Teitanblood

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Teitanblood
General information
Genre (s) Black metal , death metal
founding 2003
Website http://www.teitanblood.com/
Current occupation
NSK
J
former members
Electric guitar
Usurper of Eternal Condemnation and Inverted Crucifixion

Teitanblood is a Spanish black / death metal band from Madrid .

history

The band was formed in 2003. In 2004 their demo recording Genocide Chants to Apolokian Dawn was released , in 2005 a split EP followed with the band Proclamation , to which personal overlaps exist and whose drummer Abomination of 4 Winds and Bestial Offensor Teitanblood regards as a "brother band".

NSK also worked temporarily for Ofermod : For December 2005, the band announced that they would record their debut album Pentagrammaton in the studio of then Ofermod drummer Necromorbus , with singer Leviathan Nebiros sharing the vocals with Moloch; this is a spiritual brother and is known by a different name in the Spanish black / death metal underground. The Pentagrammaton album did not materialize, some songs and riffs were used for Ofermod's debut album Tiamtü and a Nefandus album. Belfagor from Ofermod announced, however, that Moloch will continue to work with his band and take over the vocals at concerts should Nebiros be prevented. Moloch wrote half of the text of the text on Eu Angélion ; in the booklet of the album he is named as "frater Nasko of Teitanblood" .

In 2006 a split EP was released with the German band Necros Christos . Since the band had not intended to limit the material, NSK decided to distribute it on request on CD-R with a copied cover and a few leaflets or stickers; When he asked Anastasis of Nuclear Winter Records to make these stickers and told him of his intentions, the latter suggested an official release. NSK agreed on the condition not to limit this publication and to sell it at a reasonable price. In 2009 the debut album Seven Chalices was released . With the departure of the guitarist Usurper of Eternal Condemnation and Inverted Crucifixion, the line-up was reduced to two members.

Music style and lyrics

Usurper of Eternal Condemnation and Inverted Crucifixion, who also plays in Proclamation , describes Teitanblood's music as “a coven of Goetic Death Metal” . The band mixes influences from basic black and death metal bands without trying to develop a completely new style; nevertheless, their music retains a certain independence.

The content relates to the occult and eschatology of different religions.

Discography

  • 2004: Genocide Chants to Apolokian Dawn ( demo recording )
  • 2005: Proclamation / Teitanblood ( split- EP with proclamation )
  • 2006: Teitanblood / Necros Christos (split EP with Necros Christos )
  • 2009: Black Putrescence of Evil (compilation of the tracks from the demo recording and the split EPs)
  • 2009: Seven Chalices
  • 2011: Purging Tongues (EP)
  • 2012: Woven Black Arteries (compilation of the EP Purging Tongues and a new title)
  • 2014: Death

Individual evidence

  1. ... Y LLEGARAN LOS TIEMPOS DEL FIN Y EL FIN DE LOS TIEMPOS. Retrieved August 6, 2014 .
  2. a b c d e Jason Campbell: Teitanblood. Voices from the Darkside, accessed August 6, 2014 .
  3. ^ Proclamation . In: Black Plague . 2006 ( archive.org [accessed August 6, 2014]).
  4. The Holy Union of OFERMOD. Archived from the original on February 2, 2006 ; accessed on August 6, 2014 .
  5. Niklas Göransson: Teitanblood. Bardo Methodology, December 13, 2016, accessed January 30, 2018 .
  6. a b Ofermod. (No longer available online.) Metal.de, October 31, 2008, archived from the original on January 20, 2015 ; accessed on August 6, 2014 . Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.metal.de
  7. Ofermod : Tiamtü . Norma Evangelium Diaboli, 2008.
  8. ^ Proclamation . In: Hellpike . 2005 ( archive.org [accessed August 6, 2014]).
  9. ^ A b Stewart Voegtlin: Interview: Teitanblood. TheLeftHandPath.com, July 1, 2009, archived from the original on June 19, 2012 ; accessed on August 6, 2014 .