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GOLEM

Tech/Extreme Prog Metal • Germany


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Golem biography
Formed in 1989, Golem are a German progressive death metal band based in Berlin. Originally from Buckow, Brandenburg, Golem began as the trio of guitarist/vocalist Andreas Hilbert (of blackened death metal group Fermenting Innards), bassist Max Grützmacher and drummer Michael Marschalk. Taking their name from the debut album by German thrash metallers Protector, Golem's sonic template was initially inspired by Slayer, Kreator, Sodom and especially Napalm Death. The teenagers showcased their death-grind style on the 1991 demo, Visceral Scab, and with Grützmacher's help caught the attention of famous German metal label Nuclear Blast, who reissued an abridged version of the demo the following year through their sublabel Cannibalised Serial Killer. Honing their craft while playing more live shows, Golem's sound increasingly began to take influence from Morbid Angel, Autopsy and especially Carcass, moving towards a more melodic and technical brand of death metal.

Tragedy and loss struck the band in 1992 when Grützmacher and two friends perished in a car accident; Marschalk temporarily left the band with T.A.O.R.'s Ruben Wittchow stepping in on drums and Jens Malwitz taking up guitar in Grützmacher's place. Hilbert's Fermenting Innards bandmate Rico Spiller joined as guitarist/bassist in 1993, and together the new lineup recorded and released the Recall the Day of Incarnation demo in summer of that year. Golem suffered another blow with Malwitz's death a few weeks later, but the band soldiered on, with Marschalk eventually returning to the fold. Thanks to Spiller's connections with legendary producer Dan Swanö and label head Maja Majewski, Golem were signed to Invasion Records and had a proper audio engineer to perfect their upcoming debut. Recording at Swanö's Unisound Studio in 1995, Golem released Eternity: The Weeping Horizons the following year. The band fell out with Invasion and Majewski due to his increasingly erratic behaviour.

Spiller left the band in the wake of Eternity's release, with Hilbert and Marschalk writing new material as a duo before recruiting guitarist Carsten Mai (of Divine X and Progeria) and bassist Rainer Humeniuk (formerly of Progeria) in 1997. Golem signed to Ars Metalli, yet another troubled record label which released their sophomore, The 2nd Moon, in 1998. The album showed the band beginning to move beyond their Carcass-worship, slightly advancing their compositional complexity with nods to groups like Atheist. Mars...
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GOLEM discography


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GOLEM top albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

2.00 | 1 ratings
Eternity: The Weeping Horizons
1996
3.00 | 1 ratings
The 2nd Moon
1998
3.05 | 2 ratings
Dreamweaver
2004

GOLEM Live Albums (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

GOLEM Videos (DVD, Blu-ray, VHS etc)

GOLEM Boxset & Compilations (CD, LP, MC, SACD, DVD-A, Digital Media Download)

0.00 | 0 ratings
Eternity: The Weeping Horizons / The 2nd Moon
2014

GOLEM Official Singles, EPs, Fan Club & Promo (CD, EP/LP, MC, Digital Media Download)

0.00 | 0 ratings
Visceral Scab
1991
0.00 | 0 ratings
Recall the Day of Incarnation
1993

GOLEM Reviews


Showing last 10 reviews only
 Dreamweaver by GOLEM album cover Studio Album, 2004
3.05 | 2 ratings

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Dreamweaver
Golem Tech/Extreme Prog Metal

Review by siLLy puPPy
Special Collaborator PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic

3 stars One of the premiere death metal bands in Eastern Germany, GOLEM was formed in 1989 by the then teenagers Max Grützmacher (bass), Michael Marschalk (drums) and Andreas Hilbert (guitars, vocals) with major inspiration from Napalm Death but the lineup had changed completely by the time the first demo "Recall The Day Of Incarnation" arrived in 1993 with only Hilbert remaining. By the time the band's debut "Eternity: The Weeping Horizons" arrived in 1996, not only had the band been reduced to a trio but the influences shifted from the grind influenced Napalm Death to the old school death metal sounds of Carcass and Morbid Angel. A second album quickly followed in 1998 with "The 2nd Moon" which followed suit and then suddenly the band fell silent for a number of years.

Not content with the Carcass worship, GOLEM reinvented itself into a strange mythical death metal beast that legends of made of. It took six long years and a switch to Nuclear Blast records but by 2004 GOLEM was ready to release its masterwork titled DREAMWEAVER which retained all the brutal old school death metal in the classic Morbid Angel sense but added new layers of compositional complexity, avant-garde hairpin turns and Krautrock inspired atmospheres. Also it's important not to confuse this band with the 70s German Krautrock band also named GOLEM which released one acid rock album in 1973 titled "Orion Awakes." Designed to strive for the outer reaches of harmony and complexity, GOLEM entered the fledgling world of avant-garde death metal where traditional methodologies were nixed in favor of standing out amongst the many bands who had joined the death metal camp. DREAMWEAVER was a lengthy beast with 12 proper tracks reaching the 63 minute mark.

DREAMWEAVER may not have been as innovative as album's like Gorguts' classic "Obscura" or as far removed from all Earthly reality like the band Vuvr, Pan.Thy.Monium and Düreforsög were from the same era but GOLEM did indeed manage to craft a rather unique album in the death metal paradigm made especially clear by the closing track "Le Sacre du Primtemps" which tackles all things progressive, experimental and even Nintendo! The first three tracks get the party started with a rather classic old school death metal sound still in the Carcass realm with only subtleties offering a glimpse of the band's true intent but beginning with "Breeder" the freak flags are set to fly and the unorthodoxies reveal themselves with vengeance. This particular track begins with a creepy keyboard intro but then quickly jumps into an oddly timed series of jittery riff attacks with a slight staccato. Cryptic tones and feedback ooze from the mangled distortion of the twin guitar attacks with jazzy drum rolls and demonically possessed vocal style in classic guttural growl death metal regalia.

"Afterglow" follows with a more thundering instrumentation as the metal jumps into overdrive. Laced with even more off-kilter time signature changes and a brutal prog approach in the riffing style, the album emboldens its desire to expand its tentacles into the hitherto unthinkable reaches of traditional death metal. The album chugs on for several more tracks. Too many in fact that basically retread the basically formula of jagged razor-sharp riffing accented by progressive deviations and the usual beastly delivery system. Starting with "Diaspora" Hilbert's vocals switched to a raspy black metal style. Reminds me of Ihsahn in Emperor or even Immortal. "Faces" offers some bizarre drumming techniques to accompany the rather anthemic melodic procession dressed up with blistering death metal brutality. It's a bit folky during the slower death-doom parts. "The Tower" changes things up big time with a rather strange atmospheric contribution and a completely non-death metal compositional style only dressed up in death metal clothing. It's an oddball that sounds part church ceremony, part death metal, part black metal and part traditional heavy metal. The Bach-esque keyboards are rather trippy.

The title track takes things into an even weirder direction. It seems by this time the band is channeling its Krautrock heritage with an atmospheric melodic instrumental but the real surprise is saved for last: the bizarre interpretation of Stravinky's "Le Sacre de Printemps" which takes on all kinds of strange twists and turns. Sounding more industrial than death metal, the track includes a series of metal styles as well as some chiptune sound effects. This is the most distinct track on the album and the perfect way to end it all. Overall DREAMWEAVER delivers a wealth of interesting ideas but the lack of cohesion makes this album feel like a loose grab bag of ideas rather than a fully gelled avant-garde death metal album of the ages. A few samey tracks in the middle edited out would've gone a long way and perhaps some of the techniques used on the final track could've found their way into the other tracks. A really cool avant-death metal album that was leaps and bounds more interesting than the band's previous recordings but the band needed to iron out all the kinks to make it truly outstanding. One not to be missed but falls short of greatness on a few fronts.

3.5 but not quite consistent enough to round up

Thanks to gordy for the artist addition.

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