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  • Reality about Record Label Deals

    Reality about Record Label Deals

    Aug 1 • International News • 2899 Views

    Wintersun is a metal band from Helsinki, Finland and was originally created by guitarist, keyboardist, bassist, songwriter and vocalist Jari Mäenpää as a side project to folk metal band Ensiferum, for whom he was lead singer and guitarist.  The band has been signed to Nuclear Blast Record Label and took 8 years to release their Time I album which was supposed to be followed by Time II in 2013, but later got pushed to 2014. You may ask why is the band taking so much of time to put a record out? Here’s a reality check on getting signed into a Record Label, Time II and Wintersun’s future albums. [As spoken by Jari, Wintersun]

     

    I´m very happy to see that we have so much dedicated fans that would be willing to pledge and be a part of funding a studio for Wintersun, so I could make the next Wintersun album without it taking another 10 years again.

    I´ve been thinking about this Kickstarter or Pledge crowd funding thing for a while and I´m very confident now that there is enough of you guys that would help us raise the money for the Wintersun studio! This would give me the freedom to make music efficiently and nonstop. It would eliminate lot of the problems I´ve struggled with all my life and still continue to struggle everyday. For example right now I need a studio to reamp guitars for TIME II. And not just any studio, my own studio where I can craft my sounds exactly like I want them. 3rd party studios have never worked for me and I´ve never gotten satisfactory results for the insane prices they charge.

     

    Reality about Record Label Deals

    Reality about Record Label Deals

    I live in a small shitty apartment building and I have neighbors. It is very very hard to work like this. I can´t record vocals, I can´t practice my singing, I can´t record guitars, I can´t record guitars even with modeling amps, because the electricity is so bad in this shitty building so I get lots of interference, I even play and practice the electric guitar acoustically without an amp 99% of the time in my home, I can´t record drums or basically any acoustic instruments, I don´t have the room or cool space for a big computer farm which is a must for the orchestrations for the next album (the place is too small and hot even for the one computer I have), I can´t mix properly, ´cause the room is so bad and there´s always ambient noise in and outside the building. That´s why I usually turn my sleeping rhythm around and mix at nights, but that causes problems in my everyday life. I can’t do pretty much anything properly in this situation. Building a professional studio for Wintersun would erase all this and give us the freedom to make music nonstop. It would upgrade our album sound significantly and most importantly speed up the album making process significantly. This would even raise our live game. With proper preproduction, able to tweak our live sounds and setup properly we would sound pretty incredible live. We would also be able to rehearse more and that would allow us to be able to play live more often and come to places where we normally have not been able to come. The studio would allow us to have more time for everything.

     

    But the problem is this. I have a record deal with Nuclear Blast. If I would do a Kickstarter with a downloadable album for example, they would come with lawyers and take % share (more than half) away from the money that is your money meant for the Wintersun studio and the album production. Would you even want to pledge if Wintersun didn´t get 100% of the money you´ve pledged for the album production? Then our management would take their % share away. Then there´s taxes of course. The Finnish government would take something like 40% away. This would leave me nothing. I would be totally screwed. I´ve been trying to have a discussion with Nuclear Blast about crowd funding, but they are totally freaking out. They see the crowd funding as a threat to their business and they would rather see Wintersun dead, than me doing a crowd funding. I think this would not hurt them at all, only benefit them, but they cannot see the big picture of Wintersun doing well. They actually told me point blank that I should just stop making music and they will never release Wintersun from the contract. It´s really like this, because they can´t or won´t loan me enough money to build a studio and fund an album, they don´t want other people (the fans) to fund it either… unless they get a crazy big cut of the funding (for doing absolutely nothing).

     

    This is the way a record deal works: The label gives an advance to make an album. This is a loan and they will recoup every penny back from the record sales. The reason why TIME I&II has taken so long to make (and still is taking long to finish TIME II), is because I haven´t gotten enough advances (money) to make these complex albums. Not even close. So I´ve been struggling all these years and sacrificed everything to make these albums. I have never really made any money from Wintersun. All my money has gone to album production, but you can guess who have made tons of money from Wintersun. The point is that I need my own studio to make the future albums, but Nuclear Blast won´t be able to loan enough money to make that happen and then they won´t allow me to do a crow funding campaign either that would make it happen. And even if Nuclear Blast would be able to loan me the money for the studio, our management would take their share of that money and I would get only part of the money, but I would still have to pay back 100% to Nuclear Blast from the record sales. So I would actually lose big chunk of the album production money straight away, which makes no sense at all. And then there´s the taxes. So there´s no point of taking these “loans” either.

     

    This all is stressing me out very badly and it´s slowing my workflow. I´ve got enough technical problems to deal with making these albums. I just want the freedom to make music, but I guess it is what it is. Honestly, I feel like I´ve signed a deal with the devil and I´m just a slave in the system.

     

    I´ve got probably 5 long albums worth of new insanely good material! And there´s no filler material at all! The music is much more refined, much more advanced in arrangement/composition/production wise. It´s diverse and beautiful, heavy, chaotic and exploring different styles and themes and some new dimensions I feel no band has explored before… The stuff is simply on another level, in a different universe than the debut album and the TIME albums combined. I wrote the TIME albums around 2006 and before, that was a lifetime ago. Think of the stuff I´ve written ever since to this day! And I just keep on writing, I feel like I´m on fire. The music is just flowing out of me. I´m so excited about all this new music and I can´t wait to start recording and sharing it with you… BUT I can´t without a studio, that´s the problem…

    Jari

    P.S. Should have stayed working in the post office!

     

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  • Eluveitie talks about their upcoming album Origins

    Jul 31 • International News, Interviews, News, Releases • 6485 Views

    Ever since 2002, Swiss folk metal act Eluveitie has been fascinating with every release. It seems the words “monumental” and “Colossal” are ingrained in the band’s genes. Swiss metallers are set to release their sixth studio album ‘Origins‘ on 1st August via Nuclear Blast Records. With new members coming on board in the band, the eight piece folk metal band are all ready to let their new tunes hit your eardrums. We spoke to Päde Kistler regarding their new album and Eluveitie’s plans for the coming year

    Eluveitie

    Eluveitie

    Metalbase India: Why did you decide to sing in Gaulish, a language unknown to so many of your listeners?
    Päde Kistler: We just partly write lyrics in gaulish, it’s an extinct language of our ancestors and it’s interesting to scientifically work on this. It’s just to somehow get connected with the past more then just with the feeling, also with it’s language.
    aetiological
    MBI: What draws you to the myths and histories of Celtic and Gaelic tradition?
    Päde Kistler: First of all it’s not about the gaelic tradition, it’s about gaulish tradition. Gaelic is the culture on the British and Irish Island while gaulish is from the European main lands. It’s the tradition of our ancestors.

    MBI: To name an album ‘Origins’ at this stage, quite at the peak of your musical career is rather puzzling. What inspired the name?
    Päde Kistler: The whole album is about aetiological tales of Celtic tribes that’s basically why the album is called origins. It’s all about the origin of several Celtic tribes.

    MBI: How did Miss Nicole Ansperger come to join the band?
    Päde Kistler: She got told that we are looking for a new violin player from a friend of her that also was a friend of us. Unfortunately this guy died a couple of months ago due to a tragic accident.

    MBI: While you certainly started out as the ‘New Wave of Folk Metal’, are you worried about other bands replicating your work because of your incredible success?
    Päde Kistler: No, we do not worry about this. We hope that a lot of bands fusion their traditional music with modern music, doesn’t matter which style. There is a fantastic band from England that does a fusion of Indian music with Drum and Bass, Punk and Ragga. Actually one of my favourite bands ever. They are all from Indian heritage but grew up in England. They are called Asian Dub Foundation. So to know who you are you have to know where you come from.

    MBI: You’ve just made history by being the first metal band to win at the renowned Swiss Music Awards, in the ‘Best Live Act National’ category no less, an entirely audience- voted award. Did that come as a surprise, or is that merely another feather to your cap?
    Päde Kistler: Indeed, it was a great surprise. We never thought that this could be possible for a band that plays underground music. On the other hand so far, we are the most successful Swiss band internationally, so not to be big headed but somehow I suppose we also deserve this attention ;-). For our music it doesn’t really influence us, it’s just a nice feather in our cap to once get attention from the main stream music industry.

    Eluveitie performing live

    Eluveitie performing live

     

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    MBI: Is metal popular in Switzerland? I mean, is it, for the lack of a better word, mainstream?
    Päde Kistler: No, not at all. It’s underground music. Countries like Finland have a lively and big metal scene while here in Switzerland Metal music is just underground. We somehow start to make it possible to bridge Metal and mainstream music here in this country. We get more attention through our success and that makes it possible for other Swiss metal bands to get attention as well.

    MBI: ‘King’ has been very well received. I know Indian fans are absolutely in love with the song. Could you tell us a bit about it? You know, theme, composition, production…
    Päde Kistler: You know, this questions are always difficult to answer. It’s about the high king Ambiciatus wants to serve his people and be the will of the gods. The lyrics are quite obvious about the topic.

    MBI: How does one go about composing with a combination of instruments that essentially seem to create opposed sounds? How do you reconcile the electric guitar, the growl and the flute and the violin?
    Päde Kistler: Actually in our opinion they do not create opposed sounds. I think metal music is like classic music played with modern instruments. Mostly a traditional tune is the base of a song and our riff master Ivo Henzi mostly creates the guitar riffs around the tunes. Of course, mainly Chrigel has a basic idea about every song, so the creative process is mainly done by this two people.

    MBI: How important is it for someone to grasp the ideas and events you sing about to understand your music? What, in particular, does Origins deal with, thematically?
    Päde Kistler: Well depends, if you want to enjoy the music you do not necessarily need to grasp the idea but of course it brings someone to a deeper understanding if the idea is known. The lyrics, even though they are about ancient times still have an actually significance. Topics like imperialism and war and how they affect the people are relevant as ever. Orgins, as the names says is all about the origins of several gaulishceltic tribes.

    MBI: Will you follow up the album release in August with a tour?
    Päde Kistler: Yes, we start the Orgins-World-Tour mid of Sepember in North America, after that Europe. More appearances are planned for the upcoming 2 year cycle in Asia, Australia, South America and wherever possible.

    Eluveitie Live

    Eluveitie Live

    MBI: Any plans of ever performing in India?
    Päde Kistler: Of course we would love to perform in India but it’s not upon us to decide, yeah let’s go to India. Basically a local promoter has to be willing to book a show, festival or a tour. We’d love to come back, our appearance at IIT Festival in Guwahati in 2010 is still not forgotten. So bother your promoters and we’ll come. I also have a special relationship to India, maybe sounds lame but I do Yoga which is a great practice for rock climbing, my main sport if I find time beside touring.

    MBI: Do you have a few words for your Indian fans?
    Päde Kistler: Thank you so much for all the great support we received from India. We’d love to come back to play for you guys. Hope it will be possible soon. In the meantime stay true, follow your ideas and live your life as intense as possible. Respect!

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  • Bölzer – Soma EP

    Jul 31 • Reviews, The Slumbering Ent • 3582 Views

    Achintya Venkatesh reviews the new EP from Bölzer titled Soma, released via Invictus Productions.

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    Artwork by Alexander Brown of BNB Illustration & Design

    Bölzer has in recent years produced one of the most refreshing takes on extreme metal, blending bludgeoning death metal with the atmospheric sensibilities of black metal, birthing one of the most unique aesthetics to hit a largely derivative extreme metal landscape in a while. 2013 saw the Swiss duo produce a truly fantastic EP of titanic proportions with merely three songs. Stylistic innovation and creative song-writing without the direct usage of eclectic ploys à la keyboards, synths, electronic samples, etc., is certainly something that is commendable, and Bölzer does precisely that. Essentially, the band takes the blackened death metal riff phrasings that similar contemporary bands such as Necros Christos, Antediluvian and Mitochondrion utilize a step forward. However, the syncopative riff phrasings written by KzR results in an aesthetic that is uniquely sonorous and in tonal value rather unique to Bölzer.

    Certainly, Bölzer are masters at achieving a rounded sense of artistic pursuit, as their fine balance of musical individualism and primordial imagery attest. ‘Steppes’ showcases gradual rather than immediate development in terms of riffs – percussive tremolo picking, sustained by controlled tempo builds onto melodic nuances and minor shifts in structure, which is otherwise rather stable. ‘Labyrinthian Graves’ on the other hand is more rhythmically intense, with muscular riffing being alleviated by frequent phrases of quickly picked melodies. This song in particular showcases a rich offertory of tonal textures, some extending riff motifs within a song while others bring compositional relief via cleaner tones (such as the outro to the song in question), or rhythmic cadence to a given segment, although the song is certainly not ever-evolving by any means and eventually does employ recursion.

    Accompanied by the thunderous howls of vocalist/guitarist KzR and the meticulous tempo regulation and kinetic finesse of HzR, ‘Soma’ showcases a band in a nascent stage of sorts as far as its sound and compositional sensibilities are concerned, in an experimental yet confident manner. ‘Soma’, while not as confounding as its predecessor, still presents the aforesaid riff ideas of the band in a manner that doesn’t take one by as much surprise, as opposed to serving as a rostrum for the compositional evolution of the band. In that sense, it is less appealing upon immediate inspection, as the songs seek to pursue different riff motifs and pace that are as atmospheric and resonant as they are explosive, painting abstractions that evoke the thematic explorations at play – invoking the Goddess Luna, warfare and the deference of the physical being. However, while this EP is not an avenue for immediate appeasement, it is a grower, putting it simply and is a testament to the versatility and on-going creative development of the band, in addition to being a teaser of sorts for greater things to come.

    RATING : 4/5 (This mighty tome will resurrect the dead, but it may not turn lead to gold)

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  • Noiseware working on their full length album

    Jul 31 • Indian News, Interviews, News, Releases • 3384 Views

    Looks like this year is set to punch us in the face with a slew of promising releases, but the creators aren’t giving much away just yet. Noiseware, especially, after their adequately well-received debut EP are now poised to return with a full-length album which is, in their words, “ It  isn’t really a concept album, so to speak. I think we’re all working towards creating something we would be happy with, something which would convey our sonic vision with clarity.”

    Noiseware live Control Alt Delete : The Metal Chapter

    Noiseware live at Control Alt Delete : The Metal Chapter

    That refreshingly honest essence of the anticipated album opens up a million ways of personal interpretation for the listeners. The guys continue with disavowing the construction of any tangible, labelled boundaries with I don’t think there’s a conscious effort to include certain genres as such. However, we do listen to a lot of varied music which has found its way into the music..so metal apart, you can definitely hear some post-rock, electronic and cinematic elements.” Considering that the inclusion of visual paraphernalia has received particular attention in the contemporary musical motifs, from both ends of the spectrum ( Steven Wilson to Lady Gaga), its about time metal transcends the tedious dominance of mindless pseudo-gore that so many bands use to supplement their amateurish music with some pretence at substance/meaning.

    Of course, fans of Noiseware have a bit of a rocky ride ahead because the upcoming album poses an aesthetic challenge. To quote the band, it is “Very different from our debut EP for sure. I think the EP was just an amalgamation of the material we had written then, and we were still finding our sound. Though the process of finding your sound is ever evolving, I think we’ve come to a stage where we know what works for us and what doesn’t. That is the single biggest factor which has changed around our writing style. However, you should be able to enjoy the album, if you enjoyed the EP!” No doubt the guys have taken experimentation as a mantra, and one can always hope it came out the way they intend it to.

    They have tentatively working towards a release at the end of the year, but aren’t giving away much. They did leave a message for Metalbase readers –  Noiseware V2.0. New and improved but will still have you what you loved about us. Thanks for sticking by!

    And stick by, shall we!

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  • Megadeth and Iron Maiden Are Not Coming to Bacardi NH7 Weekender 2014

    Megadeth and Iron Maiden Are Not Coming to Bacardi NH7 Weekender 2014

    Jul 30 • Indian News, International News, News • 6382 Views

    There have been numerous rumors passed around about Megadeth headlining Kolkata and Iron Maiden headlining Delhi edition of Bacardi NH7 Weekender. But, we’d like to say that both these news are hoax and we urge you not to believe in any such rumors.

    Earlier today, even we at Metalbase were made to believe that Megadeth were headlining Weekender Kolkata but later in the day Bacardi NH7 Weekender has confirmed that Megadeth are not headlining the Kolkata edition of the festival and said that “These are rumors/false news being passed by unauthorized sites”. You can find their tweet from their official account here.

     

    They are not coming!

     

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    There was also another round of rumors which were happening about Iron Maiden coming to Delhi. Once again, there is no official update regarding NH7 getting Iron Maiden nor any other event organiser having Iron Maiden headling a festival at Delhi in the near future.

    The rumor was passed on by a troll created by Sunday Times, the screen grabs of the same have been given below.

     

    Half the people just read this one bit and got all excited.

    iron-maiden-india-troll

     

    The Troll.

    troll-maiden

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