Yesterday a fan-fuelled campaign to get Polish Avant-garde Blackened Death Metallers Devilish Impressions to play at Bloodstock Festival 2012 began on Facebook. Ok, so the fan fuelling the campaign is me… but Devilish Impressions are a great band and I really think they’d go down a treat at the festival!

If you would like to help the campaign, please ‘like’ the Facebook page and share it with your friends.
Devilish Impressions’ next album, “Simulacra”, is currently in the works – keep an eye on their Facebook page for more details – or just click here for Devilish Impressions articles on Loucifer Speaks.
facebook.com/pages/Devilish-Impressions-for-Bloodstock-2012/196676743736362?sk=wall
facebook.com/devilishimpressions
devilish-impressions.com
Loucifer Speaks also likes the following “for Bloodstock 2012″ campaigns on Facebook:
I’d also like to see Obituary there… and Moonsorrow… and Kampfar… and Edguy… and Sear Bliss…
If you know of any other “for Bloodstock 2012″ pages, please comment in the box below. I’d quite like to get a little list/directory together so we can all ‘like’ the ones that interest us.
It’s days like this when I wish that I lived in Tampa, Florida. Actually, to be fair, since many of my favourite bands come from the area, I wish I lived there most days. Although I’d probably get terrible sunburn!
The following bit of metal awesomeness comes from Imperial Conquest’s mailing list – click here to sign up!

Hails!,
OBITUARY drummer DONALD TARDY and the folks at the legendary Brass Mug (the CBGB of Tampa) have organized the METAL MEOWLISHA II benefit show on Sat. Aug. 6th, 2011 to help the homeless, abused, and neglected cats of the Tampa Bay area.
The benefit party starts at around 5 p.m. and will include a raffle for extremely rare band memorabilia, a Dean guitar, and more!
The event will feature meet-and-greets with members of OBITUARY, CANNIBAL CORPSE, DEATH, MASSACRE, THE ABSENCE, DEICIDE and more. Members will be signing autographs and giving away badass prizes in the raffle! Also prizes from rocknrollheaven.biz of Clearwater.
Who knows? With that much metal in the room, there could be an all-star jam session…hmmmm, TARDY BROTHERS ????????? maybe!!!!!
This event will also feature ‘live’ music from: TO THE GALLOWS, FORGED WITH BLOOD, ULCER, MUST…NOT…KILL, DESTINED TO RUIN, SLEDGEGRINDER, SINGOD, TICKLE, IMPERIAL CONQUEST!!!
TREVOR PERES of OBITUARY, will be cooking Bar-B-Q using his own T-BONE’S FAMOUS RIB ‘LICIOUS MOUTHWATERIN’ DELICIOUS BAR-B-Q- SAUCE, which you can sample for a donation.
We will accept cash donations, as well as Friskies canned cat food donations !!!!
The door is $8 (21 and over) and $10 (under 21) Get one dollar off the cover if you bring a can of friskies cat food!
Show details: facebook.com/event.php?eid=179376895451933
If you’re in the area, make sure you don’t miss this! It’s for a great cause and there will be some fantastic music.
I’m ridiculously jealous of anyone who goes!
facebook.com/event.php?eid=179376895451933
facebook.com/imperialconquestfl
obituary.cc
Ladies and gentlemen, #itsObiTime
No, I haven’t randomly developed an obsession with Obi Wan Kenobi, #itsObiTime is the tag I use on Twitter whenever I post an Obituary related tweet… which is quite often. Anyway, it is most definitely Obi Time now!
I noticed recently that the official Obituary forum over at obituary.cc had been closed down, so I approached the band via their Twitter and asked if it would be OK to set something up on the Loucifer Speaks forum. Luckily enough for me, it was OK…
So we now have a brand new Obituary message board on the Loucifer Speaks forum. Click here or on the above banner to check it out! Since it’s part of the Loucifer Speaks forum, you don’t need to sign up with a separate set of log in details – it’s exactly the same. Or, if you’re new to this – once you’ve signed up to the Obi board, you’re also a member of the overall Loucifer Speaks forum. Good, eh? Oh yeah, and registration is (of course) FREE!
The Obituary Board will be used to talk about all things Obi-related: Albums, gigs, merchandise, Tardy Brothers (there’s even a nice little sub-forum for all TB-related stuff!) – so if you’re an Obituary fan and enjoy posting on forums, this is the place for you!
Loucifer Speaks Readers’ Poll 2010: RESULTS
It’s time to see what you voted as the best (and worst) of 2010!
Winner: Iron Maiden
Honorable mentions:
Godsized
Halcyon Way
Dimmu Borgir
Obituary
Lou’s Note: Iron Maiden probably wouldn’t have been my first choice for band of the year (you should all know by now who my vote went to!
). but no-one can deny that they are deserving of this title. Plus, “The Final Frontier” is an awesome album.
Winner: Iron Maiden – “The Final Frontier”
Honorable mentions:
ZORORMR – “Kval”
Black Label Society – “Order of the Black”
Avenged Sevenfold – “Nightmare”
Halcyon Way – “Building The Towers”
Dimmu Borgir – “Abrahadabra”
God Dethroned – “Under The Sign of the Iron Cross”
Lou’s Note: You guys must really like Iron Maiden!
But, as I said before, “The Final Frontier” is a great album. Also, I’m pleased to see ZORORMR and God Dethroned in that list too
…oh, and Dimmu Borgir… and Halcyon Way… and BLS…
Winner: Live Evil Festival
Honorable mentions:
High Voltage
Lamb of God @ Brixton
Bloodstock
Wacken Open Air
Download
Lou’s Note: Well, I can’t argue with that. I managed to get along to the Saturday of Live Evil (thanks to Dave & Jo!) and it was awesome!
Winner: Black Label Society – “Overlord”
Honorable mentions:
Dimmu Borgir – “Gateways”
Iron Maiden – “Final Frontier”
Abgott – “Lustmord”
Lou’s Note: “Overlord” is a fantastic video and is definitely worthy of your votes
Winner: Halcyon Way – “Building The Towers”
Iron Maiden – “The Final Frontier”
Dimmu Borgir – “Abrahadabra”
Lou’s Note: A brilliant cover for a brilliant album!
Winner (or should that be “Loser”?): Avenged Sevenfold – “Nightmare”
Lou’s Note: “Nightmare” seems to be 2010′s Marmite album – some of you love it, others hate it
Winner: Corey Taylor – “X-M@$”
Lou’s Note: A fine choice! Although I did also like this suggestion: “Lou singing “merry x-mas””
And there you have it! If you don’t like the results and you didn’t vote… well, that’s just tough! ![]()
Maybe next year, eh?
Band of the Year 2010: Obituary
2010 has almost reached its end and I find myself trying to work out what my Top 10 (or 20, or 30) albums were of the year, which videos were the best and which gigs/festivals really impressed me… and this year I’ve also decided to pick a “Band of the Year”.
The idea of picking one single band as the best for the entire year, is a little bit daunting. I mean, what criteria do you go on? Album sales? The quality of an album? Amount of tour dates? Press coverage?
Eventually, I came to the conclusion that none of the above really matter. Well, they do… to a degree… but not here. Instead, I decided to look at this from a purely personal point of view. The minute I decided upon this method, things became a lot clearer. Admittedly, there were still a huge number of bands that I could have chosen, but – in the end – it all boiled down to one.
As you’ve probably guessed from the title of this article, the band I’ve chosen is Florida’s finest: Obituary.
It’s true that Obituary haven’t released a new album this year, but they have toured like mofos! They’ve also been working behind the scenes on a new social network (called Unation) that should be hitting your computer screen fairly soon… and, if all that wasn’t enough, Donald and John Tardy also have side-project called Tardy Brothers. Add to the fact that they’re currently working on the new Obituary album and planning further tour dates and it becomes clear that these guys have to be some of the hardest working dudes on the planet!
But, having said all of that, those aren’t the reasons why I’ve chosen Obituary as my Band of the Year. Oh no, it’s something else entirely – it’s the way these guys treat their fans. Take me for example; I’m an Obituary fan from the UK who owns a webzine. Now, Loucifer Speaks isn’t massively well-known, but I thought I’d ask John Tardy if I could interview him anyway. John Tardy could have just told me to go away or even just ignored my request entirely, but – he didn’t. He took time out of his life to talk to me on Skype. And it didn’t stop there – he (or whoever else updates the band’s Twitter) has also “RT’ed” a number of my posts, giving Loucifer Speaks further promotion. I really can’t thank Obituary enough for all of this.
Obituary aren’t just one of the greatest Death Metal bands of all time, they are also some of the nicest guys I’ve ever had the pleasure of talking to (albeit online… but it still counts!).
Obituary Biography: (taken from the band’s Reverbnation page)
Upon switching their name from Xecutioner to Obituary, the career of one of the most successful and influential Death Metal bands began. Hailing from Florida and featuring John Tardy (vocals), brother Donald Tardy (drums), Trevor Peres (guitar), Allen West (guitar), and Daniel Tucker (bass), the band signed to Roadracer Records, a now defunct division of Roadrunner, for the recording of their debut album—the immense and immeasurably heavy “Slowly We Rot” (1989). The album was engineered by the legendary Scott Burns at Morrisound Studio, which would come to be the most sought after facility for production of albums during 1990’s rise of the Death Metal genre. Unlike much death metal preceding it, the album had a sludgy feel and integrated devastatingly slow passages along with obliterating overtures that reached far beyond any point of mayhem that metal had yet to reach; the result was a carnal pleasure for doom, death and thrash fans alike coupling the adrenaline of a speedball with the slow, degrading measures of a sewer at dusk. Like them or not, Obituary was unlike anything anyone had heard before.
“Slowly We Rot” was chaotic, bass heavy mix of manic guitar solos and crashing drums, but it was undeniably characterized by vocalist John Tardy’s disarmingly horrific, gargling style, that created guttural chasms of dread which though often strived for, to date have been paralleled by none. The ability to augment tempo so drastically became the band’s trademark along with Tardy’s unique vocal style, which distinguished them clearly from the rest of the emerging Florida Death Metal bands; nowhere is this more apparent than on the prophetic title track of their debut. The fact that Obituary refrained from printing lyric sheets with their albums led people to believe that they didn’t actually write any lyrics. Some may question the verbosity or absence of documented lyrics, however, any true fan has each grunt, growl and howling grimace committed to memory like an utterance from God in painstaking form—what does not exist can not be remembered, and an Obituary show is testimony to the re-creation of what your ears couldn’t believe in the first place. Once again bringing augmentation to irony, Live and Dead worked quite well for the quintet, dividing your conscience yet leaving much to the imagination; not since birth have your senses been so graphically assaulted yet pleased at the same time. While such differing sensations once seemed incongruous, Obituary have proven the ability to merge unlikely dichotomies, from their slow-as-hell-yet-fast-as-fuck style to the non-evil, homegrown approach to what would largely become the satanized, bastardized, make-up wearing movement known as Death Metal.
The maturation of the musicians into songwriters taking more visionary and complex forms would soon be heard world wide as Obituary took metal by storm in 1990. Despite their youth upon release of their sophomore offering, “Cause of Death” embodied the confident swagger of the most fearsome pack-leading hound. From the insidious growls of John’s vocals to the barrage of Donald Tardy’s thunderously-metered explosions of double bass, “Cause of Death” was the intention and method as promised by the early threat of “Slowly We Rot”; for Obituary, Death was just the beginning. Accordingly, the title track alone (“Cause of Death”) would be heard, regurgitated, manipulated, complimented and collapsed—but never duplicated—on third and forth generation death metal albums for years to come. Lovecraftian imagery and aural morbidity aside, even a deaf man found fear when confronted by the formidable visage of guitarist Peres; entering Frank Watkins, the hulking henchman of a bassist from South Florida, finally provided long-needed and powerful rhythm stability to the line up. However, the grinding of the axes would not be complete until the return of Xecutioner veteran Allen West, who, along with Peres and Tardy, crafted the foundation for most of Obituary’s most primordial and historic moments. Attack now whole, Obituary had given birth—sight, sound and feel—to a true horror greater than metal had ever known.
The paradox herein lies that Obituary was anything but a summation to and end, but more an exploratory journey into the infinite dehumanization of all that is known, as confronted brazenly by their best selling release yet, “The End Complete” and later followed by the cynical and dark expedition of “World Demise”. Reunited with songwriter West, the band was conjoined like quintuplets sharing life and a name. Though finality was possibly inferred by these titles, Obituary was anything but finished. Ironically, the images conjured by songs such as “Don’t Care”, “Platonic Disease” and “World Demise” seemingly foretold of the millennium as can now be seen daily, displayed plainly across the screens of CNN and reality TV programs world wide; not bad for a bunch of rednecks from Florida with Budweiser dreams and bongwater nightmares.
2004 brings reason for Obituary fans to rejoice, the sunken eyes and heaving cries have all but abated. Obituary has only aspired to live up to the standard they have set for themselves, one that numerous bands have strived to duplicate, but never attained, falling short both creatively and in lack of the unique talent that each member contributes to the near indescribable Obituary sound. Like a forgotten corpse in the basement, Obituary are back to haunt, taunt and fully pollute your senses. Fermenting like waste in the hot Florida sun, Obituary return from hiatus with the voracity of a starven wretch. The forfeiture of time brings blessings of brutality, and assurance that the Dead shall indeed rise again. Such aural abrasion can only be heard on an Obituary album or the live circumcision of a thirty-year-old man, the choice is yours…
Obituary’s Music:
Official Website: obituary.cc





















