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Creem #11 THRASH METAL by Mike Gitter

Quebecs Voivod is the next step for metal. Owing allegiance to no set formula, the French Canadian four-piece is breaking all the rules with power and originality to spare.


Voivod remain distinctive among the bulk of speed outfits with a brutally fresh attack that can only be described as Voivod music. And what is Voivod music? High-tech metal that's always evolving.

Guitarist Piggy is a viciously original player, churning forth aural devastation on their recently-released Killing Technology LP (Noise). Bassist Blacky and drummer Away keep the rhythms driving and power-charged as vocalist Snake, poking a lively tongue at thrashing audiences, lives up to his reptilian namesake.

Away, who also spends a considerable amount of time on artwork (three examples of which grace the band's three full-length albums) developed the Voivod concept before their formation in 1982. Applying the myth of the Voivods (a legendary 14th century European cannibal tribe known for their ruthlessness and drinking of the blood of their enemies) to present-day technology, limitless possibilities were born. "I admire their warrior's strength and cunning," says Away through a heavy French accent, "so I took this warrior and made him a nuclear warrior with atomic weapons.

"I had many bad feeling about this planet," he continues, "I wasn't happy to live here so a created a world of my own, the Voivod world. The world is the result of my bad feelings about technology and its bad nature, which includes things like nuclear war. The character of the Voivod can take many images including those of schizophrenia or paranoia. He is a superhero figure that can be very good or very bad."

Over the course of three albums—War And Pain (Metal Blade), RRRRROOAAAR (Noise) and Killing Technology—both their music and their concept have been developing. From the first album's speedy, unrefined power-charge to Killing Technology's ruthless originality, Away and crew have been evolving as they discuss the war long ravaging the fantasy land of Morgoth, the kingdom of ice.

"The three albums are all part of the Voivod evolution," says Away. "They tell the story of Voivod and all the characters in the Voivod land of Morgoth. There are the warriors of ice, Korgull, who is pictured on the cover of RRRRROOAAAR, the Black City where Korgull the destroyer lives, as well as many other characters as well."

Influenced by Motorhead initially and later by punk bands such as the Sex Pistols, GBH and Die Kreuzen, the sound of Voivod isn't easily pigeonholed. Away even goes so far as to count industrial outfits such as Germany's premier crash-and- burn notables Einsturzende Neubauten and New York's Swans as influences. "We've always been somewhat different and have always listened to many different things," says Away. "I guess you could even call us a punk/metal band." While standard black metallists scream and rage praises to Beelzebub, Voivod concern themselves with the potential hells on Earth.

In their French-Canadian accents, the band is screaming desperate cries against the terrible potential of technology and science. Nuclear war has always been a subject for the band since War And Pain, a record that depicted a post-holocaust world after a number of atomic conflicts. "The cover of Killing Technology shows how man allows technology to get out of control," says Away. "He has destroyed the Earth and is moving out into space to fight and destroy even more. There's a lot of hardcore bands that use images of war to protest, but we use them to describe our feelings on the chaos of life on this planet.

To Away and crew, images of death, destruction, oppression and violence that creep into their musical vision are mere protests against a world gone mad. They are quite often expressions of hostile, angry feelings. "We use the images but we don't quite say whether the are right or wrong," says the thickly accented drummer. "So, unfortunately people have come to say that Voivod are violent Nazis, which isn't true. We use images of oppression or mental disorder to express feelings. When you look at the cover of War And Pain, you see war and pain, which is a reaction.


"We see nuclear war as the real hell," says Away, his band more immersed in the brutality of technology gone mad than "Dungeons and Dragons" fantasy. Live shows find the band emerging through mushroom clouds that herald Voivod's destructive execution. Completing the picture Snake often comes into the scene with his face encased in a gasmask, portraying the cold, unfeeling insanity of barbarous conflict.

Killing Technology doesn't just limit it's scope to the destructive potential of nuclear war. Technological travesties including the explosion of the space shuttle Challenger, the potential China crisis and the threat of Star Wars missile defense system are all ominous possibilities. As Canadians residing close to the initial line of detection for possible incoming Soviet missiles aimed at U.S. targets, the Star Wars project is of tremendous concern to young Canadians such as Voivod.


"As far as Star Wars goes, if the Americans aren't the first to do it, someone else will," says Away. "But we feel that we have the right to discuss and put out our feelings on the subject."

Head and shoulders above the run-of-the-mill thrash-o-mats, Voivod are metal's next generation. Musically and lyrically, they stand far above most in the pure intelligence of their raging assault. While many have become bored with the host of Metallica/Slayer clones, Voivod are opening a new realm of possibilities. TO quote their own motto: "To the death!!!".

 

2004 VOIVOD bio by John Book & Greg Prato

1998 ArtistDirect VOIVOD bio

1999 Piero Scaruffi's VOIVOD bio (in Italian)

1998 VH1 VOIVOD bio

1996 VOIVOD biography by Yuri Jossa

1995 VOIVOD biography by Malcolm Dome (KERRANG!)
1989 VOIVOD biography by Greg Fasolino


05/05/2004 The Ultimate Eric Forest Interview

09/13/2003 Project: Failing Flesh Interview with Eric and the Gutierrez Brothers

04/08/2003 Interview with Jason at perfectpitchonline.com

03/2003 Interview with Dan Berube from Union Made / EyeInside

03/2003 Metal Update Interview with Snake

03/2003 Metal Update Interview with Michel

03/2003 Snake & Jason Interview

03/2003 Jason Newsted Interview

02/2003 Michel Interview

02/2003 Jason Newsted Interview

01/20/2003 Michel / Jason basementbar.com Interview

11/2002 Jason Newsted Interview

04/02/2002 Grinder Webzine Interview with Eric

06/2001 Interview with Blacky

05/1999 Interview with Blacky

05/1999 Interview with Eric Forest

09/ 1997 Scream Magazine Interview

08/1997 Corridor of Cells Webzine Interview

1997 Critical Mass Underground Fanzine Interview

1996 Hellfrost Webzine Interview

05/1996 Interview from Hard Force magazine

1996 Interview from the KOFFIN WEBZINE

1996

The late Sheila Rene's Awesome  Interview with Michel

12/1995 Chronicles of Chaos Away interview

1993 Denis D'Amour interview, Guitar Magazine, December 1993

1991 Trash 'n Burn Magazine Away Interview (October 91).

03/1990 bSide Interview with Michel Langevin

1986 Blackthorn magazine interview

1986 Metal Mania interview with Away

1985 Metallic Assault fanzine interview with the band


12/ 1999 Metal Hammer article

1996

Omni Magazine Online "Diverse Minds E-mail Dialog" with Michel Langevin

1996

Rip Magazine May 1996

1993 RIP Magazine July 1993

1991 Kerrang Magazine (2 Nov n°365).

1990 Rolling Stone Magazine

Q4/ 1989 The Village Voice Rock & Roll Quarterly

1989 Sheet Metal Magazine

02 / 1989 NEW! Amplified Assault Magazine

1989 Metal Mania Magazine

1988 Kerrang Magazine #186

1988 Sounds Magazine

1988 Metal Forces #28 Magazine

1988 Metal Mania Magazine

1987

Creem #11 Thrash Metal Magazine

1987

Metal Forces #21 Magazine

1987 Metal Mania MagazineOctober
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