Tuatha de Danann (band)
Tuatha de Danann | |
---|---|
Origin | Varginha, Minas Gerais, Brazil |
Genres | Celtic metal |
Years active | 1995–2012, 2013–present |
Labels | Heavy Metal Rock, Paradoxx Music, Louder Music |
Members |
Bruno Maia Giovani Gomes Rodrigo Abreu Edgard Britto/ Rodrigo Berne |
Tuatha de Danann is a Brazilian Celtic metal band from Varginha, Minas Gerais; known for the merryful Celtic dance rhythms, flute melodies, Celtic mythology-inspired lyrics and the original jesting tones such as gnome-choirs, etc. The band is named after the race of supernaturally-gifted people in Irish mythology, the Tuatha Dé Danann, roughly translated to "People of Dana".
Between July and August 2005, Tuatha de Danann did their first tour outside Brazil, performing on France and Germany. In France, the band played shows in Saint Brieuc, Languidic, Brest, Hennebont, Tours, Grenoble, Rheims, while in Germany the band played at the Wacken Open Air festival.[1]
Discography
- The Last Pendragon (1996 – 1st Demo – released under the band name Pendragon)
- Faeryage (1998 – 2nd Demo – now under the 'Tuatha de Danann' name)
- Tuatha de Danann (1999 – EP with four new songs plus "Faeryage" as bonus tracks.)
- Tingaralatingadun (2001)
- The Delirium Has Just Began... (2002)
- Trova di Danú (2004)
- Acoustic Live (2009 – Acoustic DVD)
- Dawn of a New Sun (2014 – Single)
- Dawn of a New Sun (2015)
Line-up
Current members
- Bruno Maia – guitars, flute, whistle, mandolin, bodhrán (1995–2010, 2013–present), lead vocals (1995–1998, 1999–2010, 2013–present)
- Rodrigo Berne - lead Guitar (1995 - present)
- Giovani Gomes – bass, harsh vocals (1999–2012, 2013–present)
- Rodrigo Abreu – drums, percussion (2000–2012, 2013–present)
- Edgard Britto – keyboards (2003–2004, 2013–present)
Former members
- Rogério Vilela – bass (1995–1999)
- Wilson Melkor – drums (1995–2000)
- Felipe Batiston – keyboards (1995–2000)
- Marcos Ulisses – vocals (1998–1999)
- Leonardo Godtfriedt – keyboards, violin (2000–2002)
- Rafael Castro – keyboards, piano (2002–2003)
References
External links
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