Sunday, January 27, 2013

Tom G. Warrior (Celtic Frost) - The Book of Armageddon # 1 - 1986

Tom G. Warrior, probably ca. 1984
 So since I'm in the mood for adding much-needed pieces with bands that either pioneered black metal or were heavily influential on those who did, here's a short little number with Tom Warrior of Hellhammer/Celtic Frost from 1986 (!) in The Book of Armageddon # 1.

Tom G. Warrior (Celtic Frost) - The Book of Armageddon # 1 - 1986


AEon

Hellhammer - Satanic Rites (demo) - 1983


 

I said for a long time that I wasn't going to do this, but what do you know?  Here's hoping this works out, if you know what I mean.

This should need no introduction.  It's an absolute classic and had a massive influence on every single one of the Norwegian bands, as well as the Poles and the French.  It's beyond primitive, it's beyond crude, and it's stellar.  You're welcome.



Æon

Friday, January 25, 2013

Quorthon (Bathory) - Brain Damage # 2 - 1985


Qurothon, ca. 1984

It dawned on me just a day or two ago that I still hadn't posted an interview conducted with Quorthon of Bathory, who probably more than any other single person has the most to answer for with regard to the Norwegian, and thus worldwide, black metal explosion.  I've got several interviews with the man, who died quite unexpectedly in 2004 from heart failure, but the one I've chosen for the time being - from 1985 - is the oldest that I could find, and here at Blackened Relics we're (I'm) all about old shit.

Quorthon, ca. 1984

Quorthon (Bathory) - Brain Damage # 2 - 1985

Meanwhile, I feel it only right that this also be made available here for those whose hearing has yet to be ruined by it.  It needs little introduction, and is quite possibly the single most seminal recording in black metal's entire history.



 Bathory - Bathory - 1984

Quorthon, ca. 1984

Quorthon, probably ca. 1984-1985


Æon

Saturday, January 19, 2013

Vorphalack (Samael) - Holocaust # 5 - 1991


In case you hadn't noticed, the Polish Holocaust 'zine definitely had its finger on the pulse of the burgeoning black metal movement well before many other publications who were, in 1991, still featuring predominantly standard death metal.

Samael, meanwhile, have long since gone on to pastures anew and avant-garde, but they begin in the late 1980s in Switzerland as a seminal second wave black metal act with a series of renowned and influential demos before at last unleashing their debut Worship Him on Osmose in 1991.  The album is incredibly dark, albeit primitive even by early black metal standards, being most heavily indebted to Hellhammer and Celtic Frost's slowest dirges and bearing only moderate resemblance to the sort of Bathory-cum-Sodom-on-phencyclidine black metal that the Scandinavians were about to thrust down the maw of the underground.  Still, it is absolutely essential listening, particularly bearing in mind that it and the songs featured thereon predate even Darkthrone's A Blaze in the Northern Sky.

Here, then, is featured an interview with guitarist/vocalist Vorphalack, conducted not long after the release of Worship Him in 1991 in Holocaust # 5.

Vorphalack (Samael) - Holocaust # 5 - 1991


AEon

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Mutilator (Rotting Christ) - Descrator # 2 - 1992


It's probably no secret by now that I'm very, very partial to the old Norwegian bands, followed closely thereby by the French Black Legions.  However, for those of you who don't know, Greece had a pretty thriving black metal scene that happened concurrently with the Scandinavian explosion, even predating it in some cases.  The best of those bands by far was Rotting Christ, whose debut Thy Mighty Contract is an absolute classic, not to mention the preceding EP Passage to Arcturo and demo Satanas Tedeum (my personal favorite of their demos), all black as pitch yet superficially miles removed from the frigid sounds of the Norwegians and Swedes.  Thus, I've transcribed an interview with original bassist Mutilator from the 2nd issue of the Polish Desecrator 'zine from 1992; incidentally, Mutilator also played on fellow Hellenic group Varathron's debut, His Majesty at the Swamp.

Mutilator (Rotting Christ) - Desecrator # 2 - 1992


AEon

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Nominal

The name has been changed to more accurately reflect what this project is about.  Besides, I'd come to find "Black Metal Documents" smacking of drabness, and Blackened Relics has a much nicer (and much more METAL) ring to it.  The URL has been changed as well to reflect this, and is now http://blackenedrelics.blogspot.com.  I'm also attempting to jazz up the place graphically, so things may look a bit silly from time to time.  Bear with me: I'm not remotely well-versed in HTML.

AEon 

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Samoth (Emperor) - Tales of the Macabre # 1 - 1993


Just to demonstrate that I'm serious about this not being dead, here's another old piece conducted with Samoth, guitarist from Emperor, in the first issue of Tales of the Macabre, which I believe was published in late 1993.  The interview was done soon before the release of the debut Emperor full-length, In the Nightside Eclipse.

Samoth (Emperor) - Tales of the Macabre # 1 - 1993


AEon

Sunday, January 13, 2013

Isolate

This is still happening.  Yes, I've posted nothing in a year, but real life happens.  Ten, twelve, thirteen years ago (I'm now 27, 28 in July) this blog would have been my sole activity, but these days, whether I like it or not, I'm grown: I'm married, I have a 'career,' and I run a side-business with my wife which increasingly takes up more and more of my time.  Still, music - above all heavy metal, above all black metal - is yet my greatest passion, just as it was nearly 16 years ago when I heard Emperor for the very first time.

I won't let this project die.  The state of black metal, at least that state by which it's increasingly coming to be known, concerns me.  The other day, I ran into a gentleman in the audience of a show that my wife and I produced, and he discovered that I was partial to black/death/etc. metal.  He was young - barely college-aged - and proceeded to very excitedly tell me about all of the black metal he'd been listening to: Alcest, Amesoeurs, Wolves in the Throne Room, Liturgy, that ilk.  I asked him about Emperor, and he said, "I don't really know much about them, only that they're old."  I asked him about Darkthrone, Mayhem, and Bathory, and he said "I don't know: I've never heard of any of them."

Some months later, I ran into another gentleman at another show, again one that my wife and I had produced, who had sewn a Burzum - Hvis lyset tar oss patch onto the arm of a zip-up hoodie (sp?).  I asked him about it, and he responded verbatim, "What can I say?  I have bad taste."  I raised an eyebrow and smirked, then inquired about his other patch, as I didn't recognize the logo.  "Wolves in the Throne Room," he answered, at which I hesitated before responding, "Of course: I should have known."  I abruptly excused myself.

There is a word that I hesitate to use for these two fellas, one based largely on their attitudes, but those of you who are old enough to know better and present enough to have been paying attention know what it is.  These bands (excluding Burzum, of course), their fans, and the general trend of which they seem to be a part will die out soon enough, and you'll never find any of them, or any groups resembling them, featured here.  I'll never use the terms "atmospheric," "depressive/suicidal," or "post-" to describe some mythological subset of black metal that the generation of listeners discovering this music - our music - of late have been applying in a (vain) attempt to refashion it more suitably in their own image.  Those of us who love honest-to-goodness black metal - unadulterated, untainted, unholy - won't let it die or be replaced or reappropriated.

The flame still burns.


Æon