Archive for November, 2008

Maine Campus Interview – Full Text

Posted in Interviews, Maine, Metal on November 11, 2008 by Jeremy

So it turns out the Maine Campus website is incredibly lame in that it requires registration to view any of its content. It’s free, but annoying enough to prevent most people from giving a damn. So here’s the full text of the interview as published by both the website and the printed publication.

WMEB Spot: Ministry of Metal
by Kegan Zema

Jeremy Swist, a Latin and secondary education student at the University of Maine, hosts the weekly radio show, “The Ministry of Metal,” Sundays from 7 to 10 p.m.

MC: What got you first involved with WMEB?

Swist: I saw an advertisement on FirstClass, and they said they needed metal DJs. So I thought I might as well take the opportunity to expose the kind of metal I was into, which wasn’t the kind that most people think of what metal is.

MC: What characterizes your type of metal?

Swist: I specialize in extreme metal, like black metal and death metal, but I also love more traditional styles like doom metal and heavy metal. What most current people think of when they think of metal is the new-wave American heavy metal, like Lamb of God and Godsmack and some bands that aren’t actually metal. People who aren’t into metal, they look at that [type of metal] and think that’s what the entire genre is like. But that’s the case with every genre of music. People will look at hip-hop and if they’re not really into it, think hip-hop is all 50 Cent and Lil’ Wayne, but they shouldn’t by any means represent what the genre really is.

MC: On your show, do you try to show people that there is a whole different side to the genre?

Swist: That’s part of my mission. I am on this forum called ultimatemetal.com, and it’s basically a music discussion forum. I will post the Webstream link, and they [other forum users] will listen in. I get requests from them, and they use it to discover the bands I’m into. Sometimes people who have their own really underground band will send me songs to play on the station, and there are also local bands I promote on the show.

MC: How did you first start listening to metal? As an extreme genre, most people slip into it from something else; they don’t just walk into a store and pick up a Slayer CD out of nowhere.

Swist: How most people get really deep into metal is they start with the bands that they think represent the genre as a whole. Those surface bands that once they’re really into the genre, they look back at them and think they don’t have much substance. In early high school, I got into nu-metal like System of a Down and Linkin Park, and I just moved deeper from there. I got into Metallica and Rammstein and from there, I got into bands that I could no longer find on Napster or Kazaa, so I actually had to physically buy CDs. Then I joined that forum and that opened a whole new world of music to me. The thing with extreme metal is it takes a while to acclimatize, because there are certain elements of it that aren’t very accessible.

MC: Much of the metal scene you’re are a fan of is based out of Europe. Do you feel that you are at an advantage or a disadvantage living in the United States?

Swist: Well I’m certainly isolated from the European metal scene. Metal is huge in Europe. In Norway, black metal evolved kind of as a counter-culture but also very much based in their ancestral roots. What black metal has become today is a very extreme representation of culture. So I just want to make people over here realize that metal is very deep and significant – it’s not just angry music.

MC: The metal scene often revolves around being the most legitimate. However, I have seen many die-hard metal fans embrace Dethklok from the Adult Swim show “Metalocalypse,” a completely fictional band. What is your take on the Dethklok phenomenon?

Swist: Well, I personally don’t really like Dethklok, I have always seen them as just a parody band, stereotyping the metal culture. But I think people are really into them because they are just a fun band. You have another band like Gwar, that’s also kind of a joke band, but there’s also a serious aspect to it.

MC: I noticed you are wearing an Amon Amarth shirt. I know they represent almost the opposite of the idea of being a parody band because they have such a fervent belief in Viking culture. Do find that many of the metal bands you enjoy are fully entrenched in the music they make and the world they live in?

Swist: Well, the problem is that creativity is hard to come by, and no genre of music is free of trends. So with black metal there is the whole satanic trends. Most bands don’t take it seriously, but they think that in order to be legitimate ,they have to adopt that persona. It’s the same with death metal and the death and gore lyrics. The key element to any of those genres is defined by the music, the thematic stuff is just superficial. But because it’s more easily perceptible … a genre is defined by its image, not by its music, and I don’t find that to be fair.

MC: Anything else you’d like to add?

Swist: Check out my show. See the other side of the coin, what’s under the surface, and let the music speak for itself.

“The Ministry of Metal,” part of the complete WMEB lineup, can be heard on 91.9 FM, online at wmeb.fm and on channel 20 of campus television.

“Ministry of Metal” Featured in The Maine Campus

Posted in Maine, Metal on November 10, 2008 by Jeremy

This week’s edition of the Maine Campus, UMaine’s student-run informational and cultural publication, has conducted an interview with myself for the WMEB Spot. Kegan Zema, a reporter and fellow DJ, helped me promote my show by putting my words to the page of what Metal is really about. 

Besides newsprint, the interview is available here on the The Maine Campus website.

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Coincidentally, my roommate Zev Eisenberg is featured in the same issue in an article for the Juggling Club (I actually took the picture).

In other news, I have just registered for Spring semester classes. I got all my first choices, which are the following:

LAT 454: Latin Prose of the Late Republic & Early Empire

GRE 102: Elementary Ancient Greek II

HON 212: Civilizations Past Present & Future IV

EDB 221: Educational Psychology

AST 109/110: Introduction to Astronomy (with Lab)

In terms of my Spring schedule this will leave me with no classes before dinner on Mondays and Wednesdays, and no classes at all on Fridays. This gives me convenient times to pursue a part-time job, hopefully working within the Modern Languages & Classics Department. I don’t think I could stand another four months in a dining hall dishroom!

Shadar Logoth @ The Keith Anderson House – 10/30/08

Posted in Live Reviews on November 4, 2008 by Jeremy

10162008_124452_0Last Thursday WMEB hosted a Halloween “Triple Creature Feature” at the Keith Anderson Community House on 19 Bennoch Road in downtown Orono, Maine. Several dozen UMaine students made the trek over the Stillwater River to see the best metal band the university has produced so far. Opening for dance-pop acts Feel It Robot and DJ Pres, Shadar Logoth sallied forth in promotion of their new album Curse.

Despite announcing their dissolution after their summer show at the 103 Ultralounge, Eaton, Denson and Michaud pulled their act together, though bereft of drumming sensation Ardroth (Bothildir). By the Vader shirt worn by their replacement skinsman, I was assured they hired no pushover. His performance confirmed my hopes.

The old recital hall burst into a haven of headbanging with their first song “Spitting His Curse With Venom”, which quickly moved into a nirvana of clean guitars and virtuous bass-work. It didn’t take long to get the audience thoroughly enthused, including a Joker impersonator being “so serious” (there was a costume competition).

The sound quality was top notch, as Eatons vocals and guitar solos shined through the thunderous rhythm section as did Michaud’s epic keyboard flares.

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While playing favorites from both their new album and their acclaimed 2006 demo, Shadar Logoth also threw in a couple cover tunes to spice up the night. Early on they chimed in with the Metallica classic “For Whom the Bell Tolls,” to which Eaton deftly adapted some thrashy vocals. So much for Death Magnetic. Later on they belted out a more emotional song by Type O Negative: a song called “Wolf Moon” which got the audience bringing their hands together for an act just as dedicated to their influences as to their own craft.

Given the positive responses after their set, I’d say this concert finally got Shadar Logoth the exposure they deserved since their first performances a couple years ago. Please check out their Myspace link on the right of this page and pick up their new album, soon to be released. I can’t wait to see these guys again, hopefully next time with Ardroth back in the fold.

Setlist:

Spitting His Curse With Venom

Phantom Destination

For Whom the Bell Tolls (Metallica cover)

Footsteps in the Snow

Of the Lanterns

Wolf Moon (Type O Negative cover)

The Dread Lord

 

Universitas Mainensis Condita MDCCCLXV

Posted in Maine on November 1, 2008 by Jeremy

As hinted by the post title, I have begun my translation of the University of Maine Wikipedia article. I’m already through the first paragraph, and after consulting with Dr. Passman, and navigating all the wiki-protocols, I hope to have a direct translation of the English article. Ite Ursi Nigri!

And on that note, I’m pleased to announce the advent of the Maine Senior Classical League. This has been a major project of my girlfriend, Megan Aydelott, and I will serve as secretary to her presidency. I’ll provide more on this once we have our first official proceedings. We will be attending the Junior Classical League convention later this month in Winthrop, Maine.

And finally, Happy Halloween to all, whether you hit the town in full regalia or sequestered yourselves at home to watch horror movies. Abandoning my original plan to go as The Joker, I suggested that my roommate, Zev Eisenberg, and myself dress as one another. Megan decided to also dress as Zev. For those who knew us, the reactions were epically hilarious. For those unaware, Zev is a peculiar dresser: dress shirts/pants, black goatee and a silly knit hat. Zev threw on some band shirts, glasses, a wig and my camo pants to emulate my character. We joined Melissa Carter’s crew for the masquerade ball at the Memorial Union. With delight we took in the scenery, the tarot readings and the chainsaw exhaust fumes in the haunted house. Of course, Zev had to do a photo shoot before we headed off (more photos here):