Melechesh lyrics

Melechesh

Top Melechesh lyrics

92
178

Melechesh
116

Melechesh
239

Melechesh
151

Melechesh
135

Melechesh
69
85

Melechesh biography

Originally a solo project established in 1993 by vocalist/guitarist Melechesh Ashmedi, Melechesh -- the band -- were one of the first d**h/black metal groups to emerge from the city of Jerusalem. Guitarist Moloch and drummer Lord Curse were recruited the following year, and Melechesh quickly began developing their admittedly extreme, but culturally relevant "Mesopotamian Metal" by combining Middle Eastern music and history with heavy metal. By naming their first demo "As Jerusalem Burns...Al' Intisar" and openly admitting to Satanic worship in interviews, Melechesh understandably gained both local notoriety and a police rap sheet, seeing as such heretical behavior is literally illegal in that holiest of cities. Of course, there is no such thing as "bad" press, and all of this hullabaloo only served to fuel the band's fast-rising underground profile, and scored them the opportunity to release their The Siege of Lachish EP via the Devilish Music Propaganda label. Come 1996, with ba**ist Al'Hazred having joined their merry crew, Melechesh also agreed to re-record As Jerusalem Burns for an official CD release, but, more than anything else, this inauspicious debut mostly served to prove that the band's musical abilities had yet to catch up to the controversy that preceded them. By then, their geographic location had also become a limiting factor, Jerusalem not exactly being known for its successful or active music industry. So after tiring of near-impossible working conditions and rare concert opportunities, beginning in 1998 the members of Melechesh, minus drummer Lord Curse, started migrating to continental Europe: Moloch to France, the other two to the Netherlands. After securing a new record deal with French independent Osmose Productions, Melechesh achieved a major coup when they convinced renowned Absu drummer Proscriptor (real name Russ Givens) to perform on their international debut, 2001's Djinn. In the end, the long wait had been well worth it, since this landmark release most certainly met, even exceeded, prior expectations for the band's vaunted "Mesopotamian Metal." A string of international concert dates followed, and a promo video was even recorded for the track "Genies, Sorcerers and Mesopotamian Nights" before Melechesh finally took some time off to bask in their newfound underground fame. Three years later, they were back with another acclaimed album named Sphynx. ~ Ed Rivadavia, All Music Guide