Showing posts with label Violin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Violin. Show all posts

February 6, 2009

Metal Bands with Strings Part 2

Earl Maneein
Since my Metal Bands with Strings post last November, I’ve found a few more string players in bands who write some really shit-kickin' music:

Earl Maneein
NYC violinist/violist, graduate of the Mannes College of Music and founder/primary songwriter for the self-described “violin-driven post-thrash metal band” Resolution15. Maneein’s deeply distorted and down-tuned 7-string violin handles the rhythm and lead duties with delectable brutality, leaving no room for a guitarist in the band.

Resolution15’s message is a political one and so is their name: they write on their MySpace page that Resolution 15 was “…passed by the North Vietnamese in 1959 to aid the Viet-Cong insurgency, leading directly to U.S. involvement in the second Indo-Chinese War.” Their music takes swipes at injustices in Southeast Asia as well as former president George W. Bush. To understand a little better, I think it’s worth reading a very interesting MySpace blog post written by Maneein, whose family comes from Thailand, about the cost of affluence manifesting itself at the Burmese-Thai border.

Hear it for yourself: their album is available for listening at their website. I recommend starting with "Blowback."

Photo by Gina Martini, courtesy of www.resolution15.com


Tim Charles is a man of many talents. He is a composer, businessman and instrumentalist at home with classical music, jazz and even metal. He is in the Australian progressive metal band Ne Obliviscaris as the violinist (acoustic no less!), clean vocalist, booking agent and co-manager (extreme vocalist Xenoyr is the other co-manager). He handles the business side of things through the company that he founded with Xenoyr, Welkin Entertainment, where he also manages and promotes other bands. That’s pretty impressive, but even more so is Ne Obliviscaris’ demo, The Aurora Veil.

Tim CharlesIf I had to pick one word to describe this album, it would be “epic.” I usually don’t try to categorize music like this since I prefer to let it speak for itself, but the songs on The Aurora Veil are simply that: epic. Two of the three songs are almost 12 minutes long while the third is nine and a half, and each one is a trek through Opeth-esque texture and mood shifts. However, Ne Obliviscaris’ extremes go further than Opeth’s with less repetition. The death and black metal sections don’t fail to pummel while the soft sections are moments of exquisite beauty. When they put the two on top of each other, the result is very dense sound that remains clear and tasteful without suffering from pretension.

Each player’s top-notch technique allows the music to become quite complex, but they always manage to find their own voice within even the most intricate parts of a song. Charles can be found either in the rhythm section, trading leads with the guitars or on top of it all with a melody. Brendan Brown, the bassist, has serious chops which he uses to shred through his unique lines or to double the fast-as-hell guitar parts. Dan Presland is the winner of the 2006 "Fastest Feet" drummer competition in Australia; I shouldn’t need to say any more about the double bass pedaling than that.

The Aurora Veil is available for purchase on the Ne Obliviscaris MySpace page. It’s only 10 Australian dollars plus shipping (AU$5 to send it to me in Boston), which is a deal considering the quality of music that’s on it.
Photo courtesy of flickr.com/toycarphotos

December 9, 2008

Rachel Barton Pine: Classical Violinist, Metalhead

Rachel Barton PineThe December 2008 issue of Strings magazine features virtuoso violinist Rachel Barton Pine on its cover. For some reason, it reminded me of the first album of hers that I ever heard: Stringendo: Storming the Citadel. Do you know that one? It’s her metal album.

It was released in 1997, the year after Apocalyptica’s debut album, Plays Metallica by Four Cellos. However, Barton’s recording includes more than just Metallica covers (not at all to say that an album of Metallica covers is bad!). Her range of selections is large, covering classic rock, thrash metal, speed metal, grunge and pop. She even includes two classical pieces just to drive home her point that metal and classical music are not as different as people (from both genres) think. The tracklisting is below:

  1. The Star Spangled Banner (Hendrix)
  2. Thunderstruck / Back In Black (AC/DC)
  3. Sunday Bloody Sunday (U2)
  4. Cowboys from Hell (Pantera)
  5. Blow Up the Outside World (Soundgarden)
  6. Paranoid (Black Sabbath)
  7. Fade To Black (Metallica)
  8. Caprice No. 24 in A minor (Paganini)
  9. Heartbreaker / Black Dog / Stairway To Heaven (Led Zeppelin)
  10. Symphony of Destruction (Megadeth)
  11. All Apologies / Smells Like Teen Spirit (Nirvana)
  12. Passacaglia for violin and cello (Handel, arr. Halvorsen)
  13. The Spirit of Radio (Rush)
  14. One (Metallica)
Listen to it on the rock section of her website; it should start playing right away.

Also worth noting is Pine’s 1998 album, Instrument of the Devil, which follows the path of comparing metal to classical that Stringendo blazed. However, Instrument is an all-classical album focused on destroying the stereotype that the violin plays only pretty and sweet music. This is an album of the music that associates the violin with evil, much like the Satanic reputation that the electric guitar has gained from blues, rock and heavy metal.

I’ll admit that I have not been following her since these two albums came out, so I’m very impressed to find that in addition to her busy concert schedule, she’s maintaining a large and professionally-done web presence. Kudos to her! She has embraced the “Web 2.0” culture and adapted to the new model of music business.

Her homepage is divided into three parts, one for her classical fans, one for rock music (with a motive for turning life-long metalheads on to classical music, of course) and a third part for music business. She is currently making two podcasts, one for classical music and the other for metal, has a blog, a myspace, twitter, flickr, facebook and a YouTube page. Talk about keeping in touch!

More importantly, she understands that music is about taking little parts and building big things with them. Not just making notes and motives into phrases, phrases into sections and sections into pieces of music, but putting music into a social context. It’s as though she asked herself “what’s bigger than ‘art for art’s sake’?” and thus started her musical ambassadorship between genres and the Rachel Elizabeth Barton Foundation for classical musicians in need.

She doesn’t need me to talk about how accomplished her career is, so I won't. However, I do want to draw people’s attention to the fact that she is a socially-aware artist who’s not afraid to break down preconceptions about seemingly disparate styles of music, thus hooking people on music they might not have otherwise heard. That she can throw down a bitchin’ solo on top of it all doesn’t hurt either.

;)

(Photo courtesy of flickr.com/photos/rachelbartonpine)