Type O Negative

All posts tagged Type O Negative

Roadrunner has issued that the former Metal Maniacs editor Jeff Wagner has announced that he will be writing an authorized biography of the late Type O Negative frontman Peter Steele. As he put it on Facebook, “It will be a comprehensive investigation of his life and music, supported by those who knew him best, written by a fan, for the fans. If you’re a fan, have recollections of meeting Peter, have photos, tattoos, or anything, PLEASE message me. This is a total labor of love and one that his followers will hopefully find an indispensable part of the Type O continuum.”

There’s no information yet about a publisher or a date, but Wagner is actively soliciting information from fans – write to him at PeterSteeleBio@gmail.com, and visit the Peter Steele Authorized Biography Facebook page!

PeterSteele

Roadrunner has issued as follows:

Back in 2000, a Type O Negative show in Boston was recorded for the syndicated show Levi’s Spark Radio; the broadcast as aired was actually split between Type O and Static-X. Well, we’ve unearthed that broadcast and put Type O‘s half of the show on our Soundcloud page, and you can also stream it above! The band is heard for about 20 minutes, which means they only have time for a few songs – “Everyone I Love is Dead,” from their then-new album World Coming Down, “Love You to Death” from October Rust, and their hit “Black No. 1,” from Bloody Kisses (which celebrates its 20th Anniversary this year). Enjoy!

 

Type O Negative‘s entire Roadrunner catalog is now available in the digital boxed set The Complete Roadrunner Collection 1991-2003; grab a copy from the Roadrunner webstore!

Type O Negative circa 1992

Type O Negative circa 1992

Roadrunner has issued the following:

Today would have been Carnivore and Type O Negative frontman Pete Steele‘s 51st birthday. Naturally, we thought this offered the perfect theme for our weekly Spotify playlist. So here’s a 15-song selection of tracks by both those bands, as well as “Enemy of the State,” the track Pete sang on the Roadrunner United album. (For hardcore Type O fans, we offer a longer, more in-depth playlist of just their songs, right here.)

Type O Negative circa 1992

Type O Negative circa 1992

The Type O Negative digital boxed set The Complete Roadrunner Collection 1991-2003 is available now in the Roadrunner webstore – 71 tracks from six albums for one low price! Grab your copy today!

Roadrunner has issued as follows:

Type O Negative‘s debut album, Slow, Deep and Hard, was a landmark release for Roadrunner, and for extreme metal as a whole. The few who knew of frontman/bandleader Pete Steele from his time leading crude, frequently misunderstood Brooklyn thrashers Carnivore would never have expected to hear him groaning out the sludgy, crushingly heavy anthems that made up the early Type O catalog. Still, songs like “Unsuccessfully Coping with the Natural Beauty of Infidelity” and “Prelude to Agony,” each one over 12 minutes long, proved that he and his bandmates were capable of moody psychedelic explorations as well as raw, bludgeoning riffs – and that their bilious lyrics were catchy as hell.

Type O Negative circa 1992

Translating their vision to the stage wasn’t an easy process, though. On an early European tour, they ran into a variety of problems when political activists got the (mistaken) idea that the band were somehow right-wing; explained Steele in a 1992 radio interview reprinted in Xenocide zine, “What happened is we were out with Exploited and Biohazard, two bands that we were good friends with and like very much, but we felt it wasn’t a very good matchup because we’re not a punk band and we’re not a hardcore band, we’re more like a Gothic band, and a lot of the skinheads we encountered on tour didn’t like us too much, and we had problems with them, and over in Germany and Austria we had problems with the left wing over there.” Of course, he turned it into a typically dark joke, continuing, “ultimately that turned out great because it was kind of planned, and we had set the whole thing up ourselves… We had spread rumors that we were the Fourth Reich coming over to Germany to retake the country, and we took plenty of time to make preparation, and when we got there we phoned in bomb threats to the clubs that we were supposed to play at so the shows got cancelled and we got paid for nothing. We just went out chasing German women, Austrian women, we just went chasing women.”

The Origin of the Feces (original cover)

Back home post-tour, Roadrunner asked the band to record a live album, hoping to capitalize on the band’s “controversial” live reputation. Instead, Steele and company decided to prank…pretty much everyone. The release they turned in, The Origin of the Feces, was about as far from a conventional live album as could be imagined. Hell, it wasn’t even live!

As Steele explained to Alternative Press in 1995, “We had caused so much controversy over in Europe that the record company wanted to ride the wave of all this free press. They said, ‘Here’s X number of dollars, go do a live album and we’ll release it as soon as we can.’ I think we’re a pretty lousy band live. I’m a very conniving person and I realized that we could never pull this off live. Josh [Silver] has a recording studio in his house and we went down there and played the songs live. Then we had our friends come in and we tried to reproduce all the lousy things that happened to us in Europe; bomb threats, police raids, people jumping onstage and attacking us. Rather than most bands that do a live album to show that they’re God’s Gift To Music, why not blatantly sound really bad? Not just that, but we got to keep all the money. The original cover had a big picture of my asshole on it, which of course, is my best side. That kept it out of Kmart and toy stores.”

The Origin of the Feces (reissue cover)

In addition to even more extended versions of already-long Slow, Deep and Hard tracks interrupted by hostile exchanges with the “crowd” and “staff” of the “venue,” Origin features a massive, first-gear trudge through Black Sabbath‘s “Paranoid” and “Hey Pete,” a rewrite of the blues song “Hey Joe” from an even more murderous angle than the original. And ultimately, the band’s musical talent shines through even when they’re just fucking around, making the album well worth hearing even 20 years later.

Listen to it now on Spotify, or get it as part of the Complete Roadrunner Collection 1991-2003 digital boxed set on iTunes!

ROADRUNNER has issued the following:

VH-1 recently ran a “Hard 100″ readers’ poll on their website to determine the greatest hard rock song of all time, and Type O Negative’s “Black No. 1″ was the overwhelming winner! The final results will be broadcast on a Hard 100 special on the cable channel in November, but the votes can be seen online right now!
“Black No. 1″ comes from Type O Negative’s breakthrough album Bloody Kisses, which turns 20 years old next year.

Type O Negative circa 1994

ROADRUNNER has issued the following:

As long as Roadrunner Records has been around, our roster has been widely varied – there’s never been a “Roadrunner sound.” So when we put together this week’s Spotify playlist, we decided to show that even 20 years ago, we were exploring all kinds of sonic avenues, from death metal to industrial, from hardcore to sludgy doom. So enjoy 10 tracks by Deicide, Obituary, Malevolent Creation, Type O Negative, Biohazard, Mercyful Fate, Fear Factory, Front Line Assembly, Controlled Bleeding, and Exhorder!

Listen now!

Guitarist Jack Frost (SAVATAGE, BELLADONNA, SEVEN WITCHES) has released the following statement:

“Just wanted to let you know that SEVEN WITCHES will be doing two special shows this month (April.) I say special because of the KILLER lineup that the band boasts this time around. First off, we have none other than Alan Tecchio (HADES, NON-FICTION) back on vocals for these dates. Those of you that have seen Alan sing with us know that this will be insane ’cause he goes for it at every gig. On drums, we have Jonny Kelly (TYPE O NEGATIVE, DANZIG, A PALE HORSE NAMED DEATH) and on bass Ronnie Parks (FARCRY).
“Does it get any better than a lineup like this?! I think not!

“These shows will be an insane tribute and celebration to the metal animal inside all of us, as SEVEN WITCHES takes the stage and annihilates everything in sight! Come out and support metal in its purest form at these two upcoming gigs.”

The dates are as follows:

April 20 – Dingbatz – Clifton, NJ
April 21 – Jimmy’s Place – Allentown, PA

Source: Blabbermouth.net

ROADRUNNER has issued the following:

We asked you to send in photos of your Type O Negative collection, or tell us your Type O-related stories, to win a copy of the awesome vinyl box set we released last month…and wow, some of you really came through! The winning entry is above…click here to see an even bigger image, so you can drool over just how much rare stuff this dude (yeah, it’s a dude) has in his house.

Congratulations to our winner, and thanks to everyone who entered! Your emails really brought home just how much Type O Negative means to its fans.

ROADRUNNER has issued the following:

Type O Negative‘s Roadrunner Records catalog – the albums Slow, Deep and Hard; The Origin of the Feces; Bloody Kisses; October Rust; World Coming Down; and Life is Killing Me – have been gathered in a deluxe vinyl box, with each one pressed on double green vinyl! The box also includes six stickers and brand-new liner notes documenting the creation of each album. Click here to see exactly what comes inside (warning: possibly NSFW imagery.) The set is in independent record stores today; go to RecordStoreDay.com to find a participating store near you. But we’ve also got one copy to give away, absolutely free! All you have to do is email roadrunnerrecords@gmail.com and tell us why you deserve it! We’ll pick a winner next week! Good luck!

In another news:

Type O Negative’s Peter Steele Has Tree Planted In His Name

The tree in the photo above was planted on Monday, November 21 in the name of the late Peter Steele, former frontman for Carnivore and Type O Negative and former employee of the New York City Parks Department.

Said former Type O Negative drummer Johnny Kelly, “[The oak tree planting is] something that’s been a long time in the making. A lot of fans took it upon themselves to do something special for Peter. It is something that is in the true spirit of what Peter was about and who he was. This Peter truly would’ve appreciated.”

ROADRUNNER has issued the following:

With Halloween coming up on Monday, and a deluxe vinyl boxed set of all their Roadrunner albums coming to independent record stores November 25, we thought we’d ask you what you think of Type O Negative.

For those who aren’t familiar with the group’s body of work, here’s a brief rundown: they emerged at the dawn of the ’90s, combining the grinding thrash of late frontman Pete Steele‘s previous band, Carnivore, with a seemingly bottomless well of doom riffs and a surprising gift for haunting melodies. The roaring sludge of their earliest albums, Slow, Deep and Hard and The Origin of the Feces, was gradually bolstered on Bloody Kisses, October Rust, World Coming Down and Life is Killing Me with ever-increasing doses of melody, Goth gloom and crushingly heavy guitar. They also exhibited good taste in covers, putting their own unique spin on tunes like the Beatles‘ “Day Tripper” and “I Want You (She’s So Heavy),” Neil Young‘s “Cinnamon Girl,” Deep Purple‘s “Highway Star” and, unsurprisingly, Black Sabbath‘s “Black Sabbath.”

We’ve put together a 25-track Spotify playlist of tracks from all their Roadrunner albums; you can hear that at this link.

Now – which is your favorite Type O Negative album? Vote HERE.