No Poor man´s Bodom
First there was Omnium Gatherum´s Spirits And August Light, then
Mors Principium Est´s Inhumanity, and now another new Finnish
crop called Elenium are prepared to amaze us with their debut album,
For Giving - For Getting, on Rage Of Achilles.
By Chris Bruni
Unique, Hard-hitting, visceral, emotional
progressive death metal that possesses wicked fortitude, Elenium ( comprised
of vocalist Jukka, keyboardist Johannes Salo, guitarists Kasperi Heikkinen
and Tommi Leinonen, bass player Tuomo Raisanen, and drummer Mikko Niemela
) seem like a band for people who thought Amorphis flaked out after
Tales From The Thousand Lakes. Maybe a mini death metal version of Dream
Theater or Symphony X.
"The
comparisons to Amorphis are pretty much out of date if you just listen
to the music," says bassist Tuomo. "They were a huge influence
for us in the mid ´90s and the fact that they were from the
same ´hood as us was important. It gave us hope that you can
make it pretty far from the suburbs by doing your own thing. They
haven´t influenced our music for years, even though I respect
them as a band. I really can´t make a list of our influences
because each member of Elenium has his own taste. Dream Theater is
surely a band of great musicians but from that progressive edge, Symphony
X is definitely the number one band for us, especially for Johannes
and Kasperi. They seldom run out of superlatives when speaking of
that band. On the other hand, most melodic Finnish metal bands are
compared to Children of Bodom no matter what they sound like. Luckily
there aren´t so many poor man´s Bodoms around anymore."
"Being
formed in 1995 and working more or less professionally since ´98,
we´re not totally newcomers within the industry," Tuomo
replies. "We´ve already experienced a shit load of negative
things in this business. We have done three demos and lots of promos
for zines and labels. Kasperi has had his own band, Merging Flare,
for ten years and he`s studying to become a professional musician
so he has a lot of experience. Johannes started playing piano when
he was four years old and the rest of us have been playing for about
ten years or so. But being a star and playing five-thumbed truck driver
isn´t a way of getting appreciation in here. The more you learb
to play the better you understand how lousy you actually are."
Finland
has spawned quite the interesting metal scene, newer bands like Omnium
Gatherum, Mors Principium Est and Elenium, making the best impression
this year...
"You
may have a point there. I too have noticed that most Finnish bands
have something in their music that makes it sound Finnish. There´s
a certain melancholy involved mostly. I have also noticed that the
standard of metal bands in Finland is really high at the moment. Omnium
Gatherum are really good friens of ours. We´ve played most of
our recent gigs with them and I´ve also played one gig as Omnium
Gatherum´s bass player when their bassist was unavailable. Our
vocalist Jukka also growls on two songs of Omnium Gatherum´s
Spirits album and Kasperi also played one solo for that album. But
we still are pretty unknown in Finland, probably even more unknown
than somewhere else in Europe because most of our promotion for the
last five years has been for other countries rather than Finland."
"The
main theme on the album is the selfishness of the human mind and different
aspects on how it reflects in the world we live in," Offers Tuomo,
reflecting on the album´s themes. "We´ve experienced
some really depressing events before the studio sessions because our
equipment literally drowned in shit after a sewer broke down near
our rehearsal place. That and some personal unfortunate happenings
may have brought some extra gloomy and bitter atmosphere to the album.
Some people are probably upset because our music is called progressive
death and we don´t actually write about death. We didn´t
invent the enormous need to categorize all music. In our case it is
much more brutal to write about the tragedy of being alive than some
imaginary stories about dissecting human bodies. I don´t judge
bands who do that because they do it better than we ever could. It´s
just not our thing."