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Written by Joe Henley
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Thursday, 21 January 2010 02:17 |
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If the world were like an Ensiferum album, the planet would be a far better, if far less productive place. Twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, cavernous mead halls with perfect acoustics would play host to raucous, spirit-lifting minstrels playing for the well-lubricated audience drinking continually if only to fend off a hangover that, remarkably, never seems to come. Buxom wenches and steel-jawed folk heroes would swing their steins to the pulse-pounding mix of folk melodies and metallic speed incorporated into Ensiferum's special blend of heroic Finnish folk metal, with kilts flying, heads windmilling and horns thrown all around. Yes, if Valhalla is a pub, then Ensiferum would be the house band. And though the band testifies that in their home country they are not well received, playing just one, albeit sold-out, gig per year in Helsinki, the Finnish five-piece has been welcomed with open arms and full mugs all around the world. Recognition at home has come in 2010 as well, with the band being nominated for an EMMA, the Finnish equivalent of a Grammy, for best metal album alongside such well-established acts as Sonata Arctica and Amorphis. And with an ever-evolving sound that seems to grow in scope with each successive album, and their latest offering, 2009's From Afar, even incorporating epic orchestrations that, while not real, are strong enough to have fooled even the most discriminating ears, Ensiferum is yet another band from Finland whose career is definitely on the upswing. Front man and guitarist Petri Lindroos and slightly hung over bassist Sami Hinkka took time to talk to Fight magazine before Ensiferum conquered Taipei in mid-January.
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Written by Joe Henley
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Thursday, 31 December 2009 06:52 |
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Cannibal Corpse has gore-soaked perversion and grotesque stories of the macabre. Alestorm and Swashbuckle have tales of the high seas, rum, the lash, and the pirate code. Tankard has beer, and lots of it. Gorgoroth, lineup changes notwithstanding, has the market cornered on all things satanic. In other words, the list of bands that have worked themselves into a productive, career-spanning niche goes on for miles. And near the top of that list, both alphabetically and in terms of modern-day success, would be Viking metal band Amon Amarth. Far from being limited by their chosen vehicle of expression, that obviously being Viking history and Norse mythology, imposing, perpetually long-bearded, and utterly affable front man Johan Hegg and his horde of pillaging comrades have carved out a career that is only now reaching the heights that they always thought they should be reaching.
With their latest album, Twilight of the Thunder God, a masterful work of melodic death metal, once again seeing Amon Amarth take a step in the right direction creatively and musically, there seems to be no stopping this tight-knit band of Viking warriors who, alarmingly, almost laid down their swords, shields, and horns of mead in 2002 following the release of Versus the World, the band’s fourth album for long-time label Metal Blade. But since those dark times Oden has smiled on the synchronized headbanging Swedes, and he and the rest of the Norse gods now seem to be firmly on their side. Hegg shared his thoughts on Amon Amarth’s journey thus far with Fight magazine before the mighty Norsemen played in Taipei in early December.
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Written by Joe Henley
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Tuesday, 24 November 2009 00:00 |
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It goes without saying that a lot can change in 17 years. Seventeen years ago, Skid Row came to Taiwan for the first time and played to a rabid crowd of approximately 5,000 at a concert hall in Taipei County, according to die hard local fans. The members of the band certainly didn’t know then that it would be nearly two decades before those who would actually stick it out with Skid Row would return, nor could they have known that, just a few years after they first graced Taiwan’s shores, their original front man and fan focal point, one Sebastian Bach, would be gone, to be followed later by drummer Rob Affuso. And they definitely couldn’t have been aware that their second sojourn to Taiwan would see the show location shift to a much smaller venue in Taipei City, and the crowd shrink to a size of three hundred-plus. After all, back then Skid Row were riding high on the strength of their second album, Slave to the Grind, which went double platinum and made it all the way to the top of the Billboard Top 200 Chart. Why think about the descent when the climb to the top has just begun? But such is the nature of the music business that though the ascent may be long and arduous, the descent will likely be quick and unheralded.
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Written by Joe Henley
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Monday, 23 November 2009 00:00 |
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Even on a day when Michael Amott is seriously sleep deprived, the confidence the flame-haired, soft-spoken guitar hero has in his body of work and his band still comes through loud and clear in every carefully considered word. After playing Japan’s Loud Park Festival this past October, he and the rest of Arch Enemy caught an early morning flight to Taipei the following day, returning to play to their rapidly growing fan base on the island two years since their first visit with but a few precious moments of sleep snuck in here and there. Before their blistering performance, a bleary-eyed yet remarkably coherent Amott talked to Fight magazine about Arch Enemy’s latest album, The Root of All Evil, a disc comprised of re-recordings of songs originally done with the band’s first vocalist, Johan Liiva, this time with the razor-edged vocals of Angela Gossow, and what goes into each Arch Enemy release.
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Written by Joe Henley
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Sunday, 22 November 2009 00:00 |
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Through broken bones, a suicide attempt, countless miles logged on the road, hundreds of gigs, and a million parties, Finnish shredder Alexi Laiho and his brothers in Children of Bodom have managed to crank out six studio albums of genre-blending, description-defying metal and cement themselves among the mainstays of the modern metal world. With a covers album, Skeletons in the Closet, released in September of 2009 to keep COB fans placated until the release of the follow-up to 2008’s Blooddrunk, COB went on a short Asian tour this past October, which saw them play Japan’s Loud Park Festival alongside other heavy metal heavyweights such as former tour mates Megadeth and Slayer. Following their appearance at Loud Park, COB touched down in Taipei to make their Taiwan debut, and Alexi sat down to chat with Fight magazine before a meet-and-greet with the band’s eager Taiwanese fans.
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