Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts

Tuesday, 30 July 2013

INTERVIEW: VENOM


Anyone with any sense knows that when you get right down to it there is only one band to thank for black metal, death metal, thrash metal, speed metal and all such glorious creations. That band is, of course, Venom. So when the godfathers of extreme metal release a new album it’s a momentous event and when that album is as downright awesome as Fallen Angels...well, you get your arse down to the Universal Records building in Hammersmith and talk to them about it. MTUK were lucky enough to be given an audience with all three members of the band, so read on for words of wisdom from legendary front man Cronos, guitarist Rage and new drummer Dante.

MTUK - First things first, I just wanted to say congratulations on the new album, it’s probably the finest Venom album in years.

C “Thank you, we feel that. We really feel that. It’s the whole way we approached this. We solidified this line-up in May 2009 and we said ‘let’s not think of albums, let’s not think of labels, deals, money, bullshit, publishing and all that crap. Let’s do it the way we did in the early days, as a band. Let’s get to know each other, let’s get out there and get the gigs done and we’ll take it from there’. And things have just gone from strength to strength you know? We get on great and the whole sort of writing process was just so natural – very much like it was in the early days. One of the things that I think has made the album so special is the way we approached the recording as well. From Resurrection onwards we did go down that Pro-tools, drum triggered thing...you know, just trying to make better productions for the band. I kind of scratched me head and thought ‘let’s go back. Let’s get the microphones on the drum kit, let’s get the Marshalls plugged in, let’s get the fuckers cranked up and let’s play as we do on stage. Let’s play like a fucking live band, like what Venom’s all about and we’ll see what we get out of it.’ And I was blown away by the way these tracks came out.”

R “It lets the songs speak for themselves doesn’t it?”

C “Absolutely.”

MTUK - One of the most pleasing things about Fallen Angels is the way it has captured so much of the old atmosphere and magic compared to recent albums.

R “And it’s not like we sat there and said ‘let’s write another ‘In Nomine...’ or stuff like that. It helped us in 2009 when we did the South American stuff, the 30 Years of Venom you know? Because it wasn’t like ‘go and listen to the old albums’, the vibe was already there – it was ingrained. It was like ‘let us speak, let the songs speak, let’s just write a good fucking Venom album’.”

C “I told these guys from day one that Venom is not a parody. Venom is a band that changes year after year after year. We’re not reliving 1984, Venom are a different band today than we were back then. I’m not looking for a new Mantas or a new Abaddon – I’m looking for a great Venom drummer. I’m looking for a great Venom guitarist who stands up on his own, who’s got his own ideas, his own look, his own identity. I’ve never believed in that parody thing, I think it doesn’t work.”

R “The fans are that clever and savvy now that they just see through it.”

C “That was what happened when, back in the day, we replaced Mantas when he got sick on that US tour and we got those guys in. The kids were throwing things at them and shouting ‘you’re not Mantas!’ Because that’s who they were trying to be and that’s where the first mistake was. But with these guys, from the 2009 South American tour, we said we’re going to make the live set a full thirty years of Venom, so a song off every Venom album – plus the singles – so even Calm Before The Storm is in there, stuff off Possessed and everything. Get them in there. We’ve come up with these medleys where we go from one song to the next song to the next song, so these guys have got this great understanding of how the band has progressed. But because it’s all on a live stage where we’ve got the same sound, songs from thirty years ago to now have all got the same sound and it comes together – which shows how good the songs are.”

D “Yeah, nothing sticks out like a sore thumb, like it sounds like it was recorded fucking thirty years ago. It all comes together like one great sound.

” C “As an example – and no disrespect to the band, because I think Saxon are a fantastic band – but when you hear their first stuff, ‘Wheels Of Steel’ and then you hear the stuff they do today, it would be very different for them to do a thirty year thing like that because their songs have radically changed – whereas Venom haven’t. We’ve stayed within the essence of Black Metal you know? In there is thrash metal, power metal, speed metal, death metal...it’s all part of that Black Metal stamp and I think we’ve kind of retained that, which I’m really proud of.”


MTUK - Is it difficult for you to find a balance between progressing and moving on and staying true to your original sound? Especially when there’s so much pressure on you to keep sounding like the early days?

C “Yeah it is a challenge, but I believe the honesty of the songs will tell me if it’s right or wrong. Of course I write things where I think ‘that’s not fucking Venom’, and in a way that’s why I went off and did the Cronos thing back in the day. I had all this material but I knew it wasn’t Venom so I wasn’t going to call it Venom. It was quite heavy but it wasn’t Venom. I think a Venom song tells you it’s a Venom song. It’s got to have the ‘x, y and z’, you know? It’s got to jump out at you and punch you in the nose.”

D “Or stab you in the bollocks!” (Dante making a quick reference to the lyrics of new track ‘Nemesis’)

R “It helps with me and Dante’s background. We like classic rock, Glenn Hughes (he points at my Hughes t-shirt), we like that sort of stuff. I’m not into new music. It wasn’t like I was into Lamb Of God and trying to bring that into Venom. I’m into the sort of stuff that Cronos is into.”

C “I think that’s another learning thing that Venom have had to go through. We did get a nu-metal drummer in at one point and it didn’t really work...”

MTUK - Antton?

C “Antton yeah. At first, on Resurrection, he was trying to stay within that black metal theme but you can hear by Hell that he was basically a nu-metal drummer and it wasn’t working. That’s why we parted company. Whereas Dante’s got a rock drumming background...”

MTUK – With ex-Sabbath man Tony Martin’s band.

D “Yeah.”

C “Yeah, so he’s coming from the same background as Abaddon, he’s a rock drummer who’s learnt metal.”

D “Your Sabbath, your Purple, Cream...all that’s my bag.”

MTUK - So how did you end up playing with Venom then?

D “I was playing in Germany with Tony at a festival, Bang Your Head, in 2006, ’07 maybe, and a guy I was chatting to backstage who was working at the venue was working three months later at a venue where Venom were playing. They (indicates Cronos and Rage) were chatting to this guy and asking him who he’d been working with and he reels off all these bands, including ‘Tony Martin from Black Sabbath’. So they were like ‘bloody hell, what’s he doing now?’ And the guy says ‘he’s got a drummer from Newcastle, where you’re from’. So ears pricked up...”

C “A lot of people who were auditioning were like ex-Cradle and this, that and the other but I thought ‘that’s not Venom really. We need somebody who knows about Zeppelin and Purple, the bands that Abaddon loves’. Then we’ve got somebody who’s coming from the same place and can approach the drums with the same mentality.”

R “You don’t have to explain when you’re going to do a new album. ‘Right mate, this is what you need to do...’”

C “Dante was straight up from the get go. He turned round and said ‘I’m not a thrash drummer, I don’t get this blast beat thing...’ and I said ‘you don’t have to. Abaddon developed that from the old ‘boom whack boom whack’, big hitting drumming. We’ll take it from there and you just listen to what’s going on and take it from there’ and he got it like that – because it does make sense. These guys who are going ‘tippy-tappy-tippy-tappy’ that’s not us.”

D “When you’re going a hundred miles an hour you can’t play with the intensity that the big rock drummers have got. Drumming that means something when you hit a cymbal or play a drum fill. When you’re going a zillion miles an hour it’s fast and it’s ‘fucking hell look how fast he goes’...but it doesn’t really mean anything. You think ‘this is great’ for five minutes but you get bored of it and end up thinking ‘I’m off to the bar’.”

C “I think out of all of the main bands that came up after Venom, the only drummer that I personally like is Lombardo cos he’s a hitter. I’ve stood right beside him at gigs when he’s been playing and I’ve thought ‘you’re a fucking drummer, that’s how you hit the fucking drums’. That’s what I like to hear.”

D “Basically you get your foundations down with your drums and then get your guitar on top and your vocals. If you can’t get that right then there’s something wrong.”

R “He’s not just a great drummer though (indicating Dante), he’s an entertainer as well. Sometimes I turn round and see him and his arms are going and it gives you energy cos you’re playing along.”

C “You know people do think that that’s all show but with him it’s a lot to do with timekeeping as well. He’s counting his beats as he’s doing it. You can see the concentration in the playing and it just makes everything so tight. I’ve always said about this music – thrash, power, black, death – the tighter you can make it, the heavier it gets. I’ve heard the critics who will turn around and say ‘it’s just loud to hide the mistakes’ but no; you hear the mistakes more when it’s loud.”

D “Especially when you’re a three piece; you can’t hide behind walls of guitars.”

C “I think it’s one of the testaments to this band, because of the work we’ve put into it. One of the last shows we played last year was in the Ukraine. They were young kids who’d put the festival together, it was not the best run festival but love them, they’d tried their best and I love a tryer. They were very young and they didn’t have a clue. It was terrible and sounded atrocious but because we had so much work under our belts we just looked at each other and said ‘fuck it all, let them deal with their shit, we’ll, as a band, nail our shit. The reviews came back and nobody spotted a thing. It was all ‘Venom were amazing, it was fantastic’ and I just thought ‘job done, there you go’. We just sort of looked at each other and kind of like telepathically just fucking went for it. We could stand here and cry, we could stand here and go ‘oh we’re not happy with this’ but no – these people are doing their best, let’s just get on with it. I actually enjoyed it at the end of the day...it was funny as well.”

D “You know I said how we’re a three piece? But there was always another bloke on stage, putting a mic stand back up or unplugging a monitor and signalling to the guys at the back of the tent.”

C “When I went on the bass backline was all feeding back so I went over and turned it down and the guy came straight back on and turned it back up...’no, you must be loud!’ I think they’d watched a video. They must have watched some Iron Maiden video and seen a roadie run on and change a mic and thought ‘that’s what you must do!’ So these guys kept running on and changing mics and it was like ‘there’s nothing fucking wrong with the mic!’”

R “I introduced him as the new member of the band at one point.”

C “It was great though. There was this young guy and his girlfriend there who filmed the show and they gave us the tapes after the show – the little hard drives out of their cameras – and it doesn’t look that bad. We’re putting this live DVD together and we can use the footage. We’ll give them a little credit and big them up, you know? At the end of the day it was good to be able to turn that show round, cos it could have been a disaster. The kids don’t want to know about the problems, they don’t understand. They’ve paid for their ticket and they just want to see a fucking great band – so let’s give ‘em what they came for.”


MTUK - Have you got any touring plans in place to support the new album?

C “This year, now that we’ve got the album under our belts we can start looking at getting back out there. We’ve got Germany on 26th November, it’s the Christmas festival and we’re doing the first day which has also got Immortal on before us. We’re headlining. The next day has got Saxon and Hammerfall and that. That’s going to be great – it’s one of the biggest German in door festivals and we’re going to get the full pyro show and walkways and everything. They’re really going to pull out the stops for it. Then two weeks before that we’ve got a show in Bucharest, a Rock Legends festival. We’ve never been to Bucharest so that’s really good for us. Then next year we’ll hopefully get some of the bigger festivals.”

MTUK - But will you be here?

C “Well this is one of things we’re talking about. There are a couple of venues we’re in discussions with, we’d really like to do it but we really want to put on the show. I mean we did that Mean Fiddler gig – great gig, don’t get us wrong – but for me, with England, I really want to do something a bit special. We’re going to try and get the Bloodstock gig and if we get the Bloodstock gig we should be able to put the pyro show on. Failing that would be a London show somewhere. We’re looking at somewhere like the Roundhouse because I think we could still put a show on there. But we’re still looking at all these new territories as well. We’re never been to Ireland, never been to Spain...there’s Australia, you know? We’re busy talking to all these people and then there’s the return to South America. The promoter is trying to get the timing right for us there but he wants us to go back every two or three years. There are other places now opening up there. We did Mexico, Colombia, Chile, Argentina and Brazil and he says now there’s Venezuela, Bolivia and Peru. There are places opening up all the time as governments are becoming more broad minded.”

MTUK – So did you guys find South America to be as crazy as most bands report?

D “It was like Beatlemania! The first gig was in Mexico and I’ll never forget this...we were getting our suitcases off the belt and this guy, security guy, he says ‘just two minutes, I’m going to go and check out what it’s like’. He went through to Arrivals and when he came back his face...he was like ‘we’re not going through there til we’ve sorted it out. There’s about two hundred kids screaming VENOM! VENOM! VENOM!’ It was great! They were all outside banging on these glass windows with coppers trying to drag them away.”

R “And me and Cronos were standing there going ‘right Dante, welcome to Venom’.”

D “The people were just so enthusiastic.”

R “We had to stop playing at one of the gigs because we couldn’t hear anything.”

C “They were doing this football chant but for Venom. We had to stop the gig because they were that loud. We just stood there and let them do it, and then we applauded them and got back on with it. Afterwards we asked one of the security guys what that was and he translated it for us – ‘oh Venom you are our soul and we’re really glad you’re here’ blah blah blah. It was really emotional. ‘We are you and you are us’, all this sort of stuff. They knew all the stuff as well. People have been saying for years ‘Venom is Cronos, Mantas and Abaddon’...what a load of shit. Those guys are in the minority now. The kids that are coming to our shows now, it’s all about the new stuff – they’re singing along to ‘Antechrist’, ‘Burn In Hell’, ‘Metal Black’...and they know all the fucking words as well. I mean these albums are the ones that they’ve bought now, they’re important to them. Yeah they’re familiar with Welcome To Hell and Black Metal and they understand the history of the band but they weren’t there when they were released. Of course we get the older guys at the back waiting for the ‘Countess...’, ‘Witching Hour’, ‘Bloodlust’...great, we’ll always do those, not a problem, it’s all part of the set. But those kids are so enthusiastic for the new stuff...and they’re the majority.”

MTUK - Is it hard fitting new material into the set when there’s so much from the past that you have to play?

C “Yeah, because we like to be controversial as well. We are also looking at songs that have never been played live before, songs that have only ever been played in the studio, never made it on to a stage before. We’ve been rehearsing things like ‘Manitou’...and I was quite surprised, it sounds alright, you know? I think that might creep in for a gig or two. When we did this thirty years thing we said ‘we want to do something off every album and some of the singles and that’ so now it’s like ‘At War With Satan’ going into ‘Too Loud (For The Crowd)’ going into ‘Nightmare’ going into ‘Live Like An Angel...’ blah, blah, blah. Cutting these songs together is fantastic because you see the look on the kids faces and they’re like ‘fucking hell!’ At first they’re like ‘which one’s this?’ and then they’re like ‘fucking hell!’ It’s great seeing the anticipation on their faces. And it also just shows you how good the song writing is as well that they can fit like that, that you can merge such radically different types of songs together really well. You wouldn’t think you can put something like Live Like An Angel...’ with ‘Calm Before The Storm’...but you can.”

R “The new songs as well are just slotting in because they’ve got almost the same vibe, you know? You hear stuff like ‘Pedal To The Metal’ and it just fits right in...”

...and that is where the lovely Nina from Universal stepped in and called time on our chat; a long queue of other journalists were waiting for their time with Venom. Hopefully I’ll be seeing them again soon – next time in a UK venue where I’ll get to hear some tracks from that fantastic new album, Fallen Angels, live.

For more on the band check out http://www.venomslegions.com

Interviewed by Chris Kee / MTUK Metal Zine

Monday, 22 July 2013

BURZUM’S VARG VIKERNES SPEAKS OUT ON RECENT ARREST FOR SUSPICION OF TERRORIST PLOT


Burzum‘s Varg Vikernes has recently run into some major issues with French police. Suspected of potential terrorism for plotting a “massacre,” Vikernes and his wife were arrested on July 16. The couple have since been released from French jail and the Burzum musician has used his personal blog to detail the ordeal with great detail.

Varg Vikernes is well-known for his music, but the Norwegian artist is possibly more infamous for the 1993 murder of Mayhem bandmate Øystein ‘Euronymous’ Aarseth. After Vikernes was released from prison on 2009, he has led a quiet life as a family man, although Vikernes’ racist beliefs and support of the French National Front have prolonged Vikernes’ controversial reputation. Vikernes also received the personal manifesto of mass murderer Anders Breivik, which acted as the origin of Vikernes’ 2013 investigation. After spending two days in jail, Vikernes has finally told his side of the story.

Vikernes posted the following statement on Thuleanperspective.com:

Thuesday I woke up a bit earlier than I normally do. Yes, I normally wake up because the dog wants to take a leak on our lawn, around 7:00, but this morning I woke up because of a loud bang. I more or less jumped out of bed and saw that somebody was breaking into our home. Thankfully I immediately saw that it was actually the police, so I did not reach for any means of defence, and instead just raised my arms and waited for the police to enter. “Ah, it’s just the police”. My second thought was “What on Earth are they up to? Are they actually smashing our entire entrance area just because of my blog?” I was not sure whether or not they were shooting into our living room or actually flashbanging our living room. After a total of three explosiones (that later turned out to be gun shots) and a lot of breaking of glass and door frames they entered.

My pregnant wife, not yet aware that it was actually the police, tried to cover our youngest son and — she told me later — was about to reach for her 22 LR  Browning lever action rifle, when she understood from my reaction that it was the police. Our youngest son, who was sleeping in our bed during that night (because my mother-in-law was visiting), and was therefore directly behind me and in front of the muzzles of the police’s assault rifles.

Sorry to digress, but some times when you buy underwear you get three underpants in one package, and for some reason at least one of these are always in some horrible colour, and of course I was wearing such a pair of underpants on Thuesday morning. A pair of strikingly orange underpants. Having been repeatedly dragged out into the street or prison hallways or similar in my underwear before, by the Norwegian police or prison guards, I thought to myself that this was going to repeat itself and I would be photographed with my little belly, my thin hair, my tanned arms in great contrast to my pale body and — wearing horribly orange underpants. (Everybody would believe that I was actually Dutch…)

When I had completed  my little intelligent string of thoughts, about orange underpants and everything, the police had climbed the staircase and — simply put — arrested me, laying me face down in the bed with hand cuffs on my back. To my great surprise they also arrested and put hand cuffs on my pregnant wife, leaving my shocked youngest son sitting there alone without his mother’s protection. A whole lot of DCRI police officers in civil clothes arrived and the apparent chief said “Yes, that is Vikernes”.

This is only part of Vikernes’ statement. Head over to Thuleanperspective.com to view Varg’s entire set of ‘Terrorism in France’ blog posts.

Monday, 1 July 2013

INTERVIEW: GORGOROTH


Here’s an interview with Norwegian Black Metal giants Gorgoroth. All answers by Infernus. 

Thank you for extracting out time for this interview. First of all, how have you people been?
“Thank you for showing interest in my band. As of now, we are back from a relatively speaking extensive Latin-American tour. I was a bit stressed due to the sudden need to replace our vocalist just two weeks prior to the tour. But it all went well and we had a great time there. As for now the main focus is back on studio work for a while. Meaning that me and Asklund working on pre-productions etc. in his studio at the outskirts of Stockholm, Sweden.”

We were really keen to know the literal meaning of the word ‘Gorgoroth’. Share with us the significance behind the band’s name. What made you guys choose ‘Gorgoroth’ as your band name?
“Well, sure. Back in the early 90′s, I was a bit more interested in fantasy literature than I am now. When Tolkien described the plateau of Gorgoroth in his Lord of the Rings, this made a certain impression on me. Leading to the conclusion that a description of a place inhabited by the powers of terror and fear – fear of the powers of darkness – would fit as a name for my musical project.”

Tell us the story behind the formation of the band? When and how was Gorgoroth established?
“I formed the band together with my first drummer and my first vocalist in 1992.”

Also, tell us how did you start playing Black Metal?
“Yeah. I realized that I was a Satanist and I realised I had a somewhat passionate stance towards metal music and the idea of partaking in shaping its future direction.”

What was the reason behind Gaahl leaving the band?
“He excluded himself through disloyalty through conspiring with an enemy counterworking mine and my band’s will.”

Has the band got that ‘expected’ support from the fans lately? What else would you want the fans to be like?
“I am not sure if I understand what you mean. But, I do not like the description of our audience as that of being merely humble and easy-to-direct ‘fans’. I prefer the term ‘audience’. Well, our audience has at all times been both critical and supportive. I know to appreciate that both in times of difficulties and otherwise.”

Black Suicide: Tell us about the controversy the band faced in Krakow in 2004 during the DVD recording of your live concert ‘Black Mass Krakow 2004’.
“Why?”

So, what are your future plans?
“Instinctus Bestialis has been in the making since the day the Quantos Possunt Ad Satanitatem Trahunt mastertape was delivered to the record company. And it is still not finished. As mentioned earlier, we just returned from Latin America two weeks ago. Now my focus is on studio work, pre-productions, the final arrangements for the upcoming album, and on management work. Plus, the booking duties, as I, to a large extent, do this myself. As for live appearances, I aim at and hope we will reach an agreement for doing some eight shows in south-east Asia in February. Then there will be some smaller projects before we most probably will be doing the longest tour ever back in Europe, covering ALL European territories by the end of 2013.”

Tell us about your influences? What influenced Gorgoroth the most when you were working on the first track ever?
“The spirit of Heavy Metal and a firm belief in Satan as my guide towards true light and goodness.”

Well, what do you have to say about ‘Satanism’? What does Satan is for Gorgoroth?
“Satan is the foundation whereupon we carry out our work.”

Tell us about your stage-act styles?
“No, why? Some things presented better speak for themselves. So, you shall find an answer to this when you see us live.”

Well, coming to the themes again, how would you explain Black Metal- is it about Anti-Religious trends, or is it more about Satan? How important is it to involve such themes in Black Metal?
“It has nothing to do with any kind of anti-religiosity at all. Rather the contrary. I am not sure about your background and context, but where I come from, the devil is at work in times of slumber. And this for a reason.”

What are your views regarding various subgenres originating out of Black Metal like DSBM, Progressive etc.?
“Let’s just say that I don’t know it.  I am plain simply just not interested in checking it out.”

What is your say on ‘Shoegaze’?
“Eh?”

Most of your fans in India were keen to know about your views about Varg Vikerenes. We would love it if you could share something about Varg Vikernes and Burzum.
“What would that be? He is a grown up man and I guess most of you are too. Why not let him talk for himself?”

Before we wrap up the interview, is there anything you would want to share with your fans and the readers?
“As of now, no. I’d love to go there someday. Either as a tourist or performing live (which again would mean both). A friend of mine once lived in Kolkata some months while doing a degree in comparative religions at the University of Bergen. I was invited there, but missed out on the opportunity. That bothers me a lot. If we’ll do it, I’ll make 100% sure to have some days off while there. Thanks for your time!”


Infernus - guitars (1992 - present)
Bøddel - bass guitar (2007 - present)
Tomas Asklund - drums (2007 - present)
Tormentor - guitars (1996-2002, 2008 - present)
Atterigner - vocals (2012 - present)

Sunday, 9 June 2013

Underground Attitude: Fenriz Of Darkthrone Interviewed

Toby Cook speaks Fenriz about keeping it real after all these years – March 19th, 2013


The worst interview you’ll ever do is with Lou Reed, so they say; hearing experienced, respected journalists swap tales about ‘the time they interviewed Lou Reed’ and got verbally shat on is almost like hearing veterans recounting their war stories. And yet, however many times he may have issued only mono-syllabic grunts, or answered questions by way of withering sarcasm, one particular defence of Reed occasionally appears: that he’s just a music geek and that all he really wants to do is sit down and talk about effects peddles and processors. But people don’t want to hear about it because they think it’ll be about as interesting as Lulu. Granted, this may be true, but isn’t that why musicians are musicians, because their passion, their obsession, is music?

Shouldn’t we be interested in their core motivations and their ability to coalesce all their influences, experiences and feelings into a tangible – and occasionally enthralling – expression of them?

In the early 90s Gylve Fenris ‘Fenriz’ Nagell as one half of the then black metal band Darkthrone, along with cohort Ted ‘Nocturno Culto’ Skjellum, helped lay the foundations for the sonic and aesthetic principals for what would eventually become one of the most controversial and misunderstood music scenes in history – with a trio of LPs often referred to as the ‘unholy trinity’, 92’s A Blaze In The Northern Sky, 93’s Under A Funeral Moon and 94’s seminal Transylvanian Hunger, Darkthrone found international recognition and went on to become one of the most influential bands to emerge from the Norwegian black metal scene. Nearly 30 years after forming, and having just released their 15th studio album in the shape of The Underground Resistance, they have traversed and almost totally left behind the black metal sound with which they are so synonymous erring more towards lo-fi crust punk and out-and-out heavy metal, yet they continue to command a large and dedicated fan base as well as continuing to influence countless bands not just sonically, but through their musical ideals and unshakable DIY attitude. Despite all this though, Darkthrone don’t ever play live; they record everything themselves using as basic equipment as possible; as a drummer Fenriz says he is actively trying to “un-learn” the drums and never plays except to rehearse and record; and they do virtually everything in their power to remain outside of a mainstream that becomes ever more obsessed with the cult rather than the music of black metal.

Fenriz doesn’t really want to talk about all this though; he doesn’t want to talk about black metal and a scene he no longer feels a strong attachment to, he wants to talk about heavy fucking metal. He is, to all intents and purposes a music geek; his insatiable hunger for acquiring, consuming and digesting music is legendary and has even led to him creating the celebrated Band Of The Week blog from which all the acts for the Live Evil festival are sourced. He is a musician because music is his passion, his obsession, and he Really knows his shit – as anyone who has watched his History Of Heavy Metal lecture on YouTube will no doubt attest. Would you want to continually talk about things that happened 20 years ago? Would you want to continually talk about the myths surrounding your dead or incarcerated friends? Or would you want to talk about your passions and the work that forms the most current, tangible expressions of them?

The new album is titled The Underground Resistance, which is something you have alluded to before – on the inside cover of Circle The Wagons For example – but for you who or what is the underground resistance?

Fenriz: Those who kept bands like Manilla Road and Cirith Ungol alive; those who have spread and showed interest in the NWOBHM movement in the last years; everyone holding a true sounding piece of recording high instead of championing plastic crap.

The sound and style of the album, especially when compared to the last two, is probably the least punk you have sounded in a while – to me it sounds like there is a lot more of early 80s, proto-thrash influences in there – is that fair to say? What was the reason behind slight change in style?

F: Proto thrash, as you called it, was all the bands playing fast heavy metal – sometimes called power metal, more often now called speed metal since power metal was co-opted by some increasingly flashy guys over the years and during the 90s; the first two Helloween albums were good power metal, but you might just want to call that speed metal today. Anyway, almost no metal bands played only fast metal (or ‘speed metal’) and by today’s standards it’s mid paced, not fast at all; it’s got that gospel d-beat speed, y’know? That’s what I’m into making and have been for years. But there was a punk band in the mid 80’s mixing up the fast NWOBHM and punk called Puke, from Sweden, and I put a lot of that vibe into my songs the last year, so as to not just make retro speed metal. As usual, about 0.1% of our ‘audience’ understood this. Fabulous. Anyway, I went more for the total speed metal style of Agent Steel’s first, 1985, full-length this time, but actually also returned to the typical 1985 Celtic Frost at some point too; this mystified even me!

‘Valkyrie’ especially is a particularly un-Darkthrone sounding track (if there can be such a thing!) – what’s the story behind its creation? Was it always intended to sound so epic?

F: The refrain came to me in spring 2010 – I actually had to hum it into my mp3 player! – it was kind of akin to the refrain in Helloween’s ‘How Many Tears’, from Walls Of Jericho. I’ve been die hard into Helloween and Agent Steel since they came out, at one point it reached critical mass and I just had to go there. (Well, I suppose I already did with the circle the wagons title track). Anyway, nothing happened with the Valkyrie song for a long time until I woke up with the first riff in my head in September 2011, then it sounded like the start of ‘The Ides Of March’ by Iron Maiden in my head, and I had to rearrange it and with a second, driving guitar and a beat like in ‘Gypsy’ by Uriah Heep circa 1970; it started sounding good in my head and then I just had to make the verse parts which were just inspired by myself and tons of speed metal (just yesterday I received another speed metal vinyl gem for my collection, the first album from Poland’s Turbo, from 1982, so you can see I’m still living the speed metal life, but this doesn’t mean that the album has only speed metal; of course many normal paced heavy songs are great too!) and Bob’s your uncle. It is very typical of what I would write in 1988, only I didn’t have the skills back then, neither playing skills nor writing skills, and I also mixed up my influences too much then – I feel I’m pretty much back to start with the same kind of freedom, only now with 25 years of experience on my back and in my mind.


Is there any scenario in which you could see Darkthrone playing live again?

F: We are setting up a four month tour of Bristol if we can get Richard Clayderman on bass and James Last as head stage-diver; we need that for the show.

What do you have to say to those ‘fans’ who continually cry and moan that “Darkthrone aren’t a black metal anymore”?

F: We weren’t at first either!

Is there still such a thing as ‘true black metal’?

F: Listen to The Return… by Bathory. How hard can it be, I still don’t think anyone has listened too much to 80’s black metal, and the more you do it the truer you fucking get!

How do you feel about the way the genre has gradually become fetishized by people more interested in the aesthetic and the controversy rather than the music?

F: It’s been like that for nearly 20 years... I liked the 10 years before that.

Even if black metal becomes like punk, where so-called ‘punk’ bands like Green Day are selling out arenas and going on MTV, how important is it for you that the ideals of black metal – the dedication and the DIY attitude, for example – are what survive?

F: Black metal already sold out arenas and did far worse things than MTV, they did, and do, The Eurovision Song Contest with crap like Keep Of Kalessin and the even more ridiculous Gromth. It’s embarrassing for everyone. Everyone. There are countless bands that always brought black metal to where it needs to be, like Aura Noir, Faustcoven, Deathhammer, but also the other side of it, like with the Nidrosian scene right now: Vemod, One Tail One Head, Mare, Black Majesty, Dark Sonority – countless bands really. But black metal didn’t need a push, not post 93, since then it’s needed more obscurity and hasn't got it. In the 90s it was heavy metal, the old way, that needed a push, and slowly we have pushed it forwards again; the underground resistance did that, not the big magazines, not the malls with their nu-metal sections, not the radio stations playing Volbeat and Rammstein. No. the underground resistance pushed heavy metal forwards since it was dying from 87 till 97.

What are your thoughts on bands like Liturgy or Winterfylleth who ostensibly ‘play’ black metal but don’t ‘live’ black metal – bands who use it as just another stylistic choice?

F: No problem. Ha ha! Do you prefer bands that look like they're from Twilight going to the circus and think that they are underground because their Cradle Of Filth/Dimmu Borgir rip off style doesn’t sell? Underground is an attitude, a Rammstein cover band will forever have an overground mentality even if no one comes to their shows. It’s about wanting to do some plastic style that others have success with, it’s disgusting.


Your Band Of The Week blog has achieved near legendary status – how do you manage to keep it up? What is the quality control like – do you find that as it has become more popular you get sent more and more shit?

F: I don’t have, like, an official address of course, I get enough tips to drown in from my carefully selected friends out there; friends of new and old who are trustworthy. I don’t really manage to keep it up though, it’s like it almost ends every week because I don’t have the time, although it’s not a lot of work once I have decided on a band/sound – as I hate writing about music I often just throw the link out or write a couple of lines. Arjan from Holland helps me immensely with the other pages like BOTW on Facebook and so on, I just do the little ditty on MySpace and he takes it from there. I couldn’t do it any other place than on the Darkthrone MySpace alone to be honest – I don’t even have time for a Facebook or Twitter account; I have to turn down fabulous offers weekly. Just earlier someone offered to make us a music video and all I had time for was to write back: “I just don’t want any modern shit”. Fact.

Who are two bands that everyone reading this interview should immediately go and check out, and why?

F: If you’re reading this because you want 91-94 Darkthrone maybe check out One Tail One Head. If you’re reading because you like metal just check out Demontage, a real cult forgotten band, I believe I made them a Band Of The Week as well; only for die hard and cult heavy metallers!

Tuesday, 14 May 2013

GAAHL SPEAKS: BERGEN - THE BLACK METAL CAPITAL

Bergen is known for being the black metal capital of Norway. It might be due to the heavy rain, but Kristian Espedal (Gaahl), whom is currently rehearsing for the first black metal musical, explains:
- The black metal scene of Bergen is very good. In comparison to Oslo, it’s much stronger musically.

After several church burnings in the nineties, Bergen mapped itself on the metal arena. It has later been known as the “black metal capital of Norway”. When it comes to Bergen versus other cities, he tells. 
- Bergen has been important when it comes to black metal music, many of the black metal bands started in Bergen, so the city really got the music going.

INDIVIDUALISTS
Today the black metal scene in Bergen has settled. 
- It doesn’t have the backbone that it used to, says Espedal. The people have changed and there are a lot of different people listening to black metal. Even though most people listening to black metal might look the same, it consists of individualists; it’s pretty chaotic actually.

MYSTERIOUS
When talking about the dark elements of black metal, and how people take a stand from the black metal scene, he says. 
- People will always fear of dark elements and think of it as mysterious. When we grow up we are told that dark elements are bad, but as I see it you must focus on the human as a whole. If you only focus on the good and positive things you might get sick. 

BLACK METAL COUNTRY
Though the first black metal bands started up in Bergen, Espedal explains that there are a lot of people from the countryside of Bergen.
- A lot of people outside of Bergen are both fans and members of black metal bands, and might be even more engaged in the black metal culture than people from the Bergen area. 
- The whole west coast is playing a part in the metal arena, but Bergen gathers them in a way, he says at the end.

Kristian Eivind Espedal (born 7 August 1975), better known by his stage name Gaahl, is a Norwegian vocalist. He is best known as the former frontman of Norwegian black metal band Gorgoroth. He is also the founder and frontman of Trelldom and Gaahlskagg. Since leaving Gorgoroth he has been involved with God Seed and Wardruna. Kristian Eivind Espedal (born 7 August 1975), better known by his stage name Gaahl, is a Norwegian vocalist. He is best known as the former frontman of Norwegian black metal band Gorgoroth. He is also the founder and frontman of Trelldom and Gaahlskagg. Since leaving Gorgoroth he has been involved with God Seed and Wardruna.

Also See: