
Montreal's Voivod has long been heralded as an innovative
and visionary force within the world of extreme music. For more
than 25 years, the band has performed Heavy Metal alchemy by fusing
various strains of thrash, punk, hardcore, progressive, and psychedelia
to create some of the most engaging, provocative, and, oft times,
surprisingly accessible music of their day. Founding members Denis "Piggy" D'Amour (guitar), Denis "Snake"
Bélanger (vocals), Jean-Yves "Blacky" Thériault
(bass), and Michel "Away" Langevin (drums) started out
with the concept of the Voivod, a futuristic warrior/overlord whose
exploits would be chronicled in the band's lyrics and artwork the latter of which has been created solely by Away. Over
the course of their 12 albums, Voivod has pushed its musical sci-fi
story to the end of infinity and re-emerged, reinvented, and revitalized
itself countless times over and remains a respected name in circles
where quality music and ideas, not gimmicks and trends, are held
in high esteem.
The Voivod universe burst into existence in the early 1980s as the
fledgling thrash metal movement was just getting under way. Working
on a musical diet that consisted of notorious outfits such as Venom,
Motörhead, and Mercyful Fate, Voivod began by creating brash,
punishing music suffused with the primitive thrust of bulldozer
riffs and spitfire vocal howls. Albums such as War and Pain (1984)
and Rrröööaaarrr (1986) are raw, apocalyptic blasts
of Metal screed - bristling with all the intensity of four
youths who, having been cooped up in a practice space for an entire
Canadian winter, unleash their restless tensions upon unsuspecting
instruments and microphones.
Killing Technology (1987) saw the band refine their sound and expand
beyond the influences that their early "faster/louder"
material would suggest. Most notable was D'Amour's transformation
into a guitarist whose tempered style was as informed by progressive
stalwarts such as King Crimson and Pink Floyd as by any of Heavy
Metal's shred 'n burn class. Dimension Hatröss
(1988) further developed the band's unique style of Cyber
Thrash and Nothingface (1989) can be viewed as the logical culmination
of everything the band had been striving for to date. Songs such
as "Missing Sequences" and "Pre-Ignition" display an angular, surgical paranoia that codifies the ultimate
futuristic dystopian fantasy. Where the band could go from here
was anyone's guess. It should serve as no surprise the group
took a sharp turn with their next album, Angel Rat (1991). Straddling
alt-rock and metal while still retaining the common DNA that makes
it distinctly Voivod, Angel Rat served as a new beginning for a
band that was always changing. One change, however, came in an unexpected
way when, after the recording of Angel Rat, Jean-Yves "Blacky"
Thériault chose to leave the band.
Tweaking the more hook-friendly approach from their previous album,
Voivod issued The Outer Limits (1993) in Blacky's absence
through the help of a session bassist. Vocalist Denis Bélanger,
however, was soon to depart, as well - he left the following
year. Regrouping with Eric Forrest doubling up on bass and vocal
duties, the band recorded two decidedly more aggressive studio albums
in Negatron (1995) and Phobos (1997) before the band called it a
quits in 2001.
In 2002 Voivod opened the door for Bélanger to resume his
position as frontman while longtime fan and ex-Metallica bassist
Jason Newsted stepped in to round out the rhythm section as the
band recorded and released their eponymous album, Voivod (2003).
Sadly, the reinvigorated Voivod met with tragedy in 2005 when founding
member and guitarist Denis D'Amour passed away following a
prolonged battle with cancer. The loss of D'Amour rocked not
only the band, but many in the music world who had come to regard
him not only as one of the most creative and innovative guitar players
of his time, but as a genuinely caring and thoughtful human being.
Working with basic guitar tracks laid down by D'Amour in his
home, the rest of the band came together to record Katorz (2006) - an album of energetic, punky metal anthems in the Voivod
tradition.
Finally, 2009 brings us Infini. Like its predecessor, Infini was
created by working with guitar tracks laid down by Denis D'Amour
on his laptop. The rest of Voivod have fleshed out Piggy's
ideas to produce an album that lives up to the Voivod standard and
pays tribute to the final songs recorded by D'Amour, whose
guitar tracks appear precisely as they were recorded - no
re-amping or overdubs. This truly collaborative effort came together
from a respect and belief that these final Voivod songs deserve
to be heard.
Infini may close the chapter on Voivod, but ultimately bolsters
the band's legacy as one of their generation's most
inventive and forward-thinking groups. And, fittingly, the band
that always had its compass set towards the future does indeed have
a future. Summer of 2009 should see the band playing a handful of
festival dates with original bassist Blacky returning to the fold
and Dan Mongrain of Montreal prog-metallers Martyr filling the guitar
slot. Expect the band to perform a wealth of classic Voivod material.
Meanwhile, Jason Newsted is still very much a member of the band
and there is a good chance that shows will be scheduled to highlight
material from the last three albums that he was a part of. The band
is also currently working on a short clip documenting the making
of Infini.
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VOIVOD WARRIORS OF ICEITEM NUMBER: SUNCD1352UPC CODE: 621617013520 FORMAT: CD RELEASE DATE: 2011-06-21 GENRE: METAL BUY NOW FROM ITUNES US |
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VOIVOD INFINIITEM NUMBER: SUNCD1222UPC CODE: 621617012226 FORMAT: CDX1 RELEASE DATE: 2009-06-23 GENRE: METAL BUY NOW FROM ITUNES US |
The glorious return of Canada's finest metalband ! –
Steven Willems, Rock Tribune (Belgium)
Voivod is an incredible legend! Despite the tragic circumstances they are back with a new exciting and bombastic new masterpiece ! No one else could do that ! –
METALLIAN
'Infini' as infinity. 'Infini' as unfinished. Voivod released another huge tribute to Piggy and a new proof of their unique metal style. –
Lorenzo Becciani, CLASSIX METAL (Italy)
A rude, punkish declaration of malicious intents. Voivod are back, better don't miss them. –
Fabrizio Massignani, METAL MANIAC (Italy)
Voivod invented a real new musical world, a planet infested by aliens. They are mutants, cyborgs fed with space rock, thrash and rock'n'roll. They created a brand new metal genre, cyber metal. Bands like Meshuggah and Fear Factory would never exist without them. –
Stefano Cerati, RUMORE (Italy)
...'Infini': Sharp, raw, clever and full frontal. Simply Voivod! –
Andrea Vignati, Metal Hammer
If Infini turns out to be the final Voivod album, then the group has gone out on a high note -- with help from one of metal's most underrated guitarists of all-time. –
All Music Guide
The record captures the frenetic energy that is Voivod in an entire new light showing everybody that no matter how legendary you are you have to grow and evolve musically. –
Crave Online
The raunchiest album of the year so far, Voivod?s self-proclaimed capstone is a succinct hard-rock masterpiece. 4.5 –
See Magazine

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