Archive for the ‘metal news’ Category

Varg gets out of the can – our views and thoughts

Saturday, July 18th, 2009

The release of Burzum’s mastermind Varg Vikernes from jail after fulfilling his sentence for the killing of his former friend and band partner Øystein Aarseth has raised a literal thunderstorm on the ethereal world of the net. The aforementioned phenomenon is not unusual if one knows the Internet and the people who frequent it, and was therefore easily predicted.

After all, the profile of someone like Varg – a convicted murderer (killing another human being is always bad, kids, remember that) with extreme political and racial views that don’t make him the most likeable person, at least for most people, and who gave many bogus declarations in the past (the ratio of truth vs. bullshit being relative depending on whether you’re talking with an admirer or a detractor) – is not the most favorable for a person with the truest intention to be left alone, but makes for great talking on message boards.

The thing about all the talking and bloviating is that, save for a small few who either don’t care or outright hate Varg’s music, most detractors will readily admit that the works under the Burzum moniker are worthy of consideration, and even of admiration. It’s like people still have a problem separating the person from his works.

But I’ll leave that well alone. The man’s release still needs to be commented because of the newest declarations made by Vikernes. Apparently, he will not completely shut himself from the world and will try to rekindle his music and writing careers.

After the years of continuous reunions from older, legendary bands being most of them complete flops and dissapointments, yours truly had virtually lost all faith in this phenomenon, until certain albums by certain bands like Celtic Frost and Beherit showed that reunions weren’t just mere vehicles to regain a fame and name that should have been better kept under wraps. The aforementioned acts actually showed a concern for metal’s artistic decadence and came back to prove how it’s really done (the tag of most reunions out there, but this time they really accomplished that).

Like Beherit’s, Burzum’s musical comeback should be taken with initial skepticism – after all, reunions and the like haven’t lost their essentially gimmicky nature -, but I really hope, having faith on the man’s talent and how it has maintained itself through the years, that he will be able to make an artistically honest effort that would contribute bringing metal back to life like Engram was.

In any case, one should also expect much on his future writing career, a topic that isn’t much talked about since Varg isn’t really famous for being a writer, having his music and all of the norwegian soap opera taken the forefront. It’s unfair, really, given that, despite the fact that Vikernes wasn’t a born writer, like his clumsy early essays prove, he has, throughout the years, developed an engaging style and it will be worthwhile to see what it results from that. That said, a book elaborating on scandinavian and related mythos, expanding on the short stories of Filosofem, for example, could be quite something. But, like life roughly teaches us, we should not get ahead of things and instead wait patiently.

A new Burzum album and one or two books worth considering is what’s on the future for Mr. Vikernes and the ones who might care. Oh, and there’s also a movie, but we won’t get into that…

A merry and most headbangable International Day of Slayer to all!

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

This is the album you should be playing today

Today, June 6th, is International Day of Slayer. Many dedicated people, among them the fearsome IDoS task force, have worked to make this event the biggest yet.

You may ask, if interested (and damn you if you’re not), what can one do to celebrate and fully enjoy this day? Easy: by incommodating your parents/neighbours/girlfriend/dog all day long, playing your favorite Slayer(s) album(s) at maximum volume.

But I feel that what’s been said is enough, and we shall preach no more. Today, blast yer speakers through the boundaries of hell! NO APPARENT MOTIVE, JUST KILL AND KILL AGAIN!!

Links:

Comprehensive Slayer history @ slayerized.com

Facts you probably didn’t know about Slayer, also @ slayerized.com

mp3 and FLAC bootlegs (in case some of you poseurs don’t have a Slayer album handy for today):

Slayer – Live 1984-1992

Slayer – Violent Brains – Live in Netherlands – May 28th, 1985

Slayer 1985-06-20 Blue Moon Circus, Oberhausen (soundboard – FLAC)

Slayer – Slayer – October 4, 1990 – Rheingoldhalle – Mainz, Germany FLAC:
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4

Slayer – Live Dead (Unreleased)
Part 1
Part 2

Slayer Backing Tracks – bass and drum tracks to the first five albums (Unspeakably cool resource. I think instead of Slayer I’m going to be playing along “Chemical Warfare” all day on the guitar >:-] )

Burzum’s Varg Vikernes gets released from jail

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

From Blabbermouth:

Varg Vikernes (a.k.a. Count Grishnackh), the former BURZUM mastermind who was convicted of murdering MAYHEM guitarist Oystein Aarseth (a.k.a. Euronymous) in August 1993 and setting fire to three churches, is a free man.

“I can confirm that I have been released from prison,” Vikernes told Norway’s Dagbladet.

Although his parole application was denied four times — most recently in September 2008 — Vikernes received word in February that he would be released after serving almost 16 years in prison. He was finally allowed to leave a couple of weeks ago, according to Dagbladet.

“I will have to report [to the parole officer] for one year — initially every two weeks, and then once a month,” Vikernes said.

(…)

“I’m ready for society — and I have been for many years,” Vikernes told Dagbladet last July. “I have learned from my mistakes and become older. Now I just want to be together with my family.”

“I miss my family. And I look forward the day that I could work on my farm, create music, write books and be with the wife and kids around the clock — and live a normal life.

Blabbermouth.net – Varg Vikernes is a free man!

We at the Hessian Studies Center wish the best of lucks to Mr. Vikernes and his family in any of their future endeavours. We also hope that he will be able to accomplish a bright career out of his projected writings and music.

Burzum album reviews

A selection of Vikernes’ writings:

Europe and Europe’s Soul

Paganism Part X – The Origin and Purpose of Religion

A Burzum story – Part I – Origin and Meaning

A Burzum story – Part VI – The Music

Filosofem’s lyrics and stories translated into english

Cliff Burton, the prototypical hessian

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Yes, I know this news bit is one month late, but for someone who so perfectly filled the classic hessian profile as Burton, it is well worth posting:

Castro Valley rock legend Cliff Burton was posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame with the Bay Area band Metallica this month.

cliff_burtonBurton’s father, Ray, accepted his son’s honorary induction during ceremonies in Cleveland, Ohio on April 4.

(…)

Brackett recalled Burton as a quiet and cheerful musician who appreciated classical pieces by Bach as much as he loved the songs of punk pioneers the Misfits.

(…)

No matter how busy he during rehearsal and recording sessions with Metallica, Burton always found time for one of his main loves—going out and fishing on Lake Chabot, according to Brackett.

Castro Valley Forum – CV Rock Musician Cliff Burton Inducted in R&R Hall of Fame

Cliff Burton was not just an easy going, long haired maniac with a superior compositional talent and one hell of a bass player, he was also fond of nature and of centuries-old european music, sported bell-bottomed trousers long since it stopped being fashionable to do so (usually justifying his taste in clothing with “this is what I wear, fuck you”) and was the true creative leader of the world’s most known speed metal band, Metallica.

(more…)

IDoS task force send US President a petition to make June 6 a Hessian holiday

Monday, May 18th, 2009

From the International Day of Slayer site:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
International Day of Slayer petitions the White House

SUMMARY

The International Day of Slayer Task Force has petitioned President Barack Obama to make the National Day of Slayer an official American holiday. As a culture in itself, metal (exemplified by Slayer) deserves recognition, and IDoS directors feel a holiday would begin that process.

BODY

Directors of the International Day of Slayer, a holiday for metal music and those who enjoy the music of Slayer, have petitioned the White House to make the holiday official.

(more…)

International Day of Slayer – A hessian call to arms

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Next June 6, 2009, every hessian worldwide will be blasting the Slayer album(s) of his/her choice at the home, car, backyard, public square, school, work, daycare center, church, etc.

For years known as the National Day of Slayer, this celebration became so popular with hessians all over the planet that from this year on it will become International.

We should all work to make this year’s celebration the biggest one yet. Here’s a number of things you can do in addition to listening to Slayer at full volume:

- Wear Slayer t-shirts and related armor.
- Organize Slay-in parties with local hessians.
- Take your Slayer LPs out and show them around the city.
- Talk with local DJs about making Slayer specials for this day.
- Make Slayer banners and organize manifestations in public places.
- Print flyers explaining to common people what makes Slayer the best band in the whole world. Put them up on all public places.
- Explain to all people who ask just what the hell is wrong with you, you psycho, what this day is about.

On this most glorious day, make sure that you wave the Hessian official flag. Join us in this massive celebration of metal’s values!

Inter-National Day of Slayer official website

National Day of Slayer @ the ANUS

National Day of Slayer @ Deathmetal.org

Official Slayer website

New book declares that Metal should be recognized as a significant cultural movement

Friday, April 24th, 2009

Despite its distracting academic jargon, Steve Waksman’s This Ain’t the Summer of Love: Conflict and Crossover in Heavy Metal and Punk (University of California Press) pinpoints an underappreciated truth: While elite critics have championed punk as the vanguard of pop cultural revolution, “the emergence of metal has never been treated as a historically significant event.” Punk struck the intellectuals as properly conceptual and arty; metal just seemed like brutal noise for brutes.

Waksman, who teaches music and American studies at Smith College, retells the history of pop music from 1970 to the present. His topics range from the depth and richness of Motörhead’s pioneering thrash to the genre- (and gender-) bending theatricality of Alice Cooper and David Lee Roth. The two quick-and-noisy musical arts communities, separated by the critics, have mingled and cross-pollinated on their own, helping to create today’s dynamic and delightful world of self-chosen, mix-and-match subcultures and musical identities.

Reason: The Phony War between Punk and Metal

Punk, despite its abrasive nature, was a genre that stayed within the margins of popular music and so it got quickly recognized as a revolution in popular culture. Metal, on the other hand, and despite using templates from pop music, such as its instrumentation, was outside the frame of modern culture from day one, both sonically and ideologically. As its concepts and musicality are simply too “out there” for most modern people to understand, it remains a misunderstood child of its time.

Not for long, though. For Metal, it will take more time than it took for punk to get proper credit as a true artform, but eventually recognition will take place, as its historical importance as the first true counterculture movement of the modern times is too strong to be denied, naysayers be damned.