Leprous Interview

Leprous, prog metal revelation from Norway
posted here

Leprous are a new name on the progressive music scene. The 5 young guys come from Norway, maybe not the most usual place of origin for this kind of music. So far, they released 2 demos and one full length album, and they took their time to record the latter. And, in my personal opinion, they used that time wisely.

Leprous, a new name on the stage of progressive music. The young 5 men band is coming from Norway, maybe not the most usual place of origin for this kind of music, yet with an astonishing result. So far they released 2 demos and one full length album for which they took their time to record it. And in my personal opinion the time was used wisely.

I had the honor to interview them in Oslo, Norway, few hours before their performance on the stage of Inferno festival, together with Ihsahn, and it was the first time they’d play live songs from Ihsahn’s newest album, ‘After’. They were an enjoyable company, full of good mood and I have no idea how the 90 mins just flew by so fast.

Could I have a short description of the band from you? Who are you, how did the band form and how did it evolve since 2001 up to 2010?

Leprous was founded in 2001, typical youth band. Only Einar and Tor Oddmund and 3 other guys who are not part of the band anymore. We played almost something like punk in the beginning. It was a punk band called something else, then we came up with the name Leprous and then started to play a bit different and tried to define the music into something metalish.

Are the demos still available?
We have some copies, CDs but not on the market.

What made you change that direction?
We were all inspired by metal. We are from Notodden and of course we were inspired by bands like Emperor as all the metalheads from Notodden. We just developed. We haven’t set a plan of what kind of music we were thinking of playing, we just came up with some songs. Few years later, the current bassist Halvor joined and he brought some new influences. He was listening much to prog. And then a couple of years later, Øystein joined.

We recorded our first demo in 2004. That demo is metal with too much stuff in it.. We were not that good to arrange songs. We were just playing them. It was recorded with Ihsahn and he was like a godfather for it. We used his studio even if we didn’t spend very much time doing it. We got very much help from him. It would have sounded much worse without his help. In 2006 we recorded 2 tracks length album demo which was a very instrumental thing. Better than Silent Waters but still…

Musicwise, it was kind of everything we could think of in one song, in every song. If we had one riff that was in the same key, we would be like ‘yea, this has to go in this song’ so we had a song with very many themes. I think we are better at composing and arranging the music now.

2 years later we recorded Tall Poppy Syndrome and Tobias has recently joined the band and finally the band is working really good together.

How is it going with rehearsals? Are you all living in Notodden?
Nobody really lives in Notodden. 2 of us live in Oslo, Einar in England and Tor in Aker and the bassist lives in Kristiansand. But we have rehearsal room in Notodden and one in Oslo at Tobias’ school. This implies some sacrifices when it comes to rehearsing, but actually I think we’ve been much more efficient in making songs now than before. Einar comes here every 3rd or 2nd weekend and then we rehearse here and we’re very much more efficient in making the songs than when we used to rehearse every day. This is a different way of working. You need to make good use of the time. It might be a good thing to have all the time in the world, but like this you are forced to be creative fast.

You also need to practice the songs you play with Ihsahn, and that’s not the easiest thing in the world. How do you manage that as well?

The first way around, we pretty much abandoned Leprous for like 6 months. We didn’t play at all, we just wanted to grab the opportunity as fast as possible. We practiced a lot.

After the first concert in March, last year (2009), Leprous became a much better band. I think we learned a lot as a live band from playing with Ihsahn because everything has to be much more tight. We learned to play a lot faster because we have songs that go in a slower tempo but with Ihsahn the songs go like <automatic gun noise> . It was a good experience for Leprous.

How would you describe your music? Where do influences come from? I read a description in a review characterizing you as the child of Opeth with a Norwegian mother.

We’ve been compared to Opeth before, yea. But I don’t believe we’re a copy by any means. Opeth is way more heavy and gloomy than Leprous. We’re maybe a bit more melodic. We probably have an Opethish production. It is typical when you have some growling and some clean vocals, people think ‘Oh, Opeth’. And of course, everyone in the band has listened to some Opeth so probably influences come from them.

Our music doesn’t sound like Ihsahn but of course we get influenced from playing with him. We started using 8 strings now because of the new stuff. That gave us a great opportunity to try something new.

Also we can blame a lot of progressive bands like King Crimson, new stuff like Porcupine Tree (newer than King Crimson at least, as they are from 1989 or so). Mars Volta, Shining (the Norwegian one). And especially Tobias and the bassist are into jazz. Hence you can explain the jazz bits in our songs.

How does one come up with the name Leprous for the band?
It was completely random. We kinda had like a brain storm and we were like 16 years old and actually I think it was Einar who looked up in a dictionary and said ‘yes, this word’. We got so used to the name that we didn’t want to change it. Even if it’s a typical death metal name rather than a prog name.

Is the current music the one you had in mind when you started the project?
No, we never imagined we’d get so serious. We’ve always been quite ambitious. Tor never considered it just a hobby, always thought it could be bigger. I think it’s important to have a goal like that, or else you wouldn’t succeed. But I wouldn’t have expected the music to develop the way it did when we started. When we make songs it’s like everybody in the band contributes to how it ends up. We don’t have a plan like ‘now we’re supposed to make a song that sounds like this and then we make that’. We just come up with ideas and put them together. We try not to have too many rules when we put a song together. But we are better at saying like we don’t want to use special riffs anymore. Before we always used almost everything made by any of us. But now we are more open in at least wait to use it in another song because songs sound better on the whole.

Yea, that makes your music not to sound very loaded with too much stuff
Exactly, I guess that’s the way we are maturing. And even though we have like a lot of dynamics in our songs, with slow and hard parts combined, we can like hear what’s not Leprous. Even though we’re open for pretty much anything.

The lyrics on this album are rather depressive. Are they based on personal experience or do you pick something to match the music you write? And how does your music writing process usually go? Do you have lyrics ready and come up with a song for them or the other way around?
Tor: I think the lyrics come from my wish to criticize certain values I don’t agree with. I just write the lyrics without thinking about music. When we’ve made the music then we try to make the text fit and we change this or that word to match the rhythm. The meaning of the lyrics is set by me, I can decide how it looks on the paper, but Einar uses it in another way. Maybe he uses different parts of the lyrics in different parts of the songs. But still, when we print the lyrics it would look the way I meant it to be so he just interprets the lyrics in his way. I think it is funny to see how he interprets the lyrics that I made in one way and then sounds completely different. And then he asks ‘is it ok if I use this here’ and maybe for me it doesn’t make sense and we have to find a different way. On Tall Poppy Syndrome, the bassist Halvor wrote 50% of the lyrics but now it’s Tor Oddmund who mainly writes. It was going so slow with Halvor so they told me ‘Tor Oddmund, make something’, somebody had to write something.

When it comes to everyone’s musical personal taste, what would you mention?
Einar: Jazz, one of my favorite bands is Porcupine Tree, I love the way they combine progressive rock with pop and metal in a very clever way. They are a very good live band as well. I also love Shining, the Norwegian band, very innovative. Mars Volta I love a lot of classical stuff, jazz like I said.

Tor: I’d probably say the bands that we said earlier that we were influenced by, a lot of the ones he just said. Shining, Porcupine Tree, Mars Volta, Opeth, Emperor…

Did you like Emperor before you started working with Ihsahn? Einar, you’re the one who worked with him right?
Einar: I worked with them some years ago, but I loved them as a kid and I got the offer to join them as a session musician and it was quite big for me at the time.

Tor – I don’t think I listened to them when we started playing, but I learned about them. You need to get used to that kind of music. It’s not many people who love it the first time they hear it, especially when you are very young. Probably many people who don’t listen to metal, they think that Emperor is something like Judas Priest, something you can’t tell a difference form any other rock bands.

Back to musical preferences.
Øystein: I guess I go how everybody goes, with some phases that you listen to this or that. When I started listening to metal it was Iron Maiden, just Iron Maiden, 30 albums. And now I listen to a lot of jazz these days. I find a lot of metal to be boring and not too creative.

Tobias: I listen to a lot of Norwegian contemporary jazz.

How do you think the album was received? What kind of critique did you get for it?
90% really good. We got really good reviews after it was released and maybe just about 10% that would be below 8 out of 10.

What would be the song that you’d call as main song?
On myspace I think we have ‘Passing’ like the first song. That’s the hit song. But when we ask people we heard them mention every song.

(I was whispering ‘White’ to them). It’s so funny because we were discussing before we were out playing the 3 concerts tour and we decided not to play it because nobody would be interested in it. But at every concert when we told the crowd that we have one more song, everyone was screaming ‘white, white’ so everybody wanted to hear that. But you’ll hear it on our next shows. It’s so long and we have to cut two other songs to make room for it.

And which song do you like to play best live?
Tor: I think I like some of the new songs best. Like ‘Dare you’. It’s fun to play. It sounds very hard, but it’s not.

Einar: Live I like playing ‘Dare you’ or ‘Not even a name’ since it is quite easy to headbang on. The things I play are not particularly advanced and I’m not singing all the time so I’m finally able to do it.

Tor: Another thing I like with ‘Dare you’ is that you can bang to it but it’s not like 4/4, not a standard so you have to headbang in a different way that nobody can follow. And I like to be able to bang my head even though it’s not natural.

You mentioned something about new songs. So is there a new album in the making?
We are nearly finished with all the songs actually.

Do you plan to have it ready before the tour with Therion starts?
We are aiming for that but I’m not sure if that’s a realistic plan.

But will the crowd get to hear it?
Yea, they’d get a taste probably but not as many as at the concert from Skuret because then we just tried out several songs. Normally we don’t play 4 new songs at a concert.

That’s also another reason that might make us wait, because it’s nice to play in front of an audience before you decide about the final form of recording a song. Maybe you want to change something. For example the Tall Poppy songs we had them for ages before we recorded them and they went through many many changes. Major changes. ‘Passing’ went through 4 major changes that sounded completely different. It wasn’t the same song. The chorus was like double speed or something. ‘White’ is actually our oldest song in the album. We made it right after Aeolia. That’s why probably ‘White’ is more like the older songs, it’s more rock, more straight forward than the other stuff.

So altogether how long did you work on the album?
2 years. Because we recorded Aeolia. We could have been much faster, but our drummer quit and Tobias replaced him and we needed some time. And we didn’t have anything to force us to record a new CD or press us to make songs. Now we have to come up with new songs for the next release. Back then we only made songs when we found it appropriate.

And now that you are leaving on tour and to festivals this summer, will you put the recording on hold?
No, not on hold but we need to sort some things out before we enter the studio. We need to sort out the label situation.

Will you work with Ihsahn again?
We haven’t talked about it. It’s nothing officially decided.

About the coming tour..
I am quite excited to see how we’re going to be received by Therion fans. It’s at least thousand people per concert, so probably we can reach some of them, even if Therion is more in a gothic like direction.

Recently, a metal Norwegian band, Keep of Kalessin, participated in the local Eurovision final. Would you do it if you had the chance?
I don’t know if we’d fit in and if we’d be able to make a short enough song. One riff on the song. It’s not that I have anything against it, I respect the work they do there, it’s just not us and our target.

You have an American label. How come you ended up with a contract over the ocean instead of Europe?
We just sent the album after we recorded it. Sent it around and we got good response from some European ones but we were not that satisfied. It took so long by the time they replied and this other label replied very fast and showed their interest at once. We found out they could do their job and went with them.

Any words for the fans who are going to see you live?
Come to our show (in Bucharest). We are going to play White. We promise.

We are looking forward for concerts where the crowd is not very spoiled with metal concerts, like the Norwegians are. For example, we are sorry to miss Therion’s show in Lithuania because they don’t get so many chances for concerts and the people show it differently at concerts.

NOTE: For our Romanian fans, at the time of the interview the concert in Romania hasn’t been yet confirmed but there’s chances for a concert with Therion and Leprous that shouldn’t be missed.

For more about the band, checkout their website at http://leprous.net/

Infernal Easter – 2010

For the video side of things, youtube playlist of vids I took
http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=FE4BC5097E29FE50

Tuesday – Thrills at the museum

Not officially an Inferno festival day, but on the page it was presented as a grand opening of the IMC at the Norwegian Viking Ship Museum, Tuesday 30th of March at 19:00. It was the concert of Wardruna, the brainchild of Kvitrafn (Einar Selvik), who started the project of making music out of the Norse runes after he left Gorgoroth as their drummer in 2004.
According to their website, WARDRUNA is the sound of the Norse forgotten culture and played their very first show at The Viking Ship Museum during IMC 2009. That event was held during normal daytime opening hours, and the audience was mesmerized by the heavily emotional experience. Al I can tell you is that the audience who joined for this event on Tuesday, as it was outside the opening hours, was as mesmerized as the initial crowd. It was all due the combination of the hundreds of years old viking ship on the background, surreal light effects changing shade every song, weird and odd instruments played by people who got so captivated by the music as when they wandered their eyes over you, you could have just felt their music passing through you.

The concert didn’t last for long, but it was enough to introduce you in the ‘easter’ infernal atmosphere offer by the city of Oslo for this week. I left the museum with my batteries charged and with my ears delighted by what they experienced.

In a pub in Oslo, afterwards, we went and saw Trollfest live. I don’t think it was part of the festival schedule, but it was a fun concert with one of the band members wearing fur clothes and the saxophone singer making really funny faces. The way they combine metal with balcanic rhythms made many people dance around in the small pub.

Wednesday – Indian menu

At Inferno, Wednesday has been the club night, where smaller bands play at different venues around the city. And some of these bands make it to the main stages next year or few years after, like Negura Bunget did. We couldn’t go to see all bands since the concerts run at the same time so we went to Blå for the 3 acts there.
Spearhead
First there was a British band called Spearhead and they played their death metal without really impressing many people. They did some mistakes and were not very convincing. null
Scribe
Next up was the surprise band for us. They are called Scribe and they come from India. They had funny outfits, wearing their jackets but they explained that they just arrived from 40 degrees to like 2-3 and they are just cold. The performance was impressive. A hard core show, reminding of System of a Down’s crazyness in some parts of the vocals. They had a lot of fun, the crowd was entertained and seeing Indian people headbanging was quite new to me and nice to see. At some point they asked two long haired people from the audience to come and headbang on the stage with them. It was such a crazy sight to see two local vikings, taller than all the members, long haired as well, among the 5 piece small Indians. It’s a band to checkout, nevertheless.
Vomitory
The evening ended with Vomitory. A brutal death band, who did their job well, rocked the place and showed their experience in the quality of their music. In my opinion they would have been better than some of the bands of the other days who played on bigger stages. All in all, an entertaining club evening with a very nice Indian surprise.

Thursday – Trolls day

I didn’t get the chance to attend the concerts on Thursday, so I will speak little about it, based on the feedback I received from my friends.
Belphegor
The Austrians satisfied the wish of some people for very brutal death metal and put up a good quality show that has triggered a lot of headbanging.
Finntroll
The folkish metal that people expected was played at its best and made the crowd dance to different rhythms than the other bands.
Marduk

//monica to fill in

Friday – Night of the Emperor

Ram-Zet
I missed Mistur’s show, so the first one for the day was Ram-Zet, on main stage. The female singer, a woman with big soul to say so, tried her best at impressing the audience and the result was not that bad. Voice is cool and powerful and she’s good at doing her act. So was the keyboardist girl whose hair looked as if set on fire. But I was more impressed by the violin solos spread during their songs, or some nice intros. But I would have picked many other bands that played on smaller stags to replace them, since their almost Goth like style didn’t sound like a right piece of the festival. Plus it felt weird that the voice of the male vocalist resembled more a woman, than the female vocalist. null

Benediction
It was time for some more death metal. I didn’t know Benediction from before so I just hoped for a nice surprise and I wasn’t disappointed by their energic show during which they called for moshpits and managed to get the crowd in front of the stage go nuts. Since they didn’t seem to have any new recent album out, the feast for those who enjoyed their old works was big. But I wouldn’t call it the best show of the festival and after few songs it was no longer interesting so I moved along. null

Obscura
More death metal started afterwards at the smaller stage at John Dee. It was a 4 men show and already pretty packed when I got there since everyone seemed to want to check them out. And we got rewarded for our curiosity with an impressive brutal death music that even made the beers head bang. I especially enjoyed the headbanging style of the guitarist, as he was putting one knee on the ground and started spinning his head like a mill. Also the guitar of the vocalist was catching your eye since it lacked the head. The ecstasy reached its climax during the 3 minutes drum solo that made me once again wish the organizers had a different choice for some of the bands on the main stage. These guys totally rocked the small venue at John Dee. null

Ihsahn
For all I care, Ihsahn, supported by the amazing new commers from Leprous, could have been the one and only band of the festival. And play for all 4 days. It was obvious that it is a show of a guy with experience, but above this, with passion for what he’s doing and with interest for details in his music. They performed stuff from the new album, but without forgetting great songs from previous ones, thus taking you into a journey where black metal is surprisingly combined with such a wide variety of tunes. nullThere was a small problem with the bass during the first song but it got quickly solved and what came after was history. The band members played with accuracy and passion and despite their youngness (according to the site, they are between 19 and 24), Leprous outcame many of the experienced performers I saw this week. There was a saxophone on stage at few songs, completing the lovely sound of the music. And all this good music was spiced with one of the best light show I saw, without being extremely pompous. Having seen it from the top floor (Rockefeller offers you the chance to stay next to the stage or go to the 1st or second floor and have an awesome sight over the whole stage and crowd below you) has made the experience even more complete.

Mayhem

Saturday – Nexus Polaris

Taake
To put us back on our feet after the tiredness of the previous days, first band of the day for me was Taake. And their crazy fast drumming, combined with the intensity of guitar and bass riffs was successful for a ‘morning’ coffee. I moved around during their concert since the sound didn’t seem at its best but eventually the problem got fixed. The crowd was enjoying the concert in the black metal way, almost more still than a church crowd, main difference being the raising of horns and the occasional banging of the long hairs. But the band probably headbanged way more than anyone in the audience. I don’t think they even needed cooling fans on stage. They even had a guest on stage, Carpathian Forest’s Nattefrost. And the face painting wasn’t missing, contributing to the perfect atmosphere of a true black metal concert. Or should I say true Norwegian black metal? Details, details. null

Irr
Batteries charged so moving on to John Dee as I was told that Irr is worth checking out. They came up one by one, each holding a hammer and smashing something in the middle of the stage. Their bodies, or at least the visible parts had dark greenish paint on it so I am not sure if they meant to resemble zombies or trolls, yet it fit well with the hammers and the remaining setting f the stage. But these details were uninteresting when they started to perform. It was a 3 pieces band and so I was impressed with the intensity of the music, though a bit too extreme at points. I heard they previously made it to Wacken so I think that explains the stage show, since they have been through the experience of a big festival and know what it takes to be in front of the crowd. As usual I appreciate bands who like to be on stage since it makes their music even more enjoyable, even if not my cup of tea. null

Deströyer 666
And back again to the main stage at Rockefeller for some good mix of black, death and thrash metal from this band with members from various countries. The crowd didn’t seem too eager to see them since it was rather easy to find a place in the first rows but it was only their loss if they decided to be somewhere else. It is not a band known to me, but it happened that I ended up with the idea of Slayer at some points in the show, so no regrets for staying and hearing them for a while. null

The Kovenant
Inferno festival prepared the surprise of Kovenant reunion for the 10th year anniversary of the festival. And the band decided to play the whole Nexus Polaris for this occasion. I heard various opinions regarding the choice of the album, yet I think they made a good one. We went long time before it started and hang on to the fence in front of the stage so we could have a first hand experience. And we guarded the place well We had glances of Sarah Jezebel Deva coming up on the stage on our side and well, with all due respect for her voice, nobody was thrilled by her choice of outfit. The curtains were pulled and we’ve been revealed a rather simple stage setting, with a bit band logo and…band members. With interesting outfits, yet not extreme ones. A very nice thing was that the first words were about presenting each of the band members and which project they come from. And the 2nd surprise that the band had for Inferno crowd was a newly recorded song and never performed before. I don’t recall if they said anything about a new album, but the song worked very well as an intro. It was only instrumental. Then Nagash announced that Nexus Polaris shall begin. It was a delight to listen to it. It felt like the songs got a bit of extra arrangements at times, but due the intensity of my own headbanging I am not sure if the sound just got distorted. A bit of editing after having had heard my recordings and the impression that Sarah Jezebel Deva did have a good voice day just confirmed. That’s a pitty. But the music kept on flowing, the crowd kept on singing along and applauding, the musicians gave their best and I am convinced they loved the time on stage as much as those who loved seeing them. There was nothing extravagant with their show, no super extra fancy riffs or solos, but just the pleasure of hearing a good old album played from A to Z and this band reunited on stage.


Death Angel
A big surprise for me at this festival. I knew their name, I had seen them before at Graspop but in a much smaller setting. They were the last band of the day on the main stage and also the last band of the festival. I no longer stayed in front, I went to the middle floor so have a better view over the stage and it offered a perfect experience of this band’s performance. You could see the fact that they’ve been around for quite a while since they knew how to put up a show. With their thrash music sending you back to the early days of Metallica maybe, they got the crowd to head bang and to scream a lot during their performance.

Despite having their 10 years anniversary, Inferno had a weaker lineup than previous years in my opinion. Don’t read that I was disappointed, maybe it’s also because I didn’t know many of the names on the list. Yet, I encountered nice surprises and I will be looking forward to attend this alternative to the normal Easter in the capital of Black metal. It is a week where the normal dark metalheads that seem so gloomy and mean on the streets are gathering in these not so big venues and share the joy of good music, beer and most of all a friendly atmosphere. It was incredible how easy it is to just run into them and start talking, how an enormous block wearing spikes apologizes if he hits you by mistake and how happily they smile whenever they come across a known person. And even an unknown one that just comes to you and tell you that you love them. Keep an eye out for the next editions.

But this is how it all started: