Thursday, December 17, 2015

Interview with Firecult

As a Black Metal band hailing from British Columbia, the land of the newly wed and the nearly dead, Firecult make some of the most consistent, evil, devastating Metal in the province. Below you'll find all the secrets to their madness, between the ritual that leads to the creation of each new song and the idea of live shows. It's something worth checking out!



Greetings, hopefully the great white north is treating you guys alright, but I guess the bitter winters help pave the way for solid Black Metal, eh?

Yes, the grim winter landscapes of the Pacific Northwest definitely inspires us to create Black Metal music.


So far since 2012 you’ve released a new EP or album each year, will this trend continue in 2016?

As an independent band we will continue to release EPs every 6 to 8 months. A full length LP is in our future as well.


It’s been a rather busy year for Firecult, you released “Lord of the Eternal Fire” in March, as well as your recently released split with another B.C. based Black Metal band Finite. Do you finally follow this up with a cross Canada tour?

Touring is something we look forward to doing and we will plan one when the opportunity arises.


From my understanding your guitarist Noose is also in Finite, will any future shows see him doing double duty with Firecult and Finite playing back to back or has this yet to be determined?

Yes absolutely. Carnem is also playing in Finite as a bassist and backing vocalist, and we look forward to performing multiple sets between the two bands.


If we can talk a bit about writing and recording, nothing Firecult has released sounds forced yet you release new music more consistently than most bands out there. What do you go through when writing new songs and how do you decide what works and what doesn’t?

The music and lyrics of Firecult are composed in solitude by Carnem, then brought to the altar to be further molded by intricate and relentless war tempos, obsidian bass vibrations, enchanting melodies and meditative battle cries.



Your last couple releases have been recorded at Hora Morior Studios and sound more professional than your first couple of releases, do you think you will continue at this studio in the future?

Our most recent release “Void Cult Conspiracy” was recorded, mixed and mastered by our friend Niko BW. Eternal Hails to Hora Morior and Bullys Studios who have produced our previous releases.


Firecult recently opened for heavy weights Wolvhammer, not to mention the Nothing is Heavy show earlier this year and everything else you guys have done. What is a live Firecult show like and how are you looking to evolve your live performances?

Firecult performances are a channelling of adversarial energy, and an intense expression of those energies. It is very meditative in nature as the voices of the nightside possess and speak through the musicians. Our performances are always evolving and growing stronger.

With the Black Metal underground being saturated with so many bands wanting to be “more evil than the last” how do you suggest people weed through the BS of wannabe bands to find the true gems of the underground?

The imitators and posers weed themselves out eventually. All things are subject to decay, but those with true conviction and spirit shall keep the flame burning strong.


Can you talk a bit about what Firecult has planned for the future? Whether its rough ideas that you hope come to fruition or things like tours that you’re just waiting for dates on?

Our main goal is to bring forth even more sinister evocations. There will be another release in 2016, and we will continue to perform in BC. We will tour if the opportunity arises.


Last but not least, do you have anything to say to your legion, the dedicated fans that went out of their way to check this out?

Hails to those who support underground music, and all who choose to walk the lonely path.


Thank you very much for your time, it means a lot to me. Hails from Ontario!


Hails!

give Firecult a like on Facebook
Pick up Music from Firecult on Bandcamp


1 comment:

  1. Pretty good interview. Currently trying to hit the band up for some physical copies of some of their material. Firecult are sick \m/

    - Jesse Slamwhorella.

    ReplyDelete