Massacra

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Massacra

Background information
Origin Flag of France France
Genre(s) Heavy metal
Death Metal
Years active 1987—1997
Label(s) Shark Records
Phonogram

Massacra was one of France's leading technical death/thrash metal bands in the early nineties.

After recording three demos in the 1980s, they finally landed a deal with Shark Records from Germany, and released their famous debut, 'Final Holocaust' in 1990. Unfortunately, they found that this was a label that follows trends too much, and after two more successful albums, Enjoy the Violence and Signs of the Decline, they terminated their contract in 1993.

They signed a new deal with the major label Phonogram. The band decided not to rehash the same songs over and over on later releases -- by the time of their fourth album (1994's Sick) the band had transformed rather remarkably to a groove-laden mid-paced thrash album, sounding at times almost like recent Metallica musically, with the vocals more along the lines of a more aggressive Ron Broder of the mighty Coroner. An interesting listen, but doubtless a disappointment to early fans of the group expecting more death metal.

The band broke up after vocalist Fred Duval died of skin cancer on 6 June 1997 at the age of 29. Some members of the band went on to form an industrial side project called Zero Tolerance in 1996, and released one album through Active Records.

[edit] Discography

  • Legion of Torture (Demo, 1987)
  • Final Holocaust (Demo, 1988)
  • Nearer from Death (Demo, 1989)
  • Final Holocaust (CD, 1990)
  • Enjoy the Violence (CD,1991)
  • Signs of the Decline (CD, 1992)
  • Sick (CD, 1994)
  • Humanize Human (CD,1996)
  • Apocalyptic Warriors Pt. 1 (compilation CD, 2000)

[edit] Members

  • Vocals, guitars: Fred "Death" Duval [1986-1997]
  • Guitars: Jean-Marc Tristani [1986-1997]
  • Bass: Pascal Jorgensen [1986-1997]
  • Drums: Chris Palengat [1986-1991]
  • Drums: Matthias Limmer [1992-1994]
  • Drums: Björn Crugger [1995-1997]
In other languages