King Diamond Announces Headline Tour This Fall


 

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Metal legend King Diamond has announced his comeback headline tour of the USA, this fall. The full US tour, with full production promises to be the proper King Diamond live presentation fans stateside have been clamoring for. Joining him will be longtime band members Andy LaRocque, Mike Wead, Hal Patino, and Matt Thompson, making this a must see tour.

 

For the uninitiated (or just the un-metal) King Diamond was a legend before he ever went solo, leaving Mercyful Fate in 1985. Building on Don’t Break the Oath’s success, King has put out countless amazing albums, especially his first four: Fatal Portrait, Abigail, Them and Conspiracy; which still hold up well today despite being 25-30 years old.

 

 

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King Diamond is an inspiration musically and aesthetically for two generations of metal bands, as well as being a pop culture figure as well (Clerks II, Dethklok). Best by injury and illness, save for an occasional festival appearance, this is the first full-scale tour KD has done in nearly a decade. Surely this announcement will stoke the fires for his long in the works new album, and eventually a Mercyful Fate reunion tour in the future.

 

The pre-sale started today here and the full sale is this Friday, 6/27. The tour includes stops at the annual Rock & Shock Festival and the Fun Fun Fun Fest.

KING DIAMOND North American Tour 2014:
10/11/2014 Center Stage – Atlanta, GA
10/13/2014 The Fillmore – Silver Spring, MD
10/14/2014 Best Buy Theatre – New York, NY
10/16/2014 The Palladium – Worcester, MA (as part of Rock & Shock)
10/17/2014 Olympia – Montreal, QC
10/18/2014 The Sound Academy – Toronto, ON
10/19/2014 Stage AE – Pittsburgh, PA
10/21/2014 The Vic Theatre – Chicago, IL
10/22/2014 The Pageant – St. Louis, MO
10/24/2014 Paramount Theatre – Denver, CO
10/26/2014 The Complex – Salt Lake City, UT
10/28/2014 The Moose Theatre – Seattle, WA
10/30/2014 The Warfield – San Francisco, CA
10/31/2014 The Wiltern – Los Angeles, CA
11/01/2014 House Of Blues – Las Vegas, NV
11/03/2014 Rialto Theatre – Tucson, AZ
11/05/2014 House Of Blues – Houston, TX
11/06/2014 House Of Blues – Dallas, TX

Fun Fun Fun Fest
11/08/2014 Auditorium Shores – Austin, TX

 

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King Diamond on Facebook

 

 

 


Holier Than Thou – David Nuss of Sabbath Assembly


 

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Fascinated with the teachings and the hymns of Process Church of the Final Judgment, David Nuss founded Sabbath Assembly as a tribute to this underground, avant-garde, practically unknown sacred music. Since the Church worshiped both Christ and Lucifer equally, they were outcasted from society, even by other fringe religious movements, such as Scientology which they shared some history with. Because they were disbanded by the late 70s, the hymns were thought to be lost to antiquity until Nuss discovered them and interpreted them for his records. Ghost Cult scribe James Conway connected with Nuss for an interview and received an account of this history, a glimpse into their genius vision, and examined Sabbath Assembly’s new opus Quaternity (Svart) as well.

 

When did you first become aware of the Process Church of the Final Judgment?

 

In 2009 I met original Processian Timothy Wyllie who showed me an advance copy of his book Love Sex Fear Death about his time in the Process.

 

 

How did the music of the church first affect you when you first heard it?

There was no music to hear, only sheet music from the hymns. The hymns had never been recorded because they were thought of as liturgical, rather than commercial. So our idea is that these two could meet – not commercial in the sense that we’re raking in the dollars, but in that the songs could be presented in the public marketplace rather than exclusively.

 

 

Do you have any input from current members of the Church on the recording and writing process?

There are no ‘current members’ because the Church fell apart in the mid 70s, and most people who were members then are not very public about it now because of the negative press the Church received. Timothy Wyllie, who was in the Church from its inception til it morphed to be an entity called “The Foundation Faith,” was a kind of ‘spiritual advisor’ on our first album, Restored to One, as was Genesis P. Orridge on our second, Ye Are Gods. Then we started getting some critiques from a guy called Anthony D’Andrea who says he was in a Boston Chapter of the Church in the 70s. He said we weren’t playing the hymns ‘as they were’ back in the day’ – which I’m sure is true. We’re doing our interpretation! So he played a couple over the phone for us, and those became ‘Lucifer’ and ‘The Four Horsemen’ on our new album Quaternity.

sabbath assembly band

 

Can you explain a little about the fourth element; the nature of evil and how it relates to the Christian Holy Trinity?

I don’t think it does relate to the Trinity exactly. The founding Church fathers (they were all men) deliberately left aspects out of the formation of the original Christian doctrines and creeds. These guys were not psychologists creating a balanced and healthy way for people to live; rather they were creating an autocratic government that needed a ‘spiritual’ component for validation of authority. Christianity was more multi-faceted before these guys starting decided who was a heretic and who wasn’t, creating a faux “Orthodoxy.” The idea of four elements is much more pagan, that is close to how nature actually works – solar/lunar, masculine/feminine, four directions, four elements (air water fire earth). The 4 is more about balance and natural reality, rather than political manipulation.

 

 

How did the recording of Quaternity come about and how does it relate to your previous two releases?

This is the second recording with Jamie Myers. How has she fit into the band and how does her approach differ from previous vocalist Jex Thoth? (If at all)

 

This recording was specifically crafted for Jamie’s voice. She came in a bit late in the game on the Ye Are Gods recordings cuz the songs were already done, so she had to fit what was there. This time we built our sound around her; we are so grateful to have her in the band. We took months making demos and sending them back and forth to her (between New York City and Texas where she lives), not rushing anything, so we could craft each track carefully, giving them each a unique voice.

 

Restored to One, the album with Jex, was much more experimental in that she and I had been working with a huge variety of musicians in developing the songs, and the recording of the album was almost improvised with a couple of last minute hired-gun jazz musicians. And Jex was eager to get back to her own project. Now, Jamie and I are in this for the long haul, so we’re really working on a true band dynamic.

 

There are many guest performances on Quaternity. Can you describe how some of these came about?

Daron Beck has been Jamie’s friend and neighbor since they were kids, and we have both been long time admirers of his voice and his band Pinkish Black. Mat and Marja from Hexvessel are total cohorts in the world of ‘holy rock n roll” so including them was an obvious choice, which led to our subsequent tour.

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You have performed on stage with several metal bands despite your music having no obvious metallic sounds. What kind of reaction have you had from metal audiences?

Metalheads love Satan, so anytime we sing about Satan they are happy. And Jamie hates singing about Jesus so we don’t really do that much anymore, ha. Even though our music doesn’t sound metal exactly, she and our guitarist Kevin Hufnagel (Gorguts, Dysrhythmia) and I were all born and raised on distorted power chords and double bass, so we’d like to think the spirit of metal is in there. If you check out what’s “metal” going back the last nearly 40 years there’s a pretty big variety so we are thrilled to be part of it’s ongoing development.

Is there a limited number of hymns for you to adapt on further recordings or will you be able to continue Sabbath Assembly with music inspired by the Church or similar?

The next album is going to be all original tunes, inspired by our time working with the Church, but completely separate from it.

 

 

Do you have a dream artist or band to collaborate with, that you have yet to?

Honestly we’re done collaborating. Our unit is so tight right now that we don’t need any extra assistance.

What touring plans, if any do you have on tap for 2014?

We are touring Northern Europe in May, beginning at the Heavy Days of Doom Town fest in Copenhagen on May 4th. See you there!

 

 

Why should readers of Ghost Cult check out Sabbath Assembly?

Our goal is to create beautiful and uplifting music that supports all your angels and demons. The intention is to be affirming of wherever you’re at.

 

Sabbath Assembly on Facebook

 

JAMES CONWAY

 


Artistic Integrity- David Vincent of Morbid Angel


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Morbid Angel reached a major milestone as their 1993 release Covenant turned 20 years old. Being one of the band’s biggest records, they chose to perform the record in its entirety and highlight this grand moment.

Band vocalist and bassist David Vincent explained how this idea came about. “It just happened to be the 20th anniversary so it seemed like a fitting time to revisit it ourselves.”

We’ve had some of the songs from that record have been in the set over time. It’s difficult putting a set together. Once you have so many records out, then you look at some of these things and this is how it goes. Doing a themed tour like this…I know a lot of bands do it, but it almost gives you a chance to be like ‘here’s what we’re doing..’ and here’s the theme of the tour. We had additional material following the Covenant set. Some of these songs we haven’t played [in a while] and some we’ve never played. We’re having a good time.”

Many of the songs from that record have not been regular songs in their set list or simply have never been played live. They spent time relearning the tunes as part of this special moment.

Everyone in the band is an accomplished musician so it was just adjusting a few things, rehearing and everyone owning their parts. Obviously Timothy (Yeung) and Thor (Anders Myhren – Destructhor) were not on that record but they’re both accomplished musicians. There were no challenges. It was just getting everything where it fits in and everyone owns it as much as any other material.”

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One member missing from that era is drummer Pete Sandoval, who has not performed with Morbid Angel for a few years. While some fans may have missed his lightning fast drumming to the classic tunes, Vincent summed up his thoughts on his former band mate.

Listen, I don’t cry over spilled milk. Life presents challenges and real men look at the challenges and find a way to navigate through them. Life is like a minefield. You can get caught up in one thing and blow yourself up, or you can navigate through things the best that you can. That’s the best answer I can come up with.”

Covenant was Morbid Angel’s first record that came out originally on the major label Giant Records, a then-subsidiary of Warner Brothers, which had on its roster such acts as Kenny Rogers, Oingo Boingo and Brian Wilson. A surprise choice to sign with at the time, they found themselves with a golden opportunity unlike before, despite having no real track record for signing metal bands of any sort and especially death metal.

We had a very good team. Our manager, it was his deal. He worked on that and that was a big win. But it’s no individual that just did this. It’s not just the band. The band, the band’s management, our support crew, the label itself, the people who took the chances on us….it’s a lot of people that it takes to make some of these things happen. Somehow the stars aligned and we got an opportunity and we took it. It ended up part of the ride,” he said.

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Vincent recalls the time working on the Covenant record. “Reminds me how old I am!

No, listen, all of these records again…everything we’ve done had its place in time. That was reflective of where we were at that time. Fond memories. That was an awful lot of opportunities that opened up for us with that record. We had some great videos. Obviously we were part of the Warner Brothers family for that and they managed to get us into…it was an admission ticket into a larger swimming pool. You don’t get life preservers but you get permission to swim in a larger pool. We’re thankful for the opportunity. We had a very good team and they were part of it.”

They chose to work with producer Flemming Rasmussen on Covenant, known for his work on the Metallica records. Vincent talked about how that came about.

We talked about doing this a little different. We still recorded at Morrisound…the tracking. We thought it would be neat to bring in someone else. He hadn’t done anything quite…I mean Metallica, they’re a heavy band…they’re not Morbid Angel. I think it was interesting for him. We all had a good time. We all got along real well with him. I really enjoyed working with him. He’s a great guy.”

Rasmussen had his ways of recording but generally gave the band the freedom to do things their way. But throughout the recording, he did have little things he wanted done his way in order for him to capture their sound.

He came over and was very specific about how he wanted the drums to be recorded. He listened to us and he went into the studio. That was his biggest thing is how to get the drums. At this time, there were no Pro Tools. This was on two inch tape. So he was very specific and was there throughout the process of the drums. He made a few suggestions but we had the rest of it down. His main concern was getting the drums down in such a way that where he didn’t have to do so much work splicing tape and making sure the takes were organized in such a way where he could do what he needed to do during the mixing process.”

morbid angel logo

No one could have predicted the impact the Covenant record would have upon the death metal world and its influence it would have on future generation of musicians. 20 years later and it is still one of the more common records which has had its impact felt.

Listen, obviously everybody’s out to conquer the world. But we’re much more internal with the way we think about things. We look from within rather that look at what someone else is doing and try to follow. We’ve always paved our own way. And this was no different. But obviously we had these additional opportunities that opened up for being part of the Warner family. Big video budgets and larger touring opportunities – we were looking forward to doing the best we could pushing what we do as far as what we could push it, and retaining our identity.”

A lot of times when people get put into a certain situation, then some things about their artistic integrity change. We were bound to determine that would not be the case.”

Despite the success of Covenant, Morbid Angel is arguably one of the biggest death metal bands around and continues to influence musicians of all eras. Vincent gave his thoughts on Morbid Angel’s impact on death metal.

We have our own sound. In all honesty, back in the early years, I think everybody had their own sound. Things are a lot more amalgamated and homogenized these days. When we were doing what we do, we sounded a lot different. I’m thinking about a lot of the other Florida area bands, like Chuck Schuldiner, Obituary…some of the other bands….we all sounded different. I think it’s about we did our own thing and they picked up on it.”

Morbid Angel on Facebook

by Rei Nishimoto


Beneath The Mask – An Interview with Ghost


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As we sat in the upstairs bar of Manchester’s Academy, the venue which plays host to Grunge legends Alice In Chains and all-star Seattle outfit Walking Papers, Ghost Cult is greeted by a member of rock’s most mysterious and clandestine coven, namely Ghost.Continue reading


INTERVIEW: Wolves, Not Sheep – An Interview With Watain


watain album coverIf anyone knows what evil lurks in the heart of mankind, it is Erik Danielsson of Watain. He has been a student and a teacher to a legion of followers who have ravenously devoured his music, and words like a delicious meal. With their recent album The Wild Hunt (Century Media), Danielsson continues to defy expectations and innovate musically like few other bands in the genre after over fifteen years in existence. Erik chatted with Raymond Westland about the new album, Satanism, misconceptions about his beliefs, and many other topics.

The Wild Hunt should be seen as a stand alone release and not so much as a continuation from the previous works. Can you clarify this, please?Continue reading


Ghost B.C. – If You Have Ghost (EP)


CDI have been asked more about the Ghost B.C. the last few years , and what I think of them as a legitimate band than any other question about music. Insanely catchy, totally blasphemous, and seemingly playing a joke on all of the humorless hipsters and elitists who hate them more than a tech death fan hates emo kids moshing at a show. While part of me says all of Ghosts entire being is gimmicky, and the band would be just solid if it were a bunch of dudes, there is no denying the quality of the players, or the songs. When the dust settles years from now, I believe they will be remembered for the impact they made on this era of music, and not the aura and schtick that makes people discount them.

 

This EP is really not that much different than their other recorded covers, or really any of their recorded output. Except that this EP was produced by Dave Grohl, and these are some of the best and most fun covers the band has done to date. The title track is the Roky Erickson song ‘If You Have Ghosts’ which is pretty evil sounding compared with the original. They give it their own bombastic treatment, as you’d expect them to, and it works well. Despite the hilarity of the idea of this band covering ABBA, I can’t really get past the fact that I hate ABBA deeply, as every self-respecting metal fan ought to. Still, ‘I’m A Marionette’ works as a cover, and I suspect this will be the big hit that carries this album. Army of Lovers‘ ‘Crucified’ has no irony at all actually, and is also one of the top songs herein. The best cover, and perhaps the best cover the band has done is Depeche Mode’s ‘Waiting For The Night’. This rendering is down right bliss inducing, whether you count yourself a DM fan, or not. The live version of ‘Secular Haze’ from Infestissumam is solid. Sonically the cross between the carny vibe and church music is great, and just cements the intelligence of the band to me. Once again, nothing new from this band, but still enjoyable.

 

 

8.5/10

 

Ghost B.C. on Facebook

 

Keith (Keefy) Chachkes

 


Watain – In Solitude – Tribulation: Live At The Underground Arts, Philadelphia, PA USA


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Outside the Underground Arts in Philadelphia, a line of people dressed to the nines in black garb waited for the doors to open. A collection of people sported vests and jackets with numerous patches on them, a testament to their devout following of the metal genre. In the middle of the line a twenty-something sold various patches, each one carefully placed on a slab of cardboard. The breezy, chilly night tore through the line. They all waited patiently for the doors to open.

 

 

 

 

 

When they finally did, after what seemed like an eternity, the patrons filed in one by one, handing the doorman their identification. They walked through two large gates, down a flight of stairs that curled round and descended again. At the foot of the second flight stood the entrance to the basement. On the right was the ticket merchant, selling entrance to the show for twenty-five dollars. Inside, the patrons made their way to the bar, loading up on alcohol before the nights festivities began. It was an eclectic selection of drinks — various tapped beers and second-tier liquors. Over on the back wall sat the merchandise table, peddling various t-shirts and gramophone records. After the patrons had alcohol in them, they wandered over to the table, dropping hard-earned dollars on band goodies.

 

The first act to grace the stage was Tribulation, and they played well. Heavy riffs washed over the set, coupled with the urgent speed and intensity. Johannes Andersson’s growls were raw and aggressive. Tribulation is primarily death metal, but there were tinges of black metal mixed in to create a whole sound. Buttressed by the speedy, all-out-attack guitarwork of Jonathan Hultén, the band carried on their half-hour set, full of smoke machines and bright red lighting. The crowd did not seem into it — they were amped up for what would come later on in the evening.

 

In Solitude came on next. Their new release on Metal Blade Records, Sister, hit quite a high mark in terms of reviews, but overall the band was extremely boring. Their vocalist, Pelle Åhman, looked drunk; he wobbled around on stage and sung inaudible lyrics. Musically, their style is straight “heavy metal” (whatever that means), with added influence from gothic rock acts of the 80s. The crowd was more into it, throwing up the metal sign of appreciation. Their set seemed to drag on endlessly. Their set list mixed some of the old with the new — about halfway through their set they played the title track of the new album, which sounded underwhelming. In Solitude was difficult to suffer through; they are not the great band everyone claims them to be. They might attract a lot of people with their sound, how different it is from the rest of pack, but all-in-all In Solitude is a lackluster band with mediocre musicianship and a sound that translates to dull.

 

After the Swedish quintet quit the stage, the crewmen began to set up the upside-down crosses on the stage. They took down the giant In Solitude banner that hung behind the drumkit, and moved the props into position. In front of the drumkit, nestled on the back of the stage, stood an altar with various cups and swords placed on top. As the clock drew closer to ten-thirty, the lights went out and over the various cheers in the crowd and the PA system blaring, Watain took the stage. Dressed in their usual attire of corpsepaint and blood, they started their decimation of the Underground Arts. The floor, packed with drunken metalheads, tore open; the pit engulfed stragglers who came there to just see the group perform. One large and very drunk gentleman began to tackle everyone within his reach, dragging them down onto the concrete floor. Some punches were thrown before the Watain crew stepped in to separate the aggressor from his victim. This continued to happen for some time; the pit grew larger in size and bodies crashed against each other, charging one-on-one like soldiers running into battle. Up on stage, Watain scurried through some of their back catalog before playing new tracks from The Wild Hunt. The overall sound was not up to snuff with the album quality, and with the lack of burning items and animal heads skewered on stakes, the whole ambience of the performance could best be described as lackluster. The mics were too low, the bass cranked up too high, and the guitars churned out black metal tremolos that just blended in with the cacophony. Watain is known for their use of props and elaborate stage presence, but here in the basement of the Underground Arts, they were met with flashing lights and the overused smoke machine, leaving very little room for their whole “Satanic” persona to breathe. The raucous crowd ate it up though, even if the set felt rushed and a trifle boring.

 

The show ended. The bands all packed their gear and props in their tour vans, the merchandise assorted into boxes and put in each van accordingly. The crowd thinned; a few stragglers were left at the bar, drinking away the rest of the evening. Eventually, the doors to the Underground Arts would close. The once inviting gates would be locked, and all that would be left were memories. The patrons would go off into that good night, yearning for another concert and venue, one that would certainly top this.

 

Watain/In Solitude/Tribulation

The Underground Arts, Philadelphia, PA

October 9th, 2013

 

Watain on Facebook

Words: Bill Haff