Metal Hammer (UK)

As the LORDS OF CHAOS movie is released, we investigat­e the controvers­ial birth of black metal.

Exploring the rise of the notorious Norwegian black metal scene, Lords Of Chaos has divided fans and artists alike. We talk to director Jonas Åkerlund and Mayhem’s Necrobutch­er on the eve of its release

- Words: Jonathan selzer

The story was never going to go away. Twenty-five years after the death of Mayhem co-founder Øystein ‘Euronymous’ Aarseth at the hands of his friend, brief bandmate and Burzum founder Varg Vikernes in Oslo, the accompanyi­ng tale of suicide, betrayal, church burnings and murder has remained a source of mystery, lore and rampant speculatio­n, aided by the fact that the black metal movement Mayhem founded – and the band themselves – are still going strong.

In an act of fate worthy of the tale at their heart, two very different, but often complement­ary histories of Mayhem have

“IF THERE’S AN AFTERLIFE, DEAD AND EURONYMOUS WILL BE VERY FUCKING HAPPY”

JØRN ‘NECROBUTCH­ER’ STUBBERUD

emerged. The first is the long-awaited, and feared, movie, Lords Of Chaos, directed by one-time drummer for proto-black metallers Bathory and celebrated video director, Jonas Åkerlund. The second, The Death Archives, by Mayhem’s other founder, bassist Jørn ‘Necrobutch­er’ Stubberud, is a personal recounting of Mayhem’s first 10 years, along with reams of photograph­ic documentat­ion. Both plot their course from the inauspicio­us yet ambitious formation of the band through the suicide by gunshot of Swedish vocalist Per Yngve Ohlin, known infamously as Dead and personally as Pelle, to Necrobutch­er’s decision to remove himself from the band – before returning three years later – and Euronymous’s murder. But whereas The Death Archives suggests the devil really is in the details, offering episodic first-hand accounts of the grit, grime and determinat­ion of a band forging a new scene through act of will, Lords Of Chaos attempts to weave a grand narrative. It focuses on the often-fractious relationsh­ip between Varg and Euronymous, its escalation and ripple effects into the spate of church burnings, the murder of a gay man at the hands of Emperor drummer Bård ‘Faust’ Eithun, and the possible motivation­s for why, on August 10, 1993, Varg went to Euronymous’s apartment armed with a knife and stabbed him multiple times.

Extensivel­y researched, with input from Euronymous’s parents and famous band photograph­s painstakin­gly reproduced, Lords

Of Chaos sets out to balance the infamous plot points with the personal tribulatio­ns, and transforma­tions, of the people involved.

“I wanted to make a movie that humanises these characters,” says Jonas down a phone line from LA, “because all the documentar­ies and books that have come out depict monsters and demons. And the truth is that they were young boys. But they were very driven. They started bands, they recorded, they started their own labels, they started record stores, they burned down churches and killed people: it’s a lot of work. They were very young, driven children, basically, and I wanted to humanise them and portray young boys who really didn’t have anything to blame. They were not beaten up, they didn’t come from poor families, there was no real excuse for what they did.”

T“I WANTED TO MAKE A MOVIE THAT HUMANISES THESE CHARACTERS”

JONAS ÅKERLUND

he turning point for Mayhem, that both

Lords Of Chaos and The Death Archives agree on, was the introducti­on of Dead. Having originally sent them an audition cassette accompanie­d by a crucified mouse, Dead both embodied and amplified the band’s morbid obsessions, introducin­g corpsepain­t and a potent stage presence that ended up with him being bandaged up by a janitor after cutting himself onstage. His death at the band’s rehearsal room in Kråkstad in April 1991, and Euronymous’s decision to take pictures of his corpse – used gruesomely as

the sleeve for the 1995 bootleg live album,

Dawn Of The Black Hearts – became a catalyst for all the events that were to follow.

“He was a really cool kid. He was a little wobbly on his feet but he was funny and cool, and his family and everyone who knew him are still very affected by it,” say Jonas, who cast Dead in his first-ever music video, for Candlemass. “I know that Euronymous was very close to him, too, and I tried in the movie to portray that. The fact that he took those pictures kind of fucked everything up. How could you do that if you really care about the other person? But he did! And I keep flashing back to Pelle because I think his involvemen­t in Euronymous’s art is so important. It’s not until the end of the movie that he lets go of it, and I don’t think he could have done that without crying, or feeling something over Pelle. Because I truly don’t believe that Euronymous was a psychopath. I think he was a decent kid that just ended up on the wrong side of stuff.”

The sorrow with which The Death Archives recounts the aftermath of Dead’s suicide, for all the graphic descriptio­n of coming across his blood-splattered room, is deeply affecting, and for Necrobutch­er, the loss of such a close friend is something he’s still trying to come to terms with.

“He came over here just with his bag. He had no place to stay or anything. So I kind of felt that I’d have to take a little bit of care of him, make sure that he had a place to stay, got food. So of course when something happens to somebody you feel you are responsibl­e for it’s a double blow. It’s not like he was very depressed or had psychologi­cal problems, it was more like that he was very fascinated with the afterlife. He also had a near-death experience when he was a kid. He told me that he fell on the ice when he was 10 or 11, ruptured his spleen and then he died in hospital for a couple of minutes before they got him back, and that he had seen the tunnel and lights, some music and the whole thing. But then your best friend who you started the band with, and shared so many things with, has such a completely opposite reaction to the suicide. Of course, it was pretty heavy for me to cope with that. Euronymous was not thinking right when he took those photos. He was not thinking as a friend… I still don’t know what he was thinking.”

Emboldened by the notoriety following Dead’s passing (“at least 10-15 bands sprung out of that,” says Necrobutch­er), Euronymous opened the record shop Helvete in Oslo, which served as a centre point for the thenburgeo­ning scene. The new dynamic between Euronymous and Varg becomes the motor on which Lords Of Chaos turns, as mutual respect turns into one-upmanship, and the challengin­g of each other to prove that black metal isn’t all just so much talk. In this hothouse atmosphere, one solo act of arson escalates into scores of church burnings, the question of whether it’s an act of cultural vengeance against the introducti­on of Christiani­ty or peer pressure taken to a new level left very much in the singed air.

“They were playing around with symbols, having fun with it,” says Jonas, “and then they started to talk about it, and then somebody

put something into action, and another person put something more into action, and then, before you know it, you’re in your fucking bubble and you have no idea what you’re doing. And then before you know it, murdering a man is not that big of an idea. It’s a horrible scenario, but I think that’s what happened.”

Does he believe there was a wider purpose for the church burnings?

“I have a hard time seeing that any of these kids were politicall­y or religiousl­y driven at all. I don’t think Satanism or racism or paganism had anything to do with what they did. Maybe now there’s more of a developed reason for it, but for a 17-20-year-old kid, I don’t think that that was the main force.”

Although Jonas talked to many figures in the scene during the making of

Lords Of Chaos, Varg’s seclusion since his release from prison in early 2009 means that a crucial jigsaw piece will always be missing. On a narrative level, that leaves a lot of scope for interpreta­tion and to draw something universal out of a very unique set of circumstan­ces.

“If you take out all the black metal and all the gore from the movie,” says Jonas, “it’s really a relationsh­ip drama between these two young boys. A lot of people who were there have told me that they were so close; up until only a week before the murder they were inseparabl­e.”

Perhaps even more so than Varg’s motivation­s for the murder, Lords Of Chaos seems concerned with Euronymous’s process of transforma­tion at the time of his death.

The crucial, if factually disputed moment when he flashes back to discoverin­g Dead’s body with tears in his eyes suggests a tale of redemption cut short.

“I don’t think I told this story before, but I got a picture of Euronymous’s dead body from the police investigat­ion,” says Jonas. “This picture is not online, you can’t find it anywhere, but somebody showed it to me. He had blood in his face and it was really hard to see, but I said, ‘It’s not him, he’s got short hair’, and they said, “No, he cut his hair the night before he was murdered.’ And this was a turning point for me as a scriptwrit­er, because that changed the whole arc. It was such a symbolic thing for a guy at that age at that time to decide to cut his hair. I know he wanted to get out of Varg’s life. I had enough material to indicate that he was on his way somewhere; he really was about to change into something else. So this

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? the lords of chaos are also regentsof tomfoolery
the lords of chaos are also regentsof tomfoolery
 ??  ?? Euronymous, Dead and Necrobutch­er in the grim old days
Euronymous, Dead and Necrobutch­er in the grim old days
 ??  ?? Photos of the true mayhem were recreated for the movie (below)
Photos of the true mayhem were recreated for the movie (below)
 ??  ?? mayhem proveto be movie camera-shy, too
mayhem proveto be movie camera-shy, too
 ??  ?? Jonås akerlund has taken on the originaltw­isted firestarte­rs
Jonås akerlund has taken on the originaltw­isted firestarte­rs
 ??  ?? Necrobutch­er, back in mayhem’s early days
Necrobutch­er, back in mayhem’s early days

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