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The Coroner's Report - Satyricon, Napalm Death, Kreator, Immortal, Behemoth and Many More By Peter Atkinson, Contributor Thursday, March 12, 2009 @ 5:44 AM
Carcass is coming back for their Exhumed to Consume II tour in March. Saw them last fall, and they were great. Mayhem, who haven’t played here since like 2000, will be coming in May to headline the Blackenedfest tour. Joining them, hopefully, will be Swedish black metal terrorists Marduk, who have been denied entry several times since last playing here in 2002. Napalm Death and Kreator also are headed this way in the spring. Most of these tours will hit one, if not several, of the smallish extreme music festivals that seem to keep popping up. There’s the Texas Metal Fest in Houston March 22 featuring Carcass, Suicide Silence, Samael and others. Carcass also headlines the California Metal Fest March 28 with Exodus and Suffocation joining the bill. After that are the long-standing New England Metal & Hardcore Festival (Lamb of God, Children Of Bodom, God Forbid, Suffocation, Nachtmystium, et. al.) in April in lovely Worcester, Mass.; and the three-day Maryland Deathfest (Mayhem, Marduk, Napalm Death, Brutal Truth, Absu, Bolt Thrower, Pestilence, ad nauseum) in Baltimore May 22-24. There’s probably some more I’m forgetting. Then this summer comes the second go-round of the Rockstar Energy Drink Mayhem tour, to be headlined by Slayer and Marilyn Manson. It will feature the likes of Cannibal Corpse, Behemoth, Job For A Cowboy, The Black Dahlia Murder and Whitechapel, making for a much more extreme experience than last year’s more “mainstream” line-up. No Ozzfest this summer, but with this line-up, who cares — even if it means sitting through Bullet For My Valentine or Trivium. What follows is a look at some of what’s out right now, or what’s coming down the pike.
SATYRICON: ALL FOR ONENorwegian black metallers Satyricon have had a pretty rough go of it in North America. Four labels here for their last four albums, several of which were released in the states months after they were issued everywhere else. A first U.S. tour in 2000 that saw the band play, among other notable venues, the now long-gone Phantasmagoria in Wheaton, Md., that was part bar, part used record store and part home brewing supply shop.Drummer Frost was prevented from accompanying the band when they toured here in 2004 when his visa was denied — he failed to mention jail time he’d served following a bar fight a decade earlier in his paperwork. Emperor’s Trym Torson and Slipknot’s Joey Jordinson sat in on drums during the tours, the second of which came to an abrupt end when guitarists Steinar Gundersen and Arnt Ove Gr¸nbech (aka Obsidian C.) were arrested in Toronto, accused of sexually assaulting a female fan on the band’s bus. All charges later were dropped. The band never made it over here for 2006’s Now, Diabolical.
But things seem to, finally, be turning around for them here.
The Age of Nero was issued in January through Koch Records. A brawny, riffy album of stark contrasts that might best be described as “black ‘n’ roll,” Nero marks a dramatic turn from the bone dry, deliberate Now, Diabolical, as the unpredictable band reinvents itself once again. And while Satyr and Frost work almost exclusively as a duo during the creative process, Nero features writing and performance contributions from “Lords of Chaos”-era Norwegian black metal fixture Snorre Ruch, guitarist with cult heroes Thorns. After a week of phone calls and text messages through five cities in the U.S. and Canada, I was finally able to hook up with the mysterious, but rather talkative Frost (aka Kjetil Haraldstad) at a tour stop in Minneapolis to talk about things Satyricon, his other band 1349 and Norwegian black metal in general. Some excerpts follow: KNAC.COM: An obvious question, how has the tour gone so far? Frost: Really, really well. It feels a little bit like starting fresh again. Every night is really magical, you get this electrical feeling that you only get when there is a really good connection between the audience and the band. It’s good to be here again after all these years and we’re definitely going to be more focused on the American fans from now on. We’re already talking about coming back here in the autumn for a headlining tour. Plans are loose but they are really taking shape now and we are really fueled by the enthusiasm and the massive turnouts that we see. KNAC.COM: Have you had any problems going back and forth across the border? Frost: Everything has been fine in regard to the paperwork, not a single problem actually. It couldn’t possibly have gone smoother. KNAC.COM: The last show you play here is a headline show with 1349 opening. Will you play with them too? Frost: No. For several reasons I don’t do that. It would take some of the edge off the Satyricon show and really be physically demanding to do double duty with both bands that take 100 percent of me. For me, being onstage takes lots of mental preparation and the kind of preparation I do for Satyricon is different than what I do for 1349, so it would be a clash of energy. 1349 is going to be playing with Tony Laureano, who has been playing a lot with them. He has done more live shows with them than I have (laughs). KNAC.COM: Are you still recording with them?
KNAC.COM: Nero has a much bigger, fuller sound than Diabolical, were you looking for that kind of contrast? Frost: We definitely wanted something more powerful and a stronger sense of wildness to it. Never have we been so close to our initial idea of what an album should sound like as we are with The Age of Nero. Usually we have to compromise. With Now, Diabolical, we definitely had to do compromises in the sound because there were elements that didn’t really work out how we wanted to them. But, still, we were really satisfied with the result, it was really right for that album to have a really dry and clean, though warm, sound. But this time the music demanded something different in the production and something wilder because we definitely let the reins a bit looser.
Frost: He functioned as the catalyst in the process. His background gives him the right foundation for understanding what we’re doing and analyzing it and coming with his own ideas. Sometimes he would come with musical solutions when we felt a little stuck with a certain piece of music. Other times, just having him there and his presence, his understanding, made it possible for us to feel that we had a very inspiring environment to work with. And he added some of his very particular style that we felt suited the music here and there, a really unique kind of riffing, and I think it sounds great with the new stuff. He made up that last piece in the puzzle, everything felt more complete. We remained in total control, as we need to do during the creative process, which is also the reason why there is only the two of us who are the core of Satyricon, the creative unit. And though he would come up with ideas, we never felt obliged to use them. KNAC.COM: Does the touring band actually feel like a “band?” Frost: We feel this is our strongest live lineup ever and we hope to continue with this lineup for years to come. When we tour, we’re really a band, we’re not a constellation of session musicians plus the two main members. We aren’t doing this as just pure entertainment; there is really an art aspect to it as well. So we need to have the feeling that this is an integrated band when we’re onstage, otherwise I feel it would be impossible for the band to have that kind of shine we feel Satyricon ought to have. We should all be united under the Satyricon banner; it should not be two people and four other people who are just doing their jobs. KNAC.COM: You figured prominently in Peter Beste’s “True Norwegian Black Metal” photo book, when did that all take place and what do you think of all the attention the old days of Norwegian black metal continues to receive? Frost: He was doing a photo shoot of 1349 many, many years ago and I think that the pictures he used of the band and me in the book all came from that little photo session. There are several really good shots in the book, but I have started to become a little bored of with all this meta-coverage of the scene and everything that surrounds it. There are lots of documentaries and books being released these days. It was exciting for a little period, but I feel there is enough documentation. The story has been told and told and retold again. Perhaps it’s time to start thinking about the here and now and focus on the music again, enough with the history and the static image of how it looks. Let’s get back to music and whatever it can do to people, because that’s what I’m occupied with these days, to really get into the feeling of it all. I think that has become lost in all this. KNAC.COM: The face paint you have in those photos is quite horrific, as it also used to be with Satyricon. Have you given up on the corpse paint with Satyricon? Frost: We do use make up, a kind of make up that we feel fits the Satyricon frame of mind, that is closer to that somber darkness we feel the Satyricon music has now, and that also fits a little with the more ‘80s rock and roll foundation of our music. Full-on corpse paint and spikes would just ruin the whole foundation; it would be really out of place. In 1349, we really go full circle with the face covering corpse paint and spikes and bullet belts and leather and blood and everything. And that’s 1349’s expression. There has to be a conscious choice of visual styles in every band. If there’s anything that I really dislike about this scene is that everything has become so routine and standardized. It takes away the whole meaning. This genre was built upon innovation and respect for what you do and understanding what you do. That’s what makes it powerful. Many bands are applying corpse paint without the faintest idea of why they do it, they feel that it is expected of them, but it’s bullshit. The whole idea, and that whole position should be challenged, because these bands that just apply visual elements and symbols because they feel it is expected of them will never get a sense of power or mysticism of whatever, because it isn’t there in the first place. There has to be some sort of connection between the mind and what’s going on in the physical world. If there isn’t, it ends of looking ridiculous and it basically is ridiculous.
BEHEMOTH: Payback’s A BitchBehemoth frontman Adam "Nergal" Darski fought the law - and this time he won. Twice. Sort of.As he was being conferenced in for our phone interview from his hometown of Gdansk, Poland, Darski found himself being pulled over by a local traffic cop. Apparently it is illegal to talk on your cellphone while driving there without a hands-free set. But after a couple of “hold ons” and “I’ll be right with you” he is back on the line without a ticket, and without much hassle. “I pulled into a parking lot, and that was basically it, he just let me go,” Darski said with a hint of surprise. “Usually, when I deal with the cops, I either get the ticket or I get arrested.” Just days earlier, Darski won a much more serious legal victory when a complaint against him filed by the PMRC-like All-Polish Committee for Defence Against Sects — following a 2007 Behemoth concert in Gdynia, Poland, in which he tore a Bible in half and said some nasty things about Christianity — was dropped. Earlier, the committee had distributed to Polish officials a list of bands — including Behemoth — that allegedly promote Satanism and murder as a means of having them banned from playing in the country.
Days later, Darski made good on this threat, demanding a written apology from Nowak, to be published in one of the Poland’s biggest daily newspapers, and seeking approximately $1,000 in damages, which he planned to donate to an animal shelter in Gdynia. A first hearing in the case was scheduled for March 11. By that time, work will be well under way on Behemoth’s ninth studio album. In mid-February, the band entered Radio Gdansk Studio in Poland to record the drum tracks. At the time we spoke, right before Christmas, Behemoth — rounded out by bassist Tomasz “Orion” Wróblewski, drummer Zbigniew Robert “Inferno” Promiñski and touring guitarist Patryk “Seth” Sztyber — were still writing and rehearsing the new material, but with more of a sense of urgency. “We are going to have to push ourselves to get ready to go into the studio, so we’re starting to get a little bit stressed and getting the adrenaline pumping,” Darski said. “It’s going well, it’s going slowly, but the stuff we’ve finished so far I think is killer. Most of the songs are really fast, technical and intense, but we’re also working on the slowest, most massive, epic we’ve ever done.” Behemoth had to really push to get The Apostasy done in time to play the 2007 Ozzfest. A similar, but equally attractive, deadline was dropped on the band this time, too, as it was announced they would be part of the Rockstar Energy Drink Mayhem Festival tour, playing the Hot Topic “extreme metal” stage when it kicks off July 10. The band also is slated to play a handful of off-dates supporting Slayer. What all that will mean for the new album remains to be seen. “If we could have the album out by October, that would be the perfect scenario, but who knows,” Darski said. “If it happens, it happens. We want to make sure the album is done right, and not be in the position of just having to get it done so it can be out by a certain time.” In the interim, Behemoth issued the seven-track EP Ezkaton, through their new stateside label Metal Blade, in November. It features the new song “Qadosh,” three live songs, the re-recorded “Chant for Ezkaton 2000 e.v.,” and two covers — The Ramones’ “I’m Not Jesus” and “Jama Peckel” from the Czech hardcore band Master’s Hammer. “This was a way of show the fans some of the stuff that influenced us that maybe they weren’t expecting,” Darski said. “Master’s Hammer are one of my all-time favorite bands. They are a highly respected band in Eastern Europe, but a lot of people elsewhere probably have not heard of them. So now they will. “The Ramones song is really special because even though it’s a lot different than the type of music we play, the title of the song and the meaning behind it fit us perfectly. It definitely speaks to the way we feel. And it has a little bit of a thrash thing going on there, so when we play it it actually sounds a little bit like Cavalera Conspiracy or something like that. Punk with a very metal feel.” Behemoth’s deal with Metal Blade is one more step up the ladder here for a band who’s first five album received limited, if any, exposure in the states. In three albums since with Century Media, the band have been able to tour here extensively — most recently in early 2008 with Dimmu Borgir — and build a substantial, ravenous following thanks to their relentless live shows. The Apostasy even managed to crack the Billboard chart, debuting at #149. “We’ve kind of got our foot in the door with the last couple of records, now its time to see if we can get all the way inside,” Darski said, laughing. “You look at their [Metal Blade’s] track record, and what they are still doing to this day after 25 years, it gives us an opportunity for more exposure and better visibility. Brian Slagel and all the people there are so enthusiastic, and that’s infectious, it makes you want to be better, so we’re really excited. “They’ve got a great bunch of bands, and they are bands that are constantly recording and going out on tour, building an audience for themselves and for this kind of music, and Metal Blade is there to support them. I know how it is to be on the other side, where the label makes promises and they don’t deliver and the really don’t do much to support your band or your music. Before we signed with Century Media, that’s really all we had. And there is nothing more frustrating than that.”
REVIEWS: NEW AND NOTABLE, OR NOTABSU - ABSU (Candlelight)
CATTLE DECAPITATION - The Harvest Floor (Metal Blade)
DARKANE - Demonic Art (Nuclear Blast)
DEVIAN - God of the Ill Fated (Century Media)
Dimension Zero - He Who Shall Not Bleed (Candlelight)
ENSLAVED - Vertebrae (Nuclear Blast)
EXODUS - Let There Be Blood (Zaentz Records)
GOD FORBID - Earthsblood (Century Media)
KREATOR - Hordes of Chaos (SPV)
MANTIC RITUAL - Executioner (Nuclear Blast)
NAPALM DEATH - Time Waits for No Slave (Century Media)
SAMAEL - Above (Nuclear Blast)
SEPULTURA - A-Lex (SPV)
SIX FEET UNDER - Death Rituals (Metal Blade)
THYRFING - Hels Vite (Regain)
Click on the cover art to purchase any album in this feature.
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