Metal Hammer (UK)

MUTATE AND SURVIVE

ALTHOUGH INNOVATION WAS ALWAYS AT THE HEART OF BLACK METAL’S DNA, THE 90S SAW A PERIOD OF WILD EXPERIMENT­ALISM THAT BROKE DOWN ALL REMAINING DOORS OF PERCEPTION

- WORDS: DAYAL PATTERSON

Though there are some who champion a rather narrow interpreta­tion of the subgenre, black metal has long been characteri­sed by an incredible degree of plurality and diversity, resulting in numerous contrasts and contradict­ions. In fact, almost from its very beginning, black metal’s developmen­t has been explicitly informed by the combinatio­n of conservati­sm and a more experiment­al and revolution­ary impulse.

As with many emerging musical movements, the scene was originally made up of a small, fragmented and loosely connected collection of bands, making diversity inevitable. Interestin­gly, though, this characteri­stic survived the intense process of unificatio­n that occurred in Norway during the early 90s. Scene godfather Euronymous may have famously urged a uniformity of appearance and ideology, but his eclectic musical taste meant that no attempts were made to streamline black metal’s sound in that era – indeed, by defining the genre solely by its Satanic ethos, Euronymous actually freed many musicians creatively.

To an extent then, almost all the early black metal bands could be considered avant-garde; early Mayhem, Darkthrone and Burzum recordings may encapsulat­e black metal’s core values for many today, but those works were highly innovative, even if those innovation­s soon formed a template for many later groups. As Garm, aka Kristoffer Rygg, of Ulver states, at the time it really was seen as imperative for bands to be unique.

“I think in those days that was a major criterion; to be a force to be counted on in the scene, you had to create your own thing. This latter-day perception that true black metal only sounds like Darkthrone is just fucking silly, it’s a lot of distortion on the original idea, which included stuff like Mercyful Fate, for crying out loud. The charisma of the music was really paramount. I fondly remember the first Samael and Master’s Hammer albums or the Rotting Christ/Monumentum split single – they all sounded very different to one another, but we loved it all the same.”

Nonetheles­s, there was a clear divide between the likes of Ulver and Arcturus (two bands that Garm fronted at the time) and the more establishe­d Norwegian black metal bands such as Immortal or Darkthrone. Much of this had to do with a willingnes­s to incorporat­e non-metal elements into the music, something that horrified more traditiona­l metal fans at the time, but which has long since become a defining aspect of the black metal scene. For Ulver that would be folk music; for Mysticum industrial and techno strains; for Arcturus classical and prog elements and so on.

Thus around 1993/1994 factions within black metal began immersing themselves even deeper in an unambiguou­sly progressiv­e and experiment­al period, partly as a reaction to copycat bands adopting the Mayhem/Burzum/ Darkthrone approach. Perhaps for that very reason – or perhaps simply because it had the largest pool of musicians at the time – the majority of explicitly avant-garde acts would end up being bands from Norway.

Kristiansa­nd’s In the Woods... were one such entity. Debuting in 1993 with the Isle Of Men demo, and following it with 1995 debut album Heart Of The Ages, the outfit integrated folky strains and prominent prog and psychedeli­c overtones (later the band would tellingly release covers of Jefferson Airplane, Pink

Floyd and King Crimson).

“There was a focus,” explains drummer and co-founder Anders Kobro, “it was supposed to be elitist and you had to have your own identity, that was extremely important. We couldn’t allow ourselves to sound like this or that. Black metal was already trendy in ’94,” he continues. “We followed the rule that you couldn’t sound like anyone else. It was a very strict idea then; do your own thing, don’t try to copy anybody else.”

Parallels can be drawn between In The Woods… and Fleurety, another Norwegian group on the very fringes of the scene, both geographic­ally and socially. In their case, their outsider status and unique approach would cause them to be berated and even threatened by several of their countrymen, including Ulver (the two bands have long since buried the hatchet). Neverthele­ss, their 1995 debut full-length, Min Tid Skal Komme, remains a milestone work that arguably predated the post-black metal sound of bands such as Agalloch and Alcest by a decade. Folk-inspired acoustic guitar passages, desolate riffing and blasting drums combined with unconventi­onal song structures, psychedeli­c guitar work, unusual jazzy time changes, near-funk bass work and haunting female vocals. And if anything the band became even more experiment­al with 1999’s Last-Minute Lies and the recordings that followed.

“I think there was a rather upfront psychedeli­c prog 70s influence, a certain jazz influence, a certain folk music influence... and of course black metal!” says Svein Egil Hatlevik, one half of the duo. “We were listening to Pink Floyd and King Crimson and got the jazz influence indirectly from that sort of music. It might have something to do with the general isolation we were in, but we had our own perception of what kind of music we wanted to make. That was one of the rules or guidelines that you could get from the first

“This perception that true black metal only sounds like Darkthrone is just fucking silly” ULVER’S GARM ON WHY THE TRUTH IS ‘OUT THERE’

years of black metal, that if your music or band sounded like some other band you were worthless and there was no reason why you should release records… One reason why you can say the movement did stagnate was you had certain benchmark releases, milestones, a lot of the albums by Darkthrone, for example, and people thought, ‘Ah, this is how black metal is supposed to be.’ The music people made became more streamline­d.”

Yet in reaction to this were many stunning bands who forged their own sound. Oslo’s Ved Buens Ende would demonstrat­e a groundbrea­king approach that would only be hinted at a decade later via acts such as Deathspell Omega, with the 1994 demo Those Who Caress the Pale and the 1995 full-length, Written in Waters.

Drawing on influences as diverse as jazz, folk, and prog rock – as well as second-wave black metal – the wonderfull­y bleak compositio­ns still sound fresh today, the (mostly clean) vocals, dissonant riffing, angular percussion, and challengin­g time signatures combining to offer a level of complexity all but unexplored at that time.

The aforementi­oned Arcturus would bring avant-garde black metal to a greater audience thanks to 1997’s La Masquerade Infernale, a record that seemed to offer new levels of musical and intellectu­al sophistica­tion and which utilised everything from classical musicians to electronic breakbeats.

Countrymen Solefald would follow a similar path the same year with debut album The Linear Scaffold. It had musical parallels to

La Masquerade… but replaced the historic overtones with a post-modern approach that took inspiratio­n from French existentia­l writer Jean-Paul Sartre, urban architectu­re, modern transporta­tion, and television – elements purposely ignored by a scene that consciousl­y rejected modern society and its trappings.

Clearly 1997 was clearly the peak of such undercurre­nts, with Japan’s Sigh knocking the ball out of the park in terms of experiment­al eccentrici­ty with their Hail Horror Hail album. Black metal still formed the foundation of the band’s music, but on top of this was a strange cut-and-paste juxtaposit­ion of orchestral elements, blues rock lead guitars, discordant synths and dizzying psychedeli­a, the combinatio­n of which led label Cacophonou­s to place a disclaimer on the sleeve warning listeners that any perceived strangenes­s was because the listener’s “conscious self is ill-equipped to comprehend the sounds produced on this recording”.

By the close of the decade even the more establishe­d black metal bands felt obliged to push more modern elements into their sound, as seen by the likes of Gorgoroth, Mayhem, Gehenna, Satyricon and Dødheimsga­rd, whose 1999 masterpiec­e, 666 Internatio­nal, perfected a more precise and contempora­ry/futuristic take on black metal.

Today, a certain degree of avant-garde music within the black metal movement is expected and accepted, as seen in bands such as Deathspell Omega, Dodecahedr­on, Spektr and Oranssi Pazuzu. But have no doubt: this is a direct result of those fearless pioneers of the 90s who rebelled against what was in danger of becoming an increasing­ly streamline­d genre.

SECTIONS OF THE INTERVIEWS ARE TAKEN FROM THE BOOKS BLACK METAL: EVOLUTION OF THE CULT [2013, FERAL HOUSE] AND CULT NEVER DIES: THE MEGA ZINE [2016, CULT NEVER DIES]

“If you sounded like some other band you were worthless”

FLEURETY’S SVEIN EGIL HATLEVIK ON BLACK METAL’S INDEPENDEN­T SPIRIT

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 ??  ?? Ulver circa 1993, wondering where black metal is headed next Fleurety’s Alexander Nordgaren sets off on a new tangent
Ulver circa 1993, wondering where black metal is headed next Fleurety’s Alexander Nordgaren sets off on a new tangent

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