Drudkh
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Drudkh | |
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Background information | |
Origin | Kharkiv, Ukraine |
Genres | Black metal[1] |
Years active | 2002–present |
Labels | Season of Mist |
Spinoffs | Blood of Kingu |
Members |
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Website | https://www.season-of-mist.com/bands/drudkh/ |
Drudkh is a Ukrainian black metal band. It currently consists of Roman Saenko (of Hate Forest and formerly of Dark Ages), Thurios (former member of Astrofaes and Hate Forest), Krechet, and Vlad. All four also were members of Blood of Kingu until it was disbanded. Their lyrics and artistic themes embrace Slavic mythology and Ukrainian nationalism. Many of the band's lyrics are derived from the works of nineteenth and twentieth-century Ukrainian poets (Oleksandr Oles, Oleh Olzhych, Maik Yohansen, etc.) and especially Taras Shevchenko.
Drudkh have been particularly secretive throughout the course of their career, even for a black metal band, giving no interviews and not releasing the lyrics to several of their albums. From their conception until 2009, Drudkh did not have any official website, but in May 2009, Season of Mist launched an official Myspace, operated by the label rather than the band.
The word "drudkh" is derived from the Sanskrit word for "forest" or "tree".
History
[edit]Drudkh has released eleven albums, two EPs, four splits, one single, and two compilations of material from the band's early splits and EPs. Their early releases were released on CD through the English extreme metal record label Supernal Music, with the exception of the EP (which was a vinyl release), and, again with the exception of the EP, on vinyl through two Finnish black metal labels, Northern Heritage and Faustian Distribution. More recent releases have been through Season of Mist, which has also issued remastered versions of the band's earlier albums as digipaks.
The band's first album, Forgotten Legends, was released on 18 August 2003. The album establishes the band's trademark epic sound. The album's three tracks and one outro span nearly forty minutes, with the longest track, "False Dawn", nearing the sixteen-minute mark. Terrorizer included Forgotten Legends in its Top 40 Black Metal albums list.[2]
Autumn Aurora followed on 28 November 2004. While continuing its predecessor's general mood and atmosphere, it distinguishes itself by incorporating synthesizers and other such keyboard instruments. Autumn Aurora has frequently been cited as Drudkh's finest album, although some fans give the nod to the later Blood in Our Wells.[citation needed] This record had a strong critical success: for example, it was chosen as the best album of the year by Chronicles of Chaos web-zine.[3]
After Autumn Aurora, Amorth (drums, keyboards) joined the band and replaced Yuriy.
The Swan Road (Лебединий шлях), released on 14 March 2005, marked a departure in a number of ways. It was well-reviewed and is the first Drudkh album to have Ukrainian lyrics, all of which are adapted or taken directly from the work The Haidamakas (1841) by Taras Shevchenko, narrating about the Ukrainian anti-Polish uprising of 1768.[4] Its CD booklet included prints of Shevchenko's notebooks, which many non-Ukrainian-speaking fans mistook for song lyrics. The addition of Shevchenko's poetry can also be said to have given Drudkh's music a more pronounced nationalistic leaning, a move continued on the next album.
On 23 March 2006, Drudkh released Blood in Our Wells (Кров у наших криницях), once again through Supernal Music, in a deluxe edition (limited to 1000 hand-numbered copies) and a normal CD edition. On this album, poetry from four nineteenth- and twentieth-century Ukrainian poets (including Oleksandr Oles and Lina Kostenko) serves as lyrical material, and the album itself was dedicated to Stepan Bandera, leader of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists. Musically, the album adds progressive rock influences and increased use of traditional heavy metal soloing into the mix, while retaining the band's tradition of blending black metal and Ukrainian folk music. Because several tracks sample the Ukrainian poetic film Mamay (2003), the album has greater use of cinematic elements than its predecessors. It was Drudkh's first record to appear in the Terrorizer Top 40 year list, placing at number 35.[5]
After the release of Blood in Our Wells, Amorth was exiled from the band, and new members Krechet (bass) and Vlad (drums) joined.[citation needed]
On 19 October 2006, Drudkh released Songs of Grief and Solitude (Пісні скорботи і самітності). This release is composed of folk music, with much of the music containing melodic elements from previous Drudkh compositions (for example, "The Cranes Will Never Return Here" is based on a riff from "Solitude" on Blood in Our Wells, and "Archaic Dance" is based on a riff from "Glare of 1768" on The Swan Road). It is entirely instrumental, with barely any drumming, and prominently features wind instruments. The album received mixed reviews, with some fans criticizing the band for reusing old material, and others praising the band's radical reconstruction of its own sound.[citation needed]
On 16 April 2007, Supernal Music released Drudkh's Anti-Urban, a 45-RPM 10 inch coloured vinyl limited to 999 hand-numbered copies containing exclusive tracks available only to Supernal Music customers.[citation needed] Season of Mist later re-released it as a mini CD in 2009 as part of the deluxe box-set edition of Microcosmos, and it was also included on the band's collection Eastern Frontier in Flames.[citation needed]
The band's next release, a full-length black metal album titled Estrangement (Вiдчуженiсть), was released on 25 August 2007, again as a limited deluxe edition (1000 hand-numbered copies) and as a normal CD.[6] The album, which had the working title River of Tears, had been rumored to have a "Burzumic" feel before its release, and in some ways, this was borne out by the album's release; its songs were in many ways significantly more minimalistic than those on Blood in Our Wells. Its lyrics were based completely on the 1931-1932 works of Ukrainian poet Oleh Olzhych. Reception to the album has been largely positive, with many fans hailing it as a return to the band's roots or praising the band's musicianship demonstrated in the album's many solos. Notably, the album also featured the band's first prominent use of blast beats since The Swan Road. A spoken introduction in the first track is taken from the 1995 Ukrainian feature film Assassination. An Autumn Murder in Munich about Bandera's life and assassination.
In Autumn 2008, the band signed with the French label Season of Mist.[7] On 22 June (14 July in the United States), 2009, the seventh Drudkh album Microcosmos was released through the label Underground Activists, published by Season of Mist. The standard CD version is a digipak; a limited edition box set also contained an MCD re-release of Anti-Urban.[8] The lyrics are once again taken from Ukrainian poets, like Ivan Franko, Oleh Olzhych, or Bohdan Rubchak.[9] The outro is sampled from Assassination. The album was praised by critics, ranking eleventh in Terrorizer's Top 40 Albums of 2009[5] and third in Haunting the Chapel's (Stereogum's metal section) Top 30 Metal Albums of 2009.[10]
In November 2009, Season of Mist began re-releasing Drudkh's whole catalogue, starting with remastered reissues of Forgotten Legends and Autumn Aurora,[11] and finishing with new editions of Songs of Grief and Solitude and Estrangement in June 2010.[12]
Drudkh's eighth full-length album, Handful of Stars (Пригорща зірок), was released on 21 September 2010, via Season of Mist. Critics and fans noticed the changes in style and sound: it was much clearer than previous efforts and bore influence from post-rock. The record received mixed reviews as a result, though it appeared in Haunting the Chapel's Top 50 Albums of 2010 at 8 position.[12] Again, for lyrics was used the poetry of Ukrainian authors, such as Oleksa Stefanovych and Svyatoslav Gordynskyj.[13] The release of the new Drudkh full-length was supported with Slavonic Chronicles mini album, which consisted of two covers of Master's Hammer and Sacrilegium. It was released as a CD only with a deluxe edition of Handful of Stars and also as 10" LP including a download card to get the digital version of the record. As opposed to Handful of Stars, Slavonic Chronicles was much more stylistically similar to their older works like Blood in Our Wells.
The post-rock direction, that was present at Handful of Stars, has been developed in a new project titled Old Silver Key by Drudkh members with French musician Neige of Alcest on vocals. This supergroup signed to Season of Mist and released debut record titled Tales of Wanderings on 16 September (27 September in North America), 2011.[14][15]
Drudkh's album Eternal Turn of the Wheel, recorded in summer 2011, was released on 24 February (13 March in North America), 2012, through Season of Mist.[16]
Drudkh's tenth album, A Furrow Cut Short, was released on 20 April 2015.[17]
In 2024, former drummer Mykola Sostin, who performed as "Amorth" and was in Drudkh from 2004 to 2006, was killed in battle while fighting for Ukraine during the Russo-Ukrainian War.[18]
Politics
[edit]Drudkh has been accused of being a National Socialist black metal (NSBM) band.[19] The band has denied this, and also denies links to fascism or any other political ideology.[20] However, Drudkh's music has referenced the Ukrainian Insurgent Army, a Ukrainian nationalist formation from World War II.[21] One reference is the sixth and final track of the album Blood in Our Wells being titled "Ukrainian Insurgent Army", named after the entity founded by the Bandera faction of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists. Said album was also dedicated to Stepan Bandera,[20] a Ukrainian nationalist and divisive figure of Ukrainian history.[22]
Drudkh and his relationship with Saenko, Konstantin Zmievsky, drummer for Khors have refused the accusations of being National Socialist stating "I played with Astrofaes from 1996 to 2000, for four years, and we played black metal with black metal style of lyrics and we’ve never been interested in national socialism or neo-Nazis and stuff like this." and also claimed "I know the guys very well and they’ve never been Nazis or neo-Nazis."[23]
Band members
[edit]Current
- Roman Saenko (Роман Саєнко) – guitars (2003–present)
- Thurios (Roman Blahykh, Роман Благих) – vocals, guitars (2003–present)
- Krechet – bass (2006–present)
- Vlad (Vladyslav Petrov, Владислав Петров) – drums, keyboards (2006–present)
Former
[edit]- Amorth – Drums, Keyboards (2004–2006; died 2024)
Discography
[edit]- Studio albums
- Forgotten Legends (2003)
- Autumn Aurora (2004)
- The Swan Road (2005)
- Blood in Our Wells (2006)
- Songs of Grief and Solitude (2006)
- Estrangement (2007)
- Microcosmos (2009)
- Handful of Stars (2010)
- Eternal Turn of the Wheel (2012)
- A Furrow Cut Short (2015)
- They Often See Dreams About the Spring (2018)
- All Belong to the Night (2022)
- EPs
- Anti-Urban (2007)
- Slavonic Chronicles (2010)
- Singles
- "The Nocturnal One" (2022)
- Splits
- Thousands of Moons Ago / The Gates (2014; split with Winterfylleth)
- One Who Talks With The Fog / Pyre Era, Black! (2016; split with Hades Almighty)
- Betrayed By The Sun / Mirages (2016; split with Grift)
- Somewhere Sadness Wanders / Schnee (IV) (2017; split with Paysage d'Hiver)
- Compilations
- Eastern Frontier in Flames (2014; compiles the band's material from their EPs and splits to date)
- A Few Lines in Archaic Ukrainian (2019; compiles songs from their three most recent splits to date)
References
[edit]- ^ True, Chris. "Drudkh – Music Biography, Credits and Discography". AllMusic. Retrieved 13 October 2011.
- ^ "Terrorizer Magazine's Top 40 Black Metal Albums". IGN Boards. 30 October 2009. Retrieved 5 November 2019.
- ^ "CoC : Rant : Best Albums of 2004". Chronicles of Chaos. 28 February 2005. Retrieved 11 October 2012.
- ^ Polarstern, Smierc (2010). "Drudkh's anthology of time". Politosophia.
- ^ a b "Terrorizer Magazine". Rocklist.net. Retrieved 11 October 2012.
- ^ "Drudkh (Ukr): 'Estrangement' CD Deluxe". Supernal Music. 30 August 2007. Retrieved 11 October 2012.
- ^ "New Signing". Season of Mist's News. Archived from the original on June 22, 2008. Retrieved October 8, 2008.
- ^ "Season of Mist's News". Seasons of Mist. Retrieved 7 April 2009. [dead link ]
- ^ "Drudkh - Microcosmos (2009)". MetalArea.org (in Ukrainian). 11 June 2009. Retrieved 11 October 2012.
- ^ "The 30 Best Metal Albums of 2009". Stereogum. 19 December 2009. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
- ^ "Drudkh Re-Releases Announced". Drudkh's Official Myspace Blog. 9 November 2009. Retrieved 21 November 2009.
- ^ a b "Haunting the Chapel's Top 50 Albums of 2010". Stereogum. 21 December 2010. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
- ^ "Drudkh, Eternal Turn of the Wheel Album, Pagan Black Metal". Season of Mist. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
- ^ "Old Silver Key, Tales of Wanderings Album, Post Rock". Season of Mist. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
- ^ "Old Silver Key News: Old Silver Key Update". Season of Mist. 28 June 2011. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
- ^ "Drudkh: 'Eternal Turn of the Wheel' Full Album Stream". Metal CallOut. 22 February 2012. Retrieved 22 February 2012.
- ^ "Drudkh: A Furrow Cut Short". Season of Mist. 27 February 2015. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
- ^ Kaufman, Spencer (6 November 2024). "Ukrainian Metal Drummer Mykola "Amorth" Sostin Dies in Battle". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved 17 December 2024.
- ^ Semenyaka, Olena (3 January 2013). "When the gods hear the call: the conservative-revolutionary potential of Black Metal Art". Politosophia. Retrieved 13 July 2016.
- ^ a b Solodovnyk, Maksym (3 May 2012). "Songs of Grief and Solitude". Ukrainian Week. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
- ^ Berlatsky, Noah (10 September 2009). "Fascist Folk". Splice Today. Archived from the original on 14 September 2009. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
- ^ Yaroslav Hrytsak. (2005). Historical Memory and Regional Identity. In Galicia: A Multicultured Land. Christopher Hann and Paul Robert Magocsi (Eds.) Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 185–209
- ^ Crowcroft, Orlando (15 September 2020). "In Ukraine, music's most extreme genre is on the cultural front line in the fight against Russia". Euronews. Retrieved 19 November 2022.