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During his time in the seminal hardcore band the Misfits, vocalist Glenn
Danzig displayed a fascination with outlandish, graphic, often gory imagery;
in forming the more heavy metal-oriented band Samhain, Danzig's lyrics
delved into typical metal subject matter, but took the concept of darkness
to an extreme. After the demise of Samhain, Danzig formed his own eponymous
band with Samhain guitarist John Christ, ex-Rosemary's Babies drummer Eerie
Von on bass, and longtime hardcore drummer Chuck Biscuits (D.O.A., Black
Flag, Circle Jerks); this band would prove a more effective vehicle for
Danzig's obsession with the dark side.
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While that obsession can seem cartoonish at times, there is more to the band
than meets the eye -- Danzig obviously relishes casting himself as the
menacing, evil heavy metal frontman, and his theatricality often seems to
indicate that his posturing is not meant to be taken very seriously. At the
same time, the darkness of Danzig's vision has increasingly expressed itself
over the band's career in a heavily romanticized, brooding, gothic
sensibility, more quietly sinister and darkly seductive than obviously
threatening or Satanic, and the group's music has progressed from simple,
blues-based heavy metal riffs to more atmospheric, coldly haunting song
textures that attempt to sonically replicate the feel of the lyrics. Glenn
Danzig cofounded the Misfits in Lodi, NJ, in 1977. When the hardcore band
broke up in 1983, Danzig formed the metallic, brooding Samhain in order to
experiment with different sounds, but that project imploded as well. The
band Danzig was put together in 1987, and quickly inked a deal with Rick
Rubin's Def American label. Their self-titled debut found Danzig playing the
Satanic metal singer role to the hilt, even if the band's songs sounded much
the same. Danzig II: Lucifuge followed in 1990, and it broadened the band's
musical palette, expanding on the simple blues riffs of the debut with more
extensive forays into that style. Danzig III: How the Gods Kill marked a
full-fledged entry into the realm of gothic romanticism, working to create
moods rather than pounding heavy metal aggression; "Dirty Black Summer" and
"How the Gods Kill" became staples on MTV's Headbanger's Ball. Glenn Danzig
next released a solo project, Black Aria, a quasi-operatic attempt at
classical instrumentals depicting the fall of Satan from heaven. The band
broke through into the mainstream in 1993, when a live video for "Mother," a
song originally released on Danzig, became an inescapable smash on MTV and
even charted as a single, nearly cracking the Billboard Top 40. Meanwhile,
Danzig contributed a track entitled "Thirteen" to Johnny Cash's acclaimed
1994 effort American Recordings. The more experimental Danzig 4 was released
in 1994 and entered the charts at number 29, but its quiet, moody,
atmospheric subtlety didn't find as much favor with the band's new audience
as the anthemic "Mother," while some longtime fans dismissed it as mellow
and therefore commercial. During the supporting tour, Chuck Biscuits left
the band and was replaced by Joey Castillo. Following the tour, Danzig broke
up the band and formed a new version featuring ex-Prong guitarist/vocalist
Tommy Victor, drummer Castillo, and bassist Josh Lazie; this lineup released
Danzig 5: Blackacidevil on Halloween 1996. Blackacidevil was ignored by both
the press and the public, falling out of the charts after a mere three weeks.
6:66 Satan's Child followed in 1999; Live on the Black Hand Side appeared
two years later. In 2002 and 2004 Danzig released the stripped-down I
Luciferi and Circle of Snakes, both a return to form that found the artist
emulating the simplistic brutality of his 1988 debut. |
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DANZIG PICTURES |
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