SODOM Frontman Working On New ONKEL TOM Record - "It’ll Be A Bigger Explosion Than The New Sodom Album"
December 31, 2010, 13 years ago
In a recent interview with BW&BK; scribe Carl Begai, SODOM frontman Tom Angelripper offered some insight into his forthcoming ONKEL TOM album:
“We’re in the studio right now working on a new Onkel Tom record. We’ve got 18 news songs, the drums are recorded and we’re working on the guitars now. I also have a deal with Drakkar, which is where Onkel Tom started back in the ‘90s. You’ll be surprised; you won’t be able to compare it to the early days of Onkel Tom. I have a second guitarist in the band, a new drummer, a new bass player, and it’s brilliant music. It’s punk, it’s metal, it’s death metal, it’s schlager, everything. Andy Brings (ex-Sodom guitarist) is the producer. I asked him to be a part of it because he’s a great singer and guitarist; he’s a real musician so he knows what he’s doing. It’s a co-production, really, but I definitely wanted Andy’s ears for this. It’ll be a bigger explosion than the new Sodom album (laughs).”Following is an excerpt from the interview with Angelripper about Sodom's new record, In War And Pieces:
At first glance Sorychta seems like an odd choice as producer for the album given that he made his name as a producer working with bands like Lacuna Coil, Moonspell and The Gathering. There’s a tendency to forget he’s a guitarist as well, heading up Grip Inc. through the ‘90s and now Enemy Of The Sun, both acts offering up much heavier fare.
“He knows exactly what we want,” says Angelripper, content with his choice. “I’ve known him for years and I really like the production work he did with Grip Inc.; they always had a good sound. Waldemar told us that it doesn’t matter what kind of metal he’s working with – thrash, death metal, gothic – the important thing is that it sounds good at the end. He was also very interested in the actual songs on the album, so we did pre-production three months before we recorded anything. He had the chance to really listen to the music, work on some arrangements, and then we went into the studio. It wasn’t even a real studio; it was a rehearsal room because I didn’t want to be paying 1,000 euros a day so that we had to work quickly to get out before we went broke (laughs). I had the money to pay Waldemar, and we had as much time as we needed to record.”Click here for the complete story.