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'''Unblack metal''' (also known as '''Christian black metal''') is a religious philosophy and subgenre within [[black metal]], inheriting several characteristics of it, such as the [[Black metal#Instrumentation and song structure|melody]], the [[Black metal#Vocals and lyrics|lyrics]] and the [[Black metal#Imagery and performances|aesthetics]] ([[corpse paint]]),<ref name="Tcu_corpsepaint">{{cite magazine |title=Antestor: turskamusiikkia turskain luvatusta maasta |date=24–26 March 2000 |magazine=The Christian Underground Zine |volume=4 |quote=Interviewer: 'What's your relation to penguin masks? Do you use them on your concerts?' Antestor: 'Until now we haven't done many gigs, so the answer would be no. On the other hand today (at Bobfest) we all are going to paint our faces for the first time, so yes, we use masks. It is the same for us as masking is for actors or mimes. One way to express certain feelings in the battle we are in. The main purpose is to concentrate on God and not to twist the knife in the wound in side issues like these.'}}</ref> whose artists either directly oppose the [[Satanism]] prevalent in most black metal, or promote [[Christianity]] in their lyrics and imagery.<ref name="Kapelovitz">{{cite journal|last=Kapelovitz|first=Dan|date=February 2001|title=Heavy Metal Jesus Freaks - Headbanging for Christ|url=http://www.kapelovitz.com/christianmetal.htm|url-status=dead|journal=Mean Magazine|volume=|pages=|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070805040049/http://www.kapelovitz.com/christianmetal.htm|archive-date=5 August 2007|access-date=6 September 2007|quote=And where secular Black Metal thrived, so did its Christian counterpart, Unblack Metal, with names like Satanicide, Neversatan, and Satan's Doom.|via=|df=dmy-all}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=Sol|date=2015-02-11|title=7 Christian Black Metal Bands You Need To Hear|url=https://metalinjection.net/lists/christian-black-metal-bands|access-date=2021-02-16|website=Metal Injection|language=en-US}}</ref> Unblack metal artists are controversial within the black metal subculture, because black metal's pioneers, especially those of the Second Wave, were [[anti-Christian sentiment|anti-Christian]]. It is also suggested that Christianity contradicts black metal's dark nature and the [[individualism|individualistic]] and [[misanthropy|misanthropic]] ideals of many bands.<ref name=Beat_the_Blizzard/>
'''Unblack metal''' (also known as '''Christian black metal''' or '''White metal''') is a religious philosophy and subgenre within [[black metal]], inheriting several characteristics of it, such as the [[Black metal#Instrumentation and song structure|melody]], the [[Black metal#Vocals and lyrics|lyrics]] and the [[Black metal#Imagery and performances|aesthetics]] ([[corpse paint]]),<ref name="Tcu_corpsepaint">{{cite magazine |title=Antestor: turskamusiikkia turskain luvatusta maasta |date=24–26 March 2000 |magazine=The Christian Underground Zine |volume=4 |quote=Interviewer: 'What's your relation to penguin masks? Do you use them on your concerts?' Antestor: 'Until now we haven't done many gigs, so the answer would be no. On the other hand today (at Bobfest) we all are going to paint our faces for the first time, so yes, we use masks. It is the same for us as masking is for actors or mimes. One way to express certain feelings in the battle we are in. The main purpose is to concentrate on God and not to twist the knife in the wound in side issues like these.'}}</ref> whose artists either directly oppose the [[Satanism]] prevalent in most black metal, or promote [[Christianity]] in their lyrics and imagery.<ref name="Kapelovitz">{{cite journal|last=Kapelovitz|first=Dan|date=February 2001|title=Heavy Metal Jesus Freaks - Headbanging for Christ|url=http://www.kapelovitz.com/christianmetal.htm|url-status=dead|journal=Mean Magazine|volume=|pages=|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070805040049/http://www.kapelovitz.com/christianmetal.htm|archive-date=5 August 2007|access-date=6 September 2007|quote=And where secular Black Metal thrived, so did its Christian counterpart, Unblack Metal, with names like Satanicide, Neversatan, and Satan's Doom.|via=|df=dmy-all}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=Sol|date=2015-02-11|title=7 Christian Black Metal Bands You Need To Hear|url=https://metalinjection.net/lists/christian-black-metal-bands|access-date=2021-02-16|website=Metal Injection|language=en-US}}</ref> Unblack metal artists are controversial within the black metal subculture, because black metal's pioneers, especially those of the Second Wave, were [[anti-Christian sentiment|anti-Christian]]. It is also suggested that Christianity contradicts black metal's dark nature and the [[individualism|individualistic]] and [[misanthropy|misanthropic]] ideals of many bands.<ref name=Beat_the_Blizzard/>


The exact beginning of the unblack metal movement is disputed. The Australian band [[Horde (band)|Horde]]'s 1994 studio album ''[[Hellig Usvart]]'' brought the concept and the term ''holy unblack metal'' (a word play on [[Darkthrone]]'s slogan "unholy black metal" used on the albums ''[[A Blaze in the Northern Sky]]'' and ''[[Under a Funeral Moon]]'')<ref name=Erasmus/> to media attention,<ref name=Morgenbladet/> while the Norwegian band [[Antestor]] was already formed in 1990 as a death/doom metal act and released its demo, ''[[The Defeat of Satan]]'', in 1991, before they began shifting towards unblack metal on their 1994 studio album ''[[Martyrium (album)|Martyrium]]''.
The exact beginning of the unblack metal movement is disputed. The Australian band [[Horde (band)|Horde]]'s 1994 album ''[[Hellig Usvart]]'' brought the concept and the term "holy unblack metal" (a word play on [[Darkthrone]]'s slogan "unholy black metal" used on the albums ''[[A Blaze in the Northern Sky]]'' and ''[[Under a Funeral Moon]]'')<ref name=Erasmus/> to media attention,<ref name=Morgenbladet/> while the Norwegian band [[Antestor]] was already formed in 1990 as a [[death/doom]] act and released its demo ''[[The Defeat of Satan]]'' in 1991, before they began shifting towards unblack metal on their 1994 album ''[[Martyrium (album)|Martyrium]]''.


==Characteristics==
==Characteristics==
[[File:Pilgrim.jpg|thumb|left|Pilgrim of [[Crimson Moonlight]]]]
[[File:Pilgrim.jpg|thumb|left|Pilgrim of [[Crimson Moonlight]]]]
Unblack metal is viewed as an ideological genre derived from black metal that focuses on Christian lyrical themes. Unblack metal incorporates black metal's fast tempos, shrieked vocals, highly distorted guitars, [[tremolo picking]], double-kick drumming, repetition and often unconventional song structure. Garry Sharpe-Young's 2001 encyclopedia ''A-Z of Black Metal'' states that "[t]opping the lot are Christian 'Unblack' acts who for all intents and purposes look like, sound like and employ the imagery of Black Metal whilst hidden in the unpenetrable vocal growls and distortions are the proclamations of Jesus Christ".<ref>{{Harvnb|Sharpe-Young|2001|loc="Introduction", p. iv}}</ref>
Unblack metal is a genre derived from black metal that focuses on Christian lyrical themes. Unblack metal incorporates black metal's fast tempos, shrieked vocals, highly distorted guitars, [[tremolo picking]], double-kick drumming, repetition and often unconventional song structure. Garry Sharpe-Young's 2001 encyclopedia ''A-Z of Black Metal'' states that "[t]opping the lot are Christian 'Unblack' acts who for all intents and purposes look like, sound like and employ the imagery of Black Metal whilst hidden in the unpenetrable vocal growls and distortions are the proclamations of Jesus Christ".<ref>{{Harvnb|Sharpe-Young|2001|loc="Introduction", p. iv}}</ref>


Some unblack metal artists, such as Horde, write lyrics that explicitly attack Satanism.<ref name=DirHorde>"So the album was created with a prophetic, free, submissive, obedient, reverent, anti-Satan and Christian mindset." – Horde: [http://unblack.d135-1r43.de/hordeint/hordeinterview.html Interview with Son Of Man Records] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100125152701/http://unblack.d135-1r43.de/hordeint/hordeinterview.html |date=25 January 2010 }} (retrieved 30 November 2007).</ref> This remained a dominant theme throughout most of the 1990s. In the late 1990s, groups began to write more philosophical and ideological lyrics. These often include stories of [[Religious conversion|conversion]], [[doubt]], [[salvation]], struggles with [[faith]], and the darker side of living a Christian life. Unblack metal bands may justify their use of the black metal style with reasons ranging from genuine appreciation of the musical genre, to [[Evangelism|evangelization]] towards the largely anti-Christian black metal scene, i.e. "bringing light into darkness".<ref name=DirHorde/><ref name=DirVaake>"Our songs deal with personal challenges as well as on spiritual struggles." - Pål Dæhlen: [http://www.crossover-agm.de/intVaakevandring01.htm Interview with CrossOver].</ref>
Some unblack metal artists, such as Horde, write lyrics that explicitly attack Satanism.<ref name=DirHorde>"So the album was created with a prophetic, free, submissive, obedient, reverent, anti-Satan and Christian mindset." – Horde: [http://unblack.d135-1r43.de/hordeint/hordeinterview.html Interview with Son Of Man Records] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100125152701/http://unblack.d135-1r43.de/hordeint/hordeinterview.html |date=25 January 2010 }} (retrieved 30 November 2007).</ref> This remained a dominant theme throughout most of the 1990s. In the late 1990s, groups began to write more philosophical and ideological lyrics. These often include stories of [[Religious conversion|conversion]], [[doubt]], [[salvation]], struggles with [[faith]], and the darker side of living a Christian life. Unblack metal bands may justify their use of the black metal style with reasons ranging from genuine appreciation of the musical genre, to [[Evangelism|evangelization]] towards the largely anti-Christian black metal scene, i.e. "bringing light into darkness".<ref name=DirHorde/><ref name=DirVaake>"Our songs deal with personal challenges as well as on spiritual struggles." - Pål Dæhlen: [http://www.crossover-agm.de/intVaakevandring01.htm Interview with CrossOver] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303220248/http://www.crossover-agm.de/intVaakevandring01.htm |date=3 March 2016 }}.</ref>


==History==
==History==


===Background===
===Background===
The 1970s occult boom influenced many early heavy metal bands lyricwise. In the early 1980s, several bands dealt such themes in a more extreme manner, including [[Venom (band)|Venom]], [[Mercyful Fate]] and [[Bathory (band)|Bathory]]. During the mid-1980s, heavy metal music divided into many subgenres, and black metal emerged as one of them, taking its name from [[Black Metal (Venom album)|a Venom album of the same title]]. In the 1980s, the term was imprecise with regards to musical attributes, simply referring to all metal bands with Satanic lyrical themes.<ref>[[Michael Moynihan (journalist)|Moynihan, Michael]]. ''[[Lords of Chaos (book)|Lords of Chaos: The Bloody Rise of the Satanic Metal Underground]]''. Venice: Feral House, 2006.</ref> Although Christian metal bands had existed since the late 1970s, a clear contrast with black metal occurred in 1984 with the release of American doom metal band [[Trouble (band)|Trouble]]'s significantly [[Bible]]-based debut album ''[[Psalm 9 (album)|Psalm 9]]''. [[Metal Blade Records]] marketed Trouble as "white metal" as opposed to black metal. Vocalist Eric Wagner explained in 2006 that "back in the early 1980s, all the metal was kind of Satanic," and implied that Metal Blade (or the owner [[Brian Slagel]]) actually invented the term in the first place: "I think it was more like Metal Blade trying to be cute or something, with everything being called black metal, so why not call us white metal, which is a bunch of crap."<ref>Popoff, Martin. Forewords for the re-issue of ''Psalm 9'' booklet. 2006. Escapi Music.</ref> While there were Christian extreme metal bands in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Christian black metal likely did not exist until 1994.
The 1970s occult boom influenced many early heavy metal bands lyricwise. In the early 1980s, several bands dealt such themes in a more extreme manner, including [[Venom (band)|Venom]], [[Mercyful Fate]] and [[Bathory (band)|Bathory]]. During the mid-1980s, heavy metal music divided into many subgenres, and black metal emerged as one of them, taking its name from [[Black Metal (Venom album)|a Venom album of the same title]]. In the 1980s, the term was imprecise with regards to musical attributes, simply referring to all metal bands with Satanic lyrical themes.<ref>[[Michael Moynihan (journalist)|Moynihan, Michael]]. ''[[Lords of Chaos (book)|Lords of Chaos: The Bloody Rise of the Satanic Metal Underground]]''. Venice: Feral House, 2006.</ref> Although Christian metal bands had existed since the late 1970s, a clear contrast with black metal occurred in 1984 with the release of American doom metal band [[Trouble (band)|Trouble]]'s significantly [[Bible]]-based debut album ''[[Psalm 9 (album)|Psalm 9]]''. [[Metal Blade Records]] marketed Trouble as "white metal" as opposed to black metal. Vocalist Eric Wagner explained in 2006 that "back in the early 1980s, all the metal was kind of Satanic," and implied that Metal Blade (or the owner [[Brian Slagel]]) actually invented the term in the first place: "I think it was more like Metal Blade trying to be cute or something, with everything being called black metal, so why not call us white metal, which is a bunch of crap."<ref>Popoff, Martin. Forewords for the re-issue of ''Psalm 9'' booklet. 2006. Escapi Music.</ref>


===Early 1990s===
===Early 1990s===
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The Australian band [[Horde (band)|Horde]]'s debut album ''[[Hellig Usvart]]'', recorded and released in 1994, is often credited for being the first unblack metal album, although the sole member "Anonymous" has stated that, "there were similar [unblack] bands prior to Horde, even in Norway," referring to [[Antestor]] who formed in 1990. Prior to 1993, they were a [[death-doom]] band called Crush Evil. Antestor's debut album ''[[Martyrium (album)|Martyrium]]'' was also recorded in 1994 and marked a shift into unblack metal territory. However, due to issues with the band's record label at the time, the album was not officially released until 2000.<ref>Michael Bryzak. Liner notes of ''The Defeat of Satan / Despair''. Endtime Productions. 2003.</ref> [[Euronymous]] of [[Mayhem (band)|Mayhem]] threatened to force Crush Evil to disband,<ref name=Orcustus>{{cite web |author=Eithun, Bård G. "Faust" |title=Mayhem Interview |publisher=Blackmetal.nu |date=1990–1993 |work=[[Orcustus (magazine)|Orcustus]] |url=http://www.www.blackmetal.nu/~ubc/files/euroint.htm |access-date=29 August 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927043510/http://www.www.blackmetal.nu/~ubc/files/euroint.htm |archive-date=27 September 2007 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> but was murdered by [[Varg Vikernes]] in 1993.<ref>Steinke, Darcey. "Satan's Cheerleaders". ''[[Spin (magazine)|SPIN]]''. February 1996.</ref>
The Australian band [[Horde (band)|Horde]]'s debut album ''[[Hellig Usvart]]'', recorded and released in 1994, is often credited for being the first unblack metal album, although the sole member "Anonymous" has stated that, "there were similar [unblack] bands prior to Horde, even in Norway," referring to [[Antestor]] who formed in 1990. Prior to 1993, they were a [[death-doom]] band called Crush Evil. Antestor's debut album ''[[Martyrium (album)|Martyrium]]'' was also recorded in 1994 and marked a shift into unblack metal territory. However, due to issues with the band's record label at the time, the album was not officially released until 2000.<ref>Michael Bryzak. Liner notes of ''The Defeat of Satan / Despair''. Endtime Productions. 2003.</ref> [[Euronymous]] of [[Mayhem (band)|Mayhem]] expressed in an interview that someone would need to force Crush Evil to disband.<ref name="Orcustus">{{cite web |author=Eithun |first=Bård G. "Faust" |date=1990–1993 |title=Mayhem Interview |url=http://www.www.blackmetal.nu/~ubc/files/euroint.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927043510/http://www.www.blackmetal.nu/~ubc/files/euroint.htm |archive-date=27 September 2007 |access-date=29 August 2007 |work=[[Orcustus (magazine)|Orcustus]] |publisher=Blackmetal.nu |df=dmy-all}}</ref>


''Hellig Usvart'' ([[Norwegian language|Norwegian]] for ''Holy Unblack'') caused great controversy in the black metal scene, and death threats were sent to Nuclear Blast Records headquarters demanding them to release the members' names. Later, it was discovered that the only actual member was the former [[Mortification (band)|Mortification]]/[[Paramaecium]] drummer [[Jayson Sherlock]] from Australia.<ref>Waters, Scott. [http://nolifetilmetal.com/horde.html Horde]. Retrieved 23 October 2007.</ref> The term "unblack metal" was derived from "holy unblack metal", which was a wordplay on [[Darkthrone]]'s "unholy black metal" term.<ref name=Erasmus>Erasmus. [http://unblack.d135-1r43.de/hordeint/hordeinterview.html Horde Interview] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100125152701/http://unblack.d135-1r43.de/hordeint/hordeinterview.html |date=25 January 2010 }}. Retrieved 23 October 2007.</ref> Media became interested in this controversy. On 6 June 1995, the Norwegian weekly newspaper ''[[Morgenbladet]]'' published an article about the phenomenon of unblack metal, describing Horde's album as "an abrupt satire of the Norwegian black metal movement". Antestor was also interviewed, with vocalist Kjetil Molnes stating "We identify ourselves as black metal as a music style, not black metal as an ideology or belief."<ref name=Morgenbladet>{{cite web |title=MusikkOpp-ned oppnedkors! |publisher=Oslonett |date=6 February 1995 |work=Morgenbladet |url=http://www.oslo.net/historie/MB/utg/9521/kultur/13.html |access-date=19 December 2007 |language=no}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |author=EvilVasp |title=Horde - Hellig Usvart |publisher=Open Publishing |work=Necromancy |url=http://www.geocities.com/vasp_1999/Horde.htm |access-date=19 December 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080211224403/http://www.geocities.com/vasp_1999/Horde.htm |archive-date=11 February 2008}}</ref>
''Hellig Usvart'' ([[Norwegian language|Norwegian]] for ''Holy Unblack'') caused great controversy in the black metal scene, and death threats were sent to Nuclear Blast Records headquarters demanding them to release the members' names. Later, it was discovered that the only actual member was the former [[Mortification (band)|Mortification]]/[[Paramaecium]] drummer [[Jayson Sherlock]] from Australia.<ref>Waters, Scott. [http://nolifetilmetal.com/horde.html Horde]. Retrieved 23 October 2007.</ref> The term "unblack metal" was derived from "holy unblack metal", which was a wordplay on [[Darkthrone]]'s "unholy black metal" term.<ref name=Erasmus>Erasmus. [http://unblack.d135-1r43.de/hordeint/hordeinterview.html Horde Interview] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100125152701/http://unblack.d135-1r43.de/hordeint/hordeinterview.html |date=25 January 2010 }}. Retrieved 23 October 2007.</ref> Media became interested in this controversy. On 6 June 1995, the Norwegian weekly newspaper ''[[Morgenbladet]]'' published an article about the phenomenon of unblack metal, describing Horde's album as "an abrupt satire of the Norwegian black metal movement". Antestor was also interviewed, with vocalist Kjetil Molnes stating "We identify ourselves as black metal as a music style, not black metal as an ideology or belief."<ref name="Morgenbladet">{{cite web |last=Søderlind |first=Didrik |date=6 February 1995 |title=MusikkOpp-ned oppnedkors! |url=http://www.oslo.net/historie/MB/utg/9521/kultur/13.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20020725093927/http://www.oslo.net/historie/MB/utg/9521/kultur/13.html |archive-date=25 July 2002 |access-date=19 December 2007 |work=Morgenbladet |publisher=Oslonett |language=no}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |author=EvilVasp |title=Horde - Hellig Usvart |publisher=Open Publishing |work=Necromancy |url=http://www.geocities.com/vasp_1999/Horde.htm |access-date=19 December 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080211224403/http://www.geocities.com/vasp_1999/Horde.htm |archive-date=11 February 2008}}</ref>

The Swedish band [[Admonish (band)|Admonish]] was formed around 1994, and was the first unblack metal band in Sweden.<ref name=Admonish/> They gained notoriety for calling their style "Christian black metal" on their website.<ref name=Admonish/> This caused some debate in the metal underground and soon an anti-Admonish website was started.<ref name=Admonish/> While the band did not officially release any material until 2005, the magazine ''[[Metal Hammer]]'' called Admonish "one of the leading Christian black metal bands" in a 1990s issue which focused on black metal.<ref name=Admonish>{{cite web |author=Morrow, Matt |title=Admonish Interview |publisher=Open Publishing |date=26 May 2005 |work=The Whipping Post |url=http://thewhippingpost.tripod.com/admonishinterview.htm |access-date=9 September 2007}}</ref>


===Late 1990s===
===Late 1990s===
After 1995, influenced by Horde, other unblack metal bands started releasing their first demos. The Indonesian group [[Kekal]] soon became associated with the movement.<ref>TCU zine (2001). Kekal Interview. "We're most definitely a metal band. We don't really mind what people call us: black metal, unblack metal, white metal, black/white metal. As long as it's metal we're ok with it. Though we prefer to call our music extreme metal." (Jeff Arwadi.)</ref><ref name=meandeviation>{{cite book|title=Mean Deviation: Four Decades of Progressive Heavy Metal|year=2010|publisher=Bazillion Points Books|page=342|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8ZwZcZ2X5ToC|author=Jeff Wagner, Steven Wilson|isbn=9780979616334|access-date=6 August 2011}}</ref> Eduardo Rivadavia of [[AllMusic]] wrote that "Kekal are one of the first heavy metal bands from Jakarta, Indonesia, to make international inroads, and they may just be the first to profess Christian beliefs while performing black metal."<ref name=AMGkekal>{{cite web |url={{AllMusic|class=artist|id=kekal-mn0001545395|pure_url=yes}} |title=Kekal |access-date=6 December 2007 |author=Rivadavia, Eduardo |work=[[AllMusic]]}}</ref> However, Kekal has resisted being labeled as Christian, insisting that as an institution they do not lean toward any religion or ideology.<ref name=FAQ>{{cite web |author=Kekal |title=Frequently Asked Questions (F.A.Q.) about Kekal |date=15 August 2010 |url=http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=384843479762 |publisher=[[Facebook]] |access-date=6 January 2011}}</ref>
After 1995, influenced by Horde, other unblack metal bands started releasing their first demos. The Indonesian group [[Kekal]] soon became associated with the movement.<ref>TCU zine (2001). Kekal Interview. "We're most definitely a metal band. We don't really mind what people call us: black metal, unblack metal, white metal, black/white metal. As long as it's metal we're ok with it. Though we prefer to call our music extreme metal." (Jeff Arwadi.)</ref><ref name=meandeviation>{{cite book|title=Mean Deviation: Four Decades of Progressive Heavy Metal|year=2010|publisher=Bazillion Points Books|page=342|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8ZwZcZ2X5ToC|author=Jeff Wagner, Steven Wilson|isbn=9780979616334|access-date=6 August 2011}}</ref> Eduardo Rivadavia of [[AllMusic]] wrote that "Kekal are one of the first heavy metal bands from Jakarta, Indonesia, to make international inroads, and they may just be the first to profess Christian beliefs while performing black metal."<ref name=AMGkekal>{{cite web |url={{AllMusic|class=artist|id=kekal-mn0001545395|pure_url=yes}} |title=Kekal |access-date=6 December 2007 |author=Rivadavia, Eduardo |work=[[AllMusic]]}}</ref> However, Kekal has resisted being labeled as Christian, with former front-man Jeff Arwadi stating that he views "Christian metal" as a market brand that to him does not make sense.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=RaduP |date=August 9, 2020 |title=Kekal interview (08/2020) |url=https://metalstorm.net/pub/interview.php?interview_id=814 |access-date=2024-10-14 |website=[[Metal Storm (webzine)|Metal Storm]] |language=en}}</ref>


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Antestor's 1998 release ''[[The Return of the Black Death]]'' proved highly influential for the unblack metal movement. The album was released on the British {{ill|Cacophonous Records|fr}}, which has released records by such successful black metal groups as [[Cradle of Filth]] and [[Dimmu Borgir]]. According to Matt Morrow, it became the only unblack metal album besides Horde's ''Hellig Usvart'' to be released on a secular label in the 1990s,<ref name=Morrow>{{cite web |author=Morrow, Matt |title=Antestor - The Return of the Black Death |publisher=Open Publishing |year=2001 |work=The Whipping Post |url=http://thewhippingpost.tripod.com/antestorthereturnoftheblackdeath/ |access-date=29 August 2007}}</ref> although Kekal released ''[[Beyond the Glimpse of Dreams]]'' on a secular label in the same year.<ref name=AMGkekal/> The established British magazines ''[[Kerrang!]]'' and ''[[Terrorizer (magazine)|Terrorizer]]'' both gave ''The Return of the Black Death'' 4 points out of 5.<ref name=Art_for_the_Ears>{{cite web |title=Antestor interview |publisher=Open Publishing |date=12 December 1998 |work=Art for the Ears |url=http://www.artfortheears.nl/NL/r/i/antestor.htm |access-date=17 May 2008}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |author=Morrow, Matt |title=Antestor - Det Tapte Liv Death |publisher=Open Publishing |year=2001 |work=The Whipping Post |url=http://thewhippingpost.tripod.com/antestordettapteliv.htm |access-date=29 August 2007}}</ref>
Antestor's 1998 release ''[[The Return of the Black Death]]'' proved highly influential for the unblack metal movement. The album was released on the British {{ill|Cacophonous Records|fr}}, which has released records by such successful black metal groups as [[Cradle of Filth]] and [[Dimmu Borgir]]. According to Matt Morrow, it became the only unblack metal album besides Horde's ''Hellig Usvart'' to be released on a secular label in the 1990s,<ref name=Morrow>{{cite web |author=Morrow, Matt |title=Antestor - The Return of the Black Death |publisher=Open Publishing |year=2001 |work=The Whipping Post |url=http://thewhippingpost.tripod.com/antestorthereturnoftheblackdeath/ |access-date=29 August 2007}}</ref> although Kekal released ''[[Beyond the Glimpse of Dreams]]'' on a secular label in the same year.<ref name=AMGkekal/> The established British magazines ''[[Kerrang!]]'' and ''[[Terrorizer (magazine)|Terrorizer]]'' both gave ''The Return of the Black Death'' 4 points out of 5.<ref name=Art_for_the_Ears>{{cite web |title=Antestor interview |publisher=Open Publishing |date=12 December 1998 |work=Art for the Ears |url=http://www.artfortheears.nl/NL/r/i/antestor.htm |access-date=17 May 2008}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |author=Morrow, Matt |title=Antestor - Det Tapte Liv Death |publisher=Open Publishing |year=2001 |work=The Whipping Post |url=http://thewhippingpost.tripod.com/antestordettapteliv.htm |access-date=29 August 2007}}</ref>


Vaakevandring's [[Vaakevandring (EP)|self-titled EP]] (recorded in 1998) was produced by [[Stian Aarstad]], the keyboard player of Dimmu Borgir.<ref>{{Harvnb|Sharpe-Young|2001|loc="Vaakevandring", p. 367. "A self styled 'Christian symphonic unblack metal band'. Vaakevandring look and sound like a Black Metal band but lyrically are strongly evangelical. In a surprise move the band's debut demo was produced by Stioan [sic] Aarstad of Dimmu Borgir."}}</ref><ref>[http://www.crossover-agm.de/intVaakevandring01.htm Vaakevandring] (in German). CrossOver. Retrieved 2 December 2007.</ref> The release achieved worldwide attention and later became recognized a "classic" in the unblack metal scene.<ref>Morrow, Matt. [http://thewhippingpost.tripod.com/vaakevandringdemo9899/ Vaakevandring - demo 98/99]. Retrieved 25 October 2007.</ref> In 1998, the [[metalcore]] group [[Underoath]] was founded, and played [[hardcore punk|hardcore]] and metalcore mixed with black and [[death metal]].<ref name=Powell>{{cite book|last=Powell|first=Mark Allan|title=Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music|publisher=Hendrickson Publishers|year=2002|location=Peabody, Massachusetts|page=[https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofco00mark/page/976 976]|isbn=1-56563-679-1|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofco00mark/page/976}}</ref><ref name=APAct>{{cite web|author=Boland, Casey |title=FILE UNDER: Maximum Metalcore: Act of Depression from Underoath |url=http://www.altpress.com/reviews/entry/actofdepression/ |publisher=[[Alternative Press (music magazine)|Alternative Press]] |access-date=19 May 2011}}</ref> The band subsequently moved away from this early black metal sound to a more mainstream [[post-hardcore]] style.<ref name="Sputnik define">{{cite web|author=Hartwig, Hartwig |title=Underoath Define the Great Line |url=https://www.sputnikmusic.com/review/7755/Underoath-Define-the-Great-Line/ |publisher=Sputnikmusic |date=20 June 2006 |access-date=19 May 2011}}</ref>
Vaakevandring's [[Vaakevandring (EP)|self-titled EP]] (recorded in 1998) was produced by [[Stian Aarstad]], the keyboard player of Dimmu Borgir.<ref>{{Harvnb|Sharpe-Young|2001|loc="Vaakevandring", p. 367. "A self styled 'Christian symphonic unblack metal band'. Vaakevandring look and sound like a Black Metal band but lyrically are strongly evangelical. In a surprise move the band's debut demo was produced by Stioan [sic] Aarstad of Dimmu Borgir."}}</ref><ref>[http://www.crossover-agm.de/intVaakevandring01.htm Vaakevandring] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303220248/http://www.crossover-agm.de/intVaakevandring01.htm |date=3 March 2016 }} (in German). CrossOver. Retrieved 2 December 2007.</ref> The release achieved worldwide attention and later became recognized a "classic" in the unblack metal scene.<ref>Morrow, Matt. [http://thewhippingpost.tripod.com/vaakevandringdemo9899/ Vaakevandring - demo 98/99]. Retrieved 25 October 2007.</ref> In 1998, the [[metalcore]] group [[Underoath]] was founded, and played [[hardcore punk|hardcore]] and metalcore mixed with black and [[death metal]].<ref name=Powell>{{cite book|last=Powell|first=Mark Allan|title=Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music|publisher=Hendrickson Publishers|year=2002|location=Peabody, Massachusetts|page=[https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofco00mark/page/976 976]|isbn=1-56563-679-1|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofco00mark/page/976}}</ref><ref name=APAct>{{cite web|author=Boland, Casey |title=FILE UNDER: Maximum Metalcore: Act of Depression from Underoath |url=http://www.altpress.com/reviews/entry/actofdepression/ |publisher=[[Alternative Press (music magazine)|Alternative Press]] |access-date=19 May 2011}}</ref> The band subsequently moved away from this early black metal sound to a more mainstream [[post-hardcore]] style.<ref name="Sputnik define">{{cite web|author=Hartwig, Hartwig |title=Underoath Define the Great Line |url=https://www.sputnikmusic.com/review/7755/Underoath-Define-the-Great-Line/ |publisher=Sputnikmusic |date=20 June 2006 |access-date=19 May 2011}}</ref>


===2000s===
===2000s===
[[File:Drottnar-EoR2013-12.jpg|thumb|left|The Norwegian group [[Drottnar]] live at {{ill|Elements of Rock|de}}, Switzerland in 2013]]
[[File:Drottnar-EoR2013-12.jpg|thumb|left|The Norwegian group [[Drottnar]] live at {{ill|Elements of Rock|de}}, Switzerland in 2013]]


During the early 2000s, according to ''Screams of Abel'' magazine, there was an "international explosion of Christian black metal bands", and black metal "seemed to be the fastest growing genre in the Christian metal scene".<ref name=Screams_of_Abel>{{cite web |url=http://valsignalandet.com/cgi-bin/cgiwrap/ppowell/interview.cgi?folder=Screams+Of+Abel&issueNumber=32&file=Antestor.txt |title=Antestor |access-date=12 October 2008 |author=Powell, Phil |year=2003 |publisher=Valsignalandet}}</ref> In 2000, [[Lengsel]]'s debut album ''[[Solace (Lengsel album)|Solace]]'' was critically acclaimed,<ref>{{cite web |url={{AllMusic|class=artist|id=lengsel-mn0000238976|pure_url=yes}} |title=Lengsel |access-date=20 November 2007 |author=Rivadavia, Eduardo |publisher=Allmusic}}</ref> Sanctifica released ''[[Spirit of Purity]]'',<ref>{{Harvnb|Sharpe-Young|2001|loc="Sanctifica", p. 315-316. "A Christian Black Metal band?... Fronted by Hubertus Liljegren, brother of Christian Liljegren of noted Christian Hard Rock act Narnia".}}</ref> Crimson Moonlight released its debut album ''[[The Covenant Progress]]'',<ref>{{Harvnb|Sharpe-Young|2001|loc="Crimson Moonlight", p. 91. "Crimson Moonlight are one of the few acts to pursue black Metal music with the most ironic of twists--they are clearly stated Christians."}}</ref> while [[Drottnar]] released its demos on an album titled ''[[Spiritual Battle]]'', gaining them popularity among the Scandinavian underground.<ref name=Whenall>{{cite web |url=http://whenall.tripod.com/drottnar.htm |title=Drottnar |access-date=20 November 2007 |publisher=Info-Black.com - The Ultimate Black Metal Informative Site}}</ref> In 2001, Norwegian folk metal band Arvinger formed and released its debut album ''Helgards Fall'' in 2003.<ref>Morrow, Matt. [http://thewhippingpost.tripod.com/arvingerhelgardsfall/ Arvinger - Helgards Fall]. Retrieved 25 October 2007.</ref>
During the early 2000s, according to ''Screams of Abel'' magazine, there was an "international explosion of Christian black metal bands", and black metal "seemed to be the fastest growing genre in the Christian metal scene".<ref name="Screams_of_Abel">{{cite journal |author=Powell |first=Phil |year=2003 |title=Antestor |url=http://valsignalandet.com/cgi-bin/cgiwrap/ppowell/interview.cgi?folder=Screams+Of+Abel&issueNumber=32&file=Antestor.txt |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060513124813/http://valsignalandet.com/cgi-bin/cgiwrap/ppowell/interview.cgi?folder=Screams+Of+Abel&issueNumber=32&file=Antestor.txt |archive-date=13 May 2006 |access-date=15 October 2024 |journal=Screams of Abel|issue=32|publisher=Valsignalandet}}</ref> In 2000, [[Lengsel]]'s debut album ''[[Solace (Lengsel album)|Solace]]'' was critically acclaimed,<ref>{{cite web |url={{AllMusic|class=artist|id=lengsel-mn0000238976|pure_url=yes}} |title=Lengsel |access-date=20 November 2007 |author=Rivadavia, Eduardo |publisher=Allmusic}}</ref> Sanctifica released ''[[Spirit of Purity]]'',<ref>{{Harvnb|Sharpe-Young|2001|loc="Sanctifica", p. 315-316. "A Christian Black Metal band?... Fronted by Hubertus Liljegren, brother of Christian Liljegren of noted Christian Hard Rock act Narnia".}}</ref> Crimson Moonlight released its debut album ''[[The Covenant Progress]]'',<ref>{{Harvnb|Sharpe-Young|2001|loc="Crimson Moonlight", p. 91. "Crimson Moonlight are one of the few acts to pursue black Metal music with the most ironic of twists--they are clearly stated Christians."}}</ref> while [[Drottnar]] released its demos on an album titled ''[[Spiritual Battle]]'', gaining them popularity among the Scandinavian underground.<ref name=Whenall>{{cite web |url=http://whenall.tripod.com/drottnar.htm |title=Drottnar |access-date=20 November 2007 |publisher=Info-Black.com - The Ultimate Black Metal Informative Site}}</ref>


[[File:Blood Covenant.JPG|thumb|Blood Covenant,<!-- Not to be confused with the Indian extreme metal band of the same name for which we have an article at Blood Covenant (band). --> an Armenian Christian black metal band<ref>Steve Moffitt (May 15, 2016), [http://dougvanpelt.wixsite.com/heavens-metal-mag/single-post/2014/01/20/We-Love-the-Apothecarys-New-Identity "Blood Covenant: Extreme Symphonic Black Metal for the Masses"], source: [[Doug Van Pelt]] – [[Wix.com]]. Retrieved 11 April 2020.</ref>]]
[[File:Blood Covenant.JPG|thumb|Blood Covenant,<!-- Not to be confused with the Indian extreme metal band of the same name for which we have an article at Blood Covenant (band). --> an Armenian Christian black metal band<ref>Steve Moffitt (May 15, 2016), [http://dougvanpelt.wixsite.com/heavens-metal-mag/single-post/2014/01/20/We-Love-the-Apothecarys-New-Identity "Blood Covenant: Extreme Symphonic Black Metal for the Masses"], source: [[Doug Van Pelt]] – [[Wix.com]]. Retrieved 11 April 2020.</ref>]]


Apart from Scandinavia, unblack metal has developed regional scenes in the United States, South America, and Central Europe. The Kansas City-based [[Frost Like Ashes]] is an American band.<ref>{{cite web |title=Frost Like Ashes Signs with Sullen Records - March 13, 2008 |publisher=Open Publishing |date=13 March 2008 |work=[[Blabbermouth.net]] |url=http://www.roadrun.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=92877 |access-date=15 March 2008 |quote=The follow-up to the group's 2006 acclaimed album 'Tophet' will be issued this May and will be available as a limited release, with only 250 units to be produced.}}</ref> In the early 2000s, there emerged an unblack metal scene largely congregated around Illinois' EEE Recordings. This label consisted of groups who often hid their identity and focused on extremely raw, unpolished sound production and minimalist song structures. Notable EEE Recordings artists included Light Shall Prevail, Flaskavsae, and Glaciial.
Apart from Scandinavia, unblack metal has developed regional scenes in the United States, South America, and Central Europe. The Kansas City-based [[Frost Like Ashes]] is an American band.<ref>{{cite web |title=Frost Like Ashes Signs with Sullen Records - March 13, 2008 |publisher=Open Publishing |date=13 March 2008 |work=[[Blabbermouth.net]] |url=http://www.roadrun.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=92877 |access-date=15 March 2008 |quote=The follow-up to the group's 2006 acclaimed album 'Tophet' will be issued this May and will be available as a limited release, with only 250 units to be produced.}}</ref>


The South and Central American unblack scenes are known for their radical anti-Satanic attitude.<ref>Black Metal Primer Redux Heaven's Metal #67 2-3/07.</ref> Groups such as Exousia and Mexico's Deborah have performed internationally in Europe.<ref>[http://www.imperiumi.net/gigs_2.php?id=3835 Deborah (MEX) at Finland's Underground Festival 2005]; [http://www.imperiumi.net/gigs_2.php?id=3836 Exousia (MEX) at Finland's Underground Festival].</ref> Sorrowstorm was an acclaimed band from Panama, and they were nominated for the hard music award at the Panamarock Grammys in 2003.<ref>[http://www.purevolume.com/sorrowstorm Sorrowstorm Biography] at PureVolume.</ref> Poems of Shadows (Brazil) is an example of a South American unblack metal band that has taken the anti-Satanic concept of Horde and the radical imagery of black metal to the extreme, blurring the distinction between the two often ideologically-opposed styles.<ref name=PoemsofShadows>Morrow, Matt. [http://thewhippingpost.tripod.com/poemsofshadowsnocturnalblasphemouschanting.htm Poems of Shadows - Nocturnal Blasphemous Chanting]. The Whipping Post. Retrieved on 1 December 2007.</ref> The Brazilian group {{ill|Cerimonial Sacred|lb}}<!-- PLEASE NOTE that "Cerimonial" is the correct spelling here. --> has also achieved some attention in the US and European scenes.<ref>
The South and Central American unblack scenes are known for their radical anti-Satanic attitude.<ref>Black Metal Primer Redux Heaven's Metal #67 2-3/07.</ref> Groups such as Exousia and Mexico's Deborah have performed internationally in Europe.<ref>[http://www.imperiumi.net/gigs_2.php?id=3835 Deborah (MEX) at Finland's Underground Festival 2005]; [http://www.imperiumi.net/gigs_2.php?id=3836 Exousia (MEX) at Finland's Underground Festival].</ref>
[http://thewhippingpost.tripod.com/cerimonialsacredourwarisonlyagainsthell.htm Cerimonial<!-- PLEASE NOTE that "Cerimonial" is the correct spelling here. --> Sacred - Our War Is Only Against Hell]. The Whipping Post.</ref>


In [[Poland]], notable unblack metal groups include Abdijah, Fire Throne, and [[Elgibbor]]. The latter was featured on a short Polish TV documentary that focused on unblack metal.<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jcAs8bCKIu0 Unblack metal - raj document ch.1]. YouTube.</ref> The [[Netherlands]] has groups such as Dormant and [[Slechtvalk]].<ref>[http://www.lordsofmetal.nl/showinterview.php?id=1077&lang=en Slectvalk], Lords of Metal interview; [http://www.klokradio.nl/powerhour/SlechtvalkInt.htm Slechtvalk], Klokradio.nl.</ref> Although the latter does not currently consider themselves as a "Christian band",<ref>[http://metalmessage.net/Interviews/slechtvalk-engl.htm Slechtvalk]. Metal Message.</ref> their early material was openly Christian. [[Holy Blood (band)|Holy Blood]], a folk/unblack group from Ukraine, has earned minor success.<ref name="Whipping Post">Morrow, Matt (18 January 2006). [http://thewhippingpost.tripod.com/bombworksrecordsinterview.htm Bombworks Records interview]. The Whipping Post. Retrieved 20 October 2007. "David: Without a question, Holy Blood has been our top seller. Waves Are Dancing has been the best seller, but The Wanderer has certainly been no slouch."</ref>
In [[Poland]], notable unblack metal groups include Abdijah, Fire Throne, and [[Elgibbor]]. The latter was featured on a short Polish TV documentary that focused on unblack metal.<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jcAs8bCKIu0 Unblack metal - raj document ch.1]. YouTube.</ref> The [[Netherlands]] has groups such as Dormant and [[Slechtvalk]].<ref>[http://www.lordsofmetal.nl/showinterview.php?id=1077&lang=en Slectvalk], Lords of Metal interview; [http://www.klokradio.nl/powerhour/SlechtvalkInt.htm Slechtvalk] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071020135824/http://www.klokradio.nl/powerhour/SlechtvalkInt.htm |date=20 October 2007 }}, Klokradio.nl.</ref> Although the latter does not currently consider themselves as a "Christian band"<ref>[http://metalmessage.net/Interviews/slechtvalk-engl.htm Slechtvalk]. Metal Message.</ref>


==Media attention==
==Media attention==
[[File:Frosthardr live in 2005.jpg|thumb|[[Frosthardr]] live at Immortal Metal Fest 2005, Finland. The group appeared on the ''Murder Music - Black Metal'' documentary, and has performed at the American [[Cornerstone Festival]].]]
[[File:Frosthardr live in 2005.jpg|thumb|[[Frosthardr]] live at Immortal Metal Fest 2005, Finland. The group appeared on the ''Murder Music - Black Metal'' documentary, and has performed at the American [[Cornerstone Festival]].]]


In 2006, [[Admonish (band)|Admonish]] achieved wider notice when twins Emil (guitar) and Jonas Karlsson (bass) both appeared on the MTV Europe show ''[[Pimp My Ride|Pimp My Ride International]]''. On that show, in which their car was modified, the twins advertised their band and Admonish's music was played.<ref>Jansson, AnnaMaria (15 September 2006). [http://www.aftonbladet.se/bil/article437619.ab Rishögen blev lyxbil] (in Swedish). Aftonbladet. Retrieved 25 October 2007.</ref><ref>Agency: [http://agency.se/wordpress/?page_id=54 Pimp My Ride på svenska] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071105035538/http://agency.se/wordpress/?page_id=54 |date=5 November 2007 }} (in Swedish). Retrieved 25 October 2007.</ref>
While black and unblack metal bands rarely achieve mainstream success in the music world, some bands, including [[Antestor]], [[Drottnar]], and [[Crimson Moonlight]], traveled internationally to perform at [[Cornerstone Festival]] in [[Illinois]], which, prior to ending in 2012, was one of the largest Christian musical festivals in the world.

In 2006, [[Admonish (band)|Admonish]] achieved wider notice when twins Emil (guitar) and Jonas Karlsson (bass) both appeared on the MTV Europe show ''[[Pimp My Ride|Pimp My Ride International]]''. On that show, in which their car was modified, the twins advertised their band and Admonish's music was played.<ref>Jansson, AnnaMaria (15 September 2006). [http://www.aftonbladet.se/bil/article437619.ab Rishögen blev lyxbil] (in Swedish). Aftonbladet. Retrieved 25 October 2007.</ref><ref>Agency: [http://agency.se/wordpress/?page_id=54 Pimp My Ride på svenska] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071105035538/http://agency.se/wordpress/?page_id=54 |date=5 November 2007 }} (in Swedish). Retrieved 25 October 2007.</ref> Horde also played its first live show at Nordic Fest in Oslo, Norway on 3 November 2006; Sherlock was disguised with a hood during the concert while he performed both drums and vocals.


In 2007, the Norwegian band [[Frosthardr]] appeared on the documentary feature film ''[[Murder Music: A History of Black Metal]]''. They were interviewed for a minute and represented the Christian point of view in black metal music, with vocalist Daniel Ravn Fufjord saying: "It is difficult to find musicians that are interested in this kind of music and share our point of view."<ref name="Murder Music">Shash Media & Rockwrold TV, [http://www.rockworld.tv/MurderMusicPlayer.html Murder Music – Black Metal] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110723031208/http://www.rockworld.tv/MurderMusicPlayer.html |date=23 July 2011 }} document. Interviews: Luscious Rene. Interviewees: Mantas (Venom), Dani Filth, Sabbat, Satyricon, Black Widow, Dimmu Borgir, Mayhem and Immortal. Retrieved 23 October 2007. 2007.</ref>
In 2007, the Norwegian band [[Frosthardr]] appeared on the documentary feature film ''[[Murder Music: A History of Black Metal]]''. They were interviewed for a minute and represented the Christian point of view in black metal music, with vocalist Daniel Ravn Fufjord saying: "It is difficult to find musicians that are interested in this kind of music and share our point of view."<ref name="Murder Music">Shash Media & Rockwrold TV, [http://www.rockworld.tv/MurderMusicPlayer.html Murder Music – Black Metal] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110723031208/http://www.rockworld.tv/MurderMusicPlayer.html |date=23 July 2011 }} document. Interviews: Luscious Rene. Interviewees: Mantas (Venom), Dani Filth, Sabbat, Satyricon, Black Widow, Dimmu Borgir, Mayhem and Immortal. Retrieved 23 October 2007. 2007.</ref>

A documentary specifically exploring unblack metal titled ''Light in Darkness - Nemesis Divina'' was filmed in 2008, shown at music and film festivals the same year, and officially released on [[YouTube]] on May 20, 2010. The documentary focuses on unblack metal musicians' point of view and experiences as well as some academic analysis on the matter.<ref>Rydehed, Stefan; Nilsson, David. [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPOaxWjFVNA Light in Darkness - Nemesis Divina part 1]. YouTube (authorised). 25 May 2010.</ref>

In 2020, a documentary titled ''True American Black Metal'' also heavily featured bands of the unblack metal genre, including veteran artists such as [[Crimson Moonlight]], [[Elgibbor]], and [[Frost Like Ashes]], as well as newcomers [[O, Majestic Winter]], [[Vials of Wrath]], and [[Symphony of Heaven]], the last of which formed in 2017.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.reelhouse.org/metalmissionariesthedocumentary/true-american-black-metal951|title=True American Black Metal|website=Reelhouse|first=Bruce|last=Moore|accessdate=June 4, 2021}}</ref>


==Controversies ==
==Controversies ==
Certain critics, such as Jussi Lahtonen of the Finnish indie rock magazine ''Sue'', have argued that separating Christian from non-Christian black metal artists "feels rather pointless".<ref name=Sue>{{cite web |url=http://www.suezine.fi/haastattelut?t=1&sid=87 |title=White Metal |access-date=7 September 2007 |author=Lahtonen, Jussi |date=25 October 2005 |work=Sue Rock Punk Metal Zine |language=fi |quote=Jotkut ovat vaivautuneet kikkailemaan semanttisesti nimeämällä tyylit uudestaan life metaliksi ja Anti-black metaliksi, mikä tuntuu melko turhalta. (Some [Christian metal fans] have bothered to come up with semantical gimmicks and rename the genres [death metal and black metal] as life metal and Anti-black metal, which feels rather pointless.}}</ref> However, early groups such as Horde and Antestor refused to call their music "black metal" because they felt that the style was strongly associated with Satanism. Horde called its music "holy unblack metal", and Antestor preferred to call their music "sorrow metal" instead.<ref name=Morrow/> Stefan Rydehed, director of the metal documentary ''Light in Darkness – Nemesis Divina'' says about the unblack metal musicians based on his interviews: "The Christian black metal musicians see themselves as a part of the black metal community but they have a hard time to be accepted. Not only from other black metal musicians but also the society and ordinary Christians."<ref>Pentagrimes. [http://whosearetheobjections.blogspot.com/2008/08/light-in-darkness-nemesis-divina.html Light in Darkness -- Nemesis Divina: An interview with Stefan Rydehed]. Whose Are the Objections. 13 September 2008.</ref>
Certain critics, such as Jussi Lahtonen of the Finnish indie rock magazine ''Sue'', have argued that separating Christian from non-Christian black metal artists "feels rather pointless".<ref name=Sue>{{cite web |url=http://www.suezine.fi/haastattelut?t=1&sid=87 |title=White Metal |access-date=7 September 2007 |author=Lahtonen, Jussi |date=25 October 2005 |work=Sue Rock Punk Metal Zine |language=fi |quote=Jotkut ovat vaivautuneet kikkailemaan semanttisesti nimeämällä tyylit uudestaan life metaliksi ja Anti-black metaliksi, mikä tuntuu melko turhalta. (Some [Christian metal fans] have bothered to come up with semantical gimmicks and rename the genres [death metal and black metal] as life metal and Anti-black metal, which feels rather pointless. |archive-date=27 May 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110527145157/http://www.suezine.fi/haastattelut?t=1&sid=87 |url-status=dead }}</ref> However, early groups such as Horde and Antestor refused to call their music "black metal" because they felt that the style was strongly associated with Satanism. Horde called its music "holy unblack metal", and Antestor preferred to call their music "sorrow metal" instead.<ref name=Morrow/> Stefan Rydehed, director of the metal documentary ''Light in Darkness – Nemesis Divina'' says about the unblack metal musicians based on his interviews: "The Christian black metal musicians see themselves as a part of the black metal community but they have a hard time to be accepted. Not only from other black metal musicians but also the society and ordinary Christians."<ref>Pentagrimes. [http://whosearetheobjections.blogspot.com/2008/08/light-in-darkness-nemesis-divina.html Light in Darkness -- Nemesis Divina: An interview with Stefan Rydehed]. Whose Are the Objections. 13 September 2008.</ref>


Many current unblack metal bands feel that black metal has changed from an ideological movement to a purely musical genre, and that is why they refer to their music as black metal.<ref name=Ultimate_Metal>{{cite web |url=http://www.ultimatemetal.com/forum/interviews/195667-crimson-moonlight-their-most-brutal.html |title=Crimson Moonlight - At Their Most Brutal |author=Jordan, Jason |work=Ultimate Metal webzine |year=2005 |publisher=Ultimatemetal.com |access-date=15 May 2005}}</ref> The Swedish group Crimson Moonlight's vocalist Simon Rosén, for example, says in an interview with ''WhiteMetal.it'' site: "First of all, we don't want to call our music unblack metal or white metal, we play black metal."<ref>Mei, Valerio. [http://www.whitemetal.it/intervista_crimsonmoonlight_(english).htm Crimson Moonlight]. White Metal.</ref> In an interview with ''Ultimate Metal'', Rosén further explains this view:
Many current unblack metal bands feel that black metal has changed from an ideological movement to a purely musical genre, and that is why they refer to their music as black metal.<ref name=Ultimate_Metal>{{cite web |url=http://www.ultimatemetal.com/forum/interviews/195667-crimson-moonlight-their-most-brutal.html |title=Crimson Moonlight - At Their Most Brutal |author=Jordan, Jason |work=Ultimate Metal webzine |year=2005 |publisher=Ultimatemetal.com |access-date=15 May 2005 |archive-date=25 January 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090125194719/http://www.ultimatemetal.com/forum/interviews/195667-crimson-moonlight-their-most-brutal.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> The Swedish group Crimson Moonlight's vocalist Simon Rosén, for example, says in an interview with ''WhiteMetal.it'' site: "First of all, we don't want to call our music unblack metal or white metal, we play black metal."<ref>Mei, Valerio. [http://www.whitemetal.it/intervista_crimsonmoonlight_(english).htm Crimson Moonlight]. White Metal.</ref> In an interview with ''Ultimate Metal'', Rosén further explains this view:


{{Cquote|We believe that all kinds of music are now neutral. I mean, a music genre cannot be "evil" itself. It all depends on the purpose: why you're doing it and what the lyrics are about. I will use an illustration to explain: a knife in the hands of a murderer can kill life, but a knife in the hands of a doctor can save life. Now is the knife evil itself? No, it depends on how you use it. The power is in our hands to decide what we want to use music for. I know that many black metal fans react badly when we use the words "black metal" to describe our music, and we are sorry if we make people upset for that. But for us, black metal is a musical genre. Listen to ''[[Veil of Remembrance]]'' and tell me what kind of music it is.<ref name=Ultimate_Metal/>}}
{{Cquote|We believe that all kinds of music are now neutral. I mean, a music genre cannot be "evil" itself. It all depends on the purpose: why you're doing it and what the lyrics are about. I will use an illustration to explain: a knife in the hands of a murderer can kill life, but a knife in the hands of a doctor can save life. Now is the knife evil itself? No, it depends on how you use it. The power is in our hands to decide what we want to use music for. I know that many black metal fans react badly when we use the words "black metal" to describe our music, and we are sorry if we make people upset for that. But for us, black metal is a musical genre. Listen to ''[[Veil of Remembrance]]'' and tell me what kind of music it is.<ref name=Ultimate_Metal/>}}
Line 91: Line 82:
{{Cquote|We had a debate in our letter pages that went on for six weeks. It was about whether or not you can play Christian black metal. It all started with a review [of a Christian black metal album], and the editor just didn't know what to make of it. [[Redemption (theology)|Redemption]] is one [of] the most antithetical themes to black metal there is. Black metal is about your humanity, not about giving your humanity over to a god. Maybe there are some aspects in Christianity, maybe some Old Testament 'hang 'em high' kind of wrath that might actually find parallel with black metal.<ref name="Murder Music"/>}}
{{Cquote|We had a debate in our letter pages that went on for six weeks. It was about whether or not you can play Christian black metal. It all started with a review [of a Christian black metal album], and the editor just didn't know what to make of it. [[Redemption (theology)|Redemption]] is one [of] the most antithetical themes to black metal there is. Black metal is about your humanity, not about giving your humanity over to a god. Maybe there are some aspects in Christianity, maybe some Old Testament 'hang 'em high' kind of wrath that might actually find parallel with black metal.<ref name="Murder Music"/>}}


While the Indonesian band [[Kekal]] has been labeled as unblack metal, the band has distanced itself from the movement. When asked if he was bothered by the fact that the first black metal bands were against Christianity, front-man [[Jeff Arwadi]] replied: "I think you're wrong if [the] first black metal bands were highly against Christianity. […] I dig the very first black metal bands a lot... those 80s bands like Venom, Bathory, [[Hellhammer]]/[[Celtic Frost]], early [[Sodom (band)|Sodom]], etc. […] By my knowledge, none of those bands were against Christianity. They only had those kind of 'satanic' image which is more like some high-school Halloween movies or parent-shocker rather than Satanism as a philosophy or ideology".<ref name=kekal>{{cite web|author=Jasper|title=Kekal {{!}} Interview|url=http://www.lordsofmetal.nl/showinterview.php?id=1059&lang=en|work=Lords of Metal E-zine|issue=51|date=September 2005|publisher=Lords of Metal E-zine|access-date=29 November 2011}}</ref> Earlier in the interview he even went as far as to say that "even bands like Celtic Frost were once considered 'white-metal' from some 'true' black metal fans because the band thanked God on album thanks list, and one member wearing a [[cross necklace]] instead of inverted cross. It's a totally relative issue, depending on how 'extreme' you would go, right?"<ref name=kekal/> Whereas Arwadi claimed that to his knowledge, "none of those bands were against Christianity",<ref name=kekal/> Bathory founder Quorthon rejected Christianity in numerous interviews.<ref>''Lords of Chaos'', pp. 18-21.</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.metal-rules.com/interviews/Bathory.htm |title=Bathory: An epic interview with Quorthon |author=Lahtinen, Luxi |publisher=Metal Rules |access-date=5 December 2011}}</ref>
While the Indonesian band [[Kekal]] has been labeled as unblack metal, the band has distanced itself from the movement. When asked if he was bothered by the fact that the first black metal bands were against Christianity, front-man [[Jeff Arwadi]] replied: "I think you're wrong if [the] first black metal bands were highly against Christianity. […] I dig the very first black metal bands a lot... those 80s bands like Venom, Bathory, [[Hellhammer]]/[[Celtic Frost]], early [[Sodom (band)|Sodom]], etc. […] By my knowledge, none of those bands were against Christianity. They only had those kind of 'satanic' image which is more like some high-school Halloween movies or parent-shocker rather than Satanism as a philosophy or ideology".<ref name=kekal>{{cite web|author=Jasper|title=Kekal {{!}} Interview|url=http://www.lordsofmetal.nl/showinterview.php?id=1059&lang=en|work=Lords of Metal E-zine|issue=51|date=September 2005|access-date=29 November 2011}}</ref> Earlier in the interview he even went as far as to say that "even bands like Celtic Frost were once considered 'white-metal' from some 'true' black metal fans because the band thanked God on album thanks list, and one member wearing a [[cross necklace]] instead of inverted cross. It's a totally relative issue, depending on how 'extreme' you would go, right?"<ref name=kekal/> Whereas Arwadi claimed that to his knowledge, "none of those bands were against Christianity",<ref name=kekal/> Bathory founder Quorthon rejected Christianity in numerous interviews.<ref>''Lords of Chaos'', pp. 18-21.</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.metal-rules.com/interviews/Bathory.htm |title=Bathory: An epic interview with Quorthon |author=Lahtinen, Luxi |publisher=Metal Rules |access-date=5 December 2011}}</ref>


In a 2007 ''Beat the Blizzard'' webzine's article, the writer Jan Lindsø states that "[m]any metal fans are of the opinion that Christians should 'not be allowed' to use the black metal aesthetics musically since they do not inherit this evil and perhaps misantropic ''[sic]'' trait that many people say is necessary in order to be convincing as black metal musicians".<ref name=Beat_the_Blizzard/> Kittil Kittilsen, who left [[Mayhem (band)|Mayhem]] in 1988 after becoming a born-again Christian, expressed his concern for the unblack metal musicians: "I think they're completely off the mark. I cannot seriously understand how they even manage to do it. They have missed the target completely. I mean, if you want to be a Christian, be it with all you've got, and if you want to be metal, be it with all you've got. If those people really took their faith seriously, and followed the instructions of the One they profess to believe in, they would never be found in a context like that. They are on collision course with Christian life and teaching. I say this because of my own experience, and because of what is written in the Bible; rock music, metal music has nothing at all to do in a Christian setting!"<ref name=Beat_the_Blizzard>{{Cite web|url=http://www.beattheblizzard.com/?module=interviews&interview=80|title=Interview with Kittil Kittilsen conducted by Jan F. Lindsø in 2007|website=Beat The Blizzard|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110917202423/http://www.beattheblizzard.com/?module=interviews&interview=80|archive-date=17 September 2011}}</ref>
In a 2007 ''Beat the Blizzard'' webzine's article, the writer Jan Lindsø states that "[m]any metal fans are of the opinion that Christians should 'not be allowed' to use the black metal aesthetics musically since they do not inherit this evil and perhaps misantropic ''[sic]'' trait that many people say is necessary in order to be convincing as black metal musicians".<ref name=Beat_the_Blizzard/> Kittil Kittilsen, who left [[Mayhem (band)|Mayhem]] in 1988 after becoming a born-again Christian, expressed his concern for the unblack metal musicians: "I think they're completely off the mark. I cannot seriously understand how they even manage to do it. They have missed the target completely. I mean, if you want to be a Christian, be it with all you've got, and if you want to be metal, be it with all you've got. If those people really took their faith seriously, and followed the instructions of the One they profess to believe in, they would never be found in a context like that. They are on collision course with Christian life and teaching. I say this because of my own experience, and because of what is written in the Bible; rock music, metal music has nothing at all to do in a Christian setting!"<ref name=Beat_the_Blizzard>{{Cite web|url=http://www.beattheblizzard.com/?module=interviews&interview=80|title=Interview with Kittil Kittilsen conducted by Jan F. Lindsø in 2007|website=Beat The Blizzard|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110917202423/http://www.beattheblizzard.com/?module=interviews&interview=80|archive-date=17 September 2011}}</ref>
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{{Extreme metal}}
{{Extreme metal}}
{{Christian music articles}}
{{Christian music articles}}
{{Contemporary Christian Music}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Unblack Metal}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Unblack Metal}}
[[Category:Unblack metal| ]]
[[Category:Unblack metal| ]]
[[Category:Black metal subgenres]]
[[Category:Black metal genres]]
[[Category:Christian metal]]
[[Category:Christian metal]]
[[Category:Contemporary Christian music]]
[[Category:Contemporary Christian music]]

Latest revision as of 20:00, 6 November 2024

Unblack metal (also known as Christian black metal or White metal) is a religious philosophy and subgenre within black metal, inheriting several characteristics of it, such as the melody, the lyrics and the aesthetics (corpse paint),[1] whose artists either directly oppose the Satanism prevalent in most black metal, or promote Christianity in their lyrics and imagery.[2][3] Unblack metal artists are controversial within the black metal subculture, because black metal's pioneers, especially those of the Second Wave, were anti-Christian. It is also suggested that Christianity contradicts black metal's dark nature and the individualistic and misanthropic ideals of many bands.[4]

The exact beginning of the unblack metal movement is disputed. The Australian band Horde's 1994 album Hellig Usvart brought the concept and the term "holy unblack metal" (a word play on Darkthrone's slogan "unholy black metal" used on the albums A Blaze in the Northern Sky and Under a Funeral Moon)[5] to media attention,[6] while the Norwegian band Antestor was already formed in 1990 as a death/doom act and released its demo The Defeat of Satan in 1991, before they began shifting towards unblack metal on their 1994 album Martyrium.

Characteristics

[edit]
Pilgrim of Crimson Moonlight

Unblack metal is a genre derived from black metal that focuses on Christian lyrical themes. Unblack metal incorporates black metal's fast tempos, shrieked vocals, highly distorted guitars, tremolo picking, double-kick drumming, repetition and often unconventional song structure. Garry Sharpe-Young's 2001 encyclopedia A-Z of Black Metal states that "[t]opping the lot are Christian 'Unblack' acts who for all intents and purposes look like, sound like and employ the imagery of Black Metal whilst hidden in the unpenetrable vocal growls and distortions are the proclamations of Jesus Christ".[7]

Some unblack metal artists, such as Horde, write lyrics that explicitly attack Satanism.[8] This remained a dominant theme throughout most of the 1990s. In the late 1990s, groups began to write more philosophical and ideological lyrics. These often include stories of conversion, doubt, salvation, struggles with faith, and the darker side of living a Christian life. Unblack metal bands may justify their use of the black metal style with reasons ranging from genuine appreciation of the musical genre, to evangelization towards the largely anti-Christian black metal scene, i.e. "bringing light into darkness".[8][9]

History

[edit]

Background

[edit]

The 1970s occult boom influenced many early heavy metal bands lyricwise. In the early 1980s, several bands dealt such themes in a more extreme manner, including Venom, Mercyful Fate and Bathory. During the mid-1980s, heavy metal music divided into many subgenres, and black metal emerged as one of them, taking its name from a Venom album of the same title. In the 1980s, the term was imprecise with regards to musical attributes, simply referring to all metal bands with Satanic lyrical themes.[10] Although Christian metal bands had existed since the late 1970s, a clear contrast with black metal occurred in 1984 with the release of American doom metal band Trouble's significantly Bible-based debut album Psalm 9. Metal Blade Records marketed Trouble as "white metal" as opposed to black metal. Vocalist Eric Wagner explained in 2006 that "back in the early 1980s, all the metal was kind of Satanic," and implied that Metal Blade (or the owner Brian Slagel) actually invented the term in the first place: "I think it was more like Metal Blade trying to be cute or something, with everything being called black metal, so why not call us white metal, which is a bunch of crap."[11]

Early 1990s

[edit]

The Australian band Horde's debut album Hellig Usvart, recorded and released in 1994, is often credited for being the first unblack metal album, although the sole member "Anonymous" has stated that, "there were similar [unblack] bands prior to Horde, even in Norway," referring to Antestor who formed in 1990. Prior to 1993, they were a death-doom band called Crush Evil. Antestor's debut album Martyrium was also recorded in 1994 and marked a shift into unblack metal territory. However, due to issues with the band's record label at the time, the album was not officially released until 2000.[12] Euronymous of Mayhem expressed in an interview that someone would need to force Crush Evil to disband.[13]

Hellig Usvart (Norwegian for Holy Unblack) caused great controversy in the black metal scene, and death threats were sent to Nuclear Blast Records headquarters demanding them to release the members' names. Later, it was discovered that the only actual member was the former Mortification/Paramaecium drummer Jayson Sherlock from Australia.[14] The term "unblack metal" was derived from "holy unblack metal", which was a wordplay on Darkthrone's "unholy black metal" term.[5] Media became interested in this controversy. On 6 June 1995, the Norwegian weekly newspaper Morgenbladet published an article about the phenomenon of unblack metal, describing Horde's album as "an abrupt satire of the Norwegian black metal movement". Antestor was also interviewed, with vocalist Kjetil Molnes stating "We identify ourselves as black metal as a music style, not black metal as an ideology or belief."[6][15]

Late 1990s

[edit]

After 1995, influenced by Horde, other unblack metal bands started releasing their first demos. The Indonesian group Kekal soon became associated with the movement.[16][17] Eduardo Rivadavia of AllMusic wrote that "Kekal are one of the first heavy metal bands from Jakarta, Indonesia, to make international inroads, and they may just be the first to profess Christian beliefs while performing black metal."[18] However, Kekal has resisted being labeled as Christian, with former front-man Jeff Arwadi stating that he views "Christian metal" as a market brand that to him does not make sense.[19]

Antestor's 1998 release The Return of the Black Death proved highly influential for the unblack metal movement. The album was released on the British Cacophonous Records [fr], which has released records by such successful black metal groups as Cradle of Filth and Dimmu Borgir. According to Matt Morrow, it became the only unblack metal album besides Horde's Hellig Usvart to be released on a secular label in the 1990s,[20] although Kekal released Beyond the Glimpse of Dreams on a secular label in the same year.[18] The established British magazines Kerrang! and Terrorizer both gave The Return of the Black Death 4 points out of 5.[21][22]

Vaakevandring's self-titled EP (recorded in 1998) was produced by Stian Aarstad, the keyboard player of Dimmu Borgir.[23][24] The release achieved worldwide attention and later became recognized a "classic" in the unblack metal scene.[25] In 1998, the metalcore group Underoath was founded, and played hardcore and metalcore mixed with black and death metal.[26][27] The band subsequently moved away from this early black metal sound to a more mainstream post-hardcore style.[28]

2000s

[edit]
The Norwegian group Drottnar live at Elements of Rock [de], Switzerland in 2013

During the early 2000s, according to Screams of Abel magazine, there was an "international explosion of Christian black metal bands", and black metal "seemed to be the fastest growing genre in the Christian metal scene".[29] In 2000, Lengsel's debut album Solace was critically acclaimed,[30] Sanctifica released Spirit of Purity,[31] Crimson Moonlight released its debut album The Covenant Progress,[32] while Drottnar released its demos on an album titled Spiritual Battle, gaining them popularity among the Scandinavian underground.[33]

Blood Covenant, an Armenian Christian black metal band[34]

Apart from Scandinavia, unblack metal has developed regional scenes in the United States, South America, and Central Europe. The Kansas City-based Frost Like Ashes is an American band.[35]

The South and Central American unblack scenes are known for their radical anti-Satanic attitude.[36] Groups such as Exousia and Mexico's Deborah have performed internationally in Europe.[37]

In Poland, notable unblack metal groups include Abdijah, Fire Throne, and Elgibbor. The latter was featured on a short Polish TV documentary that focused on unblack metal.[38] The Netherlands has groups such as Dormant and Slechtvalk.[39] Although the latter does not currently consider themselves as a "Christian band"[40]

Media attention

[edit]
Frosthardr live at Immortal Metal Fest 2005, Finland. The group appeared on the Murder Music - Black Metal documentary, and has performed at the American Cornerstone Festival.

In 2006, Admonish achieved wider notice when twins Emil (guitar) and Jonas Karlsson (bass) both appeared on the MTV Europe show Pimp My Ride International. On that show, in which their car was modified, the twins advertised their band and Admonish's music was played.[41][42]

In 2007, the Norwegian band Frosthardr appeared on the documentary feature film Murder Music: A History of Black Metal. They were interviewed for a minute and represented the Christian point of view in black metal music, with vocalist Daniel Ravn Fufjord saying: "It is difficult to find musicians that are interested in this kind of music and share our point of view."[43]

Controversies

[edit]

Certain critics, such as Jussi Lahtonen of the Finnish indie rock magazine Sue, have argued that separating Christian from non-Christian black metal artists "feels rather pointless".[44] However, early groups such as Horde and Antestor refused to call their music "black metal" because they felt that the style was strongly associated with Satanism. Horde called its music "holy unblack metal", and Antestor preferred to call their music "sorrow metal" instead.[20] Stefan Rydehed, director of the metal documentary Light in Darkness – Nemesis Divina says about the unblack metal musicians based on his interviews: "The Christian black metal musicians see themselves as a part of the black metal community but they have a hard time to be accepted. Not only from other black metal musicians but also the society and ordinary Christians."[45]

Many current unblack metal bands feel that black metal has changed from an ideological movement to a purely musical genre, and that is why they refer to their music as black metal.[46] The Swedish group Crimson Moonlight's vocalist Simon Rosén, for example, says in an interview with WhiteMetal.it site: "First of all, we don't want to call our music unblack metal or white metal, we play black metal."[47] In an interview with Ultimate Metal, Rosén further explains this view:

We believe that all kinds of music are now neutral. I mean, a music genre cannot be "evil" itself. It all depends on the purpose: why you're doing it and what the lyrics are about. I will use an illustration to explain: a knife in the hands of a murderer can kill life, but a knife in the hands of a doctor can save life. Now is the knife evil itself? No, it depends on how you use it. The power is in our hands to decide what we want to use music for. I know that many black metal fans react badly when we use the words "black metal" to describe our music, and we are sorry if we make people upset for that. But for us, black metal is a musical genre. Listen to Veil of Remembrance and tell me what kind of music it is.[46]

In contrast, Jayson Sherlock of Horde posted on Facebook on February 5, 2013 that he doubted whether Christians can play black metal music, saying, "For the life of me, I will never understand why Christians think they can play Black Metal. I really don't think they understand what true Black Metal is."[48]

On the other side, many in the black metal scene see "Christian black metal" as an oxymoron. On the British black metal documentary Murder Music: A History of Black Metal (2007), all interviewed musicians stated - when asked about the matter - that black metal cannot be Christian.[43] The term "Christian black metal" drew mocking replies from the black metal musicians, for example Martin Walkyier of the English metal band Sabbat commented: "'Christian black metal?' What do they do? Do they build churches? Do they repair them? (laughs)".[43] Jonathan Selzer, editor of the British metal magazine Terrorizer discussed his experiences and thoughts in the documentary:

We had a debate in our letter pages that went on for six weeks. It was about whether or not you can play Christian black metal. It all started with a review [of a Christian black metal album], and the editor just didn't know what to make of it. Redemption is one [of] the most antithetical themes to black metal there is. Black metal is about your humanity, not about giving your humanity over to a god. Maybe there are some aspects in Christianity, maybe some Old Testament 'hang 'em high' kind of wrath that might actually find parallel with black metal.[43]

While the Indonesian band Kekal has been labeled as unblack metal, the band has distanced itself from the movement. When asked if he was bothered by the fact that the first black metal bands were against Christianity, front-man Jeff Arwadi replied: "I think you're wrong if [the] first black metal bands were highly against Christianity. […] I dig the very first black metal bands a lot... those 80s bands like Venom, Bathory, Hellhammer/Celtic Frost, early Sodom, etc. […] By my knowledge, none of those bands were against Christianity. They only had those kind of 'satanic' image which is more like some high-school Halloween movies or parent-shocker rather than Satanism as a philosophy or ideology".[49] Earlier in the interview he even went as far as to say that "even bands like Celtic Frost were once considered 'white-metal' from some 'true' black metal fans because the band thanked God on album thanks list, and one member wearing a cross necklace instead of inverted cross. It's a totally relative issue, depending on how 'extreme' you would go, right?"[49] Whereas Arwadi claimed that to his knowledge, "none of those bands were against Christianity",[49] Bathory founder Quorthon rejected Christianity in numerous interviews.[50][51]

In a 2007 Beat the Blizzard webzine's article, the writer Jan Lindsø states that "[m]any metal fans are of the opinion that Christians should 'not be allowed' to use the black metal aesthetics musically since they do not inherit this evil and perhaps misantropic [sic] trait that many people say is necessary in order to be convincing as black metal musicians".[4] Kittil Kittilsen, who left Mayhem in 1988 after becoming a born-again Christian, expressed his concern for the unblack metal musicians: "I think they're completely off the mark. I cannot seriously understand how they even manage to do it. They have missed the target completely. I mean, if you want to be a Christian, be it with all you've got, and if you want to be metal, be it with all you've got. If those people really took their faith seriously, and followed the instructions of the One they profess to believe in, they would never be found in a context like that. They are on collision course with Christian life and teaching. I say this because of my own experience, and because of what is written in the Bible; rock music, metal music has nothing at all to do in a Christian setting!"[4]

In an interview with Screams of Abel webzine, former Antestor member Morten Mageroy reacted with caution to the proliferation of unblack bands: "I really hope that people (who play Christian black metal) know what they are doing. I know this sounds very rough, but I have seen people being pulled into something they do not know. I am not saying that I know that these musicians are going to mess their lives up, but I have seen it happen to some people and it frightens me very much."[29] Mageroy, however, defends the unblack metal bands' intentions: "A lot of Christian bands have done amazing things being led by God. I know that God is using many types of communication, and it is important that Christians is [sic] present in every field, in every genre, privately and in work. God might just as well use heavy metal to bring salvation to people."[29]

Some of the original Norwegian black metal musicians believe that black metal does not need to hold any ideologies. For example, Jan Axel "Hellhammer" Blomberg of Mayhem has said in an interview with Metal Library: "In my opinion, black metal today is just music. I will tell you that neither I nor other [current] members of Mayhem never really were against religion or something else. We are primarily interested in music."[52] Although rejecting the idea of "Christian black metal", Satyricon's vocalist Sigurd Wongraven stated in the Murder Music documentary that black metal "doesn't necessarily have to be all Satanic as long as it's dark".[43]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ "Antestor: turskamusiikkia turskain luvatusta maasta". The Christian Underground Zine. Vol. 4. 24–26 March 2000. Interviewer: 'What's your relation to penguin masks? Do you use them on your concerts?' Antestor: 'Until now we haven't done many gigs, so the answer would be no. On the other hand today (at Bobfest) we all are going to paint our faces for the first time, so yes, we use masks. It is the same for us as masking is for actors or mimes. One way to express certain feelings in the battle we are in. The main purpose is to concentrate on God and not to twist the knife in the wound in side issues like these.'
  2. ^ Kapelovitz, Dan (February 2001). "Heavy Metal Jesus Freaks - Headbanging for Christ". Mean Magazine. Archived from the original on 5 August 2007. Retrieved 6 September 2007. And where secular Black Metal thrived, so did its Christian counterpart, Unblack Metal, with names like Satanicide, Neversatan, and Satan's Doom.
  3. ^ Sol (11 February 2015). "7 Christian Black Metal Bands You Need To Hear". Metal Injection. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  4. ^ a b c "Interview with Kittil Kittilsen conducted by Jan F. Lindsø in 2007". Beat The Blizzard. Archived from the original on 17 September 2011.
  5. ^ a b Erasmus. Horde Interview Archived 25 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 23 October 2007.
  6. ^ a b Søderlind, Didrik (6 February 1995). "MusikkOpp-ned oppnedkors!". Morgenbladet (in Norwegian). Oslonett. Archived from the original on 25 July 2002. Retrieved 19 December 2007.
  7. ^ Sharpe-Young 2001, "Introduction", p. iv
  8. ^ a b "So the album was created with a prophetic, free, submissive, obedient, reverent, anti-Satan and Christian mindset." – Horde: Interview with Son Of Man Records Archived 25 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine (retrieved 30 November 2007).
  9. ^ "Our songs deal with personal challenges as well as on spiritual struggles." - Pål Dæhlen: Interview with CrossOver Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine.
  10. ^ Moynihan, Michael. Lords of Chaos: The Bloody Rise of the Satanic Metal Underground. Venice: Feral House, 2006.
  11. ^ Popoff, Martin. Forewords for the re-issue of Psalm 9 booklet. 2006. Escapi Music.
  12. ^ Michael Bryzak. Liner notes of The Defeat of Satan / Despair. Endtime Productions. 2003.
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Bibliography

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Further reading

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