Demigod (band)

Demigod
Origin Loimaa, Finland
Genres Death metal
Years active 1990–2008
2010–present
Labels Drowned Productions
Repulse Records
Spikefarm Records
Xtreem Music
Website http://www.demigod.tv/
Members Tuomas Ala-Nissilä - vocals
Jussi Kiiski - guitars
Tuomas Karppinen - guitars
Sami Vesanto - bass
Tuomo Latvala - drums
Past members Esa Lindén (Demigod founder) - vocals/guitar
Seppo Taatila (Demigod founder) - drums
Erik Parviainen (Demigod founder) - guitar
Tero Laitinen (Demigod founder) - guitar
Jarkko Rantanen - vocals, drums
Ali Leiniö - vocals
Mika Haapasalo - keyboards

Demigod are a death metal band formed in 1990 in Loimaa, Finland. The band's debut album Slumber of Sullen Eyes is highly regarded in the heavy metal community. Terrorizer included it in their list of "40 death metal albums that you must hear", commenting: "It is with this often overlooked classic that one of the greatest love stories of all time unfolded: Florida's pummeling groove me Sweden's buzzsaw guitar work in a union so deliciously evil it could move the hardest of bangers to tears of joy."[1]

History

Demigod was a popular group in the death metal underground of the 1990s; however, despite a steady status and a healthy number of gigs, the band split up in the mid-90s. Demigod re-formed in 1998 and was eventually signed by Spikefarm, a sublabel of major Finnish metal record company Spinefarm, who released the band's second album Shadow Mechanics.[2]

Somewhere between 2002 and 2006, this co-operation came to an end, and the band recorded the follow-up to Shadow Mechanics without a label. The recordings were finished in the summer of 2006, and the album was released by the band's own label, Open Game Productions, in 2007. Since late 2007, worldwide distribution has been handled by the Spanish label Xtreem Music, leaving only the Scandinavian market for the band's own label. Xtreem Music has also re-released the debut album, previously long out of print.[3]

In 2012, Esa Linden and several of the other "Slumber of Sullen Eyes" members took part in several reunion shows. After the string of shows was brought to a close, the band intended to begin writing another album.

Discography

References

  1. Mikkelson, Jill. Terrorizer's Secret History of Death Metal, "The 40 Albums You Must Hear", page 95, March 2010.
  2. Spinefarm
  3. Xtreem Music

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.