Bathory (band)
Appearance
Bathory | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | Vällingby, Sweden |
Genres | Black metal, Viking metal[1][2] |
Years active | 1983–2004 |
Bathory was an extreme metal band from Vällingby, Sweden. The band formed in 1983. Bathory broke up in 2004. The band's main songwriter was Quorthon. Bathory released 12 studio albums and 5 compilation albums. Bathory's first four albums were "the blueprint for Scandinavian black metal".[3] The band first played black metal but moved on to viking metal in its later years.
Band members
[change | change source]- Quorthon (Thomas Börje Forsberg) – vocals, guitar, bass guitar, drums (1983–2004)
- Freddan/Hanoi (Frederick Melander) – bass guitar (1983–1984)
- Vans McBurger (Jonas Åkerlund) – drums (1983–1984)
- Ribban – bass guitar (1984)
- Stefan Larsson – drums (1984–1986)
- Adde – bass guitar (1985)
- Paul Pålle Lundburg – drums (1986–1987)
- Kothaar – bass guitar (1988–1996)
- Vvornth – drums (1988–1996)
Discography
[change | change source]Studio albums
[change | change source]- Bathory (1984)
- The Return (1985)
- Under the Sign of the Black Mark (1987)
- Blood Fire Death (1988)
- Hammerheart (1990)
- Twilight of the Gods (1991)
- Requiem (1994)
- Octagon (1995)
- Blood on Ice (1996) – recorded in 1989
- Destroyer of Worlds (2001)
- Nordland I (2002)
- Nordland II (2003)
Compilation albums
[change | change source]- Jubileum Volume I (1992)
- Jubileum Volume II (1993)
- Jubileum Volume III (1998)
- Katalog (2001)
- In Memory of Quorthon (2006)
Other websites
[change | change source]- Official website Archived 2014-08-18 at the Wayback Machine
- Bathory on Allmusic
References
[change | change source]- ↑ Ulrey, Jeremy (February 27, 2013). "Essential Black Metal Listening: BATHORY Under the Sign of the Black Mark". Metal Injection. Retrieved October 29, 2014.
- ↑ "Bathory". Encyclopaedia Metallum. Retrieved October 29, 2014.
- ↑ Moynihan, Michael; Søderlind, Didrik (2003) [1998]. Lords of Chaos: The Bloody Rise of the Satanic Metal Underground (revised and expanded ed.). Venice: Feral House. p. 21.