These are heady days for those of us who wear our
devotion to metal like a badge of honour. The deafening beast of the
dark depths has lived to roar and rampage again and the scene has never
been in a happier or healthier state. But don’t be deceived. Metal
never really went away. In fact, its current fortitude stems entirely
from the bands that never surrendered; those brave, liquor-soaked men
whose total disregard for the vagaries of fashion and finance kept them
glued to the grindstone through metal’s mainstream wilderness years.
Now, as seems wholly fitting, the greatest of these are finally reaping
their rewards and hitting new creative peaks as they surge unstoppably
onwards and upwards. And, as it was in the beginning, so shall it be in
2006.
Just as the gravel-lined, turd-stained streets of
urban England gave heavy metal to the world back in the late ‘60s, so
that small country with the big voice continues to be the place where
the world’s finest dark metal band rest their weary, alcohol-ravaged
heads after another sonic killing spree. Love them, hate them or both,
Cradle Of Filth is back again to fondle you while slitting your throat.
Thornography has arrived.
Recorded at Chapel Studios in
Lincolnshire, England, with renowned metallic production genius Rob
Caggiano (Anthrax, Bleeding Through) and mixed by Andy Sneap
(Killswitch Engage, Arch Enemy,Trivium) at Backstage Studios,
Derbyshire, Thornography is the band’s seventh full-length studio album
and their second for Roadrunner. The follow-up to 2004’s widely
acclaimed meisterwerk Nymphetamine it’s a scintillating and terrifying
collision between the familiar and the unexpected. It’s the dark,
destructive and unsettling sound of a globe-conquering heavy metal band
at the height of their sick, twisted powers, and the continuation of a
proud, priapic and unhinged legacy that stretches back nigh on 15 years.
When
Cradle Of Filth released their now legendary debut album, The Principle
Of Evil Made Flesh back in 1994, the notoriety surrounding the Black
Metal scene – and its spiritual epicentre in Oslo, Norway, in
particular – was reaching fever pitch throughout Europe. These legions
of the damned and disgusted took metal further into the abyss than it
had ever been before, stripping away its worldly concerns and reducing
it to a pure and chilling core of impenetrable black menace. Cradle Of
Filth were undoubtedly inspired by this sea-change in metal’s ongoing
evolution, they had their own plans for disseminating their own
distinct, gothically-erotic propaganda and swiftly defined their own
left hand path. Their disdain for playing by the rules was startling in
its intensity from the very start.
Throughout the ‘90s, Cradle of
Filth – led by vocalist, lyricist and crypt-crawling master of
ceremonies Dani Filth – beavered tirelessly away, producing a series of
peerless extreme metal classics that drew from an endless, dizzying
array of inspirations and influences while always maintaining that
instantly recognisable heart of filthy darkness. The brutal and brief
Vempire mini-album and the lustrous, lascivious Dusk & Her Embrace
(both 1996) began to reveal the band’s great sonic range. Later taking
into account the slithering concept piece Cruelty & The Beast
(1998) and the Clive Barker-inspired Midian (2000) – not to mention
their excursions into the visual realm of film and promo– the Cradle Of
Filth sound showed itself to be a many-headed creature. It was one that
took delight in confounding both the purists and the critics who
continually assailed the band’s motives and creativity even as their
fan base expanded and their status soared. With a line-up that seemed
to be constantly changing – thanks, perhaps, to the cobweb-encrusted
revolving door that rumours suggest marked the entrance to the band’s
rehearsal space during this period – the music was never allowed to
stagnate; fresh blood and its revitalising effects remained a permanent
weapon in the boys’ macabre arsenal.
As the 21st century dawned,
Cradle Of Filth unleashed the epic, ambitious Damnation And A Day - a
sprawling, theatrical masterpiece that has yet to be truly recognised
for either its semantic depth or its thrilling levels of metallic
artistry. Quietly walking away from a fractious partnership with their
previous label, the band eventually found a logical home with
Roadrunner Records. It was a match made in hell that spawned what was,
until now, almost certainly the strongest collection of songs in the
Cradle canon, the mighty Nymphetamine. Wildly varied and as heavy as
anything the band had ever recorded, it was widely hailed as a triumph
and led to yet more gruelling treks around the world, where their rabid
fan base lurks in every shadowy corner waiting for their latest fix of
barbaric drama and blood-soaked belligerence.
And so to 2006, where
Cradle Of Filth find themselves in the enviable position of being in a
league and class of their own. Having long since outstripped the
achievements of their one-time contemporaries, the band are now firmly
entrenched in a rich vein of form. The current line-up of Dani Filth,
guitarists Paul Allender and Charles Hedger, bassist Dave Pybus and
drummer Adrian Erlandsson is the most solid and powerful in the band’s
career and Thornography is the resounding, conclusive proof. With songs
as brutish, bombastic and diverse as “Libertina Grimm,” “Tonight In
Flames,” “Cemetery & Sundown,” “I Am The Thorn,” “The Byronic Man”
(featuring HIM’s Ville Valo on guest vocals) and a deranged cover of
Heaven 17’s ‘80s pop gem “Temptation,” the world’s biggest and best
extreme metal band have never sounded so exhilarating, so vital, so
venomous…
“There are a lot of characters on this album,” says Dani
Filth of the new opus. “There’s no central concept. It’s more along the
lines of Nymphetamine in respect of diversity of content, both
lyrically and musically. We spent the whole summer of 2005 working
really hard on writing the material and making sure it was the best of
songs we’ve ever written. Which undoubtedly it is. It’s obviously our
best material thus far. It’s far more rhythmic and catchy and easily
the heaviest thing we’ve done, especially on the production side of
things. And there’s a real retro feel to the record, in terms of style.
It’s slightly experimental for us and a lot of people will be surprised
I think at the level of diversity we've managed to achieve with this,
especially having worked with other musicians and having our first band
instrumental included (Rise Of The Pentagram). We started to write and
got into a habit of coming up with tons of stuff. Everyone would be
working on ideas and we’d pool it all together in the dank confines of
our rehearsal room. We kept stirring the cauldron and adding or
subtracting accordingly. Thus each song has its own sound and feel in
relation to the concept behind each track. And as per normal, it's all
in good taste!
For example, Libertina Grimm, (which concerns
itself with a haughty little vivisectrix and her dissonant life of
crime) meanders through a succession of twists and turns as if to mimic
her dark, labyrinthine obsessions with the dead, before finding
foothold with a real primal, sex-laden hook. She might be mad, but
before all else she's groovy!"
Louder, harder, faster, heavier,
darker, catchier - the unstoppable force that is Cradle Of Filth
slithers menacingly forward, crushing the opposition and striking
warped, blackened glee into the hearts of misanthropes and malevolents
the world over. The nightmare continues…may we never wake up!
Members:
-Adrian Erlandsson – drums
-Dani Filth (Daniel Lloyd Davey) – vocals
-Dave Pybus – bass
-Paul Allender – guitar
-Charles Hedger – guitar
Discography:
-The Principle Of Evil Made Flesh (1994)
-Dusk.....And Her Embrace (1996)
-Cruelty And The Beast (1998)
-Midian (2000)
-Bitter Suites To Succubi (2001)
-Damnation and a Day (2003)
-Nymphetamine (2004)
-Thornography (2006)
From: http://www.cradleoffilth.com & www.pl.wikipedia.org