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úterý 22. listopadu 2016

Home » » ROOT stream new album via Noisey.Vice.com; vocalist Big Boss discusses realities of being in a metal band back in Communist Czechoslovakia

ROOT stream new album via Noisey.Vice.com; vocalist Big Boss discusses realities of being in a metal band back in Communist Czechoslovakia


AGONIA RECORDS / Press Release 





ROOT stream new album via Noisey.Vice.com; vocalist Big Boss discusses realities of being in a metal band back in Communist Czechoslovakia 


Legendary Czech dark metallers ROOT are streaming their highly anticipated new album "Kärgeräs - Return From Oblivion" exclusively via Noisey.Vice.com. The album is set for release on November 25th via Agonia Records and includess 10 tracks. You can listen to the album in advance and read an interview with vocalist Big Boss, wherein he discusses a variety of matters, including being accused of being a "Satanic spy of the West" back in Communist Czechoslovakia:





ROOT is one of the original pre-second-wave black metal bands formed in 1987 by iconic vocalist Jiri 'Big Boss' Valter. In contrast to Bathory and Venom, ROOT took the black metal genre in a more refined direction, featuring Big Boss' chartacteristic clean vocals, dark sound and an epic approach altogether. Nowadays, ROOT is often recognized as an epic heavy/black metal act, or as the band simply puts it - a dark metal band.

The new album, "Kärgeräs - Return From Oblivion", will be different from their 2011's offering, "Heritage Of Satan", says the band: 

"As always in our history as a band, we aim to deliver a unique album, something that will stand out and shine its own light in our discography. Expect dark metal at its best, along with some surprising elements. We've recorded one fully acoustic song and one entirely instrumental. Overall, the album will include ten new tracks that will differ from our previous records".

"Kärgeräs - Return From Oblivion" will be ROOT's tenth full-length album. Lyrically, it will be a concept album, and looked at from that perspective, it'll continue the story begun by their 1996 release under a similar yet shorter title, "Kärgeräs", that presents a tale of a pround nation.



The album artwork (available above) was hand-painted by Thomas Bruno. The painting started off as a portrait at first, but after the band's decision to use it as cover, the mystical tree, ravens and other elemnts where added. Recroding, mixing and mastering took place at Shaark Studio in South Moravia. Big Boss produced the album.


Tracklist:

1. Life Of Demons
2. Osculum Infame
3. Moment Of Fright
4. The Book Of Death
5. Black Iris
6. Moment Of Hope
7. The Key To The Empty Room
8. New Empire
9. Up To The Down
10. Do You Think Is It The End?

Available formats:
- Digipack CD with 28 pages booklet
- Black LP
- Red LP with A2 poster*
- Transparent red/black splatter LP with A2 poster and patch**
- T-shirt (2 versions)
*handnumbered & limited to 222 copies
**handnumbered & limited to 100 copies

Pre-orders: PHYSICAL / DIGITAL.




Since 1987, ROOT is led by founder & vocalist Big Boss - a controversial, yet valued musician, producer, writer and lyricist. He's one of the oldest and most characteristic black metal singers; one of the very few, who possesses an operatic range of vocals. Over the years, ROOT has maintained a strong underground following, while Big Boss rose up to become a cult figure in the black metal genre, guesting on albums by leading metal artists, most notabely Moonspell and Behemoth. ROOT has performed hundreds of shows worldwide, sharing the stage with bands such as Mercyful Fate, King Diamond, Cradle Of Filth, Apocalyptica, Moonspell, Behemoth, Impaled Nazarene, Nifelheim, Anathema, Sodom, Desaster, Pungent Stench, Master, Destroyer 666, Master´s Hammer, Enslaved, Testament, Marduk, Napalm Death, Krabathor, Hypnos and many other. 

Line-up:

BigBoss - voice
Igor - bass
AD - guitar
Hanz - guitar
Paul Dread - drums

Upcoming shows:

25.11. Beroun (CZE)
16.12. Kroměříž (CZE)
17.12 Litoměřice (CZE)
25-28.05.2017 Maryland Deathfest (USA)

Previously released songs:

https://youtu.be/2lLvkGyaDuY
https://youtu.be/pLtFThy2IUk


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INTERVIEW:

30 Years In, Root's Hellish Symphonies are Darker Than Ever

The Czech dark metal godfathers return to Kärgeräs with a new concept album; stream it here and read our Q&A with Big Boss and Igor Hubik.


Root has always been one of the strangest members of black metal's Second Wave. Founded in 1987 under the Communist regime in what was then known as Czechoslovakia, the band was extremely isolated from the global metal scene (including the burgeoning black metal movement). Despite the hardships that that entailed, the band's original members managed to channel their love of Bathory and Venom into their own bestial creation, and in doing so make an indelible mark on the history of Czech black metal. 


Even after their sound evolved enough for them to roundly reject the "black metal" label in favor of a more expansive and theatrical "dark metal" approach that made more use of Big Boss's incredible vocal range, Root remained inadvertent standard bearers for their homeland's wild, unfailingly unique approach to extreme metal. Without Root (and their peers in Master's Hammer), there would be no Maniac Butcher, Cult of Fire, or Death Karma—and think about how awful that would be!

Still, their Scandinavian peers still reap the lion's share of the attention when it comes to the black metal conversation, and underground icons like Root are often left out. When I asked if they felt that Root's contributions to the genre have been overlooked, though, founder and vocalist Big Boss took umbrage at the very idea. "I don't care personally, but do you think that the overlooked band would play for thirty years?" he replied.

They're still at it, too. The band—which is now comprised of founder Big Boss and newer members Igor Hubik, Pavel Kubát, Jan Konečný, and Alesh A.D.—is about to release its tenth studio album, a concept album that follows 2011's Heritage of Satan and revisits the mythical land of Kärgeräs, which the band originally introduced on a 1996 album of the same name. The album—titled Kärgeräs - Return from Oblivion—is out November 25 via Agonia Records, and we're streaming it below. It certainly sounds like Root, which is to say, it's overtly mystical, very moody and atmospheric, chock full of epic riffs and ritual chanting, and more than a little bonkers. Preorders are available now, in physical and digital versions.

Alongside our album stream, we've also got a quick little Q&A with Big Boss and guitarist Igor Hubik. Due to their varying levels of comfort with English, they elected to answer my questions via email, but the results are still plenty colorful (especially Big Boss's recollections of the time he was accused of being a "Satanic spy for the West").

Noisey: You've been releasing material quite steadily since 1987, and have never compromised on your sound or your allegiance to Satanic darkness. What drives you to continue creating this music after so long?


Big Boss: We believe in our music. We believe in ourselves and we do believe that we can bring still something new to our listeners. It keeps us alive on the way which we are still going on.

This latest record is a concept album, mean to continue the story you first introduced on Kärgeräs. Can you explain what's happening in this story? What has happened in this world you created since 1996?

Big Boss: Kärgeräs is still the same nation I invented back then and who were doomed by their own fault by the Grandiose Magus Equirhodont and his monster named Dygon. Now the sons of the Grandiose Mages come to ask him to return them to their lives.The rest of the story is on our new album. I will not tell you more! It is a direct continuation of Kärgeräs album from 1996—my own closure of the story which I wrote back in the Nineties. I promised once that one day I would finish that story and so I am keeping this promise. Many fans have been waiting for it since the first Kärgeräs album. Now they can finally get it and can enjoy another part of this story. I'm looking forward to listeners' opinions about this new masterpiece. The album is simultaneously a gift directly to Kärgeräs album fans. It´s very important because there are many fans of Root who prefer just some of our albums, and Kärgeräs is the special one.

Czech history has long been a complex, evolving beast, one marked by war and occupation, that continues to shift in the modern world. How do you think that lack of political stability influenced musicians in your generation?

Big Boss: I do not give a fuck about this society. I do not care. I am surrounded with great friends, our fans and great musicians and these are the people I care about. I do not intend to adapt to this hypocritical and worthless mass of people. "Society" is just a bunch of fucking idiots.

When Root began in 1987, the country was still called Czechoslovakia, and people lived under Soviet-style communist rule. What was it like trying to play this dark, blasphemous metal music during that period?

Big Boss: It was fun. Cops used to chase us, two or three times they even wanted to arrest as onstage—but we managed to escape. I was labeled a Satanic spy of the West, etc. We were forbidden to play, so we used to play unofficially in secret. It was the right kind of "fun"!

At what point did it finally become easier to play in a metal band and acquire metal tapes and CDs? I guess that must've happened later, after the Velvet Revolution.

Big Boss: Yes, that was the right time to start with recording official albums and play more shows, of course.




Unlike many other Eastern European bands, Root and the Czech black metal community in general tends to steer clear of politics, preferring instead to focus on the occult. What are your views on mixing politics with black metal? 

Big Boss: That´s real bullshit to mix the music and politics. Maybe some protest songs singer as Bob Dylan is. And black metal plus politics? I cannot imagine this at all.

I know Metallica was a big influence on Root in the early days; how do you feel about them now? Do you have any interest in their new music? 

Big Boss: I listened to Metallica until their Black Album, and then it went down. I can´t listen to it nowadays.

What else have you got going on? There's a reissue happening as well, right? 

Igor Hubik: Yeah, actually two albums should be re-issued on CD and LP – Madness of the Graves and Hell Symphony by Paragon Records and Eternal Death Records, both US labels.

I've got to ask on behalf of your American fans—when will we get to see you play?

Big Boss: It shall be the first US show ever. Root is confirmed for Maryland Deathfest 2017. This is really special one. Otherwise we still play live over here in Czech Republic mostly, sometimes in Germany, Sweden. See you in Hell—stay proud!

Kim Kelly is being a slightly smaller boss on Twitter.
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