Messiah Marcolin

Messiah Marcolin

Messiah with Candlemass
Background information
Birth name Bror Jan Alfredo Marcolin
Also known as Messiah Marcolin
Eddie Marcolin
Born (1967-12-10) 10 December 1967
Origin Ronneby, Sweden
Genres Doom metal, heavy metal
Occupation(s) Musician
Instruments Vocals, drums
Years active 1984–2007, 2011–present
Associated acts Candlemass
Mercy
Memento Mori
Therion
Satariel
Website Myspace Page

Messiah Marcolin (born Bror Jan Alfredo Marcolin on 10 December 1967), also known as Eddie Marcolin, is a vocalist best known for his work in the doom metal band Candlemass. He's very well known for his operatic voice.

Biography

1984–1985

Messiah Marcolin's first releases were with the heavy metal band Mercy. After recording an EP, Mercy were looking for a singer to record with and Messiah was asked to join just two weeks before recording. He sang on two Mercy albums, the first a self-titled debut in 1984, and Witchburner a year later. The albums were influenced by Black Sabbath while the falsetto shrieks were influenced by Mercyful Fate singer King Diamond. Looking for a heavier direction, Messiah decided to leave the band.

1987–1991, early career with Candlemass

Marcolin initially joined Candlemass to replace session vocalist Johan Längqvist, who could not be convinced to remain as singer for the band after Epicus Doomicus Metallicus. The band got Marcolin's name from Tom Hallbäck, a refrigerator salesman from Helsingborg and the drummer for thrash bands God BC and Hysteriah GBC. His debut with Candlemass is the band's second album, Nightfall. He sang on two subsequent albums, Ancient Dreams and Tales of Creation and performed on a live album. Due to personal differences with some of the other members during the Tales of Creation tour in 1991, Marcolin left Candlemass.

1991–2001

Messiah worked on several projects after departing Candlemass. In 1993, he co-founded Memento Mori with Mike Wead and sang on two of their albums in 1993 and 1994 before leaving as he was not being credited for writing melodies.[1] Messiah then worked with members of Stillborn on a project named "Colossus" and released a demo and contributed a cover of "Sad But True" to a Metallica tribute album titled Metal Militia: A Tribute to Metallica II in 1996. The band was inactive after this recording and Messiah returned to Memento Mori to record and release Songs for the Apocalypse, Vol. 4 in 1997. He also performed guest vocals for the melodic death metal/blackened death metal band Satariel

2002–2006

The "Nightfall era" line up of Candlemass reformed in 2002 and did various festivals and gigs. Candlemass released recordings from its live activity during this period as Doomed For Live and released a compilation, Essential Doom, which included a demo version of "Witches", a song that would later be included on Candlemass' self-titled 2005 album. After releasing Candlemass, Messiah appeared on two DVD releases: Documents of Doom and The Curse of Candlemass. Candlemass announced in October 2006 that Messiah had departed from the band once again.[2]

Additionally, in 2003, Messiah co-founded Requiem and released a three-song demo, although the band dissolved due to Candlemass' reunion and musical differences within the band.[3]

2007–present

Messiah was a guest vocalist with Therion for a string of live performances in 2007.[4] In 2011, Messiah appeared live with Swedish heavy metal band Portrait, covering the Mercyful Fate song "Black Funeral".[5] In 2013, he sang on "Hel", a song on Amon Amarth's Deceiver of the Gods.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.