Requiem (Live At Roadburn 2019) Triptykon with the Metropole Orkest

Album info

Album-Release:
2020

HRA-Release:
15.05.2020

Album including Album cover

I`m sorry!

Dear HIGHRESAUDIO Visitor,

due to territorial constraints and also different releases dates in each country you currently can`t purchase this album. We are updating our release dates twice a week. So, please feel free to check from time-to-time, if the album is available for your country.

We suggest, that you bookmark the album and use our Short List function.

Thank you for your understanding and patience.

Yours sincerely, HIGHRESAUDIO

  • 1 Rex Irae (Requiem, Chapter One: Overture - Live at Roadburn 2019) 06:34
  • 2 Grave Eternal (Requiem, Chapter Two: Transition, Pt. 1 - Live at Roadburn 2019) 06:46
  • 3 Grave Eternal (Requiem, Chapter Two: Transition, Pt. 2 - Live at Roadburn 2019) 07:13
  • 4 Grave Eternal (Requiem, Chapter Two: Transition, Pt. 3 - Live at Roadburn 2019) 03:28
  • 5 Grave Eternal (Requiem, Chapter Two: Transition, Pt. 4 - Live at Roadburn 2019) 02:15
  • 6 Grave Eternal (Requiem, Chapter Two: Transition, Pt. 5 - Live at Roadburn 2019) 05:22
  • 7 Grave Eternal (Requiem, Chapter Two: Transition, Pt. 6 - Live at Roadburn 2019) 07:22
  • 8 Winter (Requiem, Chapter Three: Finale - Live at Roadburn 2019) 06:54
  • Total Runtime 45:54

Info for Requiem (Live At Roadburn 2019)



Tom Gabriel Warrior: “In autumn of 1986, when I was 22 years old, I began writing what would become the first part of an intended three-part Requiem (missa pro defunctis; i.e., mass for the dead). The finished piece was released on Celtic Frost’s Into The Pandemonium album, in June of 1987, bearing the title Rex Irae.

As we were rehearsing and recording the first part of the Requiem, we couldn’t have foreseen that exactly such non-traditional, experimental work would lead to significant differences of opinion between the group and the label who had signed us at the time. We were still an underground band and at a pronounced disadvantage, as our industry power and resources were very limited.

We had initially intended to finish the two missing parts of the Requiem after touring the album, and to release all three sections of the Requiem on a dedicated EP as early as 1988. The aforementioned conflict with the label spiralled out of control, however, leading to the termination of the original group at the end of 1987.

When Martin Eric Ain and me resurrected Celtic Frost in 2001, finishing the Requiem was among the earliest topics discussed. In 2002, at age 38 and sixteen years after I first worked on the initial part, I began writing the third part on the basis of demos I had recorded in 2001. The finished third part was released on Celtic Frost’s Monotheist album in 2006, under the title of Winter.

What was left now was to complete the missing second part of the composition. I had quite a detailed idea in my mind of what it would entail musically, but there was no hurry attached to it; we had reformed Celtic Frost to record far more than just one album. Alas, perhaps predictably Celtic Frost disintegrated again after a few years, and the Requiem was left unfinished once more.

Nonetheless, the intention to finish the full Requiem remained with me. I was going to do it one distant day with Triptykon, the group I formed to continue to pursue the path I began in Hellhammer and Celtic Frost. It was 2018, yet again 16 years after I last worked on the Requiem, when Walter Hoeijmakers, founder of the legendary Roadburn Festival and one of my most beloved friends, contacted me to propose Roadburn as the venue to perform, at long last, the finished Requiem. Walter and his team very kindly provided for the resources necessary for such a substantial undertaking, and so, at 54 by now, I found myself commencing work on the second and thus final part of the Requiem this year.

The three parts of the Requiem will therefore be performed by Triptykon at Roadburn 2019, with full classical orchestration, congregated specifically for this occasion by Florian Magnus Maier, who is our esteemed classical collaborator and arranger in this project, and whose patience with me appears to be limitless. We feel very proud and deeply honoured to be joined in this endeavour by the renowned Dutch Metropole Orkest (orchestra).

Triptykon



Triptykon
Created in May 2008 to further develop the darkness invoked by its immediate precursors, seminal black/extreme metal pioneers Hellhammer and Celtic Frost, Triptykon evolved from a Celtic Frost side project initiated by Tom Gabriel Fischer (a.k.a. Tom Gabriel Warrior), the group's singer, guitarist, and main songwriter.

Following five years of songwriting and recording sessions, the subsequent release of their acclaimed Monotheist album, and a 125-date world tour, mounting tensions began to cripple the resplendently disinterred Celtic Frost by late 2007. The situation eventually rendered it virtually impossible for Warrior to succeed in convening Celtic Frost for songwriting and rehearsal sessions for the intended follow-up to Monotheist. Vastly disenchanted and loath to resign to inactivity, Warrior resolved to establish what was to be a temporary substitute project designed to develop, record, and perform the music and lyrics he envisioned for the projected album. The core of the initially unnamed group was completed by underground bassist Vanja Slajh (formerly of Swiss black metal project Freitod), a close friend from a past production project.

Very little of today's extreme metal scene would exist without the influence of Tom Gabriel Warrior. It's hard to imagine a heavier or more mesmerising band than Triptykon, and the marriage of Tom's charisma and some of the most pulverizing riffs ever written weaves sublime magic. A near-religious euphoria. - Metal Hammer UK

This album contains no booklet.

© 2010-2024 HIGHRESAUDIO