to TRC. “A band’s nothing without integrity, is it? ” he says. “There’s nothing fake about us, and there’s nothing fake about our music. To be honest, it’s the only way we know how to be, know what I mean? ” It looked lik could only e fun but and hospitaend in tears l bout s nothing fakeha “There’ s not ing ’ us, and thereu r music” fake about o CHA RLIE WILSON TRC hinted that they’d like some ‘space’… THE REVOLUTION CONTINUES EP IS OUT NOW VIA THIRTY DAYS OF NIGHT RECORDS ROCK BY NUMBERS 19 bottles of Desperados drunk 38 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK 2 number of people who vomited 3, 598, 982 miles per hour Ben’s strumming hand is apparently moving TRC’ S AAA ANTICS BLOW BY BLOW. 2 0% fights narrowly avoided chances of Chris getting beaten in a fight L
Escalator Music, Future Noise, Triple G Music, Advance Promotions, AMG and Tidal Concerts presents, in association with: 15th ANNIVERSARY UK TOUR plus very, very special guests Wednesday 15th December 2010 – Sound Control, Manchester www.soundcontrolmanchester.co.uk - 0161 236 0340 / www.future-noise.co.uk Thursday 16th December 2010 – Ivory Blacks, Glasgow www.triplegmusic.com / www.ivoryblacks.co.uk - 0141 248 4114 Friday 17th December 2010 – The Asylum, Birmingham www.theasylumvenue.co.uk - 0121 233 1109 Saturday 18th December 2010 – Talking Heads, Southampton www.thetalkingheads.co.uk - 02380 678446 Sunday 19th December 2010 – O2 Academy, Islington, London* www.o2academyislington.co.uk - 0207 288 4400 *with Obiat www.orange-goblin.com www.myspace.com/theorangegoblin www.myspace.com/solacedoom www.myspace.com/firebirdblues www.metalhammer.co.uk www.jagermeister.co.uk
NE WS *C O E MM NT *H V EA YF UC K M ING E TA L. “ LADY GAGA IS LIKE A BREATH OF FRESH AIR” ” KIRK WINDSTEIN WILL IR ELAND 40 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK
T H E G O DS O F S THAT SHAPED THEI METAL CHOOSE THS:ECAARELNBGUIBM R LIVE SO WORD N S KIRK WINDSTEIN The fi rst album I had sex to is... A kid asks me what metal is. I’ d hand him a copy of... Van Halen Judas Priest WOMEN AND CHILDREN FIRST Warner, 1980 “It happened to be on the turntable! I wasn’t going to waste any time looking through my records! If I could do it over I’d choose Kiss Alive!, but Van Halen was fine. It could’ve been Peter, Paul and Mary for all I cared! All I knew was I was finally getting some and in the words of David Lee Roth, Everybody Wants Some. It was 30 years ago. Jesus, I’m getting old!” BRITISH STEEL Columbia, 1980 “From the album cover and imagery of the band to the songs, guitar tones, Rob’s vocals etc, this album sums up metal. As much as I love Maiden, to me they’re almost a prog rock/metal band. Judas Priest are simply put the quintessential heavy metal band. In my opinion, British Steel was the first true heavy metal album. I still jam on it quite often!” The fi rst album I bought was... The album I’ d want played at my funeral is... Elton John Thin Lizzy GREATEST HITS DJM, 1974 “It’s not exactly the heaviest of albums, but it’s great music. It did lead me to take piano lessons, which I quit when they wouldn’t teach me Elton songs! Who could have guessed where it would lead? !” DEDICATION Vertigo, 1991 “It’s not really an album, it’s more of a best-of. This is a great collection of some of Lizzy’s finest tunes. I’ve never heard a lyricist tell a story the way that Phil Lynott did. If you want to see a grown man cry, put on some Lizzy. When I’m really focused in on it, it’s hard for me not to shed a tear ! It’s some of the most beautiful music these ears have ever heard!” I break the speed limit to... Motö rhead No one will believe I own a copy of... OVERKILL Bronze, 1979 “Anything by Motö rhead or Saxon! I have hearing damage, so I don’t normally listen to music really loud, but if I’m playing Motö rhead or Saxon I can’t help but turn the fucker up all the way! This leads me to drive faster. Years ago I nearly totalled my mom’s car listening to No Sleep ’Til Hammersmith.” Lady Gaga THE FAME Interscope, 20 0 8 “Sorry, but she’s got talent! In a pop world where 99 per cent of the artists can’t sing without a pitch corrector and lip synch live, Lady Gaga writes all of her own music and lyrics, and doesn’t lip synch. Yes, I know the costumes are a bit much, but if I hear a Gaga song I can’t get it out of my head! After seeing an interview with her, she’s very down to earth and in a world of talentless, bitchy divas, she’s a breath of fresh air! I know I’ll hear about this one! Ha ha!” The album that should not be… Britney Spears BLACKOUT Jive, 20 0 7 “Anything by boy bands, Britney Spears etc. I just cannot stand it when they take someone, write songs for them, teach them how to dance and then sit back and watch the teens buy it up like it’s the greatest thing in the world! Why worship an average karaoke singer who can remember dance steps? ” The album I’ d want to be remembered for is... DOWN NOLA Elektra, 1995 “NOLA and/or [Crowbar’s] Odd Fellows Rest. I’m very proud to have been a part of them. I have a special place in my heart for everything I’ve ever recorded but these two stand out. For God’s sake, half of the Down set is off of NOLA and Planets Collide is the best Crowbar song I’ve ever written.” The best album artwork is... The album I wish I’ d made is... Queen A NIGHT AT THE OPERA EMI, 1975 “The songwriting, diversity of song styles, harmony vocals, production and overall musicianship make this masterpiece still relevant. Brian May has the most original – and best– guitar tone I’ve ever heard. Freddie Mercury was an absolute genius and just an amazing vocalist and writer. If Crowbar ever do another cover song, it’d probably be I’m In Love With My Car. Weird, but I know we could do it justice.” Iron Maiden KILLERS EMI, 1981 “Anything by Maiden, they’re all great! In the 80s, you could not go to a metal show and not see a shitload of Maiden shirts. Now they’ve made such a huge comeback, I’m seeing tons of Maiden shirts again! I’d give anything to have a BAND cut of their merch sales! DIARY OF A MOAWDVIA Derek Riggs’ artwork IS OUT N ECORDS is awesome. I’m sure DRUNNER R A O R Maiden have sold millions of records off of the artwork alone!”
DIMMU BORGIR rose from the blackest depths of extreme metal to become one of the world’s biggest metal bands. Fearless and pioneering, they’ve never shied away from commercial sounds, but with Abrahadabra, they’re going for broke. WORDS: Jonathan Selzer PICS: Steve Brown LIVE PICS: Kevin Nixon Words: xxxxx his could well be the calm before the storm. Bathed in an unexpected Indian summer, the remaining nucleus of Norway’s most successful black metal band – frontman Shagrath and guitarists Silenoz and Galder – are sitting outside London’s Holborn Studios, temporarily intrigued by the barges lining the canal next to them as they draw curious looks from the barman, various passers-by and a nearby Linda Robson of Birds Of A Feather sitcom fame. Still sporting corpsepaint and the striking new Arctic stage gear from Hammer’s photoshoot, if Dimmu Borgir look like a fantastically displaced anomaly amongst the tranquil setting, it doesn’t concern them in the slightest as they sit down to discuss an album whose turbulent background is but a precursor to the bewilderment, disbelief, debates and outright giddy wonder that’s destined to greet its release. The tempest has been long brewing.When Dimmu announced, in August last year, that keyboard player Mustis and bassist/clean vocalist ICS Vortex had been dismissed from the band, many were quick to draft obituaries, others to decamp to opposing sides of divided loyalties, while speculation on what the next album would sound like took on a momentum of its own.And yet as outlandish as some of the theories might have been, they are but vain stick-scrabbles in the sand compared to the full-blown, imperious might that is Abrahadabra. If Dimmu are still working from a black metal template, their ninth studio album has erected a veritable, heavens-challenging Tower Of Babel on its foundations, its vaulting ambition taking it to realms that would induce vertigo in even the most fearless of power metal bands. Even on the sweeping, battles-across-Europa opus that was 2003’s Death Cult Armageddon, with its unforgettable, Hellboy-endorsed single, Progenies Of The Great Apocalypse, it was easy to get the L 42 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK impression that Dimmu were taking liberties with black metal that only they had been granted to exploit. But now, employing the services of the 51-piece Norwegian Radio orchestra and the 38 voices that make up the Schola Cantorum choir throughout, its near-50-minute, cinematic surge across vast, snowbound plains, driven by a cornucopia of hunting horns, billowing strings and massed, demonically exultant chants has crossed a new, peerless threshold of grandiosity that might have been mistaken for overreaching folly if it wasn’t shot through with the band’s customary, implacable sense of purpose. If Abrahadabra doesn’t make Dimmu Borgir one of the biggest bands on the planet, it makes them sound like they are. But coming from a genre already at war with itself between original and progressive values, and whose self-appointed gatekeepers believe that playing to the galleries and beyond is tantamount to heresy, the band are well aware that they’re about to fan the flames even higher, not just amongst seasoned brickbat-throwers, but amongst their own fanbase too. Spokesmen Shagrath and Silenoz have the wry, sanguine air of men for whom this is part of the job description. F OR THE FIRST TIME SINCE 1997 YOU’VE DROPPED THE THREE-WORD CONVENTION FOR THE NEW ALBUM TITLE. DID THAT INDICATE A WIDER BREAK WITH THE PAST? Shagrath:“Yeah, due to the changes we have been going through, we thought it was a good idea to break up some of the old patterns of doing things. Not just using one-word titles but also choosing different people to work with. For this record, due to the changes with ex-members and all that, it was time to do everything differently, from the title to the clothing to the sound too. I think it was a really necessary step to take at this point. I can see that a lot of people have a big problem with that, but
METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 43
Shagrath: warrior pose # 354 Shagrath I think the record also speaks for itself and people will understand more of the whole thing – hopefully – or maybe in two years’time. It’s like when Puritanical Misanthropic Euphoria came out [in 2001].They were like,‘What the fuck is this?’and two years later they were saying‘This is my favourite album.’” DIMMU HAVE A HABIT OF BEING SINGLED OUT IN THAT WAY. DO YOU THINK IT’S THE NATURE OF THE BLACK METAL SCENE YOU STARTED OFF IN? Silenoz:“Yeah, I think so.A lot of fans – and metal fans in general – are very conservative, which is good in one way because they continue to buy our albums. But at the same time they’re very reluctant and afraid of change. But ours are natural changes, they’re not forced. If it was forced, we would obviously be something really bad.After three years you release a new album and I wish every band would change a little bit in that time. If you don’t change in three years you don’t develop as a person either. It’s a mirror to you as a person.” Shagrath: “There really wouldn’t be any point to doing the same albums all over again, especially after changing musicians.” Silenoz:“That would totally be selling out, because then we would be laying back and resting on our laurels and not taking any chances. If you don’t gamble, you can’t win.” BOTH MUSTIS AND VORTEX HAVE GONE,AND IN THEIR STEAD,YOU’VE BROUGHT IN AN ORCHESTRA AND A CHOIR. SOME MIGHT CALL THIS ‘OVER-COMPENSATION’… Silenoz:“It’s not like we‘exchanged’ them with something else. If they had been in the band, this would still have happened. Of course it’s frustrating to change members all the time but that happens very frequently with us. It’s when certain people change their opinion about reality; and it’s sad that it happens but we have to move on and we can’t let anyone else dictate to us. We have to move forward, and if others don’t want to follow us then it’s pretty obvious what we need to do.” Shagrath:“There are a lot of misunderstood facts about the band too, because it’s hard for people to see what’s happening behind the curtains.The ones who made most of the music in the band has always been us anyway.You can hear that on this album, it’s still Dimmu.” Silenoz:“With us, it’s kind of the same with Kiss, because their music exceeds the members. It couldn’t be Kiss without Gene or Paul, but it’s still Kiss without Live in the still of the white Galder: “Call me Tom” Ace or Peter. It’s the same thing with Dimmu. Fans think of us as really hard to work with, but it’s not really that. If they knew the real deal, they should actually be angry at Mustis and Vortex for not paying attention in class. That’s really the situation here. Instead, they get too much credit for something that people think they’ve done.Which they haven’t.” Shagrath: “They probably think that Mustis has made all the keyboard sounds, which is not true. Outwardly it looks like he does, because he plays live.” Silenoz:“People think that Shagrath is only doing vocals. It’s the wrong perception.”” Shagrath:“Or that Silenoz just plays guitar.We’re all involved in different things, and we are still the ones who made most of it. So for us it wasn’t a huge change when they left. But now it’s just been better.The way of working, there are less people involved and less bullshit. We are more on the same wavelength when we create music, and it just works so much better for us.” HOW MUCH OF AN UNDERTAKING WAS ITTO WORK WITH THE ORCHESTRA AND CHOIR? Shagrath: “That was something we actually decided on quite early.That’s also why we got Gaute Storaas to help us arrange the orchestra. He was really involved in the whole process.We had songs demoed with keyboards and orchestration that we made, and he took over planning for the real orchestra from there. It was a very detailed process.That differs a lot from previous albums that had orchestra on, because they would come in later in the process, when most of the stuff was done, but this time he was involved from the first song’s birth.We were sending audio files to and fro; there was a lot of communication and detail in this, and I think the result is very pleasing.” THERE WERE RUMOURS GOING AROUND THAT YOU WERE ON THE VERGE OF SPLITTING UP. HOW MUCH DID THESE RUMOURS INTRUDE UPON THE RECORDING PROCESS? Shagrath: “Well, there are all kinds of rumours about all kinds of things: there aren’t going to be any clean vocals, there aren’t going to be any keyboards on the next album. People have so many opinions. In the 80s people were more appreciative when an album came out instead of just trying to pick it apart.They didn’t go on the internet and Blabbermouth and all that bullshit. We don’t pay attention to that stuff.We can’t please everybody, first of all we have to please ourselves. We will work harder now than we’ve done in the past. To become successful is hard, but to stay successful is even harder. I’m not talking only about record sales, but you have to just work harder.” Shagrath: “And if we continued the way we have done in the last couple of years, then the band would probably not exist today.You have to do a clean-up to be able to proceed in the direction we want go.” H Bassist Cyrus onstage 44 METALHAMMER.CO.UK aving played with Korn in Amsterdam the night before to, by all accounts, a thoroughly positive reaction from fans perhaps less accustomed to such heady fare, Dimmu headline at London’s Forum the following night as part of their aptly titled Darkness Reborn tour.That the upstairs for the 2,110-capacity venue hasn’t been opened suggests that the Ozzfest bill three days earlier has depleted potential pockets, while many might still be waiting for the new album to hit before committing. But it’s still a thronging, expectant
Dimmu Borgir (left to right): Galder, Shagrath, Silenoz Dimmu liv e and un cut “We have to move forward, and if others don’t want to follow us then it’s pretty obvious what we need to do”Silenoz
Silenoz: all white on the night Galder: shredding fur sure Shagrath: a tracksuit just wouldn’t cut it room that’s first hit with Abrahadabra’s jaw-droppingly Imax-scale widescreen intro, Xibir, its lush, roving symphonic and choral glides and counterpoints like an Angel Of Death’s-eye view on an Ice Age-bound MiddleEarth, before the new-look band enter in their cracked white, fur-lined trenchcoats. Spellbound (By The Devil) asserts how much continuity still exists across the 13 years since that track was first released, while the new tracks – the bounding gallop of Dimmu Borgir, the snarling incantation and juddering chants of Gateways with the spine-tingling, capricious vocals of Agnete Kjø lsrude sadly pre-recorded, and Chess With The Abyss’s progressive, punctuated march encircled with the massed cries of various gods of war – all prove that Dimmu’s capacity to stir and amaze has stepped up to another level. It’s a demonstratively charismatic Shagrath that shows genuine gratitude to the audience, and it’s only later you realise that as distinctive and integral as ICS Vortex’s vocals were, you were too entranced to notice their absence throughout the entire evening. Questions about whether Dimmu Borgir are ‘true’or not seem inconsequential when faced with such a dramatic scope that provides an in-the-moment authenticity all of its own. But Shagrath and Silenoz clearly still have a point to prove. Either they have to take the next step or they have to stay where they are.” Shagrath:“Some people won’t make that choice, because they’re afraid of what people might think. It’s a shame.We have taken it a step further.We come from black metal, but we’re very much into BM today. I’m very much into that genre, especially the 80s thing where it started – Bathory,Venom, Celtic Frost – but for Dimmu we don’t try to copy our favourite bands.” WAS THERE ANY ELEMENT OF ‘FUCK YOU’ IN THE FACTTHAT THE NEW COSTUMES ARE WHITE? Silenoz:“You can see it that way… It’s a bold move.The visuals have always been very important, and especially now as this album is a huge revelation, we wanted to have something to go along with it.” Shagrath:“Why should we keep doing the same thing? Everybody buys their spikes from the same shop in Oslo and wears the same clothes.They totally do what they preach against.” YOU SAID ALBUMS MARK A POINT IN TIME.THIS ONE SEEMS LIKE A POINT OF LIBERATION. Silenoz: “Yeah, that too, very much so.You kind of free yourself from that cage. It’s another statement of the strength of the band because when you think about all the things we’ve gone through, we still manage to maintain focus.” Shagrath: “Negativity gets turned into something greater than what we had, and it made us want to push it even further. Statements and the bullshit from people just make us want to do it even more.” BLACK METAL WAS NEVER JUST ABOUT THE MUSIC, IT WAS MORE DEFINED BY THE PHILOSOPHY BEHIND IT. BUT AT SOME POINT, IF YOU’RE GOING TO PROGRESS, DO YOU HAVE TO DROP SOME BAGGAGE THAT’S WEIGHING YOU DOWN? Silenoz:“Sort of. It’s like when we got a lot of attention around Enthroned Darkness Triumphant, we had two choices: do we want to go for it, or do we want to stay behind – and there’s no middle way.Yes, the mystique around the band obviously gets compromised in the process, but that’s reality. I can see that there are still bands today who were in the same position we were. YOU SEEM TO HAVE A FAIRLY PURIST IDEA OF BLACK METAL YOURSELVES, BUT IT’S EXACTLY THAT PERSPECTIVE YOU GET CRITICISED FROM. Silenoz:“I think because I know that a band like Dimmu and a lot of other Norwegian bands have opened up the doors for people.They’ve gotten to know BM through us, but they’ve gone on to listen to more brutal stuff, so in a way, we have helped them to discover other bands. But at the same time, we are getting shit for making BM‘commercial’. It just doesn’t make sense to me. It’s funny when kids go,‘Oh, you’re not Satanic’and if they really think about it, we are one of the few bands left that are really Satanic in the way that we’re thinking forward and not standing behind and stagnating. That’s not Satanic to me.” DO YOU FEEL LIKE THIS IS A NEW STAGE FOR THE BAND,AS IF YOU’RE STARTING AGAIN? Silenoz:“That’s something we touched upon in the lyrics on the album.Take the song Dimmu Borgir, which is directly about the trials and tribulations of the band and how we overcome every time something negative happens to us.” Shagrath:“Also the last song on the album, Endings & Continuations, should say everything about Dimmu…” ABRAHADABRA IS OUT NOW VIA NUCLEAR BLAST DIMMUARE FAR FROMTHE FIRSTBANDTO UNDERGOAMASSIVE SHIFTIN STYLE.HEREARE FIVE OTHER BANDSWHO BROKETHE MOULD. BRITISH STEEL (1980) After helping to refine and define heavy metal as a genre,Judas Priest struck gold when they stripped away the last of their progressive urges and went straight for the jugular with instant anthems like Breaking The Law and Rapid Fire.The hits, and the glory, followed. COWBOYS FROM HELL (1990) After four albums of decidedly lightweight, glam-tinged melodic metal,Arlington’s finest embraced groove, grit and brutality for their major label debut. Cowboys… sold millions, turned Pantera into superstars and helped to keep the metal fire burning during the grunge era. SEASONS IN THE ABYSS (1990) It would be ridiculous to suggest that Seasons… was anything other than a balls-out Slayer album, but by tempering their trademark ferocity with the occasional dash of brooding melody, most notably on the epic title track, the thrash masters cleverly expanded their sound and their fanbase. METALLICA (1991) Die-hard fans may have baulked at ballads like Nothing Else Matters and The Unforgiven, but with its colossal million-dollar production job and pounding anthems like Enter Sandman and Sad But True, Metallica was the defining metal album of the 90s and the world swiftly fell at the band’s feet. CITY OF EVIL (2005) When frontman M Shadows lost the ability to scream, metalcore’s kings-in-waiting got smart and allowed their adventurous sound to blossom.The result was an album exploding with ambition, melody and a million bright ideas. Sod metalcore… epic and audacious rock’n’roll suited A7X perfectly.

HAMMER PROMOTION Floor freakish foes to Five Finger Death Punch! Mash monsters to the mighty Mastodon! Lay waste while listening to Lamb Of God! Cleave ’em in two to Cavalera Conspiracy! 48 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK
HAMMER PROMOTION The 1988 arcade classic is back! It’s even gorier than ever and boasts asoundtrack as heavy as askip full of corpses! Prepare to get medieval on hideous beasts! S tar of the classic, übergory Splatterhouse series, Rick is back and he’s armed with baseball bats,cleavers,chainsaws and more as the masked madman gets medieval on freaky beasts once again! Splatterhouse, available to buy this autumn, is the goriest game out there! Playing as Rick, you are granted superhuman strength thanks to the mysterious, sentient mask that has fused Mastodon offer the kind of twisted narrative perfect for tearing blood-lusting creatures limb from limb to. Municipal Waste specialise in ‘massive aggressive’, a bizarre carnival of postapocalyptic partying. Only one type of music will cut it when you’re fighting for survival in a virtual world of macabre creatures who are intent on killing you! Metal: the perfect complement to any entrail-splattering killing spree,whether your weapon of choice is a plank or your bare hands. R ick’s Terror Mask has morphed from the hockey mask-style of the earlier games to a new and iconic vision of horror with its twisted, skeletal feel. Rick is now a super- T he original Splatterhouse game was a sidescrolling beat ’em up that introduced Rick, a parapsychology student who had been resurrected by the Terror Mask. He is trapped inside a terrifying world, searching for his beloved Jennifer, who he has to save from a grisly fate.The classic version saw Rick moving left to right through the levels, fighting various creatures sent to waylay (read: murder) him, with none of the extra-dimensions, dynamism or realism of the most recent version. The new 18+ game for PS3 and Xbox 360 boasts awesome new additions and twists to the original game plot, with Rick being the student of the evil Dr West who sends the armies of monsters, The Corrupted, which you will ultimately disembowel in gloriously macabre fashion as you try to rescue Jennifer. The game setting of old,West Mansion, has a new and more elegant feel than the previous rundown setting… which of course is an open invitation to make a bloody mess. Literally. In a new twist, the creatures are spawned by portals which Rick has to travel through, finding himself in various places from a corrupt carnival to a graveyard. West Mansion remains the hubworld to which he always returns. So, with the most famous gory arcade game updated and upgraded and boasting a suitably brutal soundtrack, this really is the ultimate metal game! METAL: PERFECT FOR ENTRAIL-SPLATTERING! itself to your face. But with this strength comes an ever-growing thirst for blood, and you’ll run amok trying to sate it, utilising an array of brutal instruments of death.You can even batter your enemies to death with their own arms. Niiiice. As you destroy the monsters around you, you’ll be accompanied by a stellar soundtrack that features the likes of Metal Hammer Golden God Awards winners Lamb Of God, Mastodon and Five Finger Death Punch.Also for your listening pleasure as you spray every surface with blood, are tracks from Municipal Waste,The Haunted, Cavalera Conspiracy andTerrorizer.Lamb Of God’s unique and world-beating brand of heaviness is utterly uncompromising, while Five Finger Death Punch have those fist-in-the-air choruses and sized muscular version of his old self and, while he can now also be dismembered, his limbs will actually grow back as he battles on! The game will also come bundled with the three original Splatterhouse games as unlockables.The combat gameplay is some of the most advanced and bloodthirsty ever created: as well as the dismembering of creatures with various tools of death (did we mention bare hands?!), the mask will actively speak to Rick as he mercilessly collects the ‘essence’of the dead creatures to unlock new moves.As Rick, you’ll also be able to perform special attacks, including the massive finishing moves,‘splatter kills’, which promise to up the gore factor even further.You can also link attacks together into powerful combos. SPLATTERHOUSE™ & © 1988 NAMCO BANDAI GAMES INC. © 2010 NAMCO BANDAI GAMES AMERICA INC.ALL RIGHTS RESERVED METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 49
PArkwAy Drive Parkway Drive (left to right): Ben Gordon, Luke Kilpatrick, Winston McCall, Jeff Ling, Jia O’Connor PARKWAY DRIVE hail from an idyllic surf town on the beautiful Australian coast. Underneath the surface lies ahideous underbelly that fuels the most brutal metalcore 2010 has to offer. Words: Gill. Pics: Tony Mott. 50 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK
PArkwAy Drive Drive all night P arkway Drive are not all that they seem.Yes their latest album, Deep Blue, is one of the best metal albums of the year – an uncompromisingly brutal album of hardcore-infused shape-throwing metal anthemia – and yes they look like Average Joe Aussie surf dudes. But beneath the affable laughter and the bouncing riffs lies a heart of genuine darkness – a misanthropic pessimism that verges on nihilistic despondency.To an outsider, Parkway’s hometown of Byron Bay appears to be a utopia: a small surfing community of unrivalled natural beauty. But just like the band it spawned, under the surface lies a dark reality of corruption, violence and poverty. And all of this unexpected and insightful new information inadvertently comes tumbling out of frontman Winston McCall as we question the musical roots of the bandmembers and discuss what inspired the concept behind their latest opus. “The initial idea of the band was to write music for people to just smash each other to,” explains Winston. “But with this one we wanted an album that was a lot more for the head than the feet.We wanted to write the music around the concept to give the whole thing a feel.The lyrics and themes drove the music too; we didn’t just lay the lyrics over the top of already-written songs.” As we dig a little deeper,Winston reveals another layer, a deeper, darker layer of meaning to Deep Blue and what lies behind the smiles. “The story is about a man who wakes up in a city and realises that everything he’s worked for and everything in his life is one big joke,” explains Winston as we follow the rabbit down the hole marked‘dark conversation’. “He tries to find the humanity inside himself and he finds that in the bottom of the ocean.” That’s all pretty dark dude, from meeting you over the years we had you pegged as a more upbeat kinda guy… “That’s…”he pauses as if he’s pondering whether to quickly put the lid back on the can of worms he’s just opened for us.“That’s the other part of my personality.The Mr Hyde to my Dr Jekyll.The two parts make the other able to exist. I definitely couldn’t be the person you meet in real life if I couldn’t vent myself artistically and physically through the music we make. I can write these things down that impact on me so much and I can act like a gorilla on stage and scream to get it out. I’m a much more positive person since joining this band – I was really lost before… my mind was all over the place.” Just look at the picture of them and maybe Google a picture of Byron Bay if you are unaware of the idyllic seaside destination, home to surfers and hippies alike. Now wonder what the frontman of this fast-rising metal band could possibly have to feel miserable about. Isn’t Byron Bay paradise? has been interesting to see all that; you see how power works and what it does to people.And it’s all going on here in paradise. It’s more like Babylon! “We always have our mates come and stay with us and they all say‘It’s amazing! We want to live here!’ But I don’t know where to start with describing this town… I know it’s beautiful to look at, but you’ll never get a job here. In five months you’ll be sleeping on my couch because you can’t afford the rent or you’ll be dead because you got in a pub brawl. It’s ridiculous.” D on’t think that Deep Blue is some local navel-gazing operation.To assume that travelling the world with your mates in a metal band would make you happy might be the presumption of superficial analysis. Knowing the misery of humanity reminds you that ignorance is bliss. “It’s strange when we’re taken away from this place we think of as paradise to see the rest of the world from inside the band.The more I travel the more I see different societies and the more misery I see. Humans – mainly in Western society – live in a really odd and incorrect manner.The human body and the human mind isn’t used to the luxury it lives in now: sitting in front of a box full of lights for two weeks, while some people literally starve to death. “Human existence has polarised: deep in human history it seems that plagues or bad things happened across peoples, but now it only happens to the poor or the disadvantaged.There are the haves and the havenots, and it’s getting worse.And we have these political systems in place designed to maintain the status quo,” he laughs nervously as if the outburst was a little more than he bargained for. Luckily he’s talking to Hammer, and we’re happy to rant about the politics/religion/the “I don’t hold humans in a very positive light. Humanity is a virus” Winston Mc Call “It is and it isn’t,” he says.“It’s not hard to play the role of hypocrite, because I write these songs but then come back to Byron… and that bugs me. It is a beautiful place, and more and more I see the ocean and the hills as what makes it beautiful, but the town itself is a very flawed community. It started off as a very redneck place, just farmers, but it’s since been bought up by rich movie stars and people from Sydney who can afford the real estate because being‘the place to live’drove the prices up.What you don’t hear about is that it has Australia’s highest unemployment rate, the hundreds of homeless people, the beatings and all the rapes. Growing up here METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 51
PArkwAy Drive Chill, Winston. Or not Luke: we’d tap that Nihilation Time WHERE PaRKWaYDRiVE FitintHE sliDinG sCalE oFPEssiMisM Dave Grohl Dave Lol: is he ever not smiling? ! Nicko McBrain The cockney geezer is a Duracell bunny gag-machine. Zakk Wylde The biker Viking is more Python than pillage. Corey Taylor Natural-born raconteur when the mask is off. James Hetfield Sometimes angry but mainly grinning. Phil Anselmo Hates 90 per cent of all humans. Parkway Drive It’s the end of the world as we know it. Al Jourgensen Jeff: snap your neck. But not literally He’s not paranoid, they are after him. Trent Reznor The face the un-smiley emoticon was based on. Varg Vikernes Killed Euronymous, mad racist, served 16 years in prison. Awesome. A large oompa loompa crowdsurfing on a bodyboard. Obviously
PArkwAy Drive Jeff gets palmed off View from the bar stage Ready to rock. Or surf Parkway’s Quo move impending downfall of humanity etc. But it’s not every person Hammer interviews who can launch into an erudite diatribe of astute observational misanthropy – even in a scene that supposedly thrives on negativity. “I could rant about this for days,” he says smiling before barrelling on again.“The human aspect of humanity is being conditioned out of humans by the systems in place; we call it education and work, and we’re told that money is the be all and end all – like it’s all you need to be happy and survive.” I t’s reassuring that a band who don’t look out of place in quicksilver board shorts share the bleak outlook of our most beloved metal bands from Sabbath to Metallica. As Winston admits, thinking about these things is enough to drive a man to nihilism.The rich should help the poor. Or should they?What duty does one man have to help another if he’s thousands of miles away?Does it make any difference if they’re on your doorstep?We’re always being told to save the planet and look after the earth and its inhabitants… but what for?So that more humans can exploit more animals and humans and land for selfish gains?If the world is a better place for our children, so what?If life is marginalised as suggested by dystopian movies like 2012 or The Day After Tomorrow, then it appears the rich and the greedy will get all the good seats anyway – so why leave the world in good nick for those fuckers?Whether we cause it or not the planet’s temperature will probably fluctuate by a fraction and we’ll be blown effortlessly out like a cheap birthday candle. Humans will doubtless become another miniscule footnote in the historical document of our planet as an epilogue to a chapter on dinosaurs. “It’s a very perplexing situation we’re in nowadays. It makes my mind turn and I feel guilty for the way I live in this world, there’s something in me that also says, ‘Is this how we should be living?’, but I still want to have all the things I have. Is this the best way that humans can live?We’re the only animal capable of genocide. There are some great individuals but… I don’t hold humans in a very positive light,” he says, laughing at the irony of his incongruous good humour and misanthropy. “It was The Matrix that said it best: humanity is a virus. It rings so true, which is really… sad.” There was a time when humans didn’t need iPods, cool clothes or fast cars.And we didn’t destroy the habitat we lived in to survive or acquire the few pleasures we had to the extent that man does today. Westerners particularly have harnessed the power of technology but – it seems – only to keep other but no one can change it.The people who stand up for what’s right get assassinated; not mortally but by the culture, they get marginalised or cast out.The systems are self-sustaining and it’ll take something monumental to change it, and I doubt I will see it in my lifetime.” It is a dark place to be.Like the curse of Cassandra: you can see the future but no one believes you. Once you’re faced with knowing that you are powerless to change anything even though you’d like to, how do you live? “Exactly,” he says.“That’s what I write about.” No wonder the album and live shows are so intense. S o humanity is going down the toilet and if your kids have a planet to live on they’ll be the slaves of corporate pirates, but hey, at least we have Parkway Drive, a band whose live show is like a barbarian invasion and whose album is like a collision of Lamb Of God, Hatebreed and Mastodon. And of course, Parkway have reasons to be cheerful: they’ve gone from an obscure also-ran metalcore band from a backwater within a backwater, to national heroes (playing to 5,000 people a night) and international ambassadors (becoming favourites of Warped Tour) within five years. So if you do plan on topping yourself, we suggest you head to see Parkway Drive with Bleeding Through, Emmure,Your Demise and We Came As Romans on the Altamont Never Say Die! tour for a reason to not only live, but bang your head, shake your fists and throw shapes like life-loving loons. In dark times like these, thank God for the life-affirming pessimism of Parkway Drive. “The idea used to be to write music for people to just smash each other to” Winston Mc Call humans passive while taking their money and power and destroying their planet.” Well done if you haven’t committed suicide yet but sadly, this is real life and there is no Hollywood ending. The elves don’t kill the orcs and get their homeland back. We’re all still fucked… “It’s so hard to change anything,” acquiesces Winston, shaking his head.“It’s easy to change yourself, but when you do change yourself you just realise how you can’t change anything bigger than that.We’ve been involved in community protests and other projects here and it’s done very little.” He sighs in defeat.“Humans… the masses can be controlled so easily by the few who have cash and we’ve been on the receiving end of this our whole lives. So many people can see that we’re being conditioned DEEP BLUE IS OUT NOW VIA EPITAPH RECORDS. PARKWAY DRIVE HEADLINE THE NEVER SAY DIE TOUR FROM OCTOBER 31 METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 53
KILLING JOKE KILLING JOKE’s legend was built on amelting pot of explosive personalities which imploded in 1982. After reconnecting at the funeral of fallen comrade Raven, the original lineup are back in anew bid for glory. Words: Dayal Patterson. Pics: John McMurtrie. Main Pic: Nathan Gallagher. B eing brought abruptly into consciousness at an ungodly hour and then crammed into the sardine can-like confines of a budget airline flight with a bunch of moody suits is, all things considered, not the best way to begin a day. Even with such an inauspicious start however, it’s hard not to be impressed by the obvious beauty of Geneva and the turquoise waters and stunning mountains surrounding the airport of Switzerland’s second most populated city. Better still, less than half an hour after landing and we’re sitting with our host Jaz Coleman, vocalist and co-founder of post punk/goth/industrial/metal pioneers Killing Joke, and his friend – and periodic landlord – John in a large, peaceful garden adorned with thick green bamboo plants, ornamental pond, myriad statues and a huge, friendly beast which appears to be more bear than dog.This quiet and tranquil space belongs to John and his wife’s large ivy-covered farmhouse, a location that has served as home to members of Killing Joke since 1983. “This will take the edge off the flight,” Jaz says, flashing one of his broad Cheshire cat grins, as John opens the morning’s first bottle of vintage pink champagne.“Just the ‘American Champagne’for me,” explains Jaz as his glass is refilled with Coca Cola.“I haven’t drunk for five years.At one time it was two bottles of rum a day each and whatever else on top of that… man, we were really going for it heavily with the drinks and cigars. My doctor – who’s an alcoholic – called me in, so I knew it was bad. He said,‘You’re only allowed two drinks a day.’ I thought,‘Two drinks?! It’s not worth it!’I mean, what’s the point in having two drinks?I’ve always finished the bottle. So I gave up. Plus I was becoming a fat cunt.” “Another cigar? Why the hell not!” Fonzy only got cooler with age Ride the snake, don’t drink it… 54 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK T oday, the constantly animated frontman cuts a notably trimmer figure, no doubt thanks in part to the exercise regime he’s adopted in preparation for the forthcoming Killing Joke tour.Any impression of a new clean-living lifestyle is balanced, however, by the constant smoke emanating from his beloved Nicaraguan cigars and other, more exotic, smokes.Jaz is, undoubtedly, a man who cherishes the finer things in life, which may help explain his love of this city. In fact, Geneva is only one of several locations he calls home, having long ago adopted the transitional lifestyle of a permanent traveller. He stays no more than 90 days in one place – and often less than that – moving between this city, an apartment in Prague, a farm he owns in New Zealand, the Canary Islands and Marrakesh. Nevertheless, he doesn’t hesitate for a second in naming Geneva as Killing Joke’s spiritual home, and the house we are at today is where the band wrote both the Fire Dances and Night Time albums, including the latter’s famous single, Eighties. “Quite funny when you think Come As You Are was written in this house, isn’t it?”laughs Jaz, giving a nod to Nirvana’s unofficial homage, a song that would ultimately lead Dave Grohl to perform for free on the band’s 2003 self-titled album.“We first came here on tour and had such fun – in inverted commas – that I asked if I could come back and do some writing here.When we finished the tour I jumped on a plane and came back to the house and found [bassist Paul] Raven and [guitarist] Geordie had already done the same thing! So we kind of moved here en masse in 1983.Apart from Big Paul [Ferguson, drummer] we all got Swiss girlfriends. In 1985 I got married and it transpired that I didn’t come back to Switzerland for a four- or five-year period, and when I did come back I met my eldest daughter for the first time.You can’t have everything in life.At a certain point you have to make a choice: you want to be a good dad, you have to be in one place.You want to go for your career, you have to be available like a soldier. But this has always been a place that in-between tours, in-between marriages, I always came back to.” J ust as significantly, it was the place that long time Killing Joke member Paul Raven spent much time in, living in the abode of the old city’s executioner, a building coincidentally decorated with the image of the jester or fool, Killing Joke’s mascot. It was Geneva that Raven came back to shortly before his death three years ago and in honour of the legendary bass player (who also contributed to Ministry and Prong) Jaz takes us for a hearty dinner at the man’s favourite restaurant before moving us onto his most beloved drinking spot; an anarchist bar called Le Vespetro, where a picture of Raven sits above the bar, opposite an anarchist flag.The bar is part of a large squat-cum-cultural centre called L’Usine, which also houses two venues, a record store and the recording studio in which Raven passed away. “He knew six months before that he was going to die,” Jaz explains,“I can prove this, I’ve collected all the emails and SMS messages he sent in that time where he’s uncharacteristically sentimental. Basically he had this dream where he saw all his ex-girlfriends at his funeral and then his girlfriend’s sister had the same dream.The last 10 years he couldn’t sleep flat on a bed, as he’d get terrible heart palpitations. Raven’s actual funeral was done in two halves; the half-hour crematorium gig – as I put it – and the second part here, at Raven and Joe Strummer’s secret hangout. He came to Geneva on a false passport from America via South America. But he made it. It was a It’ll be alright deep sense of comfort to me that on the knight he made it home.” Significantly, Raven’s funeral would act as something of a catalyst within the Killing Joke camp, reuniting the original lineup of Jaz, Geordie,Youth and Paul Ferguson for the first time since 1982’s Revelations.
KILLING JOKE Jaz Coleman: Lewis Carroll, eat your heart out ut no… Close b oh Not so wild in the stre ets “THE ORIGINAL LINEUP HAS A VERY DIFFERENT ENERGY TO THE OTHER INCARNATIONS. WHEN IT KICKS IN, IT’S A VERY SCARY FORCE” JAZCOLEMAN METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 55
KILLING JOKE “GEORDIE SAID, ‘IF I CAN’T WATCH THEN GET OUT!’ SO I SMASHED A BOTTLE OVER HIS HEAD” Jaz and the JAZCOLEMAN owner of Le Vespetro Another day in the office THE CONCEPT OF THE FOOL,THE JESTER AND MASQUERADE RUN DEEP IN KILLING JOKE. Since their early days, Killing Joke have frequently used the image of the jester, joker or fool in their artwork. Indeed, the original title of Absolute Dissent was to be‘Feast Of Fools’. Interestingly, a highly acclaimed Batman graphic novel entitled Killing Joke was created in 1988 by renowned writer Alan Moore, and some two decades later Jaz would find himself crossing paths with the Dark Knight, or rather his nemesis… “The fool is an interesting archetype and I’ve been consulted on this. Heath Ledger – I wish I could have done more. Jack Nicholson warned him about the role,” Jaz explains.“Actually, I was approached to play Joker in Batman. I could do it because I know about putting on the mask and taking it off, and what that means, how to compartmentalise it. I started using the facepaint as a way of putting on the mask, and more importantly taking it off.You live between the worlds being a fool. When Raven came to Geneva he moved into the old town, into the house where the city’s executioner used to live, and on the wall of the house there’s a jester with a sword, because the executioner would dress as a jester.” 56 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK “There was a line at Paul’s funeral which was a call to arms from Nietzsche, and it was to the effect of;‘When a great man dies, men put aside their differences and make solemn vows,’ and that was the trigger word. Saying that, it wasn’t a surprise to any of us. Paul [Ferguson] should have been on the [1994] Pandemonium album but he wasn’t quite ready.As he says, he spent quarter of a century going to a therapist to get over Killing Joke and now he’s back,” Jaz gives one of his roaring laughs.“The original lineup has a very different energy to the other incarnations, it’s a very explosive energy.When it kicks in, it’s a very scary force.” The results of this creative force have proved impressive, with over 20 songs crafted in a short period of time through a process of constant jamming, a sign that the chemistry that existed some 20 years ago is alive and well.Whittling these down to the 12 songs and mixes that appear on the stunning new album Absolute Dissent was no easy task however, and the process of debate and elimination were, to quote the singer,‘traumatic’. Still, things appear to be a good deal more civilised now than they were in the past… “We haven’t had a fight for four years,” Jaz ponders.“With the original lineup we always have blistering rows, but there’s been no physical fights for many years. I remember one time I was seeing this nurse temporarily and I said to Geordie,‘Is it alright if I crash round your place for one night until I move into my flat?’and he said,‘Yeah sure, come over’, and we were drinking a lot at that time and ended up getting hammered and eventually me and her went to crash.We got into bed and suddenly the door comes crashing open and Geordie says,‘If I can’t fucking watch you then you can get out of my flat!’, and I said,‘Ahhhhh fuck,’ picked up the vodka bottle and smashed it over his head.An all-out fight started, there was blood everywhere. Luckily this nurse was there and did the stitches herself.The next morning Geordie says, [adopts a posh English accent] ‘Would anyone like a cup of tea?’” W e are soon joined by none other than Franz Treichler – the founder of Switzerland’s hugely influential industrial/experimental act The Young Gods – and the two men begin chatting with the recognisable warmth of old friends, discussing a forthcoming Paris show at which both bands will perform. “There are very few bands I like on the planet, but the one I really respect is The Young Gods,” Jaz explains while his friend is out of earshot.“Franz is fighting to keep places like this [squat] alive, stopping them being knocked down.To me, this country should knight him.” Remarkably,Jaz will soon be in France for that very reason, receiving decoration by the French government for his achievements in classical music.The event stands as just one glimpse into the often-surprising worlds that Jaz inhabits outside of Killing Joke. “Personally I feel like I’ve cheated time,” he comments.“I’ve done so many things and I started young: by the time I was 22 I decided I wanted to do orchestra, by the time I was 30 I’d started with that and by the time I was 40 I’d done 35 recordings with orchestra. I work in Arabic music, Maori music in New Zealand working with 31 different tonal instruments that I keep alive, I’m a researcher in earth sciences, I lecture at universities sometimes, I even do motivational lectures for IBM.And I don’t have a CSE or A level to my name.The travel is beyond your imagination, 16 times round the world was my record in a year, but it’s never less than 12. I’ve got a carbon footprint from here to Pluto, mate!” “He’s a man of connections,” smiles Franz, when Jaz starts explaining his plan to hire a private jet for a charity cigar-smoking tour of colonial bars around the world. It would appear to be something of an understatement. His recollections contain dealings with everyone from members of government to members of organised crime, high-level bankers to anarchist squatters, from those within the Masonic and other esoteric traditions to the most high-profile musicians such as Sarah Brightman or violinist Nigel Kennedy, both of whom he has worked with. Like Geneva, a city of banking where anti-capitalist punks reside in government-subsidised cultural centres, he represents a clash of realities. Jaz Coleman is on the one hand vocal in his opposition to the darker underbelly of the world and those who control it, and on the other hand an apparent part of it. “Life’s not black and white,” he smiles with his piercing stare before chomping on another cigar. “It can make strange bedfellows.And of course, I live between the worlds, being a fool.” ABSOLUTE DISSENT IS OUT NOW VIA SPINEFARM The eyes have it

KVELERTAK Kvelertak (left to right): Maciek Ofstad, Marvin Nygaard, Erlend Hjelvik, Bjarte Lund Rolland, Vidar Landa, Kjetil Gjermundrø d SONIC ATTACK KVELERTAK began 2010 as unknown Norwegian hardcore punk’n’rollers. Since Sonisphere and Reading, however, they’re one of the biggest buzz bands in metal. But who the fuck are they? B ack in May, Norway’s Kvelertak arrived like some unexpected prophet.The Norwegian sextet went from unheard-of to metallic messiah status in what felt like the blink of an eye: their self-titled debut arrived in the Hammer office and made instant devotees of everyone, they continued to convert more and more people at every show as openers for Converge and Kylesa in July and by the time Sonisphere rolled round in August there were more Kvelertak t-shirts at Knebworth than any other save Iron Maiden, and people were spilling out of the tent trying to get a glimpse of the band.They were subsequently paid one of the ultimate compliments and found themselves as one of the very few metal bands invited to play at Reading/Leeds festival.All of this is especially impressive considering the innovative and unique nature 58 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK Words: Gill. of their music: a collage of punk, metal/black metal and rock that somehow sounds amazingly cohesive. Oh, and all their songs are sung in Norwegian. “It’s cool to see more and more people coming to see us at every show,” admits the modest frontman Erlend Hjelvik. “The buzz just got bigger and spread wider and wider as the tour unfolded.” He’s not kidding: the buzz spread like glandular fever at a school disco. The band started in 2006 in the usual quite uninteresting way that most bands do: some friends, an idea, some jamming, a lineup change and so on… “It took a while to get the lineup going, we were pretty shitty at first,” Erlend admits. But once the band had their ranks cemented the ball started rolling like a hyperactive pinball machine: from the Norwegian equivalent of America’s South By South West industry showcase where they instantly found themselves on the lips of all who witnessed their three-guitar assault of rock, punk and metal, they were booked to play Roskilde in Denmark. Ever modest, Erlend says that many people still seemed unsure of the band:“until we released the album.Then it all happened pretty quickly, especially when we got booked for the Converge tour with Kylesa. “People wrote to us saying they liked the album even though they didn’t know what the hell we were singing about! They said they’ve never heard anything like it before, which is cool.After that it wasn’t just a Norwegian thing anymore.” It certainly wasn’t. Online communities and social networks were buzzing with reports of this amazing band who were supporting Converge, smashing it every night. “Every show got better and bigger as the tour went on. It felt like the word was spreading that we were kicking ass,” Erlend says.“We didn’t really have high expectations for the
KVELERTAK “HALF OF US HAVE ADHD, HALF ARE NORMAL. APART FROM WHEN WE’ RE ON STAGE… THEN WE’ RE 100 PER CENT ADHD!” ERLEND HJELVIK tour.We’re just glad that some people saw us. In Norway people don’t usually show up to gigs until the main band are on, so I’m glad people came out to see us.There were a lot more people than we expected.” Anyone who went to Sonisphere this year will have seen the hysteria themselves – whether they knew it or not – in the hundreds of Kvelertak t-shirts.The buzz had become tangible, people wanted in. “Sonisphere was the best UK show by far,” he says.“We didn’t think it was going to be that good since we played so early and we were on one of the smaller stages, but I could see people standing outside the tent trying to get in. I could also see people trying to sing along to the Norwegian – which is always funny. People seemed really into it.” B ut who are they?Who are the people that make up one of the most exciting new bands of recent times?There are pictures of the guys playing naked onstage and getting drunk, but offstage they invariably exemplify the more demure demeanour of their fellow Scandinavians. It is hard to associate this quiet measured voice on the telephone with the bearded, barrel-chested half- naked frontman we saw tearing up the set before Converge. As Erlend admits, he used to need the beer to flick that switch, now he can filck it himself. “I stay quiet in the day and then go out at night and I’m one of the guys who drinks the most. I used to need beer to get me going, but now it just comes naturally. “[Guitarist] Vidar Landa is the diplomat of the band,” explains Erlend.“He’s usually the one who brings people together whenever there’s an argument. [Guitarist] Bjarte Lund Rolland is pretty quiet but he can get crazy when he drinks.When we’re in the car we just sit in the back doing our stuff, while the others are messing around. Bjarte is the one who stays out the longest. [Guitarist] Maciek Ofstad is one of the loudest people in the band, he talks the most. I think he has ADHD. [Bassist] Marvin Nygaard actually does have ADHD,” he laughs.“He’s the most entertaining, he likes to flash his dick to cars on the motorway. He likes to moon people. He’ll do that for hours. [Drummer] Kjetil Gjermundrø d…”he giggles.“He’s an idiot but he’s a cool guy. He’s the funniest guy, but not on purpose if you know what I mean. So we’re half ADHD, half normal.Apart from when we’re on stage… then we’re 100 per cent ADHD!” So what makes Kvelertak work?A band whose every song sounds different to the last… “I think it’s a lot of coincidences,” says Erlend.“Being in the right place at the right time. Obviously it wouldn’t be happening if we weren’t actually a good band.And it helped that the album turned out well working with Kurt Ballou from Converge.We owe them a lot for this.” And, it seems, that no one cares that the Norwegians’ songs are semantically impregnable, with all song titles (save Sultans Of Satan) and lyrics being in Norwegian (unless you got an A* in your Norwegian GCSE). We push Erlend to translate some lyrics for us, but he explains that they did have to translate them before the BBC would play their music on air,“to make sure it wasn’t about… whatever you’re not allowed to sing about on the radio!” The band are touring Europe until Xmas, after which they will be working on their second album. If it’s a fifth as good as their debut, it’ll be an album worth selling your willy for. KVELERTAK IS OUT NOW VIA INDIE RECORDINGS AND THEY TOUR THE UK IN NOVEMBER WITH COLISEUM AND BISON BC METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 59
ALTER BRIDGE THE SECOND COMING ALTER BRIDGE are made up of three-quarters of Creed, Christian rockers no right-thinking metal fan would touch. Forget that shit, their new album will blow your tits off. T Words: Dom Lawson. hey say that lightning never strikes twice, but Mark Tremonti is well on the way to confounding that particular theory.Already one of the biggest rock stars on the planet, having sold millions upon millions of albums as guitarist and chief songwriter with post-grunge arena rockers Creed, this disarmingly humble and friendly 36-year-old has spent the last seven years slaving away over a hot fretboard in order to win over the world for a second time with his current band.A heavier, darker and infinitely more exciting prospect than the one that turned him into a millionaire,Alter Bridge are something of a rarity in today’s scene; a genuinely thrilling heavy rock band that skilfully straddle the divide between radio-friendly bombast and skull-flattening metallic might. In London to spread the word about his band’s third studio album, the simply titled AB III, Mark greets Hammer with a firm handshake and a broad grin.A self-proclaimed heavy metal geek, he is obviously delighted to make our acquaintance… “Metal is definitely where I come from, man,” he smiles.“I grew up listening to Metallica because my older brother, Dan, listened to it.They were the first real heavy metal band that I got into.Then I’d hear him playing Venom and I was like,‘Wow, that’s dark and cool and creepy!’So I got into them too. My other brother was into Kiss and the glam stuff, but I wasn’t into that. I got into Celtic Frost and Sabbath and the darkest stuff you could get into.That was my vibe for a while, and I really developed my metal chops listening to bands like Metallica,Testament, Slayer, Exodus and Megadeth.As I grew older I became a very melodyoriented writer. I guess that came from being in my mom’s car listening to Rod Stewart and Journey but then I’d mix that with the metal I listened to at home!” I f you were one of the many thousands of excitable Alter Bridge fans who crashed servers and nearly broke the internet by downloading preview tracks from AB III recently, you will already know that the band’s new album is both remarkably heavy and 60 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK absolutely saturated with massive hooks. It’s the kind of album that mainstream rock bands seldom seem to make anymore, full of instantly memorable anthems performed with great intensity and verve. It also boasts a very substantial portion of balls-out thrash metal riffing which takes songs like insanely catchy first single Isolation and the thunderous Still Remains to a level of aggression and power that is going to take a lot of people by surprise.A clear progression from their previous two albums, the decent One Day Remains and the excellent Blackbird, AB III is also noticeably darker and more downbeat than anything that Mark has been involved with before, with self-evident themes of spiritual turmoil and disillusionment pushing Alter Bridge into a lyrical sphere that, as the guitarist puts it,“would definitely not fly with Creed fans…” “It’s about a man who’s lost faith in God and lost his faith in everything,” he explains.“He has no belief system whatsoever. He doesn’t believe in God or the Devil or anything, and as far as he’s concerned he’s just going to die and rot and that’s it. It’s about someone who grew up believing in all these things and had a nice, cushy life and then suddenly something happens and he stops believing. Lyrically it’s pretty dark, but there is some hope in there too.” The one thing that everyone knows about Creed – somewhat erroneously, in truth – is that they were“a Christian rock band”, so this exercise in soul-searching and doubt will certainly come as something of a surprise to those who have followed Mark’s career. But although he makes it plain that the new album’s lyrics were largely penned by frontman (and current Slash sidekick) Myles Kennedy, it’s clear that the guitarist is more than comfortable exploring such philosophically daunting territory on songs like the menacing Slip To The Void and the bleak All Hope Is Gone. “I don’t believe in organised religion and I think it’s bullshit that if you don’t believe in someone else’s faith you’re gonna burn in hell,” he states.“Those televangelists are a bunch of freaks too, but I do
ALTER BRIDGE Alter Bridge (left to right): Myles Kennedy, Brian Marshall, Scott Phillips, Mark Tremonti “WHENI WAS AKID,ISAWMYSELF AS BEINGINABANDLIKEIRONMAIDEN, PLAYINGTOAMETALCROWD” MARKTREMONTI METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 61
ALTER BRIDGE Metal disciples believe in something. Our lives do have meaning somehow, but I understand where Myles is coming from too.Whenever I write I get into these dark places and I try and come up with these dark, brooding parts, and at one point I asked myself ‘Is this going to turn me into a dark person?’because I don’t want to walk around all day being angry and depressed! I just want people to feel some dark, moody sense when they hear the songs or I want them to feel something uplifting, and nothing in between.” I for us.We always knew this record was going to happen. It was just a matter of trying to get it out before people got angry! But I’m always writing and I knew it was gonna be quick when we got to the studio.We’ve always made it clear that Alter Bridge isn’t going anywhere. I’m not pointing fingers at anybody, but there’s always some kind of stress in bands and their chemistries.There’s always one guy who’s a jackass! But in Alter Bridge everyone’s really relaxed with one another. Everybody in the band’s on the that than someone saying,‘I sure hate that Alter Bridge, but I love Creed!’You know, Creed was a big part of my life back in the day, but that was a younger version of us.We were selling out arenas and playing in these huge amphitheatres and it was great fun. It was a whole other experience, but Alter Bridge is a lot more well-seasoned and we’ve learned a lot more tricks along the way. I’m older now and I’ve worked my whole life to get better, year after year, and Alter Bridge is what I’m doing now.” With the music industry flailing helplessly around in a state of panic, it seems highly unlikely that the vast commercial triumphs of bands like Creed will be replicated too often in the future, but you would have to be pretty brave to bet against Alter Bridge defying the odds and becoming righteously massive over the next few years.Very obviously the strongest and heaviest record of his career to date, AB III suggests that Mark Tremonti is finally fulfilling all his childhood metalhead dreams in a band that appears to have the wind in its sails right now. “When I was a kid, I saw myself as being in a band like Iron Maiden, playing to a metal crowd,” he says.“I grew up playing Slayer riffs and writing that kind of music, and then suddenly people are calling Creed a Christian band and a Pearl Jam rip-off and I’m wondering‘How did I get into this?’Ha ha ha! So yeah, this is about getting back to my roots.” “SELLINGOUTARENAS WITHCREEDWAS GREAT FUN, BUTWITH ALTERBRIDGEWE’VELEARNED ALOTMORETRICKS ALONG THEWAY” n the years that have passed since the last Alter Bridge album, 2007’s Blackbird, all four members of the band have been extremely busy. Myles Kennedy, of course, has contributed to Slash’s recent solo album and become his de facto vocal muse while also going through the extraordinary experience of being rumoured to be a potential replacement for Robert Plant in a hypothetically revived Led Zeppelin lineup. Meanwhile, Mark, bassist Brian Marshall and drummer Scott Phillips stepped back in time to reunite with singer Scott Stapp to hit the road and make a new album as Creed.As a result of all this extracurricular activity, many Alter Bridge fans became concerned that their favourite band might be heading for a premature burial, but as the new album amply demonstrates, they have returned more focused and enthusiastic than ever before. “Myles is working with Slash, we’re working with Creed, I might be doing a solo project, but we all understand and it’s cool,” Mark explains.“We’re all grown adults and we look out for each other and Alter Bridge is a huge priority MARKTREMONTI same page.We’re all good buddies and it works real well for us and it’s getting better and better.” O ne of the most interesting things about the steady rise of Alter Bridge, is that very few people seem to have been put off by the association with Creed, a band that were loved by millions but hated with swivel-eyed intensity by their detractors. Mark Tremonti is clearly and understandably proud of his achievements with his first band, but he is also fully aware that AB III will be embraced by many rock and metal fans that wouldn’t touch a Creed CD with a shitty stick. “Oh man, I get that all the time!”he laughs.“I get people coming up to me saying,‘I hope this doesn’t upset you, but I never liked Creed but I love Alter Bridge!’I’d rather hear TWICE AS HARD a change.They have just released their second album. It kicks arse. STONE SOUR MURDERDOLLS CIRCLE A dumb, viciously entertaining riot of ghoulish cock rock and snotty horror punk, Murderdolls enabled Slipknot drummer Joey Jordison to strap on a guitar and rock like a bastard at the front of the stage for Not content with fronting Tool, easily one of the most revered bands of the modern age, Maynard Keenan proved that he has the Midas touch with the mellower and more straightforward A Perfect AB III IS OUT NOW VIA ROADRUNNER RECORDS. ALTER BRIDGE ARE ON TOUR NOW Circle, whose Mer De Noms debut was an instant smash hit in 2000. they shifted more than a few albums along the way. FIVE BANDSWHO FOUND SUCCESSASASIDE PROJECT.OK,FOUR… A PERFECT AUDIOSLAVE METHODS OF MAYHEM We suspected Corey Taylor could sing the birds from the trees but evidence was scarce until Slipknot’s frontman revived his old band and set about becoming hugely successful with a slick but undeniably potent mainstream rock sound. The combination of exSoundgarden vocalist Chris Cornell and three-quarters of Rage Against The Machine turned out to be considerably less than the sum of its parts but, despite being a bit dull, Instigated by tireless boob-fan and legendary Mötley Crüe drummer Tommy Lee, MOM changed the face of rock’n’roll forever, effortlessly achieving world domination. Except they didn’t really. Diabolical nu-metal twattery? Go on then…





“Depression is fucking horrible. It’s an emotional cancer. Worse than any acid trip. It was my own personal horror movie” DAVE WYNDORF | METALHAMMER.CO.UK
Dave Wyndorf MONSTER MAGNET mainman Dave Wyndorf survived depression to deliver their best album since Powertrip. Loving rock since he was 14, the choice between death and rock’n’roll was obvious. Words: Dom Lawson. Pics: Mark Weiss. WHEN AND WHERE WERE YOU BORN? “I was born in Red Bank, New Jersey, about two blocks away from where I live right now, in 1956. So I’m 54. Where’s all the time gone?” ANY BROTHERS OR SISTERS? “There were eight kids in the family. I was a middle child, with five sisters and two brothers. One brother was eight years older than me, so there was no competition there, and my other brother is six years younger than me, so there were no problems. I just beat the shit out of him! Ha ha ha!” XXXXX XXXXX XXXXX HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE YOUR CHILDHOOD? “It was a pretty idyllic existence. We were poor but we didn’t know it. We had a lot of woods to go to, there was a river nearby. Real Tom Sawyer shit. You go out in the summertime at seven in the morning and you don’t come back until lunchtime, then you go out again and don’t come back until dinnertime. I loved it. I have no complaints.” DID YOU HAVE A GOOD RELATIONSHIP WITH YOUR FAMILY? “It was always really happy. My parents were World War II veterans. They grew up during The Great Depression, so everything after that was just gravy. They were like, ‘The birds are singin’ in the trees! It’s a great day!’ They just didn’t complain. My mom was a fuckin’ Zen master, a really imaginative person. My dad worked his ass off all the time, but he never complained. My family was always completely sarcastic and funny as shit. And they still are.” WERE YOU A REBEL AT SCHOOL? “I was really shy at school. I was a ghost. I lived inside my own head. My brain was good at imagining things, so for the longest time I didn’t really have to go outside of that to keep myself happy. It wasn’t until later, when I discovered girls, that I realised it was time to clean up my act and climb out of my head. But I always did a lot of daydreaming.” WHEN DID YOU FIRST GET BLOWN AWAY BY MUSIC? “Oh, really young. My mum loved classical music and she used to play stuff like Danse Macabre and all these classic pieces, and they’d always have stories behind them, like, ‘Here’s where the skeletons rise up from the grave!’ and I’d be like, ‘Woah! This is fuckin’ awesome!’ My brother had records too, like The Beatles and The Stones. There was music in every TV show and all the old movies I watched, all these old monster movies with bodacious soundtracks, which fuckin’ rocked in their own way. So music was everything.” AT WHAT POINT DID YOU DECIDE THAT YOU WANTED TO BE IN A ROCK BAND? “I went to concerts from the age of 14, maybe two or three a week, and I saw everything. I was a total rock maniac, in a very quiet way. One day in high school, these kids I’d met said, ‘You wanna come over and practise? We’ve got a band!’ I’d never been close to a real band before. I couldn’t play anything. I went over and I knew all the words to the songs they were doing, like Ramones songs and UFO and all that stuff. The guy who was singing didn’t know all the words, so I ended up singing. The next thing you know, I joined the band. We went from being a covers band to being a punk rock band called Shrapnel.” SO WHEN DID MONSTER MAGNET BEGIN? “Eventually I bought my first guitar. As soon as I plugged that thing in and started playing around with a fuzzbox, that was it. That was the sound I wanted. Tim Cronin [bass] worked at Jack’s Music Shop, I worked at Fantasy Zone comic shop and John McBain [guitar] worked at a used record store. It was three nerdy retail guys, all lost in our own obsessions. Those two guys had been making tapes under the name Dog Of Mystery, doing weird, experimental, Butthole Surfers kind of stuff. I had my
own little thing going, called Love Monster. They wanted to do a live Dog Of Mystery thing and they needed people to fill it out. I said I’d play guitar, we started to play some songs I’d written, and we eventually became Monster Magnet.” up in the 70s when everybody had long hair and looked like hippies, but they weren’t. They were mean!” WERE YOU PLEASED WHEN THE STONER ROCK SCENE KICKED OFF IN THE 90S? “It felt great. The world finally understands! I was really a kindred spirit with the Butthole Surfers and even early White Zombie, Mudhoney, Spacemen 3 and all those guys. I was really psyched by that, but that stuff was on its way out, so it made me really happy to see that there were other bands doing the same thing. Kyuss were doing stuff that I would never do, which was playing the same riff forever. Your favourite Sabbath riffs, over and over! It’s a great soundtrack to being stoned and it was really fucking cool.” YOU HAD A LOT OF COOL NAMES BEFORE YOU FINALLY CHOSE THAT ONE… “Oh yeah! Every three months we’d change the name. For a while it was Heroin Mule, then Nipple Tank, Acid Reich, Madness Is The Mongoose, Wrath Of The Bullgod, King Fuzz, and then finally we got a gig in southern Jersey with Jane’s Addiction. On the way we were talking about old toys, and someone mentioned a thing called a monster magnet, and that was it. ‘That’s the name of the band for tonight!’ We played a 25-minute version of Grand Funk Railroad’s Paranoid with every echo machine on fuckin’ 11!” “I loved the idea of turning peace and love into something ugly” DAVE WYNDORF WHAT WAS THE AUDIENCE REACTION LIKE? “It was total bollocks, but if you do that kind of stuff with a serious face, people think it’s art. And they did! People were clapping and cheering and I just thought, ‘Wow, is it this easy?’ Ha ha ha! This old dude came over and said, ‘It’s the return of drug rock! Alright!’ and he gave me the thumbs-up.” WERE YOU ALL GUZZLING DRUGS IN THOSE DAYS? “No, not really. The other guys were smoking pot, but not me. I hadn’t done drugs in years at that point, but I was totally in love with psychedelia. I loved the idea of the peace and love movement being turned on its head and being really, really ugly. That’s what I saw when I was a kid. I grew FAVOURITE SONG “I listen to too much fuckin’shit! My favourite song today was Amon DüülII doing Eye-Shaking King, which is fuckin’unbelievable. I think it’s on the Tanz Der Lemmings album.Talk about the Bigfoot of prog! They were like a giant Yeti stompin’around!” Dave Wyndorf tells us about his fave stuff. FAVOURITE BOOK “It’s either To Kill A Mockingbird or Fear And Loathing In Las Vegas. YOU WENT FROM BEING UNDERGROUND HEROES TO THE MAJOR LABEL WORLD. WAS THE TRANSITION EASY? “It was a challenge. The way I thought about joining a major label was like I was cutting off my left nut. It was the worst thing I could do, but at the same time I was old enough to realise that it was the only thing to do. You either jump in with your fists flying and take everything on or you don’t. So we did. No matter what we did, it seemed to catch on to a certain extent. Those were golden days.” WAS IT THE PLAN FOR POWER TRIP TO REALLY BREAK MONSTER MAGNET? “We achieved it naturally. There wasn’t any grand plan. The weird thing was, that album was laughing at the whole rock’n’roll circus, but a lot of our new fans thought it was real. I was wearing leather pants and people were loving it! But for me it was just another chapter in Monster Magnet World. I guess we could’ve made ‘Power Trip Two’, but that’s not how I do things.” YOU RECENTLY MADE A RECOVERY FROM A NASTY BRUSH WITH PRESCRIPTION DRUGS AND DEPRESSION. WHAT EXACTLY HAPPENED? “I started taking these superpowerful anti-anxiety drugs to put Two ends of the spectrum, but both equally good. I try not to re-read books, but I’ve learned that it’s not the time-waste I thought it was. Good books deserve maximum attention, and I read faster now than I ever did when I was a kid.” FAVOURITE MOVIE “I’ll go for His Girl Friday, because I can watch that a million times and it never lets me down. It’s got Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell and HOW DID YOU SHRUG OFF THE DEPRESSION AND THE ADDICTION? “I can laugh about it now, but I don’t think I’ve ever seen things that black. Depression is fucking horrible. It’s an emotional cancer. It was worse than any acid trip. It was my own personal horror movie. If I thought I knew about insanity before, I just took a fuckin’ graduate course. But now it’s over and I’m feeling great! Ha ha!” MASTERMIND IS YOUR BEST ALBUM IN YEARS. IS THIS A NEW CHAPTER FOR MONSTER MAGNET? “The last record was put together from pieces I had lying around and I wasn’t in the best of shape. For this one, I was in the driving seat and it turned out great. For me, each record’s a new chapter, but there’s nothing that draws a line in your life like almost dying! It’s like, ‘Hey, remember the time I blew my mind on drugs and went to the nuthouse and almost died?’ That’s a fuckin’ line you can sink your teeth into!” DO YOU SEE MONSTER MAGNET AS SOMETHING YOU’LL DO UNTIL YOU DROP? “I’ll keep doing it until I drop dead on stage or find something better to do! I love making albums and playing live. It’s a great feeling, getting out there and fuckin’ slamming it out. Those are the things that make it all worthwhile because they remind me why I liked rock’n’roll in the first place. It never gets old for me.” MASTERMIND IS OUT NOW VIA NAPALM. MONSTER MAGNET TOUR IN NOVEMBER it’s like the fastest comedy ever. I love The Sweet Smell Of Success too.There isn’t a wasted second in either of those movies.” FAVOURITE CITY “NewYork.You can be famous or totally anonymous and it’s the same good time! You can eat FAVOURITE anything, there’s tons to look SUPERHERO at,you can rent “Spider-Man. He’s a nerd that made anything and do good! When it was originally done, it anything, was realistic because he was really any time mercenary.The first thing he of the thought of when he got his day!” superpowers was that he’d be a TV star! It didn’t work out. So that’s just like me!” R EX FEATUR ES 70 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK me out like an animal for six or seven hours a night. It was time to sleep, so bam! But they got me. If I was on tour, they would’ve worked for two or three years. Your body’s completely sweating all the time, so most of the residual drug effect is gone, but as soon as you slow down and you’re taking the same pills, they get hold of you. That stuff was the most dangerous drug I’ve ever taken in my life, that’s for sure.”

UNEARTH like Diff’rent Strokes, smashing each other’s skulls in with instruments and the odd Randy Blythe-cooked juicy steak. But Cardinal Selzer has something else cooking… Helen DeMontefort, via email Ken Susi [guitar] : “I already know the answer to this one. Groupers. I don’t think there’s any real metal band that has groupies in this day and age.” Hammer: Is that because real metal bands are too ugly? Trevor Phipps [vocals] : “Are you saying I’m ugly?” Ken: “I have no problem getting my dick sucked. But there are a lot of groupers because there are a lot of kids who want to know what you play out of which amp, what string gauge you use, way more of that.” Buz McGrath [guitar] : “I don’t think girls are as into music as aggressive as ours.” Ken: “Plus girls don’t wanna get hate-banged, ha ha ha! Unless you have a comb-over and some pop parts in your songs girls really aren’t into it. If it’s part of a trend they will come out.” Buz: “It’s 99 per cent dudes.” What’s your favourite mock porn title? Anthony Barts, via email Ken: “Oh, Weapons Of Ass Destruction, that’s the best.” Buz: “Ram-Bone is good too.” Ken: “I actually have a porn name, Dong Dellouise. Usually it’s your cat’s name and your middle name or something…” Buz: “Lawrence Of A Labia is awesome.” Where were you when Gary Coleman died? Eric Port-Short, via email Ken: “I dunno. He’s pretty much an amazing actor. It’s a bummer that his ex-wife took pictures of herself with him on his death bed.” Buz: “She sold them to a newspaper.” Ken: “That fucking sucks. He was one of the greatest actors of our time. I used to watch that fucking show every week.” Trevor: “I wouldn’t call him versatile, but I love Diff’rent Strokes.” Hammer: If you were only famous for one thing, would you think,‘Well at least I left that to the world?’ Or would you want people to drop it? Ken: “He was probably stoked that he did it, but at the end, like,‘This sucks.’” Del, via email Would you push an old lady down the stairs for a million dollars if you were guaranteed to get away with it? Trevor: “The worst injury I sustained was from this douche [points at Ken] in Pittsburgh in 2003. During a heavy part, Ken was coming down chopping his guitar like an axe, I was headbanging and the guitar hit me right on the soft part of the head. I split my head and got knocked out. Luckily it was the last song. I got carried off the stage with blood pouring down my face.” Buz: “I permanently disfi gured my knee cap on this tour we did, where I smashed it on a monitor. Now my kneecap is really pointy. The other one is all cool and round but the left one is all pointy. I can still do stuff though, so I guess it’s cool.” Hammer: Have you ever seen any kids get injured? Trevor: “I saw a kid at a show have a seizure while crowdsurfi ng. It was not cool.” Ken: “Absolutely!” Buz: “Oh yeah.” Trevor: “Our old drummer and guitar tech got arrested in Las Vegas for pushing a Latino lady down the stairs. One pushed the other into the old lady and the tech got a night in prison while the other spent 10 minutes in the paddy wagon.” Ken: “It’s a million fucking quid!” What’s the worst injury you’ve ever suffered on stage or seen in one of your circle pits? | METALHAMMER.CO.UK Andy P, via email Trevor: “Fuck her, I’m sure she’s had a good life.” Ken: “I’d rather hockey crack her against the wall. I’d like a dry hand job, too, spit shine.” Trevor: “How big are the stairs?” Ken: “Look, it doesn’t matter, it’s basically killing someone for a million pounds. I’ve killed younger for less.” In the absence of porn, what’s the best women’s mag to wank to? Joe Jobbs, via email Ken: “I can’t jerk off to still life. I need to see full penetration. Other than that I will never climax.” What’s the best meal Lamb Of God’s Randy Blythe has ever cooked you? Paul Ericcson, via email Ken: “Steak.” Trevor: “He is a great, great cook.” Ken: “Back in the day when neither band was even close to being as big as we are now, we played Virginia with them and he said, ‘Come to my restaurant.’ He came out with those balloon chef pants on and the hat and he gave us fi let mignon, mashed potato and lobster tails. On Ozzfest a few years back he came on tour with this whole grill contraption.” Trevor: “He’s a stand-up guy. And we love him.” Hammer: He and Ted Nugent should have a cook-off. Ken: “Nugent would probably kill Randy, gut him and eat him.‘Oh, hey Ted, this is delicious, what is this?’‘Oh, it’s Randy Blythe.’ ‘Noooooo!’ Ha ha ha!” What’s the dumbest thing you’ve done while drunk? James Tariq ,via email Trevor: “There’s one thing that I did a few years back when we stopped at a rest area. I was in blackout mode.And I have a thing for jumping on cars so I started jumping on this car. Our bassist was like,‘Get off the car!’So I jump off then these two massive-looking dudes turn up, so if I hadn’t have gotten off the car right then, things might have ended quite differently. It wasn’t a nice area in New Jersey either.” Buz: “I sprayed the whole band with a chemical fi re extinguisher one time.” Hammer: What’s it like partying with straightedge bands? Ken: “A lot of straightedge bands party harder than drunk dudes because they keep going.” How does it feel knowing your circlepits will always be better than your music? Lester The Molester, via email Ken: “I don’t care, as long as people pay to get in!” August Burns Red are actually kings of the breakdown. Discuss. Ferris De Angelo, via email All: “Ha ha!” Buz: “I’m not going to disagree with that. They’re a cool band I think they’re great… this year.” Hammer: Ever been on tour with a really awful band? Ken: “We’ve often been on tour with bands where we might not be into their music, but when we hang out and they’re super-cool dudes, you don’t wanna talk shit on them.” Trevor: “Gwen Stacey. They’re shit. And they forced their Christian views down people’s throats. I don’t care if you’re Christian, just don’t force it on people.” What’s the worst fight you ever got in? Chris Needs, via email Ken: “I got put in jail for busting some guy’s eyes out of his head. I got thrown in a cell for a night and spent $5,000 on lawyers to get out of it. I then had to do community service. When the ambulance came they were holding his eyes into his head.” Trevor: “But we’re not hot-heads or thugs. I haven’t had a proper fi ght in years.” THE MARCH IS OUT NOW VIA METAL BLADE RECORDS PIC:MICK HUTSON T here are two kinds of bands in this world – ones that get groupies and ones that get groupers (15-year-old guys who want to get backstage and talk about bands). Which are you?
UNEARTH “I GOT PUT IN JAIL FOR BUSTING SOME GUY’S EYES OUT OF HIS HEAD” KEN SUSI Unearth: Ken, Buz and Trev always loved hanging around bars. Any bars would do ushing old ladies over?Saying girls don’t like P aggressive music?Pointy knee caps?These nerks clearly need some‘correction’. Can you hear the drums, Fernando?Fetch the industrial thermometer,the Castrol GTXand the bulldog clips, ràpidamente! Don’t wait up… Music journalism: the finger painting of the literary world.Think you can do better? Think you can do better? Check out who’s coming up in Spanish Inquisition at www.metalhammer.co.uk and send your questions to chainmail@futurenet.co.uk.
Tracnkg listi ELL’ FROM H TE S Y O B ‘COW AL CONCRE ‘PRIM EDGE’ SL DAY’ O HOLI H C Y S ‘P Y’ ‘HERES GATES’ ERY ‘CEMET INATION’ M ‘DO ERED’ ‘SHATTH REALITY’ WIT ‘CLASH DICINE MAN’ ’ ‘ME LOOD GE IN B P’ A S S E ‘M EE ‘THE SL HREDDING’ S RT OF ‘THE A S VOCAL MO: ANSEL UITAR PHILIP DARRELL: G AR D IT N U O G DIAM OWN: BASS MS REX BR IE PAUL: DRU D PANTERA VINN RY DATE AN R D BY TE E C U D PRO 74 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK Pantera (left to right): elmo, Rex Brown, Philip Ans Paul nie Diamond Darrell, Vin
Cowboys From Hell IT WAS 1990. Metal was under attack from grunge, alternative rock and pop-punk. Metallica were on the verge of inconceivable hugeness, but thrash was in its decline as major labels ditched metal bands and looked elsewhere for their new rock stars. Meanwhile, somewhere in Texas, four men were preparing to reinvent the steel and change heavy music forever. F or most metal fans, the Pantera story began with the release of Cowboys From Hell, but in fact the band had been active for a full decade prior to that album’s completion. Formed in Arlington, Texas, in 1981 by teenage brothers Vinnie Paul and ‘Diamond’ Darrell Abbott (later to be known as Dimebag), the band began life as a covers band, performing naïve but impassioned versions of their favourite songs by Van Halen, Judas Priest and Def Leppard, just as the glam and hair metal explosion was in full effect. Fronted by original singer Terry Glaze, Pantera dedicated themselves to playing live and honing their craft from the very beginning and soon earned a strong enough reputation to begin releasing albums. Their first three full-length efforts – Metal Magic, Projects In The Jungle and I Am The Night – were spirited but unremarkable affairs, but it was with the departure of Terry and the recruitment of Louisiana-born vocalist Philip Anselmo that the true Pantera began to emerge. “Three albums into it, we wanted to get heavier, but the singer we had at the time didn’t want us to go in that direction,” recalls Vinnie Paul.“Terry always wanted to do more of a David Lee Roth, poppy-type thing, but we were falling in love with Metallica and Slayer and stuff like that, so when we brought Phil on board we went a little more towards that stuff.After we finished the next album, Power Metal, we realised that we weren’t wearing the clothes we wanted to wear and that we wanted to strip it all down.The groove thing was the most important element in everything and that’s what really set us apart from the thrash metal bands and the plain old rock’n’roll bands. Our crowds were becoming more intense too.” Words: Dom Lawson. a lot of confidence. We felt like a freight train that couldn’t be stopped. We put out our first record when I was 17 and Dime was 15. As we kept growing we kept getting better and kept pushing each other to another level. When we started writing songs for Cowboys From Hell, we felt like the magic was there. We’d been turned down by every record company in the States, so we were angry and that all came out in the music! We saw what our new songs were doing to people, to our crowd. It was driving people crazy.They couldn’t wait to hear us play Cowboys From Hell or anything off that record, even before we recorded it, so we knew we were onto something special…” R “Every record company turned us down. We were angry and it showed” Vinnie Paul A s the 80s drew to a close, metal was beginning to run out of commercial steam, which in turn led to dwindling creative returns, as the grunge scene in Seattle began to draw media attention away from traditional heavy music. However, despite their clear and proud adherence to old-school metal values established in an earlier age, Pantera defied the odds and secured themselves a major label record deal. Stranded in Texas due to freak weather conditions, Atco Records man Mark Ross saw the band perform and was so impressed by the power and intensity of their live show that he immediately set the wheels in motion to add them to the label’s roster. Having already been turned down by countless American record labels, Pantera were understandably thrilled to be receiving some longoverdue recognition for all their hard work, and put the resulting energy and excitement into the creation of some truly devastating new material. “We had really honed our skills,” says Vinnie.“We were a machine and we played really, really tight together and we had eady to make an immediate impact, Pantera were eager to improve on the demo versions of future classics like Psycho Holiday, Domination and Cowboys From Hell itself and produce an album that would ensure their translocation from relative obscurity to international renown. With that in mind, as a new decade approached, the band headed to Pantego Sound Studio in Arlington, Texas, which was owned by Vinnie and Darrell’s father, to commence work on their fifth album with renowned producer Max Norman, who had previously sprinkled magic over albums by Ozzy Osbourne, Megadeth and Savatage among many others. Lined up to facilitate Pantera’s every sonic whim, Max seemed the perfect choice, but unfortunately the collaboration fell apart before it had even begun. “Two days before we started recording, Max got a bigger and better offer from Lynch Mob,” explains Vinnie Paul.“So he bailed on us and went and did a record with them instead, and so we were stuck without a producer. Our A&R guy said, ‘How about this guy Terry Date?’ He’d done the Soundgarden record (1989’s Louder Than Love), which
we were all really blown away with, and he’d just done the new Overkill record, so we said,‘OK, let’s bring him down!’ He was a little shy and reserved at first, but after we got to know each other and he could see how hungry the band was, he really went the extra mile to help us to get what we were looking for out of the sound.” With Terry installed as co-producer, Cowboys From Hell began to take shape, and the sheer ferocity of Pantera’s ever-evolving sound began to become apparent.Two decades later, the likes of that brutally catchy title track, the epic and haunting Cemetery Gates and the lurching riff-riot of Clash With Reality still sound ridiculously exciting. Back in 1990, the impact of this fearless and ferocious update of classic heavy metal was huge as people were blown away by the immense power and originality of songs like the crushing Primal Concrete Sledge. “That song was an accident, basically!” chuckles Vinnie Paul.“We’d recorded the 10 or 11 songs we wanted to put on the record. I was taking my drum set down when I came up with that pattern between the toms and the hi-hat, with the kick drums running underneath it. Dime heard it and he came running round the corner saying,‘What the fuck is that?’ I said,‘It’s just a new beat I came up with’ and he said,‘Don’t take the drums down! I got a riff, dude! That’s too fucking badass! We can’t let that one go…’Then Terry came round the corner and said,‘Guys, we don’t have time for this! I have to go to Connecticut in three days to mix the record!’ but Dime said, ‘No, man, we have to do this!’That’s why the song is only two minutes long, because we didn’t have time to work on it. It’s a short, powerhouse tune and it gave the album a lot more muscle and a lot more heaviness.” U nleashed in July 1990 as grunge and so-called alternative rock started to supplant metal as the music industry’s bit of rough, Cowboys From Hell was one of very few majorlabel metal records released that year. Seemingly carrying the torch for the entire scene, as even well-established thrash metal acts like Metallica and Megadeth began to simplify and soften their sounds, Pantera were instantly embraced by disenfranchised metalheads who could hardly fail to relate to the album’s cover shot which portrayed the four members of the band rocking out in an austere 19th-century saloon; diehard Yes, these guys really did reinvent metal “Metal bands in the US came from LA or New York. We were from a hillbill country state and were out of place!y ” Vinnie Paul outsiders gatecrashing the most unlikely of social occasions. “At that time, every metal band in the United States came from either LA or New York and Seattle had just come on the scene too, but we were this band from this hillbilly country state that made people think of ZZ Top and country music,” says Vinnie Paul.“We were out of place. Cowboys From Hell started off as a t-shirt design that we had, and we loved the title and everyone loved the shirt so much that we decided to write the song. We wanted the same vibe on the album cover, so here we are, this heavy metal band in this old saloon from 1846 with these old cowboys around the bar, and we’re totally out of place. When we did the photoshoot, it was before they had Photoshop and all that, so they had to cut the photos out and actually glue them onto that old picture, and if you look real closely at it you can see where they fucked up Dime’s headstock and had to cheat! If you look with a magnifying glass, you’ll see it! It’s pretty funny. Somehow it turned out great, though!” Refusing to take their collective foot off the accelerator, Pantera tore into a gruelling touring schedule like men possessed, spreading the word about their state-of-the-art sound far and wide and proudly capitalising on the fact that, SOMEWHERE IN TIME as a new decade dawned, virtually no one else was playing metal with such verve and passion. Having fulfilled their potential in the studio, the band were doggedly proving to their major label paymasters that the investment had been worthwhile. What no one realised as Cowboys From Hell picked up momentum and started to sell, was how huge Pantera would soon become. “I don’t know if we knew that we were going to be really successful,” muses Vinnie Paul today.“But we knew that at least we had an opportunity, our shot. We knew that if we wanted to get to where we wanted to be, we had to have that big major label machine behind the band, so we held out for the deal. Then one day we got a phone call from the label in LA and we were told that we’d sold over 100,000 units. It was a special time, no doubt about it. I don’t think any of us thought we’d made it just because we had a record deal. We knew we had to work really hard for it.” With very few exceptions, metal bands had a torrid time during the early 90s, but thanks to Cowboys From Hell and the men who made it, the genre was able to keep moving forward, inspired by Pantera’s groove-driven, mutant thrash attack and their odds-defying conquering of the mainstream. Where Pantera stand in the chain of inspiration. their cues from the PANTERA Taking heaviness of thrash, the flash of glam metal years and a gutterCowboys the level realism that made them an From Hell instant hit with metal fans all VAN HALEN Fair Warning METALLICA Master Of Puppets With revolutionary fret-god Eddie Van Halen leading the charge,Van Halen inspired thousands of guitarists to embrace the shred. Dimebag was surely one of them. Arguably thrash’s most important record, MOP proved that Metallica had already outgrown their roots and become something truly special. 76 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK over the world, Pantera gave metal a huge shot in the arm with this tour-de-force of riffs and hooks. The perfect bridge between old and new schools of heavy goddamn metal. MACHINE HEAD Burn My Eyes Huge grooves, riffs that could level skyscrapers and lyrics that oozed passion, this flawless debut could not have existed without Pantera’s groundwork. “It’s funny, because when we put those records out you couldn’t hear those songs on the radio, but now I’ll go to a football game or a soccer game and they’ll play Cowboys From Hell, and you can hear Cemetery Gates on the radio like it’s a brand new song!” laughs Vinnie Paul.“They still sound fresh and they sound good to this day. It took the four individuals in the band to make that record. Our crew at the time were real important too, and always believed in us and even worked for nothing. Terry Date was a big part of it too, and that’s why we kept him around for so many years. It was a special time and it took all those people to make it happen.” COWBOYS FROM Hell eXPanDeD anD DeluXe eDiTiOnS aRe OuT nOW.THe ulTiMaTe eDiTiOn FOllOWS in nOVeMBeR,all Via RHinO ReCORDS THE NEXTCHAPTER... “W e felt were close to getting the ultimate Pantera sound on Cowboys…, but on Vulgar Display Of Power we stepped it up even further!”states Vinnie Paul, and it’s hard to fault his logic. Released in 1992, Vulgar Display Of Power was again recorded at Pantego Sound with Terry Date at the controls, but this was a heavier and more destructive record than its predecessor,with the last remaining traces of the Texans’hair metal roots erased once and for all. The album debuted at Number 42 in the Billboard album chart, kick-starting Pantera’s rise to commercial glory that peaked with 1996’s Far Beyond Driven, their first Number One album. More albums and sold-out tours followed, but the band’s internal chemistry faltered as the 90s drew to a close, before a media war of words resulted in an untidy and acrimonious split in 2003.The shocking murder of founding guitarist Dimebag Darrell while performing onstage with he and Vinnie’s follow-up project Damage Plan in December 2004 put a brutal end to hopes of a reconciliation. Vinnie Paul now drums for Hellyeah!,while Phil Anselmo fronts Down.
SAVE SUBSCRIBE AND GET 20% O THE CO FF PANTERA’S CLASSIC V E R PRICE! COWBOYS FROM HELL! Subscribe to Metal Hammer today for just £22 every six months and we’ll send you the Deluxe Edition of Pantera’s Cowboys From Hell Cowboys From Hell may have been Pantera’s fifth album,but as their major label debut it signalled a departure from the hair metal of their 80s guise, a seminal work that redefined heavy metal. This Deluxe Edition includes two bonus discs of unreleased,live and demo material.Disc two features seven unreleased live tracks plus the Australia-only Alive And Hostile EP.Disc three features 11 unreleased demos and the never-before-heard The Will To Survive. GREAT REASONS TO SUBSCRIBE… •Save 20% off the cover price – that’s just £3.40 an issue! •Get in-depth fea tures on the grea test na mes in meta l –pa st, present a nd future. •Never miss a copy of Metal Hammer – 13 a year, delivered FREE, direct to your door. SUBSCRIBE TODAY! Order online: www.myfavouritemagazines.co.uk/mhmp16 OR CALL: 0844 848 2852 (Quoting code MHMP16) Lines open 8am-9.30pm weekdays and 8am-4pm Saturdays Live outside the UK? For fantastic savings please visit www.myfavouritemagazines.co.uk/metalhammer NORTH AMERICAN READER OFFERS… FOR GREAT SAVINGS (NO GIFTS THOUGH!) order online at www.imsnews.com/mhm or call toll free: 1-800-428-3003 Terms and Conditions: Offer is only available to new UK subscribers paying by Direct Debit. Minimum subscription term is 12 months. You will receive 13 issues per year. Your subscription will start with the next available issue. The gift is subject to availability. In the event that stocks become exhausted, we reserve the right to substitute with items of a similar value. Please allow up to 60 days for delivery of your gift. If at any time during the first 60 days you are dissatisfied in any way please notify us in writing and we will refund you for all un-mailed issues. Offer ends: November 22, 2010
Al bu m s/ DV Ds kn o t nine. 8 4 S li pked to the power of Download gets roc Blood, All That Remains, Big Elf, Bonded By hods Met ord, Half d, win Down, Ginger, Fire re, Soundgarden, Of Mayhem, Queensrÿche, The Red Sho Torche and more! or, Terr n, Spiritual Beggars, Soundgarde Plus! ind to his power 82 Fi retariw st, Gus G, returns Ozzy’s new gui metal roots. CRADLE OF FILTH DARKLY, DARKLY, VENUS AVERSA PEACEVILLE/ABRA CADAVER Dani Filth’s latest concept? You wouldn’t Adam and Eve it… Live s 96 O zz fe stn, Murderdolls, Steel Panther Ozzy, Kor and Skindred tear up the O2. Dimmu Borgir, Mammothfest, Skeletonwitch and more! Plus! BASED on an original tale about the arrival of she-demon Lilith into the contemporary world and her subsequent elevation to deity status, the ninth full Cradle Of Filth studio opus seems intended as some kind of oestrogen-drenched companion piece to the grimly priapic Godspeed On The Devil’s Thunder, which told the story of hero-cum-child-killer Gilles De Rais. Never let it be said that COF have run out of ideas or audacity. Neither have they run out of musical invention, as this is yet another sumptuous and spectacular eruption of gothic melodrama, perverted sonic schlock and balls-out extreme metal bombast. It is a testament to the richness and totality of the musical and lyrical world that the band have constructed, armour-like, around themselves over the last two decades that Darkly, Darkly… sounds very much like the next instalment in an ongoing series of sonic novels, rather than merely another batch of dark metal songs glued together with bat spittle and blood. Of course, the pathetic shrieks of BM purists continue to bounce feebly off Dani Filth’s back, not least because his band’s sound remains a fiercely open-minded amalgam of all the great heavy (and heavier) metal of the 80s and 90s, rather than some weak-minded one-track trickle of noise. On this occasion, the influence of King Diamond is writ large from the start, not least in the whole breaking news albums WWW.METALHAMMER.CO.UK Foron allallthethehottest
ALL THAT REMAINS FOR WE ARE MANY ANOTHER PERFECT DAY THE GOTHENBURG POST SCRIPTUM DESPITE selling vast numbers of albums and gaining a fanbase that appears to be loyal despite the waning Metalcore fortunes of metalcore,ATR veterans hit seem content to tread a plateau water with their fi fth album. Sure, Adam Dutkiewicz’s production is as glistening as ever, and the band play like 12-fi ngered demons, but that just illustrates the fact that you’ve heard many of these songs before. Still, there’s the odd glimmer of hope, specifi cally in thrashfests like From The Outside and melodic mashups such as Dead Wrong, an unpredictable meeting of ideas which sounds like Steve Vai meeting Trivium. Next time around, ATR will have to up their game and grab fi rmly onto their more experimental side, or it may just be goodbye from them. [6] WHY anyone would name their band after one of Motörhead’s weaker albums is beyond us, but that curiosity aside, Melo-death Another Perfect Day’s boffins put their debut is a thoroughly heads together satisfying work, full of sophisticated textures and unexpected shifts in direction. Much of this can be attributed to the fact that it’s a studioonly project based around one musician, Kristian Kohlmannslehner, who runs the Kohlekeller studio in Germany. Judging by the scope of the music here, which ranges from melodic death metal (The Matador) to Opeth-style progressive folk (Until You Bleed), Kristian has learned a lot from the many bands that have passed through his studio. The guest vocals from fellow studio boffi n Dan Swanö add a dash of value. [8] JOEL McIVER JOEL McIVER ALTER BRIDGE AB III BAPTIZED IN BLOOD BAPTIZED IN BLOOD JUST when it seemed that Alter Bridge had run their course, the band have blasted back with their best album Crossing over yet. Now that Creed are into the back together, and big time? frontman Myles Kennedy is heavily embroiled with Slash, can Alter Bridge have any future? AB III suggests they do. In the past, the band have sounded like Creed with a different singer and lesser songs, but now they’ve found their own niche. The record is stuffed with anthemic tunes, delivered with real aggression. The style is very dark, the band expressing self-doubts through the lyrics. The fact that it sounds so spontaneous – due to lack of studio time – is also to the album’s advantage. Alter Bridge now have real momentum. [8] CANADA’S Baptized In Blood have stumbled upon a great mix of twinharmony party metal like Trivium covering Bon Jovi Canadians and hardcore brutality. prepare some The chords are uplifting party classics majors jabbed at breakneck speed and the while the main riffs may not be particularly distinctive, the 80s-infused leads bring so much character to the mix. To some it might seem a bit too pastiche in the vein of Blessed By A Broken Heart, but the band admit they started as a fun side-project that became better than their main projects. And with sleazy, Crüe-inspired lyrics in songs like Up Shirts Down Skirts, it’s no wonder they did. Like Dragonforce meets Cancer Bats, Baptized… will doubtless resonate with the more open-minded mosher. [8] MALCOLM DOME GILL AND HELL FOLLOWED WITH BIGELF REISSUES PROSTHETIC ROADRUNNER A DAZZLING AND DASTARDLY DISPLAY OF DESTRUCTIVE DEVILRY storytelling aesthetic and amid the initially toys with left-field notions black twinkle of those intros, interof discord and groove, before ludes and hazy ambience hidden mutating into a rampant blend of between the riffs.The percussive rush the sinister and the upbeat. of Iron Maiden is an omnipresent With all due respect (i.e. none shadow across the album too, but whatsoever) to the drooling foodhere it comes with ever-escalating mashers of the internet whose intensity and enough sinew-shredding unsolicited prescribing of the very blastbeats to satisfy all but the most nature of metal itself continues to snooty extremists. Opening stormpointlessly poison everyone else’s blast The Curse Of Venus Aversa, conversational oxygen, criticising conceptual centrepiece Lilith Cradle Of Filth for any other reason Immaculate and the brilliantly titled than a simple dislike of their music The Nun With The Astral Habit are is a complete waste of time. Both as brutal and uncompromising as in terms of success and creativity, anything in the COF canon, while the the Suffolk fiends have already rampaging, scabby-knuckled won 10 times over. And here they traditionalism of Beyond Eleventh are, 18 years after releasing their Hour amounts to the first demo, with yet INFLUENCED BY strongest album-closer another dazzling and IRON MAIDEN, KING since Mother Of dastardly display DIAMOND, DANNY ELFMAN Abominations from of destructive ALSO TRY 2004’s Nymphetamine. devilry. This is In terms of obvious simply what they THE VISION BLEAK The Wolves Go Hunt Their Prey crowd-pleasers, The do, and so if you PROPHECY, 2007 Persecution Song don’t like it, other KING DIAMOND House Of God offers a deviously bands are available. MASSACRE, 2000 If you do, it’s time infectious guitar melody SABBAT to surrender to the within its stirring Dreamweaver (Reflections Of Our Yesterdays) dark once again. [8] mid-paced battery, NOISE, 1989 DOM LAWSON while Deceiving Eyes     PROPRIOCEPTION SUPREME CHAOS ROADRUNNER POWERAGE CREDIT where it’s due – this album can be quite heavy in some sections. Nick Holland’s vocal range is impressive and US deathcore Billy Noffsinger’s drums crew hit are staggering, but the depths technical profi ciency does not always make for good songwriting.After the endless breakdowns and absence of a single original riff, adding up to rehashed deathcore at its mind-numbing worst, you feel like you’ve spent 45 minutes chasing your tail. Every cliché d trick in the book is repeated ad infi nitum, not least of which are the utterly pointless samples. The end of 2010 is nigh upon us and if this is the best deathcore can throw out then all we can say is goodbye and good riddance. [3] WHEN you hear a band for the fi rst time and you’re not exactly sure what decade they’re from, it’s usually a Vibrant promising sign. LA progsters step prog/psych rock quartet back in time Bigelf are one such band. Despite oodles of talent, the mist-shrouded machinations of the music industry have somehow prevented their rise beyond cult status. That needs to change. These timely reissues of the band’s fi rst EP, 1996’s Closer To Doom [7] , and fi rst two albums, 2000’s Money Machine [7] and 2003’s Hex [8] , will hopefully fi nd their way into the hands of the burgeoning new generation of prog fans. Mixing Sabbath, Floyd, Queen and The Beatles into one glorious fusion of styles, this is one of the best bands you’ve never heard. ABHIJEET AHLUWALIA GREG MOFFITT EARACHE ‘Goat Of Mendes’ aka the Satanic symbol, the Baphomet, is DID YOU KNOW? The believed by Luciferians to be the result of Lillith and Lucifer mating. METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 79
CATARACT KILLING THE ETERNAL DUB WAR THE DUB,THE BAD & THE UGLY THIS Switzerland-based metalcore crew have been around over a decade now and, in this time, they’ve upgraded labels, traded Metalcore members and all but crew learn to nudged out their remainget Down ing hardcore influences in favour of more diverse metallic subgenres. But as with their last release, thrash is most dominant here. Fedi’s deathcore vocals have grown noticeably more Phil Anselmo-esque, working brilliantly against the Swedishinspired fretwork and chugging riffs. But despite Killing… showcasing a host of enjoyable tracks, few are very memorable in the long term. It’s actually closing track, Allegory To A Dying World, that truly sparkles and suggests just what these guys could offer if they explored this unique, slightly dirtier direction in future albums. [7] EARACHE have collated a great package of Dub War recordings and fi lmed live footage. The CD is a collection of Skindred released and unreleased frontman material – the latter that reveals his roots would have formed the band’s fourth album before they disbanded in 1998 (frontman Benji Webbe going on to form Skindred). The music itself is heavily dub-infused hard rock with Benji’s inimitable vocal stylings always present. Tracks like Respected just go to show that while they were innovative, they were also great songwriters. And what the recordings lack in dense studio production values they make up for in human grit that shouts from every bouncing riff and spat lyric – as the live DVD portion (shot at their LA2 London show) corroborates. [7] NIK YOUNG GILL CITY OF FIRE CITY OF FIRE FALLEN ANGEL CRAWLING OUT OF HELL WITH side-projects twoa-penny these days, no one could reasonably have expected the Fear Factory spin-off City Of Fear Factory Fire to shake things up. members give But now given a proper double trouble UK release, it’s a keeper from the word go, not because it’s massively heavy or technical but because it combines fully leaded choruses with a hybrid rock/metal approach that sounds completely evolved. The most obvious example of this deft mix of styles is the single, Rising, and the rest of City Of Fire is equally gripping. All this is explained by the presence of Fear Factory singer Burton C Bell and bassist Byron Stroud, whose day job is, of course, all about balancing melodic vocal hooks with crushing riffage. Thoroughly gripping. [8] WITH a paper-thin concept that appears to have been conceived simply in order to promote the second and Power metal as-yet-unreleased with a episode of the Crawling novel concept Out Of Hell saga, Fallen Angel are about as subtle as a brick. This fi rst instalment sees our hero comatose after a car crash that has him flitting between two worlds, a bit like Life On Mars but without flares or misogyny. To make up for this, the album comes with an overwrought novel and artwork that looks like it won a drawing competition at a secondary school. It’s not all bad, though – flashes of Priest and Queensrÿche promise much, though titling a musical segue Respiration Desperation is never going to win you any friends. [6] JOEL McIVER PHILIP WILDING BONDED BY BLOOD EXILED TO EARTH THE CROWN DOOMSDAY KING FORBIDDEN OMEGAWAVE GRUMPY piss-flingers, clutching their vinyl close to their chests, bemoan the neo-thrash fi xation on one specifi c sound, the Cali thrash meaningless pop-culture pack turn the referencing and the lights low historical re-enactment fashion. Cali thrashers Bonded By Blood helpfully exemplifi ed all of these things on their debut, their name alone a testament to their narrow spectrum of influences. Now with a concept album, BBB may be rattling on about an alien invasion and touching all the usual 80s reference points, but they’ve taken a turn for the darker. Gone is the keg-tapping DayGlo atmosphere, and in its place a pummelling, prowling meaness and threat reminiscent of Rust in Peace or Seasons In The Abyss. Still a cartoon, but an adult one at least. [7] YOU could always rely on The Crown to push meloDM to the very limits of brutality, and their absence from the scene Scando-brutes left a chasm that lesser return with bands had no hope of fists flying fi lling. Newly reunited with God Macabre’s Jonas Stålhammar, now spitting venom at the mic, the Swedes have simply plugged in, cranked everything up to the max and continued where they left off. The razor-wire riffi ng of guitarists Marko Tervonen and Marcus Sunesson remains the key to these songs’ effectiveness, the duo’s blend of catchiness and skull-coshing bellicosity propelling everything along with bracing urgency. Jonas acquits himself brilliantly too, particularly on the opening title track and the cheerfully wicked Soul Slasher. An extremely welcome return. [7] WHILE re-enactors and prominent survivors try to convince the world that Bay Area thrash has a oneline dictionary defi nition Thrash pioneers and a pic of Dave Mustaine struggle to giving the thumbs-up, the catch up return of the defi antly diffi cult Forbidden is an eagerly awaited one. In the 13 years since Forbidden’s last album, Green, yesterday’s forward-thinking became today’s common currency. But even though 90s groove-laden half-thrash of yore has been updated slightly to echo Strapping Young Lad’s space-age grandeur in places, and Machine Head’s crowd-pleasing calls-toarms, Omega Wave is just fi lling in the gaps when it should be setting the cosmic waypoints for the next decade. It’s fi st-pumping fun, but Forbidden have fallen short of their own dizzyingly high standard. [7] JAMES HOARE DOM LAWSON JAMES HOARE A great way to remember the awesomeness of RJD DIO HOLY DIVER LIVE EAGLE VISION RONNIE James as Stand Up And Shout and Man On The Silver Mountain. Ronnie also Dio’s music paid tribute to his stint in Black touched so Sabbath with Heaven And Hell and many people that there’s still The Sign Of The Southern Cross (the latter from the 1981 album Mob a huge hole in the heavy metal Rules), making this more or less a perfect summary of his unique The late, great scene six voice of rock career. Although the Blu-Ray format months after re-enacts a classic allows for bonus features such as his death. One picture-in-picture material, extras way to remember him is via this are sparse here, so don’t buy a hi-def excellent live Blu-Ray, recorded at player just for this. Still, we get a London’s Astoria (also no longer tasty backstage documentary in with us) back in 2005, when Ronnie which Ronnie and band (bassist and his band were so full of energy Rudy Sarzo, drummer Simon Wright that they were practically emitting and guitarist Doug Aldrich) are sparks. Holy Diver Live was released as a standard DVD interviewed about the INFLUENCED BY Holy Diver album and back in 2006, so pick DEEP PURPLE, BLACK their current state of this up for the zinging SABBATH, JUDAS PRIEST mind. As a band, they high defi nition and ALSO TRY seem completely DTS audio. The show QUEENSRŸ CHE optimistic about the features the band Mindcrime At The Moore future. Five years bookending a THOMPSON MUSIC OZ, 2007 down the line, Ronnie run-through of the GLENN HUGHES Live In Australia would be gone. classic, eponymous UNIVERSAL PICTURES VIDEO, 2009 Life is fucking cruel album with eight other HEAVEN AND HELL Live From Radio City Music Hall sometimes. [8] songs, among them RHINO/WEA, 2007 JOEL McIVER career highlights such   ALBUMTHAT CHANGED MYLIFE Barney Greenway Napalm Death MOTÖRHEAD ACE OF SPADES BRONZE “FOR me that’s the fi rst extreme album; it’s fast and it’s raw. There were bands at the time that were defi nably more metal – Saxon and the like – but they were nothing on Mötorhead – they seemed random, spontaneous and extreme. That was the start of my interest in chaotic music.”   EARACHE TRUE OR FALSE? Ronnie James Dio never took any singing lessons. CANDLELIGHT CENTURY MEDIA EARACHE FALLEN ANGEL NUCLEAR BLAST True. He claimed he learned his breathing techniques from playing the French Horn. METAL BLADE
GINGER TEN ROUND A SHORT LOOK AT THIS MONTH’S OTHER OFFERINGS COMPLETE FAILURE HEAL NO EVIL RELAPSE PREVIOUSLY on Steve Austin’s SuperNova label, Pennsylvania’s Complete Failure have more than a hint of Today Is The Day in the doomy breaks that pepper this noxious gumbo, seasoned with the hoarse misanthropy of His Hero Is Gone, the riff-driven nihilism of Integrity and the fi st-clenching bludgeon of Assück. [8] JAMES HOARE THE CONSTRUCT TITAN WWW.MYSPACE.COM/THECONSTRUCT_BAND THE artier, Cult Of Lunainspired end of posthardcore has proved very hard to fuck up, and Manchester’s The Construct are another band wading into rite-of-passage territory with well-versed foreboding. Equally driven by Burst riffs, you’ll be too entranced by where they’re heading to care where the inspiration comes from. [7] JONATHAN SELZER HOSTILITY SET IN STONE HOSTILE LIFESTYLE MUSIC SET In Stone recalls Dry Kill Logic with the now-obligatory nod to Pantera. While it lacks neither muscle nor crunch, it’s recording anything memorable or original that proving diffi cult for the Arizonians. Fourteen years into their career, it’s not quite good enough. [6] TERRY BEZER LOGAN THE GREAT UNKNOWN GUARDIAN ANGEL WITH Keith Olsen’s production, you’d be mistaken for thinking Logan had come strolling out of the Midwest. Rich melodies, punch ballads– it’s a familiar scenario, though possibly not for a band from Glasgow. Deft and polished it might be, but you’d think heartbreak would have more edge. [6] PHILIP WILDING h This mornyt… in hBEiRs1t98o8 NOVEM MANOALWKINAGRS THE MIC ET ATLANT d, ets with mea FILL the gobl is a killer. m bu al w ne nd, Manowar’s think of this ba Whatever you is excellent. s The Metal King of integrity and full It’s an album t a great dignity. I’m no cord. tremendous is re th ve lo I t bu Manowar fan their y me back to They can carr e. [4/5] lik ey th y time longboats an ER VALERIE POTT TEN is more a ‘best of’ than a ‘greatest hits’ set, on account of none of the tunes actually having been a hit, but Solo overview every one of the 16 from Wildheart songs on offer, including lynchpin new tracks No Way Out But Through and This Too Will Pass, are cracking examples of brilliantly written power pop. Boisterous, energetic and hugely melodic, the likes of Sonic Shake and Yeah Yeah Yeah deploy the same incisive wit and drive Ginger brings to The Wildhearts, whilst the lower key Black Windows and I Knew You display a more reflective side. Best of all, however, is Girls Are Better Than Boys, a glam rock stomper that stands alongside the best that Sweet or Slade ever came up with. Rocking! [8] JERRY EWING INFECTIOUS GROOVES/ THE KINGS OF FROG ISLAND CYCO MIKO 3 FUNK IT UP & PUNK IT UP: LIVE IN FRANCE ’95 ELEKTROHASCH SUICIDAL RECORDS A RECORDING of the French stop on a tour this funky fi ve-piece played 15 years ago, this collection shows off the real stage Funk-metal sound feed and original colloboration stellar line-up lead by lives again Suicidal Tendencies’ Mike Muir and Metallica’s Rob Trujillo. The two sets are stuffed with heavy grooves, meaty basslines and a healthy dose of Cyco Miko and Infectious Grooves’ goofy humour. It’s tough not wishing you’d been there to see these guys tearing through the different sets each night. The un-enhanced basslines don’t come out the cleanest, but the result is charmingly authentic and makes for one seriously funky trip down memory lane. [8] NIK YOUNG STONER rock became stale so quickly that by the end of the 90s it was like fi ngernails on a blackboard. A decade later, the Out of link between scruffy sods psych, out with guitars and bona fi de of mind psychedelia has been fully restored, not least by this Midlands collective, who over three albums have displayed a knack for pot-addled esoterica. Fans of 80s acid rockers Loop and Spacemen 3 will fi nd plenty to swim in here, as swarming analogue drones and crudely thumped toms spiral upwards in a cyclone of grubby grooves, while snappier pieces like Dark On You sound like the kind of thing QOTSA used to do before they disappeared up their own idly chattering shitters. [7] DOM LAWSON GREY WHONEEDSYOU BASTARDIZED RECORDINGS THESE days, when forming a hardcore band, there are essentially two routes you can take. One is to pool your various Hamburg mob influences and genuinely debut with try to create something a Botch job crushing and unique. The other is to just rip off Botch. It takes a supreme level of arrogance to think that you can get away with the latter, yet it takes an unfathomable amount of skill to do it anyway and not only get away with it but almost make that sound your own – which is exactly what Hamburg’s Grey have done. Whilst lacking the headfucking counter-rhythms of the Washington legends, the fleeting moments of savagely simple yet rewarding riffs and barely controlled chaos prevail on a most unpleasant yet cultured debut. [7] TOBY COOK IMPERIAL STATE ELECTRIC IMPERIAL STATE ELECTRIC PSYCHOUT THOSE still mourning The Hellacopters’ demise should buy this ASAP. To all intents a solo album from vocalist/guitarist Hellacopters Nicke Andersson, it picks man touches up where the ’Copters down left off – fun choruses, punchy guitars and radio-friendly anthems of wanton self-indulgence. We’ve all burned the candle too much whilst away from home and one can imagine Nicke’s grin as he sings ‘Need to recuperate/From recuperation’ during the opening track, Holiday From My Vacation. If what you crave is well-played garage rock with unselfconscious nods at the psychedelia of the 60s (The Beatles) and the following decade (The Who and Small Faces), then look no further. [8] DAVE LING Down: Southern discomfort DOWN DIARY OF A MAD BAND ROADRUNNER FOCUSING on NOLA sludge metal legends. It’s like the 10-legged, Anselmo and co. can hardly believe headbanging, their eyes at the power of their hellraising, own music and how much it means weed-toking, to people. Indeed, the London whiskeyAstoria show that the two-disc guzzling audio CD comes from had one of Mighty sludgers supergroup’s the most diehard, full-throated on the road first venture audiences that the capital has seen to maturity overseas, in the past five years. The only Diary Of A Mad Band captures the negative to this collection is that igniting of the fire inside the bellies if you’ve seen Down since the of the members of Down first hand. release of III: Over The Under, you’ll know the band have gotten much, Primarily concentrating on the much better as a live act since this performances of their 2005 collection was recorded. Phil summer tour, this collection was Anselmo, in particular, is back to recorded at a time when the band his ‘stronger than all’ were totally inactive INFLUENCED BY best and it makes without a label or any SOILENT GREEN, BLACK some of the shows new material to SABBATH, PANTERA on here tamer in promote. What’s ALSO TRY comparison. That fascinating about the CORROSION OF CONFORMITY said, Diary Of A Mad DVD portion of the Deliverance Band is still an package is to see the SONY, 1994 essential purchase passion from the ORANGE GOBLIN Healing Through Fire for any fan of this European crowds SANCTUARY, 2008 band and, by proxy, that greets the band THE SWORD Age Of Winters this magazine. [8] and how it breathed KEMADO, 2006 TERRY BEZER life back into these DID YOU KNOW?     Should you visit Metairie, LA, you could pop into Anselmo’s, the restaurant owned by Phil Anselmo’s dad. METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 81
METHODS OF MAYHEM QUEENSRŸ CHE A PUBLIC DISSERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT EMPIRE They have the powerrrrrrr! FIREWIND THE DAYS OF DEFIANCE CENTURY MEDIA FEW would There’s ample room for showboating surely dispute for sure, with keyboard player Bob Gus G’s Katsionis often matching the deserved flamboyance and speed of his guitar elevation from counterpart, but the likes of The Ark Of Lies, Cold As Ice and the one-two the driving punch of The Departure/Heading For force of a band The Dawn are examples of melodic Melody, muscle and that have been, musicianship from to use a football power metal at its best. Whilst in the Ozzy guitarist analogy, playoff past some have pinpointed the vocals of Apollo Papathanasio as Firewind’s regulars for the past several seasons Achilles’ Heel, his performance here into Ozzy Osbourne’s centre forward is full of confi dence, hitting the of choice. Whilst the 30-year-old accepted standard levels with Greek cannot hope to match the star consummate ease. Having felt that quality of his Ozzy predecessor, Zakk their last album, 2008’s The Wylde, The Days Of Defi ance resonates with all the musicianly Premonition, sounded a little too glossy thanks to flair of an artist whose INFLUENCED BY Fredrik Nordström’s CV includes spells with BLACK SABBATH, production, this time Arch Enemy, Dream IRON MAIDEN, STEVE VAI the band handled Evil and Mystic ALSO TRY things their own Prophecy. Gus G is a DREAM EVIL way. Coupled with heck of a guitar player, The Book Of Heavy Metal the conspicuous but Firewind’s sixth CENTURY MEDIA, 2004 absence of cheesy studio set doesn’t ARCH ENEMY Doomsday Machine covers, the results resort to merely CENTURY MEDIA, 2005 are more satisfying ramming those DRAGONFORCE UltraBeatdown than ever. [8] credentials down the ROADRUNNER, 2008 DAVE LING listener’s throat. LAST RECORD IBOUGHT ROBERT TRUJILLO METALLICA BARONESS THE BLUE RECORD RELAPSE “IT’S really heavy, but there’s a real progressive aspect too. I’m branching out into bands like Torche, and High On Fire’s last album is great too. We’ve been blessed enough to tour with a lot of these bands.”   EMI REMEMBER when Sugar Ray, OPM, Unkle Cracker and Smash Mouth were making sun-kissed music that was sweeter Tommy Lee than downing a jar of spends too long sugar-coated syrup? in the sun It was shit, wasn’t it? Especially if you come from a country where the weather predominantly ranges from shit to really shit. Unfortunately, nobody told Tommy Lee as Methods Of Mayhem have switched from their nu metal to just this. Music for people who make the Ultimate Big Brother contestants look like a meeting of MENSA minds, …Announcement is almost essential listening because you need to hear how ludicrously shit this record is. Sadly, it’s an album more likely to cause you to question the point in living than ring your mates for a piss-up. [3] BACK in 1990, Queensrÿche faced a dilemma: how to follow the acclaimed, complex concept album US progressive Operation: Mindcrime? metallers In the end, they decided strike back not to try. Instead, they wrote good songs and out came Empire. The result is now possibly the best album of the Seattle band’s career. Now there’s a chance to reassess this record and to realise that, 20 years on, if anything, it’s even better. There’s a low-key stylishness about songs like Jet City Woman, Silent Lucidity and Best I Can are magnifi cent examples of the ’Rÿche in their element. No OTT performances, no histrionics. Just majestic rock. You also get a bonus CD with a live performance from that era, at the Hammersmith Odeon. Unbeatable value. [9] TERRY BEZER MALCOLM DOME NEGLIGENCE COORDINATES OF CONFUSION THE RED SHORE THE AVARICE OF MAN DON’T get hung up on the nationality angle; Negligence aren’t just worth a listen because of the novelty factor of Slovenia being Slovenian. This is goes metal the band’s second album thrashing mad and it’s appropriate that this was recorded in New York because there’s a lot of East Coast heritage about the album, and Negligence prove this is where their soul resides. The musicianship rarely slackens, with guitarist Jey proving particularly adept, while vocalist Alex Skofljanec really can roar and soar. There’s nothing new here, but Insane Asylum, Mind Decay and Addicted To Aggression show that Negligence have something going for them on an international scale. And they can also caress, as the acoustic The Way To… amply proves. [7] NEVER mind Sweden, Australia is the place to go if you want mindnumbingly violent death metal. Melbourne’s The Ear-damaging Red Shore bring the DM from aggro in abundance with Down Under an approach that doesn’t sacrifi ce feel for technicality. The Avarice Of Man lays on the sonic aggression with no obvious compromise, with songs such as Armies Of Damnation based on fi lthy, full-throttle grind that devolves into slow grooves. It’s not all about murderous speed, though: on tracks such as The Union…, air-raid sirens, discordant ambience and industrial sounds give the album a palpable atmosphere which will be perfect if you’ve been stuck in a traffi c jam for two hours. Albums like this make you forget that Dannii Minogue ever existed. [7] MALCOLM DOME JOEL McIVER METAL BLADE LISTENABLE INC. PRETTY RECKLESS REDRUM THE MAN-EATING TREE THE HEAVY DIVISION LIGHT ME UP VINE CENTURY MEDIA INTERSCOPE FIREFIELD EX-SENTENCED drummer Vesa Ranta has fi nally emerged from his self-imposed exile with a new band. With a lineup Seasoned including ex-Fall Of The Finns play the Leafe vocalist Tuomas crying game Tuominen and Poisonblack guitarist Janne Markus, Vesa has assembled a squad of seasoned veterans, and it shows. Given their similar backgrounds and the fact that Markus penned most of the music, it’s no surprise that gothic metal is the main course. Devotees of Katatonia, Type O Negative minus the ‘humour’ and, of course, latter-day Paradise Lost will fi nd a lot to like here, even if it does get a bit samey towards the end. Some good songs and a solid grasp of that which makes teenage metal chicks instantly weep. [7] THE early signs were discouraging. The Pretty Reckless are fronted by Taylor Momsen, a 17-year-old actress from Teen actress the popular but vacuous in musical TV show Gossip Girl. talent shocker Along with the tabloid revelations suggesting that their song, Goin’ Down, is about an attempt to seduce a priest, the exploitative fi shnets-clad photos featured in its CD booklet hinted that Light Me Up would be the tackiest of prize turkeys. In fact, Taylor is the owner of quite a voice and only the most uncharitable of music fans could attempt to deny the quality and likability of the NY quartet’s unflinchingly honest mixture of sleazy, Hole-like hard rock and Alanis Morissette-esque confessional grunge-pop. A bit of a guilty pleasure. [7] IT’S taken these German heavyweights 10 years and four EPs to get around to releasing their debut album. Having toured Slow-brewed, heavily with Crowbar in melodic the past – indeed this sludge album includes a cover of All I Had (I Gave) and guest appearance from mainman Kirk Windstein – it’s clear where their influences lie. Musically one foot is in New Orleans sludge, while the other taps to a more melodic, Southern rock groove. It’s an interesting stylistic blend that saves Heavy Division from being a cliché of anger, shouting and brutality for its own sake. Sadly it’s topped with a monotonous cookie monster-style vocal that makes you feel as though you’re listening to the same song repeatedly, leaving the whole thing sounding disappointingly flat. [6] GREG MOFFITT DAVE LING CAREN GIBSON TRUE OR FALSE? Gus G and Firewind have fought the forces of evil, alongside God Forbid and Atreyu. True. But it was in the pages of the Eternal Descent comic series, featuring bands endorsed by ESP guitars.   ROADRUNNER
SOUNDGARDEN TELEPHANTASM TORCHE SONGS FOR SINGLES A BIT like 1997’s A Sides but with a better cover, this represents a swift tutorial in all matters Soundgarden. There’s Top drawer even a new song, Black grunge Rain, which the reunited recollections band originally recorded for 1991’s Badmotorfi nger. Typically downtuned and repetitive, there are better Soundgarden songs… and most of them are here – from the early bluster of Hands All Over to some anthemic Badmotorfi nger moments, the big hits from Superunknown and a couple of tunes from the underrated Down On The Upside. If you can fi nd it, get the two-disc set with an extra DVD, which really is the ultimate Soundgarden package. This set, however, still conveys why most metalheads thought Soundgarden were far and away the best of the grunge bands. [8] EVERYONE enjoys workplace distractions, and one of our favourites is our summer beach bash where a dumptruck’s A (short) worth of sand is laid out ray of back and Florida’s Torche sunshine feature prominently. Previous platter, Meanderthal, was a big hit with the umbrella-in-drink crowd and their latest is bound to have even Hammer’s kvltist intern, Jurgen, shimmying his translucent flesh to the sun-kissed melodies of U.F.O. and Cast Into Unknown. Since day one, Torche have been called ‘thunder pop’ and Songs For Singles has enough saccharine in its grooves to rot a dentist’s teeth while Face The Wall and Out Again simultaneously test bowel muscle veracity, but remain melodic enough to have the phrase ‘doom without depression’ spring to mind. [8] TRENT is no stranger to curating movie soundtracks, and these fi ve pieces were created for The Social Network, Nine Inch Nails which is about the birth mainman gets of Facebook. It’s scarier ambient than it sounds. Within the context of the fi lm, the ‘sounds’ work perfectly to accentuate mood, and with Trent at the helm we all know which mood. Specialising in haunting ambience, the pair have created 22 minutes reminiscent of the interlude-esque tracks from The Fragile. While cinematically the soundtrack fi ts in with the visual stimuli and the multimedia result is powerful, out of context the tracks simply feel like Trent without ideas – audio waffle, talking loud and saying nothing. [5] JERRY EWING CONNIE GORDON GILL A&M A SHORT LOOK AT THIS MONTH’S OTHER OFFERINGS LORD OF THE LOST FEARS OUT OF LINE HORROR-FUELLED organ, crunchy guitars and schizophrenic vocals – Lord Of The Lost certainly know how to make an impact on their debut. Some of the songs could be stronger, but the German goth rockers’ blend of Manson, Zombie and Paradise Lost still pushes the right buttons. [6] NATASHA SCHARF ONLY FUMES AND CORPSES WHO REALLY CARES, WHAT REALLY LASTS LOCKJAW RECORDS WITH a doomy guitar sound that shares as much in common with High On Fire as it does the hardcore scene, Ireland’s Only Fumes And Corpses serve up a pacy, passionate serving of balls-to-the-wall punk rock fury that shows bags of potential. [7] TERRY BEZER PANZERBASTARD CENTURION PATAC OPENING with a characteristic barrage of furious crust riffs and gear-gnashing barks, the title track explores the band’s black metal roots with an atmospheric crawl and two Celtic Frost covers before another change of gear ushers in some classic rock posturing. All delivered with that trademark blue collar grit, obviously. [6] JAMES HOARE SPELLCASTER SPELLS OF SPEED HEAVY ARTILLERY ORIGINALLY a demo but given a proper release to appease collectors in the year 2021, this combo of studio and live retro speed metal tracks joins the current vogue of looking to 80s also-rans for authenticity-guaranteeing inspiration. This Portland crew sound like the real nearly-thing. [6] JONATHAN SELZER h This mornyt… in hBEiRs1t99o9 NOVEM T DEEJAYR: SLIPKNOD OFF FO “I JERKE STERN” HOWARD ver story, Sid fi rst UK co IN the band’s “When we went on ed: al ve Wilson re nted to ern Show I wa the Howard St cock. I was jerking y m show Howard nt hanging keep it a dece off, trying to n’t on the show for re size but we we surprisingly, Wilson ” Un long enough. s actually k Howard wa added: “I thin ” . of us quite scared HYDRA HEAD TRENT REZNOR & ATTICUS ROSS THE SOCIAL NETWORK WWW.NULLCO.COM/TSN/ SPIRITUAL BEGGARS RETURN TO ZERO Halford: steel standing INSIDE OUT WE’VE waited fi ve long years but at last it’s time for Sweden’s premier retro-merchants to drop their seventh Michael Amott album of 70s-worship. returns to Formed in 1993 as the pet the retro project of Arch Enemy/ Carcass axeman Michael Amott, the band soon flowered into much more than that. A shedload of shit-hot music later and Michael continues to hone his skills, refi ning the Beggars’ sound as he goes. The result is a logical and worthy successor to 2005’s Demons with the added twist of a new frontman, Firewind’s Apollo Papathanasio. His rich, resonant voice sits snugly amid the alchemical mix of stoner, doom and blues rock riffs. It’s not their best album, but where Michael’s involved, the best may be yet to come. [7] GREG MOFFITT TERROR KEEPERS OFTHE FAITH CENTURY MEDIA FANS expecting yet another album’s worth of killer shoutouts and hardcore anthems might be disappointed by the LA hardcore latest effort from this LA crew toy with quartet. Yes, it’s insistent, the formula scattered with tear-away guitar solos and simmering with familiar Scott Vogel rage, but it also draws on rather more old-school hardcore and metal roots than usual. It’s also noticeably more experimental, and Stay Free and Shattered come across as surprisingly moody when compared to the classic sound of Dead Wrong and the mightily crushing Hell And Back. If you can ignore the repetitive boredom of You’re Caught, this album has a lot to offer. It won’t drag you straight into the pit, but give it time and you’ll be airpunching and screaming once more. [7] HALFORD MADE OF METAL METAL GOD THE debut subtle deviations, like a synthesised albums from dance club vocal that opens the title Fight and the track. Take away the metal sheen and Thunder And Lighting is a 1986 hit Halford band for Bon Jovi. And when the band fully were jolts jumps off the beaten path, the compared to results are compelling, such as the the preceding Painkiller and The Metal God gunfi ghter desolation of Till The Day treads familiar Voyeurs from I Die. Halford, the band, are best here ground Judas Priest when Halford, the man, wails with and the ill-fated Two respectively, but pained emotion. The piano fabric of the fourth studio release from singer Twenty-Five Years and the pleading Rob Halford’s solo band breaks much I Know We Stand A Chance are open wounds that contrast noticeably with less new ground. Made Of Metal is mostly traditional metal with the bravado and precision of the rest galloping riffs and tight snare beats, of the album. Made Of Metal might not be an immediately and Rob’s vocals are INFLUENCED BY recognisable classic, big, almost choral in BLACK SABBATH, DIO, but further plays some instances. It’s JUDAS PRIEST reveal appreciable familiar territory, ALSO TRY nuances that will including Like There’s IRON MAIDEN No Tomorrow that embed it into your Brave New World EMI, 2000 could’ve been a track consciousness, even ICED EARTH on any Iron Maiden if it’s not destined The Crucible of Man: album since 2000. to become the Something Wicked Part 2 SPV, 2008 Although the album brightest star in HAMMERFALL never strays too far Halford’s glittering Unbent, Unbowed, Unbroken from the expectations Chapter V:NUCLEAR constellation. [7] BLAST, 2005 ROGER LOTRING of Priest fans, there are     NIK YOUNG DID YOU KNOW? In 2002, PETA reputedly asked Judas Priest to change the METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 83 title of Hell Bent For Leather to Hell Bent For Pleather.
VAMPS BEAST WOLF PEOPLE STEEPLE THE side-project of Hyde from J-Rock superstars L’Arc-en-Ciel, Vamps is a straight-up rock riot reminiscent of the J-Rockers Britrock scene of the unleash early 00s, with an a monster obligatory dose of Japanese psychosis. Devil Side kicks off with a rousing rumble and groove backed with spacey synths, which add an almost proggy air to the proceedings. Though the lyrics drift between English and their native tongue, the vocal lines and soaring melodies on the likes of Get Up and standout Revolution latch on with immediate effect. The latter is bolstered by a swinging brass section, while Piano Duet hits another irresistible peak. Though on the lighter side of the Hammer spectrum, this is undeniably a shining effort. [7] APPARENTLY recorded in ‘a converted chicken barn’, somewhere in the English countryside, Wolf People’s debut sounds Brit trippers set like the work of a band the haystacks who take their mystic ablaze musical powers seriously. This is intelligent but wholly naturalistic psych rock that touches upon similar territory to The Heads, Diagonal and even Circulus, flute-laced, pastoral whimsy balancing out the nightmarish clangour of a subtly murderous wall of guitars, but with gigantic tunes providing a necessary core around which everything else dances and dazzles. Hitting a peak of heaviness on One By One From Dorney Reach, Steeple has its heart in the past but its head in clouds that cast a defi ant shadow across notions of temporal relevance. [7] ADAM REES DOM LAWSON VEIL OF MAYA [Id] ZODIAC MINDWARP AND THE LOVE REACTION GAN-SHIN Slipknot: nine lives SLIPKNOT (SIC)NESSES ROADRUNNER DOWNLOAD Before I Forget and, in particular, 2009 will go the intro to Duality are now etched into Donington folklore forever. It’s down in metal backed with a bonus disc of on-tour history for footage, where Slipknot invite you two reasons. into their crazy world, but not too far. One: it was a Half the charm of the masks and spectacular An historic live show comeback after suits is not just to look cool as fuck; and moving picture of a disastrous it creates an air of mystery – despite the metal zeitgeist 2008. Two: it their gradual unmasking over the years there is only so much of the was the year the (sic)est band in Slipknot world that the band will ever metal joined the likes of Metallica, Iron Maiden and AC/DC as headlining expose. Also included are the videos taken from All Hope Is Gone, but elite. Slipknot celebrated the 10th most interesting is the making of the anniversary of their debut album in Hitchcock-ian Snuff promo, a deeply style with an incendiary set that was all captured on video for your viewing personal song to singer Corey Taylor but again never pleasure. If you were INFLUENCED BY revealing the full one of the 80,000 – METALLICA, story. Finally, in a breathtaking sight SLAYER, PANTERA tribute to their late from any angle – who ALSO TRY bandmate, bassist were there, you’ll want PANTERA Paul Gray, is an to see it again, if you Three Vulgar Videos From Hell interview with the weren’t you will wish WARNER VISION, 2000 man about what you were. As iconic as BLACK LABEL SOCIETY Boozed, Bruised And Broken Boned Slipknot meant to Maiden’s Donington EAGLE VISION, 2005 him: a touching credit appearance in KORN Live On The Other Side to a lost brother. [8] 1992, the crowd UNIVERSAL PICTURES, 2007 CAREN GIBSON participation on     UNSUN CLINIC FOR DOLLS STILL ONTHE STEREO MYSTIC PRODUCTION KILLING JOKE ABSOLUTE DISSENT SPINEFARM RECONVENING their original line-up, with Youth returning to replace the late Paul Raven on bass, Killing Joke managed to touch upon various pressure points from their long, incendiary past, and still sound both utterly of the moment and galvanising in their single-minded, apocalyptic putsch. Killing Joke have relit the flames and fanned them to a multi-hued, mind-searing inferno. SUMERIAN JAGJAGUWAR ON any long-haul flight there’s always someone who manages to sleep through even the most biblical levels of Deathcore crew turbulence; no one knows prepare for the how they do it. Sitting long haul through the relentlessly average deathcore of [id] , the third LP from Chicago’s Veil Of Maya, should, however, give you some insight. Undeniably heavy, and although infused with moments of Botch-like guitar spasms and seemingly pointless Casio keyboard plonking, a great yawning nothingness prevails throughout. Here everything is ‘just right’. Just enough grunting, just enough chugging and ultrasonic drum assaults, and coupled with flurries of production trickery, the combined effect is devoid of the emotion people like Whitechapel have in spades. [5] FOR a wild bunch who were the epitome of the ‘live in fame, die in flames’ attitude of the 80s, Zodiac Mindwarp’s Sex, drugs and periodic comebacks rock’n’roll. prove that living large And Vikings doesn’t have to end in premature death, at least not yet. Unusually for a band who’ve tended to trawl the gutter in search of tales of sex, drugs and rock’n’roll, We Are Volsung fi nds Zed and co drawing inspiration from Norse mythology, but only for the fi rst half, soon returning to the sleaze that’ll have you breaking out the Aviators and slicking sump oil through your hair like it’s 1985. [7] TOBY COOK GREG MOFFITT WAR FROM A HARLOT’S MOUTH ZÜOUTÜOFTIME L MMX WE ARE VOLSUNG SPV PLANET METAL BEING the brainchild of Vader guitarist Mauser, Unsun were never going to be your typical ‘femalefronted gothic metal’ Death metaller band. Where their peers breathes new rarely, if ever, put the life into FFGM emphasis on the metal part of the equation, the controlled, bristling blasts that drive Clinic For Dolls’ accessible yet entrancing knack for straying off the path into lunar-gilded moments of reckoning offers serious ballast.What really sets Unsun apart is an uncontrived and evocative hint of entirely fluff-free eeriness and magic that feels like a by-product of Aya’s plaintively ruffled,Arctic vocals.Their near-permanent presence adds a dream-bordering, carousellike dimension that makes even ballad The Last Tear a thing of wonder far, far away from standard Eurometal territory. [7] GERMANY’S metalcore sluggers WFAHM haven’t just delivered with their third record, they’ve kicked down the door, Germans given you the package redefine and ravaged your pets in post-metalcore the process. Bands that incorporate breakdowns often get a hard time, often with good reason as they seem jammed in with no purpose other than to illicit cheap moshpit action, but on MMX, WFAHM show that the stuttering chuggery of a mid-chorus breakdown can be used intelligently, and to spine-tingling effect. At 32 minutes it doesn’t outstay its welcome, remaining compulsive throughout. There’s no reason they couldn’t be massive. Wunderbar! [8] PUTTING the ‘ill’ into Illinois, Züül bring the dirty, street-ready sound of the NWOBHM to life on a debut that’ll have Youngsters retro-metallers young take on and old punching the air. NWOBHM Channelling the punktinged energy of early 80s UK outfi ts such as Tank and Jaguar, it’s a supercharged ride promising no bullshit and no ballads, just balls-out heavy metal all the way. Sporting heroic monikers such as The Baron Batteau, Hateful Jared and Lungoat, they charge like so many chain-wielding bikers through the simpering, latté -sipping é lites, scattering iPads and eyeballs on a ride to freedom and glory. And look at that logo – few are they who dare to double up on umlauts. A very fi ne opening gambit indeed. [8] JONATHAN SELZER DANIEL CAIRNS GREG MOFFITT LIFEFORCE REVIEWED NEXT MONTH... THE BIG FOUR/HOLY GRAIL/MOTÖRHEAD Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding reckon the number of the beast, for it is the number of a decent album; and it is a review-score above six.
IN A SSOC IA TION W ITH 2010 LOCAL OPENING ACTS •NEVER MEANS MAYBE (LONDON) •CARCER CITY (LIVERPOOL) • LAVOTCHKIN (NEWCASTLE) •MADMAN IS ABSOLUTE (GLASGOW) •GUNDOGS (BIRMINGHAM) NOVEMBER 9TH –LONDON O2 ACADEMY ISLIN NOVEMBER 10TH –LIVERPOOL O2 ACADEM NOVEMBER 11TH –NEWCASTLE O2 ACADE NOVEMBER 12TH –GLASGOW O2 ABC2 NOVEMBER 13TH –BIRMINGHAM O2 ACADE FREE TICKET COMPETITIONS FOR ALL DATES NOW RUNNING ON WWW.JAGERMEISTER.CO.UK ALL ENTRANTS MUST BE OVER 18 YEARS OF AGE
the fever tour fuelled by plus very special guests + december mon 6 wed 8 thu 9 sat 11 sun 12 birmingham nia manchester men arena glasgow secc arena cardiff cia arena london wembley arena 0844 338 8000 0844 847 8000 0844 499 9990 0292 022 4488 0844 815 0815 buy online at livenation.co.uk / gigsinscotland.com new album ‘fever’ out now www.bulletformyvalentine.com www.myspace.com/bulletformyvalentine a live nation, DF CONCERTS & the agency group presentation in association with PLUS GUESTS NOVEMBER 24 PORTSMOUTH WEDGEWOOD ROOMS 28 SHEFFIELD CORPORATION 29 NOTTINGHAM RESCUE ROOMS DECEMBER 01 NORWICH WATERFRONT 02 NEWCASTLE O2 ACADEMY2 03 GLASGOW GARAGE 04 MANCHESTER ACADEMY 3 06 BRISTOL THEKLA 07 OXFORD O2 ACADEMY 08 BIRMINGHAM O2 ACADEMY2 09 LONDON ELECTRIC BALLROOM BUY ONLINE AT LIVENATION.CO.UK WWW.VOLBEAT.DK NEW VOLBEAT ALBUM ‘BEYOND HELL / ABOVE HEAVEN’ OUT NOW ON SPINEFARM RECORDS UK A LIVE NATION PRESENTATION IN ASSOCIATION WITH XRAY PLUS SPECIAL GUESTS 023 9286 3911 0114 276 0262 08713 100 000 01603 508 050 0844 477 2000 08444 999 990 0161 832 1111 08713 100 000 0844 477 2000 0844 477 2000 0207 485 9006 WEDNESDAY 30 MARCH 2011 LONDON O2 ACADEMY BRIXTON please note Venue Change Due To Phenomenal Demand ORIGINAL TICKETS REMAIN VALID 0844 477 2000 BUY ONLINE AT LIVENATION.CO.UK www.within-temptation.com A LIVE NATION PRESENTATION BY ARRANGEMENT WITH XRAY TOURING
FIRST TIME IN THE UK IN 12 YEARS!!! FULL AMERICAN STAGE SHOW!!! FEB 2011 WED THU FRI SUN MON TUE 16 17 18 20 21 22 PLUS SPECIAL GUESTS LONDON O2 ACADEMY BRIXTON MANCHESTER ACADEMY NEWCASTLE O2 ACADEMY GLASGOW O2 ACADEMY LEEDS O2 ACADEMY BIRMINGHAM O2 ACADEMY 0844 477 2000 0161 832 1111 0844 477 2000 0844 477 2000 0844 477 2000 0844 477 2000 BUY ONLINE AT LIVENATION.CO.UK WWW.ROBZOMBIE.COM NEW ALBUM ‘HELLBILLY DELUXE 2’ OUT NOW ON ROADRUNNER RECORDS. A LIVE NATION, TRIPLE G & KILIMANJARO PRESENTATION BY ARRANGEMENT WITH XRAY
NOVEMBER THU 04 MANCHESTER MEN ARENA 0844 847 8000 FRI 05 NEWCASTLE METRO RADIO ARENA 0844 493 6666 TUE 09 BIRMINGHAM LG ARENA 0844 338 8000 WED 10 THU 11 LONDON UT SOLDOO ARENA THE 2 SOLD OUT LONDON THE O2 ARENA 0844 856 0202 BUY ONLINE AT LIVENATION.CO.UK NEW ALBUM ‘A THOUSAND SUNS’ OUT NOW A THOUSAND SUNS : WORLD TOUR PLUS SPECIAL GUESTS WWW.LINKINPARK.COM WWW.MUSICFORRELIEF.ORG A LIVE NATION PRESENTATION IN ASSOCIATION WITH X-RAY A LIVE NATION PRESENTATION IN ASSOCIATION WITH ITB PLUS VERY SPECIAL GUESTS NOVEMBER 2010 FRI SAT 12 13 MON WED THU FRI SAT 15 17 18 19 20 SUN 14 GLASGOW O2 ACADEMY LEEDS O2 ACADEMY MANCHESTER O2 APOLLO SOUTHAMPTON GUILDHALL LONDON O2 ACADEMY BRIXTON NORWICH UEA NOTTINGHAM ROCK CITY BIRMINGHAM O2 ACADEMY 0871 230 7131 0844 477 2000 0844 477 2000 023 8063 2601 0844 477 2000 01603 508 050 08713 100 000 0844 477 2000 BUY ONLINE AT LIVENATION.CO.UK/TRIPLEGMUSIC.COM THE NEW ALBUM ‘DIAMOND EYES’ OUT NOW DEFTONES.COM VELVETHAMMER.NET
ab`bj_bo T _fojfkde^j kf^ ^obk^ MUQQ PPU UMMM U ilkalk tbj_ibv ^obk^ MUQQ UNR MUNR V mivjlrqe m^sfiflkp MUQR NQS NQSM NN di^pdlt pb`` MUQQQ VVV VVM NO j^k`ebpqbo `bkqo^i MNSN UPQ OTMM NP klqqfkde^j ^obk^ MUQQQ NOQ SOQ _rv lkifkb ^q ifsbk^qflkK`lKrh L dfdp^kaqlropK`lj OQeo `` elqifkbW MUQQ UNN MMRN allop lmbk SmjK cfopq _^ka lk pq^db SKQMmj tttKol`hpq^oq^pqblc`e^lpK`lj ^ ifsb k^qflkI jbqolmlifp jrpf` C ac `lk`boqp mobpbkq^qflk _v ^oo^kdbjbkq tfqe `^^ PLUS SPECIAL GUESTS DECEMBER 2 LONDON O2 ACADEMY BRIXTON 3 PRESTATYN HARD ROCK HELL 4 GLASGOW BARROWLANDS 5 BELFAST ULSTER HALL 7 DUBLIN OLYMPIA 9 MANCHESTER ACADEMY 10 BIRMINGHAM O2 ACADEMY BUY ONLINE AT LIVENATION.CO.UK PLUS SPECIAL GUESTS 0844 477 2000 0871 230 5595 0844 277 0100 028 9033 4455 081 871 9330 0161 832 1111 0844 477 2000 THE ALBUM ‘NO GUTS, NO GLORY’ OUT NOW A LIVE NATION PRESENTATION BY ARRANGEMENT WITH XRAY TOURING NOVEMBER 26 LONDON KOKO (EARLY START/CURFEW – CHECK WWW.KOKO.UK.COM) 27 WOLVERHAMPTON WULFRUN HALL 28 MANCHESTER ACADEMY 2 29 GLASGOW GARAGE BUY ONLINE AT LIVENATION.CO.UK THE NEWALBUM ‘THE POWERLESS RISE’ OUT NOW A LIVE NATION PRESENTATION IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE AGENCY GROUP myspace.com/asilaydying PLUS SPECIAL GUESTS 00 0844 477 20 00 0844 477 20 R EMY 0 NOVEMBECA 08444 999 99 STLE O2 ACAD 0 05 NEW S O2 ACADEMY 08713 100 00 ED ES LE CH 00 06 0870 320 70 GOW THE AR 00 20 7 47 07 GLASINGHAM ROCK CITYFRUN HALL 0844 WUL 00 08 NOTT 0844 477 20 EMY ERHAMPTON 05 09 WOLVNEMOUTH O2 ACAD 0844 847 24 UR 10 BO TOL O2 ACADEMY 61 832 1111 01 IS M BR RU 12 N HMV FO EMY 13 LONDO ESTER ACAD ILDRIVER O.UK 14 MANCH LINE AT LIVENATION.C WWW.MYSPACE.COM/DEV TS FIS ZY BUY ON RA 6C /3 .UK ACE.COM OMUK.CO WWW.IDITKO NCY GROUP WWW.MYSP AND THE AGE EITIE.CH WITH TION WWW.ELUV ON IN ASSOCIA PRESENTATI A LIVE NATION PLUS GUESTS SLAVES TO GRAVITY TUESDAY 16 NOVEMBER LONDON RELENTLESS GARAGE 0844 847 1678 BUY ONLINE AT LIVENATION.CO.UK THE ALBUM ‘BELOW THE BELT’ OUT NOW DANKOJONES.COM A LIVE NATION PRESENTATION IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE AGENCY GROUP asilaydying.com 0844 847 2258 0870 320 7000 0161 832 1111 0844 4771000

The Underworld 174 CAMDEN HIGH STREET, CAMDEN TOWN, LONDON NW1 · 020 7482 1932 · WWW.THEUNDERWORLDCAMDEN.CO.UK ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ THU 21 OCT AFTER THE BURIAL &+ THEMAROON EYES OF A TRAITOR & THE AGONIST TICKETS £10 ADV / DOORS OPEN 19.00 SAT 23 OCT LIVE EVIL FESTIVAL 2010 WEEKEND TICKETS £30 ADV / DAY TICKETS £20 ADV SUN 24 OCT THU 11 NOV THE VARUKERS + THE FIEND TICKETS £10 ADV / DOORS OPEN 19.00 FRI 12 NOV FREAK KITCHEN + JUROJIN & HAKEN TICKETS £12 ADV / DOORS OPEN 18.30 SAT 13 NOV THE PEACOCKS LIVE EVIL FESTIVAL 2010 WEEKEND TICKETS £30 ADV / DAY TICKETS £20 ADV + DEATH VALLEY SURFERS, THE RAZORBLADES & GINKINTA TICKETS £10 ADV / DOORS OPEN 18.00 MON 25 OCT SUN 14 NOV TICKETS £15 ADV / DOORS OPEN 19.00 + PRIMITAI, G-DSIZED & BELLIGERENCE TICKETS £8 ADV / DOORS OPEN 19.00 SHINING & ENTHRONED + SVART CROWN & THE ORDER OF APOLLYON TUE 26 OCT KIUAS & METSATOLL &TICKETSCELESTY £10 ADV / DOORS OPEN 19.00 FRI 29 OCT ANTI NOWHERE LEAGUE + DRUNKEN BALORDI, COMPANY L & THE RESISTANTS TICKETS £10 ADV / DOORS OPEN 18.00 SAT 30 OCT BLITZKRIEG TICKETS £10 ADV / DOORS OPEN 19.00 SUN 7 NOV SCHELMISH TICKETS £11 ADV / DOORS OPEN 19.00 WHITE WIZZARD MON 15 NOV BOMB THE MUSIC INDUSTRY + CYNICS TICKETS £7.50 ADV / DOORS OPEN 19.00 TUE 16 NOV PAIGE + DESTINE & ATLAS & I TICKETS £8 ADV / DOORS OPEN 19.00 FRI 19 NOV THE VIBRATORS + BRACELETTES TICKETS £10 ADV / DOORS OPEN 19.00 MON 22 NOV GRAVE & MISERY INDEX + ARSIS, THE LAST FELONY & THE ROTTED TICKETS £10 ADV / DOORS OPEN 18.00 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ T i c k e t s a v a i l a b l e f r o m T h e W o r l d ’s E n d p u b ( n e x t d o o r t o t h e U n d e r w o r l d ) o r b y c c : STARGREEN 020 7734 8932 / www.stargreen.com TICKETWEB 08700 600 100 / www.ticketweb.co.uk
PRESENT KILIMANJARO, METROPOLIS AND FRIENDS BY ARRANGEMENT WITH X-RAY PRESENT + SPECIAL GUESTS NOVEMBER 18 CARDIFF MILLENIUM MUSIC HALL 029 2023 0130 20 SHEFFIELD CORPORATION 0114 276 0262 21 READING SUB 89 WARP RIDERS TOUR PLUS GUESTS NOVEMBER 29 PORTSMOUTH WEDGEWOOD ROOMS 30 BRISTOL FLEECE & FIRKIN DECEMBER 01 BIRMINGHAM O2 ACADEMY3 03 LEEDS COCKPIT 04 GLASGOW G2 05 NEWCASTLE O2 ACADEMY2 06 MANCHESTER ACADEMY 2 08 NOTTINGHAM RESCUE ROOMS 09 LONDON O2 ISLINGTON ACADEMY 10 BRIGHTON AUDIO 0870 264 3333 22 SOUTHAMPTON UNIVERSITY 023 8063 2801 23 BIRMINGHAM HMV INSTITUTE 02392 863 911 0844 811 0051 0844 811 0051 01132 443 446 0871 230 7131 0844 811 0051 0844 811 0051 0845 413 4444 0844 477 2000 01273 606 906 TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM 0 8 4 4 87 1 8 8 0 3 WWW.KILILIVE.COM • WWW.SEETICKETS.COM New album Warp Riders out August 2010 0844 248 5037 25 MANCHESTER MOHO LIVE 0161 832 1111 26 LONDONELECTRICBALLROOM 0844 871 8803 Tickets also available from: kililive.com artistticket.com | 0871 230 0333 & usual outlets New album in stores Autumn 2010 monstermagnet.net | myspace.com/monstermagnet A Kilimanjaro + friends presentation by arrangement with Primary Talent International WWW.SWORDOFDOOM.COM KILIMANJARO + FRIENDS BY ARRANGEMENT WITH X RAY PRESENT PLUS GUESTS: PLUS GUESTS OCTOBER 22 MANCHESTER ROADHOUSE 0161 832 1111 23 GLASGOW THE ARCHES 0871 230 7131 24 LEEDS BRAINWASH FESTIVAL 0113 244 4600 25 BIRMINGHAM ASYLUM 0844 871 8803 26 NOTTINGHAM ROCK CITY BASEMENT 0845 413 4444 27 SOUTHAMPTON THE JOINERS 0844 871 8803 28 LONDON CAMDEN BARFLY 0844 871 8803 TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM: KILILIVE.COM WWW.KELLERMENSCH.COM • THE SELF-TITLED DEBUT ALBUM OUT NOW NOVEMBER WED 10 PORTSMOUTH WEDGEWOOD ROOMS 02392 863 911 THU 11 MANCHESTER CLUB ACADEMY 0161 832 1111 SAT 13 NEWCASTLE LEGENDS 0844 477 2000 SUN 14 GLASGOW GARAGE 0871 230 7131 MON 15 SHEFFIELD CORPORATION 0114 276 0262 WED 17 NOTTINGHAM RESCUE ROOMS 0845 413 4444 THU 18 BRISTOL O2 ACADEMY2 0844 477 2000 FRI 19 BIRMINGHAM O2 ACADEMY2 0844 477 2000 SAT 20 LONDON ISLINGTON O2 ACADEMY 0844 477 2000 ALSO AVAILABLE FROM: KILILIVE.COM, 0844 871 8803 & USUAL OUTLETS NEW ALBUM “ANNIHILATOR” OUT NOW ON EARACHE RECORDS ANNIHILATORMETAL.COM A KILIMANJARO, ACADEMY EVENTS & FRIENDS PRESENTATION BY ARRANGEMENT WITH X-RAY Kilimanjaro by arrangement with The Agency Group present DAYS OF DEFIANCE TOUR 2011 + GUESTS TUESDAY 07 JANUARY SUNDAY 28 NOVEMBER TUESDAY 30 NOVEMBER GLASGOW GARAGE LONDON ELECTRIC BALLROOM 0844 477 1000 MONDAY 29 NOVEMBER MANCHESTER ACADEMY 2 0844 871 8803 LONDON RELENTLESS GARAGE 0844 871 8803 0844 871 8803 WEDNESDAY 01 DECEMBER SHEFFIELD CORPORATION 0114 276 0262 Tickets also available from www.kililive.com Kilimanjaro & friends by arrangement with Factory Music Management + Agency present TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE FROM WWW.KILILIVE.COM THE ALBUM ‘DAYS OF DEFIANCE’ OUT 25 OCTOBER ON CENTURY MEDIA WWW.FIREWIND.GR | A KILIMANJARO PRESENTATION BY ARRANGEMENT WITH FACTORY MUSIC MANAGEMENT & AGENCY LTD KILIMANJARO, TIDAL CONCERTS + FRIENDS BY ARRANGEMENT WITH POSITIVE NUISANCE PRESENT THE DECEMBER TO DISMEMBER TOUR + plus guests + NOVEMBER Tue 23 MANCHESTER ACADEMY 2 0161 275 2930 Wed 24 GLASGOW GARAGE Thu 25 WOLVERHAMPTON WULFRUN HALL 0844 477 1000 0870 320 7000 Sat 27 LONDON HMV FORUM 0844 847 2405 Tickets: kililive.com • 0844 871 8803 The album “Root Of All Evil” out now on Century Media www.archenemy.net DECEMBER 2010 BELFAST SPRING & AIRBRAKE DUBLIN WHELANS MANCHESTER ACADEMY 3 BRISTOL FLEECE & FIRKIN NOTTINGHAM RESCUE ROOMS GLASGOW IVORY BLACKS LONDON O2 ACADEMY ISLINGTON 03 04 05 13 14 15 17 0844 277 4455 1890 200 078 0161 832 1111 0844 871 8803 0845 413 4444 0871 230 7131 0844 477 2000 TICKETS AVAILABLE FROM: 0844 871 8803 | KILILIVE.COM & USUAL OUTLETS W W W.MYSPACE.COM/ MUNICIPALWASTE THE ALBUM “MASSIVE AGGRESSIVE” OUT NOW ON EARACHE RECORDS T I C K E T S AVA I L A B L E AT K I L I L I V E . C O M
PRESENT KILIMANJARO, DF CONCERTS + FRIENDS BY ARRANGEMENT WITH THE AGENCY PRESENT PLUS SPECIAL GUESTS DECEMBER 2010 06 BRISTOL FLEECE 0 8 4 4 8 7 1 8 8 0 3 07 NOTTINGHAM RESCUE ROOMS 0 8 7 1 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 08 GLASGOW GARAGE 0 8 4 4 4 9 9 9 9 9 0 09 SHEFFIELD CORPORATION 0 1 1 4 2 7 6 0 2 62 10 BIRMINGHAM HMV INSTITUTE THE LIBRARY 0 8 4 4 47 7 2 0 0 0 11 STOKE SUGARMILL 0 8 4 4 8 7 1 8 8 0 3 13 LEEDS COCKPIT 0 1 1 3 24 4 1 57 3 14 MANCHESTER CLUB ACADEMY 0 1 6 1 8 3 2 1 1 1 1 15 PORTSMOUTH WEDGEWOOD ROOMS 0 2 3 9 2 8 6 3 9 1 1 16 LONDON RELENTLESS GARAGE 0 8 4 4 8 7 1 8 8 0 3 TICKETS: KILILIVE.COM, GIGSINSCOTLAND.COM AND USUAL OUTLETS HATEBREED SELF-TITLED ALBUM OUT NOW ON ROADRUNNER RECORDS WWW.HATEBREED.COM KILIMANJARO BY ARRANGEMENT WITH X-RAY PRESENT WED THU SAT SUN MON 15 16 18 19 20 DECEMBER 2010 NOTTINGHAM ROCK CITY GLASGOW QMU MANCHESTER ACADEMY 2 LONDON HMV FORUM BRISTOL O2 ACADEMY 0845 413 444 0844 499 9990 0161 832 1111 0844 847 2405 0844 477 2000 TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE FROM: KILILIVE.COM ALT-TICKETS.CO.UK | GIGSINSCOTLAND.COM | 0844 871 8803 & USUAL OUTLETS FEAR FACTORY “MECHANIZE” OUT NOW ON AFM RECORDS HIGH ON FIRE “SNAKES FOR THE DEVINE” OUT NOW ON CENTURY MEDIA WWW.FEARFACTORYMUSIC.COM - WWW.MYSPACE.COM/HIGHONFIRE A KILIMANJARO, DF CONCERTS & DHP PRESENTATION BY ARRANGEMENT WITH THE AGENCY GROUP KILIMANJARO & FRIENDS BY ARRANGEMENT WITH FIRST CONTACT AGENCY PRESENT FRIDAY 19 NOVEMBER LONDON HMV FORUM 0844 847 2405 FOR ONE NIGHT ONLY PERFORMING TROUBLEGUM IN FULL + MORE WITH SPECIAL GUESTS TO BE ANNOUNCED TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE FROM WWW.KILILIVE.COM 0 8 4 4 8 7 1 8 8 0 3 + USUAL OUTLETS WWW.THERAPYQUESTIONMARK.CO.UK K I L I M A N J A R O B Y A R R A N G E M E N T W I T H X - R AY P R E S E N T NOVEMBER 02 LONDON HMV FORUM 0844 847 2405 03 GLASGOW ABC 0844 499 9990 04 WOLVERHAMPTON WULFRUN HALL 0870 320 7000 TICKETS ALSO AVAILABLE FROM: KILILIVE.COM 0844 871 8803 & USUAL OUTLETS WWW.APOCALYPTICA.COM THE NEW ALBUM ‘7 TH SYMPHONY’ OUT NOW ON SPINEFARM RECORDS UK OCTOBER 023 8063 2601 Sun 31 SOUTHAMPTON THE JOINERS NOVEMBER Mon 01 WOLVERHAMPTON SLADE ROOMS 0870 320 7000 0114 276 0262 Tue 02 SHEFFIELD CORPORATION Wed 03 NOTTINGHAM ROCK CITY BASEMENT 0845 413 4444 0844 871 8803 Thu 04 LONDON CAMDEN UNDERWORLD 01223 511 511 Fri 05 CAMBRIDGE HAYMAKER 0844 871 8803 Sun 07 NEWPORT SIX FEET UNDER 0870 264 3333 Mon 08 EXETER THE CAVERN 01792 654 226 Tue 09 SWANSEA MILKWOOD JAM 0117 907 4927 Thu 11 BRISTOL THE FLEECE 01733 571 616 Fri 12 PETERBOROUGH MET LOUNGE 01472 351 125 Sat 13 GRIMSBY YARDBIRDS 0844 477 1000 Sat 27 NEWCASTLE HYEM 0141 221 5279 Sun 28 GLASGOW KING TUTS 0161 832 1111 Mon 29 MANCHESTER MOHO LIVE KILILIVE.COM • SEETICKETS.COM • 0844 871 8803 & USUAL OUTLETS VOODOOSIX.COM • MYSPACE.COM/VOODOOSIX • THE ALBUM FLUKE? OUT T I C K E T S AVA I L A B L E AT K I L I L I V E . C O M 18 OCTOBER 2010
Factory Music proudly presents PLUS SUPPORT & Tuesday 9th Nov GLASGOW Garage Wednesday 10th Nov MANCHESTER Academy 2 Thursday 11th Nov LONDON O2 Academy Islington FACTORY MUSIC PR OU DLY PR ESE NT S PLUS (LONDON ONLY) NOVEMBER Thursday 18th : CENTRAL STATION Wrexham Friday 19th : G2 Glasgow Saturday 20th : THE VILLAGE Dublin Sunday 21st : SPRING & AIRBREAK Belfast Monday 22nd : RESCUE ROOMS Nottingham Tuesday 23rd : O2 ACADEMY ISLINGTON London Tidal, Brew, PCL and Capsule by Mammoth Booking proudly present Factory Music proudly presents Plus special guests PART CHIMP ** UK Tour - November 2010 22 LONDON The Garage** 23 LEEDS Brudenell Social Club** 24 GLASGOW Stereo 25 BIRMINGHAM Hare and Hounds** 26 BRIGHTON Tbc www.ticketweb.co.uk www.seetickets.com www.theticketsellers.co.uk SUNDAY 5th DECEMBER HMV Forum 9-17 Highgate Road, Kentish Town, London NW5 Info: 020 7428 4099 · Doors: 7pm · Tickets: £20 adv TICKETWEB: 08444 771000 / www.ticketweb.co.uk STARGREEN: 020 7734 8932 / www.stargreen.com

y… o you b t t h g u bro og . via g www o . co Murderdolls: Joey Tem Tribiani Jord pest ison . uk Korn: Jonathan Davis singing into the big metal stick lady JÄGERMEISTER STAGEshadow of the main IN the towering arena, like a sort of medieval shanty town-cum-car park, and encroaching on the Village Of The Dammed (although upon inspection, Hamlet Of The Mildly Unfortunate might be more s apt), those bands appearing on Ozzfest’ second stage have an unenviable task. Given the stage’s sponsor, the sleazy, cock-rock stylings of JETTBLACK [6] is just what you’d expect to be opening up the Jäger’stage, but this particular stick of rock tinder never truly ignites today. Next up, Welsh hopefuls REVOKER [6] fare a little better. New signings to Roadrunner and no doubt due to make more appearances on their own soon, their drop-D fanfare seems to have won a few new fans today. In a leap forward in the intensity stakes, BLACK SPIDERS [7], whose references to‘the car park’suggests bemused displeasuree considering they recently shared a stag t with Ozzy at the Roundhouse, set abou their task with wilful abandon and refreshing arrogance. Thankfully their Southern-fried and at times almost stoner rock assault is of a quality more than capable of backing that attitude up – after all, as mainman Pete ‘Spider’ Spiby announces, Just Like A Woman is “number one in Iceland”. Bringing the stage to a close – and finding a large and welcoming number of people who have decided to give Korn a miss – veteran melodic/goth/doomsters PARADISE LOST [8] reward those in attendance with arguably the best-sounding set of the day. Pity The Sadness and I Remain illustrate the diversity of the band’s career, and before numbers start to dwindle due to Ozzy’s impending appearance there’s still time for As I Die, and for Nick Holmes to declare:“If you know the words, sing. If you don’t, then just stand there like a cunt.” Well, if you say so Nick. her: Steel Pant ain hair ag 96 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK MAIN STAGE Ozzy Osbour ne: Got milk? IT’S not easy to summon soul and an intimate sense of fun in a venue as coldly cavernous as the former Millennium Dome, but if there’s one tour that’s up to the challenge it’s Ozzfest, and a legion of fans are already swarming. There can surely be no better band to get the party started than the ever glorious SKINDRED [8], a band who are still the grand masters of positive vibes and uplifting noise. Resplendent in their silver suits, their joyous mash-up of metal and reggae acts as an on switch for the audience, and frontman Benji Webbe’s heartfelt speech honouring live music is pure serotonin for anyone who cares about rock. STEEL PANTHER [7] are a testament to metal fans’ ability to take the piss out of the more ludicrous aspects of the music they love. Early in their brilliantly boneheaded set they play Asian Hooker, a song so deeply offensive on so many levels you’d be outraged if it wasn’t so hilariously authentic to the most obnoxious KEVIN NIXON O2 ARENA, LONDON O2 ARENA, LONDON WWW.METALHAMMER.CO.UK/GIGS
Murderdolls: Wednesday 13 is back in black Ozzy Osbourne: black eyes! Black eyes! : he Skindred’s Benjiagain won’t get foiled moments of 80s LA glam rock. Pilfering riffs from Bon Jovi (Fuck All Night And Party All Day bears more than a passing resemblance to Runaway) and Van Halen (The Shocker) and scouring the gutter for subject matter, they make mincing idiocy into an artform. MURDERDOLLS [7] look positively horrific in comparison, despite the bizarre dress/apron concoction Wednesday 13 is wearing. But, backed by relentless drums, their Misfitsmeets-Tim Burton Halloween metal is powerful and tight, the band duce windmilling furiously as they intro new track Nowhere, which fits in with old favourites like Twist My Sister likeSay an old friend. The stomp of I Love To Fuck (complete with ‘fuck’-branded umbrella) may underestimate how immune we Brits are to the shock of swear words these days, but it’s a spirited set nonetheless. By the time KORN [8] are done with us, leaving us breathless, dazed and delirious, it takes a real effort to s. remember they’re not the headliner ed, Looking lean, together and determin these old pros bring the noise nding Korn: outsta ) in his Field(y magnificently. The cathartic intensity s of Jonathan Davis is balanced by river of pyrotechnics, and it makes for an overwhelming hour. And so we finish with the star of the show, Mr OZZY OSBOURNE [7], as game as ever in his introductory r video that sees him channel his inne Beyoncé in a spoof of Lady Gaga’s in Telephone video. It is astonishing, all every sense. What’s amazing after as these years is how amped he looks he storms on and demands we“go n!”, fucking crazy, let the madness begi pantomiming it up with his hand behind his ear as his band plough G meatily into Bark At The Moon. Gus is utterly flawless whether playing Sabbath or Ozzy classics. Bassist Blasko is a shape-throwing dervish and Tomamy Clufetos is simply Bruce Lee behind , kit. The whole set is a joyous singsong Ozzy spraying the crowd (and a handful of unimpressed photographers) with , foam like he’s hosting a kids’ TV show War Pigs threatening to tear the roof off.“I love you all!” he proclaims, and the O2 wipes a tear from its collective eye. Right back atcha. TOBY COOK/EMMA JOHNSTON For all the latest hammer-approved gigs and to buy tickets
u by… t to yo h g u o r b o . via g www go.c o . uk Sahg wear th discs of doomeir r i g r o B u m m i D Enslaved/Sahg W HILE it’s easy to be cynical and view tonight’s openers SAHG [8] as merely another Norwegian supergroup (featuring members of Ov Hell and Audrey Horne), it’s certainly hard to maintain that stance once you’ve seen them live, and their rich tones, obvious 70s rock influence and collection of ass-kicking songs make this an unlikely but invigorating t start to the night. One of Norway’s mos acclaimed metal acts, ENSLAVED [8] have steadily moved from their Viking BM roots towards more expansive and progressive territories, their evolution matched by a steadily expanding fanbase. Slowly drawing fence-sitters to the front tonight, the band debut material from their new album, Axioma Ethica Odini, while also rewarding veteran fans by dipping into their extensive back catalogue, including their vitriolic debut EP. Sound-wise things are occasionally patchy however, seemingly an unavoidable situation when it comes to extreme metal in this venue, the backing vocals of keyboard player Herbrand Larsen in particular sitting somewhat uncomfortably on top of the rest of the music. It’s a concern that continues with the appearance of the headliners, yet for the most part DIMMU BORGIR [9] manage to escape the venue’s acoustic wrath, the proviso being that 98 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK you stand up front and central – further back and the experience becomes hideously muddy. Of course , sound is only one concern for the band returning as they are from a lineup split that has seen them lose long-time synth player Mustis and bassist and backing vocalist Vortex. The latter in particular is a void which has yet to be filled, his spinechilling vocals on classics such as The Insight And The Catharsis – a song omitted from tonight’s set – undoubtedly a hard asset to replace. And yet, amazingly, it doesn’t actually seem to matter. Appearing to have used the crisis as an opportunity for reinvention, the aesthetic change in the band’s attire aptly reflects a further move away from their black metal past, the songs from new album Abrahadabra showcasing a bigger, more bombastic sound that further accentuates the similarities to latter-day Rammstein. Scepticism is forgivable, but tonight Dimmu are nothing less than a display of pure power, surprisingly convincing and undisputedly stimulating. DAYAL PATTERSON lder: Dimmu’s Gacreep negative Enslaved’s Grutle: “I remember when this was all me ad halls and wenches” DIMMU BOR GIR :KEV NIXON/HEIDENFEST &SKELETONWITCH:JAMES SHAR R OCK FORUM, LONDON Dimmu Borgir’s Shagrath: “You should see the other guy…” WWW.METALHAMMER.CO.UK/GIGS
Heidenfest Black Country Communion ISLINGTON ACADEMY, LONDON W ITH a take on battle metal that is overtly jaunty enough to make Turisas look like Darkthrone, EQUILIBRIUM ething of an acquired taste, though som are [6] their bouncy assault admittedly makes more [8] have sense live than on record. ENSIFERUM and never es shor e thes on sight lar regu a become ed debt en-in Maid their of gth disappoint, the stren folk metal material always impressing, withMetal Spaghetti Western spectacular Stone Cold be an being particularly genius. While there may first the ably argu ory, Bath een betw link ous obvi ng playi s band the and , band l Viking/folk meta ent support here tonight, it’s clear from the mom here yone ever one not s it’ that h finis Ensiferum is necessarily interested in. In fact, half of nthe gap. crowd depart, highlighting the generatio S GOD THE OF T LIGH TWI since It’s their loss ory [9] prove to be a stunning walk down mem lane, their status as a covers band perhaps actually justified by the fact that Bathory never of their played any live shows after the release l on ordia Prim of Alan uring Feat m. first albu ayhem vocals, Nicholas Barker on drums, ex-MVikin g guitarist Blasphemer and members of the , erjer Einh and fing Thyr llers black meta ssioned performance is unsurprisingly both impa ls. voca s ’ Alan cular parti in , shed mpli acco and nder remi a s serve ht tonig , hing More than anyt to of the huge debt today’s metal scene owes many sadly if even , thon Quor man main Bathory remain unaware of that fact. DAYAL PATTERSON JOHN HENRY’S, LONDON IVEN that it took the intervention G of producer Kevin Shirley to solve an argument that came close to Alan Nemtheanga pays tribute to the metal gods SkAengletonwitch elus Apatrida/Warbringe r THE UNDERWORLD, LONDON B Skeletonwitch: harbinger of thrash EING the best thrash band in Spain is a bit like being the most famous person in Dudley; not much of an achievement. But it’s an achievement nonetheless, and despite ANGELUS APATRIDA’s [7] rather unenviabl distinction the large number of punters that e have turned out early-doors is testament to the underlying quality of their very obviously NWOBHM-inspired trad thrash. Being a thras gig, WARBRINGER’s [8] mid-bill appearanceh is perfectly timed as most in attendance have had just enough beer to be reaching the‘pissedenough-to-party’stage – an atmosphere helpe by a brief appearance onstage by Evile’s Ol Draked – and, despite the absurdly violent Bay Areastyle thrash peddled by the group, are intent on partying the fuck out. Total War leaves many a spilled pint and several bruised noggins, as does the ensuing wall of death that leaves one elder gent looking very confused. However you mighly choose to categorise SKELETONWITCH [9], t noise expectorated by them is never less thanthe a white hot poker of nailed-on-coffin-lid-tigh metal; Chance Garnette’s vocals sear your auralt senses while the pummelling riffs maliciously loosen your bowels and cause your head to involuntarily detach from your spine. However, by the time Beyond The Permafrost hits, most are too shitfaced to care. TOBY COOK derailing the release of their debut album, Black Country, it’s reassuring to know that Black Country Communion really do exist. Even so, this debut live performance takes place behind closed doors in a tiny London rehearsal studio, witnessed only by a hundred industry figures and competition winners. With their debut nestling comfortably at number five in the midweek album chart, BCC are clearly beginning to make waves. Glenn Hughes and Jason Bonham are the band’s public faces, though guitarist Joe Bonamassa has already sold out the Royal Albert Hall as a solo artist. Bonham and the bass-playing Hughes instantly register as a formidable rhythm team via the album’s heavyhitting title song, the latter’s vocals reminding us why he is nicknamed The Voice Of Rock. But all four members play their part in weaving a sound that, whilst undeniably retro-based, has sufficient energy and vibrancy to connect with audiences of many different ages. [9] DAVE LING Truckfighters THE GAFF, LONDON OLLOWAY Road is rapidly becoming the UK’s Metal Mile with Bulleit bourbon, eightball’n’Bud shacks dispensing heavy rock to the twitchy and tattooed, in a very Americanised Route 666 manner. So The Gaff is the ideal venue for Truckfighters to rock out in, given that they too are Yankworshippers from Sweden. As a threepiece, playing live, everything that made Gravity X stand out from the crowd (Spanish guitars, funk, horn sections) has been stripped away and what remains is very, very Fu Manchu indeed. It’s insane the extent to which guitarist Drango has modelled himself on Angus Young, with his shorts, mullet and headbanging duck walk, but the more he apes his AC/DC master, the more you’re aware you’re not watching the real thing. The set is heavy with songs from Mania, and a heavily phased guitar recreates the Doppler effect of high-speed vehicles zooming past on the freeway. There is a chaotic and exciting encore that includes Loose but ultimately Truckfighters are like trucker speed, trucker porn or trucker food – simple, stripped back and fucking nasty; doing exactly what it says on the tin and little else. And even though it’s good to sink a few cold ones and bang your head, they never step out from the monolithic shadows cast by Kyuss and AC/DC, even for a second. [6] JOHN DORAN H For all the latest hammer-approved gigs and to buy tickets
Every Time I Die’s Keith Buckley: a damned thing h: All Shall Perisack none more bl Hell On Earth ISLINGTON ACADEMY, LONDON her example of UE to a mix-up with stage times, and tonight is yet anot ted bands in imita t mos we’re crushed to have missed the that. One of the showcase everything ETID rock, The ern of mod drive chist technical anar that’s great and vital about punk, Acacia Strain. To say we’re cheered up iness heav hardcore and metal during a neon end lowg, derin by the thun an is explosion of a set. From the opening [8] of ALL SHALL PERISH groove-laden punch of No Son Of Mine understatement. Uncompromisingly us through to the face-punch punk of dero thun and s brutal blastbeat level a Ebolarama and anthems like The New beatdowns are delivered with your like Black and Who Invented The Russian feel you es mak that ity of feroc gh throu Soldier?, these Buffalo revolutionaries pe esca bowels are trying to t span the genres and raise hell during your arse for the set’s duration. Wha ivity, one of the finest sets we’ve seen all creat in lack may ers these bruis er. pow in year. Keith Buckley has some of the best for they more than make up stage moves in the business, Andy s Thoroughly impressive stuff. [8] Williams and Jordan Buckley criss-cros ROR TER arts Hardcore stalw all he-w the stage like a hyperactive King and detonate no thrills, balls-to-t Hannemann and the band as a whole with ered deliv core, roots hard gy ener are tighter than 99.9 per cent of the the all and unstoppable spirit bands currently touring the Earth. of a crack-fuelled nursery class. nonEnding the set by having the power and stare icy the by Conducted the l, Voge pulled on them after roughly 100 t Scot stop goading of leader people storm the stage for We’rewolf, floor of the Islington Academy is like They t. ETID still lead the world of modern ghou throu icane a fucking hurr or k attac hardcore, showing everyone how it’s may not have the variety in done. If you weren’t here, you were the finesse of tonight’s headliners, but core, having a shit time. hard y h-gu in the field of toug TERRY BEZER Terror still throw elbows harder than ion. petit com most of the We’re going to level with you: there are very few bands as great in the live environment as EVERY TIME I DIE [9] Terror: 66…? 100 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK HELL ON EAR TH &MAMMOTHFEST:JAMES SHAR R OCK /BLIND GUAR DIAN:ESTER SEGAR R A D WWW.METALHAMMER.CO.UK/GIGS
Blind Guardian: Flying V for victory Blind GuSta r dian eelwing 02 SHEPHERD’S BUSH EMPIRE, LON DON “T HIS is the birthplace of heavy metal!” exclaims STEELWING’s [6] frontman Riley, grinning excitedly from the stage of one of London’s larger music halls. The Swed five-piece have only been around since last yearish so already performing at such a prestigious venu is really quite an achievement. Despite a slow e start, things pick up by the Maiden-esque The Illusion and these lads seriously ooze not only the trademark sound and look of their NWOBHM heroes. If England is the home of heavy meta then Germany is certainly one of the key counltries for power metal and tonight BLIND GUARDIA [9] prove it. With no clichés and no set formula,N the German pioneers treat fans to an hour-anda-half of explosive anthems. Tight, intense, epic – BG tick all the boxes and there’s even the breathtaking acoustic track In The Forest. The melodic Nightfall from the Middle-Earth-in d album of the same name is also ripped throuspire gh, as is current single A Voice In The Dark, from the new album At The Edge Of Time and the origin Viking metal anthem, Valhalla. As the grand al finale, Imaginations From The Other Side, draw to a close, frontman Hansi Kürsch promises the s audience they’ll be back on these shores again soon. The frenzied response from the crowd just about says it all. NATASHA SCHARF Mammothfest o g o . c o . uk www. via g ORGET about the fact that the F sound quality here is generally indistinct. Forget about the fact that, at times, the Swedes sound a little sloppy. This is all about an incredible atmosphere, as Dark Tranquillity finally come of age in the UK. Faced with a sold-out crowd who greet them, and each song, with huge roars of celebration, the occasion almost overwhelms the band, as vocalist Mikael Stanne makes clear with breathless gratitude at the start of this lengthy set. The rapport between fans and stage is so tight that you get the feeling the Dark ones could have gotten away with anything, but for the most part, the performance is powerful and focused. There are times when the musicians let things slip, as they become a little too loose, but that’s probably because they’re a touch too eager to please. But there’s no denying the verve and vivacity. They even bring along an oversized backdrop screen to provide appropriate images – in a venue this size that’s gloriously foolhardy. Forced to live for so long in the shadow of In Flames and Arch Enemy, tonight Dark Tranquillity’s intriguing twist of melodic death metal finally pays rich dividends. [8] MALCOLM DOME GARAGE, LONDON B … BROUGHT TO YOU BY THE UNDERWORLD, LONDON Reckless Love HOVE TOWN HALL, BRIGHTON & HOVE RIGHTON’S metal scene has been crying out for an annual knees-up, and despite last-of minute lineup changes and a faint whiffas is chaos, Mammothfest fits the bill nicely. This of much about celebrating the UK’s currentes,glut and nam big in ing bring t abou is it as t talen HORN [7] scorching sets from thrash brutes TERRAT D [7] are and Wylde-at-heart riff-wielders GODSIZEctive colle the get to s need day the t exactly wha YON [8] blood bubbling. The locals know that FUR greeted is set their and , pect pros ss d-cla worl a are TED ity, insan r shee For oria. euph with deserved MAUL [8] still take some beating. With new batshit material that sounds even more fervently have to y read d soun s oner than the old, the Lond a well-lit another stab. Somewhat awkward in such to make and sterile venue, ABGOTT [6] do their best black a not ly plain is this darkness descend, but come metal crowd. Instead, it’s MALEFICE [8]ewho a is Ther s. liner head the g agin closest to upst neo-thrash delicious simplicity to the Brits’lurching,and it’s not vals festi at antly brilli s work that ult assa this like ts even g linin head hard to imagine them it is left to in the near future. As the booze kicks in,the mighty the ageless ORANGE GOBLIN [8] and less classics time few a out n ENTOMBED [8] to chur and and send everyone home with buzzing ears . 2011 on Roll cles. mus bruised neck DOM LAWSON Dark Tranquillity been about 30 minutes and IhasT’SReckless Love vocalist Olli Herman taken off his top three times. Not Orange Goblin’s manmountain, Ben Ward that he’s come on stage looking like a man trying to smuggle jumpers out of Primark, Olli’s sharper than that; he struts on stage wearing a vintage band top he probably bought on eBay, peels it off and then goes off, puts on another one and does it all over again. Olli is prettier than most Miss World contestants so the crowd appreciates this very much. They also like the way he kicks the air like David Lee Roth used to; they even find it in their hearts to applaud both the guitar and drum solo too. If it weren’t for their shoddy songs and sub-standard LA shtick, they’d be an enigma. Sadly, ripping off Warrant’s Cherry Pie (almost note for note) and wearing vacuum-packed pants can only take you so far. Olli’s braying insistence to raise your hands in the air (he does it more often than Jon Bon Jovi – it might be some sort of record) wears thin after a while and though he might look like the bastard lovechild of Vince Neil (before the rhinoplasty) and Mike Tramp, Reckless Love are a case of diminishing returns; truly all mouth and (very tight) trousers. [6] PHILIP WILDING BUY TICKETS FOR THESE AND MANY MORE… THE DAMNED THINGS - AVENGED SEVENFOLD - ALEXISONFIR E - DEVILDR IVER - DEFTONES - ANNIHILATOR - MONSTER MAGNET - AS I LAY DYING



THE ORDER FORM BELOW, DETACH M E TA L H A M M E R S E P T E M B E R 2010 OR BY CREDIT CARD & POST C ODE *P LEASE ADD 95 P + £1 PE RODUCT X A M P L E One Shoul de r PER ITEM FOR POSTAGE & PRICE £13.99 £17.99 £11.99 £19.99 £13.99 TO US WITH YOUR CHEQUE OR POSTAL ORDER TO : S I M P LY O R D E R O N O U R F R E E P H O N E H O T L I N E Order Form T R 1 6 0 1 2 3 DESCRIPTION LONGSLEEVE STUDWAIST DRESS T-SHIRT LACESIDE DRESS LONGSLEEVE PACKAGING (E.G. 2 SPIRAL GUARANTEE ! FULL REFUND OR EXCHANGE WITHIN 10 DAYS OF PURCHASE IF YOU ARE NOT FULLY SATISFIED. S IZE Q TY L ITEMS 1 = £2.95) *P & P TOTAL VALUE 11.99 £ £ 0.95P +£1 PER ITEM Ref NAME F = ROCK OUT G = SOULCOLLECTOR H = LIVE NOW I = REMINISCE J = AWAIT THE NIGHT CODE TR294600 TR293800 TR289238 DT192221 DW180700 SIZES XXL XL L M XXL XL L M XL L M S XL L M S XL L M S DESCRIPTION T-SHIRT S/S HOODIE LS SLASH GLOVE RIBBON CAMI GOTH HI NECK PRICE £11.99 £27.99 £13.99 £14.99 £13.99 S PIRAL D IRECT LTD , S PIRAL H OUSE , 29 - 35 G LADSTONE R OAD , C ROYDON , S URREY, CR0 2BQ . 0500 000 880 CONTINUE ORDER ON A SEPERATE SHEET IF REQUIRED C OMPLETE SIZES XXL XL L M XL L M S XXL XL L M XL L M S XXL XL L M P LEASE Ref NAME CODE A = LYCAN TRIBE DW181700 B = EXORCISM DT191255 C = GUNS & ROSES TR295600 D = LOVE 2 HATE DW182256 E = VAMP CLAN DW180700 NAME P ALL ADDRESS LEASE FILL DURING 1 0 A M & 8 P M W E E K D AY S . W W W. S P I R A L D I R E C T. C O M TEL NO DETAILS IN CLEAR CAPITAL LETTERS POSTCODE PAYMENT M ETHOD : P LEASE TICK THE APPROPRIATE BOX CHEQUE (UK (M AKE ONLY) ALL CHEQUES COUNTRY *SIGNATURE *R EQUIRED TO AUTHORIZE ORDER & POSTAL ORDERS POSTAL ORDER (GBP) PAYABLE TO MASTERCARD ‘S PIRAL D IRECT ’ ) VISA MAESTRO AMEX CREDIT CARD NUMBER : START DATE EXPIRY DATE ISSUE NO SPEND OVER £20 & GET A Q U A L I T Y T- S H I RT F R E E > > CVV2 NO. MEN’S (BLACK) LADIES’ (BLACK) CVV2 = THE LAST 3 DIGITS ON REVERSE OF CARD (4 DIGITS FOR AMEX)
ISCOVER ED, THE PANT-WETTINGLY BIZA THE LOST, THE R ED RRE Tank (left to right): Doogie White, Dave Cavill, Cliff Evans, Mick Tucker, Chris Dale TANK hit afalse start in the early 80s.They released fi ve albums and supported Metallica and then disappeared. Now the NWOBHM rockers are back to make up for lost time. Words: Dom Lawson. he early 80s marked a very vibrant and exciting time for British metal, as a new generation of bands gave the genre a huge kick up the arse. Although never truly part of the New Wave Of British Heavy Metal, Tank fitted in perfectly, their ferocious blend of metal aggression, rock’n’roll swagger and punk energy immediately endearing them to fans of loud, obnoxious music across the UK and Europe. Fronted by singer and bassist Algy Ward, a former member of Brit punk legends The Damned, they released their debut album, Filth Hounds Of Hades, in 1982 and caught the attention of a few aspiring musicians across the Atlantic, resulting in the luckiest break imaginable for a young metal band at that time. “I joined the band and a couple of weeks later we were out on the road with Metallica!” laughs guitarist Cliff Evans, who has been a member of Tank since 1984. “They were fans of Tank, so that was the greatest moment for us. It was the Ride The Lightning tour and they were pulling really big crowds. They asked for us to go on that tour, which was amazing.” Despite lacking the commercial clout of Iron Maiden or Saxon,Tank clearly struck a chord with a generation of beer drinkers and hellraisers, tapping into the same audience that shoulder-barged Motörhead into the charts and having an impact far beyond what their underdog status would suggest. “A lot of bands that are around today were influenced by Tank,” says Cliff.“We heard from Kurt Cobain that Nirvana used to jam Tank songs! So yeah, Metallica loved us and Nirvana loved us, so we can’t complain really! Ha ha!” Despite releasing five well-received albums during the 80s, Tank never toured enough to capitalise on their notoriety, fading from prominence as the decade drew to a close. They resurfaced in 1997, but the momentum had long been lost, largely due to the erratic behaviour of Algy Ward and his failure to write material for a rumoured comeback album. “We never really split up,” insists Cliff.“We just didn’t do anything! In all the time I’ve been in Tank, we only did about 25 gigs. I guess that’s why people want to see us now, because they didn’t get a chance back in the old days! Me and Mick [Tucker, guitarist] have always been fired up, but we were held back because Algy kept disappearing! Eventually we decided to reform the band without him. Obviously Algy wasn’t too happy about it, but his health is really bad and he doesn’t want to tour anymore, so we discussed it and decided that we had to do it! The fans want to see us, so we’ve got to get back out there.” Now fronted by former Rainbow/Malmsteen singer Doogie White, Tank are finally back in action and ready to simultaneously honour their legacy and move forward into a new era. An excellent new album, War Machine, looks likely to win the band plenty of fresh converts, while forthcoming live shows promise to please old and new fans alike, with plenty of classic material in among the new songs. “At the end of the day, it’s all about the songs,” states Cliff emphatically.“This is a new start for us. We don’t want to dwell on the past. We thought the first show without Algy might end with us being pelted with bottles, but it went really well! The kids loved it and knew the words to the songs. It felt really good and every other show we’ve done has gone the same way. Now we can’t wait to hit the road again.” Tank’s entire discography can be found on the handily compiled nine-disc box set The Filth Hounds Of Hades/Dogs Of War 1981-2002. War Machine is released on October 25 via Metal Mind. Tank will be playing at Hard Rock Hell IV in Prestatyn, North Wales, this coming December. Visit the band’s official web presence at www.tankofficial.com for further info.
PRESENTS… GOING UNDERGROUND “WE HAVE CDME FOR YOUR MESSIAH!” PLUS! MELECHESH ATHEIST THE WRETCHED END DRAGGED INTO SUNLIGHT Strangers in astrange, holy land TOM G R WI hAavRe mRadeIpOlenty “ More reviews, more new bands, new reports from % MORE EVIL 666 the extreme cultural underground and beyond! ies...” of enem
Melechesh: the brave and the gold WELCOME TO HELL H eavy metal has always looked back to ancient times in search of clues for who we are today, but for all its focus on pagan history, mythology and glorious battle, there is one battleground that, while much further away from our doorstep in geographical terms, has proved much closer to home. It’s a battleground that has defined our contemporary consciousness in ways that more noble, possibly romantic causes have failed to do, and has shown no sign of abating across the course of millennia. It is, of course, the Middle East, both the birthplace of modern religion and the older, more mystically inclined systems it usurped. In this month’s Subterranea we get to grips with two very different bands – one closely bound to their English homeland, one comprised of exiles from a city,Jerusalem, that never recognised them in the first place – who are both determined to delve back into the region’s hotly contested past and sift it for practical answers.While kicking ass until it bursts into kaleidoscopic hues.We joust with our ever-controversial cover stars,The Meads Of Asphodel, as we discover their very English brand of eccentricity and their obsession with how the rewriting of Jesus Christ’s religious background has worked its way through history with devastating results.We also welcome back ethnically astute black metallers Melechesh to discover the wonders of Sumerian mythology and how to bring magic down a to human scale. Samoth’s return to action with The Wretched End also gets a fulsome hail and we get inside the starkly lit mind of Triptykon’s Tom G Warrior. He doesn’t piss about, and when it comes to the revelatory power of extreme metal, neither do we. Subterranea Editor Soilent Green: beware sludge bands offering Brownies INFERNO FEST TAKES IT SLOW I Battling doom and sludge veterans added to extreme fest. nferno, Oslo, Norway’s Subterranea -sponsored four-day extreme metal festival, has announced two more eye-watering acts for 2011’s bash.Joining the previously announced homegrown bands, Immortal and Aura Noir, will be two giants of both the downtuned, doom-laden riff and the heroic instinct for survival against barely conceivable odds – Virginian true doom overlords Pentagram, who will be celebrating their 40th anniversary, and NOLA sludgegrind kings Soilent Green.With histories that include drug dependencies, hospitalisations, incarcerations, numerous breakups, murders and Katrinarelated deaths of bandmembers and crippling car crashes, both bands are powerful testament to the human spirit, and are not to be missed. Inferno 2011 takes place yet again at the Rockefeller/John Dee in downtown Oslo, between April 20-23, with a‘club night’on the first evening taking place in various venues around the city, offering a perfect excuse for combining a love of extreme metal with pub crawling and inebriated map-reading.Accommodation connoisseurs not planning on simply passing out outside the venue will be pleased to know that the plush Clarion Hotel Royal Christiania is once again the official hotel, offering special rates, along with‘black metal breakfasts’, exhibitions, raucous, musicianfilled after-parties and more to anyone booking before March 1. Tickets for the festival are € 180 for all four nights, € 35 for the club night and € 70 for each of the regular nights. More band announcement are to be made over the coming weeks, and the festival is also accepting demos from bands hoping to play some of the earlier spots at the John Dee stage.To upload a demo, buy tickets and get the latest news, go to www.infernofestival.net. GRIEF IN BRIEF P ENTAGRAM have also been confirmed for the Hammer Of Doom festival in Würzburg, Germany on April 16 where they’ll be joining the likes of WHILE HEAVEN WEPT, and British doomsters SOLSTICE and AGE OF TAURUS. See www.myspace. com/hammerofdoomfestival for details. If that’s not enough, the Virginians will also be playing Tilburg, Holland’s muchcelebrated Roadburn. Expect some unique, one-off shows from the monolithic, crushing likes of SWANS (below) and GODFLESH, as well as British‘heritage’metallers WINTERFYLLETH, and one of the most mesmerising bands on the planet, WOVENHAND, based around the fundamentalist Christian muse of David Eugene Edwards, and much beloved of various Satanic black metallers including Marduk founder Morgan. France’s revered, occult black metallers DEATHSPELL OMEGA release their new album, Paracletus, on November 9 through Season Of Mist.

The Wretched End (left to right): Cosmo, Samoth, Nils Fjellstrom Samoth an d Cosmo chill out THE WRETCHED END “I Emperor’s Samoth returns to the fray, with alayer of Scum. wanted to rekindle the fire of creativity once more,” begins former Emperor legend Samoth as he speaks about his new death/ thrash project The Wretched End.“Things had become really stagnant with my previous band Zyklon. The spark had faded and I decided to take a break from the stress of it all and venture somewhere else.” And so, faced with the fact that there was no life in the old dog, the Norwegian guitarist chose to channel his frustration into a new project and created Ominous with a little help from an old friend. “In 2007 it became obvious to me that Zyklon was no more,” he offers.“I found it hard to continue running the band and it was a fucking hassle trying to get people to come to rehearsals and things like that, so I decided it was time for a change. In 2008 I began mapping out the blueprint for The Wretched End’s death/ thrash sound and started working with my good friend Cosmo, who I had previously worked with on the Scum side-project.” Happy to be reunited on a new venture, the duo began making their unholy racket in earnest and quickly started scanning the local scene for a tub-thumper with the chops to flesh out their extreme sound. “I’ve been friends with Cosmo for a long time and we live near each other so it was good to have him in the band,” explains Samoth. “I thought Scum turned out really well and I’m happy I’m continuing the collaboration with him.A short while later we found Nils “The plan was always to fuse together death and thrash metal.We wanted to have that aggressive sound and see where that would take us, but there are many different moods on the record. Some of the tracks have that epic feel in the vein of Metallica’s Ride The Lighting and Master Of Puppets. I made sure to layer the music and that’s something that I did for years with Emperor too.” Unleashed on October 25,TWE aim to distribute the slab of wax via Samoth’s own label Nocturnal Art Productions (an imprint of Candlelight Records). “This will be the first time I’ve released something on my own label,” he explains. With Samoth’s Emperor days now long behind him and Zyklon and Scum put on ice, the musician is looking ahead to an uncertain yet exciting future and confirms that TWE aren’t a one-album-only affair. “It’s hard to predict the future but we’ll definitely make another album for sure,” he concludes.“In fact we’ve already got new tracks written and ready to be recorded.These days the album has a short lifespan so we’ll be making another one soon and we want to strike while the iron is hot.” “Zyklon had become really stagnant” 110 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK SAMOTH [Fjellstrom]. I’d had my eye on him for a while and he’s a great drummer and nailed his parts in the studio in four days.” The recording of Ominous continued long into the winter of 2009, but by the spring of the following year the trio were ready to let their 12-track monster loose on society. Featuring a cacophony of chaotic soundscapes, punkinfluenced buzzsaw riffs and atmospheric suckerpunches,TWE’s debut sees Samoth once again carve out another new niche for himself within the realm of extreme music. EDWIN McFEE WhoThey are LINE-UP: Samoth (lead and rhythm guitar), Cosmo (lead and rhythm guitar, bass, vocals), Nils Fjellstrom (drums). SOUND LIKE: A hellacious mix of thrash and death metal served up with a side order of black metal bravado. CURRENT RELEASE: Ominous (Nocturnal Art Productions/ Candlelight, 2010) WEBSITE: www.myspace. com/thewretchedend
DRaggED INTo suNlIgHT Enimgatic Brits invite you into the shadows for akicking. “o ur atmosphere is an exorcism of those feelings people would otherwise seek to repress – depression, isolation and hatred – and Dragged Into Sunlight has always been a portrayal of how we see extreme metal in 2010 and beyond,” begins the multi-headed hydra and super-secretive extreme noise band, who speak as an anonymous collective.“It has no image or physical attributes, yet carries an aura of negativity and hideous strength.That’s our identity and in a world of so many, identity is all we have.” Welcome to the mysterious realm of Dragged Into Sunlight. A band as filthy and nasty as a rummage through Jodie Marsh’s knicker drawer, their anti-image coupled with a sound that blurs the boundaries between sludge, death and black metal has made many tongues wag of late and their debut album, Hatred For Mankind, has helped establish the Liverpool act as a truly extreme prospect. “In principle, extreme music should be about the THE aTRoCITy ExHIbIT Those lovely Dragged boys out playing compositions themselves. There appeared to be an overabundance of vogueish fashion, ultimately affecting extreme metal. Dragged Into Sunlight as a construct is a totally blank canvas.You see what you want you to see and if you like what you see, then so be it.” And clearly a lot of people are excited by what they’re seeing from the band who cite Godflesh,Weakling and Deicide as influences, as they’re about Who They are to embark on a European tour this November while making tentative plans to release the self-financed Widowmaker project early next year. “Widowmaker is a three-part informal release,” they conclude. “Each part consists of 40 minutes of music that’s slower, louder and heavier than anything we’ve done. It adds another face. It sounds like getting kicked to death.” LINE-UP: T (vocals), A (guitar), C (bass), J (drums),A (samples). SOUND LIKE: “We wanted it to sound like smashing a window into Hell.” CURRENT RELEASE: Hatred For Mankind (Prosthetic, 2010). WEBSITE: www.myspace. com/draggedintosunlight EDWIN McFEE EasTERN FRoNT Reporting back from the bloody frontlines of black metal. I rish and English black metal seems to be experiencing something of a breakthrough into the (relative) mainstream at the moment, with Candlelight in particular picking up a swathe of bands, namely Altar Of Plagues, Winterfylleth,Wodensthrone and Eastern Front. Of the four bands it is undoubtedly the latter who offer the most traditional sound.The band draw heavily on Scandinavia’s Eatern Front: from the frontline second wave of black metal with nods to the likes of Gorgoroth and Marduk, and yet the blueprint has been enhanced by a distinctive level of panache and attention to detail that makes them more than worthy of your attention.. “Eastern Front is a band that plays traditional black metal but experiments with other genres like doom, death, folk and classical in order to create different atmospheres and emotions in our songs,” comments lead guitarist Holocaust.“For our debut album, Blood On Snow, we aimed to have a strong production to maximise the dynamic range in our songs in order to help the flow of the different elements of the music.” Keeping their eyes on the past, the group look somewhat further back in time when it comes to lyrical themes, focusing on World War II. “The Eastern Front campaign of WWII is regarded as the war of extermination and was the most brutal campaign of that war, so therefore we felt that Eastern Front was the perfect name for a band writing brutal and atmospheric black metal,” explains rhythm guitarist Krieg. Our lyrics are written in memory of the victims of war.” The Atrocity Exhibit have been on the scabby lips of people in certain circles for a while now, and there’s a good reason for that.They’re fucking brilliant.And new album Damned And Blasted is conclusive proof.Just what is it that makes these Northampton grinders tick? Let’s ask their drummer, the mercurial Danny: “I guess our priority has always been to be extreme, but to write actual songs. There are far too many bands out there obsessed with being the fastest and it all blurs into a white noise.” www.myspa ce.com/thea trocityexhibit basTaRD PRIEsT The 00s look set to be heralding the return of filth, the precursor of Teitanblood’s Seven Chalices belching forth the likes of Obliteration, Grave Miasma and Horned Almighty, all taking death metal back to atmospherically coarse, occultic realms that had become the sole preserve of BM. Bastard Priest hail from the flashpoint of Stockholm and their debut album, Under The Hammer Of Destruction, is a cavernous, crust-caked rampage that puts old-school hardcore/punk influences through a concrete mixer of doom.“We wanted to play the hardest, most powerful stuff we could ever come up with,” says co-vocalist Matt. www.myspa ce.com/ ba sta rdpriestsweden DAYAL PATTERSON Who They are LINE-UP: Nagant (vocals), Holocaust (lead guitar), Krieg (rhythm guitar), Destroyer (bass), Destruction (drums). SOUND LIKE: Aggressive Nordic mid-90s black metal with added English dynamism. CURRENT RELEASE: Blood On Snow (Candlelight Records, 2010) WEBSITE: www.myspace. com/easternfrontuk lusTRE What happens when you take the metal out of BM? Lustre is stirring, triumphant ambient music with a nod to Burzum and Summoning Nachzeit. Having also served time with the depressive Hypothermia, it’s going for something a touch more grandiose.The concept for A Glimpse Of Glory? “These short moments of glory when everything just makes sense… I believe everyone has this experience now and then.” www.myspa ce.com/lustresweden METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 111
The Meads Of Asphodel: barking lusive, eccentric and very, very English, The Meads Of Asphodel have been warping the boundaries of black metal since their inception in 1998. Fusing medieval and Eastern influences with a wildly experimental edge, they’re not so much rewriting the rulebook as burning it and then burning the ashes.The result has been a weird and wonderful odyssey highlighted on a series of idiosyncratic releases made all the more bizarre and baffling by the band’s refusal to perform live or even to show their faces. It’s unsurprising, then, that en route to a secret location hidden deep within the Hertfordshire countryside to discuss the Meads’latest album, The Murder Of Jesus The Jew, nothing whatsoever is revealed in advance.Abandoning the relative safety of the main road, we veer down narrow country lanes, each smaller than the last, before finally trundling through an unmarked entrance onto a pencil-thin, potholed track that seemingly leads nowhere. Emerging from the gloom of the forest, we find ourselves in a clearing containing a cluster of rudimentary dwellings. Amid the deathlike silence, large dogs lurk ominously in doorways while recent evidence of bonfires dot patches of open grassland. Still with no clue as to our whereabouts, we’re instructed to enter a stone building at one end of the compound. In the corner of the single, darkened room a tall figure stands alone, backlit by an open fire. His face is hidden beneath a leather bondage mask leaving only his eyes and mouth partially visible. 112 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK Luckily for Hammer, this isn’t The Hills Have Eyes or some kind of Pulp Fiction-style rape scenario.The shadowy shape is none other than Meads Of Asphodel frontman Metatron, indulging his flair for melodrama whilst maintaining the strict code of secrecy of his band. “I do look silly in this mask but it does seem to be lucky,” he explains, adjusting the mouthpiece to take a sip of freshly brewed tea.“There’s always been a bit of mystery about the band and I’m happy with that. Hopefully it will remain so. I don’t have any ego driving me to say‘Hello everybody! It’s me!’” Image has always been an important part of the Meads ethos, adding to their strange appeal.The only reason Metatron is sporting an item of bondage paraphernalia as opposed to his usual armour is that said armour weighs around 70 pounds and after spending several hours in full battle garb, his limbs have had enough. “The image was always going to be paramount,” he confirms.“We didn’t wanna be running around the forest in corpsepaint.The music was centred on religious myth so armour was the natural starting point. People could look at us and go‘That’s the Meads’. Ten years on, it’s pretty much the face of a lot of bands in the pagan genre but that was always going to be our image and it always has been.” T hat the Meads revel in their Englishness is unusual in itself, some would say almost un-English.The English, after all, are notorious for not knowing what Englishness actually is. Is it the pinstriped city gent with his bowler hat, buck teeth and impeccable manners?Or is it the warm beer and soggy chips of the flat-capped working class?Maybe it’s cricket whites, croquet hoops and morris dancing on the village green?Meads identify with none of these, their sense of Englishness instead derived from the tradition of the English eccentric, great British heavy metal and the uncelebrated but unconsciously acknowledged fact that this land is a place of vast cultural significance. “We’re proud to be English but we’re not under the false pretensions of a lot of bands,” says Metatron.“We’re quite aware that what people see as English is German anyway, ’cause of the Saxons. But we do want a kind of English look.” Musically, the Meads are part of a long line of quirky, quintessentially English outfits including the likes of Sabbat, Skyclad, Bal-Sagoth,Thus Defiled, Forefather and Akercocke: some black metal, some not, but all sharing the same indomitable bulldog spirit. “We’re very conscious of the English scene being not particularly numerous, but what we do is good,” Metatron opines.“Sabbath,Venom, Cradle Of Filth and Bal-Sagoth… We might not have many but what we do tend to produce are fantastic. I think the English produce the best metal bands on the planet, bar none.To be part of something with all those bands we grew up with, I think we’ve achieved that now as a reward for everything. It makes us very proud.” The band, currently comprising Metatron alongside James Tait (guitar) Urakbaramel (drums) and ex-Hawkwind bassist Alan Davey, have certainly created an album to be proud of. The Murder Of Jesus The Jew is an ambitious, fearless and at times burlesque journey into biblical lore which trumps all that has gone before it.
THE MEADS OF ASPHODEL THE MEADS OF ASPHODEL are no strangers to controversy, but now this most eccentric of British black metal bands have upped the ante even further as they delve into the entwined roots of Jesus Christ and anti-Semitism. Words: GreG Moffitt. Pictures: ester seGarra. “We have put our feet firmly in certain places other bands wouldn’t dream of going” Metatron METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 113
THE MEADS OF ASPHODEL Metatron: hidden talents James Tait: axe appeal Who Made The Meads? METATRON OUTLINESTHE BAND’ S INFLUENCESAND INSPIRATIONS. Bathory “That was a band that existed on the fringes and which you never really saw. I know at the end [Quorthon]appeared in his leather pants and did that awful video [One Rode To Asa Bay],but Bathory are our major influence.When Blood Fire Death came out, it destroyed me.Then he came out with Hammerheart and I’m thinking,‘You can’t do it to me twice!’” VenomAt War With Satan “The narrative of influenced a lot of when I start speaking, all my little rhymes. It’s a paramount part of the band and the music’s written to have those little gaps where I can spout this or that.The way it gels with the music is what makes it work.” Martin Walkyier “If you ask me personally what has influenced me to do what I do, one is Martin Walkyier. He’s a master lyricist who I’d one day very much like to be mentioned in the same breath as. He’s brilliant.” Hawkwind “Hawkwind are an institution and they’ve got a lot of fantastic albums.The 80s Huw Lloyd-Langton years are fantastic. His lead guitar is astonishing. He’s best on The Friday Rock Show Sessions.” Sigh “Without Sigh there would be no Meads Of Asphodel, it’s as simple as that. Our main influence can still be traced to Ghastly Funeral Theatre and Infidel Art.They blew me away and I remember thinking that they were just fucking mad.” 114 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK Urakbaramel: sword of chaos “We wanted to show the historical foundations of Christianity and the repercussions of a man being made God” “James has put the last two years destroyed the temple of Jerusalem of his life into these songs,” says in 70 AD.That was the centre of the Metatron.“Some of our previous Jewish religion and without it they albums have been right off the wall but were nothing.The Emperor Hadrian we’ve tried to keep this to the concept later evicted the Jews from their own and just weave in and out of that. land and they went all over the world. We’ve put absolutely everything into it, In Rome they were regarded as the nothing’s been pulled back.We’ve tried culprits for the death of Christ and to make it the best Meads album ever.” for the next 1,000-1,500 years they Despite being fê ted pretty much were forever blamed as God killers. from day one, the Meads’big break It’s so complex, it’s a touchy subject has yet to materialise and they remain and anti-Semitism is entwined in it. forever on the cusp of wider success. All the roads I’ve gone down lead to Although a new deal with Candlelight the Roman decimation and antiis by far their biggest yet, they remain Semitism is a Catholic phenomenon. Metatron both realistic and relaxed about their My tract explains all this. So if immediate prospects. someone wants to call me racist, “We’ve always been tethered to the read that and then call me it again.” underground for various reasons,” Metatron explains,“which The ‘tract’to which Metatron refers is a 60,000-word is where we feel comfortable.We’re not under any illusions; discourse on the real origins of Christianity which is set for Candlelight obviously went on a signing spree, which labels do. publication after years of painstaking research. With the digital age shafting them, they’ve got to. But it’s good “The lyrics walk a fine line of political correctness and to know that someone approached us and with their I wanted to explain,” he says.“The same years went into the distribution network it’ll do the band more good than harm. lyrics as James put into the music and if you wanna delve A lot more people will get to hear it.Whether they like it into them you can. Some people may find it uncomfortable. or not is another matter. It’s probably the most We wanted to show the actual historical foundations of controversial thing we’ve ever attempted. It’s a very Christianity and the repercussions of what happens when provocative album and we have put our feet firmly in a man is made God, which was incredibly sad for the Jewish certain places other bands wouldn’t dream of going.” race as a whole. It’s a fact; there’s no way around it.After the death of Jesus you had his brother with the Jewish strain side from turning black metal on its head and that the teachings of Jesus were for the Jews, not for anybody injecting all manner of craziness into its basic else.They carried on his teachings until Paul came along, formula, the Meads have made their name tackling took them to Rome and as time went on the Jewish strain some of the most taboo subject matter of our times.World was completely erased.The Roman church was born, grew religions, genocide and their gore-drenched connection are and the Jews were blamed for their God’s death. It’s a tragic predominant themes. Even in an age when the world and his story. It’s a heavy subject and this album’s all about that. wife just can’t wait to be offended, it’s sensitive and potentially “You talk to a normal Christian and they would not explosive material. The Murder… is no different. understand that it’s all basically Jewish.They’ve basically “Candlelight said to us,‘Our exporters are gonna adopted a Jewish Rabbi, deified him and suddenly he’s have a heart attack when they see this!’”laughs everywhere.Jesus was a Galilean Rabbi who spent most of Metatron.“But they knew we were doing this prior his life in Galilee, went to Jerusalem, caused a stir and got and I said,‘These are the lyrics, we’re grateful nailed up. Nothing was written about Jesus until 40 or 50 for you offering us a deal but I’m not going to years after he died and a lot of shit was made up to fill in the compromise.’ And I wouldn’t have.” gaps.A religion is born.” Song titles such as Jew Killer and use of the With the Islamic fundamentalist box already ticked and ‘n’word within the lyrics will doubtless attract a lingering desire to write a Holocaust-themed album, the opprobrium from those who have not question arises as to whether any arena is genuinely out of and will not take the time to actually bounds. Can anything deter them from speaking their minds? discover their true message. “I’ve got no interest in exploring Islam itself,” he offers after “They just immediately jump on a lengthy pause.“I think that would be a place that could be… the holocaust,” Metatron concedes. uncomfortable. But that’s the trouble.When you start to think “We should never forget that you shouldn’t be doing something, why are you thinking that? moment in time for what it was but Maybe fear’s creeping in. Maybe that’s exactly what you should be doing.” to trace it back you’ve got to go back to Jesus, or Jeshua, call him THE MURDER OFJESUS THE JEW IS OUT ON NOVEMBER 15 what you like.When he died and VIA CANDLELIGHT.WWW.THEMEADSOFASPHODEL.COM Christianity was born, the Romans a
set YOUr MetaL DetectOr tO eMUsIc.cOM Whether you like it black, hardcore or old school, get over to eMusic and take 50 tracks, free. It’s on us, just for checking us out. take 50 free tracks Go to: www.emusic.com/MetalHammer Get up to 50 free downloads free with a 7-day eMusic trial subscription. Offer available to first- time eMusic customers only. Internet access, registration, and credit or debit card required. Limited time offer. Offer and eMusic’s prices are subject to change and are subject to eMusic’s terms of use. eMusic and the eMusic logo are either registered trademarks or trademarks of eMusic.com Inc. in the United Kingdom or other countries. All rights reserved. eMusic is notresponsible for products, services or claims made by Future Publishing.
MELECHESH were forced into exile from their native Jerusalem, but the multi-faith four-piece have delved back into the history of their region, to the Sumerian myths and the very beginnings of civilisation. WordS: dayaL PattErSon. ormed in 1993 in the holy location of Jerusalem (or unholy, depending on your point of view), Melechesh have been slowly perfecting their unique‘Mesopotamian metal’sound – a blend of black metal, thrash and Middle Eastern influences – reaching a steadily increasing fanbase in the process. It’s now four years since the release of their last album, the successful Emissaries, and the band have returned with The Epigenesis, an undeniable powerhouse of an album released on their new label, Nuclear Blast Records. It’s small wonder, then, that when we meet founder and central protagonist Ashmedi in his Camden hotel – where his now-labelmates Dimmu Borgir are also present doing interviews – he’s in good spirits, tucking into room service while playing moody Middle Eastern music in his room.As it turns out, the latter influence is more audible than ever in his own compositions, with The Epigenesis containing numerous Eastern touches in its songs, as well as two hugely atmospheric non-metal instrumentals. “This crossover of Indian and Persian music is very little known,” he explains of the music emanating from his laptop.“On our new album, the track When Halos Of Candles Collide is a 12-string guitar improvisation àla Indian and Persian scaling. Basically this is underground stuff, nobody in India or Persia listens to this unless they’re into Sufi meditation. It’s played within a spiritual context – and there are certain sorts of music for the morning and for the afternoon. “I love the blend of classical Persian instruments and Indian music,” he continues.“The sounds are very dark, heavy and sombre, and to relate to the album we carefully chose what Middle Eastern – or Near Eastern – music to use.We consciously avoid the Disneyland cliché of Eastern music, we adhere to those principles of ragas, not that Aladdin keyboard stuff.We specifically wanted certain instruments that sounded dark and even in the Middle East a lot of people aren’t exposed to this.You have to learn it through teachers of these instruments. It’s just like here, if you’re listening to some weird meditative Celtic music which has been played for a couple of thousand years, no one will say,‘Oh yeah, sure, I have this album!’” At a time when ethnic sounds and traditional influences are increasingly bolstering metal’s arsenal – from the humppa of Finland’s folk metal bands to the bagpipes, whistles and other exotic instrumentation employed by many Eastern European black metal acts – Ashmedi is keen to make clear that Melechesh is above all a metal band, a point that won’t be argued by anyone who has heard crushing new numbers such as Ghouls Of Nineveh or Defeating The Giants. “We recorded in Istanbul and of course there was a lot of access to traditional instruments, but people might be misled by me saying that.They might think we’re a folk-experimental band which we are not, we’re a metal-rock band.There is, of course, an ethnic influence, but the main instruments are the guitars and drums, and I always start songs by writing these at the same time. However, almost every album has an acoustic piece, which is pure self-indulgence.We realised that a lot of Melechesh fans were liking this kind of music, but didn’t know where to find it. So we thought we’d always have that – who knows, maybe one day we’ll do an album just of that kind of music.” espite their undeniable metal credentials and an apparent hard rock influence, this use of traditional sounds has become somthing of a trademark for the band and they are ably complemented by Ashmedi’s lyrics, which explore the Sumerian mythology of Mesopotamia, the cradle of civilisation situated in what is now known as Iraq. One of the few other metal bands to explore the subject is US band Absu – and, interestingly, mainman Proscriptor drummed for Melechesh for many years, the two bands having made contact thanks to a mutual appreciation for each other’s work. Indeed, much like his friend Proscriptor, Ashmedi is fascinated by the concepts of magick and the occult, even if his perspective is arguably somewhat more grounded than that of his notoriously eccentric American cohort. “I just see magick as‘undiscovered science’, as ways of manipulating energy,” says Ashmedi with a smile. “Sitting on an airplane would be considered magick years ago, for example. I consider myself a learner. Nothing is absolute, there is no absolute answer. Sumerian mythology is very interesting but what lies behind it is very philosophical and cosmic, there are pseudo-scientific theories hinting that ancient deities were not deities – obviously – but rather more advanced people.Which kind of makes sense. If we now go somewhere else where people are in the stone age, we will be gods, we can do genetic engineering, heal them, and we’ll be the ones in the statues. So from that perspective it’s very interesting.” Such interests in religion, philosophy and civilisation are perhaps unsurprising given that both Melechesh and Ashmedi himself grew up in the ancient and religiously charged city of Jerusalem. Indeed, Melechesh drew much attention in their early days thanks to their unusual location. But while the setting was undoubtedly an inspiring one for the band, it also caused its fair share of difficulties, which resulted in the group relocating to Holland. Not only had the police taken an interest after a Jerusalem newspaper featured the band in an article as a‘Satanic cult’, but as Ashmedi is from an Armenian background and longtime guitarist Moloch from a Palestinian background (a Christian Palestinian background – his family once even threatening him with an exorcism because of his metal activities) the group also experienced more general day-to-day difficulties with the discrimination against non-Israelis within Israel’s society. “Jerusalem is awesome.There’s great architecture and if you’re a spiritual person you can feel that there is spiritualism there. Israel itself is a liberal country but our status is different to other bands there.We are second-class citizens by law. If a thief comes to your house the police won’t come. But you’ll still pay 100 per cent taxes – actually, where we lived was the premium area for tax, but they didn’t collect the garbage, and if you don’t pay the tax they’ll come and arrest you and take the furniture. Many like me manage to leave the country and can’t go back there anymore.We can’t go back, and we’re also stuck in the middle of a fight which is not ours. I’m neither Palestinian or Israeli, but I’m trying to be as objective as I can and I formed my own opinion ’cos I saw the good and the bad.” Coming from neither a Muslim or Jewish background and initially rebelling against the Christianity present in his immediate surroundings,Ashmedi now takes a pragmatic view of the religions and the ancient writings which have defined both the country he grew up in, and, arguably, the world itself. “I went to a Catholic school so I had the‘privilege’ to read the Bible, but I don’t limit myself, I read all spiritual books. I like to know what’s there and maybe sometimes you can see the connections.Those books are interesting mythological books and they served their purpose for the time,” he concludes.“You can’t expect people 1,000 years from now to use a manual for a JVC television, but it works for now, so it’s all just outdated manuals really.” THE EPIGENESIS IS OUT NOW VIA NUCLEAR BLAST
MELECHESH aSHMEdi Melechesh (left to right): Moloch, Ashmedi, Xul, Rahm METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 117
enjoyed much greater THE WRETCHED END exposure. However, with his OMINOUS new project, The Wretched CANDLELIGHT Samoth turns to the demotic IT’S a miracle that Emperor, the greatest BM band ever to walk this cursed Earth, kept it together as long as they did. With the benefit of hindsight, it’s obvious that the two main protagonists, Vegard ‘Ihsahn’Tveitan and Tomas ‘Samoth’ Haugen, were into completely different music.While Ihsahn has evolved into a kind of avuncular professor of prog, Samoth has spent the nine years since Emperor first called it a day playing sharpedged death metal with a deeply misanthropic edge. Both musicians are masters of their craft, but Ihsahn has 118 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK End, Samoth may embark on his own route to postImperial acclaim. The obvious antecedent to TWE is Zyklon, the DM band with which Samoth released three albums before they is the polar opposite of, say, Steel Panther: sounds that leave the listener frozen and without hope. It’s interesting that Ominous doesn’t reveal its true nature immediately: its first post-intro song, Red Forest Alienation, is a familiar, exuberant death/ thrash crossover tune. The A RELENTLESS INDUSTRIAL GRIND THAT DOESN’T NEED TO ACCELERATE TO 250BPM ceased trading this year. The same razor-sharp riffs anchor the songs on Ominous; the same machinelike cold permeates the album; and the same sense of doom creeps into your soul after a few listens. This same goes for Last Judgement, which devolves to a Slayer-esque, stop-start riff from the drawer marked Divine Intervention. However, Ominous isn’t primarily about speed and aggression, although those elements are there. What songs like Of Men And Wolves, With Ravenous Hunger and Numbered Days focus on is a relentless, almost industrial grind that doesn’t need to accelerate to 250bpm to work. These songs crank themselves forward at mid-tempo, repeating until the message is clear. It’s a tremendously effective approach and one which is as dark and hateful as anything Samoth and his collaborators, Mindgrinder bassist Cosmo and Dark Funeral drummer Nils Fjellström, have ever done. This time they’re not singing about Satan or a modern dystopia, either; songs such as Human Corporation (which begins with samples of newsreel reports about the financial crisis) make it clear that The Wretched End ’s targets are based squarely in the here and now. The title of Zoo Human Syndrome will also resonate with the average wage slave, although it’s hard to imagine anyone listening to this album for pleasure on the bus to the office. Magnificently bleak. [7] JOEL McIVER INFLUENCED BY SLAYER, CARCASS, SUFFOCATION ALSO TRY THE HAUNTED …Made Me Do It EARACHE, 2000 ZYKLON World Ov Worms CANDLELIGHT, 2001 LOCK UP Hate Breeds Suffering NUCLEAR BLAST, 2002
ADAI FELO DE SE ANAL CUNT FUCKIN’A! AUTOPSY THE TOMB WITHIN Caught by the fuzz The fart [jokes] of the matter Operation mindfuck CAVITY PATAC PEACEVILLE FELO De Se is dynamic Denver duo Adai’s latest assault of the eardrums and it is a fuzz-fuelled stoner jazz odyssey that makes you get down on your knees and thank whatever deity you believe in for the invention of the effects pedal. Quite surprisingly though, the fi ve-track EP doesn’t feature a single bass-line, but that doesn’t stop the band from delivering their mostly instrumental songs in a style reminiscent of dearly departed desert heavies Kyuss and Mondo Generator. Beginning with a large dollop of toothrattling feedback, the spacey Trigger and the grungy yet grandiose Bodies are defi nite highlights and our only real criticism of the slab of wax is the fact that its 20 minutes are over far too soon. [7] THE truth is, Anal Cunt’s song titles are far better known than any of the music. Thankfully they’ve stopped calling things ‘gay’ but continue with humour that runs from dumb (Kickin’ Your Ass And Fuckin’Your Bitch) to just plain stupid (I’m Gonna Give You AIDS ). As ever, Seth Putnam churns out noisy hardcore but instead of the short frantic blasts, they seem to have a newfound sense of maturity (as if!) with one song clocking in at a mammoth fi ve minutes. All I Give A Fuck About Is Sex and I Wish My Dealer Was Open may suggest a slightly more biographical take but don’t expect any great revelations. Fuckin’A is decent enough, it’s just that the jokes wear thin rather quickly. [6] SINCE Autopsy initially gave up the ghost in 1995, DM has changed an awful lot. Is there a place for bloodgargling vocals, sick primitivism and lo-fi barbarism amongst the day-glo shirts, triggered precision and synchronised windmilling of modern death?Damn right, there is! Imagine the most unpleasant scenes from your favourite horror and gore fi lms set to music – The Tomb Within makes the perfect soundtrack for all your hacking, slashing, gouging and disembowelling viewing. Truth be told, the EP sounds just like Autopsy always did: nasty! Death with hints of Sabbath doom and ripping crust punk. If modern metal is surgical then Autopsy are drunken medieval surgeons hacking away using blunt rusty knives and no anaesthetic. [8] EDWIN McFEE ALASTAIR RIDDELL ALASTAIR RIDDELL Atheist: you’d better believe this album is a blinder ATHEIST JUPITER SEASON OF MIST Gods for the godless ALTHOUGH ignored in recitals of DM’s roll of honour,Atheist played a huge part in the genre’s evolution, particularly in terms of technical dexterity and the assimilation of jazz/ avant-garde elements. The Floridians’ third album, PRIEST RSTÍÐIR LÍFSINS BASTARD ADRIFT FOR DAYS Á UNDER THE HAMMER JÖTUNHEIMA DOLGFERÐ THE LUNAR MARIA SELF-RELEASED VAN IF Earth’s Hex; Or Printing In The Infernal Method were a fi lm, it would be Once Upon A Time In The West, it being a lengthy and solipsistic meditation on man’s nature and the landscape, given that it contains as much beauty as it does brutality. By the same token, the amazing yet unsigned Australian stoner doom quintet Adrift For Days would be John Hillcoat’s Antipodean frontier movie, The Proposition. The epic size of the dusty, reverberating tracks within link the band to their landscape in a truly Wordsworthian manner, meaning the giant desert is a constant presence on the post-rock structures of Messages Through Sleep and the dark, narcotic intensity of the band mirrors their country’s interior. [8] FORMED a mere two years ago, Árstíðir lífsins (meaning ‘the seasons of life’) already have a strikingly mature sound in place, as this 70-minute debut proves. Overwhelmingly ambitious, it contains contributions from no fewer than 10 musicians and paints a rich tapestry inspired by the realities of Icelandic life and history while avoiding Viking cliché s. Drawing predominantly from folk and BM, as well as from ambient and doom, the record avoids easy categorisation, creating emotive and carefully constructed epics overlaying an array of textures and instruments (including acoustic guitars, violin and keys) upon a mid-paced metal bedrock. The result is both bewitching and inspiring and bears considerable promise. [8] DM comes in many forms, but nothing can top the old-school’s fi lthy, neck-wrecking insanity. Selfproclaimed servants of Autopsy, Master and Death, Bastard Priest keep it simple, savage and stupid, hammering away at breakneck pace, peeling off a seemingly neverending stream of catchy but supremely ugly riffs along the way. Songs like Visions Of Doom, Total Mutilation and the title track delight in their own rawness, with a faint air of Bathory-style sonic recalcitrance adding an extra dimension of lobotomised oomph. Even at snail’s pace, as on the cheekily Entombed-alike Chock, the Priest keep the flames of rage burning while taking a dump on the altar of decency and modern production values. Urgh! [8] JOHN DORAN DAYAL PATTERSON DOM LAWSON The blizzard of Oz Icelandic folk black eruptions OF DESTRUCTION PULVERIZED Dirty death from sunny Sweden DID YOU KNOW? SAMOTH’S FATHER IS SPOONFUL OF BLUES BASS PLAYER JENS HAUGEN. represents and how it should sound, and so although Jupiter is by no means a lazy retread of past glories, it does resonate with the febrile spirit of the early 90s. There’s also a sense that Kelly and Steve have expanded their remit to include influences that seldom emerged before. Second To Sun reeks of Voivod, the spectre of the Canadians’ brittle angularity and taste for dissonance adding otherworldly fuel to their adherents’ blazing fretwork and maelstrom of interwoven rhythms. There is too much to be absorbed in one hit, but the craft and class is more than apparent. The schizophrenic, spite-driven Faux King Christ is another highlight, with its jarring dynamics and bursts ATHEIST MOULD THE CHAOS INTO SMART, COHERENT SONGS WITH HOOKS GALORE Elements, was a significant milestone in extreme music’s mutation; a self-evident antecedent for the fretboard athleticism of DEP, The Faceless and Necrophagist. Atheist redefined what was possible for metal musicians, so it’s heartwarming to hear that, 17 years on, this reformed incarnation are still attacking their instruments with evangelical fervour, cramming in as many notes, tempo shifts and brainmelting time signatures as they can, yet still moulding the chaos into smart and coherent songs with hooks galore. The creative core of vocalist/guitarist Kelly Schaefer and drummer Steve Flynn have an intuitive understanding of what Atheist of hateful thrash, while Third Person threatens to take Atheist into melodic territory before erupting into a more typically deranged, densely layered exercise in brutal showboating. Atheist have reconvened with great focus, pride and determination, reborn as a force to rival any of DM’s foremost deities. [8] DOM LAWSON INFLUENCED BY DEATH, VOIVOD, SADUS ALSO TRY OBSCURA Cosmogenesis RELAPSE, 2009 DEATH The Sound Of Perseverance NUCLEAR BLAST, 1998 PESTILENCE Spheres ROADRUNNER, 1993 METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 119
Gnaw Their Tongues: no, they went the other way! GNAW THEIR TONGUES L’ARRIVEE DE LATERNE MORTTRIOMPHANTE CANDLELIGHT Symphonies of sickness THE combination of metal and classical can conjure up the spectre of such questionable affairs as Metallica’s S& M or Kiss’s Symphony: Alive IV. These lamentable cash cows ignore the creative (dis) harmony that can be forged between more traditional musical ensembles and extreme metal units, as found in recent Sunn O))) and Wardruna. But perhaps this alliance is at its most caustic, majestic and exciting when realised by Gnaw Their Tongues. On L’Arrivee de la Terne Mort Triompante (which roughly translates to The Arrival Of Colourless Triumphant Death), the avant-classical maniac behind GTT, Mories, applies an attention to detail that is autistic. His work could be compared to Stravinski and Ligeti but produces the emotional turmoil of Throbbing Gristle. [8] JOHN DORAN THE BATALLION HEAD UP HIGH BLUTMOND THIRTEEN URBAN WAYS 4 Thrashing through the ages GROOVY BOHEMIAN DAYS KARISMA/DARK ESSENCE THE Batallion describe themselves on their MySpace as ‘bad-ass 80s death thrash metal’, and ‘bad-ass’ is defi nitely an apt description. Head Up High, the band’s second release, is a fun, taut little record. It won’t change the world and the cosmos won’t shatter and mess up the multiverse upon its release, but it’s a groovy fucker that’s refreshingly devoid of any pretentious stodge or delusions of grandeur. Along with all the vintage thrash and death influences there’s a smattering of early punk in the mix here too, and it results in a spiky, vigorous 40 minutes of pogoing, headbanging fun. Plus, any band with a song called The Roaring Grandfather deserves your undivided attention. [7] DANIEL CAIRNS 120 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK GHOST OPUS EPONYMOUS AND DEATH Denim, and Satan! Urban BM thrown into a blender SELF-styled ‘urban black metal’ Swiss fi ve-piece Blutmond channel their inner mad scientist for this intriguingly titled second album, slicing up different genres to buck as many scene cliché s as possible. Thirteen… is reminiscent of the equally unhinged Devin Townsend and the likes of Working Poor, Yuppie Yeah! (A/a 3000) blend jazz breakdowns with stoner grooves and old-fashioned BM headfuckery. Sampled sounds of life are interspersed throughout and you have to admire their bravery when they opt to put saxophones and 80s electrobeats into their musical broth. Ultimately though, their inability to conclusively fi nish an idea leaves you a little unsatisfi ed. [6] CANDLELIGHT ADVERSUM Black metal on the battlefield WHILE Delirium Bound may be a new name, the fact that they feature Kim Sø lve of Trine og Kim Design Studio (who have designed covers for the likes of Ulver, Enslaved, Darkthrone, Mayhem) will surely give this debut a bit more appeal in some quarters. But even without this knowledge, Delirium… is recognisably Norwegian. Drawing upon the furious blackened thrash of Aura Noir as well as the cold and dissonant late 90s BM of Thorns and Satyricon – along with a dash of Voivod – the record draws upon the forward-thinking metal of yesteryear. And so this is both fresh and strangely traditional as well as containing enough charisma to make it worthy of investigation. [8] INSPIRED by Gunter K Koschorreck’s book Blood Red Snow: The Memoirs Of A German Soldier On The Eastern Front, Blood On Snow aims to evoke the emotional experiences of battle via the medium of heavy fucking metal. And for the most part, it works. Beginning with beastly howls and ominous soundscapes, the ‘war torn black metal’ band also take in elements of doom, folk and classical music for their relentless debut and it’s a bit of a Boy’s Own affair. At times the military theme can get a little laboured (At The Gates Of Moscow ) and the bass sound just isn’t meaty enough, but frontman Nagant’s vocal gymnastics coupled with the band’s admirable musical bravery help make up for the odd misfi re. [7] Avant yet familiar Norsk metal DAYAL PATTERSON CODE 666 EDWIN McFEE FRONT DELIRIUM BOUND EASTERN BLOOD ON SNOW DELIRIUM, DISSONANCE EDWIN McFEE RISE ABOVE ON the back of a recommendation by Darkthrone drummer and cult metal afi cionado Fenriz, Sweden’s Ghost have built up an impressive underground buzz during the last six months. The clutch of killer tracks circulating on the internet suggested that their debut album would be a mouthwatering treat for denim-and-leather devotees everywhere. Satan be praised! It does not disappoint. Appropriate, then, that Rise Above should facilitate the release of probably the top true metal effort of 2010. Invoking the musty atmosphere of Angel Witch, Witchfi nder General, Pagan Altar, Witchfynde and early Mercyful Fate, this is an arcane occult feast. If Hammer Studios recruited an in-house band, Ghost would undoubtedly get the job. [9] GREG MOFFITT DRAGGED INTO SUNLIGHT OF BULLETS FATHER BEFOULED HAIL ON DIVINE WINDS MORBID DESTITUTION OF COVENANT CENTURY MEDIA RELAPSE Death metallers in the wars PROSTHETIC Deathly deeds designed to disgust PROSTHETIC have signed this deeply unpleasant UK four-piece and have reissued their Mordgrimm debut from last year, Hatred For Mankind. As statements of sheer nihilism go, this is close to (im)perfect. Dragged Into Sunlight show total disdain for their audience by playing in neardarkness while wearing sex case/ terrorist balaclavas. There is no quarter given to artistry, delayed gratifi cation or atmospherics on Boiled Angel, just seething, hateful, necrotic sludge at the close-to-white-noise/crustpunk end of the scale. Buried With Leaches takes the misanthropy even further with pigfuck vocals that sound like the unfortunate extras in Hostel II. [8] IT’S the guitar tone that hits you fi rst: a thick, viscous, writhing aural fog sucking chaotic percussion and guttural exclamations into its maw. This is death metal used as a battering ram to smash down Hell’s gates from the inside, with unmistakable shades of both Incantation’s peerless Onwards To Golgotha and Immolation’s recent missives from the abyss, but also with its own ghastly, hopeless charisma. With plenty of variations in pace, Father Befouled frequently stray into the kind of desolate doom territory beloved of Asphyx. Above all, FB provide a stark reminder that when stripped to its primal essence, DM remains heavy music’s true last word. [8] HAVING dealt with the Eastern Front on their magnifi cent debut album, Of Frost And War, Holland’s new masters of wartorn brutality have turned their attention to the Pacifi c Ocean and the bloody mayhem that ensued between the Japanese army and American Marines during WWII. Musically, this is another exhilarating barrage of marauding old-school DM that boasts more than enough cuttingedge punch to dispel notions of retro lethargy while pissing out a seemingly never-ending stream of vicious hooks, as the ageless Martin Van Drunen gives his leathery larynx yet another gruelling workout. Hail Of Bullets are deceptively versatile. The horrors of war never rocked so hard. [8] HATRED FOR MANKIND The joy of torture JOHN DORAN DOM LAWSON DOM LAWSON STILL ON THE STEREO: ENSLAVED AXIOMA ETHICA OUDINI (INDIE): “A STATE OF ABUNDANTLY HUED SPLENDOUR”

Sehnsucht: a stop-start affair HORNED ALMIGHTY NECRO SPIRITUALS CANDLELIGHT PROLIFIC UK noise/ambient/ industrial label Cold Spring have been busy in recent months with their latest batch of darkly disturbing new releases. The brainchild of former Endvra man Christopher Walton, TENHORNEDBEAST is a oneman project – as so many of these things are – whose third Cold Spring album Hunts & Wars [8] deviates somewhat from his previous drone/doom output with a largely dark ambient soundscape. The progression works well and the artwork courtesy of Kevin Yuen (Sunn O))), Wolves In The Throne Room) complements it beautifully. Another solo effort, FIRE IN THE HEAD, concludes a six-year career with a final full-length album, Confessions Of A Narcissist [6] . Its harsh, cathartic industrial/power electronics offer a relentlessly brutal excursion to the dark side via delightful ditties such as I’m Not Here To Coexist, I’m Here to Win and Home is Where the Whore Is. Interestingly, it also features guest appearances from Nick Blinko of punk veterans Rudimentary Peni and 122 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK Agoraphobic Nosebleed’s J Randall. German legends VON THRONSTAHL weigh in on behalf of the nation most associated with industrial music, presenting Conscriptum [7] , a double CD odds’n’sods collection of rare tracks, alternative versions and previously unreleased material. From neo-folk to self-styled ‘military-pop’, it’s a wideranging assortment of sounds and styles and the whole thing, as you might expect, is very, very German. Sticking with Deutschland and the ambience of MACHINEFABRIEK, whose latest outing Daas [7] brings together material previously only available on a series of obscure self-released CD-Rs. More haunting and reflective than sinister, it’s wallpaper music where the wallpaper is faded, peeling and composed of a drab, long-forgotten palette of colours. Finally, fresh from his expectationconfounding exertions with Skitliv, former Mayhem frontman Maniac has formed SEHNSUCHT, a side-project featuring fiancé e Vivian Slaughter of Gallhammer. The result of their efforts, Wüste [6] , is a tapestry of noise/dark ambient moods. GREG MOFFITT MY SILENT WAKE IV ET LEX PERPETUA US BM fails to impress It’s grim up North. And down South. PLANET METAL DARK BALANCE ALTHOUGH two of the most disparate starting points on the metal spectrum, a number of artists are becoming increasingly adept at melding elements of hardcore and black metal into a frightening new monster. Whilst the miserable bastards in France’s Celeste are ploughing altogether more misanthropic furrows, Denmark’s Horned Almighty conjure up an aural sensation somewhere close to what Cursed would sound like if they’d done a black metal album, having never heard one. But HA have, and despite their hardcore leanings Necro… is littered with passages that belie a knowledge and devotion to a genre they’ve successfully mongrel-ised. [8] THE members of Chicago black metallers Kommandant have put in some serious time in some great Illinois bands – Nachtmystium and Cianide for starters. That they are seasoned pros is obvious from the start. Kontact is a barrage of harsh, abrasive black metal very much in the modern Norwegian vein: razor-sharp riffi ng as harsh as a broken glass body scrub, throatripping nails-on-blackboard vocals and the odd catchy moment. However, whilst deftly executed and boasting some good songs on this 20-minute EP, Kommandant are not quite in the same league as their more illustrious cousins. Kontact is a fi ne slice of nastiness, it just doesn’t leap out at you screaming ‘Pick me!’ [6] DESPITE a name suggestive of fringes and sulky teens, My Silent Wake plough a much nastier furrow. There are hints of early Paradise Lost and a nod towards My Dying Bride’s sense of the grandiose but mixed in is a hint of syrupy Sabbath-esque groove. At times they could almost be sludge with a guitar sound, as much Southern US nihilism as Northern UK pessimism, although they never lose their English identity. Songs like Death Becomes Us and Bleak Endless Winter are perfect for those who love their gloom and death/doom. Of course, celebrating the misery does not an instant hit make and Iv Et Lex Perpetua needs a few listens before really making its presence felt. [7] HUMILIATION DAWN OF WARFARE KORESH CRIPPLEDRIVER NOX BLOOD, BONES AND The case for heavy youth in Asia Urban doomsters spew forth debut RITUAL DEATH Black metal to the ’core Subterranea delves into the dark heart of industrial with Cold Spring Records. KOMMANDANT KONTACT TOBY COOK NEBIULA THERE is something immensely appealing about a band that has no Facebook, Twitter or MySpace presence, particularly when they are also based in a country that frowns upon the very notion of extreme music. Humiliation play ‘Malaysian old skool death metal’ and you would have to be uniquely mean-spirited not to applaud them, regardless of the quality of their debut full-length. Fortunately, this is both a hugely likeable and undeniably spirited fi rst effort, strongly redolent of early Death, Massacre and Bolt Thrower but stripped down even further to a persistent but lobotomised mid-tempo thud. At times the band’s naivety holds them back and but there is potential here too and a vast amount of passion. [6] DOM LAWSON ALASTAIR RIDDELL WITHERED HAND FEATURING current and former members of Witchsorrow, Among The Missing and Pombagira, London’s vile sludge extremists are every bit as English in their depiction of the genre as Electric Wizard. While theirs is the parochial perversion of The League Of Gentlemen, like the late, great Iron Monkey, Koresh channel the black humours of urban blight: overcrowded council housing, foul-smelling chicken shops and the dried vomit crust of the early hours into churning ball of sonic negativity. Flecked with Khanate’s rumbling progressions, buzzing Poison Idea guitars and vocals which reach to claw hungrily black metal highs like bloodied, broken nails on concrete, Crippledriver is every bit as malignant as its cover. [8] JAMES HOARE ALASTAIR RIDDELL LISTENABLE Dark masters of Dutch death ABSENT without blast since their short-lived tenure on Earache and the resultant Ixaxaar album, Nox remain a sure and unshakable force for evil in death metal, channelling the spirit of the old Deicide and Morbid Angel albums that clearly inspired them to make music in the fi rst place. Testing the water upon their return, the Dutchmen have delivered four chunks of frayed and bloody malevolence, with an admirably creepy intro and grandiose outro thrown in to heighten the overall sense of Satanic oppression, and every last second suggests that their powers have grown during their hiatus. Nox deliver the word of the Old Gods with all faders in the bloody red. [7] DOM LAWSON THIS MONTH IN HISTORY NOVEMBER 1982: VENOM’S BLACK METAL IS RELEASED,BOUGHT BY SOME NORWEGIANS.

OCTOBER TIDE ATHIN SHELL TURBID NORTH OROGENY WHITE HILLS STOLEN STARS LEFT Gloomy crew return to mourn anew Tales from the frozen north FOR NO ONE CANDLELIGHT OVER a decade has passed since October Tide’s last record, and since then founder member (and Katatonia vocalist) Jonas Renske has relinquished his position in the band, but Fred Norrman – also a member of Katatonia until 2009 – remains, steering the ship through its most alluring waters yet. Still fi rmly entrenched in the death/doom sphere, A Thin Shell is strong on melody and atmosphere, but it’s its heaviness which may take fans by surprise. Taking cues from Swallow The Sun, a band that have more than a little October Tide in their sound, Fred and co have dared to dream in more vivid shades this time round, imbuing the morose but motoring likes of The Dividing Line with a scintillating sense of drama. [8] SELF-RELEASED TURBID North originally hail from a town actually called North Pole, Alaska and they’re working as lumberjacks to save enough money to move to more fertile musical climes. Fortunately, their music is also worthy of mention. While the production may be a tad over-processed, the songs themselves are Grade-A slabs of vicious thrash/death as shades of Heartwork-era Carcass spiral around classic Metallica and Slayer before nuzzling up against the Southern likes of Mastodon and Baroness. The vocal tradeoffs between Brian McCoy and guitarist Nick Forkel provide dizzying energy as Forkel and Alex Rydlinski’s solos heave with bluesy, classic rock inflections and awesome fusion-inspired fi nger-stretching. [8] THRILL JOCKEY Psych from the blanc generation WHITE Hills are every inch the cult heavy rock band. A threepiece consisting of Jon Spencer lookalike Dave W on vocals and Kyuss-strength guitars, Ego Sensation, the PVC clad bassist cut from the same cloth as the young Lita Ford and various amazing drummers, including the astounding Kid Millions from Oneida. Add to this a violent aversion to plaid, a worship of Orange amps and a bewildering array of EPs, seven-inches, split albums, CD-Rs, cassettes and collaborations and you have the real fucking deal. Recorded live with no overdubs, tracks go from smacked-out bliss metal grooves to buzzing harmonics and Hawkwind-esque space phase. Top class psychedelia. [8] DOM LAWSON CONNIE GORDON TRIPTYKON SHATTER WARLORD UK THE EVILWITHIN WITHERED DUALITAS Legend merges past and present Brummie thrashers return Brewing up a storm CENTURY MEDIA/PROWLING DEATH SERVING as something of a companion piece to last spring’s Eparistera Daimones, former Celtic Frost lynchpin Tom Gabriel Warrior’s new band Triptykon continue where they left off for their new odd’n’sods EP, Shatter. Comprising of three new studio songs plus two live cuts, the haunting title track is the pick of the bunch and features a bewitching brew of evocative female vocals and sinister whispers that pack more menace than Archie Mitchell in his prime. It’s not all killer though, as the listless drone of Crucifi xus has ‘fi ller’ stamped all over it, but the Frost covers recorded at the Roadburn festival – Circle Of The Tyrants and Dethroned Emperor – help make the EP a worthy addition to Warrior’s tale. [6] EDWIN McFEE 124 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK COPRO PRESUMABLY forced to adopt the rather awkward ‘UK’ part of their name due to the American metal band Warlord, this long-running act began life in the early 90s, releasing a lone album in 1996 before throwing in the towel a few years later. Now over a decade later, vocalist/bassist Mark White is back with a new lineup and half an hour of new music. The intervening years clearly haven’t inspired a massive desire for progression, the music based around a straightforward meat ’n’ potatoes thrash/death template that indulges its aggressive desires, without needing to head into more technical, brutal or forward-thinking territories. The result is satisfying and immediate but the linear nature of the music suggests a limited shelf life. [6] DAYAL PATTERSON JOHN DORAN PROSTHETIC NOTHING beats the rush of putting an album on, not knowing what to expect and getting your head blown so far off your shoulders that you spill your tea. Withered have just done that with Dualitas. The record is equal parts atonal blastbeat-laden violence, sludgy groove and effects-laden atmospherics, and it all contributes to a hell of an album. Any band that combines the dense progressive attack of Cult Of Luna with furious black metal and doesn’t make a balls of it is very much worth your time. Withered’s strength lies in their ability to snatch a semblance of melody from the maelstrom of bludgeoning guitars and savagery. A compulsive, densely packed listen that you should investigate right bloody now. [8] DANIEL CAIRNS Amorphis: getting the beards in Subterranea looks back in anger with the latest reissues. SIMILAR to how bands from across the popularity spectrum are reuniting regardless of public demand, albums both near-impossible to find and those littering cutout bins are being reissued en masse. Here’s a small glimpse into what’s being shuffled back into the deck. First up from our pals at Relapse: two slices of Sunshine State sludge. -(16)-’s Curves That Kick [7] and Drop Out [7] are both sinewy and teeming with hatred, drug abuse, surrealist outsider art and pill-poppin’, whiskeysoaked cynicism. The preponderance of punky/bouncy rhythms on Curves… is surprising and Drop Out’s Trigger Happy will have misanthropes hollering the classic ‘Life sucks/Leave me alone! ’ refrain in perpetuity. Reissue specialists, Metal Mind offer up a reconstituted version of SORROW’s Hatred & Disgust/Forgotten Sunrise EP [6] . Considered a hard-tofind gem by doomheads, this remaster is simply a louder, cleaner and clearer version of Winter’s moroseness meets Slayer’s whammy-bar beatdowns. ACID BATH were a band paid little attention when they actually existed, only to experience posthumous interest once the world discovered New Orleans’ extreme music history. So, for all those claiming to be down with the Bath, here’s your chance to actually own one of their releases – the band’s second album, Paegan Terrorism Tactics [7] and its humid thrash/death/sludge gumbo, courtesy of Rotten Records. From Hydra Head comes Demasiado Tonto Para Los Nino Listos [6] , the doubledisc discography from mid-90s AmRep obsessives, LA GRITONA. The dissonant and acerbic style still grates 15 years later, but if you can’t get enough of conventionfuckers like Melvins, and The Jesus Lizard, check this out. Not a reissue per se, but present-day AMORPHIS have re-recorded old faves and classics for Magic & Mayhem – Tales From The Early Years [8] . The result is rather enjoyable, but treads dangerous territory with those fans/purists who will simply never be pleased when the old-school gets toyed with or updated. CONNIE GORDON REVIEWED NEXT MONTH: ABOYRM/DEATHSPELL OMEGA/ELECTRIC WIZARD/THE MEADS OF ASPHODEL/STARGAZER/SVART CROWN

HOT SHIT Gavin Baddeley licks his lips as he samples the booze from down below. s The bro-dawg g from Brew Do hen British cinema’s reigning W Prince Of Darkness, Christopher Lee, won his Spirit Of Hammer Award “Stop it! That well tickles!” HEADPRESS BOOKS Subterranea enters the murky realms of punk porn, Satanic swingers, Nazi prison gangs and bukkake parties with the UK’s most fearless publishers. Words: Gavin Baddeley. T he UK underground institution Headpress issued the first edition of their self-titled irregular journal in 1992.The publishers’roots gave a clear indication of the taboo territory they planned to explore, as Headpress founder and head honcho David Kerekes explains: “I got to know the filmmaker Jörg Buttgereit reasonably well at around the time he was making Nekromantik – which you may know is the most bootlegged movie in the history of the world, as well as an entirely reprehensible work about a disillusioned necrophiliac.” Nekromantik is an infamous low-budget love story about a German couple addicted to sex with the dead. David and compatriots secured the UK rights to Jörg’s next film – a harrowing meditation on death entitled Der Todesking – and with the profits launched Headpress. “We refused to be pigeonholed and didn’t take a political stance, but instead published what we thought was interesting, be it stuff about the‘dark ak fre Two-legged 126 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK side’, porn, music, true crime or whatever,” says David.“A lot of people didn’t get it, so some supposedly more liberal-minded outlets wouldn’t stock us, some feminists considered us misogynists and some occult people didn’t think we were occult enough.Actually, no one liked us very much at all. Printers were more discerning back then, too.We often got turned down.The first time was because of a cartoon ad we ran for a handbook called Uncle Fester’s Home Explosives. That was back in issue one.” Deviant sex looms large in the Headpress catalogue, in books like Flesh Trade in which author Bruce Barnard takes us behind the sweaty scenes of the UK sex industry, peeling back the sticky curtain on such bizarre scenes as underground bukkake parties and self-help groups for ‘porn addicts’. Discarded culture is a recurring theme at Headpress, such as the two Bad Mags books, in which intrepid author Tom Brinkmann sifts through 40 years’worth of tabloid trash to document the weirdest and worst magazines ever published: UFO contactee monthlies to occult swingers journals (including the infamous issue of Jaybird in which Church Of Satan founder Anton LaVey appeared nude). Scott Stine’s Trashfiend does much the same for horror fans, casting an affectionate gaze over the neglected monster movies and merchandise of yesteryear. Metal also gets a lookin.“I maintain that one of the most succinct music books of all time is our own Gigs From Hell – bands from around the world tell of their worst gig experience,” says David.“Because it’s compiled by [Hammer scribe] Sleazegrinder it has a natural leaning towards metal.” Over the past couple of decades, the Headpress roster has become a rogue’s gallery of the most offbeat subjects, fucked-up imagery and bizarre authors ever committed to print. “Many of the people we publish come to us, generally because they like what we do or they feel I owe them a beer,” observes David. That’s a good way to do business. Never trust a man who doesn’t drink beer.” FIND OUT MORE The best way to explore the taboobusting world of Headpress is via their website – www.worldheadpress.com. You can read an online version of their infamous magazine at www. worldheadpress.com/ezine2. Upcoming releases include Dark Stars Rising: Conversations From The Outer Realm – “A large book containing interviews with many people at the forefront of countercultural ideas”including the likes of Crispin Glover and the mighty Sunn O))) – and Blood In, Blood Out: The Violent Empire Of The Aryan Brotherhood –“A grim, first-hand account of the gangs that dominate American penitentiaries and run the methamphetamine cartels from within them.” at the Golden Gods this year, he announced as he left that“I will be leaving on my motorbike with a case of Jä germeister and several copies of Metal Hammer.” There’s no criticising his choice of fuel, as Jä germeister not only sponsored the Award, but has entered metal lore as a classic libation, alongside such liquid legends as Newcastle Brown and Jack Daniels. Come this Halloween, thirsty horror fiends may be tempted by a new line of traditional ales sanctioned by Hammer, the British horror studio that first made Lee famous as Count Dracula over 50 years back. Coffin-Ale is an‘awfully pale ale’ te us weighing in at Our livers will ha 4.5 per cent, Dracula’s Desire a ruby ale‘to die for’(5 per cent), while Curse Of Frankenstein is the monster of the trio, an IPA boasting a formidable strength of 7 per cent. For fearsomely powerful, high-quality British beer, however, you can’t beat Brew Dog, an iconoclastic Scottish brewery who boast of concocting ‘beer for punks’. They’ve won over connoisseurs with potent but dangerously drinkable brews like Punk IPA (6 per cent) and Hardcore IPA (9.2 per cent). The release of Tactical Nuclear Penguin caused something of a stir, as the world’s strongest ever beer at an utterly terrifying 31 per cent. Undeterred by killjoys and critics, Brew Dog struck back with Sink The Bismarck, which, Punk IPA : strong at 41 per cent, is closer in potency to whisky than it is to anything we’d call beer, let alone in character. Even the Count himself would struggle to rise from his coffin, after an encounter with Sink The Bismarck…

Reviewed next month tone: Thundersh flair Finnis Kvelertak: so good it hurts your eyes cuppered last April by the geological own-goal of Iceland’s Eyjafallajökull volcano spewing ash all over the place, the Hammercurated Nordic Expo, Ja Ja Ja, finally makes it over to London, in the salubrious yet lived-in surroundings of Islington’s Lexington venue. The red curtains and textured wallpaper carry more than a hint of Twin Peaks ’ Black Lodge to it – the perfect setting, then, for former black metallers SÓLSTAFIR’s [8] through-the-looking-glass, scorchedsky trail songs. Looking like a leatherbound outlaw cowboy clan, their guitarist’s strangely dainty method of pickless strumming gives rise to reactive, crackling expanses that sound like their native volcano starting to get overcome with remorse. Frontman Aðalbjörn Tryggvason’s forlorn, cracked howl, rather than leading Pale Rider ’s billowing, transformative rush, comes on like an echo pulled along by its massive, storm-lashed slipstream. Sólstafir have a date with 128 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK destiny and they draw everyone here up into their nerve-enflaming thrall. In a bill of otherwise idiosyncratic boundary-breakers, Finland’s THUNDERSTONE [6] are an anomaly, their trad, 80s-based power metal drawn to the weightier, less fluff-filled end of the spectrum, but trading it all away for ironic, onstage playacting that blows a massive, fat raspberry at any possible suspension of disbelief. Not that the singer’s nods and winks, and the guitarist’s jokey habit of miming the lyrics, drawing tears down his cheeks, are any anathema to their hardcore following down the front, but for all their intimate connection with their fans and authentic metal chops, it’s so much inconsequential, ambitionlacking bluster that never enters the full-blown, absurdly convincing worlds of their peers. Norway’s KVELERTAK [9] are one of those rare bands who, through sheer, chaos-coralling conviction, have become a cause in their own right, each gig they play creating scores of new converts telling wide-eyed tales of galvanising sonic onslaught. And so it proves again tonight, the six-strong collective throwing themselves about the stage as pulsating, leash-straining rallying cries pull in all manner of musical detritus around their insatiably rocking hardcore mass. Black metallic stomps and momentumcharged melodies all become fused together around frontman Erland Hjelvik’s scorched bark, gang chants that exclude macho posturing for an all-inclusive drive for enlightened oblivion and massive, heartbursting-through-ribcage grooves. The tightly packed crowd chant their name like it was some kind of talisman, and all for a band whose eponymous debut album was released only four months ago. Kvelertak have that immediate effect, and their fireball is about to engulf the world of metal. JONATHAN SELZER Só lstafir: out of space JA JA JA:NAKI/WAtAIN:EstEr sEgAr r A THE LEXINGTON, LONDON
Subterranea haS a feSt-frenzy at SuperSonic and Live eviL! Dyscarnate/ Hour Of Penance/ Ion Dissonance/ Psycroptic Destroyer 666 CAMDEN Watain: have you been involved in an accident or injured at work…? UNDERWORLD, LONDON Destroyer 666: war metal HERE is a certain rough-hewn charm that marks out Australian bands, from AC/DC to the myriad underground death and black metal bands. They like a drink, they like to have fun but are not averse to a fight too. In the case of DESTROYER 666 [8], it seems like the fight is top priority. Forget battle metal, this is all-ou war – a barrage of punk-edged metal drawing t on early Slayer, Maiden and Venom mixed in blades, coshes and a size 11 boot to the head.with But violent as they sound, this is not just knuckle-dragging thuggery. There’s a strong sense of melody hidden amongst the spikey riffing and a good dash of classic metal showmanship. Brains and bullet-belts. WATAIN [9] also grasp the importance of putting on a show but have taken it up a notch. Not content to sound killer – which they do and look the part – again, no one could quest–ion that – they also smell evil. Against a backdrop of candles, dead crows and incense they take stage drenched in blood – blood that has beenthe allowed to fester for a few days. In the confi of a small club this is quite pungent. When nes mainman Erik Danielsson decides to bless the crowd with a chalice of this blood during Devil’s Blood (the song, not the band), it becomes almost unbearable. Those who are able to overcome the nauseating stench are treated an overpowering display of black metal fromtoone of the finest live bands in the genre. Modern classics Sworn To The Dark and Reaping Deathday hit with all the force of a small hurricane and stirring blast through Bathory’s Sacrifice suggaests Watain are still a band at the top of their game confident, fired up and downright nasty. Venom; may have been taking the piss but it would appear that Watain are deadly serious about their love of the Devil and indeed the live show has the feel of a Satanic ritual. A full-on sensory experience not for delicate stomachs. ALASTAIR RIDDELL UNDERWORLD, LONDON PENERS DYSCARNATE [7] might have the appearance of a bunch of posh boys with a gym addiction, yet any of the sparse crowd expecting them to sound as such have everything but their teeth peeled clean off by the sheer neutronic intensity of their death/grind onslaught. Too tough an act to follow, it would seem, for Italy’s HOUR OF PENENCE [5], who, whilst providing some humorous inter-song banter, forget to provide anything else. Despite possessing the kind of deep-worn grooves that even neck spasms won’t help you keep time to, the eight-stringed white noise of ION DISSONANCE [7] is actually pretty boring. On the other side of the coin, the brutal simplicity of PSYCROPTIC’s [8] Antipodean DM is, well, simply brutal. After a nearly two decade career, CEPHALIC CARNAGE [9] have been at all times skin-peeling, humorous, complex and crushingly simple and tonight fully justifies their longevity and shows what all those stoners listening to Bob fucking Marley are really missing! TOBY COOK THE GAFF, LONDON HOULD you feel so inclined, you can pick from two seemingly contrary conclusions about the state of teh punx in the UK. Either the scene’s in unexpectedly rude health given how many assembled crusties, thrashers and assorted dis-fits have turned out for a band in danger of being outpaced by their massed legion of imitators (mostly Swedish), or it’s everything the disillusioned claim it is (a toothless fashion show). While a sizeable throng jostle under the onstage d-beat barrage, the street outside and snug annexe to the back of the room seem to have drawn an equal, if not greater, portion happy to drink heavily and compare mohawk sizes. Discharge’s post-reunion output may have been sporadic and the results sometimes confused, but having clawed up the sorely missed anger of old on last year’s Desensitized, these hoary veterans have found their place in the world: pretty much where they’re currently standing, working metallic buzzsaw riffs and caustic, gravel-throated extortions in a barbarous flurry. With three decades to draw from, the emphasis on the back catalogue isn’t the nostalgia pandering cop-out it could be – it’s a tightly wound display of hardcore history at its most raucously alive, offering up new cuts to be devoured by the fist-aloft fanatics as every inch the equal of those classics. [7] JAMES HOARE METALHAMMER.CO.UK | 129
Tom G Warrior Triptykon Switzerland’s seminal extreme metal legend breaks the ice as he discusses transcendental aliens, driving ambitions and the non-Satanism of chickens. W hen you started, did you ever think your career would last this long? “I didn’t even imagine having a standards, I don’t think I’m difficult to work with, although I’m quite sure there will be people who will tell you otherwise.” career. Everything spoke against it. My beginnings were so modest and the odds so much stacked against me that I didn’t think I’d have a career never mind one that’s lasted almost 30 years.” Have you ever made any enemies along the way? Do you believe in God or the devil? “I don’t believe in anything, especially not those two. I don’t believe – I either know or I don’t know. It’s not part of my life.” Is there apiece of art or fi lm that’s important to you? “Anything that HR Giger creates. I know that might be too obvious or a cliché but to me there is no greater surrealist living. Some of his work transcends almost all other art on this planet. He is a living genius” What has been the high point of your career? “The high point is to even have a career.To be part of the people I idolised as a teenager. I used to sit trying to escape from reality listening to rock albums and it took me to spheres I didn’t know existed.To be granted by luck or destiny to be among them is the high point. It surpasses any other single event.” And the low point? “They are uncountable but the most severe by far was the destruction of Celtic Frost.” Are you adiffi cult person to work with? “I don’t think so. I have very high demands of quality and professionalism and I work meticulously and in great detail. If somebody also has high 130 | METALHAMMER.CO.UK plays rather than songs and they transcend the usual musical/ lyrical format.” What are your ambitions? “I have made plenty of enemies and they let me know in no uncertain terms almost every day of my life. Sometimes it becomes overpowering to the point I think about stopping.” What’s the hardest part of the lifestyle you’ve chosen? “The extreme financial instability I’ve been dealing with for 28 years. I’ve been asked by fans if I drive a Rolls Royce. It’s ludicrous. We’re not Bon Jovi. Like all extreme metal bands we’re in a niche market. Even in the 80s when there was still a lot of money in music the record company stole it from us. Now in “At this point in my life, nothing. I have fulfilled my ambitions. Now I’m playing music merely for enjoyment. I have plans for Triptykon but to call them ambitions would be too much.” What’s the most important lesson you’ve learned? “To have stamina and be persistent. If you don’t have those you might as well not try to be a musician.Talent alone won’t get you anywhere.” What albums would you take to adesert island? “The first Angel Witch album [Angel Witch],Venom’s Welcome To Hell,Vol 4 and Sabbath Bloody “I HAVE MADE PLENTY OF ENEMIES AND THEY LET ME KNOW ALMOST EVERY DAY OF MY LIFE” TOM GWARRIOR a band where we have full control there’s no record sales any more. That’s my life in a nutshell.” Is there asong you’re most proud of writing? “Possibly Triumph Of Death by Hellhammer.Then probably The Prolonging by Triptykon. Both these songs transport radical emotions. Of course you attempt to do that with every single song you make but sometimes for some reason or other it works perfectly. They are both almost like albums in themselves.They’re more like Sabbath by Black Sabbath, Wish You Were Here by Pink Floyd and something by Dead Can Dance, most likely Spleen And Ideal.” What will you be doing immediately after answering these questions? “Straight after this I will be eating a chicken and salad wrap.That’s probably not Satanic enough but that’s what I’m gonna do.” TRIPTYKON’S NEW EP, SHATTER, IS OUT NOW VIA CENTURY MEDIA WWW.TRIPTYKON.NET
E287 Passion Earring £18.99 P570 Caltrop Cross Pendant £22.99 AHMT3 The Alchemist Hand Made Tie £24.99 P578 Venetian Cross of Light Pendant P573 £28.99 Mask Of Venom Pendant £31.99 ULR8 Needle Gun Ring £14.99 ULP24 Skull Duster CubanChoker £17.99 ULP21 Faith Pendant £17.99 ULR7 Unlucky For Some Ring £13.99 ULC2 Bet Your Life Cufflinks £21.99 E283 Mournan Earrings £15.99 E285 Crux Angelicum Earrings £16.99 AAT36 Turpin’s Gallows Leather Covered Tankard £47.99 P581 The Duellist’ Cantosonic Wave Gun Pendant £22.99 ULP22 Glory Cross Pendant £15.99 ULP23 Saint of Killers Pendant £15.99 AAC59 Unus Thorns of Passion Rose Vase £89.99 BTF 518 Necronaut Man’s Fitted T Shirt sizes: M/L/XL £18.99 ULA4 Pain Is Pleasure Leather Strap £17.99 B88 No Evil Buckle £38.99 R160 Anastasia Ring £22.99 ULFE4 Swallow Studs Pair Earrings £7.99 R161 Victoria’s Gladrocks Ring £17.99 Alchemy MH1110, Hazel Drive, Leicester LE3 2JE To receive your mail order pack - includes new 68 page Alchemy Gothic 1977 catalogue, Alchemy UL13 brochure plus our UL17 flyer -please send your name & address with a cheque or P.O. for £2.99 payable to ALCHEMY. New Alchemy Gothic collection available NOW! .For online ordering visit the shopping emporium at www.oldcuriosityshop.net UL13 Rings available in sizes: W(Large), T(Medium), Q(Small) Please state size. Alchemy Gothic rings are available in sizes : LNQTYW Please state size ULF1 Love Life Bracelet £27.99 U.K. Ordering Methods of Payment: Credit Card orderline- 0116 282 4824 Fax- 0116 282 5202 Cheque / P O - Enclosed with Order. U.K. Shipping & Handling £3.75 Next Day delivery £8.00 www.UL13alchemy.com www.alchemygothic.com Please quote MH1110 when responding to this advert. For trade & wholesale enquiries please contact the sales team: Lyn, Elizabeth, Matt or Georgia.
www.metallica.com