Metal Church
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Metal Church | ||
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Background information | ||
Origin | Aberdeen, Washington, United States | |
Genre(s) | Thrash metal Heavy metal |
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Years active | 1980 1982 - 1993 1998 - present |
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Label(s) | Ground Zero Elektra I.R.S. Epic SPV Nuclear Blast Mercury |
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Associated acts |
Metallica (Lars Ulrich) Shrapnel Hall Aflame |
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Website | http://www.metalchurch.com | |
Members | ||
Ronny Munroe Kurdt Vanderhoof Ray Reynolds Steve Unger Jeff Plate |
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Former members | ||
David Wayne (deceased) Mike Howe Craig Wells John Marshall Duke Erickson Andrew Peters Kirk Arrington |
Metal Church is an American heavy metal band from Aberdeen, Washington. They formed as Shrapnel in 1981, their first album was released in 1984, and the band's most recent work, A Light in the Dark was released in 2006.[1]
Metal Church was formed when the thrash metal genre was still evolving. David Wayne's vocals on the self-titled album Metal Church and The Dark, resembled those of the growls used by European Black and Death Metal bands of the 1980s but in a very high-pitched tone. The lyrics from the album The Dark talk about death, assassination, and fears. Metal Church is still a working band; they are working with their third vocalist.[1]
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Early History (1980s)
Metal Church originally formed as Shrapnel in 1981, with Mike Murphy on vocals, Kirk Arrington on drums, Craig Wells and Kurdt Vanderhoof on guitars, and Duke Erickson on bass. Mike Murphy quit, however, citing personal and creative differences. He was replaced by David Wayne.[1]
Before releasing their self-titled debut album, Metal Church released a demo tape, called the Four Hymns. This album contained the songs "Battalions," "Deathwish," "Gods of Wrath," and "The Brave." Though the demo has been long out-of-print, the songs are freely available from the band's web site.[1]
In 1984, their self-titled debut album was released. The album included cover of the Deep Purple song, Highway Star.
By the time Metal Church released The Dark, they were touring with high-profile acts like Metallica.
In 1989, the band replaced Wayne with former Heretic singer Mike Howe, and released Blessing In Disguise.
[edit] Break-up and Solo careers (1990s)
Following the release of 1991's The Human Factor, Kurdt started working solo, and later with his new band, "Hall Aflame", which released their debut album, Guaranteed Forever, through I.R.S. Records.
The band broke up in 1993 after the release of Hanging in the Balance. Kurdt and Kirk formed "Vanderhoof" and released their self-titled debut album in 1997, and Wayne, formed "Reverend" in 1989.
Duke went on to have a son, Andrew.
[edit] Resurrection (1998-Present)
The founding members of Metal Church released the album Live in 1998. The band then started working on a new studio album. Craig Wells departed from the band due to personal and creative differences. He was replaced by John Marshall.
Masterpeace was released in 1999.
Vanderhoof released A Blur in Time in 2002, and Kurdt started working for new material for Metal Church's studio album.
In 2004, Kurdt and Kirk recruited Ronny Monroe, ex-Malice guitarist Jay Reynolds (who in his off-time sells satelite television as a minimum wage telemarketer in Washington), and Steve Unger. The result was the album Weight of the World.
In 2006, Kirk Arrington left the band due to health complications with diabetes. His replacement was Jeff Plate, who previously worked with Savatage, Chris Caffery and the Trans-Siberian Orchestra.[2]
On June 26th, 2006, Metal Church released their latest album, A Light In The Dark, which featured a re-recording of "Watch the Children Pray", a tribute to David Wayne, who died in 2005.
[edit] Discography
- Four Hymns (1982)
- Metal Church (1984)
- The Dark (1986)
- Blessing In Disguise (1989)
- The Human Factor (1991)
- Hanging in the Balance (1993)
- Live (1998)
- Masterpeace (1999)
- The Weight Of The World (2004)
- A Light In The Dark (2006)
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d www.metalchurch.com, band history page, Metal Church, 2007.
- ^ www.metalreview.com, interview with Kurdt Vanderhoof, 2006.