Deicide (band)
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| Deicide | |
|---|---|
| Also known as | Carnage Amon |
| Origin | Tampa, Florida, United States |
| Genre(s) | Death metal |
| Years active | 1987–present |
| Label(s) | Roadrunner Earache |
| Associated acts | Cannibal Corpse Vital Remains |
| Website | www.deicide.com |
| Members | |
| Glen Benton Jack Owen Steve Asheim |
|
| Former members | |
| Brian Hoffman Eric Hoffman Dave Suzuki Ralph Santolla |
|
Deicide is an American death metal band formed in 1987. The band has sold close to 500,000 releases[1] in the USA since the SoundScan era, making them one of the best selling death metal bands of all time. Their albums Deicide and Legion are also ranked second and third place in best-selling death metal albums of that era.[2]
Contents |
[edit] History
Deicide was formed in Tampa, Florida July 21, 1987, after guitarist Brian Hoffman called Glen Benton, replying to an advertisement the latter had placed in a local music magazine. Within days the band, consisting of Benton (bass/vocals), Hoffman, Hoffman's brother Eric (guitars) and Steve Asheim (drums), had been named Amon after the Egyptian deity.[3] Within a month, Amon had recorded crude Feasting the Beast 8-track demo in Benton's garage and had started playing the occasional gig in the Tampa area.[4] In 1989, Amon recorded their second demo, Sacrificial, at Morrisound with producer Scott Burns.
However, before being known as Amon, the band was known as Carnage: "Carnage consisted of 5 members the 2 members were let go. Glen was found in a local music magazine. We had him play bass. And another singer was hired. He could not phrase properly so he was let go. Then we decided have Glen sing. Amon was brought into this world."- Eric Hoffman[5]
Malevolent Creation guitarist Phil Fasciana recalls an early Amon show: "It was like Slayer intensified a thousand times." "I guess Amon had hollowed out a mannequin and filled it with fuckin' blood and guts from a butcher shop... and then they threw the fuckin' thing on the floor. Morbid Angel had these pit bulls with them back then and they were just tearing the meat up. It was a really weird scene, man. There was blood and meat everywhere."[6]
Benton reportedly stormed into Roadrunner Records' A&R man Monte Connors' office and presented him with the demo, saying, "Sign us, you fucking asshole!" The next day contracts were issued to the band.[7] In 1989 the band's name was changed to Deicide at the request of Roadrunner Records, as Amon was the name of the house in the (then fellow Roadrunner artists) King Diamond album "Them".[citation needed] "Deicide" is defined as the act of killing a being of a divine nature, or a symbolic substitute for such a being; a deicide can also be one concerned in putting such a deity to death.[8] "Me and my first wife were visiting family up in Buffalo and we went over to the city with a copy of the demo. Scott Burns had already sent it to Monte, though, and it was actually sitting on his desk. So I walked in and said, "I'm Glen Benton- here's another tape. Don't be an asshole- sign us. I wasn't even back in Buffalo yet when they called in with the contract offer."
Deicide then released their self-titled debut album, also produced by Scott Burns at Morrisound, in 1990. Their debut featured re-recorded versions of all six of the Sacrificial tunes that had secured them their record deal.
Both Eric and Brian tended to play technical solos at fast speeds and with overlapping riffs, which gave Deicide the definitive heavy sound and complex song structures. This lineup remained intact until November 25, 2004 in the wake of increasing animosity between Glen Benton and the Hoffman brothers - allegedly in regards to royalties and publishing.
On the break up of the original line-up Benton said:
| “ | "It's real simple: Eric Hoffman has a fucking steroid problem, and he's bi-polar. Brian married some young women who's running his life for him. What initially happened is that when our publishing deal ended with Roadrunner, and our new deal started with Earache, we put them on notice that our publishing was no longer gonan be split four ways — it's gonna be based on who writes what. That's the industry standard. Brian writes one song for the album, Eric writes two songs and they wanna get paid for all the songs Steve [Asheim, drums] wrote. That's not fuckin' fair at all, And I wrote all the lyrics, so I'm entitled to 50% of the publishing. Why should I give those two money? They've been losing thousands of dollars for me and Steve for ten years now. If it was one of those things where they showed up and did their jobs, we wouldn't have a fucking problem. That's why the deal we signed [with Roadrunner] in '90 was set up like that. Back then, everybody wrote and contributed and it was a fuckin' group effort. But now me and Steve are the Lennon and McCartney of the band, doing all the writing, and those two wanna get paid for our hard work. Fuck that."[9] | ” |
Shortly after, the guitar roles were then filled by ex-Cannibal Corpse guitarist Jack Owen, and Vital Remains guitarist Dave Suzuki. Following the tour, Suzuki was replaced by Ralph Santolla, formerly of Death, Iced Earth and Sebastian Bach. Santolla stated he is a Catholic and this has received a small amount of shock and ridicule from some metal fans. In spite of this, Deicide's eighth studio album The Stench of Redemption album received rave reviews, and is one of their biggest sellers yet.{Fact|date=July 2007}
On [May 24] [2007], it was announced that Ralph Santolla had left Deicide.[10] Subsequently, he joined Florida's Obituary and appears on their album Xecutioner's Return as well as the tour. Then on July 20, 2007 guitarist Jack Owen (ex-Cannibal Corpse) announced that Deicide is "on hiatus" and he has joined Ohio based death/thrash combo Estuary for touring purposes.[11] The band did a Balkan tour, dubbed "Balkans AssassiNation Tour", in October 2007 alongside Krisiun, Incantation and Inactive Messiah.
By November 2007 Deicide began work on its ninth studio album at Florida's Morrisound Studios. Entitled Till Death Do Us Part, the follow-up to 2006's The Stench of Redemption promises to be Deicide's "most savage and aggressive [offering] to date," according to a press release. Drummer Steve Asheim recorded drum tracks and Benton started recording vocals in December.[12] By April 2008 two songs off this album were posted online.[13]
[edit] Controversy
Deicide has received considerable controversy relating to their albums and lyrics, which include vehement anti-Christian themes. This was reinforced by frontman Glen Benton branding an inverted cross into his forehead. Drummer Asheim of Deicide said "The whole point of Satanic music is to blaspheme against the church", "I don't believe in or worship a devil. Life is short enough without having to waste it doing this whole organised praying, hoping, wishing-type thing on some superior being".[14]
At the Canadian-U.S. border in October 2003 Eric Hoffman and a Deicide crew member were arrested when customs agents found they were in possession of drugs and weapons.[15]
Ostensibly in order to prove his genuine Satanic nature, Benton claimed in the early 1990s that he would commit suicide at the age of 33. However, he passed that age in 2000 and did not commit suicide. In 2006, he stated that these statements had been "asinine remarks" and that "only cowards and losers" choose to kill themselves.[16]
Deicide has been banned from playing in several venues (such as Valparaiso, Chile over a promotional poster featuring Jesus Christ with a bullet hole in his forehead[17] and with various festivals such as Hellfest, after several graves had been spray-painted with "When Satan Rules His World", which is a song from Deicide's 1995 album Once Upon the Cross. More recently, their music video for "Homage for Satan", which features blood-splattered zombies on a rampaging mission to capture a priest, was banned from UK music TV channel Scuzz.[18]
In the early 1990s, Deicide was on tour in Europe with Gorefest, a Dutch death metal band. In Stockholm, and after the first band performed, a bomb was detonated in the club they were playing in. Many people blamed animal rights activists who were angered at Deicide's lyrical themes of animal sacrifice.[19]
[edit] Members
[edit] Current members
- Glen Benton - vocals, bass guitar (1987–present)
- Steve Asheim - drums (1987–present)
- Jack Owen - guitar (2005–present)
[edit] Past members
- Brian Hoffman - guitar (1987–2004)
- Eric Hoffman - guitar (1987–2004)
- Ralph Santolla - lead guitar (2005–2007), session member for Till Death Do Us Part
[edit] Tour members
- Dave Suzuki - guitar (2004–2005)
- Seth Van Loo - vocals (2007), as substitute for Glen Benton
- Garbathy "Yaha" - vocals (2007), as substitute for Glen Benton (after Van Loo)
[edit] Discography
[edit] Studio albums
- Deicide (1990)
- Legion (1992)
- Once Upon the Cross (1995)
- Serpents of the Light (1997)
- Insineratehymn (2000)
- In Torment in Hell (2001)
- Scars of the Crucifix (2004)
- The Stench of Redemption (2006)
- Till Death Do Us Part (2008)
[edit] Compilations
- Amon, Feasting the Beast (1993)
- The Best of Deicide (2003)
[edit] Live albums
- When Satan Lives (1998)
- Doomsday L.A. (2007)
[edit] DVDs
- When London Burns (2006)
- Doomsday L.A. (2007)
[edit] Billboard charts
- 1992 Legion - Heatseekers 16
- 1995 Once Upon the Cross - Heatseekers 22
- 1997 Serpents of the Light - Heatseekers 17
- 2004 Scars of the Crucifix - Top Heatseekers 24
- 2004 Scars of the Crucifix - Top Independent Albums 18
- 2006 The Stench Of Redemption - Top Heatseekers 11
- 2006 The Stench Of Redemption - Top Independent Albums 21
- 2006 The Stench Of Redemption - Top Internet Albums 205
[edit] Further reading
- Mudrian, Albert (2004). Choosing Death:The Improbable History of Death Metal and Grindcore, Feral House, ISBN 1-932595-04-X.
[edit] References
- ^ Includes both CD and VHS sales
- ^ "It's Official: CANNIBAL CORPSE Are The Top-Selling Death Metal Band Of The SoundScan Era", Blabbermouth.net, November 2003. Retrieved on 2008-05-17.
- ^ Mudrian, Albert (2004). In Choosing Death: The Improbable History of Death Metal and Grindcore, Feral House, ISBN 1-932595-04-X, pp. 90-91.
- ^ Mudrian (2004), as above.
- ^ DEICIDE Interview with Eric Hoffman
- ^ "Behind the Crooked Cross." Decibel: 72-78.
- ^ Mudrian (2004), as above, p. 162.
- ^ Merriam-Webster's Online Dictionary definition of 'deicide'
- ^ an interview with Glen Benton from metalunderground.com
- ^ "DEICIDE Parts Ways With Guitarist RALPH SANTOLLA", Blabbermouth.net, May 24, 2007. Retrieved on 2008-05-17.
- ^ "DEICIDE Guitarist JACK OWEN To Tour With ESTUARY", Blabbermouth.net, July 20, 2007. Retrieved on 2008-05-17.
- ^ "DEICIDE's GLEN BENTON Recording Vocals For 'Till Death Do Us Part'", Blabbermouth.net, December 12, 2007. Retrieved on 2008-05-17.
- ^ "DEICIDE: Another New Song Posted Online", Blabbermouth.net, April 17, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-17.
- ^ "Death-metal gods Deicide are the yin to Barry Manilow's yang.", The Sydney Morning Herald, December 1, 2006. Retrieved on 2008-05-17.
- ^ "DEICIDE's Record Label: Canadian Border Incident Was 'A Misunderstanding'", Blabbermouth.net, October 24, 2003. Retrieved on 2008-05-17.
- ^ "DEICIDE Frontman On JON NÖDVEIDT's Suicide: 'Only Cowards And Losers Choose That Option'", Blabbermouth.net, September 7, 2006. Retrieved on 2008-05-17.
- ^ "Deicide banned in Chile", Metal Hammer, 23/02/2006. Retrieved on 2008-05-17.
- ^ "'Homage For Satan' off the air", Metal Hammer, 23/08/2006. Retrieved on 2008-05-17.
- ^ "Deicide Biography", MTV, 2008. Retrieved on 2008-05-17.
[edit] External links
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