JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding. You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly. You should upgrade or use an alternative browser. Thread starter Volhv Start date Feb 7, There is a band known as "Behemoth".
They use "ov" instead of "of" for their lyrics I always wondered why. I heard a fan saying that it is the archaic form of this article, and I'll be happy to know if it's indeed so.
You can never feel totally safe here. That makes it easier for me to get inspiration. You can do or be anything you want there. I'm a huge fan of that kind of freedom, but I don't really have it here.
Struggling with that on a daily basis makes me who I am, and fuels my passion for this music. Nergal doesn't view the heightened rock influence as a conscious creative decision so much as a renewed interest in the historical origins of the music he makes. That should give you a clear indication of why this album is more rock-based.
It all comes down to the songwriting. I believe this is some deeper metal language. It's art. Which is to say nothing of the piece Polish orchestra arranged by Jan Stoklosa and engineered by Tomasz Budkiewicz. Or as Nergal sums it up: "Pretty much every instrument was recorded in a different studio, and a lot of amazing people were involved. Every band likes to think that its most recent work is also its best. It basically plays itself. Nergal comes by his confidence honestly.
Since forming nearly 20 years ago, Behemoth—which also includes bassist Orion and drummer Inferno—have become one of the most influential acts in the European extreme metal scene.
But it was too late. We had a schedule and deadlines, and we had to hit the road. The result is an accomplished effort that is brutal but melodic, precise yet pummeling.
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