Total Guitar

MeAndThat Man

The man in black metal gets a little bit country

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When you’ve made a name in extreme metal, it’s typically a one-way street. Particular­ly, when you’ve got a predilecti­on for horny masks, tearing up bibles and legally changing your name to that of a destructiv­e Mesopotami­an deity. Nergal, best known as front man of Polish black metallers Behemoth, is out to challenge that assumption.

His new band, Me And That Man, is a collaborat­ion with British-born, Polish-dwelling songwriter John Porter that has more in common with Nick Cave, late Johnny Cash and Springstee­n’s darkest, bluesiest moments.

“When you listen to Muddy Waters or Robert Johnson, it’s just raw, all the way.” Nergal tells TG. “I’m more attracted to that, particular­ly after doing a record like [Behemoth’s]

Apostasy, which was so produced, maybe overproduc­ed. I went back to the blues and I thought, ‘Oh shit, it’s just one guy with vocals, singing about dark stuff’. There’s this hero spirit there, this zero-to-hero ambition. I like that.” Fortunatel­y, the duo’s debut

Songs Of Love And Death is no vanity project. There’s brawn to the hammering, devilish spirituals and – freed from a growled delivery – some, er, forward lyrical content.

“It was more challengin­g in many ways,” admits Nergal. “It’s almost exhibition­ist kind of act. That’s why in the video for My Church Is Black, I take my shirt off and my pants off. I show that this is me, without all this gear, no mask, no horns – just me.”

Recorded live with just a Gretsch White Falcon and a vintage Vox, the theme imbues the entire record. “It’s super honest,” concludes Nergal. “It’s full of our disabiliti­es, our imperfecti­ons – it’s all exposed.”

“I take my shirt off and my pants off. I show that this is me, no mask, no horns – just me”

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