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Hail the Apocalypse
View on Wikipediafrom Wikipedia
| Hail the Apocalypse | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 13 May 2014 | |||
| Recorded | Karma Sound Studios, Bang Saray, Thailand | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 50:52 | |||
| Label | Entertainment One | |||
| Producer | Tobias Lindell | |||
| Avatar chronology | ||||
| ||||
| Singles from Hail the Apocalypse | ||||
| ||||
| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| Revolver | |
Hail the Apocalypse is the fifth studio album by Swedish metal band Avatar, released on 13 May 2014. It is their first album to chart on the US Billboard 200, reaching number 97 and selling 3,500 copies in its first week. The album was mixed by Jay Ruston and mastered by Paul Logus.
In December 2024, amidst a legal battle with their former record label, Avatar released a 7" single of "Tower", consisting of a piano version on the A-side and a live version on the B-side.[1]
Track listing
[edit]| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Hail the Apocalypse" | 4:13 |
| 2. | "What I Don't Know" | 4:53 |
| 3. | "Death of Sound" | 4:21 |
| 4. | "Vultures Fly" | 4:38 |
| 5. | "Bloody Angel" | 6:04 |
| 6. | "Murderer" | 5:03 |
| 7. | "Tsar Bomba" | 3:33 |
| 8. | "Puppet Show" | 4:23 |
| 9. | "Get in Line" | 3:13 |
| 10. | "Something in the Way" (Nirvana cover) | 4:27 |
| 11. | "Tower" | 6:04 |
| 12. | "Use and Abuse" (featuring DJ Starscream) | 3:26 |
| Total length: | 54:18 | |
Personnel
[edit]Avatar
[edit]- Johannes Eckerström – lead vocals
- Jonas "Kungen" Jarlsby – guitar
- Tim Öhrström – guitar, backing vocals
- Henrik Sandelin – bass, backing vocals
- John Alfredsson – drums
Charts
[edit]| Chart | Peak position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200[3] | 97 |
| US Top Hard Rock Albums (Billboard)[4] | 6 |
| US Top Rock Albums (Billboard)[5] | 25 |
| US Independent Albums (Billboard)[6] | 18 |
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Avatar Release Re-Recorded Piano Version of "Tower"". Metal Planet Music. Retrieved 16 December 2024.
- ^ Chichester, Sammi (20 May 2014). "Review: Avatar — Hail the Apocalypse". Revolver. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 12 February 2025.
- ^ "Avatar Chart History (Billboard 200)". Billboard. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
- ^ "Avatar Chart History (Top Hard Rock Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
- ^ "Avatar Chart History (Top Rock Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
- ^ "Avatar Chart History (Independent Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
Hail the Apocalypse
View on Grokipediafrom Grokipedia
Background and development
Concept formation
Following the exhaustive touring schedule supporting their 2012 album Black Waltz, Avatar faced significant personal turmoil, including burnout and frustration that led frontman Johannes Eckerström and drummer John Alfredsson to briefly quit the band in a moment of despair.[10][11] This crisis, compounded by broader societal anxieties reflected in Hiroshima 1945 imagery, inspired the album's overarching apocalyptic theme, portraying an inevitable doom that demands confrontation rather than escape.[12] Eckerström envisioned the title Hail the Apocalypse as an embrace of chaos, symbolizing the band's chaotic energy amid encroaching darkness.[10][11] This concept shifted lyrical motifs from the fire of prior works to water and storms, representing a psychological study of coping with inevitable turmoil.[11] The theme drew from the band's evolving stage persona, rooted in theatrical clown makeup and circus-inspired visuals, which they sought to fuse with a heavier, more visceral sound to heighten the apocalyptic narrative's intensity.[13] In late 2013, after opening for Avenged Sevenfold and Five Finger Death Punch on their European arena tour culminating at Wembley, the band recommitted to this direction, emphasizing groove-heavy riffs contributed by guitarist Tim Öhrström to anchor the chaos.[12][10] Songwriting efforts from all members, particularly Öhrström's emotive riffs, helped solidify this blend of theatricality and aggression.[12]Songwriting process
The songwriting for Hail the Apocalypse took place during collaborative sessions in Sweden spanning early 2013 to 2014, primarily led by vocalist Johannes Eckerström alongside guitarists Jonas "Kungen" Jarlsby and Tim Öhrström. These sessions emphasized a collective approach, where the band members contributed riffs, structures, and lyrical ideas in a focused environment to refine the album's core sound before formal recording. The process allowed for experimentation, drawing on the band's evolving style while incorporating the overarching apocalyptic theme that influenced the lyrics' themes of doom and societal collapse.[10] Individual tracks emerged from specific creative sparks during these sessions. For instance, "Bloody Angel" explores guilt and moral reckoning. Similarly, "Tsar Bomba" references the historical Soviet nuclear bomb test in 1961, the most powerful ever detonated, and features German-language verses to evoke urgency and destruction. These origins highlight how historical and musical prompts drove the composition of key songs, ensuring each piece aligned with the album's intense narrative.[10] Pre-production demos were recorded at Sound Industry Studios in Gothenburg, where the band captured rough versions of the material to test arrangements and tempos. This phase involved layering basic instrumentation and vocals to solidify transitions and hooks, providing a blueprint that preserved the raw energy from the writing sessions while identifying areas for refinement. The demos underscored the band's intentional shift toward shorter, punchier song structures compared to the more expansive and technically complex compositions on previous albums like Black Waltz, aiming for tracks around three to four minutes with immediate, anthemic choruses to enhance live performability and listener impact.[10]Recording and production
Studio recording
Pre-production for Hail the Apocalypse occurred at Sound Industry Studios in Sweden, where the band developed initial material including song riffs before traveling abroad. The primary recording sessions then took place from late 2013 to early 2014 at Karma Sound Studios in Bang Saray, Thailand, with additional work at PhuketHill Studios in Patong, Thailand.[14] Producer Tobias Lindell, who had collaborated with Avatar on their previous album Black Waltz (2012), was involved from the project's early stages and guided the sessions toward capturing the band's raw live energy. Inspired by a documentary on live recording techniques, the band opted for a semi-live approach, jamming organically with a click track to prioritize authentic performance over polished perfection. This method allowed them to bring pre-written riffs into the studio for immediate development and refinement during tracking.[15] The tropical isolation of the Thai countryside presented challenges, keeping the band sequestered and focused but restricting access to external influences like local music scenes. The sessions were remarkably intensive, spanning less than a month with only two days off and minimal time outside the studio, fostering both creative breakthroughs and moments of self-doubt and interpersonal tension. Lindell's rented house served as a secondary space for final touches on elements like solos and vocals, further immersing the group in the process.[15][16]Post-production
Following the recording sessions at Karma Sound Studios in Bang Saray, Thailand, and PhuketHill Studios in Patong, Thailand, the album's post-production focused on refining the raw takes to achieve a polished sound blending industrial and metal elements. Mixing was handled by Jay Ruston, who worked to bring clarity to the groove-driven rhythms and dynamic layers, ensuring the tracks maintained their aggressive energy while enhancing overall balance.[17] Mastering was completed by Paul Logus at PLX Mastering, where final adjustments optimized the sonic range for commercial release, emphasizing the theatrical vocal delivery of frontman Johannes Eckerström without overpowering the instrumentation.[18][19] Additional electronic textures were contributed through programming by Walter Bäcklin, adding subtle atmospheric depth to select tracks and supporting the album's thematic intensity.[20]Musical style and themes
Genre influences
Hail the Apocalypse showcases a fusion of groove metal, industrial metal, and melodic death metal, drawing from Avatar's Swedish metal roots while incorporating alternative and nu-metal elements. The album's sound is characterized by heavy, chugging riffs and electronic textures that evoke industrial influences, as noted in contemporary reviews describing it as a blend of death and industrial metal with progressive undertones.[21][22] This mix is evident in tracks featuring programmed synths that add atmospheric depth, complementing the band's aggressive guitar work.[8] The album reflects influences from bands like Slipknot and Korn, particularly in its groovy, riff-driven structures and nu-metal grooves that prioritize rhythmic intensity over sheer speed. Dynamic tempo shifts and electronic breakdowns further align it with System of a Down's chaotic energy, creating a sound that balances brutality with accessibility. The title track exemplifies this approach as a groovy, riff-heavy opener that combines industrial-tinged percussion with melodic death metal melodies.[23][22] Instrumentation plays a key role, with dual guitars delivering layered, harmonized riffs that enhance the melodic aspects, while synth elements provide an ominous, atmospheric backdrop.[24][8] Compared to Avatar's earlier albums like Black Waltz, Hail the Apocalypse evolves toward more hook-laden compositions, introducing accessible choruses and hardcore edges—such as in "Murderer"—while preserving the core aggression of their melodic death metal foundation. This shift broadens the album's appeal without diluting its heaviness, marking a refinement in their genre-blending style.[8][25]Lyrical content
The lyrics of Hail the Apocalypse revolve around the central theme of apocalypse as a metaphor for personal reckoning, profound guilt, and the collapse of societal structures, portraying end-times not merely as cataclysmic events but as inevitable consequences of human failings.[26] This concept permeates the album, framing destruction as a mirror to individual and collective moral shortcomings, where redemption remains elusive amid escalating chaos. For instance, the track "Bloody Angel" delves into remorse experienced by a Soviet labor camp officer, evoking the weight of complicity in systemic atrocities and the futile search for absolution.[27][28] Recurring motifs of violence intertwined with fleeting redemption, willful ignorance, and unrelenting destruction underscore the album's bleak worldview. In "Vultures Fly," violence manifests as mindless warfare driven by brainwashed soldiers, with vultures symbolizing inevitable death and the futility of resistance against false orders to surrender, drawing on ancient Greek imagery of Ares to highlight eternal cycles of conflict.[29][30] The theme of ignorance appears in "What I Don't Know," critiquing self-deception and the avoidance of uncomfortable truths that perpetuate downfall. Destruction reaches a literal peak in "Tsar Bomba," which references the 1961 Soviet hydrogen bomb test—the most powerful nuclear detonation in history—as a symbol of tyrannical hubris and the dehumanizing horrors of power, evoking figures like Stalin and Hitler through German-language lyrics that blend historical allusion with visceral condemnation.[31][32] Vocalist Johannes Eckerström employs a poetic, theatrical style characterized by abstract imagery and layered historical allusions, crafting narratives that blend personal introspection with broader societal critique to heighten the dramatic tension of impending doom.[33] His lyrics often shift between visceral confessions and prophetic warnings, using mirrors, curses, and mythical beasts to symbolize internal turmoil and external decay.[27] The album's overall narrative arc progresses from heralding inevitable doom in the title track—where futile actions cannot avert extinction—to a defiant stance of survival amid ruin, urging confrontation with one's destructive impulses rather than passive acceptance.[34] This journey culminates in tracks like "Torn Apart," reinforcing resilience against apocalyptic forces through raw, unyielding resolve.[2] The genre's aggressive delivery amplifies these themes, lending a sense of urgency to Eckerström's proclamations.Release and promotion
Singles
The lead single from Hail the Apocalypse was the title track, released on March 17, 2014, and accompanied by an official music video directed by Johan Carlén that showcased a theatrical performance by the band in a dramatic, end-times setting.[35][34] The follow-up single, "Bloody Angel," was issued on April 8, 2014, with its music video premiering on May 12, 2014, also directed by Johan Carlén and featuring a dystopian narrative centered on a winged figure in a post-apocalyptic wasteland, highlighting the band's emphasis on visual storytelling.[36][27][37] "Vultures Fly" served as the third promotional single, with its official music video released on January 26, 2015, directed by Axel Widén and incorporating animated propaganda-style sequences alongside live performance clips to evoke a sense of impending doom.[38][29][39] These singles generated substantial pre-album anticipation through high-profile YouTube premieres and media coverage, with the videos collectively amassing millions of views and introducing Avatar's blend of groove metal and theatrical flair to broader audiences; notably, the "Vultures Fly" video topped Loudwire's weekly polls for five consecutive weeks.[38]Touring and marketing
The album Hail the Apocalypse was released on May 13, 2014, through eOne Music in North America and Gain Music (a Sony imprint) in Europe, available in digital download, CD, vinyl, and a deluxe edition formats that included bonus tracks such as "Use and Abuse."[7][40] Marketing efforts for the album emphasized visual and theatrical elements, with the band releasing a teaser video for the title track on March 17, 2014, directed to showcase their signature dramatic style and build anticipation ahead of the launch.[35] Social media campaigns on platforms like YouTube and Facebook highlighted album artwork, behind-the-scenes footage, and promotional clips, such as the full music video for "Hail the Apocalypse," to engage fans and drive pre-orders.[6] Merchandise tied to the rollout included apparel like band tees featuring the album's apocalyptic imagery and embroidered patches depicting the cover art, sold through official channels to complement the visual branding.[41][42] The Hail the Apocalypse Tour commenced in summer 2014 with European dates, including a performance at the Download Festival on June 15 in Castle Donington, England, where the band played tracks from the new album alongside earlier material.[43] The tour then shifted to North America, featuring festival appearances like Rock on the Range in Columbus, Ohio, on May 17, and headline shows in select markets.[44] By fall 2014, Avatar expanded into U.S. headlining dates, performing across venues from September onward to capitalize on the momentum from singles like "Bloody Angel," with the overall tour encompassing over 40 shows through December.[45][46]Reception and legacy
Critical reviews
Upon its release, Hail the Apocalypse received generally positive reviews from music critics, who praised the album's accessible grooves, polished production, and the band's evolving sound that broadened its appeal beyond traditional metal audiences. Sputnikmusic awarded it 4 out of 5 stars, describing it as "a very promising new album" with "near perfect" drums, guitars, and vocals that would attract new fans globally.[8] Similarly, Louder Sound gave it a 7 out of 10, highlighting the "high points" like the title track, which delivered "groovy, more tune-focused Slipknot" energy and satisfied both melodic and brutal cravings.[22] Critics noted some inconsistencies in track quality, with certain songs feeling less impactful amid the album's intensity. Metal Kaoz rated it 8 out of 10, noting the blend of brutality and melody with non-traditional elements and repetitive themes that might not suit classic metal listeners.[23] Louder Sound also critiqued the melancholic clean vocals for occasionally "watering down the overall effect."[22] Aggregate scores reflected this mixed but favorable reception, with averages on sites like Rate Your Music (3.3 out of 5).[24] AllMusic characterized the album as a "punishing, cinematic" effort from the "grease-painted Swedish death/industrial metal" outfit, emphasizing its end-times imagery and sonic brutality.[21] Peek-A-Boo Magazine lauded it with 94 out of 100, calling it a "great Soulfly-Korn fusion" with stylish vocals and powerful variation.[47] Overall, the album marked Avatar's breakthrough, blending theatricality and groove to expand their reach.Commercial charts
Hail the Apocalypse marked a significant commercial breakthrough for Avatar, becoming their first album to enter the US Billboard 200 chart upon its release in May 2014. It debuted at number 97 on the all-format Billboard 200, selling approximately 3,500 copies in its first week in the United States.[4] The album also performed strongly within the rock genre, reaching number 6 on the Billboard Hard Rock Albums chart, highlighting the band's growing appeal in the heavy music market.[48]| Chart (2014) | Peak Position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 97 |
| US Billboard Hard Rock Albums | 6 |
Album credits
Track listing
The standard edition of Hail the Apocalypse contains 11 tracks with a total length of 51:00.[14] All tracks were written by Johannes Eckerström, Jonas Jarlsby, Tim Öhrström, Henrik Sandelin, and John Alfredsson, with some lyrical co-writes by Annette Eckerström on select songs such as "Tsar Bomba".[7]| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Hail the Apocalypse" | 4:14 |
| 2 | "What I Don't Know" | 4:54 |
| 3 | "Death of Sound" | 4:22 |
| 4 | "Vultures Fly" | 4:39 |
| 5 | "Bloody Angel" | 6:05 |
| 6 | "Murderer" | 5:04 |
| 7 | "Tsar Bomba" | 3:34 |
| 8 | "Puppet Show" | 4:23 |
| 9 | "Get in Line" | 3:14 |
| 10 | "Something in the Way" | 4:28 |
| 11 | "Tower" | 6:04 |
