Seventh chapter:
...More of the same
(2006)
The new year started with the first concert overseas, in Minneapolis (Minnesota, USA) to be precise, on January 21st, together with, *drumroll*, Thyrfing and Primordial, which I guess made Ville clap his ears, since those are two of his most admired bands. That concert was followed by another one in Montreal two days later; this quick visit to North America was, rather than the beginning of a conquest, a reconnaissance mission, since they didn’t leave Europe any more that year. A year which was, by the way, quite calm for Moonsorrow, there’s little to tell really. On March 7th they signed a new contract with Spikefarm for two more albums. Short after that, in April, they played all over central Europe in a tour called Heathen Crusade (I think the Minnesota concert was included in this tour, or something – however, the name was the same even though practically all the bands were different) together with Mourning Beloveth, Gardens Of Gehenna and, again, Primordial, being this the first time they went on tour with an important band in the pagan scene, and doubtlessly an important milestone in Moonsorrow’s history. They did eleven gigs in eleven days, visiting five countries: Hungary, Austria, Holland, Germany and Belgium.
The tour ended on April 16th, and short after that, Henri and Marko were already in Kemi recording a new album; to be precise, they entered Tico Tico on May 29th, in a moment when Lordi and heavy metal in general were in fashion, because the mentioned band had just won the Eurovision contest with an all-time record in votes, which brought about some jokes in the studio diary. The other three guys joined them the following week. The album’s working title was Homosika (gay pig), but this time they said since the beginning that it was just that, a working title. Again they had a very special guest, this time on vocals: mister Thomas Väänänen, who used to sing in Thyrfing back then, and whom Ville cites as one of his main influences in his vocal style. In mid-June they left the studio, having recorded 98% of the material, and came back on the first half of August to record the choirs and mix the whole thing. This time around, they had better economical means than in the past; in Ville’s words: “We had a bigger studio budget than ever, counting up to 5 weeks reserved for recording and mixing the album, so the session was quite relaxed compared to some of the previous ones. In the end we even had time to delve into some details we used to be a bit more careless about, such as spontaneous vocal overdubs and all sorts of interesting panning experiments”. After recording, emptying a fire extinguisher over a cigarette, mixing, covering a hotel room in plastic and improving some details here and there, the last task was mastering, which took place in September. Not even then they wanted to reveal the final title or any other details. However, the promotional machinery had started to turn, and soon some info appeared in the internet: it would be called Viides luku: Hävitetty (fifth chapter: ravaged) and contain only two songs, with an approximate total playig time of one hour. Their titles: “Jäästä syntynyt/Varjojen virta” (born of ice/stream of shadows, being the former the intro), clocking up to thirty minutes, and “Tuulen ajettu maa” (a land driven into the fire), twenty-five. The working titles had been “Paskaa” (poo) and “Kusta” (pee), respectively. The release date was prudently set right after Christmas.
At some point this year they signed a contract with the booking agency Dragon Productions, which became noticeable the following year, during which the number of gigs almost tripled in comparison with this 2006 we’re talking about. Also, on March 11th they had come to Spain for the first time ever, to the festival Atarfe Vega Rock, province of Granada. They were the second band in the schedule, at about half past two in the afternoon and, as far as I’ve been told, the place got filled when the Finns went onstage, and half-emptied again when they finished; apparently many people attended that festival only to see them. Henri was there too.
The tour ended on April 16th, and short after that, Henri and Marko were already in Kemi recording a new album; to be precise, they entered Tico Tico on May 29th, in a moment when Lordi and heavy metal in general were in fashion, because the mentioned band had just won the Eurovision contest with an all-time record in votes, which brought about some jokes in the studio diary. The other three guys joined them the following week. The album’s working title was Homosika (gay pig), but this time they said since the beginning that it was just that, a working title. Again they had a very special guest, this time on vocals: mister Thomas Väänänen, who used to sing in Thyrfing back then, and whom Ville cites as one of his main influences in his vocal style. In mid-June they left the studio, having recorded 98% of the material, and came back on the first half of August to record the choirs and mix the whole thing. This time around, they had better economical means than in the past; in Ville’s words: “We had a bigger studio budget than ever, counting up to 5 weeks reserved for recording and mixing the album, so the session was quite relaxed compared to some of the previous ones. In the end we even had time to delve into some details we used to be a bit more careless about, such as spontaneous vocal overdubs and all sorts of interesting panning experiments”. After recording, emptying a fire extinguisher over a cigarette, mixing, covering a hotel room in plastic and improving some details here and there, the last task was mastering, which took place in September. Not even then they wanted to reveal the final title or any other details. However, the promotional machinery had started to turn, and soon some info appeared in the internet: it would be called Viides luku: Hävitetty (fifth chapter: ravaged) and contain only two songs, with an approximate total playig time of one hour. Their titles: “Jäästä syntynyt/Varjojen virta” (born of ice/stream of shadows, being the former the intro), clocking up to thirty minutes, and “Tuulen ajettu maa” (a land driven into the fire), twenty-five. The working titles had been “Paskaa” (poo) and “Kusta” (pee), respectively. The release date was prudently set right after Christmas.
At some point this year they signed a contract with the booking agency Dragon Productions, which became noticeable the following year, during which the number of gigs almost tripled in comparison with this 2006 we’re talking about. Also, on March 11th they had come to Spain for the first time ever, to the festival Atarfe Vega Rock, province of Granada. They were the second band in the schedule, at about half past two in the afternoon and, as far as I’ve been told, the place got filled when the Finns went onstage, and half-emptied again when they finished; apparently many people attended that festival only to see them. Henri was there too.
Nice bloog post
ReplyDelete