Rabu, 19 Januari 2011

Brutal Death/Thrash Metal GOMORY












Gomory (Fra)


Gomory (Fra)
Genre(s)
Brutal Death/Thrash Metal
Lyrical theme(s)
World Issues, Inner Struggles
Origin Formed in Current label Status
France (Fronton, Midi-Pyrénées) 2001 Snakebite Productions Active
Current line-up
Naja-Atra - Vocals, Drums, Lyrics (Apoptosis (Fra), Mourning Forest (Session)
Incertaesedis - Guitar, Bass, Backing Vocals
Bastich - Vocals (Fleshdoll)

Thuomas - Session Live Bass
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Submitted by On
christkiller November 20th, 2004
Last modified by On
PyreneanMetalheads October 29th, 2009
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Gomory (Fra) members (Click to see larger picture)


Discography


Destruction & Misery Full-length, 2004

Gomory (Fra) - Destruction & Misery

Full-length, Snakebite
October 6th, 2004
[add/edit review]
Album recorded and mixed at Winterized Studio (France).
Mastered at Snakebite Studio.
1. Intro 00:56
2. Destruction & Misery 03:25
3. Disorder of Ideas 03:26
4. Underworld Gate 03:28 [view lyrics]
5. Power Is illusion 02:36
6. Predatory 02:43
7. Hardened Steel Hair 04:42
8. My Dark Army 02:41
9. Damned 04:53
10. Humanity is Animal 03:44
11. Universe Is An Arena 02:47
12. Final Frontier 03:47
Total playing time 39:08
Destruction & Misery cover (Click to see larger picture)
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o eBay Canada
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o eBay UK
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o eBay Netherlands
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o eBay Australia
* search on Gemm.com



Back to Gomory (Fra)'s page


Links

Official
GOMORY on Snakebite Productions
Gomory
Gomory Myspace

Fan site
PYRENEAN METAL


Back to the Encyclopaedia Metallum

Senin, 18 Oktober 2010

King Diamond




King Diamond (born Kim Bendix Petersen, Copenhagen, Denmark, on June 14, 1956) is a Grammy Award nominated heavy metal musician. As a vocalist, he is known for his extensive vocal range, in particular his usage of falsetto. He is the lead vocalist for both Mercyful Fate, and the eponymous King Diamond.
Contents
[hide]

* 1 Career
o 1.1 Mercyful Fate
o 1.2 King Diamond
* 2 Stage presence
* 3 Influences
* 4 Religious beliefs
* 5 Marital status
* 6 Discography
* 7 Awards
* 8 References
* 9 External links

[edit] Career
[edit] Mercyful Fate
Main article: Mercyful Fate

King Diamond's first DK heavy rock band, with whom he played guitar, was called Brainstorm (1974–76), with Jeanette Blum (Jean Blue) vocal and bass, Michael Frohn (Mike West) guitar and Jes Jacobsen (Jesse James) drums. King Diamond left Brainstorm and began singing with a local Danish hard rock band Black Rose. It was during this time in Black Rose that King Diamond began experimenting with horror themed theatrics as well as shaping a malevolent quasi-Satanic stage persona. In 1980, he left Black Rose and joined the punk-metal band Brats where he met the three musicians (Hank Shermann, Michael Denner, Rak Hiasat, Timi Hansen) that would join with King Diamond in 1980 to become Mercyful Fate.

Following Mercyful Fate's 1984 release of Don't Break The Oath and the subsequent tour (which saw them play in the U.S. for the first time), King Diamond split ways with Mercyful Fate. With him, he took two of his bandmates (Hansen and Denner) to pursue a solo career under his own name.

Mercyful Fate reunited in 1992 (while King Diamond simultaneously continued his solo career) and recorded five more studio albums. In 1999 King decided to put Mercyful Fate on hold and continue on with his solo career. Though Mercyful Fate continues to remain dormant, the band is still under contract with Metal Blade Records. Also in 1999, King Diamond and Hank Shermann performed the song Mercyful Fate with Metallica live. This performance also has King Diamond without his famous makeup. In recent interviews, King Diamond has stated that Mercyful Fate will record and tour again when the timing is right, saying "It's definitely not finished.".[1]
[edit] King Diamond
Main article: King Diamond (band)

In 2001, King Diamond worked out a deal with the band Usurper to sing backup vocals on the song "Necronemesis" in exchange for them shifting their recording schedule around to accommodate the recording of Abigail II: The Revenge. In 2004, King Diamond contributed vocals to "Sweet Dreams", which was the final track on the album of Dave Grohl's heavy metal side project Probot. In late 2005, King Diamond appeared on the Roadrunner United - The All-Star Sessions album, contributing vocals for his song "In the Fire", which featured multiple Roadrunner Records musicians (past and present) working together to create individual songs. King Diamond also guested on the Cradle of Filth song "Devil Woman" in late 2005.

In April 2006, King reunited with Mikkey Dee (Motörhead drummer) at a sold-out gig at Kåren in Gothenburg, Sweden.[2] In 2001 King referred to Dee as "one of the best [drummers] of all time and that's something that has bothered us since he left."[3]

King Diamond released his album Give Me Your Soul... Please, on June 26, 2007. Following the release the band received a Grammy nomination in the "Best Metal Performance" category for the track "Never Ending Hill".[4] He was forced to cancel a United States tour due to a herniated disk, causing severe back pain, which puts him in intense pain almost all of the time.[5] He attributes the problem to the long stressful hours spent working on the album.

King Diamond made an appearance at Ozzfest on August 9, 2008 at Frisco, TX alongside Metallica, performing a medley of Mercyful Fate songs previously released on Metallica's Garage Inc. album. Earlier in the day, he also performed a cover of the Pantera song "New Level" with Vinnie Paul, Scott Ian, Max Cavalera, and Nick Bowcott.[1]

In 2009, King Diamond was revealed to be a character for the rhythm game Guitar Hero: Metallica, appearing with Mercyful Fate's song "Evil".[2]
[edit] Stage presence

On stage, King Diamond uses a microphone handle consisting of a femur bone and a tibia bone in the shape of a cross. King Diamond had previously used a human skull which was called Melissa, on stage. In the mid-1980s Melissa was stolen after a performance in the Netherlands.

King Diamond has changed the design of his make-up often over the years. With Conspiracy, he wore a mesh of black and white line war paint, with some red "blood" made to look like a wound coming out of his forehead. With his album The Puppet Master, he used very little white and mainly had black inverted crosses going up and down his face.
[edit] Influences

King Diamond cites David Byron, Ian Gillan, Robert Plant, Alice Cooper, Rob Halford, Ronnie James Dio and Ozzy Osbourne as his main vocal influences.[6]
[edit] Religious beliefs

King Diamond stated that he does not follow any specific religion, and expressed concern that religion has led so many people to kill and destroy each other. He stated that he cannot comprehend why religion has caused so much death and destruction when it is logically impossible to prove the presence or absence of any god. He states that he has reached a point in his life where he has completely given up believing in anything religious.[7]
[edit] Marital status

King Diamond is married to Livia Zita, a Hungarian-born singer who has made appearances as a backup vocalist on the albums The Puppet Master and Give Me Your Soul... Please, as well as during live performances. She is also his business partner, and is currently working with him to compile old footage for two planned DVD releases of King Diamond and Mercyful Fate live performances, as well as helping him make remastered editions of the King Diamond albums The Spider's Lullabye, The Graveyard, Voodoo and House of God.[8]
[edit] Discography

* King Diamond discography
* Mercyful Fate discography

[edit] Awards

* 2008- Grammy nomination in the "Best Metal Performance" category for the track "Never Ending Hill".[4]

[edit] References

1. ^ "KING DIAMOND: MERCYFUL FATE 'Is Definitely Not Finished, At Least In My Book'". Blabbermouth.net. March 8, 2008. http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=92517. Retrieved 2008-08-13.
2. ^ "MOTÖRHEAD's MIKKEY DEE Jams With KING DIAMOND In Sweden". Blabbermouth.net. April 21, 2006. http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=51287. Retrieved 2007-07-13.
3. ^ "Diamonds Are Forever: An Exclusive Interview With King Diamond". KNAC. December 31, 2001. http://knac.com/article.asp?ArticleID=167. Retrieved 2007-07-13.
4. ^ a b "KING DIAMOND Comments On GRAMMY Nomination". Blabbermouth.net. December 6, 2007. http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=86262. Retrieved 2007-12-13.
5. ^ "KING DIAMOND On Tour Cancellation". Blabbermouth.net. November 24, 2007. http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=85506. Retrieved 2007-12-13.
6. ^ "King Diamond Interview". tartareandesire.com. 2005-05. http://www.tartareandesire.com/interviews/kingdiamond.html. Retrieved 2010-08-29.
7. ^ "King Diamond Interview". heavymetal.dk. 2006-02-27. http://www.heavymetal.dk/interviews_view.php?id=101. Retrieved 2007-07-13.
8. ^ "King Diamond is Madly in Love With His 24-Year-Old Wife". Blabbermouth.net. 2009-01-04. http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/BLABBERMOUTH.NET/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=111860. Retrieved 2009-06-20.

[edit] External links

* Coven Worldwide – Official website
* Official Brazilian Fan Club
* The U.S. Coven
* King Diamonds Image Factory
* The Temple of the King
* The Darkness Coven
* The Spanish Coven
* The French Coven
* Very Cool Shockwave Clips
* Interviews with King Diamond band members Mikki Dee, Pete Blakk, and Andy LaRocque

[show]
v • d • e
Mercyful Fate
King Diamond · Mike Wead · Hank Shermann · Bjarne T. Holm · Sharlee D'Angelo
Michael Denner · Timi Hansen · Kim Ruzz · Snowy Shaw · Morten Nielsen
Discography
Studio albums
Melissa (1983) · Don't Break the Oath (1984) · In the Shadows (1993) · Time (1994) · Into the Unknown (1996) · Dead Again (1998) · 9 (1999)
EPs
The Mercyful Fate EP (1982) · The Bell Witch EP (1994)
Compilation albums
The Beginning (1987) · A Dangerous Meeting (1992) · Return of the Vampire (1992) · The Best of Mercyful Fate (2003)
[show]
v • d • e
King

Between the Buried and Me


Between the Buried and Me is an American heavy metal band from Raleigh, North Carolina. Since their inception in 2000, they have released five studio albums, one cover album and one live DVD/CD. Their follow-up to Colors, titled The Great Misdirect, was released October 27, 2009.

The band's name is derived from a section of lyrics in the Counting Crows song "Ghost Train"; "Took the cannonball down to the ocean/Across the desert from the sea to shining sea/I rode a ladder that climbed across the nation/Fifty million feet of earth between the buried and me".
Contents
[hide]

* 1 Biography
* 2 Touring
* 3 Musical style and influence
* 4 Band members
* 5 Discography
* 6 Other projects
* 7 References
* 8 External links

[edit] Biography

The band was founded in 2000 in Raleigh, North Carolina by vocalist Tommy Rogers, guitarist Paul Waggoner, drummer Will Goodyear, guitarist Nick Fletcher (formerly of Empire Falls), and bassist Jason King.[1] They selected their band name by taking a line of lyrics from the Counting Crows song, "Ghost Train". [2]

Between the Buried and Me's first release was a three-song demo, containing the tracks "Use of a Weapon," "What We Have Become," and "More of Myself to Kill." These three tracks were re-recorded for the band's self-titled debut album, released through Lifeforce Records in 2002. The album includes the track "Arsonist," a protest against the beliefs and practices of the Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kansas. The song "Aspirations" became the band's first music video. This album is not widely known and the songs from it are rarely played live. However, the release of it did gain the attention of Victory Records, to which they later signed. Victory Records reissued the album in 2004 as an enhanced CD.

In 2003, the band released their second studio album, The Silent Circus, featuring the singles "Mordecai", "Aesthetic", and "Camilla Rhodes".[3] "Mordecai" was produced as their second music video. The album was re-released in 2006 with a live DVD of the band's performance at The Cat's Cradle in Chapel Hill, North Carolina on July 17, 2005. Mark Castillo played drums on The Silent Circus replacing Will Goodyear however, on the live DVD Blake Richardson, Dustie Waring, and Dan Briggs had already joined the band and recording for Alaska was already finished.

After the release of The Silent Circus, the band went through numerous members before the current lineup was assembled for the third album, Alaska. On drums, Mark Castillo was replaced by Jason Roe (later replaced by Blake Richardson). On guitar, Nick Fletcher was replaced by Shane Blay (later replaced by Dustie Waring). And on bass, Jason King was replaced by Kevin Falk (later replaced by Dan Briggs). Once the current lineup had been established, frontman Tommy Giles Rogers joked that it is the final lineup, and that he would quit if anymore lineup changes needed to take place. The band's lineup has not changed since that statement.

In the summer of 2005, Between the Buried and Me released their third studio album, Alaska. The title track "Alaska" became their third music video. The album released the songs "Selkies: The Endless Obsession", "The Primer", and "Backwards Marathon" as singles. Then in the following year, the band released The Anatomy Of, a collection of covers of bands that influenced Between the Buried and Me, including Metallica, King Crimson, Pantera, Queen, Pink Floyd, Earth Crisis, Counting Crows, and Soundgarden.

In September 2007, the band released their fourth studio album, Colors. The band has said that "it's a 65 minute opus of non stop pummeling beautiful music... we have described this release as 'new wave polka grunge.'"[4] The band has also described the album as "adult contemporary progressive death metal."[5]

On November 6, 2008 the song "Prequel to the Sequel" was made available as downloadable content for Rock Band on Xbox Live marketplace and the PlayStation store.[6]

On May 31, 2009, the group went into the studio to record their fifth original album The Great Misdirect. They have described one song as having "a noisy Coalesce breakdown, 3/4 Mastodon groove, 9/8 The Mars Volta, Queen chromatic build up, and Megadeth chorus"[7]. Tommy Giles Rogers had stated that they planned to "out do Colors".[8] In early fall 2010, the group announced that they are recording an EP, possibly a precursor for their next full-length album. [9]
[edit] Touring
Crystal Clear app kedit.svg
This article or section may need to be rewritten entirely to comply with Wikipedia's quality standards, as This is simply an unverified list of tour dates.. You can help. The discussion page may contain suggestions. (May 2009)

In early 2006, Between the Buried and Me was on tour supporting Bleeding Through along with Every Time I Die and Haste the Day. They were also on the Ozzfest 2006 Second Stage.[10] In late 2006, they were on the Radio Rebellion Tour headlined by Norma Jean.[11]

In September 2007, after the release of Colors, the band went on tour with Animosity and Horse the Band. Giant (now known as BraveYoung) also supported their shows in the USA. The run concluded with their November 4 appearance at the Saints and Sinners Fest in Asbury Park, New Jersey. In December 2007, they again embarked on a headlining tour, supported by August Burns Red and Behold... The Arctopus. The band were also the main support on The Dillinger Escape Plan's 2008 U.K. tour. Between the Buried and Me were one of the acts that took part at "Progressive Nation '08," the first in what became an annual progressive music festival.

Starting in summer 2008 and continuing in the fall, they performed as a supporting act for Children of Bodom's U.S. headlining tour, alongside The Black Dahlia Murder. In early December 2008, they went on a short 4-show tour around the Carolinas and Georgia (US) with other Carolina based bands, such as He Is Legend, Advent, and Nightbear. Between The Buried and Me finished a month-long tour of Australia on January 9 with headliners Bleeding Through, As Blood Runs Black, In Trenches and The Abandonment. In September 2009, Between The Buried and Me performed a Canadian Tour with Killswitch Engage and In Flames co-headlining, along with the support of Protest the Hero.[12]

In early 2010, Between the Buried and Me toured across North America with Cynic, Devin Townsend, and Scale the Summit.[13] Afterwards, they traveled to Europe supporting Lamb of God, along with Job for a Cowboy and August Burns Red.

In February 2010, Between the Buried and Me helped support Mastodon along with Baroness on their US headlining tour. During the summer of 2010, they were on the Cool Tour with As I Lay Dying, Underoath, War of Ages, The Acacia Strain, Architects, Cancer Bats and Blessthefall.[14]
[edit] Musical style and influence

Between the Buried and Me's general musical style has been stated by critics to be primarily a blend of metalcore,[15] progressive metal[15] and death metal[15][16][17], along with them incorporating many different musical styles: "One minute the band may be playing thrash metal and the next they're flowing into death metal growls and thick guitar riffs... the metal take on things can seemingly change in a flash as lead singer Tommy Rogers flashes out his vocals and utilizes the keyboards to create something that sounds more like it should be on a Smashing Pumpkins album".[18] On their covers album, The Anatomy Of, the band pays tribute to many of their diverse influences, including Metallica, King Crimson, Soundgarden, Pantera, Pink Floyd, Earth Crisis, and The Smashing Pumpkins.[19]
[edit] Band members

Current

* Tommy Giles Rogers – lead vocals, keyboards (founding member)
* Dan Briggs – bass guitar, backing vocals (2004-present)
* Blake Richardson – drums (2004-present)
* Paul Waggoner – lead guitar, backing vocals (founding member)
* Dustie Waring – rhythm guitar (2004-present)



Former

* Wil Goodyear – drums, clean vocals (2000-2003)
* Nicholas Shawn Fletcher – guitar (2000-2003)
* Jason Schofield King – bass (2000-2003)
* Mark Edward Castillo – drums (2003)
* Kevin Falk – bass (2004)
* Shane Blay – guitar (2004)
* Jason Roe – drums (2004)

[edit] Discography
Main article: Between the Buried and Me discography

Studio albums

* Between the Buried and Me (2002, Lifeforce)
* The Silent Circus (2003, Victory)
* Alaska (2005, Victory)
* The Anatomy Of (2006, Victory)
* Colors (2007, Victory)
* The Great Misdirect (2009, Victory)

[edit] Other projects

* Tommy Giles Rogers has an electronica side project named Giles. A music video for the song "Slumber Party" is featured on the DVD that is included on the re-release for Between the Buried and Me's second album The Silent Circus.
* Dustie Waring and Blake Richardson are members of the deathcore band Glass Casket.
* Tommy Rogers and Jacob Troth run a clothing line named Jacob Rogers.
* Dan Briggs and members of Fear Before and Abigail Williams are members of an experimental supergroup named Orbs.
* Tommy Rogers can be heard on August Burns Red's 2009 Album Constellations, singing on the song Indonesia.[20]

[edit] References

1. ^ Official site
2. ^ "Between The Buried & Me - "Colors" Our World". Band Rescue. 2007-10-20. http://www.bandrescue.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=113&Itemid=1.
3. ^ http://www.411mania.com/music/columns/92440/What-The-Hell-Happened-To...12.15.08:-Between-The-Buried-And-Me---The-Silent-Circus.htm
4. ^ "Between the Buried and Me quote". 2007-06-13. http://betweentheburiedandme.com/alaska/.
5. ^ http://www.metalunderground.com/news/details.cfm?newsid=26849
6. ^ "Track on the Rock Band website". RockBand. Harmonix Music, Inc.. http://www.rockband.com/songs/prequeltothesequel. Retrieved 2010-8-5.
7. ^ Briggs, Dan; Between the Buried and Me (2008-12-13). "week 1". BTBAM WRITING SESSION: WINTER '08-'09. Winston-Salem, North Carolina: Blogger. http://btbamofficial.blogspot.com/. "Some adjectives thrown around while writing it were "noisy Coalesce breakdown", "3/4 Mastodon groove", "9/8 Mars Volta", "Queen chromatic build up", "Megadeth chorus", and a whole lot more."
8. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LK9p7AaqhY
9. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GIwLbMRi3nU&feature=player_embedded
10. ^ "Tour report on Live Metal Net". LiveMetalNet. http://www.live-metal.net/concertreports_ozzfest2006.html. Retrieved 2010-10-03.
11. ^ "Tour info on SMN News". SMN News. http://www.smnnews.com/2006/07/25/radio-rebellion-tour-2006-feat-norma-jean-between-the-buried-and-me-fbtmof-misery-signals-nd-more. Retrieved 2010-10-03.
12. ^ "Tour dates on Blabbermouth". Blabbermouth. http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=122289. Retrieved 2010-05-08.
13. ^ Freeman, Phil (2009-10-28). "Article announcing early 2010 tour dates". MSN Superfans. MSN. http://music.msn.com/superfans/heavy-metal/blog/between-the-buried-and-me-announce-2010-tour. "Progressive metal band Between The Buried And Me, whose latest album, The Great Misdirect, hit stores yesterday, will be launching another one of those tours where the openers kick the headliner's ass night after night in early 2010."
14. ^ "Cool Tour 2010 lineup". Cool Tour. http://www.cooltour10.com/lineup.html. Retrieved 2010-5-8.
15. ^ a b c Sharpe-Young, Garry. "Between the Buried and Me". MusicMight. http://www.musicmight.com/artist/united+states/north+carolina/raleigh/between+the+buried+and+me. Retrieved 2009-07-21.
16. ^ Morris, Kurt. "The Silent Circus review". Allmusic. Rovi Company. http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:avfixqqaldje~T1. Retrieved 2009-07-21.
17. ^ Donnelly, Dave. "Colors review". Allmusic. Rovi Company. http://allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:wifuxzthldke~T1. Retrieved 2009-07-21.
18. ^ "Review of The Silent Circus". Allmusic. Rovi Company. http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:avfixqqaldje. Retrieved 2007-5-21.
19. ^ "Between the Buried and Me Biography". Allmusic. Rovi Company. http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:dpfpxq80ldde~T1. Retrieved 2007-5-21.
20. ^ de Sylvia, Dave (2009-7-9). "Constellations review". Sputnikmusic. http://www.sputnikmusic.com/review/31316/August-Burns-Red-Constellations/. "Between The Buried And Me vocalist Tommy Rogers provides a bridge vocal to 'Indonesia' that is eerily reminiscent of Dirt-era Layne Staley, and it exemplifies neatly just where August Burns Red are at right now..."

[edit] External links

* Official website
* Official Victory Records profile

[hide]
v • d • e
Between the Buried and Me

Rabu, 14 Juli 2010

HISTORY OF BLACK METAL

Black metal



Black metal is an extreme subgenre of heavy metal. It often uses fast tempos, shrieked vocals, highly distorted guitars played with tremolo picking, blast beat drumming, and unconventional song structure.

During the 1980s, certain thrash metal bands formed a prototype for black metal. This so-called "first wave" included bands such as Venom, Bathory, Hellhammer and Celtic Frost.[1] A "second wave" arose in the early 1990s, mostly of Norwegian bands such as Mayhem, Burzum, Darkthrone, Immortal and Emperor. This scene developed the black metal style into a distinct genre.

Black metal has been met with great hostility from mainstream culture, mainly due to the misanthropic and anti-Christian standpoint of many artists. Moreover, a handful of musicians have been linked with church burnings, murder or National Socialism. For these, and other reasons, black metal is often seen as an underground form of music.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediA

Characteristics
[edit] Instrumentation

Black metal guitarists usually favour high-pitched guitar tones and a great deal of distortion.[2] Typically, the guitar is played with much use of fast tremolo picking.[2][3][4] When writing music, guitarists often use scales, intervals and chord progressions that yield the most dissonant, fearful and ominous sounds. Guitar solos and low guitar tunings are rare in black metal.[4]

The bass guitar is rarely used to perform stand-alone melodies. It is not uncommon for the bass guitar to be inaudible[4] or to homophonically follow the bass lines of the electric guitar. Typically, drumming is fast-paced and uses double-bass and/or blast beat techniques; although basic drumming is not uncommon.

Black metal songs often stray from conventional song structure and often lack clear verse-chorus sections. Instead, many black metal songs contain lengthy and repetitive instrumental sections.
[edit] Vocals and lyrics

Traditional black metal vocals take the form of high-pitched shrieks, screams and snarls.[2][4] This is in stark contrast to the low-pitched growls of death metal.

The most common and founding lyrical theme is opposition to Christianity[4] and other organized religions (called "Right-Hand Path" religions by some). As part of this, many artists write lyrics that could be seen to promote atheism, antitheism, paganism and Satanism.[5] Other oft-explored themes are depression, nihilism, misanthropy[5] and death. However, many modern black metal lyrics have begun to focus more on the seasons (particularly winter), nature, mythology, folklore, philosophy and fantasy.
[edit] Production

Low-cost production quality was a must for early black metal artists with low budgets, where recordings would often take place in the home or in basements; a notable example of such is the band Mayhem, whose record label Deathlike Silence Productions would record artists in the basement of the shop Helvete.[2] However, even when they were able to raise their production quality, many artists chose to keep making low fidelity recordings.[4][5] The reason for this was to stay true to the genre's underground roots and to make the music sound more "raw" and "cold".[5] One of the better-known examples of this is the album Transilvanian Hunger by Darkthrone – a band who "represent the DIY aspect of black metal" according to Johnathan Selzer of Terrorizer magazine.[5] Many have claimed that, originally, black metal was not meant to attract listeners.[5] Vocalist Gaahl claimed that during its early years, "black metal was never meant to reach an audience, it was purely for our own satisfaction".[



Characteristics
[edit] Instrumentation

Black metal guitarists usually favour high-pitched guitar tones and a great deal of distortion.[2] Typically, the guitar is played with much use of fast tremolo picking.[2][3][4] When writing music, guitarists often use scales, intervals and chord progressions that yield the most dissonant, fearful and ominous sounds. Guitar solos and low guitar tunings are rare in black metal.[4]

The bass guitar is rarely used to perform stand-alone melodies. It is not uncommon for the bass guitar to be inaudible[4] or to homophonically follow the bass lines of the electric guitar. Typically, drumming is fast-paced and uses double-bass and/or blast beat techniques; although basic drumming is not uncommon.

Black metal songs often stray from conventional song structure and often lack clear verse-chorus sections. Instead, many black metal songs contain lengthy and repetitive instrumental sections.
[edit] Vocals and lyrics

Traditional black metal vocals take the form of high-pitched shrieks, screams and snarls.[2][4] This is in stark contrast to the low-pitched growls of death metal.

The most common and founding lyrical theme is opposition to Christianity[4] and other organized religions (called "Right-Hand Path" religions by some). As part of this, many artists write lyrics that could be seen to promote atheism, antitheism, paganism and Satanism.[5] Other oft-explored themes are depression, nihilism, misanthropy[5] and death. However, many modern black metal lyrics have begun to focus more on the seasons (particularly winter), nature, mythology, folklore, philosophy and fantasy.
[edit] Production

Low-cost production quality was a must for early black metal artists with low budgets, where recordings would often take place in the home or in basements; a notable example of such is the band Mayhem, whose record label Deathlike Silence Productions would record artists in the basement of the shop Helvete.[2] However, even when they were able to raise their production quality, many artists chose to keep making low fidelity recordings.[4][5] The reason for this was to stay true to the genre's underground roots and to make the music sound more "raw" and "cold".[5] One of the better-known examples of this is the album Transilvanian Hunger by Darkthrone – a band who "represent the DIY aspect of black metal" according to Johnathan Selzer of Terrorizer magazine.[5] Many have claimed that, originally, black metal was not meant to attract listeners.[5] Vocalist Gaahl claimed that during its early years, "black metal was never meant to reach an audience, it was purely for our own satisfaction".

Imagery and performances:



Unlike artists of other genres, many black metal artists do not perform concerts. Bands that choose to perform concerts often make use of stage props and theatrics. Mayhem and Gorgoroth among other bands are noted for their controversial shows; which have featured impaled animal heads, mock crucifixions, medieval weaponry, and band members doused in animal blood.[6]

Black metal artists often appear dressed in black with combat boots, bullet belts, spiked wristbands,[5] and inverted crosses/pentagrams to reinforce their anti-Christian or anti-religious stance.[1] However, the most stand-out trait is their use of corpse paint – black and white makeup (sometimes mixed with real or fake blood), which is used to create a corpse-like appearance.

In the early 1990s, most pioneering black metal artists used simple black-and-white pictures or writing on their record covers.[7] Some believe this was a reaction against death metal bands, who at that time had begun to use brightly-colored album artwork.[7] Most underground black metal artists have continued this style. Bands that do not use this style usually have album covers that are either atmospheric or provocative; some feature natural or fantasy landscapes (for example Burzum's Filosofem and Emperor's In The Nightside Eclipse) while others are violent, perverted and iconoclastic (for example Marduk's Fuck Me Jesus)

The First Wave:



The first wave of black metal refers to those bands during the 1980s who influenced the black metal sound and formed a prototype for the genre. They were often speed metal or thrash metal bands.[1][8]

The term "black metal" was coined by the English band Venom with their second album Black Metal (1982). Although considered thrash metal rather than black metal by modern standards,[5] the album's lyrics and imagery focused more on anti-Christian and Satanic themes than any before it. Their music was unpolished in production and featured raspy grunted vocals. Venom's members also adopted pseudonyms, a practise that would become widespread among black metal musicians.

Another major influence on black metal was the Swedish band Bathory, led by Thomas Forsberg (under the pseudonym Quorthon). Not only did Bathory use unpolished production and anti-Christian themes, but Quorthon was also the first to use the "shrieked" vocals that came to define black metal. The band exhibited this style on their first four albums, beginning with Bathory (1984) and ending with Blood Fire Death (1988). At the beginning of the 1990s, Bathory pioneered the style that would become known as Viking metal.

Other artists usually considered part of this movement include Hellhammer and Celtic Frost (from Switzerland), Sodom and Destruction (from Germany),[9] Bulldozer and Death SS (from Italy), Ancient Rites (from Belgium), Tormentor (from Hungary), Root (from Czech Republic) , Mercyful Fate (from Denmark),[citation needed] Sarcófago (from Brazil) and Blasphemy (from Canada). Furthermore, King Diamond and the members of Sarcófago were allegedly the first musicians to sport "true" corpsepaint.[10]

The Second Wave
Main article: Early Norwegian black metal scene

The Second Wave of black metal emerged in the early 1990s and was largely centred on the Norwegian black metal scene. During 1990–1994 a number of Norwegian artists began performing and releasing black metal music; this included Mayhem, Burzum, Immortal, Darkthrone, Satyricon, Enslaved, Emperor, Thorns, Ildjarn, Gorgoroth, Ulver and Carpathian Forest. As seen below, some of these artists would be responsible for a rash of criminal controversy, including church burnings and murder. Musically, these artists developed the style of their 1980s precursors as a distinct genre that was separate from thrash metal. Philosophically, an aggressive anti-Christian sentiment became a must for any artists to be finalized as "black metal". Ihsahn of Emperor believes that this trend may have developed simply from "an opposition to society, a confrontation to all the normal stuff."[11] A dark, misanthropic mentality was complemented visually with the use of corpsepaint, which was also most prevalent during this period as a statement to separate black metal artists from other rock bands of the era.[5]

"De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas"
Play sound
The title track of Mayhem's De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas (1994)
Problems listening to this file? See media help.

A few bands in neighbouring Sweden adopted a similar sound, usually with inspiration from the Norwegian scene. This included Marduk, Dissection, Lord Belial, Dark Funeral, Arckanum, Nifelheim and Abruptum. In Finland, the late 1980s saw the emergence of black metal bands who often included traits similar to those found in death metal such as Beherit, Archgoat and Impaled Nazarene. Black metal scenes also emerged on the European mainland during the early 1990s - again inspired in large part by the Norwegian scene. In Poland, a scene was spearheaded by Graveland and Behemoth. In France, a close-knit group of musicians known as Les Légions Noires emerged; this included artists such as Mütiilation, Vlad Tepes, Belketre and Torgeist. Bands such as Von, Judas Iscariot, Demoncy and Profanatica emerged during this time in the United States, where thrash metal and death metal were more predominant among extreme metal enthusiasts.

By the mid 1990s, the musical style of the Norwegian scene was being adopted by bands across the globe. Newer black metal bands also began raising their production quality and introducing additional instrumentation such as synthesizers and full-symphony orchestras. This expansion and diversification marked the end of the Second Wave.
[edit]
Helvete and Deathlike Silence

During May–June 1991,[12] Øystein Aarseth (aka 'Euronymous') of Mayhem opened an independent record store named Helvete (Norwegian for hell) in Oslo. Musicians from Mayhem, Burzum, Emperor and Thorns frequently met there, and it became a prime outlet for black metal records.[13] In its basement, Aarseth founded an independent record label named Deathlike Silence Productions. With the rising popularity of his band and others like it, the underground success of Aarseth's label is often credited for encouraging other record labels –that previously refused black metal acts– to then reconsider and release their material.
[edit]
Ohlin's suicide:

On 8 April 1991, Mayhem vocalist Per Yngve "Pelle" Ohlin (aka 'Dead') committed suicide in a house shared by the band. Fellow musicians often described Ohlin as a quiet and introverted person, while his performances involved cutting himself, carrying around a dead crow, and wearing clothes that had been buried weeks prior to the event.[3][14]

He was found with slit wrists and a shotgun wound to the head; the shotgun was owned by Mayhem guitarist Øystein Aarseth (aka 'Euronymous'). Ohlin's suicide note read "Excuse all the blood" and included an apology for firing the weapon indoors. Before calling the police, Aarseth went to a nearby store and bought a disposable camera to photograph the corpse, after re-arranging some items.[15] One of these photographs was later stolen and used as the cover of a bootleg live album entitled Dawn of the Black Hearts.[16]

Eventually, rumours surfaced that Aarseth made a stew with pieces of Ohlin's brain, and made necklaces with fragments of Ohlin's skull.[5] The band later denied the former rumour, but confirmed that the latter was true.[5][14] Additionally, Aarseth claimed to have given these necklaces to musicians he deemed worthy.[1] Mayhem bassist Jørn Stubberud (aka 'Necrobutcher') noted that "people became more aware of the [black metal] scene after Dead had shot himself ... I think it was Dead's suicide that really changed the scene."[17]
[edit] Church burnings



Members and fans of the black metal scene claimed responsibility for over 50 arsons directed at Christian churches in Norway from 1992 to 1996.[13] Many of the buildings were hundreds of years old, and widely regarded as important historical landmarks. One of the first and most notable was Norway's Fantoft stave church, which the police believed was destroyed by Varg Vikernes of the one-man band Burzum.[13] However, Vikernes would not be convicted of any arson offences, until his arrest for the murder of Øystein Aarseth, widely known as Euronymous, in 1993 (see below). The cover of Burzum's EP Aske (Norwegian for ash) portrays a photograph of the Fantoft stave church after the arson; however it is unconfirmed if Varg took this picture himself or not. The musicians Samoth,[18] Faust,[18] and Jørn Inge Tunsberg[13] were also convicted for church arsons.

Today, opinions differ within the black metal community concerning the legitimacy of such actions. Guitarist Infernus and former vocalist Gaahl of the band Gorgoroth have praised the church burnings in interviews, with the latter also opining "there should have been more of them, and there will be more of them".[1] However, Necrobutcher and Kjetil Manheim of Mayhem have disapproved of the church burnings, with the latter claiming "It was just people trying to gain acceptance within a strict group (the black metal scene) ... they wanted some sort of approval and status".[19]



Aarseth's murder
Mayhem's De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas features Aarseth's last recordings; his murderer (Vikernes) performs alongside him.

On 10 August 1993, Varg Vikernes of Burzum murdered Mayhem guitarist Øystein Aarseth (aka 'Euronymous'). On that night, Vikernes and Snorre Ruch of Thorns travelled from Bergen to Aarseth's apartment in Oslo. Upon their arrival a confrontation began, which ended when Vikernes fatally stabbed Aarseth. His body was found outside the apartment with twenty-three cut wounds – two to the head, five to the neck, and sixteen to the back.[20]

It has been speculated that the murder was the result of a power struggle, a financial dispute over Burzum records, or an attempt at "out doing" a stabbing in Lillehammer committed the year before by another black metal musician, Bard Faust.[21] Vikernes claims that Aarseth had plotted to torture him to death and videotape the event – using a meeting about an unsigned contract as a pretext.[22] On the night of the murder, Vikernes claims he intended to hand Aarseth the signed contract and "tell him to fuck off", but that Aarseth attacked him first.[22] Additionally, Vikernes has stated that most of Aarseth's cut wounds were caused by broken glass he had fallen on during the struggle.[22]

Regardless of the circumstances, Vikernes was arrested within days, and a few months later was sentenced to 21 years in prison for both the murder and church arsons. In a controversial display, Vikernes actually smiled at the moment his verdict was read, an image that was widely reprinted in the news media.[22] In May 1994, Mayhem finally released the album De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas, which features Aarseth on electric guitar and Vikernes on bass guitar. While granted a brief leave in 2003, Vikernes attempted to escape his bonds in Tønsberg, but shortly thereafter he was re-arrested driving a stolen vehicle and carrying various firearms.[23]

[edit]
Conflict between scenes

Many[who?] recall a strong rivalry between Norwegian black metal and Swedish death metal scenes. Fenriz and Tchort have noted that Norwegian black metal musicians were "fed up with the whole death metal scene"[7] and that "death metal was very uncool in Oslo" at the time.[19] On a number of occasions, Euronymous sent death threats to the more commercialized death metal groups in Europe.[19] Allegedly, a group of Norwegian black metal fans plotted to kidnap and murder certain Swedish death metal musicians.[19]

A brief "conflict" between Norwegian and Finnish scenes gained some media recognition[citation needed] during 1992 and 1993. Part of this was motivated by seemingly harmless pranks; Nuclear Holocausto of the Finnish band Beherit started to make prank calls in the middle of the night to Samoth of Emperor (in Norway) and Mika Luttinen of Impaled Nazarene (in Finland). The calls consisted of senseless babbling and playing of children's songs,[24] although Luttinen believed them to be death threats from Norwegian bands.[citation needed]

Notably, the album cover of Impaled Nazarene's Tol Cormpt Norz Norz Norz contains texts like "No orders from Norway accepted" and "Kuolema Norjan kusipäille!" ("Death to the assholes of Norway!"). The Finnish band Black Crucifixion criticized Darkthrone as "trendies" due to the fact that Darkthrone began their career as a death metal band.[25]
[edit] Stylistic divisions
This section may contain original research. Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding references. Statements consisting only of original research may be removed. More details may be available on the talk page. (October 2008)

* Symphonic black metal is a style of black metal that uses symphonic and orchestral elements. This may include the usage of instruments found in symphony orchestras (piano, violin, cello, flute and keyboards), 'clean' or operatic vocals and guitars with less distortion. Symphonic black metal is often confused with melodic black metal and gothic metal, as the styles overlap.

* Folk black metal and Viking black metal are terms used to describe black metal bands who incorporate various kinds of folk music. Viking black metal bands focus solely on Nordic folk music and mythology. Their harsh black metal sound is "often augmented by sorrowful keyboard melodies".[26] Vocals are typically a mixture of high-pitched shrieks and 'clean' choral singing.[27] The origin of Viking metal can be traced to the albums Blood Fire Death (1988) and Hammerheart (1990) by the Swedish band Bathory.[28] In the mid 1990s, Irish bands such as Cruachan[29] and Primordial[30] began to combine black metal with Irish folk music.

* Blackened death metal is a style that combines death metal and black metal.[31][32]

* Blackened crust is a style that combines elements of black metal with crust punk. The earliest crust punk groups, such as Amebix, were also inspired by bands such as Venom and Celtic Frost,[33] while Bathory was initially inspired by crust punk as well as metal.[34] In the 1990s, some crust punk groups began to incorporate elements of "Norwegian black metal". Examples include Iskra,[35] Gallhammer[36] and Skitsystem. In addition, Norwegian band Darkthrone have incorporated crust punk traits in their more recent material. As Daniel Ekeroth described in 2008:

"In a very ironic paradox, black metal and crust punk have recently started to embrace one another. Members of Darkthrone and Satyricon have lately claimed that they love punk, while among crusties, black metal is the latest fashion. In fact, the latest album by crust punk band Skitsystem sounds very black metal—while the latest black metal opus by Darkthrone sounds very punk! This would have been unimaginable in the early 90's."[37]

[edit] Ideology
This section may contain original research. Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding references. Statements consisting only of original research may be removed. More details may be available on the talk page. (October 2008)

Any attempt to lay out the ideology of a musical genre is bound to generalize to the extent that some traits are unfairly emphasized, while others are laid out which do not apply to all. Nonetheless, black metal is generally opposed to Christianity and supportive of individualism.[1] Arguably, this is the only coherent sentiment among black metal artists. In a Norwegian documentary, Fenriz stated that "black metal is individualism above all".[38] Artists who oppose Christianity tend to promote atheism, antitheism, paganism, or Satanism.[1] Some musicians – such as Euronymous, Infernus and Erik Danielsson – have insisted that Satanism should be first and foremost.[39][40] Occasionally, artists write lyrics that appear to be nihilistic and misanthropic,[5] although it is debatable whether this represents their mentality. In some cases, black metal artists have also espoused romantic nationalism, although the majority of those involved are not outspoken with regard to this. Nonetheless, many black metal artists seek to reflect their surroundings within their music. The documentarist Sam Dunn noted of the Norwegian scene that "unlike any other heavy metal scene, the culture and the place is incorporated into the music and imagery".[1]

Regarding the sound of black metal, there are two conflicting groups within the genre – "those that stay true to the genre's roots, and those that introduce progressive elements".[5] The former believe that the music should always be minimalist – performed only with the standard guitar-bass-drums setup and recorded in a low fidelity style. One supporter of this train of thought is Blake Judd of Nachtmystium, who has rejected labelling his band black metal for its departure from the genre's typical sound.[41] A supporter of the latter is Snorre Ruch of Thorns, who stated that modern black metal is "too narrow" and believes that this was "not the idea at the beginning".[42]

Some prominent black metal musicians believe that black metal does not need to hold any ideologies. For example, Jan Axel Blomberg said in an interview with Metal Library that "In my opinion, black metal today is just music."[43] Likewise, Sigurd Wongraven stated in the Murder Music documentary that black metal "doesn't necessarily have to be all Satanic, as long as it's dark."[5]
[edit]
National Socialist black metal
Main article: National Socialist black metal

National Socialist black metal (NSBM) is a term used for black metal artists who promote National Socialist (Nazi) beliefs through their music and imagery. NSBM is not regarded as a distinct subgenre, as there is no method to play black metal in a National Socialist way. Some black metal bands have made references to Nazi Germany for shock value, causing them to be wrongly labelled as NSBM. Due to his writings,[44] Varg Vikernes is regarded as the prime inspiration for the NSBM movement. Vikernes, however, has recently tried to distance himself from Nazism and the NSBM scene, preferring to refer to himself as an odalist instead of a "socialistic", "materialistic" Nazi.[44]

NSBM artists are a small minority within black metal, according to Mattias Gardel.[45] They have been criticised by some prominent black metal musicians – including Jon Nödtveidt,[46] Tormentor,[47] King ov Hell,[48] Infernus,[49] Lord Ahriman,[7] Emperor Magus Caligula,[7][50] Richard Lederer,[51] Michael W. Ford[52] and the members of Arkhon Infaustus.[7] They categorize Nazism alongside Christianity as authoritarian, collectivist, and a "herd mentality".[46][47]
[edit] Unblack metal
Main article: Unblack metal

Unblack metal (also known as Christian black metal) is a term used in reference to black metal bands whose lyrics and imagery depict Christianity positively. Such bands are controversial, primarily because they contradict the anti-Christian and individualistic sentiment of most black metal. Like National Socialist black metal it is not regarded as a distinct subgenre, as there is no distinct method to play black metal in a Christian way. The first black metal albums to promote Christianity were Antestor's Martyrium (1994) and Horde's Hellig Usvart (1994) – the latter coined the term unblack metal.[53] A number of such bands have emerged since then.
[edit] Media

Documentaries on black metal:

* Det Svarte Alvor (1994).
* Satan Rides the Media (1998).
* Norsk Black Metal (2003) was aired on Norwegian TV by the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK).
* Metal: A Headbanger's Journey (2005) touches on black metal in the early 1990s, and includes an extensive 25-minute feature on the DVD release.
* True Norwegian Black Metal (2007) was aired as a five-part feature by the online broadcasting network VBS.tv. It explores some of the aspects of the lifestyle, beliefs and controversies surrounding former Gorgoroth frontman Gaahl.[54]
* Black Metal: A Documentary (2007), produced by Bill Zebub, explores the world of black metal from the point of view of the artists. There is no narrator and no one outside of black metal takes part in any interview or storytelling.
* Murder Music: A History of Black Metal (2007).
* Once Upon a Time in Norway (2008).
* Until The Light Takes Us (2009) explores black metal's origins and subculture, including "exclusive interviews" and "rare, seldom seen footage from the Black Circle's earliest days".[55]

References in media:

* A mockumentary was created in 2006 titled "Legalize Murder," wherein a satire is made by having two main characters create and discuss a band and the black metal scene.
* The cartoon show Metalocalypse is about an extreme metal band called Dethklok, with many references to leading black metal artists on the names of various businesses such as Fintroll's convenience store, Dimmu Burger, Gorgoroth's electric wheelchair store, Carpathian Forest High School, Marduk's Putt & Stuff, Burzum's hot-dogs and Behemoth studios (as well as the man who owns Behemoth studios, whose name is Mr. Grishnackh). In the episode Dethdad they travel to Norway to visit Toki's dying father, and visit the original black metal record store.
* A Norwegian commercial for a laundry detergent once depicted black metal musicians as part of the advertisement.[56]
* Black metal bands such as 1349, Emperor, Behemoth, Dimmu Borgir, Enslaved and Satyricon have had their videos make appearances on MTV's Headbangers Ball.
* Comedian Brian Posehn made a visual reference to Norwegian black metal bands in the music video for his comedy song "Metal By Numbers".[57]
* A Canadian commercial by KFC in 2008 featured a fictional black metal band called Hellvetica. The band's vocalist engages in a fire-eating trick during a show (like Abbath from Immortal usually does). Once backstage he takes a bite of the spicy KFC chicken product and declares "Oh man, that is hot".
* An episode of Bones featured the discovery of a human skeleton at a black metal concert in Norway. The episode was called "Mayhem on a Cross". It was the 20th episode of the 4th season.

[edit] See also
Search Wikimedia Commons Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Black metal music groups

* List of black metal bands
* Extreme metal

[edit] Literature

* Ekeroth, Daniel (2008). Swedish Death Metal. Bazillion Points Books. ISBN 978-0-9796163-1-0
* Moynihan, Michael. Lords of Chaos: The Bloody Rise of the Satanic Metal Underground. Venice: Feral House, 2006. ISBN 0-922915-48-2
* Kahn-Harris, Keith. Extreme Metal: Music and Culture on the Edge. Oxford: Berg, 2006. ISBN 9781845203993
* Christe, Ian. Sound of the Beast: the Complete Headbanging History of Heavy Metal. New York: Harper Collins, 200


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Selasa, 13 Juli 2010

Sejarah music underground ,rock ,metal di indonesia



Embrio kelahiran scene musik rock underground di Indonesia sulit dilepaskan dari evolusi rocker-rocker pionir era 70-an sebagai pendahulunya. Sebut saja misalnya God Bless, Gang Pegangsaan, Gypsy(Jakarta), Giant Step, Super Kid (Bandung), Terncem (Solo), AKA/SAS (Surabaya), Bentoel (Malang) hingga Rawe Rontek dari Banten. Mereka inilah generasi pertama rocker Indonesia. Istilah underground sendiri sebenarnya sudah digunakan Majalah Aktuil sejak awal era 70- an. Istilah tersebut digunakan majalah musik dan gaya hidup pionir asal Bandung itu untuk mengidentifikasi band-band yang memainkan musik keras dengan gaya yang lebih `liar’ dan `ekstrem’ untuk ukuran jamannya. Padahal kalau mau jujur, lagu-lagu yang dimainkan band- band tersebut di atas bukanlah lagu karya mereka sendiri, melainkan milik band-band luar negeri macam Deep Purple, Jefferson Airplane, Black Sabbath, Genesis, Led Zeppelin, Kansas, Rolling Stones hingga ELP. Tradisi yang kontraproduktif ini kemudian mencatat sejarah
namanya sempat mengharum di pentas nasional. Sebut saja misalnya El Pamas, Grass Rock (Malang), Power Metal (Surabaya), Adi Metal Rock (Solo), Val Halla (Medan) hingga Roxx (Jakarta). Selain itu Log jugalah yang membidani lahirnya label rekaman rock yang pertama di Indonesia, Logiss Records. Produk pertama label ini adalah album
ketiga God Bless, “Semut Hitam” yang dirilis tahun 1988 dan ludes hingga 400.000 kaset di seluruh Indonesia.

Menjelang akhir era 80-an, di seluruh dunia waktu itu anak-anak muda sedang mengalami demam musik thrash metal. Sebuah perkembangan style musik metal yang lebih ekstrem lagi dibandingkan heavy metal. Band- band yang menjadi gods-nya antara lain Slayer, Metallica, Exodus, Megadeth, Kreator, Sodom, Anthrax hingga Sepultura. Kebanyakan kota- kota besar di Indonesia seperti Jakarta, Bandung, Jogjakarta, Surabaya, Malang hingga Bali, scene undergroundnya pertama kali lahir dari genre musik ekstrem tersebut. Di Jakarta sendiri komunitas metal pertama kali tampil di depan publik pada awal tahun 1988. Komunitas anak metal (saat itu istilah underground belum populer) ini biasa hang out di Pid Pub, sebuah pub kecil di kawasan pertokoan Pondok Indah, Jakarta Selatan. Menurut Krisna J. Sadrach, frontman Sucker Head, selain nongkrong, anak-anak yang hang out di sana oleh Tante Esther, owner Pid Pub, diberi kesempatan untuk bisa manggung di sana. Setiap malam minggu biasanya selalu ada live show dari band-band baru di Pid Pub dan kebanyakan band-band tersebut mengusung musik rock atau metal.

Band-band yang sering hang out di scene Pid Pub ini antara lain Roxx (Metallica & Anthrax), Sucker Head (Kreator & Sepultura), Commotion Of Resources (Exodus), Painfull Death, Rotor (Kreator), Razzle (GN’R), Parau (DRI & MOD), Jenazah, Mortus hingga Alien Scream (Obituary). Beberapa band diatas pada perjalanan berikutnya banyak yang membelah diri menjadi band-band baru. Commotion Of Resources adalah cikal bakal band gothic metal Getah, sedangkan Parau adalah embrio band death metal lawas Alien Scream. Selain itu Oddie, vokalis Painfull Death selanjutnya membentuk grup industrial Sic Mynded di Amerika Serikat bersama Rudi Soedjarwo (sutradara Ada Apa Dengan Cinta?). Rotor sendiri dibentuk pada tahun 1992 setelah cabutnya gitaris Sucker Head, Irvan Sembiring yang merasa konsep musik Sucker Head saat itu masih kurang ekstrem baginya.

Semangat yang dibawa para pendahulu ini memang masih berkutat pola tradisi `sekolah lama’, bangga menjadi band cover version! Di antara mereka semua, hanya Roxx yang beruntung bisa rekaman untuk single pertama mereka, “Rock Bergema”. Ini terjadi karena mereka adalah salah satu finalis Festival Rock Se-Indonesia ke-V. Mendapat kontrak rekaman dari label adalah obsesi yang terlalu muluk saat itu. Jangankan rekaman, demo rekaman bisa diputar di radio saja mereka sudah bahagia. Saat itu stasiun radio yang rutin mengudarakan musik- musik rock/metal adalah Radio Bahama, Radio Metro Jaya dan Radio SK. Dari beberapa radio tersebut mungkin yang paling legendaris adalah Radio Mustang. Mereka punya program bernama Rock N’ Rhythm yang
mengudara setiap Rabu malam dari pukul 19.00 – 21.00 WIB. Stasiun radio ini bahkan sempat disatroni langsung oleh dedengkot thrash metal Brasil, Sepultura, kala mereka datang ke Jakarta bulan Juni 1992. Selain medium radio, media massa yang kerap mengulas berita- berita rock/metal pada waktu itu hanya Majalah HAI, Tabloid Citra Musik dan Majalah Vista.

Selain hang out di Pid Pub tiap akhir pekan, anak-anak metal ini sehari-harinya nongkrong di pelataran Apotik Retna yang terletak di daerah Cilandak, Jakarta Selatan. Beberapa selebritis muda yang dulu sempat nongkrong bareng (groupies?) anak-anak metal ini antara lain Ayu Azhari, Cornelia Agatha, Sophia Latjuba, Karina Suwandi hingga Krisdayanti. Aktris Ayu Azhari sendiri bahkan sempat dipersunting sebagai istri oleh (alm) Jodhie Gondokusumo yang merupakan vokalis Getah dan juga
mantan vokalis Rotor.

Tak seberapa jauh dari Apotik Retna, lokasi lain yang sering dijadikan lokasi rehearsal adalah Studio One Feel yang merupakan studio latihan paling legendaris dan bisa dibilang hampir semua band- band rock/metal lawas ibukota pernah rutin berlatih di sini. Selain Pid Pub, venue alternatif tempat band-band rock underground
manggung pada masa itu adalah Black Hole dan restoran Manari Open Air di Museum Satria Mandala (cikal bakal Poster Café). Diluar itu, pentas seni MA dan acara musik kampus sering kali pula di “infiltrasi” oleh band-band metal tersebut. Beberapa pensi yang historikal di antaranya adalah Pamsos (SMA 6 Bulungan), PL Fair (SMA
Pangudi Luhur), Kresikars (SMA 82), acara musik kampus Universitas
Nasional (Pejaten), Universitas Gunadarma, Universitas Indonesia (Depok), Unika Atmajaya Jakarta, Institut Teknologi Indonesia (Serpong) hingga Universitas Jayabaya (Pulomas).

Berkonsernya dua supergrup metal internasional di Indonesia, Sepultura (1992) dan Metallica (1993) memberi kontribusi cukup besar bagi perkembangan band-band metal sejenis di Indonesia. Tak berapa lama setelah Sepultura sukses “membakar” Jakarta dan Surabaya, band speed metal Roxx merilis album debut self-titled mereka di bawah
label Blackboard. Album kaset ini kelak menjadi salah satu album speed metal klasik Indonesia era 90-an. Hal yang sama dialami pula oleh Rotor. Sukses membuka konser fenomenal Metallica selama dua hari berturut-turut di Stadion Lebak Bulus, Rotor lantas merilis album thrash metal major labelnya yang pertama di Indonesia, Behind The 8th Ball (AIRO). Bermodalkan rekomendasi dari manajer tur Metallica dan honor 30 juta rupiah hasil dua kali membuka konser Metallica, para personel Rotor (minus drummer Bakkar Bufthaim) lantas eksodus ke negeri Paman Sam untuk mengadu nasib. Sucker Head sendiri tercatat paling telat dalam merilis album debut dibanding band
seangkatan mereka lainnya. Setelah dikontrak major label lokal, Aquarius
Musikindo, baru di awal 1995 mereka merilis album `The Head Sucker’. Hingga kini Sucker Head tercatat sudah merilis empat buah album.

Dari sedemikian panjangnya perjalanan rock underground di tanah air, mungkin baru di paruh pertama dekade 90-anlah mulai banyak terbentuk scene-scene underground dalam arti sebenarnya di Indonesia. Di Jakarta sendiri konsolidasi scene metal secara masif berpusat di Blok M sekitar awal 1995. Kala itu sebagian anak-anak metal sering
terlihat nongkrong di lantai 6 game center Blok M Plaza dan di sebuah resto waralaba terkenal di sana. Aktifitas mereka selain hang out adalah bertukar informasi tentang band-band lokal daninternasional, barter CD, jual-beli t-shirt metal hingga merencanakan pengorganisiran konser. Sebagian lagi yang lainnya memilih hang out di basement Blok Mall yang kebetulan letaknya berada di bawah tanah.

Pada era ini hype musik metal yang masif digandrungi adalah subgenre yang makin ekstrem yaitu death metal, brutal death metal, grindcore, black metal hingga gothic/doom metal. Beberapa band yang makin mengkilap namanya di era ini adalah Grausig, Trauma, Aaarghhh, Tengkorak, Delirium Tremens, Corporation of Bleeding, Adaptor, Betrayer, Sadistis, Godzilla dan sebagainya. Band grindcore Tengkorak pada tahun 1996 malah tercatat sebagai band yang pertama kali merilis mini album secara independen di Jakarta dengan judul `It’s A Proud To Vomit Him’. Album ini direkam secara profesional di Studio Triple M, Jakarta dengan sound engineer Harry Widodo (sebelumnya pernah menangani album Roxx, Rotor, Koil, Puppen dan PAS).

Tahun 1996 juga sempat mencatat kelahiran fanzine musik underground pertama di Jakarta, Brainwashed zine. Edisi pertama Brainwashed terbit 24 halaman dengan menampilkan cover Grausig dan profil band Trauma, Betrayer serta Delirium Tremens. Di ketik di komputer berbasis system operasi Windows 3.1 dan lay-out cut n’ paste tradisional, Brainwashed kemudian diperbanyak 100 eksemplar dengan mesin foto kopi milik saudara penulis sendiri. Di edisi-edisi berikutnya Brainwashed mengulas pula band-band hardcore, punk bahkan ska. Setelah terbit fotokopian hingga empat edisi, di tahun 1997 Brainwashed sempat dicetak ala majalah profesional dengan cover
penuh warna. Hingga tahun 1999 Brainwashed hanya kuat terbit hingga tujuh edisi, sebelum akhirnya di tahun 2000 penulis menggagas format e-zine di internet www.bisik.com). Media-media serupa yang selanjutnya lebih konsisten terbit di Jakarta antara lain Morbid Noise zine, Gerilya zine, Rottrevore zine, Cosmic zine dan
sebagainya.

29 September 1996 menandakan dimulainya sebuah era baru bagi perkembangan rock underground di Jakarta. Tepat pada hari itulah digelar acara musik indie untuk pertama kalinya di Poster Café. Acara bernama “Underground Session” ini digelar tiap dua minggu sekali pada malam hari kerja. Café legendaris yang dimiliki rocker gaek
Ahmad Albar ini banyak melahirkan dan membesarkan scene musik indie baru yang memainkan genre musik berbeda dan lebih variatif. Lahirnya scene Brit/indie pop, ledakan musik ska yang fenomenal era 1997 – 2000 sampai tawuran massal bersejarah antara sebagian kecil massa Jakarta dengan Bandung terjadi juga di tempat ini. Getah,
Brain The Machine, Stepforward, Dead Pits, Bloody Gore, Straight Answer, Frontside, RU Sucks, Fudge, Jun Fan Gung Foo, Be Quiet, Bandempo, Kindergarten, RGB, Burning Inside, Sixtols, Looserz, HIV, Planet Bumi, Rumahsakit, Fable, Jepit Rambut, Naif, Toilet Sounds, Agus Sasongko & FSOP adalah sebagian kecil band-band yang `kenyang’ manggung di sana.

10 Maret 1999 adalah hari kematian scene Poster Café untuk selama- lamanya. Pada hari itu untuk terakhir kalinya diadakan acara musik di sana (Subnormal Revolution) yang berujung kerusuhan besar antara massa punk dengan warga sekitar hingga berdampak hancurnya beberapa mobil dan unjuk giginya aparat kepolisian dalam membubarkan massa. Bubarnya Poster Café diluar dugaan malah banyak melahirkan venue- venue alternatif bagi masing-masing scene musik indie. Café Kupu- Kupu di Bulungan sering digunakan scene musik ska, Pondok Indah Waterpark, GM 2000 café dan Café Gueni di Cikini untuk scene Brit/indie pop, Parkit De Javu Club di Menteng untuk gigs punk/hardcore dan juga indie pop. Belakangan BB’s Bar yang super- sempit di Menteng sering disewa untuk acara garage rock-new wave-mellow punk juga rock yang kini sedang hot, seperti The Upstairs, Seringai, The Brandals, C’mon Lennon, Killed By Butterfly, Sajama Cut,
Devotion dan banyak lagi. Di antara semuanya, mungkin yang paling `netral’ dan digunakan lintas-scene cuma Nirvana Café yangterletak di basement Hotel Maharadja, Jakarta Selatan. Di tempat ini pulalah, 13 Januari 2002 silam, Puppen `menghabisi riwayat’ mereka dalam sebuah konser bersejarah yang berjudul, “Puppen : Last Show Ever”, sebuah rentetan show akhir band Bandung ini sebelum membubarkan diri.

Scene Punk/Hardcore/Brit/Indie Pop


Invasi musik grunge/alternative dan dirilisnya album Kiss This dari Sex Pistols pada tahun 1992 ternyata cukup menjadi trigger yang ampuh dalam melahirkan band-band baru yang tidak memainkan musik metal. Misalnya saja band Pestol Aer dari komunitas Young Offender yang diawal kiprahnya sering meng-cover lagu-lagu Sex Pistols lengkap dengan dress-up punk dan haircut mohawknya. Uniknya, pada perjalanan selanjutnya, sekitar tahun 1994, Pestol Aer kemudian mengubah arah musik mereka menjadi band yang mengusung genre british/indie pop ala The Stone Roses. Konon, peristiwa historik ini
kemudian menjadi momen yang cukup signifikan bagi perkembangan scene british/indie pop di Jakarta. Sebelum bubar, di pertengahan 1997 mereka sempat merilis album debut bertitel `…Jang Doeloe’. Generasi awal dari scene brit pop ini antara lain adalah band Rumahsakit, Wondergel, Planet Bumi, Orange, Jellyfish, Jepit Rambut, Room-V,
Parklife hingga Death Goes To The Disco.

Pestol Aer memang bukan band punk pertama, ibukota ini di tahun 1989 sempat melahirkan band punk/hardcore pionir Antiseptic yang kerap memainkan nomor-nomor milik Black Flag, The Misfits, DRI sampai Sex Pistols. Lukman (Waiting Room/The Superglad) dan Robin (Sucker Head/Noxa) adalah alumnus band ini juga. Selain sering manggung di Jakarta, Antiseptic juga sempat manggung di rockfest legendaris Bandung, Hullabaloo II pada akhir 1994. Album debut Antiseptic sendiri yang bertitel `Finally’ baru rilis delapan tahun kemudian (1997) secara D.I.Y. Ada juga band alternatif seperti Ocean yang memainkan musik ala Jane’s Addiction dan lainnya, sayangnya mereka tidak sempat merilis rekaman.

Selain itu, di awal 1990, Jakarta juga mencetak band punk rock The Idiots yang awalnya sering manggung meng-cover lagu-lagu The Exploited. Nggak jauh berbeda dengan Antiseptic, baru sembilan tahun kemudian The Idiots merilis album debut mereka yang bertitel `Living Comfort In Anarchy’ via label indie Movement Records. Komunitas-
komunitas punk/hardcore juga menjamur di Jakarta pada era 90-an tersebut. Selain komunitas Young Offender tadi, ada pula komunitas South Sex (SS) di kawasan Radio Dalam, Subnormal di Kelapa Gading, Semi-People di Duren Sawit, Brotherhood di Slipi, Locos di Blok M hingga SID Gank di Rawamangun.

Sementara rilisan klasik dari scene punk/hardcore Jakarta adalah album kompilasi Walk Together, Rock Together (Locos Enterprise) yang rilis awal 1997 dan memuat singel antara lain dari band Youth Against Fascism, Anti Septic, Straight Answer, Dirty Edge dan sebagainya. Album kompilasi punk/hardcore klasik lainnya adalah Still One, Still Proud (Movement Records) yang berisikan singel dari Sexy Pig, The Idiots, Cryptical Death hingga Out Of Control.

NB : akankah musik metal ,undergound mengalami kemerdekaannya di indonesia

dan duduk sejajar dengan jenis music lainnya hehehe dari segi komersial hehehe

Kamis, 01 Juli 2010

Chuck Schuldiner father of death metal


Chuck Schuldiner

Chuck Schuldiner on tour in Scotland, 1992
Background information
Also known as "The Father of Death Metal", "Evil Chuck" (at start of career)[1]
Born May 13, 1967(1967-05-13)
Origin Glen Cove, New York
Died December 13, 2001 (aged 34)
Genres Death metal, progressive metal, technical death metal, heavy metal[2][3][4]
Occupations Musician, songwriter
Instruments Vocals, guitar, bass
Years active 1983–2001
Associated acts Death/Mantas
Slaughter
Control Denied
Voodoocult
Website The Official Chuck Schuldiner Website



Charles Michael "Chuck" Schuldiner (May 13, 1967 – December 13, 2001) was an American singer, songwriter, guitarist and musical genre innovator.

Schuldiner was the singer, songwriter, rhythm and lead guitarist of the band Death, which he founded in 1983, initially under the name Mantas. He is often referred to as "The Father of Death Metal",[5][6][7] and his obituary in the January 5, 2002 issue of UK's Kerrang! magazine stated that "Chuck Schuldiner was one of the most significant figures in the history of metal."[8] Schuldiner himself was modest about his part in the history of death metal, noting "I don’t think I should take the credits for this death metal stuff. I’m just a guy from a band, and I think Death is a metal band."[6]



Biography
[edit] Early life

Chuck Schuldiner was born on May 13, 1967 on Long Island, New York to a Jewish father of Austrian descent and a mother from the American South, a convert to Judaism; both his parents were teachers. In 1968, his family moved to Florida. Schuldiner was the youngest of three children. He had an older brother named Frank and an older sister named Bethann.

Schuldiner started playing guitar at the age of 9. His 16 year old brother had just been killed in an accident and his parents bought him a guitar, thinking it would help with his grief. He took classical lessons for less than a year in which his teacher taught him "Mary had a Little Lamb", which he didn't like very much, and almost stopped completely, until his parents saw an electric guitar at a yard sale and bought it for him. The young Schuldiner immediately took to the instrument. After getting amps, he never stopped playing, writing and teaching himself. Schuldiner was known to spend the weekend in the garage or his room playing his guitar, but was limited to three hours on weekdays when school was in session. Schuldiner first played in public in his early teens.

Schuldiner was originally inspired by Iron Maiden, Kiss and Billy Idol, among others. He was particularly interested in the metal movement known as NWOBHM - New Wave of British Heavy Metal - and cited bands of that genre among his favorites. He frequently cited French band Sortilège as his personal favorite metal group. Slayer, Possessed, Mercyful Fate/King Diamond and Metallica were later influences he would apply more to his own band. Later in his career, Schuldiner frequently cited progressive metal bands such as Watchtower and Queensrÿche as influences. Official Schuldiner website, Empty Words, quotes Schuldiner's mother making the claim that he enjoyed all forms of music except country and rap. He also apparently particularly enjoyed jazz and classical music in addition to metal and British alternative acts such as Lush.

Schuldiner performed well in school, however, he became bored with education and eventually dropped out. He later regretted this decision.[4].

Schuldiner was not afraid to take on controversial lyrical subjects such as the anti-drug sentiments of "Living Monstrosity" and abortion in "Altering the Future"[9].
[edit] Musical career

Schuldiner formed Death as Mantas in 1983 when he was 16 years old. Original members were Schuldiner (guitar), Rick Rozz (guitar) and Kam Lee (drums and vocals). In January 1986, Schuldiner moved to Toronto and temporarily joined the Canadian band Slaughter[10]. However, he quickly returned to continue the formation of Death.

Death underwent many lineup changes, however with Chris Reifert he eventually released his first Death album, titled Scream Bloody Gore, in 1987. He continued with 1988's Leprosy with the line-up of former Mantas guitarist Rick Rozz and rhythm section Terry Butler on bass and Bill Andrews on drums, and 1990's Spiritual Healing, where guitarist James Murphy had replaced the fired Rozz in 1989.

After Spiritual Healing, Schuldiner stopped working with full time band members and instead worked only with studio and live venue musicians due to bad relationships with Death's previous rhythm section and guitarists. This earned Schuldiner something of a 'perfectionist' reputation in the metal community. Schuldiner had also fired his manager Eric Greif but settled and re-hired him before the recording of his next, influential release[11][12].

Death's breakthrough album, Human saw the band evolving to a more technical and progressive style, in which Schuldiner displayed his guitar skills more than ever. He continued in this style (and continued the success of the band) with 1993's Individual Thought Patterns, 1995's Symbolic, and finally The Sound of Perseverance in 1998.

He folded Death after this to form a new band called Control Denied, and released The Fragile Art of Existence in 1999. Schuldiner also played guitar in the "supergroup" Voodoocult on the album Jesus Killing Machine in 1994 and played a guest solo on Naphobia's 1995 release, Of Hell on the track "As Ancients Evolve" as a favor to the band's bassist at the time who was a friend of Schuldiner's[13]. Schuldiner was also asked to be one of the many guest vocalists on Dave Grohl's 2001 Probot project by Grohl himself. Grohl even campaigned to raise funds to help Schuldiner pay medical bills for the brain cancer that would eventually take his life. Schuldiner succumbed to the disease before any collaboration could happen. Grohl, in tears, in an interview over Schuldiner's death, said that "Chuck died for making the right decisions in life. That's just... that's just not fair."
[edit] Battle with cancer

In May 1999, Schuldiner experienced pain in his upper neck, which he initially thought was a pinched nerve. He consulted with a chiropractor followed by a massage therapist/acupuncturist who recommended an MRI Exam. He was correct about the pinched nerve; unfortunately, it was being caused by a tumor. On his 32nd birthday, May 13, 1999, Schuldiner was diagnosed with a high-grade pontine glioma, a malignant type of brain cancer that invades the brain stem, and immediately underwent radiation therapy.

In October 1999, Schuldiner’s family announced that the tumor had necrotized and that he was on the way to recovery. In January 2000, Schuldiner underwent surgery to remove what remained of his tumor. The operation was a success, however, the Schuldiner family was struggling financially. The total costs of the operations would come to $70,000, a price the Schuldiner family could not afford. Many fundraisers, auctions, and benefit concerts took place to help cover the costs. The money began to come in as the metal community, in total shock, realized that Schuldiner's life was in danger. The metal community and the Schuldiner family showed deep concern because Schuldiner could lose his life due to lack of funds.

Schuldiner continued to work on his music, continuing his work with Control Denied. About two years after his original diagnosis, in May 2001, the cancer returned and Schuldiner fell ill again. He was originally denied surgery (which he needed immediately) due to lack of funds. A press release called for support from everyone, including fellow artists. Jane Schuldiner urged all who read the statements about Schuldiner and his illness to go out and get insurance, stating her frustration in the American system. Schuldiner had gotten medical insurance after his first surgery, but the insurer had refused to pay because the tumor existed before he had gotten the insurance. Many artists, including Kid Rock, Korn and Red Hot Chili Peppers, got together in Summer 2001 to auction off personal items with the funds assisting Schuldiner's medical expenses. This was covered by MTV.[14] Matt Heafy, vocalist and guitarist for Trivium has also stated that the band had played a benefit show for Schuldiner while he was in the hospital in their days as a local band.[15] Schuldiner received a chemotherapy drug called vincristine to help with his therapy. Like most drugs used in the treatment of cancer, the side effects were harsh and weakened Schuldiner greatly. In late October/early November, Schuldiner became ill with pneumonia.

Schuldiner died on December 13, 2001, at approximately 4 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.[16] He was buried in Tampa, Florida on December 18, 2001 and MTV reported that famed musicians including Mike Patton, Dimebag Darrell, Glen Benton, King Diamond, Ville Valo, Trey Azagthoth and Max Cavalera, along with all of the former and active members of Death, attended his funeral.
[edit] Legacy

His mother, Jane Schuldiner, sister Beth and former manager Eric Greif handle his legacy. Jane Schuldiner frequently interacts with Schuldiner's fans and has stated many times that she enjoys his music. Beth Schuldiner and Greif keep track of his recordings and handle Schuldiner's intellectual property. Beth Schuldiner has a son named Christopher, who also plays guitar and has all of Schuldiner's guitars except his first one, which his mother keeps. BC Rich also released a statement in their 2008 catalog stating that Schuldiner's signature model Stealth will be available for purchase.

Schuldiner had a home and two dogs in Altamonte Springs just outside of Orlando. Schuldiner built a studio inside the garage where many of his songs such as Crystal Mountain were inspired. Schuldiner's home office was the site of the Metal Crusade newsletter and fan club.

A legal battle began from the time of Schuldiner's death on the settlement of the rights to the partially completed second Control Denied album, When Man and Machine Collide. Demos of these unreleased Control Denied songs, as well as early Death demos and live Death recordings from 1990, were released in the Zero Tolerance two-part compilation bootlegs by the Dutch Hammerheart Holdings company and the Schuldiners and Greif asserted rights on behalf of Schuldiner's estate. The matter was settled in November 2009, anticipating the project being finished and released in 2010.

Tribute concerts have been coordinated or funded by his mother, family and various Death tribute groups internationally. CKY front man, Deron Miller, who considers Schuldiner an idol of his, got the idea, while working on various projects with former Death guitarist (and brain cancer survivor) James Murphy, to do a tribute album. Murphy announced he would release a Chuck Schuldiner tribute album to commemorate his lasting mark on the metal community and Schuldiner's family publicly offered support for Murphy's effort. Schuldiner's sister has confirmed via her Youtube channel that Death: Live in Japan, a behind the scenes Death video, as well as a boxset containing all of Schuldiner's works including some exclusive copies of handwritten notes by Schuldiner are in the works[17].
[edit] Beliefs

Chuck once described himself as "a lover of life", "friendship", and "animals."[18] "I would like to live forever, if it was possible", he once said in an interview.[18] He commonly spoke out against artists who were "out of control", garnering negative attention to the death metal scene. Schuldiner openly condemned and disavowed stereotypes of metal musicians as being harmful to animals, people, or being "anti-life".[19]

When asked about his opinions regarding an afterlife, Schuldiner responded "I don't know", but elaborated that he believed "this is hell", and that demons are in people, as they "create evil."[20] [dead link] Although his parents are both Jewish, Schuldiner did not go through any formal religious training. In the documentary, "666 At Calling Death", he was asked whether Satanism was a part of his music. He replied, "Not at all. I really don't want to involve any type of religious theme in our music. I think that's more of a personal thing. Yeah, I'm not a Satanist and I definitely don't put that into our music. No purpose. I was really young when the band first started out. I was never really into writing Satanic lyrics at all, personally. We did write gore lyrics, but it was more like kind of tongue-in-cheek, horror-movie type level. Nothing like encouraging people to go out and hurt themselves or anything stupid like that. It's pure fantasy-movie type, scary stuff. And then, I just really got into writing about reality, which is what we all have to deal with."[21] [dead link]

Schuldiner designed the Death logo and its various incarnations during the length of his career. In 1991, before the release of Human, he cleaned up the logo taking out more intricate details and the "T" in the logo was swapped from an inverted Cross to a more regular looking "T", one reason being to quash any implication of religion.[22]

Schuldiner was also openly against hard drugs; he is quoted as saying, “I’ve tripped several times. That’s all because I don’t like the hard drugs. And my only drugs are alcohol and grass.” [23]
[edit] Discography

Death

* 1987: Scream Bloody Gore
* 1988: Leprosy
* 1990: Spiritual Healing
* 1991: Human
* 1993: Individual Thought Patterns
* 1995: Symbolic
* 1998: The Sound of Perseverance

Control Denied

* 1999: The Fragile Art of Existence
* 2010: When Man and Machine Collide

Chuck Schuldiner

* 2004: Zero Tolerance

With Voodoocult

* 1994: Killer Patrol (Single)
* 1994: Metallized Kids (Single)
* 1994: Jesus Killing Machine (Full-length Album)

[edit] Equipment

Schuldiner's primary guitar throughout most of his career was the B.C. Rich Stealth model, an extremely rare model available only through the BC Rich custom shop until 2008, when it was released to the public as the Chuck Shuldiner Tribute Stealth. Prior to this, he used a BC Rich Mockingbird. Most of Schuldiner's sound came from a DiMarzio X2N pickup placed in the bridge. During the (In)Human Tour of the World (1991–92), Schuldiner briefly endorsed a small Wisconsin custom guitar company called Axxtra, who worked with him on designs, though he still insisted on using his BC Rich during filming of the Lack of Comprehension video in September 1991 in Orlando.

The amp he used towards the end of his career was a Marshall Valvestate (Model 8100) amp head and Valvestate 4x12 speaker cabinets on Individual Thought Patterns as well as the ITP tour, and eventually started using Marshall 1960 cabs. Before that he used various equipment including Randall Amps and cabinets, and on the (In)Human Tour of the World he used a small GK 250ML miked up, despite having hollow 4x12 stacks 'for show'.
[edit] Playing style
This section does not cite any references or sources.
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2009)

Techniques most frequently utilized by Schuldiner included his extremely fast and accurate alternate picking technique and his somewhat off-the-wall legato style. Schuldiner did occasionally utilize techniques such as sweep picking and string skipping as well, and he was an accomplished two hand tapper (as evidenced by the tap intro to "The Philosopher"). He also utilized vibratos a lot later in his career.

Schuldiner was not well schooled in musical theory, and found "playing by ear" to be a more effective and advisable method for himself. Schuldiner "made up" his own scales and modes (many of which ended up being real scales, such as harmonic minor, melodic minor, and phrygian) which Schuldiner frequently utilized in his solos. This also led him to create his odd fingering positions which very much defined his style.

Schuldiner's bandmates, including James Murphy, Paul Masvidal, Andy LaRocque, Bobby Koelbe and Shannon Hamm, tended to have more formal training. Their styles contrasted his more unconventional technique.

At one point, Schuldiner played lead, rhythm and bass guitars on recording sessions, and according to Gene Hoglan, Schuldiner "was a killer drum programmer too!", as stated on the re-release of 1995's Symbolic. He was also, as quoted by Hoglan on the Individual Thought Patterns album, "Best chef in all Death Metal".
[edit] References

1. ^ as found at emptywords.org
2. ^ The Man-Machine Will Rock You: The Existential Paradox of Technical Death Metal, The High Hat, issue 9 (Fall 2007)
3. ^ BNR Metal Pages
4. ^ The simple technique behind a technical death metal band, Aardschok, November 1998
5. ^ allmusic ((( Death > Biography )))
6. ^ a b Metal Rules Interview with Chuck Schuldiner
7. ^ The Best Of NAMM 2008: Jimmy Page, Satriani Models Among The Highlights | News @ Ultimate-Guitar.Com
8. ^ List of music magazine Schuldiner obituaries
9. ^ Metal Maniacs
10. ^ Krgin, Borivoj. Liner notes to Death's Scream Bloody Gore
11. ^ Thrash 'n Burn
12. ^ Empty Words
13. ^ [1]
14. ^ MTV coverage
15. ^ [2]
16. ^ "Death Frontman Chuck Schuldiner Dies", mtv.com
17. ^ [3]
18. ^ a b "Death (Video Essay)" on YouTube, (accessed August 31, 2009)
19. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0fSnXEtpb6s
20. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pZEo7zMAwlE
21. ^ Interview in which Schuldiner discusses his religious beliefs
22. ^ Death, Alters of Metal Interviews, (accessed August 26, 2008)
23. ^ Deep Look Inside, Spark Magazine, (accessed February 7, 2009)

[edit] Sources

Emptywords.org
[hide]
v • d • e
Death
Chuck Schuldiner
Studio albums
Scream Bloody Gore · Leprosy · Spiritual Healing · Human · Individual Thought Patterns · Symbolic · The Sound of Perseverance
Live albums
Live in L.A. (Death & Raw) · Live in Eindhoven
Demos
Death by Metal · Live in Tampa · Reign of Terror · Live at Ruby's Pub · Infernal Death · Rigor Mortis · Back from the Dead · Infernal Live · Mutilation
Compilations
Fate: The Best of Death
Videos
Live in L.A. (Death & Raw) · Live in Eindhoven · Live in Cottbus '98
Related articles
Control Denied · Voodoocult · Massacre · Autopsy

YNGWIE MALMSTEEN Akan Tampil Dalam Sebuah Gitar Klinik




Gitaris legendaris dari Swedia Yngwie Malmsteen akan tampil dalam sebuah klinik eksklusif pada 18 Mei di Castlebrando di Treviso, Italia – tempat yang dianggap sebagai salah satu istana yang paling mengesankan Italia abad pertengahan. Para penggemar Yngwie Malmsteen akan mendapatkan kesempatan untuk pengalaman bermain Yngwie Malmsteen dari dekat.

Untuk informasi lebih lanjut, kunjungi http://www.mmitreviso.com/.

Yngwie Malmsteen juga akan menjadi headliner dalam acara "The Ultimate World Guitar Exhibition " di Music Italy Show tahun ini - yang paling penting adalah pameran yang akan menampilkan alat musik, penerbitan, peralatan backstage, DJ dan Diskografi, yang akan diadakan 15-17 Mei 2010 di Bologna, Italia.

" The Ultimate World Guitar Exhibition " akan menampilkan:

The Protagonists:
* Yngwie J. Malmsteen
* Glenn Hughes
* Jennifer Batten
* George Lynch
* Doug Aldrich
* Timo Tolkki
* Elias Viljanen

Superstar House Band:
* Neil Murray
* Greg Bissonette
* Derek Sherinian
* Stef Burns

Opening Act:
* Maurizio Solieri (VASCO ROSSI)
* Ricky Portera (STADIO, LUCIO DALLA)
* Max Cottafavi (LIGABUE)
* Adriano Molinari (drums, ZUCCHERO)
* Claudio Golinelli (base, VASCO ROSSI)