What is the name of your band
and how did you come up with it?
What is your name and what do you do
for the band?
Dan: The band name is ITHEIST.
Kane (vocals) came up with it. We were never really satisfied with
our previous band name (Aetherium Mors) and when Kane wrote the lyric
“self-deified Itheist", the word stuck with him and he
suggested it as a new name.
My name is Dan and I deal with the
music; writing the music, performing and tracking the instruments,
editing, dealing with mixing, cd layouts, and the ‘business’ side
of things.
Kane is the lyricist and vocalist and
comes up with the art concepts.
Neither of us could do this without the
other!
Kane: Like
Dan said, the word Itheist was used in our last release as Aetherium
Mors, on the song ‘Divine Order Without God’. I found the word
and its meaning in the Satanic Scriptures by Peter H Gilmore. Its
correct spelling is I-theist. As a band moniker we prefer the visual
impact the word has without the hyphen.
My name is Kane, I create concepts then
write them in the form of lyrics which are then vocally grafted to
the music that Dan creates.
2.Tell us where you are based and
describe the scene. How do you think where you are located influences
your sound.
Dan: We're located in the South
West of the UK. Farmer country. We have the sea on our doorstep, as
well as moorland, country fields and woodland. Beautiful part of the
world except it pisses with rain for more than half the year! I
wouldn’t say the landscape particularly influences our sound, I’m
not hanging out in a primordial wood dodging vipers or sitting by a
fire on the beach strumming a ukulele as I write riffs... the music I
write is just a combination of what I like to hear and the way I have
developed my guitar playing over the years, tempered by Kane's
guidance when I need a second opinion.
The local scene has never been amazing
for underground or extreme metal. There are a lot of great bands in
various genres, but besides a couple of grind bands most of the bands
that have used blast beats and speed extensively, I’ve been the
drummer! (Holodomor and Carcinoma). The area is short of true
maniacs…
Kane: I live in a quiet retreat
by the sea. I do spend time on the moors and in woodlands. Connection
with nature permits a closer relationship with oneself. My writing is
not influenced by my environment as with many great black metal
bands. My writing is a map of one’s inner world and reveals a
gateway that when opened can harness one’s own potential from the
quantum field.
3.Who influences your sound that
would surprise people?
Dan: There was a riff on the
last Aetherium Mors e.p. that a reviewer correctly identified as
being inspired by Jerry Cantrell (Alice in Chains). I have stolen
many Ritchie Kotzen (Shrapnel Records teen shredder-turned
blues/jazz/soul singer) arpeggio shapes and licks too, although
they’re well hidden! I try to keep my songwriting and playing as
varied as possible, just to keep myself entertained.
Kane: Rob Halfords enunciated
delivery of his words allow them to strike emotional chords with the
listener. That is a powerful influence that has inspired me.
4. Are you endorsed by musical
companies , if so who , and if not who would you like to be endorsed
by?
Dan: Nope, I’m not really
interested in that. I don’t have the right face to advertise stuff
for companies anyway, haha. If anyone wants to send me free stuff
though, I wouldn’t say no.
5.When you started what was your
ultimate goal? And how close to the goal are you now?
Dan: When me and Kane started a
band back in 2004, the goal was to find a drummer and play some gigs.
A humble goal, but one that would define the rest of our struggles up
to this point. So we haven’t even achieved that meagre goal, haha.
However, I took up drumming, got distracted playing drums for a
couple bands and playing guitar for a couple more bands. Kane and I
hooked back up and recorded demo versions of our old songs, which
eventually became the Aetherium Mors debut album, Drenched in
Victorious Blood. We did a 4 track follow up ep (Entrails of the
Soul), which got us signed to a small US label. Then we wrote another
album, renamed the band Itheist, and here we are today. So, it hasn’t
been the journey we envisaged, but it has been a good time despite
all the adversity.
Kane: My goal was to write
concepts and ideas that were my own and like no other extreme metal
bands. I am an avid metal fan and I can candidly say that I have
achieved this on the last Aetherium Mors e.p. and most certainly on
this record. I believe this is the most authentically Satanic piece
of extreme music you are likely to find. Everything else has been a
bonus. Performing our music live with a band with the same level of
passion me and Dan have would be great, but the key is to enjoy
everything you have, whilst in pressure of everything you want.
6.In today's digital environment it
takes creative strategy to keep things moving. What creative ideas do
you have to keep your band relevant over time?
Dan: If I told you that, a bunch
of other bands would steal our ideas, haha. I’m old school, I’ll
just keep writing and recording music and hopefully people will
listen to it.
For this album I am working with
Clawhammer PR to get the album out to a wider audience. I did all the
PR myself before, but I just don’t have time to do that any more.
They’re doing a great job, I would recommend them to anybody. I’d
say we have stepped up every aspect of what we have done in previous
bands - everything has had more time, experience and professionalism
applied to it this time around.
Kane: How we get our music will
always change, what music does for people will depend on what they
want. I want people to feel the dark power within them and for that
power to make them feel unconquerable when listening to our
music.
How relevant that is will depend on how many like-minded individuals there are who like this kind of music.
How relevant that is will depend on how many like-minded individuals there are who like this kind of music.
7. We've all seen a terrible live
band that is awesome on CD. Is that cool with you or do you lose
respect for bands that cannot pull it off live?
Dan: You can forgive a lot in
the live arena, once you’ve played in bands and had to deal with
shit monitors, someone else’s gear, a falling apart drum set etc,
you tend to have more sympathy for a band giving a bad performance.
That stuff tends to happen more on a local DIY gig level though.
Actually I’ve seen so many gigs over
the years it’s often the shit gigs that are more memorable, haha! I
saw Carcass back in ’93 or ‘94 (the Heartwork album UK tour) in a
local venue, and I was disappointed with it at the time, there were a
lot of of technical problems, the guitars kept cutting out, and the
band just walked off stage with Jeff Walker announcing there would be
no encore. Not a great introduction to live gigs for an
impressionable teenager. Now I’ve done so much live stuff I can
totally sympathize with that situation! I’m happy to say the last 5
or 6 times I’ve seen them in their reunion phase, they’ve been
awesome every time.
What pains me more than bad live bands
is when you listen to a CD and you can hear how much studio trickery
has been used to get the end result, like you can hear where the
riffs have been copied and pasted or recorded in small bits at a
time. I understand time and budget constraints, but at least make it
sound somewhat natural!
Kane: Like Dan said performing
live has its challenges, I remember seeing Hate Eternal at a venue
that is renowned for its technical faults. The whole crowed was
inspired by the bands professionalism and persistence to keep moving
forward and performing regardless of what went wrong. That was
commendable by my standards.
8. Tell us your “core” are you
Metal , Rock , Punk , Pop etc because people just have to categorize
these days you know?
Dan: Itheist is unquestionably a
Metal band.
Kane: I would say that my
creativity is free form to free feel, otherwise what is the point of
individual expression? I would say that if you lay our sound and
lyrics out as a creative tapestry, it would look like Dark Satanic
Powerful Metal.
9. This is a tough question but a
very real reality, Is your band actually talented or just popular?
Dan: Neither!
Kane: Great question. That is
not for us to decide.
Many bands make it with a cliche or
publicity stunts etc. Would you accept fame even if it was just
because of being the “ in” thing or is it actually important to
you that you gain favor with talent?
Dan: I’m not comfortable being
the centre of attention at all. I’m not really into the idea of
‘making it’ in the traditional sense of touring and album release
cycles. These days, you can reach a huge audience without leaving
your house, that’s more my style, haha. Most bands that trend hop
are always slightly out of date as trends come and go, so although I
try and keep my playing fresh by devising new chord shapes etc, I’m
not trying to jump on any bandwagon.
10. Tell us what to expect from you
live. Nothing is more boring than watching bands stare at the floor
and bob their heads to music nobody but the band knows. What can your
band offer in a live setting that people will remember?
Dan: Sadly, for reasons already
mentioned, we are a studio band only at this time. The new material
I’m working on is more aimed at being played live, so we’ll see
what happens in the next couple years. I know that Kane is a
formidable force on the live stage; I have seen him perform at both
tiny local venues and on bigger stages, e.g. a big UK festival called
Bloodstock, and he always brings a stage presence that will grab
people by the throat, so I am excited by the prospect of sharing a
stage with him.
Kane: I would love to perform
our music live, it's finding the right musicians. I used to do live
shows with a previous band, and I miss commanding the stage and
getting the crowd to move in unison with the music. It would be
loaded with energy and confidence. And our main objective would be
for our metal kindred to have a good time.
11. What releases have you put out ,
When will we see something new?
Dan: We are currently promoting
out debut full length album, which is entitled Itheist. It will be
released on the 21st June. It was originally planned to be
the second Aetherium Mors full length, but we like a challenge so we
thought we’d start all over again with the new band name, haha. For
now, check out the first preview track, Guardian of Baphomet, you can
stream it here and pre-order the new album…
https://itheist.bandcamp.com
12. If you have videos where can we
see them?
Dan: Just a static video for the
first preview song at the moment. You can find some studio promo
clips and old Aetherium Mors songs on YouTube. Just search for them.
Kane has lots of ideas for videos, but
it’s a case of finding the time and money to do it.
13. Everybody has Bandcamp ,
ReverbNation , Soundcloud , etc
Why do you think this is so
important? Doesn't it seem like everyone is giving everything out for
free?
Dan: The music industry is in a
confusing state at the moment, music is essentially promotional
material, or ‘content', to sell merchandise and gig tickets. For
us, we do it for the fun of it, it’s a break from normal work and
family life, it’s our passion, and it keeps us off the streets
haha. I believe recorded music still has a power that few things can
match, I’m sure many out there agree. Unfortunately for many people
that powerful feeling isn’t worth the price of an artisan cup of
coffee these days.
It is nice to see a resurgence in Vinyl
sales, it goes to show that some people still hunger for a tangible
package rather than just some digital files.
Kane: The biggest enemy of
underground bands is obscurity. Recognition for your music is greater
in emotional value than the price people would pay for it. Therefore
Bandcamp and the like is a great way for like-minded individuals to
communicate and get exposure.
14. Best moment of your career so
far?
Dan: Speaking from Itheist’s
point of view, getting this album released is the defining moment and
will hopefully lead to more of the same. It has taken 5 years of my
life, from writing all of the music which took a year, to recording
everything while dealing with logistical issues, building my own home
studio, learning how to record decent sounding tracks, learning how
to mix over the course of a year (then scrapping the mix and paying a
pro to do it)… all with job changes, juggling other bands, and the
arrival of parenthood (I became a father and Kane had his second
child). It has been a long road.
Kane: That is a goal that exists
within the quantum field. So it's personal for the time being.
15. Your message to the fans?
Dan: Hope you enjoy the new
album, thanks for the support!!
Kane: Haha.... You are alive!
Now what are you going to do about it?
Bonus Question who do you bring back
Dime , Cliff , Dio , Lemmy , Randy
Dan: Cliff, no contest. I spent
more time with his music than anyone else on that list. They’re all
titans though, and I enjoy all of their contributions to music.
Kane: Because of the great
contribution these legends have made, they never really left. But if
I could bring back one that was taken way too soon and was full of
life, it would be Dimebag Darrell.
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