|
Ladies and
gentlemen... from the very depths of Hell: GROTESQUE!!!! Well, just because
those particular words may have been stolen by myself from an introtape of a
rather influential UK band doesn't mean that this Swedish horde also used to rip
them off in any way (just blame it on my lack of ideas to kick this feature off
here). During their quite shortlived existence GROTESQUE were actually a totally
unique, yet extremely blasphemous and dark sounding outfit that had written
material that easily stood the test of time. Even after so many years after
their split-up there's still a certain mystery surrounding them. That's why Lacy
contacted former singer "Goatspell" (aka Tomas "Tompa"
Lindberg) and bassplayer "Virgintaker" (aka Per Nordgren) to discuss
the whole GROTESQUE phenomenom in detail...
Do you have any early memories of music while growing up and what spurred you on from being a music fan to becoming a musician?
Goatspell: "My earliest memories are Rock and Roll orientated I guess, getting cassette versions of
Chuck Berry, Bill Haley and Elvis Presley albums and blasting them in my kid
room. The first album (vinyl) I bought was actually a Chuck Berry compilation. I must have been about seven or
something. All the other stuff came later (Alternative / Garage Rock / Punk / Hardrock etc) from my
sister's boyfriends record
collection. He got me into bands like MC5, the stooges, thin lizzy, blue
Öyster cult, dead boys, the cramps, ramones, black sabbath etc from when I was about ten or
something. Then everything just exploded. I guess me turning into actually playing music was inevitable and related to me being a fan of
Punkrock, which seemed fairly simple to play... I started out playing in a Hardcore
Punk band when I was 13 or something like that... Later on, I guess those early
Thrash records (possessed, dark angel, slayer, metallica, voivod, celtic frost, venom etc) were responsible for me turning into a singer, I was just screamig along to them at the top of my lungs in my bedroom, hehe..."
How did you end up being a Heavy Metal addict back in the day? Do you recall your first meeting with that music style?
Goatspell: "As I mentioned earlier, my sister's boyfriend is responsible for the initial meeting with the style, but that was more classic
Hardrock though, bands like b.ö.c. and
wishbone ash had a deep impact on me when
I was a kid. I guess it was the mystique surrounding it. I know I was after something else though as these bands lacked the intensity of other stuff
I was listening to: the ramones, the misfits, stooges, black flag
etc... And when I stumbled upon metallica's
"Ride The Lightning" and discharge's
"Hear Nothing, See Nothing, Say Nothing" in the early eighties, the flame was lit..."
Virgintaker:
"I think I was
around twelve when a friend of mine at the time introduced to me the concept of
the 666 layers of hell. I was fascinated by the idea that evil could run so
deep. If ordinary people like you and me, ermh, I mean most people, would only
get to one of the first few levels, and the deeper you’d go the more evil the
dwellers there would be then it’s hard to even fantasize about the evil that
went on towards the bottom of the pit. I began reading books on sorcery, devil
worship and different types of sacrifice. Right about this time Iron
Maiden released "The Number Of The Beast” which of course had an
imense impact on a child of twelve, at the time completely consumed by fantasy,
ocultism and theology. I was especially thrown by 'Hallowed Be Thy Name', the
narration of a death sentence carried out in real time. The same concept,
equally fascinating was done by Metallica
two years later on "Ride The Lightning”. Up until this point I had never
even heard fast agressive music. These days it’s almost funny that Iron
Maiden were considered evil... Not long after. Only like a few weeks.
Another friend of mine found a cassette (yeah, this was 1982) on the street so
we took it home and cranked the volume up to be completely blown away by 'The
Hellion' (the intro to the Judas Priest
record "Screaming For Vengeance"). The power was flattening. I guess
these two albums were my entry point to the Metal scene. As time progressed me
and my friends (especially Kristian "Necrolord" Wåhlin) grew
gradually more into harder stuff like METALLICA (as above), VENOM and SLAYER. It
went to Thrash when Kristian found this compilation with Overkill,
Exhumer, Sodom and you name it on. We’d skip school to go to his place
and listen to it... LOUD.”
Were you always into Death
Metal or…?
Goatspell: "From the moment I first got in touch with the Death Metal sound
I was hooked. Bands like bathory, hellhammer
and possessed had already made me ready for what was to come to a certain
degree. But when I stumbled upon the underground scene and bands like repulsion (then
genocide), death
/ mantas, morbid angel, terrorizer, vomit (Norway), necrophagia, insanity etc nothing was the same
anymore... It was the first stuff I discovered by myself and that was probably quite important for a lonesome teenager like myself."
Virgintaker: "Well, as I said to
start of it was mainly British Heavy Metal, and then German Heavy Metal (Accept,
Warrant, Stormwitch, Warlock). And then I turned to Thrash. We didn’t
think of ourselves as Death Metal while I was still in the band. The concept of
Death Metal was simply not coined yet.”
When did you decide to become a musician and how did your choice fall on the
bass? Was it the first instrument that you’ve decided to play?
Virgintaker: "Bass was my instrument of choice right from the start. A
minute to learn, a lifetime to master, you know, like master mind the game...
eh... nevermind... Anyway, I thought it was really cool. I’ve played heaps of
different instruments, vigorously encouraged by my dad. The list goes something
like; piano, recorder, guitar, trombone, cello, harmonica and violin. I tried my
hands on mandoline, clarinet and drums as well, but I suck as a drummer...
The bass is the only instrument that's stayed with me. I am however concidering
getting a new cello. You can create some pretty eerie stuff on a cello.”
What were your influences to become a musician at all? Were you self taught
or…?
Virgintaker: "I would have to say Steve Harris (Iron
Maiden). No-one can play like that. I’m blown away everytime. I
haven’t been into MAIDEN for a long time but when I was, I was REALLY into
MAIDEN. I could sit for hours practicing 'The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner' the
bass parts. I had a teacher for a while who showed me the basics, but that was
only for a few months. He showed me pentatonic chords and that if you cook your
old bass strings they sound like new, for a while. All the fat and grime from
your fingers stuck on the strings floats to the top. It’s nasty. I also want
to sent some credit to mine and Kristian's old music teacher who had this room
set up at school complete with drumkit, amps and axes. That’s where it all
started as far as I’m concerned. At the age of 13 we’d be there bashing out
AC/DC songs.”
When and in which circumstances did you end up joining
Grotesque which had been formed by you, Necrolord and Insulter on guitars Nuctemeron on bass and Shamaatae? Was it really the first band for all of you or…?
Goatspell: "I have to correct you on the line-up here. I joined a band called
conquest that was basically Kristian and some
Thrasher dudes, that later all quit except
Nuctemeron (David Hultén) who stuck along for a year or two at least... During those early days it was mostly a question of me and
Kristian bashing out noise in his parents basement with different dudes turning up now and then, only to leave pretty fast (because they had no understanding for the stuff that we were
into). The other guys you mention, I don´t know. Insulter is a synonym for Johan
Österberg, who never was a part of grotesque at any point (although he did play second guitar on the reunion show), he was though an active
scenster all the time and edited
Cascade Magazine during the late eighties / early nineties... Shamaatae I guess is the dude who is now in
arckanum, he was eleven at the time that he was in
grotesque, and left pretty
quickly..."
Do you still remember who came up
with the name of the band and who did the logo?
Goatspell: "The band name was stolen from celtic
frost, I think it´s from a song on "Emperor's Return". It sounded twisted and cool, a bit different I
guess. Kristian designed the logo, he was, and still is, a king when it comes to
Death Metal design. I like the sick, twisted, disfigured style he came up with, it´s almosty like a graffittti painting or something...hehe."
Did you take the band seriously right from the start?
Goatspell: "We were very young, I guess we were as serious as we could be, everything meant alot to
us. You know how sensitive you were as a teenager, the band was all we cared about, we lived in this different world between the ages of 14-18
I guess... No one in our city knew what the hell we were doing, but we had this huge underground scene to escape to, it was awesome...
Our own separate universe of sound, visual art and international comradeship."
Why did you use nicknames instead of using your real names? Was it a kind of
Venom approach or…?
Goatspell: "Yeah, we were dead into all that stuff, we had a glimpse in the eye though, we loved how cheesy some of the
Brazilian bands stage names sounded; KK Bullet, Skullcrusher and all that, a huge
influence. But I guess it was taken out of proportions when looking back upon it, it was all great
fun... And kind of came with the territiory of our vision of what a Death Metal band was all about."
During the mid /
late '80s the underground scene was ruled by Thrash Metal, contradistinction to it in Sweden happened a great
Death Metal boom... Does it mean that Death Metal had a stronger background than
Thrash, although in Sweden there were cool Thrash acts as well, such as Merciless, Mezzrow or
Agony?
Goatspell: "We, and most of Swedens other prominent Death Metal acts, came bursting out at the time of
the Thrash Metal fade out... all other bands were playing anthrax, testament shit, we didn´t have any understanding at all from them, it was alot of silly rivalry when you look back upon it... we couldn´t compromise one inch with our style, it was
Death Metal or nothing!!!! I remember we were, for an example, deeply aggrevated by
sepultura´s "sell-out" on
"Beneath The Remains"... When I think back upon it, the Swedish Death
Metal scene between the years 87-91 only had about thirty people that were invovled, the trend happened later..."
Virgintaker: "I couldn’t tell. When I left the band in 88 I was really fed up
with Death Metal. But I’ve come to my senses again since ;-) I think there’s
maybe too much analysis of what went on. At the time the genres where hardly
defined. We would often refer to what we doing as techno (as is Techno
Metal) as it was fast and complicated. When Dance-Techno gained a larger audience Techno
Metal as a definition disappeared. I was alway more leaning more towards fast and crazy rather than
brutal. I still am today with my current band AUTOTRASH.”
What did you feel seeing that
Death Metal explosion in your area with quite a good number of outfits popping
up from everywhere?
Goatspell: "This happened way later, probably around 92-93 or something. We
were alone for a long, long time, I can tell you that. There was not even any
people coming to shows with this kind of music or anything. The scene was pretty
much dead in Gothenburg. We lived in the international underground bubble,and
enjoyed it to the max as well...
Later when some bands started to pop up it was
a good feeling, we were not that alone anymore, but stupid enough. I think we
felt some kind of elitism evovling as well, that we didn´t want to be a part of.
It was not compatible to the underground spirit that we were raised in.”
Virgintaker: "We were way to early to see any of that around ’87-88. Noone (in
our area) understood what we where doing. Towards the end of ’88 we met
NIHILIST and INTOXICATE. But they were from other areas (NIHILIST from Stockholm
and INTOXICATE from another part of Gothenburg)”
Were Stockholm and Gothenburg
the centers of the Swedish Death Metal movement at this point?
Goatspell: "Stockholm had (in 1988) only a few bands, but were still miles
ahead of everybody else. I was in contact with Nicke and Uffe already in 1987,
and we traded alot of tapes etc. We used to stay over for Summers and stuff, it
was a good time. Gothenburg, as I said before, was dead and silent, we were
alone. So, when we wanted to hang out, we went to Stockholm where there was at
least a handful of dudes into the underground way of thinking.”
Virgintaker: "I suppose. I don’t know. At the time it felt nothing like a
movement. Just kids drinking beer and making noise, having a good time. I
don’t know about any other Death Metal bands from Gothenburg so I suppose that
Stockholm was the center, as with most things in Sweden.”
As
far as I know, before you joined GROTESQUE, you were in volved in Conquest,
is that correct? What about this act as a whole?
Virgintaker: "Conquest was alot of fun. It was very far from Grotesque of
course. Definately not Death
/
Thrash
Metal... More about the AC/DC songs I mentioned above. We drank beer and
"rehearsed” in Necrolords basement. I can’t believe the patience of his
parents... The band members came and went with Necro, me and "Maskis”
(nothing to do with Dinosaur Jr) as the constant members. I think Nuctemeron was
around playing drums for a while (he later appeared as the bass player when I
left the band). Alot of times it would be like an open session where anyone
present could grab the mic and freestyle rock vocals.”
In your opinion, did GROTESQUE
belong
to the first wave of Swedish Death Metal with acts, such as Corpse,
Nihilist, Mefisto, Carnage etc.?
Goatspell: "The first Swedish wave consists of only one band (and only one
guy): BATHORY. Later mefisto,
obscurity popped up which is probably the second wave I guess, if you could even
call it a wave... nihilist,
morbid, grotesque, corpse / grave, treblinka, sorcery, merciless are the third wave and were closely followed by dismemberizer
/ dismember, afflicted convulsion, therion, crematory, macrodex, carnage etc... that was the intitial scene right there. Up until 91 I guess
that was all that was going on in Sweden at all... If you don´t count the Grind
/ Crust scene which was closely related to what we were doing with bands like anticimex,
filthy christians, g-anx, no security, mob 47, asocial, avskum, svart parad etc...”
Virgintaker: "The only Grotesque gig I played (before the reunion last year) was a gig in Gothenburg
together with Nihlist. This was in ’88, so yeah I’d say we we’re definately first wave.
Apparently parts of this gig was captured on video and is in the hands of
Offensor, but he hasn’t sent it to me yet. There’s a clip of Grotesque performing 'Hell Awaits' (SLAYER). We must have been about 16-17 at the
time. I remember being in total adrenaline shock just to be on stage. My bass
strings snapped when I tried to tune it and the string hooked into my hand like
a fish-hook so I had to rip it out. So I was dazed and bleeding but on stage and
loving it.”
You were rehearsing in the
basement of Necrolord’s house, what do you recall from your rehearsals? Did
you start writing originals right from the start or were you jamming mostly on
covers?
Goatspell: "Well,
the first ever time we met it was only me and Kristian,
we didn´t even know each other or had met... David,
the bassplayer (Nuctemeron)
gave me Kristian's
address and just told me to go there...
This was long before cellphones or the
internet kids!!
We started going through his record
collection and he showed me some stuff he had been working on...
We decided to jam and the first stuff
we ever bashed out was a cover of (the just released) 'Enter
The
Eternal
Fire'
by bathory.
The next time I
showed up I
brought a few demos and stuff, introduced Kristian
to the undergound sounds of bands like necrophagia
(a big influence in the early days) and pentagram,
we glued instantly and started working on originals directly after that...”
You
soon got together your first violent pieces of death and mayhem, 'Moondance
Prophecy' was a slow song reminiscent of Celtic
Frost / Hellhammer, 'Shadows Of Lost Life' was a faster song somewhat in
the style of Obscurity / Bathory
and POSON (Germany), how do you see it?
Goatspell: "Yeah , I guess that describes
it pretty much... Kristian
was still alot into the hellhammer
thing. He
would later become more obsessed with crazy riffing along the lines of morbid
angel, insanity, necrovore etc, so the
first songs were really crude and basic, almost Hardcore
sounding.
We played at the very top of our very
limited capability, this was max speed for us at the time, we just wanted to be
as brutal as possible...
hehe”
These songs respectively 'Ripped
From The Cross' ended up on your first demo entitled "Ripped From The Cross”.
Do you still remember how the demo was recorded, which was probably your first
experience? Can you give us details on this tape?
Goatspell: "Ripped From
The
Cross"
was never a real demo in the modern way of seeing stuff.
It was mainly just a rehearsal that we
polished (a bit) with extra guitars and spread through the tapetrading
circuit... it was just us and a tape recorder. In a basement, that´s pretty
much how it worked back then, nothing fancy whatsoever...”
Did you shop the demo around
to attract label interests? Do you think that the demo opened some doors for the
band? What type of reviews did you get for this tape?
Goatspell: "As I said before it was never
a real official demo like that.
We didn´t send it to any of the
bigger magazines or anything or labels for that matter, we were not really
interested in all that.
It was more important to us how the
diehard undergound dudes would greet it, so we got a few mention in a few small
fanzines, that´s it basically.
And we were dead happy with that as
well for that matter...”
After the release of
"Ripped From The Cross” Shamaatae quit and instead of him Offensor (aka
Tomas Eriksson) joined. Why did he decide to leave the band and how did the new
guy get into the picture exactly? What about his musical background?
Goatspell: "Tomas Eriksson came into the band after having played a show with
us, with his other band (a local Thrash band) where he played the guitar. He was
interested in playing drums for a band, and we were looking for members... As he
was not into the whole imagery and lyrical approach of the band he choose to
stay a session member throughout his stay in the band, as it was important for
us (as teenage diehards) that every member of the band was into the same kind of
shit as we were his decision didn´t worry us much. Our previous drummer Johan lagher (Shamaatae) quit / got kicked out, he was just a kid. I guess his
dad was worried about him hanging out with a bunch of weirdos like us, he also
stole some of Kristian's vinyls....”
Was he the first choice or
were other musicians auditioned as well? Did you part ways with Shamaatae on a
friendly term in the end? Was he involved in other acts after his departure from
Grotesque?
Goatspell: "As I mentioned before, there were not many people into heavy music
at all in Gothenburg at the time. We had tried out a few dudes on various
instruments, but noone seemed to have a clue what we were after. At least Tomas
knew who BATHORY and POSSESSED were, that was at least a start, hehe... Shamataee
was, as I said , only eleven, we didn´t hear from him ever again... We later
heard he was playing in this troll Black Metal band or something like that...
quite funny, maybe we did "destroy” him after all...”
The
coming months were spent writing new songs like the epic 'Angel’s Blood' and 'Submit
To Death' as well. Does it mean, that you immediately started writing new material with Offensor? Did he have a big hand into
the songwriting at this point? You
rehearsed heavily and composed more complex and evil Death
/ Black Metal material like
'Ascension Of The Dead', 'Blood Runs From The Altar' and 'Fall Into Decay'. Would you say, that Offensor was a more talented and experienced drummer
than Shamaatae and it allowed you to move into a more complex direction?
Goatspell: "No, Tomas was just a session member, we pretty much told him how
to play, but as you mention we did have more energy and focus because we had,
for the first time, a drummer who could actually play! That was quite a trip for
us, we had alot of ideas before but they were never really fulfilled. Now we
felt we could push the concept a bit further, but all the songs were still
written by Kristian and me. Some of these songs had been embryos for a long time
in our heads.”
Virgintaker: "I was part of writing 'Blood Runs From The Altar', 'Fall Into Decay',
'Ripped From The Cross', 'Moondance Prophecy' and 'Submit To Death' (although I
never got any credit for any of it).”
On the 4th of May 1989 you
recorded the blasphemous rehearsal / demo "The Black Gate Is Closed”
featuring 'Bestial Summoning', 'Blood Runs From The Altar' and 'Angel’s Blood',
an avalanche of death and hate preparing the wimps for Grotesque’s
first studio recording... What about the recording sessions?
Goatspell: "A 4-track portable mixing
desk in the rehearsal room, that´s all, it´s all live as well- straight to
tape, it´s distorted, twisted and has a weird aura surrounding it.
I think
this was as close to real Satanism
we ever came. I think the tape is quite scary in some places actually, because
of the desparation and angst displayed in the performance... I guess we were
surprised how it turned out and therefore
decided to spread the tape more efficiently than previous ones.”
"The
Black Gate Is Closed” was an advance tape for "The Final Conspiracy”
LP, is that correct?
Goatspell: "That was one of our many plans. We had contact with some guy in Brazil
who wanted to release an album at this stage, pure f-king underground! Of course
we should have kept our mouths shut until we knew it was going to happen,
hehe... anyway, as you all know- this record never happened...”
A rehearsal demo followed
this tape, also in 1989, featuring 'Angel’s Blood', 'Fall Into Decay' and 'Rise
Of Armageddon'. Was it a better representation of the band? Did this tape sound
closer to what you wanted to achieve with Grotesque?
On this tape was a longer version of 'Angel’s Blood', how did it happen?
Goatspell: "When we recorded "The Black Gate Is Closed", we didn´t
have a full version of 'Angels Blood', but the part we recorded was so brutal
that we decided to put it on the demo as a trailer kind of, inspired by MORBID´s
'Deathexecution' trailer on the "December Moon" demo I guess... The
version on that next rehearsal tape is close to the finished version that
appears on "In The Embrace Of Evil" if i remember it correctly. We are
playing better on that tape, but I like the feeling and atmosphere on "The
Black Gate Is Closed" more... I guess we were trying to identify the
direction of the band, I think this second part of our history starts with the
writing of "Incantation".”
You were playing a few crazy
and brutal live shows at this point, what do you recall from these gigs? Did you
do some headlining local shows or were you opening act for bigger bands as well?
Goatspell: "Not that many shows were
actually played, a mere handful only. These were poorly attended and people didn´t
seem to understand what the hell was happening, I guess it all would have been
different if we had a scene to interact with, as the bands in Stockholm
had, at least the guys in the other bands showed up at the local gigs there, in Gothenburg
we were alone. We did play some memorable shows though, one in Strömstad
with THERION,
that show was booked by Jon
Nödtveit
actually, he was quite young then and also one in Gothenburg
with NIHILIST.
We were basically too young, around 15-16 to be able to arrange bigger shows and
invite other bands...”
The legendary November 1989
recording of "In The Embrace Of Evil” featured five songs - this was
originally meant to be the first five songs of a full length album on Dolores
Records, another three tracks to be recorded later on therefore... The recording
was never released as a demo, what did happen exactly?
Goatspell: "This was another totally
unprepared thing, hehe... we just happened to come in contact with this guy who
had this studio, we were psyched about the option of getting our stuff portrayed
in a real studiosound, we scrambled together the cash that was needed, pretty
much for us teenage kids probably... and went ahead to record, we were quite
unexperienced, to not say totally, of being in a studio, but I
think the result is totally ok when I
listen back to it, everything is
untight to the point of collapse but the underground Death
Metal
feeling is there for sure, we did approach Dolores
about the possibility of releasing it somehow, but everything just fell apart
again.... and David
quit the band...”
On December 12, 1989
GROTESQUE played a truly insane local show in front of 200 people. The crowd was
in a frenzy as GROTESQUE launched their brutal Death Metal at unsuspecting
victims. Besides your own songs you got to play 'The Return' by BATHORY before
the show was shut down by local authorities clamining GROTESQUE were a bunch of
drug addicted Satanic maniacs trying to start a riot. How do you remember?
Goatspell: "How
could I
ever forget? We lied to the people at our local high school that were organizing
the gig to be allowed to even play.
When they realized what we were up to
they simply pulled the plug on us, hehe... As
usual there was not really any people attending that knew what the hell was
going on, but people at that age take each chance to stir up some trouble I
guess, and our brutal sound proved to
be just what the kids needed to totally let go, hehe... a scandal...”
In late '89 Nuctemeron left
the band and joined Virgintaker (aka Per Nordgren). What lead to Nuctemeron’s
departure and how did Virgintaker get into the picture exactly? What about his
musical past? Were there still other bassists in mind besides him?
Goatspell: "This
is all wrong actually.
When David
quit the band I
started to play the bass instead.
It was as simple as that.
Per Nordgren
was never called Virgintaker
when he was in the band for a month or two at the very start; he left the band
cause he felt that we were too brutal. He was later invited to play the reunion
show on his merits as one of the original members though.”
This set-back did not hinder
the unholy making of new, faster and more technical evil songs , such as 'Nocturnal
Blasphemies', 'Spawn Of Azathoth', 'Church Of The Pentagram', 'Ritual Mutilation'
and the legendary 'Incantation'. And these new songs fully stated that GROTESQUE
never compromised one way or the other, do you agree with it? Would you say,
that you had only gotten blacker, more evil and intense?
Goatspell: "Yeah,
this is the start of the second era of the band for sure.
We started to develop our skills as
muscians and writers and gained alot of energy from being published in more
undergound fanzines than before.
The rest of the Swedish
bands had more in common with each other musically, our style of more Satanic,
twisted Death
Metal
was unusual in our part of the world.
I guess
that made it stand out as well... yeah, the darkness was increasing by the
minute, that´s for sure...”
Guitarist "The
Haunting” (aka Alf Svensson) had joined the band in the beginning of the year.
Do you think, that he brought a new dimension of brutality into GROTESQUE?
Before Alf got involved in GROTESQUE, what were the previous acts he had played
with?
Goatspell: "I got to know Alf
from high school where he was studying arts.
He was a few years older than the rest
of us, but we clicked instantly.
He came from a more Hardcore
background, playing in different Hardcore
Punk
bands around the area but had an urge to write and play some deeply fucked up
evil shit. He definatley brought a new perspective to what we were doing.
Initially this was just what we needed.
Later Kristian
felt some frustration over his creation being a bit lost in this new version of
the band, but for the time that everything worked out, things were killer.
Alf had some weird ideas when it came
to harmonies that I
felt complemented Kristian's
intense twisted riffing perfectly and added alot of disturbing feelings to the
sound.”
In August 1990 GROTESQUE did
the "Incantation” recording (3 songs for the Dolores Records mini album).
Did you have a decent budget to record the material? How did the recording
sessions go with this material at all? Were you more prepared than for the
previous ones?
Goatspell: "I guess we had a budget
enough to spend three days in Sunlight
Studios
with Tomas Skogsberg.
I can´t remember how much it costed
but it can´t have been that much.
We had rehearsed more intensily for
this one for sure, and we had also rewritten alot of the material together with Alf,
that had added alot of extra depth to the songs. We were much more pleased with
this recording than with the "In
The
Embrace
Of
Evil"
one.
I guess we tried to stay away from the obvious entombed
guitarsound that everyone wanted when
the went to Sunlight.
We ended up with this very strange,
ghostly tone that I
haven´t heard on any recording since.
It´s really not that distorted, you
can hear every note but it´s still brutal.
Today
I
look back on this recording with pride, we very creating something very
different.”
Did you have some songs
written that didn’t make it on the EP?
Goatspell: "This were basically the three songs that we had worked hardest on,
the ones we felt represented the new GROTESQUE most. We had older unreleased
tracks lying around, but they weren´t matching the level of brutality of those
three songs. That´s why we only recorded these three, also 'Incantation' is a
long f-king song...”
The material was released by
Dolores Records in lilac and black vinyl and the black vinyl version seems to be
the first pressing, is that correct? How were you signed by them at all?
Weren’t any bigger labels interested in the band?
Goatspell: "I could not remember, but it feels correct with the black vinyl
being the first pressing. We didn´t get any response from any bigger labels,
this was at the very start of the record releasing era of Death Metal. You got
to remember that only a few bands had released anything and the explosion hadn´t
happened yet. We were probably a bit ahead of our time. It´s also my feeling
that it was some meaning to that as well, that GROTESQUE somehow was meant to be
an underground band.”
In your opinion, did all of
the demos expand GROTESQUE’s
popularity in the underground scene? Were
your material monstrous hits in the
Swedish underground?
Goatspell: "No, we didn´t have any breakthrough whatsoever, I
guess we were weirder than most of the stuff that was emerging.
We were also a bit uncalculating, we didn´t do it for the career, we
rather spent our time on producing new stuff than hassle record labels or
managers or anything like that...”
In 1990 GROTESQUE played
their last show, what do you recall from it?
Goatspell: "I had started trying to book
some shows for fiends abroad.
I was a long time friend from Patrick
in disharmonic
orchestra and they were doing a low
budget tour through Europe.
I basically rented the hall at the
local rehearsal
place
and invited them for a couple of hundred bucks or something.
This was a perfect chance for us to
portray our new stuff in front of an audience.
We had not played live since the
recording of "Incantation".
It was me, Tomas
Offensor,
Alf and Kristian
performing that night and it was a "greatest hits” kind of setlist with
material from all our different eras, smoke machine, light show, the whole kit,
it was a great experience and also the first time some people came out that
actually knew who we were, as the scene had slowly started building up at this
point.”
Due to contradictions you
split up shortly afterwards, why did you decide to break up?
Goatspell: "There are a few different
reasons actually.
First of all,
me and Kristian
had been talking about doing another project anyway, we felt that GROTESQUE
had said all that we wanted to say,
that if we continued down the same path for much longer we would eventually
paint ourselves in a corner, and we had such great ambitions... We
wanted to make music that was more insane, more artisticly challenging and
intellectual and we felt that the formula of GROTESQUE
needed to be intact and that was a
dilemma...
We decied to split the band on good
terms and start another project:
liers in wait... I
had at the same time started hanging
out more and more with a couple of dudes named Anders
and Jonas
and had helped out their band infestation
on bass and vocals – they were doing a more American
/
Stockholm version of Death
Metal
along the lines of autopsy,
master, nihilist etc
and that was alot of fun as well... I
guess Kristian
wanted full control of what he was doing and decided to take the drummer of liers
in wait (Hans,
later in the
GReat deceiver, luciferion, now in dimension
zero) with him and reform the project
without the rest of us... "The
rest”, i.e. me,
Alf,
Anders
and Jonas
would instead form at
the gates...all of a sudden you
had two bands continuing a part of the
grotesque
legacy , but in different ways...”
After the demise of the band
Kristian Wahlin aka Necrolord became known as an artist, and painted album
covers for many bands, like Emperor
and Dissection
and formed Liers
In Wait,
you and Alf went on to form At
The Gates, but what about Virgintaker
and Offensor after Grotesque
broke up? Did you remain in touch with each other?
Goatspell: "As I mentioned before Per Nordgren (who was NEVER called Virgintaker)
disappeared from the band after just a couple of months, never to associate
himself with Death Metal again. Offensor actually started singing instead and
have played in a variety of local Gothenburg bands, none of them releasing
anything... None of us have really stayed in touch but we say hi when we meet...
grotesque had always been just me and Kristian, though Alf had some input in the
last version as well...”
Virgintaker: "No. We didn’t hear from each other for years and years. We’d
see each other around town, but we weren’t talking. I was fed up with the fact
that all I heard at rehearsals was "play faster”. At that time I was
getting into other music. More melodic and expressive. Not unlike what became of
Kristian and his "LiErs
in wait project”. I bought a long leather coat and started playing music more
along the lines of Fields
of the NephIlim. I guess the others thought it was kind of cool because they asked to
borrow the coat for a photoshoot. The coat that Tompa is wearing on the back
sleave of "In The Embrace...”
is actually mine. There have been many claims to this coat. People have actually
payed alot of money for what they thought was this coat. The truth is it fell
apart many years later still in my possesion and I threw it in a secondhand-bin
while living in Sundsvall. So unless it came from there the ones they bought
were fake, suckers...”
In
your opinion, did Liers
In Wait and At
The Gates deserve to be followers of Grotesque?
Virgintaker: "I think they are both quite bland in comparism. I’ll probably
get alot shit for saying this but neither is as good as Grotesque. Way too technical and not half as much nerve. Listen to 'The Flames Of
The End'. What the F- is that? This
is of course a matter of taste. But I prefer the punkier aspects of Grotesque such as 'Submit To Death'.”
Would you say that Grotesque
was the forerunner of what became known during the mid ’90s as
"Gothenburg melodic Death Metal" or did you address the same concepts
that evolved Black Metal but takes a much more Death Metal interpretation
through polyrhythmic phrasing and structuralist architectures?
Goatspell: "I do believe that grotesque, as you mention as an option, have more in common with what happened
later with bands as darkthrone,
satyricon, etc... we were a brutal, Satanic Death Metal band... It was important
for us to be dark and ritualistically pure. That whole Gothenburg thing happened
way later, and I do take my hand away from it all, I guess , as we were the
first band to play extreme music in Gothenburg we might be to blame for
introducing the kids to the subgenre, but i don´t think we were ever an
influence musically...”
Virgintaker: "I read that phrase on a website somewhere and I find it really
funny. While I was in the band the goal was to be as brutal as possible. "Polyrhythmic
phrasing and structuralist architectures” is of course high-brow bullshit. I
know Kristian spent alot of time and devotion writing those songs, but hardly to
have them described that way. This music wasn’t written to be deconstructed it
was written to be experienced, loud!”
Did you have an important
impact on bands, such as In
Flames, Arch Enemy, Dark Tranquillity
etc.?
Goatspell: "I guess some of the guys in those bands, the ones that are old
enough, came to a few of the grotesque last shows and bought the "Incantation" album, but other than
that, no... I guess at
the gates had a more direct input in that whole thing, but the formula was later
bastardized and made more melodic etc... As I said; I take my hand away from
that whole thing... I have nothing against any of those bands, they are great
artists and some of them are great friends, but if you ask them they will tell
you the same; that grotesque did not have any influence on them musically...”
Virgintaker: "It’s hard to say. At the time Grotesque folded I doubt they had much impact. The impact has come later with the
1996 release. This is of course just a guess.”
On
the Friday 13 of 1996 Necrolord, Goatspell and Offensor entered Berno studio to
record 2 songs especially for the "In The Embrace Of Evil” CD: 'Church Of
The Pentagram' and 'Ripped From The Cross', the very first songs you wrote after
Grotesque’s demise. From where
did the idea come to write these tunes?
Goatspell: "'Ripped
From
The
Cross'
was,
as you
mention,
one of the very first songs to be written ever by me and Kristian...
It was recorded along with the rest of
the tracks on the initial "In
The
Embrace
Of
Evil'
session, somehow that song was lost over the years though and we couldn´t find
it on any
of the mastertapes.
When Dolores
introduced us to the idea of finally releasing all the GROTESQUE
studio
material on one CD
(maybe to cash in on the success of at
the gates?), we felt that we couldn´t
release it without this significant song...
and going to the studio
to record just one song felt stupid, so we took one of our old songs, 'Church
Of
The
Pentagram',
and reworked it a little...”
Virgintaker: "'Ripped From The Cross' is actually the very first song we ever
wrote. It’s just re-recorded. I heard from the boys that they put it on there
for laughs. Now it’s like a grotesque-anthem. Me and Kristian had alot of fun coming up with this one. The
idea is that when Christ is hanging on his cross, this huge hand comes up from
underground, grabs him around the waist and, well, rips him from the cross.
None of this graphic desciption ever made it into the final song. What a
pity... As for 'Church...' I’ve no idea. But it’s a great song.”
Was
this record a kind of tribute or paying attention to GROTESQUE?
Virgintaker: "It might have been. Or it was Tompa needing money ;-) I don’t
know. I’m glad it was released though. As I said; if it hadn’t been, I’m
not sure GROTESQUE would have had the same impact.”
Were
you deeply involved in the making of this?
Virgintaker: "I wasn’t even aware of it.”
This album unites a session
of early material and two later recording sessions, meaning that it is a time
lapse double album of a band emerging from itself - it grows and it mutates,
erratically, but beautifully, into a direction visibly incendiary in inspiring At
the Gates... What
do you think about it?
Goatspell: "Well, as I said before, it is basically the "Incantation"
recording and the "In The Embrace Of
Evil" recording, together on one album: as it was intended long ago... the
plan that never happened somehow (the "Incantation" mini LP was kind
of a compromise)... the new recording was intended to fill the gap between the
two old ones, I guess the comparison with early at
the gates is logical – seeing that both me and Alf were in both bands...”
Virgintaker: "I think it’s a beautiful piece of work and I’m proud to be
associated with it although I had nothing to do with it (apart from part taking
in writing some of the songs on it).”
Would you say, that the first
part of this album showcases frenetic and violent early songs in the crossover
of percussive Speed Metal with early Death Metal riff styles and structural
variations, especially in the tendency of Satanic bands like SLAYER to use
strange pieces of songwriting to build logically communicative top-level
architectures? This is an ugly, uncanny bastardisation of Death Metal,
the complex song structures and raw, unrelenting atmosphere of early Morbid
Angel is blended with the messy
over-stretched teenage ambition of early Possessed
with some manic Slayer solos, crushing slow passages,
atmospheric intros, an overtly Satanic image...
How do you see it?
Goatspell: "Well, that was a quite good
explanation I guess, except for the thing
about Speed
Metal.
To me Speed
Metal
is bands like HELLOWEEN
etc, which I
think is total crap... We
were inspired by possessed,
morbid angel, insanity, necrovore, pentagram...
stuff like that. Although I
guess our roots in music like bathory,
sodom, hellhammer, kreator, destuction, slayer, dark angel
shines through on some of the older stuff which gives it that primitive
charm.... and that mix might be what makes it interesting...”
The first half of the album
bears a great similarity to pioneers SLAYER as well as SEPULTURA material of
years past; its songs are fast but extract turns of melody and structure and the
art of recombinance to reveal an inherent pattern and similar to middle 80s
works of Thrash-influenced Metal where chorus lines determined major song rhythm
and thus a predictable sequence of emphasis points for any phrase. This music
rages along nicely with a somewhat confused but aesthetically coherent and
structurally focused textural evolution... What do you think about it?
Goatspell: "We were young and hyper, we wanted to combine the furious
aggression and brutality of the early favorites, sepultura's first two albums are important here, together with other Brazilian
faves such as sarcofago and ritual... with more complex, profane textures of more intellectual nature,
that gives the whole project a twisted feel of something not being quite right,
some real insanity going on... and I think this only happens when you are young
and inspired in the sense that we were.”
Virgintaker: "Again, very high-brow description of music created by beerdrinking
teenagers. Although probably a very precice description as SLAYER is what we all
listened to at the time.”
Would you say, that a slow
melting and recombination of momentum in each riff allows a melody to gel from
the associative structures of the song, but the abrupt narrative of violence in
embedded rhythms gives the music its underlying strength and encodes an artistic
portrayal of an abstract perspective on human aggression?
Goatspell: "There is so much natural teenage aggression on that record, it´s
all real frustration and anger – all this is played out in a scenery of more
abstract musical structures, disjointed ideas almost caveing in from the weight
of pure hate. This is real music, from the heart.”
What about the lyrical
concept as a whole? Were you heavily influenced by Satanism, Anti-Christianity,
Occult things and stuff to use titles, such as 'Ripped From The Cross', 'Blood Runs
From The Altar', 'Thirteen Bells Of Doom', 'Church Of The Pentagram' etc.?
Goatspell: "Grotesque
was a melting pot for all our aggression as I
mentioned earlier, our way of
expressing ourselves was in the most antisocial, nihilistic and misanthropic way
possible; Satanism.
I was very inspired by the works of Aleister
Crowley
in these early days and we tried hard to create something along these lines of
thinking. Of course some of the older songs are more basic and you
can see inspiration from other Death
Metal
bands being more obvious, but as the band grew, the lyrics had to evolve too...
referring more to philosophy surrounding Occultism
and Satanism
than the actual ritual
itself, we went inside the psychological depths of this subreligious activity, I
am however a militant atheist and am
only interested in Satanism
and its thoughts and not the religious practice itself...”
In your opinion, is "In
The Embrace Of Evil” an extremely
nasty listening experience, and a classic example of real
Death Metal? Was
this record the deserved ending of Grotesque’s
career?
Goatspell: "As I mentioned already, we had quit much earlier, when we decided
to get back together to record those two songs in 1996, it was understood that
we were going to do that, and nothing else, we never "reformed”, so we
couldn´t possibly quit again, could we?”
Virgintaker: "Definitely. Actually the record is probably better than Grotesque ever really were.”
The material was also
re-released as a split with At
the Gates’ "Gardens of
Grief” EP as well by Century Media in 2001, how did it happen? Were you aware
of this release?
Goatspell: "This was done behind our backs, no one is happy with that release,
it is official, but we haven´t seen a penny from it.”
Virgintaker: "Don’t know.”
On 26 January 2007 you played
some songs at the release party of the Swedish Death Metal book and decided to
reunite. What about this book as a whole? Do you think that Sweden became the
home of the European Death Metal movement and had a very big importance on the
scene?
Goatspell: "I think this book is fantastic, it tells the true story of what
happened at the turn of the last decade. Also, the way it was written, in the
same enthusiastic style as the fanzines from that period, paints a full picture
of the feeling back then. I am happy that Daniel put this project together, it´s
a great read! About Sweden being some sort of Death Metal capital I don´t know,
it´s not up to me to judge that. Some of the bands involved in the scene has
caused a great ruckus and had international careers, so something must have been
good! Right?”
Virgintaker: "Everyone should get the book. And almost everyone has... I think
its sales have actually broken a few records. Well done Daniel! The story behind
the gig is that me and Kristian met in Stockholm while he was here exibiting his
art at a Metal expo. Daniel came over while we where talking and we started
talking about a Grotesque reunion for the release of the book. Said and done. Daniel claims this
in his book. I wouldn’t really know.”
How did the show go? Didn't
you think about playing more shows? What about the line up and the setlist as a
whole?
Goatspell: "The gig was fun, it was weird for sure , trying to recapture that
teenage aggression and angst at the age of thirty-something, but because of the
fact that the audience was solely compromised by people that were around when it
"happened” originally with members from merciless,
grave, treblinka, dismember, morbid, obscurity, macrodex etc. it made it easier to cope with. The line up was me - vocals, Kristian
- guitars, Offensor - drums, Insulter (Johan) - session guitars and Pernordgren
- bass. We played 'Incantation', 'Blood Runs From The Altar', 'Spawn Of Azathoth',
'Ripped From The Cross' and 'Submit To Death'. It was a weird but great night.
NIRVANA 2002 and INTERMENT played as well....”
Virgintaker: "The show was fantastic. The crowd was insane, we were at the
height of our game. We where all covered in black paint, as was the entire
backstage area. Tompa was drinking the
paint from a skull and spewing it into the crowd. What an entertainer! My
brothers (and fellow bandmembers of AUTOTRASH) who where in the audience claimed
it was pure genius. At the end of the show we where all really psyched up for
alot more shows. At least almost all of us... We were offered several shows
right away and everyone was thrilled to be back in action. We were all prepared
to do a show in Gothenburg at a major venue when Tompa all of a sudden decides
that he doesn’t want to do it. With no explanation and without consulting any
of us he just called it of. The booker called me, furious of course, while I was
away on holiday. I was in shock. Apparently
she (the booker) had arranged all kinds of cool / weird stuff, like topless nuns
serving Jaegermeister...!! The band on the reunion night was: Goatspell on
throat and ink-skull, Necrolord on main strings, Insulter also on strings,
Virgintaker on thunderbird, Offensor on skins. The set list as it was played: 'The
Thirteen Bells Of Doom', 'Blood Runs From The Altar', 'Submit To Death', 'Spawn
Of Azathoth', 'Incantation' and 'Ripped From The Cross'.”
Did you perhaps film or
record the performance?
Goatspell: "Someone, somewhere has something, I know I saw a camera, my advice
it to search the internet forums for this... I don´t have any film of any
performance I´ve ever done, as I am no narcissist...hehe...”
Virgintaker: "The show was filmed by a TV-team and I’ve seen the result. I’m
still waiting for Daniel to somehow release it, because it's great
entertainment. I think some of the other bands are hesitant to have it released
because they have other careers which they feel would not benifit from it, or
some shit like that.” (well, at least a short clip can be found at youtube...
just go
here - Frank)
On April 2nd 2007 you Tompa
announced that Grotesque
was done after a few shows. Does it mean that you put the band on ice for good?
Won’t there be any further Grotesque
shows, new material etc. in the near future?
Goatspell: "Grotesque is dead, the legacy shall remain intact forever. We did one reunion to
record the two songs for "In The Embrace Of Evil" and one reunion for
Daniel's book because he is a great friend. That´s all. It would not be true to
the spirit of the band to try to do this with the same conviction again: I don´t
think that´s something you could ever calculate and try to recreate...”
Virgintaker: "Actually there where no more shows. When Tompa decided to quit the
Gothenburg show the rest of us considered getting a new singer but we realized
that it probably wouldn’t work. I know that Kristian started writing new
material almost right away and I’ve sent him some new lyrics but I doubt that
anything will come out of it.”
Would
you say, that GROTESQUE
marked
people’s minds and became one of the most influential Death Metal outfits?
Virgintaker: "Considering the reponse we got at the gig I would have to agree.
People traveled from all over Europe to see us at this tiny club. Daniel claimed
that he had about 2000 people who wanted tickets but the venue only held about
200 people. When I listen to a song like 'Angels Blood' I can’t help but quote
Tompa in his press release with which he finally killed the band "It can
never be as brutal”.”
Any final words to our
readers?
Goatspell: "I think it is awesome that
people are still interested in GROTESQUE,
that means we must have been doing something right... thanks for all the time
you spent on creating this interview, it warms my heart that you dedicated so
much time trying to reach the inner core of the band. GROTESQUE
will always be in my heart, as it is a
big part of my life, even today... I believe
we must let the band rest now though, to keep he legacy intact... anyway, thanks
and take care!!!!”
Virgintaker: "GROTESQUE
is dead but the creative genius lives on in other forms such as Disfear,
The Great Deceiver and AUTOTRASH. There are even rumours that At
The Gates are reforming. Who knows what the future holds...?”
Interview: David Laszlo
Intro: Frank
|