Blackdiamond of METAL SHOCK FINLAND has conducted an interview with MORTAD‘s frontwoman Somi Arian before they blast Hammerfest IV with their metal.
You can listen to the whole of the interview on Soundcloud player below:
Video highlights of MORTAD‘s performance at this year’s Hammerfest, which was held March 15-18, 2012 in Prestatyn, North Wales, can be seen below:
As previously posted, MORTAD will enter the studio in November with producer Russ Russell (NAPALM DEATH, DIMMU BORGIR, EVILE) to begin recording its sophomore album for a 2013 release.
MORTAD‘s debut CD, “The Myth Of Purity”, was made available last month with the February 2012 issue of Metal Hammer magazine and will receive a more “official” release later in the year. The album was recorded last October with Russ Russell.
MORTAD was formed in 2009 by Iranian vocalist Somi Arian , whose lyrics take aim at the hypocrisy of religion and the government as well as seeking inner truth and strength in the face of such oppression.
MORTAD released a music video and an EP, entitled “Pandemic Paranoia”, in early 2011. This effort brought the band immense attention on the social media sites, placing the group as the No. 1 metal band on ReverbNation London metal chart, and attracting over 40,000 Facebook fans.
MORTAD‘s “Waste Of My Rage” video was sponsored by the Alchemy apparel clothing brand and produced by the Manchester-based video production company Video Ink. More than a dozen actors were cast for the clip, including Collette Von Tora, who agreed to have her head shaved for this video shoot.
Struck – On first glances you immediately get that feeling of something almost out of the ordinary. Combined with an almost ‘dance’ like industrial special effects and raunchy guitar riffs, this track takes you on an ever elusive journey into the minds of industrial based metal and keeps you there.
Thanks – The overall basis of this song opens up the listener to another view on life in an almost Kate Bush style. The lead vocals provide both gentle and powerful combinations to give you not only beauty, but simplicity throughout the song. The passions in the vocal lines are enough to keep you listening, waiting in anticipation for the next progression.
I don’t care – From what starts off as a gentle paced song, you are led into a false sense of security just as the strength of the vocals come out in full force. The vocal lines control this entire track with passion holding you deep within the music, putting you almost on the edge of your seats. It is not often you get melody, power, great progressions, beautiful use of strings (orchestral) and passion all combined within the same song.
Overall, for uplifting music and an artist to keep you hooked throughout, this band has so many great features going for them. Indigo Darkpsych would be ideal for not only diehard fans of female fronted melodic metal/industrial such as Evanescence, Lacuna Coil etc… It is also for those with an interest in heavy rock and ballad based music. The quality of the recordings is at very high standards as is almost expected with music software on the increase, as are the progressions in the instruments, vocals, and melodies. Keep an eye (and possibly your mind) open for Indigo Darkpsych, as I too am certainly looking forward to more releases in the future.
Finnish symphonic metallers NIGHTWISH have nearly completed the additional score for their upcoming Imaginaerum film.
As previously reported, on August 8th, Nightwish will debut the film to fans with a special showing at the Hartwell Arena. The 11,000 capacity arena has hosted previous Nightwish live gigs, but this would be the largest movie premier in Finnish history.
Petri Alanko, “the wizard behind the newborn versions and soundscapes,” checks in with the following update:
“Since July 2011 I’ve been working on Imaginaerum The Movie soundtrack based on the album multitrack sessions and the original songs by Tuomas (Holopainen) (and one by Marco Hietala). I’m afraid some of my text will be more or less technical mumbo-jumbo, but I’ll try and keep it as readable as it’s humanly possible for yours truly.
A brief history: I met Stobe Harju whilst working with Remedy Entertainment’s Alan Wake XBOX game for which I composed the soundtrack. I worked briefly, yet closely with Stobe during the game’s cinematic cue production phase. To be honest, he must have enjoyed to make me cry, really. Every visual thing he ever showed me brought me to tears. Obviously he didn’t hate me much, as I’m here again – and it’s been a damn funky ride! Better than any theme park ride, this; at times you feel the wind on your face and things just couldn’t come any better, no matter what you do. Then there’s that one occasional moment of ‘how the eff do I turn this 16 bar riff into a nine minute monster?’, a thought repeatedly waking me up at nights for what seemed like a week. Oh, the agony – and how simple and elegant the solution eventually was! A lot of things have just clicked, which makes this one of my most enjoyable jobs ever and definitely the most original one. What I do is a passion, not a profession. I do make a living out of it, but without the spark that ignites me the living would suck.
Indeed, the sparks were many in this project. Let me elaborate a bit.
The process of turning an album track full of orchestra, keyboards, bass, guitars, Uilleann pipes, percussion and vocals into a mayhem of grief, misery, joy, yearning or wonder is not an easy one. It’s a method of analysis combined with the gut feeling, at its best. I think I utilized some serious “blinking” (quick decisioning, a term borrowed from Malcolm Gladwell) during the pre-production phase: I had to listen to and through every single track of every song on Nightwish’s Imaginaerum ProTools multitrack sessions – and cut out and paint green every ‘ok’ snippet. If a certain thing sounded like it would benefit from further processing, I’d paint it orange or yellow, depending on my mindset (or a process anticipated for that particular cutout). Yellow meant simply “retune”, orange “beat the shit out of it no matter what”. Retuning usually meant throwing pitches around until the original sample was no longer recognizable… The decisions had to be made presto prestissimo, as I rapidly understood the more I thought of something, the more the original idea dissolved.
I remember one day particularly well, in the very beginning. I had been working on a single track for the whole day, drinking about 7-8 espresso shots, and finally the last track was cut into grays (no-go), greens, yellows and oranges. The arrange page seemed a bit crowded, so I decided to select only the colored sections… and I think I crapped my pants a bit then: there were – I just checked this – 1073 tiny sections separated from their original tracks, in one song alone. Multiply that number by the amount of songs on the album, and you come across with a number such as about 12773, which my ‘Imaginaerum raw material’ folder tells me whenever I hit cmd-I. (The size of the folder is 7.94 GB, by the way. That’s a lot of raw material, in other words.) After a weekend off, I did a second run for the material, and to my surprise, I didn’t have to do much additions or corrections.
Some of those snippets were then turned into keymaps, them into instruments, instruments were combined to form multi-instruments – and little by little I had managed to develop myself a virtual Nightwish! Well, not really, as they were only single sounds, not pieces of performances as such. However, I did create some tempo-lockable guitar/bass instruments, shredding Nightwish riffs from one key only – and I could switch the key while they played – but these instruments were often used underneath the orchestral sections, to provide some extra “oomph”, and you can _not_ hear them playing solo anywhere on the soundtrack. What’s loud and sounds like a guitar or bass, it’s Emppu or Marco. Period. I did similar stuff for Jukka’s drums (again tempolockable) but this time I ran a lot of his stuff through different resonators and filters. Often I took the tom tracks only, picked up a rhythm from his playing and used that rhythm to control the pitches I was putting into a resonator by a keyboard. The result sounds like a percussive huge bass instrument and must be heard to believe… also, some of the vocals were turned into choirs or manic chanting. Marco’s demonic “down down, deeper down” in Ghostriver redefined word “scary” after a treatment. You wouldn’t want to hear that at night, I promise. At least my neighbour didn’t – and he lived 20 meters away. Lived. Moved. Marco’s chanting is used on a dark gray field, by the way… I did use “commercial libraries” as well, but wanted to rely on what I had on the Imaginaerum hard drive.
(A side note: I was constantly amazed throughout the process due to the fact every song still sounds like a proper Nightwish track, thanks to the strong personalities behind the performances. You can’t fade or mutilate true passion. Period.)
It’s probably pointless to say the number of tracks per song/cue turned into nightmarish amounts pretty soon after I had started. I’ve never been a fan of “let’s just put that trendy Casio shit on and sing on top of it” method, and Nightwish are even less so. These two combined = oh holy crap and a thousand portaloos… ‘Last Ride Of The Day’ alone had 327 tracks altogether when it went to mix, of which about 100 from the band itself, and the rest was put in to emphasize the action of the scene in which it was needed. In some cases I had to keep two spare computers running Vienna Ensemble Pro 5 (a virtual instrument networking application, not an orchestra plugin), slaved to my master computer. Yes, master had two slaves – hmm… I wish I had some assistants, too.
I know some of you keep on repeating ‘Why all this hassle? Why must that nasty bloke destroy everything we love?’, I’m sure. Movie scores are a different beast. It’s not about egotripping or hating original music (I _love_ it, by the way, I, too, am a fan. ‘Hello, my name is Petri and I’m a Nightwish fan.’), it’s about emphasizing the picture and the storyline. Grabbing the essence and rebuilding emotions selectively onto that. Some wiser man (must have been my piano teacher) said movie scores build tools for “dissecting the dreams we see and turn them into consolations or encouragement”. There are two (well, three to be honest) tracks that were left as is: Slow, Love, Slow and Scaretale. The third is I Want My Tears Back, sort of.
One by one the songs of Imaginaerum The Album have reformed – transformed – into a soundtrack. It hasn’t been easy – and hey, it shouldn’t have been; in creative field, comfort zones are for suckers and nine-to-five people. One has to trust the “gut feeling”, though. No use to choose the hard way just because it’s there. Some things have transformed themselves almost by accident, whereas some have taken a slightly longer time. It’s been a damn good ride, and there are still a few good curves ahead – but I can already see the final straight of this rollercoaster, and all you people waiting for your turn on the platform, soon joining the ride. I’m thrilled to be a tiny part of your experience.
There have been a few times when I’ve wished there was a shotgun in my studio, but only a few. Much more often it was the wind machine that was missed. Or a wedge monitor on the floor onto which to rest my leg. Or a fog machine. A multi-kilowatt PA. A crowd of >20000 people… Heh, the amount of air guitar played in this room has months ago gone through the roof. The end result is going to sound magical, and fear not: I cannot spoil any of it, the original songs and themes are that strong. I’m mixing/cutting the fourth reel (of five) and I can’t wait to see this on the big screen.
To be a part of this realising dream is a privilege, and I cannot express my gratitude and pride in an appropriate way; sometimes words just _aren’t_ enough. I hope the soundtrack recites wiser words than what I just did.
Bassist Yves Huts has left Dutch female-fronted symphonic metallers EPICA.
Commented the band: “Yves has been with us from the start and has been of great value to the band.
“We want to thank Yves for his contribution to EPICA‘s success and wish him the very best in his future career, whether musically or in a different way. We will never forget the good times we shared together on the road!
“The silver lining to this cloud is that we can already announce an awesome successor. Fulfilling duties on bass from now on will be none other than Rob van der Loo. You might know Rob from his work with MAYAN or DELAIN. We are sure that Rob will fit perfectly as a musician and as a person, and we are looking forward to share the stage for the first time next week.
Stated Huts: “013 is the venue where we did our first show with EPICA and, almost a decade later, also my last.
“I’m leaving the band because I have another career opportunity that is not combinable with the schedule of a world-touring band. I’ve tried to live these two different lives simultaneously for as long as I could, but in the end I just had to make a choice, one of the most difficult ones in my life.
“I look back to these 10 years in EPICA satisfied and enriched with life experience. As a founding member, I’m proud of what we’ve achieved so far and I’m sure the future has a lot more great things in store for the band.
“I would like to thank the band, crew, fans and everybody else involved for the good times and I wish my successor good luck.”
Commented Rob van der Loo: “A few days ago I spoke to Yves and he brought back a memory from the time when EPICA was still a support band for one of my former bands. At that time he would never have guessed that almost 10 years later I’d be his successor in EPICA… Well, neither did I… but I’m damn proud of it!
“I’ve been sharing the stage with the people from EPICA for almost ten years now, and becoming a member of MAYAN last year brought us even closer. So making the decision to join EPICA feels pretty good. Therefore I want to show my gratitude to the bandmembers (including Yves) and the crew for allowing me in the EPICA family!
“See you guys on the road! I won’t let you down!”
EPICA‘s fifth full-length album, “Requiem For The Indifferent”, sold 4,800 copies in the United States in its first week of release to debut at position No. 104 on The Billboard 200 chart. The band’s previous CD, “Design Your Universe”, opened with 2,100 units to land at position No. 12 on the Top New Artist Albums (Heatseekers) chart, which lists the best-selling albums by new and developing artists, defined as those who have never appeared in the Top 100 of The Billboard 200.
“Requiem For The Indifferent” was released on March 9 in Europe and four days later in North America via Nuclear Blast Records. The CD was recorded at Gate Studio in Wolfsburg, Germany under the watchful eye of Sascha Paeth.
A video for “Storm The Sorrow” was filmed last month and it “will show the band in a way you have never seen before,” according to a press release.
DJ Blackdiamond of Firebrand Rock Radio and Metal Shock Finlandhas recently conducted a very metal interview with metallers SEVERENTH , after they played their loud metal at Hammerfest IV.
You can listen to the whole of the interview on soundcloud player below:
Formed in 2007 Severenth hail from Chester and Hawarden UK and they released their debut album ‘The Age Of Paranoia’ in 2009.
They have played various festivals including the prestigious Wacken last year, and are set to return again this year.
Severenth‘s second album ‘Reveal’ was released in the spring of 2011 and this year has become available to buy worldwide from sites such as itunes and Amazon.
They have already started writing for the next album, says Dave ‘Severenth’ Roberts -“Reveal is such an amazing record that we are all immensely proud of, and believe whatever type of music you are into, there is a track on there for you! And we can’t wait to hit you with the next one!”
Severenth is:
Ben Jones (Bass)
Peet Bailey (Vocals)
Ste Ensall (Lead Guitar)
David Roberts (Drums)
Adam Sidor (Guitar)
Video highlights of MORTAD‘s performance at this year’s Hammerfest, which was held March 15-18, 2012 in Prestatyn, North Wales, can be seen below.
MORTAD will enter the studio in November with producer Russ Russell (NAPALM DEATH, DIMMU BORGIR, EVILE) to begin recording its sophomore album for a 2013 release.
MORTAD‘s debut CD, “The Myth Of Purity”, was made available last month with the February 2012 issue of Metal Hammer magazine and will receive a more “official” release later in the year. The album was recorded last October with Russ Russell.
MORTAD was formed in 2009 by Iranian vocalist Somi Arian , whose lyrics take aim at the hypocrisy of religion and the government as well as seeking inner truth and strength in the face of such oppression.
MORTAD released a music video and an EP, entitled “Pandemic Paranoia”, in early 2011. This effort brought the band immense attention on the social media sites, placing the group as the No. 1 metal band on ReverbNation London metal chart, and attracting over 40,000 Facebook fans.
MORTAD‘s “Waste Of My Rage” video was sponsored by the Alchemy apparel clothing brand and produced by the Manchester-based video production company Video Ink. More than a dozen actors were cast for the clip, including Collette Von Tora, who agreed to have her head shaved for this video shoot.
Source : Blabbermouth.net
Chief Shock Video
Kimmo Kuusniemi’s ASA unveil the long-overdue release of "Collective Failure" + first music video for title-track! Check it out and stay tuned for more news! Click image to watch the video
Kimmo Kuusniemi’s SARCOFAGUS return with a Historic 2010 Concert Video Premiere on YouTube! Click image to watch the video
Ads
Visionary artist KIMMO KUUSNIEMI's ANCIENT STREAMING ASSEMBLY (ASA) have released “Aurora Nuclearis”, a powerful 12-minute audiovisual experience, dedicated to the Late Keyboardist Esa Kotilainen. - Click image to watch the video