Dimmu Borgir Should Compose Music For Star Wars. Seriously.

Hello friends.

Here I am with another blog article! This time, I am going to wax long about two things I like, so you’ll have to deal with that. Been a while since I’ve written a blog article! I had the busiest-as-hell July, but I wanna get writing. This isn’t 2007 anymore. Nice blogs cost money now, and i’m shelling out the “hard”-earned cash for this, so I want to get my money’s worth. So I’m going to get my money’s worth by explaining why a Norwegian symphonic black metal band could and should compose music for the biggest space fantasy of all time.

So, I’ve been a primarily-listening-to-metal guy probably since about 2006. It was touch and go with punk and conscious rap there for a while, but eventually the guitars and growls won out. Maybe if there had been conscious rap about Vikings or troll sagas…who can say?! In my early years, and for much of the following, I stayed pretty close to Finnish metal, ignoring Swedish, Norwegian, and other Nordic bands. I’d heard Dimmu Borgir before, but honestly never caught onto them. I think this is mostly because I was introduced to their music through their music videos, which mostly feature them standing around, alone, in big empty spaces looking…scary? I understand metal budgets are cheap, but it doesn’t help the music to have the band members standing around like costumed amusement park haunted-house employees, fingers clenched as if holding an invisible pomegranate, grimacing into the ether.

Pure nightmare fuel!
Dimmu Borgir or Muppet?
Is he, like, laughing?


Earlier this year, my Spotify algorithm was like “please listen to something else other than these four bands and Johnny Mathis” and threw me Dimmu Borgir, and I said back “okay, fine, it has a skull on the album cover, whatever”. This time, Dimmu Borgir worked. And boy, did it work! “Gateways” was the one that got me hooked (which I always thought was a funny coincidence). In the ensuing weeks, I listened to their Abrahadbra album hella. (Don’t worry, Dimmu fans, I am slowly listening to their older, more pure black-metal stuff. Calm down).

In this immersion, I would often watch their live videos while working from home, that is, processing online orders for a bookstore (nothing reminds one of the written word more than screechy vocals and choir-laden, double-bass apocalypse!). In their career performing live, they’ve sometimes performed with a whole entire orchestra, and sometimes, the orchestra will play an orchestra-only version of their songs! I was enjoying these too, in a music-score kind of way, when it struck me. Dimmu Borgir could totally compose music for fucking Star Wars.

Now, my history with Star Wars is long and conflicted and could cover 10,000 blog articles, but the short version is: I love the old movies to death, abhor the prequels, got excited for the Disney era, loved Force Awakens, and hated everything else except Solo. I don’t watch the cartoons and Mando was like whatever. Basically, I haven’t been happy with it for a long time. In my own life head-canon, I somehow get rich enough to wrangle Star Wars from the Disney claws and can finance my own fucking Star Wars movies (or at least get license to from them). With this plan in the back of my head, I am always on the look-out for Star Wars-y music that will serve as soundtracks to these hypothetical new films (that would probably take place far after Return of the Jedi, and for the record, would be good and would not be shit).

So, all right, enough talk and set up, this isn’t a recipe! Here is why I think Dimmu Borgir could compose some fuckin’ Star Wars music.

Exhibit A: “Eradication Instincts Defined (Orchestral Version)

Doesn’t this just sound like some sweet old Star Wars music? Right off the bat, it sounds like some dark-side user and their cadre of cronies are up to no good. Can’t you just see it in your mind? Some dark lord marching along with some troopers behind them? Or perhaps, this could be the theme of a new villainous organization. I might remove the choir, since Star Wars barely had that shit, but keep the instrumentation. I just love it.

Approaching 1:50, the song’s mood changes to some urgency. High tension between the stars! For this, I can see some officers on some good-guy ship discussing some plans to deal with a nasty blow to their war strategy (or something like that). Then we get to 3:10, and something bad has happened. Oh man! Someone is tumbling to their imminent death! Or a vital ship is going down! Round back to the opening melody and you got your evildoers bein’ jerks again. Fuck yeah.

Exhibit B: The beginning of “The Serpentine Offering”


The orchestral part of this song only goes for 45 seconds, but I mean, come on. You thought there was an evil theme in the last one, well listen to this. What classic, militaristic villain music. Does it sound like “Imperial March” in the beginning? Well, yes it does, but the lead melody is different, so fuck it. Just imagine another villain coming onto the screen to this music. Delightful.

So, yes, let’s get these two together. There are other orchestra-only songs they have, but “Eradication Instincts Defined” is really the best example of their Star Wars-y-ness. What do you think? (I don’t know if I allow comments on this blog, if not, just as rhetorical, see the question!)

Wouldn’t this be cool? Come check cinemas in 25 years when this happens! If all goes according to plan, I’ll be able to independently produce Star Wars movies (Big D can keep all the money), and Dimmu would still be kicking around. Hmm..now I’m going to be thinking about these future Star Wars movies all day… Thank you for reading and may the force be with your unhallowed soul!

Loch Ness: The Webseries and Me

I moved down to the glorious Los Angeles area to work in the movies, armed with a film degree and the naivety of one fresh from University. Now this is not a post to complain about the absolutely impenetrable wall that is Breaking In Hollywood, but a post to tell you that, after not working on as many productions as I would have thought (like practically none), I finally got to work in one of those places where a bunch of people are tired and starving and about to cry/give it all up at any moment: a movie set.

Well, it was more like a webseries set. Well, more like a webseries location (we were just at a dude’s house), but there was a fancy camera, real lights, an HD monitor, and sandbags, which all means this was a legitimate production (especially the sandbags).

The shoot was for the webseries coming out soon, titled Loch Ness, a show about a high-school folk metal band who tries to make it happen despite various complications. I don’t know if you read that closely, but it’s a show about a FOLK METAL band, which, if you don’t know, sits extremely high on my list of things I find interesting. It also sits high on my list of things I try to convince normal people are cool.

Kivimetsan Druidi
It’s really hard sometimes.

In addition to helping out the only day I was free (the other day was an all-night shoot, which would have been followed by a full day at work. Translation = YaIdon’tthinkso), I provided the art department with some awesome photos of my fake (real?) metal one-man project (band?), Linnalapsi. Back when it was still a joke, and had lyrics like “We are ready for battle/ we are quick like wolves, our enemies slow like cattle“, I coerced convinced a bunch of friends of mine to pose as your run-of-the-mill folk metal band with access to forests and facepaint.

Early on, I told my a friend that my main goal for Linnalapsi was to get someone to play one of the technology-restricted, midi-tastic Linnalapsi songs with real instruments. I mean, sure, the main goal now is taking the metal world by storm (like why wouldn’t it be?), but for the mean time, getting some people to play a song seemed a little more doable. After years of complete obscurity, I was down to settle for anyone to even notice or mention Linnalapsi at all. So the fact that a poster for Linnalapsi is featured in Loch Ness: The Webseries is still both cool and surprising to me. Check it out:

Loch_Ness_Linnalapsi_Poster
I apparently have a gig next month.

Of course, they could totally cut the scene it’s in and re-shoot it entirely or whatever, but as far as I know, this little poster will be among the others in the scene, which is pretty damn awesome. Someone might not have covered one of my songs yet, but if my little joke band can get this far after five years, will could it possibly go in another five?

Check out some of the production pics posted below, and then be sure to follow the show’s Facebook and Twitter and Instavine and whatever new social media has been invented in the last five minutes. I have to go now and practice for my May 19th show. Does anyone know where the Valkyrie Castle is?

-Casey of movie-sets and Linnalapsi

Production Pics!

Loch_Ness_1
Extras, standing around, “working”.

Loch_Ness_2
Myself and three others as extras. I hit my head on that light next to me and started bleeding. It was pretty metal.

Loch_Ness_4
See his hand on the left? That shot is looking pret-ty nice!

Loch_Ness_Band_Photo
This is surprisingly not a band photo. Maybe “extra photos” look the same?

Loch Ness Links!

Official Website
Loch Ness IMDb
Loch Ness Facebook
Loch Ness Twitter
Loch Ness Kickstarter

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Women Who Inspire Me – International Women’s Day 2014

Hey everyone, it’s International Women’s Day! In light of the holiday, I’ll share with you some women that I personally look up to and find inspiring. Remember though, we should celebrate women every day!

Anita Sarkeesian

220px-Anita_Sarkeesian_headshot

The woman behind Feminist Frequency, a critical vlog about women’s representation in media, is Anita Sarkeesian. For years, she has been fighting for equal representation of women in media, most currently video games, where she wishes female characters weren’t simply damsels in distress or there to be a “Smurfette”. In videos not related to her “Tropes vs. Women in Video Games” series, she analyses films and marketing, uncovering how companies reinforce the idea of bogus gender roles. Her work has garnered an unprecedented amount of ludicrous sexual harassment, but she is brave enough to keep on going. Check out her video about LEGO and marketing, and then watch all of her other videos! Seriously, you need to watch all of them!

Caprice Crane

Caprice Crane

I first encountered Caprice Crane through a friend who recommended I read her debut novel Stupid and Contagious. I immediately loved her book, and have since read everything she’s done, even attending book signings for the last two. Ms. Crane’s comedic voice doesn’t only appear in books, for she has also written for television and movies. If you haven’t read Stupid and Contagious, what are you doing?! Get it from your local independent bookstore and read it now!

Alyssa White-Gluz

White-Gluz_Alissa-15347

Metal is a place you don’t often find women. And even when you do, they might just be used in sexualizing promotional materials (which is dumb). But Alyssa White-Gluz, lead singer of The Agonist, refuses to be one of those women. With her amazing blend of clean and growling vocals, Alyssa has astonished everyone I’ve shown her to. People are often skeptical that it is her doing both types of vocals, but I’ve seen her live and she is indeed doing both, and excellently so. You’d think that after all that growling, her voice would be shot, but after listening to her a capella version of Swan Lake, you can see just how talented she is. Amazing! Keep up the good work, Alyssa!

Sandra van Eldik (Née Völkl)

Sandra_Vokl

As stated before, there sadly aren’t too many women in metal. While Alyssa White-Gluz and other females front bands (like Simone Simons of Epica and Floor Jansen of Nightwish), Sandra van Eldik absolutely rocks it as the bassist for German folk-metal band Eqililbrium. See her in this video for “Der Ewige Sieg” (English: “The eternal victory”) and then get excited about the upcoming album!

Netta Skog

Netta and I, Nov. 5, 2008

I cannot even tell you how sad I was the day I that Netta Skog, the accordionist of Finnish Viking metal band Turisas, was leaving. Only 16 when she jumped in to do some summer gigs (the other accordionist, like, totally disappeared), Netta officially joined the band soon after. In the four times I saw them with Netta, she was always smiling and rocking out harder than anyone, bringing a level of fun that has not since returned. Check out her accordion playing below during a song called “Sahti-Waari”. So great! We miss you, Netta!

Emmi Silvonoinen

Emmi Silvenoinen

Wow, I must really like metal! Emmi Silvenoinen, who joined the folk/viking metal band Ensiferum in 2007 after the departure of Meiju Enho (honourable mention, Meiju!), continues to rock as Ensiferum’s keyboardist. Unfortunately during live shows, her keyboard is stuffed in back with the drummer, but she is often elevated so that all can see her spinning hair. I don’t know how she does it! See her fast-moving fingers in this video for their amazing song “Twilight Tavern”!

Joan of Arc

Jeanne d'Arc

After a while of someone knowing me, I’ll eventually tell them I am huge “Joan of Arc fan”. I’m often greeted with curious looks, because, well, who is really a “fan” of historical figures? Jehanne d’Arc has always been an influence on me and her story never ceases to interest, amaze, and inspire me (a picture of her is even currently my cell phone background!).

I wish there was a perfect Joan of Arc movie to recommend to you, but I honestly don’t think it’s been made yet. So I’m going to suggest you just simply watch as many as you can. If you don’t have time to watch a bunch of Joan of Arc movies (which you should make the time to do!), might I recommend one of my all-time favorite books, Joan of Arc by Mark Twain. When you’re done with that, read The Maid by Kimberly Cutter and An Army of Angels by Pamela Marcantel. Just saying, we should all know Joan of Arc’s amazing story of adversity and devotion. So get on it!

Of course, there are many more women who are inspiring and awesome. If you have a woman who inspires you, comment below, and if you are an amazing woman, don’t keep it to yourself!

-Casey

Fadenfreude – Industrial Metal

Fadenfreude is my industrial metal music project. Originally an experiment for 2012’s “February Album Writing Month” (a challenge to write fourteen original songs in twenty-eight days of February), Taking inspiration from European Industrial bands like Ruoska, Turmion Kätilöt, and Rammstein, Fadenfreude has grown into something more than a mere experiment.

Discography:

2012: Die Bäckerei ist geschlossen
TBA: Vollmond (working title)

Linnalapsi

Linnalapsi was my very first folk metal music project and first music project overall. It was founded in late 2008 when I had made a few parody rap songs, one of which was a Viking-metal themed rap song. A few more songs were written as spoofs of Viking metal, and eventually the project grew to cover two albums as of 2012.

Linnalapsi is often comedic and spoof-heavy, although there are some more serious songs in the body of work. Since I had zero money for equipment, all of Linnalapsi’s music is generated by computer, either through MIDI sounds or electronic “re-creations” of real instruments. I will not lie and say that I don’t want to re-record all of Linnalapsi’s music someday (with some slight compositional tweaks).

Taking heavy influence from folk metal bands like Finntroll, Ensiferum, Korpiklaani, Alestorm, and early Turisas, I have tried to combine elements of folk and Viking metal (as well as punk and industrial metal) in my pieces. My lyrics are mostly in English, although a good number of songs are also in German.

My lyrics deal mostly with adventurers of days gone past, chronicling forest adventures, drinking adventures, silly mishaps, and epic battles.

To date, I have made two full-length albums, the newest being Menneisyyden Laulut, released May 18, 2012. Two EPs, each representing a subgenre of folk metal, are planned for the future with an unknown release date.

Discography

2010 – Laulu Linnalapsien
2012 – Menneisyyden Laulut

Music Videos

2009: Battle Chaos (often mispelled “Choas”)
2009: Hei
2009: Olut ja Vapiti
2009: Spears to the Sky

Images

Here is a gallery of images pertaining to Linnalapsi! They are presented in chronological order. I have provided some captions to describe what was happening in each one. Enjoy!