Death Metal Bands

not really death metal, but in mourning has released some info including track listing regarding their new album!

http://inmourning.net/

really nice album art :)


Hate to be the dissident... But this sounds tremendously familiar to me... Not because I had already heard anything from them, but because, I'm afraid they're not that original.

Although, the do have a special touch, compared to the rest of "new" bands coming into the genre... I guess.
 
They aren't particularly original :) Just twangy melodeath mixed up with, not enough, doom :) They just write good songs, especially for having so much melodeath in 'em


Alright then, sounds acceptable :D

Still, it's so familiar... that it even makes me feel uncomfy :rofl:
 
They aren't particularly original :) Just twangy melodeath mixed up with, not enough, doom :) They just write good songs, especially for having so much melodeath in 'em
Alright then, sounds acceptable :D

Still, it's so familiar... that it even makes me feel uncomfy :rofl:
They may not be too original, yet the sheer quality of their stuff dwarfs pretty much all the competition.
 
I had to post this:lol:

KEEP OF KALESSIN Competing To Represent Norway In EUROVISION SONG CONTEST


”..Norwegian black metal band KEEP OF KALESSIN is one of the artists who are competing to represent Norway in next year’s Eurovision Song Contest.

On Tuesday (December 1), KEEP OF KALESSIN guitarist and songwriter Obsidian C (real name: Arnt Grønbech) told the Norwegian TV show “Lydverket” that he’s looking forward to performing the song “The Dragon Tower” alongside Norwegian pop artists and mainstream songwriters.

“I read an interview with Per Sundnes (host of the Norwegian Eurovision finals) where he said they wanted darker and harder songs for the Norwegian Eurovision finals,” he said. “At the same time, we had made a song with a catchy chorus, so I just sent it to them.”

On being called sellout:

Obsidian: “I think we are gonna get some reactions from the black metal scene, and lose some credibility. Some people, at least, will call us sellouts, but people saying those things are usually people who have an underground band themselves but make a living from selling hot dogs at a gas station. I think it’s less of a sellout to play in the Eurovision than to sell hot dogs.”