Shaman (band)
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Shaman | |
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Also known as | Shaman (2000-2004; 2007 - 2014); Shaaman (2005-2006) |
Origin | São Paulo City, São Paulo, Brazil |
Genres | Power metal, heavy metal, folk metal |
Years active | 2000–2014 (Hiatus) |
Labels | Scarlet |
Past members | Thiago Bianchi Léo Mancini Fernando Quesada Junior Carelli Hugo Mariutti Luís Mariutti Andre Matos Ricardo Confessori[1] |
Shaman, previously known as Shaaman, was a Brazilian progressive/power metal band assembled in 2000 by three musicians who left the band Angra - Andre Matos, Luis Mariutti and Ricardo Confessori. The band was completed with guitar player Hugo Mariutti (Luis' younger brother - both of them also play in another band called Henceforth).
Shaman changed its name to Shaaman due to legal reasons, but the issue was solved and they renamed it back to Shaman.
In October 2006, Andre Matos officially left the band along with the Mariutti brothers. Confessori is currently reforming the band.
Biography
The band was formed in mid-2000, when musicians Andre Matos (Vocals, keyboards, ex-Viper), Luis Mariutti (Bass, ex-Firebox) and Ricardo Confessori (Drums, ex-Korzus) left the band Angra. At the time the band was assembled, they did not have a guitarist, so Hugo Mariutti (ex-Henceforth) was initially hired to assist in the compositions. Later they permanently integrated him into the band.
The name chosen for the band, Shaman, refers to the religious practice of shamanism, with the word "shaman" generally thought to be of Siberian origin.
They started an initial tour, which went through Europe and Latin America (specifically: France, Mexico, Argentina, Chile and Brazil). For live keyboards the band requested the help of musician Fábio Ribeiro (Blezqi Zatsaz, ex-Angra).
Mixing heavy metal, classical music and world music,[citation needed] the band started recording their debut album, entitled Ritual, in January 2002. The disc was entirely recorded in Germany, with the exception of a few tracks which were recorded in Brazil and the US. The production was managed by the producer Sascha Paeth, who also produced albums for Angra, Edguy, Rhapsody of Fire and Virgo and with co-production of Phil Colodetti.
Ritual was released in more than 15 countries.[citation needed] The World Ritual Tour lasted for one year and a half, touring in such places as: Brazil, Asia, Latin America and Europe. There were over 150 shows at that time, some presented twice in the same place.
During 2003, Shaman were among the first place slots for Brazil, with Ritual being awarded the best album of 2002 and 2004 by the readers of Folha de S. Paulo, a Brazilian newspaper.[citation needed] Later in 2004, the band opened for Iron Maiden's show in São Paulo, playing to an audience of over 45,000.[citation needed]
The band then recorded a live show in the Credicard Hall with the participation of several special guests such as Tobias Sammet, Marcus Viana, Andi Deris, Sascha Paeth, George Mouzayek and Michael Weikath. The show was then released on CD and DVD, entitled RituAlive. The engineering and mixing was done entirely at The Creative Studios in São Paulo, Brazil and the production was done by Phil Colodetti together with the Shaman members. According to director of Universal Music of Brazil, RituAlive is still the best DVD of its genre due to its quality and contents.[citation needed]
In 2005, with the second album almost completed and ready to release, they decided to rename the album to avoid a court hearing by another band. The band also decided to add an 'A' to its name as Shaaman. The name change occurred after another band named Shaman was consulted and specified that the meaning and pronunciation of the name were still the same.
In the following months, the new album, entitled Reason, was released. The result of Reason, which was mixed in Germany by the producer Sascha Paeth and recorded in Brazil by Phil Colodetti at Creative Studios, attempted to return the feeling and spirit of 80's heavy metal.[citation needed] Their first single, named "Innocence" from the Reason was played on radio stations and further split the official charts of the highest charting songs in Brazil.[citation needed] The video for the song also appeared on music TV channels.
Shaaman then went on a hiatus which was confirmed on October 12, 2006, when a statement by bass player Luís Mariutti was released on the fansite For Tomorrow that "the band had called it a day."[2][3]
Ricardo Confessori, the only remaining member of Shaaman, decided to continue the band with a new line-up. Later, in 2007, the album Immortal, was released.
In 2013, all members but Confessori formed a new band called Noturnall. On a 2014 interview, guitarist Fernando Quesada confirmed none of the members would return to Shaman.[4]
Line-up
- Current members
- Ricardo Confessori - drums (2000–present)
- Former members
- Andre Matos - vocals, keyboards (2000–2006)
- Hugo Mariutti - guitar, backing vocals (2000–2006)
- Luís Mariutti - bass, backing vocals (2000–2006)
- Thiago Bianchi - vocals (2007–2013)
- Léo Mancini - guitars (2007–2013)
- Fernando Quesada - bass (2007–2013)
- Junior Carelli - keyboards (2012–2013)
- Touring musicians
- Fábio Ribeiro - keyboards (2000-2006)
Discography
Studio albums as Shaman
- Shaman (Demo) (2001)
- Ritual (2002) No. 101 French Charts # 80 Japanese Chats
- Fairy Tale (single) (2002)
- For Tomorrow (single) (2003)
- Immortal (2007) - No. 262 Japanese Charts[citation needed]
- Origins (2010)
- Kurenai (X-Japan cover) (2009)
Studio albums as Shaaman
Live albums as Shaman
- RituAlive (2003)
Videography
Music videos as Shaman
- Ritual (2002)
- Fairy Tale (2002)
- For Tomorrow (2003)
- Immortal (2007)
- In The Dark (2007)
- Origins (2010)
- Finally Home (2010)
- Ego (2011)
Music videos as Shaaman
DVDs as Shaman
- RituAlive (2003)
- Animelive (2008)
- Shaman & Orchestra - One Live (2011)
Notable gigs
- 2001
- 04/21 - Via Funchal (São Paulo)
- 2002
- 2003
- 04/05 - Credicard Hall (São Paulo - the RituAlive concert)
- Citybank Hall (Rio de Janeiro - Ritual Tour)
- 2004
- 01/17 - Pacaembu Stadium (São Paulo - as the Iron Maiden opening act)
- 2005
- 06/11 - Credicard Hall (São Paulo)
- Citybank Hall (Rio de Janeiro - Reason Tour, the biggest audience in an exclusive concert as headliner)
- 10/12 - Canindé (São Paulo - as the co-headliner of Live'n'Louder Festival)
- 2006
- 21/05 - Bar Opinião (Rio Grande do Sul - the last gig)
Set-lists
Ritual World Tour
01. Ancient Winds
02. Here I Am
03. Distant Thunder
04. Time Will Come
05. For Tomorrow
06. Nothing to Say (Angra)
07. Time (Angra)
08. Over Your Head
09. Fairy Tale
10. Ritual
11. Pride
12. Unfinished Allegro (Angra)
13. Carry On (Angra)
14. Living for the Night (Viper)
+ No More Tears (Ozzy Osbourne) and some other Angra songs
Reason Tour
01. Intro
02. Turn Away
03. Trail Of Tears
04. Distant Thunder
05. Time Will Come
06. For Tomorrow
07. Innocence
08. Reason
09. Be Free (Instrumental)
10. Drum Solo
11. Scared Forever
12. More
13. Fairy Tale
14. Ancient Winds
15. Here I Am
16. Lisbon (Angra)
+ Pride and Painkiller (Judas Priest)
See also
References
- ^ http://whiplash.net/materias/news_815/202740-angra.html
- ^ BLABBERMOUTH.NET: SHAAMAN Calls It A Day, posted October 12, 2006 (English)
- ^ Ricardo Confessori: "O Ritual continua!" (Portuguese)
- ^ ""Não voltaremos ao Shaman", diz Fernando Quesada em entrevista exclusiva". 26 November 2014.
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