Showing posts with label necro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label necro. Show all posts

Friday, 22 August 2014

Midnite Madness LXII - Demo Entrails VI—Buried and Forgotten


Finally, the semi-classic Demo Entrails is here. I did endeavour to play tracks only from my most-listened-to demos, but a few others snuck in. I could easily do another one, but I am sure you've had enough of the grainy, under-produced sounds of underground 80s death/thrash/speed/black metal for another few months. Perhaps October's show—which is pencilled in as another Live Evil special—will contain the classic 2000s demos I originally thought might make this show, but alas, there was too much demo power in my realm to mix decades on this particular effort.
Thanks to the mystery listeners, as always, and to the power from hell that inspired these demos back in the 80s. I will return at midnite on Tuesday, September 16th, or 00.00 hours Wednesday the 17th. I don't know which date is correct, I am guessing the latter. Confusion aside, there will be more to come, but as yet a theme has not been established. Maybe a death or black metal show, or something less noisy, perhaps. Time waits, for the ripper!

Friday, 16 April 2010

Interview with Attila Csihar

Here is an interview from Vice with Attila Csihar, who of course has laid down vocals for Tormentor, Mayhem, Aborym, and Sunn O))), among others. As regular AFITFOG readers will know, I am a big, big fan of Attila, and his stage performances. For me, he is Mayhem's best ever vocalist. Both times I saw them on the Ordo Ad Chao tour he took showmanship to new heights. Here's what Julien Morel at the French Vice office and Mr. Csihar spoke about...

Where do your costumes come from?
Attila Csihar: Most of the costumes I wear are actually designed by me or are collaborations. A lot of my masks were made by Nader Sadek in New York, and most of my clothes by my friend Mate Benyovszky in Budapest. The last costume I wore with Mayhem was actually a real priest’s funeral outfit. It was like 70 years old and was handmade by nuns. The costume was worn at hundreds, maybe thousands of funerals through the years. I bought it in a Christian store - it was kind of expensive, but it was worth it since it's really beautiful. Of course, I didn’t say why I was buying it. I had to lie and say I was working on a film. But I think the church lies to us too, so it’s alright.
Over the years you’ve worn a lot of costumes. How many do you have?
I've never counted. Making the costumes happen is a crazy amount of work. My live concept for the latest Mayhem record, Ordo Ad Chao, was to use different costumes and outfits for each show. It was an almost impossible task. I had to think about it all in advance and make a lot of plans and preparations for the daily shows. I really do like challenges so it was worth it, but I’m not doing it anymore.

Of all your costumes, which is your favourite?
Well, there were so many favourites. There was Dr. Pig - a scalped pig’s face I wore over my own face. It was a huge scandal in Sweden. The Mummy - that went with an onstage time machine. The Pimp was good, and the Slavetrader, I had a black guy on a leash for that. He was a bit worried when I tried to sell him during the show, but he was cool really - he knew it wasn’t a racist thing. People in Tel Aviv and Moscow really loved The Dictator, and there were others too: De Gaulle and Alien. I rose from an onstage coffin for Satan Klaus, and there was also Quasimodo.

The spookiest?
The Invisible Man.

 The most expensive?
Most expensive was maybe The Broken-Mirror Man, and the funeral priest costume.

The worst?
I like to challenge the audience, so the worst thing for me is going on stage with something that has been seen a million times before, like corpse paint. Actually, the first time I wore corpse paint was in 1987 with my band Tormentor. Alien Sex Fiend were using white make-up, so I started to wear a white base and put black make-up on top, around the eyes and the mouth. When Dead did a similar thing in the early 90s, he was the first to label that make-up technique "corpse paint". It was cool then.

I read somewhere that as a vegetarian you were grossed out by the dead pig’s face.
No, we were supposed to be forcing the public to look death in the face.
 What about the incredible frozen tree costume?
When Sunn O))) saw my costumes they were really impressed. For their tour, the concepts behind the costumes had to have a totally different meaning. The tree was about transformation. During the show, I gradually transform from a human into a plant.

What's the most money you've ever spent on a costume?

I would like to keep that secret, but some costumes were expensive. However, I think the idea behind them is much more important than the money.
Is it all about costumes with you, or do you like mainstream fashion. Do you do casual?
I do like fashion. For normal everyday wear, I like some of the Cyberdog clothes, but not everything they do.
Is there a costume you’d like to wear but which is just too expensive, or made out of something too rare, or is one that somebody has worn already?
Yes, of course. I talked to Banks Violette about making something that would make me look like I was performing in another dimension. I wanted to levitate in a huge, on-stage aquarium filled with liquid, wearing deep-diving gear. We planned to have strange or weird sea animals swimming around, like ink fishes, octopuses and horseshoe crabs, for instance. I wanted a spacesuit but they are extremely expensive. Huge crystals could be good too for appearing as a fossil. The ideas are endless, but the costumes have to have meaning. Recently people started to expect the costumes and my main philosophy in music and art is freedom. When I feel any force or pressure to do something, I move on to the next thing. The music is the most important part for me.

INTERVIEW JULIAN MOREL

Saturday, 1 August 2009

Watch Blue Velvet, Wild At Heart, Lost Highway & Hotel Room

Maybe Lynch's three greatest movies. Wild At Heart will always be my favourite, the car crash scene with Sherilyn Fenn is easily the hottest thing of all time. Well, it challenges Salma Hayek's snakedance in From Dusk Till Dawn anyways. Oh, and Powermad are in it too...

Blue Velvet (1986) David Lynch (USA)
Blue Velvet

Wild At Heart (1990) David Lynch (USA)
Wild At Heart

Lost Highway (1997) David Lynch (USA)
Lost Highway

Also, I only recently got acquainted with a HBO show Mr. Lynch did after Twin Peaks called Hotel Room, it ran for 3 episodes, Lynch directing both the first and third installment. To be honest they're pretty weird 30 min short stories, the last featuring Crispin Glover and an enchanting Alicia Witt being my favourite.

David Lynch's Hotel Room (1993) David Lynch (USA)
David Lynch's Hotel Room
Here is a link to Hotel Room in 8 RapidShare parts.

Wednesday, 15 April 2009

Dead Baby On A Stick

So recently a friend of mine (let's just call her Nell McAndrew) recalled a harrowing experience they had whilst in Africa; a roadside beggar with a dead baby on a stick as bait. Yes, really. I was as perplexed as you are so I got them to draw a picture and I got an account of said harrowing experience...
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Me: So, what's this picture all about
Nell McAndrew: It represents the plight of the Africans in 3rd world Africa, conveyed through an artistic medium

Did you really encounter squalor as heinous as this in the 'motherland'?
I did. It was a turning point for me in my life. It made me appreciate the little things in my life. Like the fact the only things I usually see on sticks is candy floss or ice lollies. Not babies

Hahaha how old where you when this was presented to you like an unwanted birthday gift from a paedo uncle?
Hahahaha stop! I was about ten years old, it has haunted me ever since. It was then the childhood innocence was ripped from my eyes

What did you say to people back home about your horrific encounter? Or were you too embarrassed to speak about it
I wasn't embarrassed, no it was more a sick sense of realization. It was like when you find out Santa isn't real. But you find out some people beg using babies on sticks as sympathy tools to earn more money
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Did you find out Santa wasn't real before or after this? I guess Santa wasn't really relevant after a dead baby on a stick right
Exactly. Santa was far from my mind. Now the only thing coming down my chimney was a steaming pile of guilt topped off with a baby on a stick

Have you ever thought about going back to Africa and getting a witch doctor to exorcise the visuals from your mind?
Maybe next year? Its always a thought
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Tuesday, 17 March 2009

A FIST IN THE FACE OF GOD

I was just thinking the other day how thrash bands always have a self titled track and how real that is so here's a self titled blog instead. Anyway, apparently 'they' did a survey in 2005 throughout Europe asking people if they believed in God or not and here are the answers. Well done to the Czech Republic by the way

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Maybe there should be more of these in London...

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Saturday, 20 December 2008

Interview with Hoest of Taake

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Here's an interview I did for the Vice blog recently with Hoest of Taake.

Me- There was an amazing live version of 'Voldtekt' on the Norsk Svart Metall compilation, along with your new record do you think that it represents some kind of third wave of black metal?

Hoest- I don’t think in terms of 'waves' or whatever. To me it just seems like one big continuous wave. I don’t think black metal should achieve anything either, except reminding people that Hell is right here on earth and that people can be demons if they just sell their souls to The Devil.

Right. So it’s all happening right here on Earth. If there was a black metal version of the bible you’ve been around pretty much since Genesis. How do you feel about what has happened to black metal since then?
Too many people got involved and then there were too many ideas on how to do things. The best bands were the first ones and most of them changed too quickly into meaningless nonsense. A lot of bands lost their focus and ideals and fucked up something we could have been very proud of. The glory days are long gone. But at least some bands are still on to something.

Who’s still making stuff that isn’t 'meaningless nonsense'?
Orcustus, Aura Noir, Urgehal, Nattefrost/Carpathian Forest, Deathcult, Secht, Dead to this World, Amok and Slavia.

Yourself, Natteforst and Darkthrone particularly have taken on a much punkier sound, atypical to most recent black metal. The latest Darkthrone basically sounds like Motorhead doing Exploited covers.
Taake has had such elements on each release, it is merely a coincidence that there is a bit more of them in the newest material. I always felt that the punk influence should be kept alive, as it is evident in the old black metal roots. Look at bands like Venom, Hellhammer, Bathory, Sodom and so on.

Yourself and Nattefrost in particular seem hell bent on pissing basically everyone off fairly indescriminently. You even stated that with the Nekro EP you'd hoped to lose fans. Erm, what’s up with that?
Black metal is a magnet for idiots and I’m embarrassed about being enjoyed by so many useless people who don’t really understand what Taake is about. I’d rather have an audience of quality than quantity. I have always felt that black metal should be something for a few especially interested people.

Do you think that the German public overreacted over the whole kerfuffle in Essen last year (in March '07 he went on stage with a swastika painted on his chest in Germany)?
Yes indeed, I never expected such overblown reactions. But the weirdest thing is that most people seemed to react because displaying a swastika is against the law in Germany. When have I ever cared about the law?

Were you surprised by Kreator's intervention?
At first, yes. But then I was told that they use their music as a tool to fight fascism. I think I heard them introducing “Pleasure to Kill” at a concert though with: “are you ready to kill? Are you ready to kill each other?”. Maybe they should be boycotted for saying things like that. But of course, no one takes talk of killing seriously these days and we certainly know that those wimps don’t mean anything by it. Time to retire, boys.

Do you think prison has made you more determined to make your point?
No, my times in jail hasn’t changed me in any way apart from becoming increasingly bitter towards the Norwegian court system every time I go through it.

How does the ever expanding escalation of celebrity culture sit with you? I can’t imagine you sitting at home checking out the X Factor over a Domino’s.
You lose me again, I don’t know what X-Factor is. I live in my own little world and don’t give a shit what the rest of the world is up to.

Terrorizer ranked you joint 6th "most evil person on the planet" with Osama Bin Laden last year. How do you feel about not cracking the top 5?
I can’t take such a readers’ poll seriously, It’s just a big joke being on the same list as Sharon Osbourne and George W. Bush.

Varg is due out of prison soon, what are your predictions of what shenanigans he’ll get up to on his release?
I have absolutely no idea and am not particularly curious either. I heard someone say he will continue with music. Although I enjoy many old Burzum tracks, I don’t have any expectations that he will create musical magic again.

Where do you see Taake going for the future?
Straight to Hell.



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Friday, 28 November 2008

The Origin of the True Thumbs Down, One Year On...

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So it was this time last year, in the unholy year of 2007, that the true meaning of thumbs down became apparent in a place called the Button Factory (not very nekro) in Dublin. The deliverer of such an evangelical revelation was none other than Attila Csihar, Mayhem's enigmatic Hungarian frontman. We all know what thumbs down means as a general, worldwide rule, up for good, down for bad. Atilla somehow managed to redefine thumbs down and give it a completely new meaning. His onstage 'altar' comprised of two pigs heads, two candlesticks and a plug-in globe that he would spin maniacally, stop at a random part of the world and give it the unholy thumbs down. It was at that point that I knew...



If you can't be bothered to watch the below in its entirity go to about 4:50 to witness the most unholy, double-thumbs-down-in-a-candle mankind has ever seen...


Original tour poster
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Apparently he was dressing as different people throughout history on the Ordo Ad Chao tour, here's a few of the most thumbs down ones I found here
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'Darkness will show us the way...'

Friday, 5 September 2008

Neseblod Records

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Click here to see the full pictorial.

Here is their FAQ...

What is Neseblod?
-Neseblod is a recordshop located downtown Oslo, that buy, trade and sell records.

Are we nekro?
-Yes

There it is.

Sunday, 24 August 2008

I Can Give A Dead Man Almost Any Look

I went to check out the Hunterian exhibit at the Royal College of Surgeons which is located next to Lincoln's Inn Fields and let me tell you, this is one very necro place. It comprises the collections of John Hunter and Richard Owen. Photography was obviously prohibited but I took some cheeky shots with my BlackBerry...

This was a rodent of some sort just hanging out, exposing his innards

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A really gnarly looking cuttlefish

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A beaver's jaw avec overgrown incisor

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A baby alligator/crocodile splaying

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This was some sort of dog I think which looks to have more inside somehow. Well done buddy

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A baby's vein system

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Some fucking good draftsmanship

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A 'portrait' of a girl called Mary Sabina who had the skin pigmentation condition piebaldism. This is a genetic disorder that causes an absence of melanin in certain areas of the skin and hair. Michael Jackson 'had' it apparently

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Something imaginatively titled 'Boys Face', which was just a boy's er, face

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And finally, a dismembered foetus showing all the good stuff. Not sure why this was necessary it looked pretty grim I guess, foetal juice anyone?

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There was actually a bunch more foetuses there but they were real close to the desk where Reginald and Dorris were having a ball so I decided not to negate their fun by being a cunt and flaunting their no photography policy. Well not right in front of them anyway. Upstairs was some human surgery exhibit but the whole surgery thing kinda darks me out so I thought it best to just leave. Go check it out. Oh and it's free.