It is taking longer than expected to fetch the next song to play.
The music should be playing soon.
If you get tired of waiting, you can try reloading your browser.
Please check our Help page for information about troubleshooting Pandora on your browser.
Until they began taking chances with their sound later on in their career, 1349 were a traditional Norwegian black metal band -- both musically and visually -- that took their name from the year in which the black death arrived on Scandinavian shores need we say more? Well, if you must know, the band originated in the city of Oslo, in 1997, born of the ashes of an earlier group named Alvheim featuring vocalist and drummer Olav "Ravn" Bergene, guitarist André "Tjalve" Kvebek, and bassist Tor Risdal "Seidemann" Stavenes. Second guitarist Idar "Archaon" Burheim would join two years later, in time to perform on 1349's second demo (named "Chaos Preferred") and ensuing eponymous 2001 EP, which established the band's sound as a single-minded throwback to the devastating style of black metal that made Norway the movement's focal point in the early '90s (with the help of some rather illicit behavior extensively chronicled elsewhere). 1349 made another connection to that seminal period in time when they recruited Satyricon drummer Kjetil Vidar "Frost" Haraldstad to allow vocalist Ravn to roam free on-stage, which contributed to the band's burgeoning reputation both as players and as performers, thanks to the usual black metal accoutrements (ghastly corpse-paint, leather and spikes, fire breathing, etc). A trio of career-affirming albums followed, namely 2003's Liberation, 2004's Beyond the Apocalypse, and 2005's Hellfire, paving the way for a U.S run supporting the reunited Celtic Frost and a few years of dedicated touring and major European festival appearances. 1349 finally got back to the business of recording via 2009's Revelations of the Black Flame album; a radical departure produced in partnership with Celtic Frost icon Thomas Gabriel Fischer, who replaced much of the band's old-school black metal with slower, ambient, and semi-industrial sounds, outraging most of their fans. The following year's Demonoir made only token efforts to redress the situation (with numerous atmospheric pieces sprinkled amid the more typical black metal songs) and further polarized 1349's audience, leaving many unanswered questions as to the bands future prospects. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia, Rovi
This band is actually pretty lame compared to Gorgoroth, but that's just my opinion. But the fact that no one in Gorgoroth has converted to Christianity makes them the better band.
Check out a song called Hardware-from a band called Mortification....supposedly Christian,but as good and hard as any black metal or Death Metal band.....Doesn't much matter to me- I am a pagan and think both religious views(Christianity and Satanism) ridiculous,but more to the point, music is music
ebrewer3
dont bother replying. he jacks off to responses to his posts.
Yeah. The whole "white" or "unblack" metal thing pisses me off. There's some kid at my school who listens to what he calls "life metal," or christian death metal. Stupid as hell, if you ask me.
Comments
GODSMACK all the way..
Oh what fun it is to play
TRUE metal all the way, HEY!
i hear that term and fall over laughing... what's next, "polite death metal?"
read up on him sometime.