About MANOWAR
"The whole purpose of playing live is to blow people's heads off," says MANOWAR bassist Joey DeMaio. "That's what we do; that's the energy of this band. We're out there to kick ass, we're out there to turn our gear on and blast, we're out there to kill. That's what metal is. Anybody who says otherwise is not playing heavy metal. We will melt your face!" With the double live CD "Hell On Stage Live", MANOWAR's first album for Metal Blade, the band proves that the demise of metal has been greatly exaggerated. In fact it's alive and well and still and as devastating as ever. True to form, they are back with 16 tracks steeped in the august tradition of Deep Purple's Made In Japan, The Who's "Live at Leeds" and the Led Zep Classic, "The Song Remains The Same". Giving fans what they've been waiting for.
The
fans' appreciation of MANOWAR's various moods is just one
component of an intense, magical bond between the band
and their
following. Stories of MANOWAR fan loyalty have become legendary.
Fans constantly send the band letters signed in their own blood
and photos of themselves tattooed with MANOWAR imagery. On the
band's last European tour, a Norwegian acolyte flew over 1,000
miles south from beyond the Arctic Circle to see MANOWAR play in
Oslo. When a group of Australian fans heard MANOWAR were playing
in Japan,they caught a flight there and attended all four shows.Devotees
in Argentina collected thousands of signatures pleading with the
band to come to their country. "We have the greatest fans in
the world," attests drummer Scott Columbus. "For a long
time, our fans have stood by us. They've given everything to the
belief that together we are the defenders of the heavy metal
faith. That's why we've been able to keep playing our brand of
music. That's why we haven't wimped out or bowed to commercialism.
Our fans are at the core of everything we do. That's the way it's
been done from the beginning."
In
the beginning, Joey DeMaio was working as a bass/pyro tech for
Black Sabbath.When Sabbath played a show at Newcastle City Hall
in England, he hooked up with original MANOWAR guitarist Ross the
Boss, who at the time was playing for Shakin Street, a Sabbath
support band. As both shared an all-consuming love for in-your-face-metal,
it was not long before they struck on the idea of MANOWAR.Later,
having recruited the ultimate voice of heavy metal, Eric Adams (and
drummer Donny Hamzik), MANOWAR recorded their debut album "Battle
Hymns." It featured a bone chilling narration by legendary
actor Orson Welles on the track "Dark Avenger."
When
MANOWAR joined forces with a new label, they signed their
recording contract in blood (becoming the first band to
demonstrate their commitment this way). Their second release,
"Into Glory Ride" featured the debut of Scott
Columbus, a man so viscous with the sticks that standard drum kits
simply fell to pieces under his awesome attack; hence the need
for custom built, stainless steel drums.
Recorded and mixed in six days, MANOWAR's third album was titled "Hail to England." It heralded the band's debut tour of Great Britain. Not since the Vikings invaded northeast England in 878 had the isles seen such all-consuming power. The whole of Europe fell prey to MANOWAR with the "Spectacle Of Might" tour as the band slashed and burned their way across the Continent in support of their forth album, "Sign Of The Hammer." It was then that MANOWAR entered the Guinness Book of World Records as the world's loudest band.
On the heels of "Sign Of The Hammer", the band released "Fighting The World." MANOWAR took the whole of Europe by storm yet again in support of this record.All the while, the crowds swelled. MANOWAR satisfied the teeming hordes by playing wilder, louder, and heavier inviting fans to join them onstage to sing or even play guitar.
The
band's next album "Kings Of Metal" (a title bestowed on
the men of MANOWAR by their international legion of fans) saw
them push the sonic envelope even further. They traveled to
England to record "The Crown and the Ring" as well as other standout tracks, with the 100-voice, all-male Canoldir
choir in St. Paul's Cathedral in Birmingham. This majestic work
also featured orchestra,as did others on "Kings of Metal."
Two tours were required to do justice to this landmark recording.
Fans waited four years for the band's next offering.During this
period, MANOWAR built their own studio in New York; it was
christened Haus Wanfried after composer Richard Wagner's
house.
From there unfolded the band's seventh album, "The Triumph
Of Steel" which boasted over 70 minutes of pure metal might.
Inspired by Homer's "The Illad," the song "Achilles:
Agony and Ecstasy in Eight Parts" clocked in at 28 minutes.
"The Triumph of Steel" entered the charts in Germany at
No. 35 and stormed its way to No. 8- without a single or video.
When the album was released in Greece, MANOWAR fans laid siege to
the largest record store in Athens to be among the first to hear
the new disc. Extra copies were rush delivered, so great was the
demand for "The Triumph Of Steel." The band played to
over 15,000 metal maniacs in Athens' Stadium of Peace and
Friendship (in their first show there).
The
band continued to play to packed halls. In Hanover, Germany they
established a new standard in ear splitting power by breaking
their Guinness record for loudest band in the world. Two sound
specialists officiated, measuring and documenting with
painstaking care as MANOWAR shook the city, playing live at a
staggering 129.5 decibels through 10 tons of amplifiers and
speakers measuring 40 feet in length and 21 feet in height. This
astounding event was reported worldwide. Another highlight of the
"Secrets Of Steel" tour was the band's first
performance in Russia, where they had been voted the live act
music fans would most like to see, beating out the Beatles and
Michael Jackson.
Two years in the making, MANOWAR then released "Louder Than Hell." "We're perfectionists," explains DeMaio of the lengthy interval. "Good songs do not grow on trees and great art does not abide by some arbitrary timetable. When we're inspired, we create. And when we create, our goal is to capture the attitude and power these songs possess when we play them live in the studio. Our live energy is the defining characteristic of this band."