Apocalyptica
| Apocalyptica | |
|---|---|
Apocalyptica at the 2009 Ilosaarirock festival. |
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| Background information | |
| Origin | Helsinki, Finland |
| Genres | Cello rock/metal, symphonic metal, neo-classical metal, progressive metal, classical |
| Years active | 1993–present |
| Labels | MCA Music, Inc., Zen Garden, Mercury, 20-20, Jive, Sony Music, RCA |
| Associated acts | Hevein, Lahti Symphony Orchestra, Three Days Grace, Amon Amarth, Bush, Metallica, Shinedown, Corey Taylor, Rammstein, Sonata Arctica, Lacuna Coil, Fuel, Bullet For My Valentine, Oomph!, Lacey Mosley, The Rasmus, HIM, Hoobastank |
| Website | www.apocalyptica.com |
| Members | |
| Eicca Toppinen Paavo Lötjönen Perttu Kivilaakso Mikko Sirén |
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| Past members | |
| Max Lilja Antero Manninen |
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Apocalyptica is a band from Helsinki, Finland, formed in 1993. The band is composed of classically trained cellists Eicca Toppinen, Paavo Lötjönen, and Perttu Kivilaakso (all three of whom are graduates of the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki)[1] and drummer Mikko Sirén. Originally a Metallica tribute band, their music borrows elements from a wide variety of genres including classical music, neo-classical metal[citation needed], speed metal, alternative metal, post-grunge, hard rock, progressive metal[citation needed], thrash metal and symphonic metal. They also incorporate some influences from Middle Eastern music, world music and traditional folk melodies. They have sold over four million albums to date.[2]
Contents |
[edit] History
Apocalyptica was formed in 1993[3] when four cellists, Eicca Toppinen, Paavo Lötjönen, Max Lilja, and Antero Manninen gathered to play Metallica covers at Sibelius Academy. In 1996, Apocalyptica released their debut studio album, Plays Metallica by Four Cellos, which consisted solely of Metallica covers played on cellos. They were later featured on two songs on the Waltari album Space Avenue in 1997.[4] In 1998, Apocalyptica released their second studio album, Inquisition Symphony, which was produced by Hiili Hiilesmaa. Inquisition Symphony once again contained covers of Metallica, but also contained covers of Faith No More, Sepultura, and Pantera. For this album the band also decided to include three original songs written by Eicca Toppinen.
In 1999, Antero Manninen left the group, and was replaced by Perttu Kivilaakso who had appeared in the line-up already in 1995. In 2000, Apocalyptica released their third studio album, Cult, which featured 10 original songs, and 3 covers. Soon after the recording of Cult, the first Apocalyptica track featuring vocals was released, "Path Vol. 2". In 2002, Max Lilja left the group and joined Hevein, leaving Apocalyptica with only three members.
In 2003, Apocalyptica released their fourth studio album, Reflections, which consisted for the first time of all original songs. Reflections featured a more experimental sound, instead of the previous acoustic style arrangements found on Inquisition Symphony and Cult. Dave Lombardo from Slayer played drums on five songs from Reflections, with session drummer Sami Kuoppamäki playing on the rest of the songs. As Lombardo was unable to join the band on stage on the following tour, the band hired Mikko Sirén, who would stay with the band for future tours as well as the recording of the next album.
In 2005, Apocalyptica released their fifth studio album, Apocalyptica. This album featured a number of guest musicians including Ville Valo of HIM, Lauri Ylönen of The Rasmus, and once again Dave Lombardo. They also recorded the Intro for Bullet For My Valentine's album The Poison. In December 2005 Mikko Sirén was announced as an official band member after having played around 200 shows with the band.
Apocalyptica released their sixth studio album, Worlds Collide, on 17 September 2007. It was produced by Jacob Hellner. To the surprise of many, the album includes a cover of the German version of David Bowie's song "Heroes". Till Lindemann of Rammstein, for whom they opened on the Reise, Reise tour, was the guest vocalist on the track "Helden". Worlds Collide was released on April 15, 2008 in the United States. The first single "I'm Not Jesus" featuring Corey Taylor of Slipknot and Stone Sour from the "Worlds Collide" album cracked the top 10 of both the Active rock and Alternative rock charts.
To end 2007, the band toured Europe successfully, selling out many of the venues they played.[citation needed] In 2008 the tour continued in US and included numerous festivals in Europe.
In June 2008, during the Rock in Rio concert in Lisbon, Apocalyptica joined the Greenpeace "energy [r]evolution campaign" and played the Beethoven 5th symphony from the stage.[5]
The band also appeared on Last Call with Carson Daly on October 31, 2008. Here they made their American television debut with a performance of "I Don't Care" with Toryn Green.
In November 2008, Apocalyptica featuring Adam Gontier of Three Days Grace hit first at the BDS and Mediabase Active Rock radio charts with the single "I Don't Care". Later that month, the band ranked 3rd at Billboard's Hot Modern Rock Track chart and 2nd at Billboard's Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart just after AC/DC, and just ahead of Metallica, an ironic twist, due to their origins performing Metallica covers. Recently, it reached No. 1 on the Billboard rock chart, making Apocalyptica the first Finnish band to top the US charts. The song "I Don't Care" was also featured in the 16th episode of season 8 of the TV series Smallville, which aired on March 19, 2009.
The seventh Apocalyptica studio album entitled 7th Symphony, produced by Joe Barresi and Howard Benson (on two tracks), was released on August 23, 2010 in Europe (Germany on August 20, 2010),[6] and August 24 in the U.S.[7] The first single aired on radio June 29, 2010.[7]
The album features eight instrumentals plus four tracks with guest vocals.[7] The first single, "End of Me", features Gavin Rossdale, best known as the vocalist of the British alternative rock band Bush, who had previously collaborated with the band. Slayer drummer Dave Lombardo plays on "2010", "Bring Them to Light" features Joseph Duplantier, singer and guitarist of the French death metal band Gojira, "Broken Pieces" is a cooperation with Flyleaf singer Lacey Mosley, and "Not Strong Enough" is sung by Brent Smith (Shinedown).[6]
"Broken Pieces" and "Not Strong Enough" were released as the second and third singles from the album. Due to distribution rights on Smith's vocals, "Not Strong Enough" was re-recorded with Doug Robb of Hoobastank before being released to US radio on January 18, 2011.[8]
On October 7, 2011, RCA Music Group announced it was disbanding Jive Records along with Arista Records and J Records. With the shutdown, the band (and all other artists previously signed to these three labels) will release their future material on the RCA Records brand. [9][10]
On December 5, 2011, Apocalyptica performed live with Metallica on three songs, "No Leaf Clover", "One" and "Seek & Destroy" in celebration of Metallica's 30th Anniversary.
On October 28, 2011, the band released an exclusive pledgers-only song "Solo Tu" featuring Erik Canales of Allison via fan-funding website Pledgemusic, as part of their Apocalyptica photo book project.[11]
[edit] Band members
[edit] Current line up
- Eicca Toppinen – cello (1993–present)
- Paavo Lötjönen – cello (1993–present)
- Perttu Kivilaakso – cello (1995,1999–present)
- Mikko Sirén – drums (2005–present)
[edit] Former members
- Antero Manninen – cello (1993–1999)
- Max Lilja – cello (1993–2002)
[edit] Sessional members
- Dave Lombardo of Slayer – drums (on Reflections)
- Sami Kuoppamäki – drums (on Reflections)
[edit] Tour members
- Antero Manninen – cello (2002–2009)
- Mikko Sirén – drums (2003–2005)
- Johnny Andrews – vocals (April 2008)
- Adam Gontier (of Three Days Grace) – vocals (New York and Toronto 2008)
- Tony Kakko (of Sonata Arctica) – vocals (Finland and Japan 2008)
- Cristina Scabbia (of Lacuna Coil) – vocals (Download Festival 2008)
- Toryn Green (ex–Fuel) – vocals (2008)
- Tipe Johnson (ex–Leningrad Cowboys) – vocals (2009–present)
- Kyo (of Dir En Grey) – vocals (US Tour 2010)
[edit] Guest musicians
- Vocalists
- Adam Gontier (of Three Days Grace) on “I Don't Care”
- Brent Smith (of Shinedown) on “Not Strong Enough”
- Corey Taylor (of Slipknot, Stone Sour) on “I'm Not Jesus”
- Cristina Scabbia (of Lacuna Coil) on “S.O.S. (Anything But Love)”[12]
- Doug Robb (of Hoobastank) on “Not Strong Enough”
- Emmanuelle Monet (of Dolly) on “En Vie”
- Erik Canales of Allison on "Solo Tu"
- Gavin Rossdale (of Bush) on “End of Me”
- Joe Duplantier (of Gojira) on “Bring Them to Light”
- Lacey Mosley (of Flyleaf) on “Broken Pieces”
- Lauri Ylönen (of The Rasmus) on “Life Burns!” & “Bittersweet”
- Linda Sundblad (of Lambretta) on “Faraway Vol. 2”
- Marta Jandová (of Die Happy) on “Wie Weit” & “How Far”
- Mats Levén (of Therion, Krux) on “S.O.S. (Anything But Love)” & “I Don't Care” (Backing Vocals)
- Matt Tuck (of Bullet for My Valentine) on “Repressed”
- Matthias Sayer (of Farmer Boys) on “Hope Vol. 2”
- Max Cavalera (of Soulfly, Cavalera Conspiracy, ex–Nailbomb, ex–Sepultura) on “Repressed”
- Nina Hagen on “Seemann”
- Sandra Nasić (of Guano Apes) on “Path Vol. 2”
- Till Lindemann (of Rammstein) on “Helden”
- Ville Valo (of HIM) on “Bittersweet”
- Instruments
- Tomoyasu Hotei[12] guitar on “Grace”
- Dave Lombardo (of Slayer) drums on “Betrayal/Forgiveness”, “Last Hope” & “2010”
- Richard Z. Kruspe (of Rammstein) guitar on “Helden”
[edit] Discography
- Plays Metallica by Four Cellos (1996)
- Inquisition Symphony (1998)
- Cult (2000)
- Reflections (2003)
- Apocalyptica (2005)
- Worlds Collide (2007)
- 7th Symphony (2010)
[edit] References
- ^ "Interview with Mikko and Eicca for FaceCulture.nl 2007". Apocalyptica.apocello.ru. http://apocalyptica.apocello.ru/press/faceculture-mikko-eicca-2007-en.php. Retrieved 2011-10-20.
- ^ "APOCALYPTICA: New Album Artwork Revealed". Roadrunnerrecords.com. http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=141115. Retrieved 2011-10-20.
- ^ Billboard Music Charts - Latest Music News - Music Videos[dead link]
- ^ "Encyclopaedia Metallum page". Metal-archives.com. 2011-07-22. http://www.metal-archives.com/release.php?id=10034. Retrieved 2011-10-20.
- ^ "Apocalyptica supports Greenpeace campaign. Video on YouTube". Youtube.com. 2008-06-09. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJ6At2GmDbI. Retrieved 2011-10-20.
- ^ a b "Apocalyptica Set Release Date For 7th Symphony; First Single Announced" MetalFromFinland.com May 6, 2010.
- ^ a b c "Apocalyptica Prepare for New album with U.S. Tour" PRNewswire.com May 7, 2010.
- ^ Apocalyptica Pulls Smith's Vocals For Single AlternativeAddiction.com. January 8, 2011.
- ^ "RCA's New Executive Team Named Under CEO Peter Edge Amid Layoffs (Update)". Billboard.biz. 2011-08-23. http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/industry/record-labels/rca-s-new-executive-team-named-under-ceo-1005324782.story. Retrieved 2011-10-20.
- ^ "Radio Industry News, Music Industry Updates, Arbitron Ratings, Music News and more!". FMQB. http://www.fmqb.com/article.asp?id=2268707. Retrieved 2011-10-20.
- ^ "Apocalyptica: Photo book - Free song for all pledgers!". Pledgemusic. October 28, 2011. http://www.pledgemusic.com/projects/apocalyptica/updates/7078. Retrieved February 11, 2012.
- ^ a b "Lacuna Coil, Gojira Members To Guest On New Apocalyptica Cd". Roadrunnerrecords.com. http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=72337. Retrieved 2011-10-20.
[edit] External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Apocalyptica |
- Official website
- Interview with manager Ulysses Hüppauf, HitQuarters April 2009
- Photos from concert Apocalyptica in Minsk, Belarus
- Photos from Omaha, Nebraska 2008
- Photos from London 2010
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