King Diamond

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King Diamond
Mercyful Fate - 2022216204958 2022-08-04 Wacken - Sven - 1D X MK II - 2326 - B70I4217.jpg
King Diamond performing in 2022
Background information
Born
Kim Bendix Petersen

(1956-06-14) 14 June 1956 (age 69)
Hvidovre, [1] Denmark
Genres
Occupations
  • Singer
  • songwriter
  • musician
  • producer
Instruments
  • Vocals
  • keyboards
  • guitar
Years active1974–present
Member of
Website kingdiamondcoven.com

Kim Bendix Petersen (born 14 June 1956), [1] better known by his stage name King Diamond, is a Danish rock musician. As a vocalist, he is known for his powerful and wide-ranging countertenor singing voice, in particular his far-reaching falsetto screams. He is the lead vocalist and lyricist for both Mercyful Fate and the eponymous King Diamond. He also plays keyboards and guitars on studio recordings but uses live shows to focus solely on his vocal performance. Diamond is renowned for his dark lyrical content and his story concepts. He is also known for his distinctive shock stage persona (in particular his black and white facepaint). He has been an influence for other rock and metal artists, including Metallica, [3] Slayer [4] and Cradle of Filth. [5]

Contents

Career

Early days

King Diamond's first heavy rock band was called Brainstorm (1974–76), with Jeanette Blum (Jean Blue) on vocals and bass, Michael Frohn (Mike West) on guitar and Jes Jacobsen (Jesse James) on drums. Diamond left Brainstorm and began singing with local Danish hard rock band Black Rose. He began experimenting with horror-themed theatrics and shaping a malevolent quasi-Satanic stage persona. He left Black Rose and joined the punk-metal band Brats, where he met Hank Shermann. The two were soon asked to help Michael Denner (also formerly a member of Brats) with his own project, Danger Zone. This band included Timi Hansen, and the musicians would join with Diamond in 1980 to become Mercyful Fate.

Mercyful Fate

Following Mercyful Fate's 1984 release of Don't Break the Oath and the subsequent tour (which saw them play in the U.S. for the first time), Diamond split ways with Mercyful Fate. With him, he took two of his bandmates (Hansen and Denner) to pursue a solo career under his own name.

Mercyful Fate reunited in 1992 (while Diamond simultaneously continued his solo career) and recorded five more studio albums. In 1999, Diamond and Hank Shermann performed the song "Evil" live with Metallica. This performance also featured Diamond without his famous makeup.

King Diamond in 1999 King Diamond live 1999.jpg
King Diamond in 1999

In 2000, Diamond decided to put Mercyful Fate on hold and continue on with his solo career.

On 1 August 2019 Mercyful Fate announced a reunion and an accompanying European tour. [6] Then 3 years later on June 2, 2022, Mercyful Fate performed their first live show since 1999 in Hanover as part of a European tour, where they debuted a brand new song titled "The Jackal of Salzbur." King Diamond also confirmed that the band was actively working on a new album. [7] [8] However in January of 2025 the bands Bass player Becky Baldwin stated that the new Mercyful Fate album was not expected to be released before 2025, due to King Diamond's focus on his namesake band's upcoming thirteenth studio album. [9]

King Diamond

After Mercyful Fate broke up, King Diamond, along with Michael Denner and Timi Hansen, formed the eponymous King Diamond band in 1985. [10] Fatal Portrait , the band's first full-length studio album, was released on 14 March 1986, through Roadrunner Records. [11] Their second album Abigail , was released on 29 May 1987 was the first concept album based on an original story by Diamond. [12] Following some line up changes another concept album, "Them" charted at number 38 on the Swedish album chart, number 65 on the Dutch album chart, and at number 89 on the Billboard 200, making it King Diamond's highest charting album in the U.S. to date. [13] [14] [15] Diamonds album a continuation of the storyline from "Them", Conspiracy was the first King Diamond album to be recorded in the United States and was released in 1989. The next album The Eye was released the following year in 1990, however King Diamond reunited with Mercyful Fate in 1992 where he would then balance recording and touring with both Mercyful Fate and his eponymous band throughout the 1990s. [16] [17] After recording and touring with Mercyful Fate, King Diamond reformed his eponymous band in 1994. [18] Released on 1 October 1996, The Graveyard saw King Diamond return to writing concept albums this was then followed by 1998 Voodoo. [19] Then when Mercyful Fate was put on hold in 1999, King Diamond began recording the album House of God at the Nomad Recording Studio in Carrollton, Texas. [20]

In 2001, King Diamond worked out a deal with the band Usurper to sing backup vocals on the song "Necronemesis" in exchange for them shifting their recording schedule around to accommodate the recording of Abigail II: The Revenge . In 2003 King Diamond released their eleventh album The Puppet Master , the album also featured additional vocals from Diamond's wife Livia Zita. [21] In 2004, Diamond contributed vocals to "Sweet Dreams", the final track on the album of Dave Grohl's heavy metal side project Probot. In late 2005, Diamond appeared on the Roadrunner United – The All-Star Sessions album, contributing vocals for his song "In the Fire", which featured multiple Roadrunner Records musicians (past and present) working together to create individual songs. Diamond also guested on the Cradle of Filth song "Devil Woman" in late 2005. [22]

In April 2006, Diamond reunited with Mikkey Dee (Motörhead drummer) at a sold-out gig at Kåren in Gothenburg, Sweden. [23] In 2001 he referred to Dee as "one of the best drummers of all time and that's something that has bothered us since he left." [24]

Diamond released his album Give Me Your Soul... Please , on 26 June 2007. The band received a Grammy nomination in the "Best Metal Performance" category for the track "Never Ending Hill". [25]

He was forced to cancel a United States tour due to a herniated disk, causing severe back pain, which puts him in intense pain almost all of the time. [26] He attributes the problem to the long stressful hours spent working on the album.

Diamond made an appearance at Ozzfest on 9 August 2008 at Frisco, Texas alongside Metallica, performing a medley of Mercyful Fate songs previously released on Metallica's Garage Inc. album. He also performed a cover of the Pantera song "A New Level" with Vinnie Paul, Scott Ian, Max Cavalera, and Nick Bowcott.

In 2009, Diamond was revealed to be a playable character for the rhythm game Guitar Hero: Metallica , appearing with Mercyful Fate's song "Evil". The player must complete the song on any instrument and any difficulty to unlock the character. [27]

On 29 November 2010, Diamond was taken to the hospital, where doctors discovered several blockages in his arteries due to his heavy smoking habit. They determined that he had had several heart attacks and that he needed triple-bypass surgery, during which time he was medically dead for five hours. [28] The surgery was performed successfully and on 11 December 2010 it was announced that he was at home recovering. [29] All his musical projects were placed on hold. [30]

On 7 December 2011, Diamond appeared on stage with Metallica at the Fillmore in San Francisco to celebrate Metallica's 30th anniversary. [31]

In June 2012, Diamond performed his comeback concert at Sweden Rock Festival.

On Saturday 8 September 2012, Diamond appeared along with Mark Tremonti on VH1 Classic's That Metal Show discussing his surgery and various details about upcoming events.

King Diamond in 2013 Tuska 20130628 - King Diamond - 32.jpg
King Diamond in 2013

He appeared on Volbeat's 2013 album, Outlaw Gentlemen & Shady Ladies , providing guest vocals on the track "Room 24". [32] This collaboration resulted in another Grammy nomination for Best Metal Performance at the 56th Annual Grammy Awards. [33] In August 2013 Diamond performed at Open Air Bloodstock Festival, UK.

Slayer was chosen to headline the 2015 Rockstar Energy Mayhem Festival. The bands HELLYEAH, King Diamond, The Devil Wears Prada, Thy Art Is Murder, Jungle Rot, Sister Sin, Sworn In, Shattered Sun, Feed Her To The Sharks, Code Orange and Kissing Candice also participated in the Rockstar Tour. [34]

In 2018, King Diamond began work on its thirteenth studio album, which would be divided into two parts to connect with its theme. The first part of the series was later revealed to be titled The Institute; the title has since been changed to Saint Lucifer's Hospital 1920. Originally intended for release in 2020, it faced multiple delays before its planned release in 2026. This delay was in part due to Diamond taking his time on perfecting new material by both the King Diamond band and the reunited Mercyful Fate. [35] [36]

In November of 2025 Diamond was honored by the Danish Arts Foundation and was given the lifetime honour for his "very special efforts and contributions to Danish art and cultural life." In addition Diamond will receive a yearly 189,000 Danish Krona (about $26,000) grant from the foundation for the rest of his life. [37] [38]

Other media

Diamond was a special celebrity guest star in four episodes of the Warner Bros. adult-oriented cartoon Metalocalypse as the Blues Devil, Ronald von Moldenberg, a fast food manager, and one of the Klokateers in 2006 on Adult Swim.

Artistry

Diamond performing in Ballenstedt, Germany in 2025 King Diamond Rockharz 2025 17.jpg
Diamond performing in Ballenstedt, Germany in 2025

Diamond is known for his falsetto singing voice. [39] He is known for creating conceptual works that feature recurring stories that include the supernatural, horror, fate and death. His lyrics have been described as a "gothic horror romance in metal form, delivered with technical precision and theatrical grandeur." [37] Diamond has stated he has loved of horror films since his youth when he would watch Frankenstein and Dracula with his parents; these films have also played a part in his lyrical style. [40] Diamond said that when he first joined Mercyful Fate, he lived in a apartment that "turned out to be truly haunted." He stated in a interview with Blabbermouth.net: "Many of the things that are written in the lyrics have been taken straight as they happened from these real experiences." [40] In that same interview, he stated that a lot of his lyrics are drawn from real life, but some come from his imagination: "To make a story flow, you change some of the things that you've experienced. When an album is done and I read through all the lyrics, I get a little uneasy when I see how much of myself I've put into the stories. But then again, I know that no one's going to know unless I tell them exactly what's what, and I'm certainly not going to do that. But it's drawn from everywhere." [40]

Diamond cites Arthur Brown, David Byron, Alice Cooper, Ronnie James Dio, Ian Gillan, Ozzy Osbourne and Robert Plant as his primary influences. [41] According to Diamond's biography on his official website, the first two albums he bought were Deep Purple's Fireball and Black Sabbath's Master of Reality . [42]

Stage presence

On stage, Diamond uses a microphone stand consisting of a femur bone and a tibia bone in the shape of a cross. He previously used a human skull, called Melissa, on stage. In the mid-1980s Melissa was stolen after a performance in the Netherlands.[ citation needed ] Diamond is also known for his Corpse paint and has changed the design of his make-up often over the years. With Conspiracy , he wore a mesh of black and white line war paint, with some red "blood" made to look like a wound coming out of his forehead. With his album The Puppet Master , he used very little white and mainly had black crosses and inverted crosses going up and down his face. [43] Diamond is also known for his onstage performance Brave Worlds described his stage presence stating "On stage, he transforms the concert into a dark theatre – a ritual where gothic tales, horrific characters and symbolic scenography merge. His distinctive "corpsepaint" and his microphone holder, an inverted cross made of human bones, make him an iconic figure." [37]

Personal life

Diamond is married to Livia Zita, a Hungarian-born singer who has made appearances as a backup vocalist on the albums The Puppet Master and Give Me Your Soul...Please , as well as during live performances. She is also his business partner, and is currently[ when? ] working with him to compile old footage for two planned DVD releases of King Diamond and Mercyful Fate live performances. She also helped him make remastered editions of the King Diamond albums The Spider's Lullabye , The Graveyard , Voodoo and House of God . [44] In 2017, they became parents to a son, Byron, [45] born in March. [46] [47] In a 2016 interview with Metal Hammer Diamond revealed that following his health scare he has given up smoking and started living a healthier life style, which he has credited to helping improve his singing voice. [48] Some of Diamonds interest include Formula One and Football, growing up he played for the youth squad of Danish club called Hvidovre IF but he stopped playing once he went to college and started getting involved in music. [48] [49]

Diamond followsLaVeyan Satanism, which he does not see as a religion, but a philosophy by which he lived even before reading occultist Anton LaVey's The Satanic Bible . [50] Michael Moynihan calls him "one of the only performers of the '80s Satanic Metal who was more than just a poseur using a devilish image for shock value". [51] Diamond has expressed concern that religion has led so many people to kill and destroy each other. He stated that he cannot comprehend why religion has caused so much death and destruction when it is logically impossible to prove the presence or absence of any deity. He states that he has reached a point in his life where he has completely given up believing in anything religious. [52]

Legacy

Metallica released an 11-minute medley of five Mercyful Fate songs on their 1998 Garage Inc. cover album. King Diamond has provided guest vocals for live performances of the medley at Metallica's concerts on three occasions: at the 1999 Gods of Metal festival in Milan, Italy (with Hank Shermann on guitar); [53] at the 2008 Ozzfest in Dallas, Texas; [54] and at a 2011 Metallica fan club gig in San Francisco, California (with Hank Shermann on guitar, Michael Denner on guitar and Timi Hansen on bass). [55]

King Diamond has appeared on the covers of many rock and metal magazines, and has influenced many artists, including Metallica's Lars Ulrich, [3] Cradle of Filth, [5] Cage, [56] and Andy DiGelsomina of the Wagnerian opera metal project Lyraka. [57]

American heavy metal band Cage devoted to him the song "King Diamond" on the album Hell Destroyer in 2007.

King Diamond has inspired many bands such as Metallica, [58] Slayer, [59] Opeth, [60] Pantera, [61] Cradle of Filth. [5] and Emperor [62] have all cited him as a influence.

Discography

Awards

References

  1. 1 2 Bille, Torben, ed. (2002). Dansk rockleksikon (in Danish) (1st ed.). Politikens Forlag. p. 253. ISBN   87-567-6525-8. Kim Bendix Petersen. Født 14. juni 1956 i Hvidovre. [English: Kim Bendix Petersen. Born 14 June 1956 in Hvidovre.]
  2. Staff (4 September 2018). "A Brief History Of The World's Greatest Shock Rockers". Kerrang!. Retrieved 16 July 2023.
  3. 1 2 "The History of Metallica". Metallicaworld.co.uk. Archived from the original on 5 June 2014. Retrieved 7 March 2012.
  4. "Kerry King interviewed by Metal Hammer". YouTube. 15 June 2010. Retrieved 8 December 2012.
  5. 1 2 3 "KNAC.COM - The Loudest Dot Com on the Planet!". Knac.com. Archived from the original on 12 October 2013. Retrieved 25 March 2020.
  6. August 2019, Alice Pattillo02 (2 August 2019). "Mercyful Fate bring original lineup back to home turf in Copenhell 2020". Loudersound.com. Retrieved 25 March 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. "MERCYFUL FATE Played Their First Show In 23 Years And They Sounded Fantastic". Metal Injection. 3 June 2022. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
  8. "Absolute Top Horror". CREEM - America's only rock 'n' roll magazine. Subscribe now. Retrieved 8 May 2023.
  9. Blabbermouth (13 May 2025). "KING DIAMOND On Long-Awaited New Album From His Namesake Band: 'I Want To Make Sure It's The Best Material I've Ever Released'". BLABBERMOUTH.NET. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
  10. "Coven Worldwide -". www.covenworldwide.org. Archived from the original on 27 January 2007. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
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  12. "King Diamond "Abigail"". King Diamond & Mercyful Fate. Archived from the original on 30 June 2016. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
  13. swedishcharts.com http://swedishcharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=King+Diamond&titel=%22Them%22&cat=a . Retrieved 10 November 2025.{{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  14. swedishcharts.com http://swedishcharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=King+Diamond&titel=%22Them%22&cat=a . Retrieved 10 November 2025.{{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  15. "King Diamond | Biography, Music & News". Billboard. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
  16. "King Diamond Band Members". King Diamond & Mercyful Fate. Archived from the original on 9 July 2015. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
  17. "Mercyful Fate Songs, Albums, Reviews, Bio & Mo..." AllMusic. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
  18. "King Diamond "The Spider's Lullabye"". King Diamond & Mercyful Fate. Archived from the original on 2 July 2015. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
  19. "King Diamond "The Graveyard"". King Diamond & Mercyful Fate. Archived from the original on 2 July 2015. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
  20. "King Diamond "House Of God"". King Diamond & Mercyful Fate. Archived from the original on 30 October 2017. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
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  24. "Diamonds Are Forever: An Exclusive Interview With King Diamond". KNAC. 31 December 2001. Retrieved 13 July 2007.
  25. 1 2 "King Diamond Comments on Grammy Nomination". Blabbermouth.net. 6 December 2007. Archived from the original on 13 December 2007. Retrieved 13 December 2007.
  26. "King Diamond on Tour Cancellation". Blabbermouth.net. 24 November 2007. Archived from the original on 13 December 2007. Retrieved 13 December 2007.
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  28. ""I was begging the doctors to kill me": the confessions of King Diamond". loudersound.com. Metal Hammer. 20 October 2016.
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  31. "2011 Tour Photos – 12/7/2011 – The Fillmore – San Francisco, CA". Facebook. Retrieved 7 March 2012.
  32. "Volbeat Recruit King Diamond + Other Guests for 'Outlaw Gentlemen & Shady Ladies' Album". Loudwire.com. 6 March 2013. Retrieved 15 July 2014.
  33. 1 2 "Grammy nominations 2014: List of nominees - CBS News". www.cbsnews.com. 7 December 2013. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
  34. "Slayer 2015 Rockstar Energy Mayhem Festival Tour Schedule". slayer.concerttournewshub.com. Archived from the original on 19 April 2015. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
  35. Blabbermouth (22 February 2021). "New KING DIAMOND Album Will Sound 'More Organic', Says Guitarist ANDY LA ROCQUE". BLABBERMOUTH.NET. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
  36. Blabbermouth (22 March 2022). "New KING DIAMOND Album Won't Arrive Before 2023". BLABBERMOUTH.NET. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
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  56. [ dead link ]
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  64. Pearce, Dutch (5 January 2021). "King Diamond - "Them"". Decibel Magazine. Retrieved 10 November 2025.
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