Ofermod
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Ofermod | |
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Origin | Norrköping, Sweden |
Genres | Black metal, death metal |
Years active | 1996–present |
Labels | Norma Evangelium Diaboli, The Ajna Offensive, Season of Mist, Spinefarm Records, Helter Skelter Productions, Shadow Records, Pounding Metal Productions |
Members | Michayah Belfagor Rudra Anomias |
Past members | Shiva Mist Atum Moloch Nebiros Leviathan J.K. S. Samuelsson |
Ofermod is a Swedish black/death metal band, formed in Sweden in 1996 by Michayah Belfagor.
History
Ofermod were formed in 1996[1] by Nefandus drummer, backing vocalist and lyricist Mika "Belfagor" Hakola. The band recorded the single Mystérion Tés Anomias in Tore "Necromorbus" Stjerna's Necromorbus studio in January 1998 and released it through Pounding Metal Productions. In 2000, Belfagor retired from his musical activities to concentrate on his occult studies and practices. This, together with the closure of Shadow Records, led to the cancellation of the band's planned debut album.
In 2003, while in prison, Hakola started composing again. In 2004, he was joined by singer Nebiros again, and they recruited drummer Tore "Shiva" Stjerna, who had produced the Mystérion Tés Anomias single. After he served another prison sentence, Hakola got in contact with guitarist Atum, and through him with bassist Tehôm. In December 2004, the band recorded two songs for the Mystérion Tés Anomias re-release through Norma Evangelium Diaboli; on the re-release, Hakola used the new pseudonym "Michayah", and Nebiros called himself Leviathan.[2]
The band's first album Pentagrammaton, which was supposed to feature Moloch of Teitanblood sharing vocals with Nebiros[3] and "mark the ten year anniversary of OFERMOD" in 2006, was "partly finished in late 2005/early 2006", but delayed because "Michayah was sent to prison, for assault, robbery and a few other incidents, in early March 2006". He was released in August 2006, but sentenced to serve more time the same year, "due to new acts of violence". Pentagrammaton was therefore further delayed until 2007.[4] The album remained unreleased because "obviously the forces of chaos did not want this album to be released". Belfagor took time to solely re-work the material, which was produced by former Marduk bassist Magnus "Devo" Andersson and released under the title Tiamtü in 2008.[3]
The band released their second album Thaumiel in 2012 with singer and guitarist J. Kvarnbrink; aka "Tehôm" of the bands Mortuus and Head of the Demon, replacing Nebiros who left the band in 2011 to rejoin Malign; though he briefly rejoined the band in 2012 for some live performances, and produced once again at Endarker Studio by Magnus Andersson. By 2012, Ofermod had a new line-up; including bassist Robin "Rudra" Fjäll and drummer Simon Samuelsson. The band released their second EP Serpents Dance in 2014 and their third full length album Sol Nox in 2017.
Johannes Kvarnbrink amicably departed the band upon completion of Sol Nox and according to Hakola he left due to feeling he had achieved his potential and had nothing more to offer the band; even stating that the album was a masterpiece that he could not top.[5] From July 2017 until September 13, 2019, Mika Hakola was the only member of the band left[5] until he announced that bassist Robin Fjäll had rejoined the band, Anomias also joined as the band's new vocalist. On March 20, 2020, Shadow Records announced that they would be releasing a remastered and remixed version of the band's scrapped 2005 album Pentagrammaton; the album was released on June 22, 2020. The remixing and remastering was done by Tore Stjerna.
Music and ideology
Ofermod are based on the forces of Sitra Achra. Belfagor claims to write the lyrics in connection with meditation and astral travels and composes the music in semi-trance.[6] Belfagor tries to avoid being consciously influenced by other bands.[3][7] Ofermod's musical style supposedly influenced other Swedish black metal bands such as Watain and Ondskapt.[7][8] On Tiamtü, Ofermod "has eschewed breakneck speed for brutish, evocative music, which has far more technically in common with Death Metal than Black Metal".[9] Their EP's style has been likened to bands such as Watain[10] (whom Ofermod supposedly influenced[7][8]), Dark Funeral[10] (whom Belfagor called one of "the non-serious bands that use the Satanic thing as an image but actually have no idea of this phenomenon's esoteric aspects"[3]) and Gorgoroth[10] by AllMusic journalist Eduardo Rivadavia. Marduk guitarist Morgan Håkansson, for whose album Wormwood Belfagor wrote the lyrics to "Phosphorous Redeemer", described their early music as "raw black metal", whereas the style on the Tiamtü album "include[s] some death metal, like a bit of MORBID ANGEL"[11] (whose debut album Altars of Madness made a great impression upon Belfagor[12]).
The band originally worshipped the Devil and termed the music "Orthodox Black Metal".[4] The new tracks on the EP re-release were characterised as "Orthodox Death Metal", "for the band no longer use the word 'Satan' (ha-shatan) as a description of their religion, but leave the holiest essence of the Lord silent, as it forever should be, for it existed before the cosmos and eventually will bring to its primal form: No-Thing = Utter Spiritual Death".[2] Yet Ofermod are still connected to Satanism; Belfagor stated that "our lyrics and most of all the presence conjured into our album in the process of making it is SATANIC in every way possible", and that he considers black metal and death metal to be "exactly the same, when it comes to the Cult, as it is the same satanic forces of Chaos we religiously devote ourselves to".[9] The band refers especially to the Kabbalah and chaos as the dark counterpart to creation, which is seen as the true evil by Ofermod, but Belfagor also uses terms like evil for his own views, being evil from a cosmic perspective.[6] According to Belfagor, "[t]he materialization of existence must and will be inverted, emanation by emanation, for it is a curse life has inflicted upon itself through manifestation".[1]
Mika Hakola joined "Dragon Rouge" a Draconian Current organization founded by Thomas Karlsson sometime before the release of Thaumiel and has been actively promoting the organization in various ways, the most recent one being sharing their website and logo in the booklet of Sol Nox, as well as being an avid and frequent practitioner of Draconian Magick and Goëtia, even offering his services to perform occult rituals outside of his music.
Line-up
- Current members
- Michayah Belfagor (Mika Hakola) - guitars, additional vocals
- Rudra (Robin Fjäll) - bass
- Anomias (N.) - lead vocals
- Past members
- Nebiros Leviathan (Jonas Tengner) - lead vocals
- Mist (Mikael Schelin) - bass
- Shiva/Chivah (Tore Stjerna) - drums
- Atum (Karl Emil Lundin) - guitar
- J.K. (Johannes "Tehôm" Kvarnbrink)[13] - guitars, lead vocals, bass
- Moloch (Ignacio "N.S.K." Muñoz) - vocals[4][13]
- Samuel Samuelsson - drums
Discography
- Albums
- Tiamtü (2008)
- Thaumiel (2012)
- Sol Nox (2017)
- Pentagrammaton (2020)
- EPs
- Mystérion Tés Anomias (1998)
- Serpents Dance (2014)
- Black Metal Terror split with Malign, Triumphator, Watain (2019)
References
- ^ a b Ofermod. In: Funeral Maelstrom Of Hate, no. 6, 2004.
- ^ a b Ofermod: Mystérion tés anomias, Norma Evangelium Diaboli 2005.
- ^ a b c d Stahlschrulle: Ofermod - Interview Archived 2015-01-20 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ a b c "The Holy Union of OFERMOD". Web.archive.org. 17 October 2007. Retrieved 7 October 2020.
- ^ a b "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2019-01-05. Retrieved 2019-01-04.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ a b Terry Demeter: Ofermod. Breath of the Dragon. In: Unrestrained Magazine, no. 39, pp. 74f.
- ^ a b c Nathan T. Birk: OFERMOD.
- ^ a b Stahlschrulle: Ofermod - Tiamtü.
- ^ a b Stewart Voegtlin: TheLeftHandPath.com - Interview: Ofermod.
- ^ a b c Rivadavia, Eduardo. "Ofermod biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 2018-07-24.
- ^ Darren Cowan: MARDUK. Interview with guitarist Morgan Håkansson, December 2009, accessed on 29 December 2009.
- ^ Belfagor: 5 Klassiker. In: Rock Hard, no. 269, October 2009, p. 83.
- ^ a b Daniel Ekeroth: Swedish Death Metal. Second printing. Brooklyn, NY: Bazillion Points 2009, p. 387.