As previously announced, English thrash/death metallers FORGOTTEN REMAINS announced that they are set to record an EP this year, with esteemed producer Russ Russell (NAPALM DEATH, DIMMU BORGIR, AMORPHIS, EVILE and many more).
To help finance “Morbid Reality”, the band have launched a Kickstarter campaign. To support them, head to this location. The band have stated the following about the campaign:
“Forgotten Remains have made significant progress over the last couple of years with the support of the underground scene, promoters and fans from all around the country. Our approach to metal is to play fast, intricate and heavy music and when it came to recording our new EP, there was only one name on the list that we believe can take our recorded music to a new level, the one and only Russ Russell. The band is 100% self funded with all members working full-time to pay for rehearsals, equipment, a van and its running costs, as well as CD duplication and merchandise production costs.
This new EP, “Morbid Reality” is going to incur our greatest costs so far but it is going to be worth it! This Kickstarter project is to partly fund the recording, production, mixing and mastering of the EP with the bulk of the cost being paid by the band themselves. There will be some limited edition items to purchase, as well as some “one-off” exclusives and some great bundles! In addition to that, all of the CDs ordered via the Kickstarter campaign will be signed – unless of course you request otherwise!
Kickstarter supporters will be the first to see artwork for the EP, hear previews of the new songs, get video updates from the studio and win some special secret prizes!”
For more information on FORGOTTEN REMAINS, check out their official Facebook page here.
Italian symphonic death metal masters FLESHGOD APOCALYPSE have released a captivating brand new track, ‘Gravity’.
The song comes from the band’s upcoming opus “King”, which will be released worldwide on February 5th, 2016 via Nuclear Blast. You can stream ‘Gravity’ here:
The band have recently release a third teaser, which covers the piano and orchestration recordings, here:
In a world where Revolver’s much-maligned Hottest Chicks in Hard Rock (formerly Hottest Chicks in Metal) issue still exists, where entire websites are dedicated to “protecting” metal from “SJW lefty PC bullshit,” and where men’s rights forum The Return of Kings (AKA Misogyny Central) covers #metalgate (whatever that was,) I feel pretty safe saying you’d be hard-pressed to find a woman who hasn’t encountered some sort of sexist behavior whilst participating in the cock forest that is extreme metal.
It wasn’t long after I started going to shows that the first metal dudebro demanded I prove my love of Death by naming all their albums in order, including year. I realized if I wanted any degree of respect in that scene, I was going to have to work harder, dig deeper, know more; that women are expected to prove they love the music, expected to justify their presence. It’s either that, or you’re there to smoke pole and bask in the much-coveted male gaze. Obviously.
In my determination to find kickass jams, hone my expertise of the underground, and ultimately weaponize said knowledge against the gatekeepers, mainstream death like Suffocation, Carcass and Devourment gave way to Jig-Ai, Amputated and Prostitute Disfigurement, and from there bands like Gut, Cock and Ball Torture, and Cemetery Rapist. There was no such thing as too many blastbeats, slams or pig gargles: the gnarlier, the better.
As my familiarity and love of goregrind and brutal death metal (BDM) grew, so did my cognitive dissonance. As a woman, how could I accept brutal rape and murder fantasies, amongst of myriad of other degrading subjects, language, and art, as part and parcel? Would we tolerate an epic glorification of lynching? Would we tolerate singing Hitler’s praises for his totally brutal extermination program? No. So why is all the objectification, humiliation, and sexual violence—something that is a sick reality for millions of women worldwide—shrugged off? Why are we calling women “sluts,” “whores,” and “bitches” when those words are filled with the same hatred and dehumanizing, derogatory intentions that racial slurs are?
I didn’t really think about the subject matter in any depth at first. I’ve always been more about riffs and structures than lyrics and album art. Sure, there’s plenty of BDM and goregrind that deals with society, politics and non-gendered horror/gore, but time and study revealed there’s also a huge amount devoted to elaborate sexual degradation and brutality, so much so that it evolved into it’s own genre—pornogrind. As far as I was initially concerned, though, it was just eye-rolling teenage perversion. Boys will be boys, especially at the giant sausage party, and since I had already been shown my place, I stayed quiet. Any time I did mention I thought something was offensive, I was met with dismissal or mockery, and told to lighten up. In addition to booking gigs for them, in my music journalism days I interviewed people like Jig-Ai and Cemetery Rapist, and asked what they thought about the lyrical content and any accusations of misogyny. They toed the Cannibal Corpse “it’s just fantasy” line, because they certainly aren’t misogynists. They love their girlfriends and mothers and sisters and aunts! Death metal is supposed to be sick, it’s in the name and the language—”death,” ‘gore,” “brutal.” If it made me uncomfortable, then that was clearly my problem, and I resigned myself to accept it as part of a long line of depravity one-up-manship. Humiliate, torture and fuck with a knife! As is tradition!
But over the past few years, I’ve been unable ignore or tolerate it. I attempted to excuse and justify the subject matter as somehow divorced from reality. Video games don’t make people go out and shoot up the streets, so degrading “art” and lyrics like, “Then drag the blood soaked victim deep into the woods I strip her / no one hears her screams / I beat her, I smash my fist in her face / Please kill me she says while breathing her last breath / I clutch my blade with all my might, stab her in the fucking guts / Now the fucking fun will begin / I slide my hard cock right in,” doesn’t make men rape or abuse women. I don’t think anyone listening to Devourment is necessarily an outright menace, but I’ve realized it’s not that simple, either. Lyrics like this are reflective of a sexist society; they help to preserve a patriarchal power structure, maintain the status quo of women as disposable sex objects, and it’s very likely that they’re insidiously affecting men’s attitudes towards women, both in the context of metal and outside of it. Why else would the idea that women are just fuckdolls to be humiliated and abused be so broadly appealing as to warrant its own genre, deemed funny to the people listening and actively engaging with it? Why do so many women have so many stories of sexism in metal? Why are women like Myrkur regularly receiving death threats?
“It’s just fantasy” is almost always the first line of defense, but culture does not exist nor is it created in a vacuum. The social context of any work of art matters. In this case, it’s the fact that the WHO says that “over a third of women globally have suffered violence from a partner or sexual violence from another man.” This isn’t even getting into female genital mutilation (FGM), unequal pay, lack of representation in positions of power, or the countless number of social conditions pointing towards the global marginalization of women. With this in mind, why on earth are we nurturing and normalizing this violence and repression, or at the very least trivializing it? The only message here is that women are toys to be degraded and penetrated—that they’re not people you want to get to know, not people who have thoughts, feelings, imaginations, aspirations, and certainly not people who also happen to enjoy death metal and grind.
“There are more important things going on in the world. Why do you always have to make it about gender? Besides, women in *insert developing nation here* have it way worse! Try living there, then complain about it.” My white, Western-born self would never argue that compared to many places, we’ve made significant advances for women. Nobody would. But acknowledging misogyny in one’s immediate surroundings doesn’t lessen concern for injustices women everywhere face every day; it is possible to be knowledgeable about and sympathetic to more than one issue at the same time. Saying it is trivial to point out problematic attitudes in music effectively translates to “This is the way it is, shut up, know your place.” I can’t help but wonder if all that talk about stabbing bitches in the cunt is related to this kind of contemptuous dismissal.
Don’t see it? Not a problem for you? Doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist. Don’t like politics in your music? Don’t engage in these conversations and then harass and bully the women and men who would like to. No one is going to stop you from listening to or making another Molesting the Decapitated.
“Metal is supposed to push the boundaries of acceptability!” Well, if one in three women is experiencing sexual violence at some point in their lives and it’s enshrined in the lyrical cannon of extreme music, wouldn’t it be more controversial to speak up in defense of women then to flog the ol’ rape horse yet again? Where are all the turbo-feminist goregrind bands if metal is about challenging the boundaries of acceptability? Judging by the virtual shitstorm that erupts any time sexism in metal is addressed, I think it’s pretty safe to bet BDM about female empowerment would set the message boards ablaze effectively (Castrator anyone?).
Truth is, violent misogyny is no longer shocking or provocative. It’s the status quo, and bands choosing this lyrical approach are simply reinforcing it. When rape culture in some way or another affects every woman’s life, this approach is at best callously insensitive, and at worst, gleefully perpetuates attitudes that can and do result in real harm.
So, is it possible to open a civil dialogue? Can we make people more aware of how hurtful, denigrating, and othering this subject matter is, make them aware it is not a joke, that this has a genuinely damaging effect on attitudes towards women not only in metal but in the world at large? Many people (mostly men) involved think that any kind of discussion is hellbent on destroying the sacred tenets of the genre, sticking the “SJW lefty PC bullshit” where it does not belong. It’s always framed as an attack. Well, it’s not. Adults have conversations, and just like you have the right to create and consume offensive art, others have the right to criticize it. Free speech works both ways.
I think people need to ask themselves why they’re writing and consuming this sort of material, why they think it’s funny, why they fantasize about it, and most importantly, why they feel threatened by conversations about it. The fact that this is all still fairly commonplace tells me there’s a long ways to go, but the feminists (male and female alike!) aren’t staying quiet anymore—and I hope our unfamiliar counterparts will have the guts to join us for a chat.
Austin heavy psych rockers SCORPION CHILD are very pleased to announce to be supporting legendary space rock icons MONSTER MAGNET on their upcoming European tour.
Commented the band’s singer, Aryn Jonathan Black: “MONSTER MAGNET are an amazing band! We can’t wait to share the stage with them in March. We will be performing a great deal of new material that will be featured on the new album that’s due out this summer! Can this tour hurry up and begin already??”
w/ MONSTER MAGNET
07.03. N Bergen – Garage
08.03. N Stavanger – Folken
09.03. N Drammen – Drammen Scener
10.03. S Gothenburg – Trädgarn
11.03. S Stockholm – Gota Kallare*
12.03. DK Copenhagen – Pumpehuset
13.03. D Hamburg – Markthalle
14.03. D Berlin – Huxley’s
15.03. A Wien – Szene
16.03. D Lichtenfels – Paunchy Cats*
17.03. D Wiesbaden – Schlachthof
18.03. D Cologne – Gloria
19.03. UK London – The Forum (+ ORANGE GOBLIN)
20.03. D Düsseldorf – Pitcher*
21.03. CH Pratteln – Z7
22.03. CH Winterthur – Salzhaus
23.03. D Karlsruhe – Substage
24.03. D Rheine – Hypothalamus*
25.03. NL Utrecht – Tivoli
26.03. B Ostende – Zwerver
27.03. NL Schijndel – Paaspop Festival*
28.03. D Rosenhof – Osnabrück
*SCORPION CHILD only
The band had recently released the brand new single, ‘She Sings, I Kill’. The official lyric video can be viewed here:
This new track gives us a furtive glimpse into the Texans highly anticipated upcoming sophomore album, on the wake of starting a month long UK and European tour. Aryn Jonathan Black returns with his rich, electrifying vocals interweaved with the groove laden riffs of guitarist Christopher Jay Cowart and the sauntering bass work of Alec Caballero Padron. SCORPION CHILD are completed by Jon ‘Charn’ Rice (drums) and AJ Vincent (keyboards). More impassioned than ever, SCORPION CHILD have something to prove.
‘She Sings, I Kill’ is now available as a 7″ vinyl and digital download. The single contains the new track as well as another new song, ‘(Enter The) Twilight Coven’, which will be a B-Side exclusive to this release.
The 7″ is available in black or white vinyl format and at the Nuclear Blast Mailorder as well as via digital download HERE.
SCORPION CHILD’s second album is due to be unleashed in the summer of 2016, and anticipation has been building. The band have once again been working with Chris ‘Frenchie’ Smith (THE ANSWER, …AND YOU WILL KNOW US BY THE TRAIL OF DEAD) who produced and arranged the band’s self-titled, first full-length.
SCORPION CHILD is: Aryn Jonathan Black – Vocals Christopher Jay Cowart – Lead Guitar Jon “Charn” Rice – Drums Alec Caballero Padron – Bass AJ Vincent – Keyboards
Tobias Sammet’s AVANTASIA are set to unleash their seventh album “Ghostlights” to fans, which is the sequel to 2013’s “The Mystery Of Time”. The rock operatic opus will be released worldwide on 29th January via Nuclear Blast Records. Tobias is well known for not doing things by halves, which the new album proves in stunning fashion!
In true AVANTASIA style, there are some regular artists the fans know and love on the new album, including Bob Catley, Michael Kiske, Amanda Somerville, Jorn Lande and Ronnie Atkins. Also welcomed to the ensemble are some new guests, such as Dee Snider, Marco Hietala and Geoff Tate.
I caught up recently with Tobi for an in depth chat about “Ghostlights” and an insight into the album, as well as why the first single sounds so much like Meatloaf! Also including the huge forthcoming tour and their Eurovision entry, plus plenty more, along with an update on EDGUY. Check out some excerpts from our discussion below and listen to the full interview, (which Tobi always makes so entertaining!) on the audio player:
Talking of the guests on the album, Tobi discussed some of his choices and the process he went through:
“When I write a song like the title track for the new album, I know Michael Kiske would be the singer for that song. I have it in the back of my mind, then I’d do it right from the start.
But sometimes you have a song, for example ‘The Haunting’ with Dee Snider – the music had been written and I was standing in my basement (which is the music part of the house) and I was in there listening to the material and then I tried to imagine who could be the proper singer for that song. ‘The Haunting’ was in need of a vocalist who would be both theatrical actor, but at the same time dramatic vocalist and the song was very very eery. And I imagined somebody who should sound like a crossing between something very flamboyant and the Child Catcher in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (laughs).
And of course I was going through my record collection and thought ‘Dee Snider’s got to be in it!’ It was not obvious I would ask Dee Snider for such a track, because it’s not exactly ‘We’re Not Gonna Take It’ or ‘I Wanna Rock’, but if you listen to the final result, it sounds like no one else could have done that and in the end it fits. It’s not a choice that comes across as reasonable before you finally do it, but after you’ve done it, it sounds like nothing else could have been better and that’s something I’m really proud of.”
Tobi continued:
“Everything comes together based on intuition. At first I’m a music lover, much more than a music producer or songwriter. I want to put the singers on there that I would want to listen to as a fan.”
Regarding the forthcoming “Ghostlights” World Tour, Tobi revealed:
“I don’t believe we’re gonna do another tour within the next three, four, five years, there are so many people involved with individual schedules. So it should not be taken for granted that everybody is available and why we want to seize the chance that we are all available for this tour. We’ll play for three hours minimum, I think it’s gonna be a little longer and we’re gonna do 24 or 25 tracks. It’s gonna be a journey through the history of Avantasia and it’s going to be very visual, we’re going to bring the whole stage production, it’s gonna be an amazing scene and something quite unique. I can highly recommend it to anyone that’s into Avantasia, it’s gonna be the last time in a very long time that you will have a chance to do so.”
London-based trio BLACK ORCHID EMPIRE have unveiled their incredible first single ‘Come In’. Infusing complex melodies and mammoth riffs, Black Orchid Empire’s unique sound is instantly memorable – yet beautifully vulnerable.
Listen to ‘Come In’ here:
Exceptionally driven and unquestionably talented, BOE have performed alongside heavyweights such as Biffy Clyro, Skunk Anansie, Feeder and Editors and are thriving in the resurgent British rock scene.
“In the beginning we just hurled riffs around in a sweaty rehearsal space, making music that we loved simply for the joy of making it. It was such a raw, heartfelt process, and it spawned so much music that has become incredibly precious to us.
We poured everything into refining and shaping those first ideas until they evolved into the songs we have now. Survival of the fittest riff. This became our core ethos – to make music that we would obsess over if we were fans of the band. That’s all we do.
Our first single ‘Come In’ is the gateway drug to BOE – it has an evocative lyrical message, hook-laden melodies, killer riffs and intricate time-signature stuff but mostly it’s just about saying ‘this is what we love to do’. This song defines us.” – VocalistPaul Visser.
Winners of Emergenza UK, the band includes previous members of highly-acclaimed groups Queen Adreena and Cape Fear, and is poised to be one of the breakthrough acts of the year.
Watch out for the official music video for ‘Come In’ and forthcoming full-length debut album.
The band will be celebrating the single release with a special free show and launch party at London’s Borderline on the 2nd of March. Details below: Black Orchid Empire live dates:
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
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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