ASTARTE's MARIA 'TRISTESSA' KOLOKOURI Dies After Leukemia Battle

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Maria Kolokouri, better known as Tristessa, the vocalist of the Greek black metal band ASTARTE, has died from complications of leukemia.Kolokouri's husband Nick Maiis has released the following statement regarding her passing: "Maria she's left from this world. You are leaving a lot behind and my soul is in pain. You are a special person, you are my wife. I will always adore you, our son and everybody that they love you. I will always honour you and you will never be forgotten. Until we meet again, my love, I will kiss you from inside of my soul."ASTARTE in 2013 announced plans to enter the studio to record its sixth full-length album, "Blackdemonium".The band's fifth CD, "Demonized", was released in 2007 via Avantgarde Music.Asked in an interview what "Astarte" stood for an what the band's goals were, Tristessa said: "Astarte is the great goddess of fertility, beauty and war. She is the Phoenician predecessor to the Greek Aphrodite. Her counterparts are well known to all of us, for instance to the Sumerians, she was known as Innanna, to the Babylonians as Ishtar, and so forth. She was associated with the moon and called Mother of the Universe, so her background fits to the Greek pagan spirit."She added: "Our goal is to create the absolute personal music style and to show that music and generally art belongs to everybody. The world of art welcome all those who have feelings, imagination and creativity and each one shall take what he or she deserves."In a 2007 interview with Metal-Rules.com, Tristessa said about the songwriting process for ASTARTE: "First of all, I need to have some conditions that will help me to start composing music. My mind needs to be in total self control and sadness is very helping factor to transform my thoughts into the music. "I record my ideas to a small console that I have in my bedroom. Once I gather a lot of ideas (hours of riffing ideas), I choose and unify them, to find the metronomes and to make a skeleton of a song. Then is the right time to meet the band and to enrich my riffs in order to work on final formation/skeleton of every song."For the aggressive songs, we gave emphasis to the guitars to be more aggressive, riffings are not so melodic and drums are faster and raw and straight in your face."

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