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Gallhammer
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Gallhammer (/ˈɡælhæmər/) were a Japanese extreme metal group that drew on black metal,[1] doom metal and crust punk.[2][3] They formed in Tokyo in 2003 and released three studio albums.
Key Information
The final group lineup consisted of Vivian Slaughter (vocals, bass guitar) and Risa Reaper (vocals, drums); the original lineup included Mika Penetrator (vocals, guitar).
Biography
[edit]Their first recording, a free demo tape limited to 30 copies, was distributed at their first gig at Koiwa Death Fest Vol.2, around March 2003, in Japan. In July of the same year, the self-titled demo was released. By April of the following year, they had released another demo, Endless Nauseous Days, and were working towards their debut full-length CD. The 8-track album, entitled Gloomy Lights, was released in November 2004 through Hello From The Gutter Records.
In January 2006, Gallhammer was signed to Peaceville Records, on the recommendation of Darkthrone.[4] A CD/DVD pack, entitled The Dawn of..., was released, containing a CD, demo and rehearsal footage, and a DVD recording of Gallhammer performing in Okayama and five concerts in Tokyo.
Gallhammer released their second full-length album, Ill Innocence, through Peaceville Records in September 2007, followed by a European tour. In March 2008, they did a second European tour. They also played at the Inferno Metal Festival in June.
For their third LP The End released in 2011 their guitarist, Mika Penetrator, was no longer present, but nevertheless the band chose to continue as a bass-drums duo.[5] For allmusic.com´s reviewer Phil Freeman "this has changed their musical style quite a bit; the thrashing punk metal of 2004's Gloomy Lights and 2007's Ill Innocence can still be heard on songs like "Rubbish CG202" and "Entropy G35," but tracks like "Aberration," "Sober," and the title cut are totally different—slow, sludgy death marches that owe more to Flipper and the Melvins than black metal."[5]
Gallhammer appeared in Nocturno Culto's film The Misanthrope: The Existence of Solitude and Chaos.[6]
Influences
[edit]In an interview with Contraband Candy, Vivian Slaughter cited Hellhammer, Celtic Frost, Amebix and Burzum as Gallhammer's main musical influences.[7] Slaughter is also a passionate fan of Judas Priest,[8] and once called Corrupted "the greatest band in the world".[9] She says she was first inspired to play music after seeing Napalm Death and Painkiller in concert.[4]
Lisa Reaper is a fan of old school techno, krautrock, Kraftwerk and Laibach.[8]
The band's other influences include Joy Division, Antisect, Carcass, Cathedral, Morbid Angel and Scorn.[10] The group is also inspired by Japanoise and have collaborated with Incapacitants.[8]
While the group borrows from crust and anarcho-punk, they do not identify with a particular political outlook.[11]
Members
[edit]- Current
- Vivian Slaughter – lead vocals, bass
- Lisa Reaper – drums, backing vocals
- Former
- Mika Penetrator – guitars, backing vocals (2003–2010)
Discography
[edit]- Studio albums
- Gloomy Lights (2003)
- Ill Innocence (2007)
- The End (2011)
- Other albums
- The First Reh-Tape (demo) (2003)
- Gallhammer (demo) (2003)
- Endless Nauseous Days (demo) (2004)
- Beyond The Hatred (EP) (2007)
- The Dawn of... (compilation) (2007)
- A Taste of Despair (EP) (2010)
- Videos
- The Dawn of... (2007)
- Ruin of a Church (2008)
References
[edit]- ^ "Hard of Hearing", Terrorizer no. 171, June 2008, p. 56.
- ^ "Gallhammer – The Dawn Of… review". metalstorm.ee. March 6, 2007. Archived from the original on July 7, 2007. Retrieved February 24, 2008.
What do we have here? A compilation of a young Japanese band who wants to play Black / Crust Metal ?
- ^ "Gallhammer Biography". Peaceville Records. Archived from the original on July 7, 2007. Retrieved February 24, 2008.
Although Gallhammer had been known primarily as a black metal/punk act, the album was impressively diverse, showing their implementation of many influences and moods from both metal and non-metal genres.
- ^ a b Interview with Rockers NYC. [1] Access date: October 24, 2008.
- ^ a b "The End – Gallhammer – Songs, Reviews, Credits – AllMusic". AllMusic.
- ^ "Review of Nocturno Culto – The Misanthrope: The Existence of Solitude and Chaos". Metal Crypt. July 8, 2007. Retrieved November 24, 2015.
- ^ ContrabandCandy (October 4, 2007). "Gallhammer Interview". Archived from the original on December 15, 2021 – via YouTube.
- ^ a b c "Hard of Hearing", Terrorizer No. 171, June 2008, p. 56-57.
- ^ Doukas, Yiannis (December 9, 2007). "Vivian Slaughter (Gallhammer) interview". Metal Temple. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved November 24, 2015.
- ^ Interview with Cosmic Lava, October 2004. [2] Archived January 5, 2009, at the Wayback Machine Access date: October 26, 2008.
- ^ "I never wanted to write political lyrics or sing about political topics – I just don't feel I can handle the responsibility, but me and many others in Japan were influenced by bands on Crass Records. But the political and economic systems in Japan and the UK are very different." – Vivian Slaughter, "Hard of Hearing", Terrorizer No. 171, June 2008, p. 56-57.
External links
[edit]Gallhammer
View on GrokipediaHistory
Formation and early releases (2003–2004)
Gallhammer was formed in Tokyo, Japan, in February 2003 by Vivian Slaughter on vocals and bass, along with Risa Reaper on drums and vocals, and Mika Penetrator on guitar and vocals, as an all-female ensemble drawing inspiration from the underground extreme metal scene, particularly the raw aggression of bands like Hellhammer.[4][10] The members, who had prior experience in noise and other extreme genres but were relatively new to their instruments, aimed to create a primitive, DIY sound rooted in the local punk and metal underground.[11] The band's inaugural recording, the rehearsal tape The First Reh-Tape, was released on March 12, 2003, as a limited-edition cassette of just 30 numbered copies, distributed for free at their debut performance on March 29 at Koiwa Death Fest Vol. 2 in Tokyo.[12][13] Later that year, on July 5, they self-released their debut demo, also titled Gallhammer, on CD-R, which showcased a raw fusion of crust punk and black metal elements through aggressive riffs, hoarse vocals, and relentless drumming.[14] Early sets at this time often incorporated covers of influential tracks by Hellhammer and Amebix, reinforcing their ties to crust and early black metal aesthetics.[4] In 2004, Gallhammer issued their second demo, Endless Nauseous Days, on March 10, marking an evolution toward slower, more atmospheric doom influences while retaining their gritty core, with tracks two and three captured live on March 18 at the underground venue Kouenji 20000v.[15][16] In 2004, Gallhammer also released their debut studio album, Gloomy Lights, independently through labels such as Goatsucker Records and Hello From The Gutter, showcasing their raw crust-punk and black metal fusion.[17] These initial releases and performances in Tokyo's noise and punk circuits helped cultivate a dedicated local cult following through grassroots distribution and word-of-mouth within Japan's extreme music community.[18][19]Signing with Peaceville and international tours (2005–2009)
In January 2006, Gallhammer signed with Peaceville Records, a move that expanded their reach beyond Japan's underground scene through improved international distribution.[20][21] The deal came at the recommendation of Darkthrone's members, aligning the trio with a label known for extreme metal acts.[21] Their debut full-length album, Gloomy Lights, originally released independently in 2004, received a reissue via Peaceville in January 2007, featuring two bonus tracks to mark the band's growing profile.[21] Later that year, on September 24, Gallhammer issued their second studio album, Ill Innocence, through Peaceville, which blended black metal's aggression with doom's atmospheric weight, earning praise in the metal press for its raw, primal energy.[22][23] Critics highlighted tracks like "Blind My Eyes" for their obnoxious, in-your-face delivery and the album's overall somber mood, influenced by Hellhammer.[23] The release also underscored the band's all-female lineup as a challenge to extreme metal's male-dominated norms, with reviewers noting how their sound defied expectations tied to gender.[24][25] Supporting Ill Innocence, Gallhammer embarked on their first European tour in fall 2007, sharing stages with acts like Darkened Nocturn Slaughtercult and Denial of God, which helped solidify their international presence.[26] A follow-up European tour in March 2008 further built momentum, culminating in a performance at Norway's Inferno Metal Festival in Oslo that April.[27][28] These outings showcased the band's live intensity, captured earlier in the 2007 live DVD The Dawn of..., released by Peaceville as a CD/DVD package compiling Japanese festival footage and rehearsal tracks from Okayama and Tokyo.[4][29] Peaceville also issued the digital EP Beyond the Hatred on April 30, 2007, featuring raw tracks like "Crucifixion" and "Hallucination" that emphasized themes of despair, mental violence, and hopelessness central to Gallhammer's lyrics.[30][31] Interviews in metal outlets during this era often focused on these motifs, portraying the band as a voice for emotional turmoil while celebrating their unpolished authenticity.[24] The period marked Gallhammer's transition to a more recognized force in global extreme metal, with Ill Innocence receiving acclaim for its "down 'n' dirty" fusion of genres that "smokes, burns, and churns."[24]Final album and disbandment (2010–2013)
In 2010, guitarist Mika Penetrator departed Gallhammer to pursue other musical endeavors, leaving the band as a duo consisting of Vivian Slaughter on bass and vocals and Risa Reaper on drums and vocals.[32] The duo adapted to the reduced lineup by releasing the EP A Taste of Despair later that year through Peaceville Records, emphasizing a raw intensity driven by bass and drums to maintain their extreme metal sound.[33] Gallhammer's third and final studio album, The End, followed on May 9, 2011, also via Peaceville, and was recorded entirely as a duo at Void)))Lab in Tokyo during mid-October 2010. The album featured a stripped-down, grubby production that amplified its themes of despair and overwhelming gloom, marking a culmination of the band's evolution toward heavier, doom-laden territory.[34][35][36] Following the album's release, Gallhammer's live activity became limited, confined to domestic performances in Japan—such as a 2013 show featuring tracks like "Crucifixion"—with no additional international tours undertaken.[37][38] By 2013, the band's inactivity signaled an effective hiatus, later described by Vivian Slaughter in 2014 as the group being "practically totally inactive" amid personal commitments.[26] Since then, the members have pursued individual projects without any Gallhammer reunions as of 2025; Slaughter has released experimental electronic and noise music under the moniker Viviankrist, including albums like Sundust (2018), while Reaper has contributed to bands such as GISAN and her solo electronic project risaripa.[39][40][9]Musical style and influences
Genres and sound characteristics
Gallhammer's primary genres encompass blackened crust punk, black metal, and doom metal, blending the aggressive, raw energy of crust punk with the atmospheric darkness of black metal and the sludgy heaviness of doom.[24] Their sound is defined by slow, sludgy tempos, lo-fi production that emphasizes raw distortion and minimalism, and screamed vocals that convey intense emotional turmoil.[41] This combination creates an oppressive, nightmarish sonic landscape often described as primitive and discordant, with a focus on atmosphere over technical complexity.[42] The band's sound evolved across their discography, reflecting shifts in lineup and musical focus. Early works from 2003–2004, such as their debut album Gloomy Lights (2004), highlight fast-paced crust aggression with manic, repetitive riffs and delirious shrieks, evoking a rehearsal-room rawness and zombielike shuffle.[41] By their mid-period release Ill Innocence in 2007, the style incorporated more black metal-inspired riffs and doom-laden atmosphere, featuring haunting clean vocals alongside gruff growls, driving bass lines, and filthy guitar noise to heighten a sense of dread and delirium.[24] In the later duo era with The End (2011), the sound turned minimalist, emphasizing bass-and-drums heaviness with static-feedback crust elements and unhinged, experimental vocals, stripping away excess for a bleaker, more introspective gloom.[39] Lyrical themes center on despair, paranoia, hatred, emptiness, and obsession, often exploring nihilistic anguish and anti-religious sentiments through multilingual lyrics in Japanese and English.[43] All three members contributed screamed and growled vocals, delivering these themes with a visceral, unpolished intensity that amplifies the music's mental-violence quality.[42] Instrumentally, Vivian Slaughter's distorted bass serves as the lead voice, providing droning, sludgy foundations, while Risa Reaper's thunderous double-kick drums drive the rhythmic assault with a punk-infused ferocity.[39] During the trio phase, Mika Penetrator's dissonant guitar added layers of raw noise and filth, contributing to the overall decrepit, anti-musical aesthetic.[41] As one of the few all-female bands in the male-dominated extreme metal scene, Gallhammer's outsider perspective infuses their sound with a unique, unyielding authenticity that underscores themes of isolation and rebellion.[24]Key influences
Gallhammer's sound draws heavily from the raw aggression of early black and doom metal, particularly the Swiss pioneers Hellhammer and Celtic Frost, whose primitive riffs and morbid atmospheres profoundly shaped the band's formation and aesthetic. Vivian Slaughter has cited Hellhammer's early demos, such as "Triumph of Death," as a core inspiration, initially envisioning Gallhammer as an all-female ensemble covering their material before evolving into original compositions that echo this proto-black metal ferocity.[42] Similarly, Celtic Frost's influence manifests in the minimalistic, doom-laden structures that permeate Gallhammer's work, blending unrelenting heaviness with atmospheric dread.[44] Atmospheric despair from Norwegian black metal, exemplified by Burzum, further informs their isolationist themes, with Slaughter noting the band's practice of covering Burzum tracks to internalize its bleak, lo-fi intensity.[42] Grindcore and death metal elements from Napalm Death and Carcass contribute the high-speed brutality and crust-tinged ferocity, as Slaughter was first motivated to play music after witnessing Napalm Death and Painkiller live, incorporating their extremity into Gallhammer's relentless pacing.[19] The band's punk and crust roots anchor its anarchic energy, with Amebix serving as a pivotal influence for their D-beat rhythms and sludge-heavy crust punk ethos, which Slaughter describes as a raw, primitive foundation that she emulated extensively.[19] Corrupted's slow, oppressive sludge similarly informs the weighty, despairing undercurrents, while post-punk acts like Joy Division provide emotional depth through haunting melodies and introspective gloom, blending seamlessly with the heavier elements.[42] Additional punk inspirations from Antisect and Dirt amplify the crust core, adding chaotic, anti-establishment urgency to tracks.[19] Beyond core metal and punk, Gallhammer incorporates diverse extremities, including heavy metal riffing from Judas Priest, death metal technicality from Morbid Angel, and noise-jazz chaos from Painkiller—a John Zorn project known for its grind-infused improvisation—which Slaughter encountered during her formative years and integrated for experimental harshness.[45][19] The broader Earache Records roster, including Cathedral and Scorn, influenced her early death metal phase, contributing industrial-tinged doom and dub elements.[19] Influences from the Japanoise scene, Japan's underground noise movement, add layers of abrasive experimentation, evident in collaborations and the band's raw production values.[46] These influences manifest distinctly across Gallhammer's output: their early demos replicate Amebix's D-beat propulsion and Hellhammer's primitivism, establishing a crust-black hybrid from inception.[42] The 2004 album Gloomy Lights channels Celtic Frost's minimalism through sparse, repetitive riffs and lo-fi gloom, creating a hypnotic descent into nausea and hatred.[44][47] By the 2011 release The End, Burzum-like isolation evolves prominently, with tracks built on singular, mind-numbing riffs evoking profound alienation and entropy.[48] Culturally, Gallhammer bridges Japan's vibrant underground noise and punk scenes—rooted in harsh experimentalism and DIY ethos—with European black metal traditions, forging a unique hybrid that amplifies personal torment through global extremity.[19][49] This fusion reflects Slaughter's eclectic tastes, from 1980s UK crust to Earache's death metal, resulting in a sound that transcends genre boundaries while honoring its sources.[42]Members
Vivian Slaughter
Vivian Slaughter, whose real name is Eri Isaka, is a Japanese musician born in 1978 in Tokyo. Active in the underground music scene since the early 2000s, she played saxophone and bass in bands such as Congenital Hell and Nikudorei prior to forming Gallhammer.[5][50] In 2010, she relocated to Oslo, Norway, where she continues to reside.[39] As the founder of Gallhammer, Slaughter served as the band's vocalist and bassist, while also acting as the primary songwriter. She conceived the group in early 2003 as an all-female extreme metal outfit, drawing inspiration from the isolating and dark atmospheres of genres like black metal and crust punk.[19] Her compositions formed the core of the band's sound, featuring raw, primitive riffs that evoked atmosphere and tension, as heard in tracks like "Endless Nauseous Days."[19] Slaughter's lyrics delved into personal themes of mental anguish, including self-hatred, anxiety, mental instability, and cruelty, reflecting her inner experiences and the darker aspects of life.[19][51] Slaughter led Gallhammer through its entire discography, adapting to challenges such as the 2010 departure of guitarist Mika Penetrator by restructuring the band as a duo with drummer Risa Reaper. For the final album The End, she handled lead melodies on bass, emphasizing grimy, vicious lines that drove the sludgy, guitar-less arrangements.[32][52] Known for her commanding and aggressive stage presence, she channeled raw emotion into performances that challenged preconceptions about women in metal.[53] Following Gallhammer's indefinite hiatus around 2013, Slaughter launched solo projects under the Viviankrist moniker, exploring noise, ambient, and electronic music with influences from artists like Kraftwerk and Aphex Twin. Since 2017, she has released over two dozen EPs, often incorporating noisy melodies and collaborating sporadically with former bandmate Risa Reaper in ventures like risaripa. As of 2025, she continues releasing music under Viviankrist, including the live album Live at Kafé Hærverk in Oslo 2025.04 and First Dream earlier that year.[39][9] In interviews, she has peripherally addressed feminism in metal by highlighting the expression of female mental cruelty and instability through aggressive music.[51]Risa Reaper
Risa Egawa, known by her stage name Risa Reaper, is a Japanese musician who emerged from Tokyo's underground punk scene and co-founded the extreme metal band Gallhammer in 2003.[40][45] As the band's original and enduring drummer, she played a pivotal role in shaping its sound through her technical prowess on the kit.[1] In Gallhammer, Risa Reaper handled drums and backing vocals, delivering relentless blast beats and D-beat rhythms that anchored the group's crust punk and doom metal foundation.[35][56] Her drumming emphasized endurance and intensity, providing a driving percussive backbone that complemented the raw, atmospheric heaviness of the music. She also served as a co-vocalist on multiple tracks, layering high-pitched screams and occasional clean squeaks to enhance the band's vocal texture—for instance, she penned a portion of the lyrics for "Blind My Eyes" on the 2007 album Ill Innocence, drawing from her inner negative emotions while prioritizing rhythmic flow over explicit meaning.[57][58] Following guitarist Mika Penetrator's departure in 2010, Risa Reaper sustained the duo dynamic with Vivian Slaughter, heightening drum ferocity in live performances and on the final album The End (2011) to propel the stripped-down arrangements forward.[32] Throughout her tenure, she participated in all major tours, including a standout appearance at the 2008 Inferno Metal Festival in Oslo, Norway, where the band shared stages with international acts amid their European promotional run.[59][60] Risa Reaper's performance style highlighted physical exertion and visceral energy, channeling a forceful presence that amplified Gallhammer's chaotic live aura, especially in the guitar-less duo era where her rhythms took on even greater prominence.[61] After the band's hiatus beginning in 2013, she has engaged sporadically in Japan's noise and experimental scenes, contributing drums and other instruments to projects like Galaxy Express 666 and GISAN, alongside her solo electronic endeavor risaripa. As of 2025, she remains active in experimental music through risaripa, including live performances such as one in June 2025.[62][63][64]Mika Penetrator
Mika Sugimura, known by her stage name Mika Penetrator, joined Gallhammer at its formation in Tokyo in 2003, emerging from the city's underground extreme metal scene.[65][66] As the band's guitarist and occasional vocalist, she contributed dissonant riffs and black metal-inspired leads that defined the trio's sound from 2003 to 2010.[56] Penetrator's guitar work significantly shaped Gallhammer's mid-period aesthetic, particularly on the 2007 album Ill Innocence, where her full, heavy tone integrated seamlessly with the rhythm section to maintain the band's oppressive heaviness while adding layers of atmospheric depth through riffing structures like the dissonant patterns in tracks such as "Delirium Daydream."[56][56] She also performed on the band's European tours in late 2007 and March 2008, where her live guitar presence amplified the trio's crushing intensity during shows across the UK, Norway, and other venues.[67][45] In 2010, Penetrator departed Gallhammer to focus on other commitments, leading the band to continue as a duo without replacing her.[68][36] The split was reported without any indications of conflict.[36] After her departure from the band, Sugimura continued her longstanding role at Intersol Inc. in Tokyo, where she had worked since 2002, advancing to CEO in 2023.[69]Discography
Studio albums
Gallhammer released three studio albums during their active years, each showcasing their evolution from raw, punk-infused crust and doom metal to a more atmospheric and minimalist black metal sound. These full-length releases, primarily through independent and Peaceville Records, garnered acclaim within underground metal circles for their intense, lo-fi aesthetic and all-female lineup's raw energy.[1] Their debut album, Gloomy Lights, was independently released in 2004 via Goatsucker Records, with a reissue on Peaceville Records in 2010. Clocking in at approximately 40 minutes across eight tracks, it was produced by the band and recorded and mixed by Makoto Fujishima at Studio Celephais in August and September 2004, capturing a gritty blend of crust punk aggression and doom-laden atmospheres. Key tracks include "Endless Nauseous Days" and "Crucifixion," which highlight the album's relentless riffs and screeching vocals. The track listing is as follows:| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Endless Nauseous Days | 5:48 |
| 2 | Crucifixion | 4:30 |
| 3 | Tomurai: May Our Father Die | 4:34 |
| 4 | Beyond the Hate Red | 2:51 |
| 5 | Lost My Self | 3:17 |
| 6 | State of Gloom | 3:57 |
| 7 | Aloof and Proud Silence | 5:18 |
| 8 | Color of Coma | 10:07 |
| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | At the Onset of the Age of Despair | 7:49 |
| 2 | Speed of Blood | 3:07 |
| 3 | Blind My Eyes | 3:23 |
| 4 | Delirium Daydream | 3:25 |
| 5 | Ripper in the Gloom | 4:33 |
| 6 | Killed by the Queen | 2:23 |
| 7 | Song of Fall | 6:19 |
| 8 | World to Be Ashes | 4:08 |
| 9 | SLOG | 8:35 |
| 10 | Long Scary Dream | 6:46 |
| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | The End | 7:00 |
| 2 | Rubbish CG202 | 6:02 |
| 3 | Aberration | 4:02 |
| 4 | Sober | 4:00 |
| 5 | Entropy G35 | 2:23 |
| 6 | Wander | 12:06 |
| 7 | 108=7/T-NA | 10:18 |
Demos and extended plays
Gallhammer's demos and extended plays formed the backbone of their early underground catalog, capturing the band's raw evolution from rehearsal sessions to more structured releases while building a dedicated following through limited distributions and festival handouts. The inaugural recording, "The First Reh-Tape," was a self-released cassette issued in 2003 and limited to just 30 hand-numbered copies, featuring two tracks of lo-fi, rehearsal-quality material that embodied their proto-crust sound with gritty, unpolished energy.[12][13] That same year, the band followed with the self-released demo titled "Gallhammer," a six-track effort running approximately 25 minutes, primarily distributed at local festivals and gigs to showcase their emerging fusion of black metal ferocity and punk aggression.[14][77] In 2004, "Endless Nauseous Days" emerged as an independent demo comprising three tracks over about 20 minutes, serving as a key pre-label experiment that refined their thematic intensity around despair and delirium without compromising the DIY ethos.[15][16] Following their signing to Peaceville Records, the 2007 EP "Beyond the Hatred" marked a transitional release with four tracks clocking in at roughly 18 minutes, designed as a tour companion that amplified their aggression through a raw, live-like production capturing the band's onstage venom.[30][31] The EP "A Taste of Despair," released in 2010 on Peaceville, represented the duo's first output after Mika Penetrator's exit, delivering three tracks in around 15 minutes with a heightened focus on brooding atmosphere and sonic weight.[33][78] Beyond audio releases, Gallhammer extended their visual presence with the 2007 live DVD "The Dawn of...," a Peaceville production compiling performance footage from Japanese shows alongside demo tracks, and the 2008 video "Ruin of a Church," which offered additional live captures and interviews to complement their growing international profile.[79][80]References
- https://viviankrist.[bandcamp](/page/Bandcamp).com/album/live-at-kaf-h-rverk-in-oslo-202504
- https://viviankrist.[bandcamp](/page/Bandcamp).com/album/first-dream
