Desaster

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Desaster
Desaster performing in 2016
Desaster performing in 2016
Background information
OriginKoblenz, Germany
GenresBlack metal, thrash metal
Years active1988–1990, 1992–present
LabelsMerciless Records
Metal Blade Records
Iron PegasusInquisitor
Menhir
MembersInfernal
Odin
Sataniac
Hont
Past membersOkkulto
Creator Cassie
Thorim
Luggi
Alexander Arz
Tormentor

Desaster are a German black/thrash metal band formed in Koblenz in 1988. Their lyrical themes involve war, hate and Satanism.

History

Desaster formed in 1988. The band had line-up issues before Infernal, the only remaining member of the original line-up, found musicians to continue Desaster in 1990. Okkulto and Odin joined the band in 1992.[1]

After the two demos, The Fog of Avalon and Lost in the Ages (which Alexander von Meilenwald of Nagelfar and The Ruins of Beverast considers to be one of the five most important recordings for the German scene[2]), Merciless Records released a split-7" with Ungod in 1995, the band's vinyl-debut. In 1996 the first album A Touch of Medieval Darkness was released. The line-up for their following release, the 1997 Stormbringer mini-album, included new drummer Tormentor.[1]

In 1998, the band released the limited Ride on for Revenge picture-single; one of the songs was also released on the Thrashing Holocaust compilation CD released via Necropolis Records in 1999. Hellfire's Dominion, the second album, was released in 1998, which included the song "Metalized Blood" with guest vocals from Wannes of Pentacle, Lemmy of the German speed metal band Violent Force, and Toto of Living Death.[1] By the time it was released, Desaster were considered the most important German black metal band by Rock Hard journalist Wolf-Rüdiger Mühlmann and, according to his review, the whole underground scene;[3] his colleague Götz Kühnemund would later call them "Germany's leading black thrashers".[4] During the recording sessions of the second album, Desaster also recorded the song "Proselytism Real" for the Sodom tribute CD Homage to the Gods,[1] which was released as a bonus CD of the Code Red album's limited edition.

The band celebrated their 10th anniversary in late 1999 with the Ten Years of Total Desaster double LP. In 2000, they released a split 10-inch with the Dutch band Pentacle via Iron Pegasus Records and their third full-length album Tyrants of the Netherworld,[1] which featured Beliar from Mayhemic Truth as a guest musician.

Desaster in 2008

In summer 2001, Desaster contributed the song "Darkness and Evil" with Sabbat vocalist Gezol on guest-vocals for a Brazilian Sabbat tribute LP. After the band had played several festival-shows (e.g., Fuck the Commerce and Wacken Open Air), vocalist Okkulto decided to leave the band; he was replaced by Sataniac, the former vocalist of the German black/thrash band Divine Genocide. The Souls of Infernity 7-inch (2001) was Okkulto's last release with Desaster. Divine Blasphemies, featuring the Divine Genocide cover song "Necrolord" and Kreator vocalist Mille Petrozza as a guest vocalist on "Nighthawk", was released in 2002. A show in São Paulo, Brazil, in front of 900 spectators was considered "a special highlight of 2003" by the band; a recording of the show was released as a double LP/CD and DVD on the Brazilian label Mutilation Records. The band moved to Metal Blade Records who released their fifth album Angelwhore in 2005, which was also released on vinyl via Iron Pegasus Records.[1]

After performances in Germany, England, Finland, Ireland, Sweden, the Netherlands, Switzerland and other countries, a mini-tour through Croatia, Serbia, Hungary, Austria and Slovenia and the South American Tour through Brazil, Peru and Colombia, the band released a 12-inch vinyl single called Infernal Voices with one new song, the re-recorded "Fields of triumph" and a cover version of Unleashed's "Before the creation of time".[1]

In May 2007, Desaster entered the Harrows Studio, Holland (Asphyx, Pentacle, Occult, Soulburn etc.) to record the sixth studio album Satan's Soldiers Syndicate. It features guest appearances by Proscriptor (Absu), A.A. Nemtheanga (Primordial) and Ashmedi (Melechesh).[1]

Musical style

When Desaster formed, they were inspired by bands like Venom, Hellhammer and Destruction; the name of the band comes from the Destruction song "Total Desaster".[1] They describe their song "Metalized Blood" as a "neck breaking Speed Metal hymn" and their typical style as "thrashing, blacking riff metal without mercy where there is no space for any innovation and modern elements! It's what Desaster is all about: 'A FIST IN YOUR FACE METAL ATTACK'!"[1] Kühnemund described them as "raw, dirty, honest, heavy and punchy".[5] Desaster's style is closer to traditional thrash metal than to the Norwegian black metal style;[3] although they are often referred to as a black metal band, Frank Stöver considers them a pure thrash metal band whose style, strongly influenced by the old German thrash metal, still sounds "refreshing and honest", unlike many other bands that had black metal roots and then started to play thrash metal.[6] Robert Pöpperl-Berenda described songs like "Victim of My Force", "Tyrants of the Netherworld" and "Call on the Beast" as "primordial Teutonic thrash" and "Nekropolis Karthago" as "black metallic rage".[7] With Sataniac's vocals, Desaster sound "still a bit harder and more uncompromising".[8]

Members

Desaster performing in 2016

Current lineup

  • Infernal – guitars (1988–1990, 1992–present)
  • Odin – bass (1992–present)
  • Guido "Sataniac" Wissmann – vocals (2001–present)
  • Hont – drums (2018–present)

Former members

  • Creator Cassie – vocals, bass (1988–1990)
  • Alexander Arz – drums (1988–1990)
  • Okkulto – vocals (1992–2001)
  • Luggi – drums (1992–1995)
  • Tobias "Thorim" Moelich – drums (1995–1996)
  • Tormentor – drums (1996–2018)

Timeline

Discography

  • The Fog of Avalon Kaizerslawten (demo, 1993)
  • Lost in the Ages (demo, 1994)
  • Ungod / Desaster (split with Ungod, 1995)
  • A Touch of Medieval Darkness (1996)
  • Stormbringer (EP, 1997)
  • Ride on for Revenge (single, 1998)
  • Hellfire's Dominion (1998)
  • "Proselytism Real" on Code Red (1999)
  • Ten Years of Total Desaster (Best of/Compilation, 1999)
  • Desaster in League with Pentacle (split with Pentacle, 2000)
  • Tyrants of the Netherworld (2000)
  • Souls of Infernity (EP, 2001)
  • Divine Blasphemies (2002)
  • Live in Serbian Hell (live album, 2003)
  • Brazilian Blitzkrieg Blasphemies (live album, 2004)
  • Angelwhore (2005)
  • Invaders of Wrath (split with Ironfist, 2005)
  • Sabbatical Desasterminator (split with Sabbat, 2005)
  • Infernal Voices (EP, 2006)
  • Satan's Soldiers Syndicate (2007)
  • 20 Years of Total Desaster (boxed set, 2009)
  • Anniversarius (split with Sabbat, 2009)
  • Zombie Ritual / Devil's Sword (EP, 2010)
  • The Arts of Destruction (2012)[9]
  • The Oath of an Iron Ritual (2016)[10]
  • Churches Without Saints (2021)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j History, Web.archive.org, accessed on 21 November 2012.
  2. ^ Wolf-Rüdiger Mühlmann: Die Könige vom Westwall. Die legendären Protagonisten von damals im exklusiven Interview. In: Rock Hard, no. 269, October 2009, p. 92.
  3. ^ a b Wolf-Rüdiger Mühlmann: Desaster. Hellfire's Dominion. In: Rock Hard, no. 139, accessed on 21 November 2012.
  4. ^ Götz Kühnemund: Desaster. Satan's Soldiers Syndicate. In: Rock Hard, no. 245, accessed on 21 November 2012.
  5. ^ Götz Kühnemund: Desaster. Brazilian Blitzkrieg Blasphemies. In: Rock Hard, no. 210, accessed on 21 November 2012.
  6. ^ Frank Stöver: Desaster. Stormbringer. In: Rock Hard, no. 121, accessed on 21 November 2012.
  7. ^ Robert Pöpperl-Berenda: Desaster. Tyrants Of The Netherworld. In: Rock Hard, no. 165, accessed on 21 November 2012.
  8. ^ Götz Kühnemund: Desaster. Brazilian Blitzkrieg Blasphemies. In: Rock Hard, no. 220, accessed on 21 November 2012.
  9. ^ CROMCarl: Desaster Streaming New Track "Queens Of Sodomy", 10 January 2012, accessed on 21 November 2011.
  10. ^ "The Oath of an Iron Ritual". Metalcovenant.com. Retrieved 7 October 2020.

External links