Kingdom of Sorrow

Kingdom of Sorrow is an American heavy metal band that features Kirk Windstein of Crowbar and Down, along with Jamey Jasta of Hatebreed.[1][2]

Kingdom of Sorrow
Jamey Jasta performing in 2013
Background information
OriginNew Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.
GenresSludge metal, metalcore
Years active2005–present
LabelsRelapse Records
Associated actsHatebreed, Icepick, Crowbar, Down, Seemless, Unearth
MembersJamey Jasta
Kirk Windstein
Charlie Bellmore
Nick Bellmore
Past members

History

Kingdom of Sorrow was founded when Hatebreed frontman Jamey Jasta introduced himself to Down/Crowbar guitarist Kirk Windstein at a show at Pearl Street in Northampton, Massachusetts. A short time later Jasta, who actively booked shows throughout New England in the early nineties, put up the cash for a Napalm Death/Crowbar show in order that Hatebreed could play with one of their favorite bands. Ever since then, the two have remained in close contact and became friends over the subsequent decade.

Jasta and Hatebreed invited Crowbar out for a UK run of dates in March 2005. It was there that the two friends decided to create a band based on their mutual affinity for bands of the likes of Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden, and Pantera.

In May 2005, the duo recorded in Silver Bullet Studios in Connecticut, and Kirk relocated after hurricane Katrina to write and assemble what would become the first Kingdom of Sorrow album. The first taste of the untitled project surfaced in the form of the track "Buried in Black" on Roadrunner Records' MTV2 Headbangers Ball: The Revenge compilation, released in April 2006.

Songs were deconstructed, reconstructed, written and recorded again in Planet Z Studios with Zeuss until the duo was completely satisfied with the outcome. Jasta commented on the writing process, "It really was probably the best time I've ever had in the studio. As far as creatively...it was such a liberating thing. We felt like, 'It's a new band. It doesn't matter what anybody thinks.' We're just doing it because we want to do it. So it was a totally genuine and pure creative process."

Kingdom of Sorrow inked a deal with Relapse Records in fall 2007, and made their live debut on February 27, 2008, at the Worcester Palladium in Worcester, Massachusetts, with Thy Will Be Done as direct support. A subsequent tour followed with support from Dead to Fall and Thy Will Be Done.[2]

On August 5 and 6, 2008, Kingdom of Sorrow played at the First Annual Mayhem Festival on the Jägermeister Stage at the Comcast Center for the Performing Arts in Mansfield, Massachusetts and the Nassau Coliseum in Long Island, New York, respectively.

Through a Myspace blog on March 30, 2010, the band announced that their next album was titled Behind the Blackest Tears; it was released on June 8, 2010, via Relapse Records. For a period in 2010, Kirk Windstein left the band to enter rehab, with Kenny Hickey of Type O Negative taking his place at Ozzfest tour dates, and other shows that year.[3]

It was announced on January 31, 2011, that the band would be playing at the 2011 Mayhem Festival, on the Jägermeister Stage.[4]

Debut release

Kingdom of Sorrow's self-titled album debuted at number 131 on the U.S. Billboard charts and sold 6,000 records in its first week of release.

Band members

Current

  • Jamey Jasta – lead vocals (2005–present)
  • Kirk Windstein – lead guitar, backing vocals (2005–present)
  • Charlie Bellmore – rhythm guitar (2010–present)
  • Nick Bellmore – drums (2010–present)

Former

Live

  • Kenny Hickey – guitars (fill-in for Kirk Windstein in 2008 and Ozzfest 2010 tour dates)
  • Phil Zeller – bass (2008)
  • Matt Brunson – bass (2009–2010)
  • Christopher Taylor Beaudette – bass (2011–present)
  • Kanky Lora – drums (2011)

Discography

Date of US release Title Label US Billboard peak
February 19, 2008 Kingdom of Sorrow Relapse Records 131
June 8, 2010 Behind the Blackest Tears 151

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.