Necrophagist
Necrophagist | |
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Necrophagist performing in 2010. Shown from left to right: Stephan Fimmers, Muhammed Suiçmez, Romain Goulon (behind), and Sami Raatikainen. | |
Background information | |
Origin | Gaggenau, Baden-Württemberg, Germany |
Genres | Technical death metal[1] |
Years active | 1992–2016 (on hiatus) |
Labels | |
Associated acts | |
Website |
www |
Members | |
Past members | (See below) |
Necrophagist is a German technical death metal band, founded and fronted by guitarist and vocalist Muhammed Suiçmez. The band is known for its rapid and technical compositions.
The name originates from the Greek roots νεκρο- nekro- ("dead body")[2] and -φαγος -phagos ("eater of").[3] This figuratively translates to eater of the dead; literally the eater of dead bodies.
History
Necrophagist's debut album Onset of Putrefaction has been out of print for years. The percussion on the album was handled by a drum machine. Eventually, a new edition with drum samples recorded by Hannes Grossmann was created. All of the old guitar, bass guitar, and vocal tracks were mixed along with the brand new drum samples. The re-release also features two songs from Necrophagist's 1995 self-titled demo tape. The whole album was also engineered by long-time Necrophagist engineer and producer Christoph Brandes at The Iguana Studios. It was mastered by Bob Katz at "Digital Domain", Orlando, Florida. The re-release was issued in 2004 by Willowtip in the United States/Canada and Relapse in the rest of the world. In August 2001, Necrophagist performed at the Brutal Assault open air festival in the Czech Republic. The band also returned to perform in the years 2001, 2003, 2005 and 2010.
On February 10, 2006 it was announced that Christian Münzner had departed the band due to scheduling conflicts. Later on, he joined the death metal band Obscura. A replacement guitarist was found, Sami Raatikainen, who is from Helsinki, Finland. Sami also plays in the band Codeon.
In 2006, the band undertook an American tour called "Carving North America's Epitaph". Necrophagist was joined on this tour by Arsis, Alarum, Neuraxis, Ion Dissonance, Cattle Decapitation and Thine Eyes Bleed. They, along with Dying Fetus, supported Cannibal Corpse on their U.S. tour in the fall, which also included some Canadian venues.
In 2007, the band announced on its Myspace profile that after the 2007 California Metalfest, drummer Hannes Grossmann would leave the band. Hannes stated that he was unable to commit to the band's full-time touring schedule. Marco Minnemann (who has played with Paul Gilbert, Terry Bozzio, Chad Wackerman) was the official permanent replacement for Hannes.
Necrophagist was a headlining act for The Summer Slaughter Tour in 2007, which featured a wide variety of other extreme metal bands including Decapitated, Arsis, The Faceless, Cephalic Carnage, As Blood Runs Black, and Cattle Decapitation.
In April 2008, Necrophagist announced that Romain Goulon would be joining the band as their new drummer, replacing Minnemann, who would still be working with Suiçmez on a side project.[4]
Necrophagist played in the "Pillage the Village Tour" in 2008 from August 26, 2008 to September 10, 2008 with death metal bands Dying Fetus and Beneath the Massacre. Shows in some areas also included Carcass, Suffocation, 1349, and Aborted.
In 2008, Necrophagist began work on its next album with new drummer Romain Goulon.[5] According to rumors, two possible names were "The Path to Naught" and "Death to the Faithful". Suiçmez stated that the band would be using seven-string guitars on the album.[6] Muhammed himself will be recording with a new custom shop Ibanez Xiphos guitar with 7 strings, as well as 27 frets.[7] Sami Raatikainen is now an Ibanez Guitar endorser, using a 7 String RG-Series guitar on stage.
As of 2012, it is unknown if Necrophagist are still active, or have plans to release a follow-up to Epitaph. This has led to a large amount of speculation on the part of fans, bewildered by the album's long wait. However, in a statement made in August 2012, former drummer Marco Minnemann stated there is indeed progress on a new album, saying "I know people are waiting for the new Necro album so bad. Muhammed is a very close friend of mine and I know he's really concerned about delivering the best album possible. But I personally know there's progress....hang on in there, I'm sure he'll deliver the goods."
On September 11, 2013, drummer Romain Goulon issued a statement that Necrophagist are still active and attempting to record a new album, however no indication of when it would be released was given.[8]
Members
Final Line-Up
- Muhammed Suiçmez – lead guitar, vocals (1992–2016)
- Stephan Fimmers – bass guitar (2003–2016)
- Sami Raatikainen – rhythm guitar, lead guitar (2006–2016)
- Romain Goulon – drums (2008–2016)
Former members
- Jan-Paul Herm – guitar (1992–1995)
- Matthias Holzapfel – guitar (1995–2000)
- Raphael Kempermann – drums (1992–1995)
- Daniel Silva – drums (1995–1998, 2001–2003)
- Mario Petrovic – guitar (2000–2001)
- Slavek Foltyn – drums (2000–2001)
- Björn Vollmer – guitar (2001–2002)
- Julien Laroche – bass guitar (2001–2003)
- Christian Müenzner – guitar (2002–2006)
- Heiko Linzert – bass guitar (2003)
- Hannes Grossmann – drums (2003–2007)
- Marco Minnemann – drums (2007–2008)
Discography
- Studio albums
- Onset of Putrefaction (1999)
- Epitaph (2004)
- Demo albums
- Requiems of Festered Gore (1992)
- Necrophagist (1995)
References
- ↑ York, William. "Epitaph > Review". allmusic.com. Retrieved 2008-09-19.
- ↑ "'necro-' definition". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2010-08-22.
- ↑ "'-phagous' definition". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2010-08-22.
- ↑ "Necrophagist Announces New Drummer". Blabbermouth.net. 2008-04-24. Retrieved 2009-01-05.
- ↑ "Romain Goulon joins Necrophagist". Necrophagist.de. Retrieved 2010-08-22.
- ↑ "NECROPHAGIST Frontman Talks About Forthcoming Album". Blabbermouth.net. Retrieved 2008-12-27.
- ↑ "Necrophagist on MySpace Music". MySpace. Retrieved 2010-08-22.
- ↑ "An Actual Update On A New NECROPHAGIST Album". Metal Injection. September 11, 2013. Retrieved August 13, 2014.