Metal for the Brain

Last updated

Metal for the Brain
MFTB01.jpg
Psi.Kore at Metal for the Brain 2001
Genre Heavy metal, death metal, black metal, thrash metal, grindcore
DatesOctober - December
Location(s) Australia
Years active1991 - 2006

Metal for the Brain was Australia's largest heavy metal music festival. The event was held in Canberra annually, usually towards the end of the year, and featured Australian bands almost exclusively. The festival was established in November 1991 as a charity event for the National Brain Injury Foundation and continued as such until the final event in November 2006.

Contents

History

In 1990, Canberra teenager Alec Hurley suffered severe and permanent brain damage and was rendered a quadriplegic after he attempted to stop a fight outside a night club. [1] [2] [3] Hurley was left permanently disabled and, with little government assistance, [4] his friend, Joel Green, of local death metal band Armoured Angel organised the first Metal for the Brain concert for 16 November 1991, to raise money for Hurley's benefit and the National Brain Injury Foundation. [1] [4] The first event featured six acts; [5] [6] in the following year it was expanded to ten artists and included two punk bands, The Hammonds and The Hard Ons. [4] Green and Armoured Angel organised the festival each year until 1996, when the band split up. After this, the event was put together by another Canberra band, Alchemist, [7] the only act to have appeared at every Metal for the Brain. From 1990 to 1996, the festival was held at the ANU Bar. [8] It moved to Canberra University in 2000, where it was held from that time forward. The final Metal for the Brain festival was held on 4 November 2006. [9]

The Festival

Even in a country where heavy metal bands are neglected or reviled even by the alternative music press and industry,[ citation needed ] Metal for the Brain grew consistently since its inception. By 2000, the show had grown so big that it necessitated a move to a new venue from its long-time home at the ANU. From a bill of only six bands in 1991, by 2006 Metal for the Brain featured more than 30 and extended for more than 14 hours across three stages. In 2000, an international act was added to the show for the first time when Canadian metal pioneers Voivod headlined the event. German thrash band Destruction and Japanese thrash band Sun's Owl were booked to play MFTB in 2002. However, due to insurance problems the show was cancelled for the first time ever. Over the years, the musical focus of the event moved from exclusively death, thrash and black metal bands to a variety of styles and in later years nu metal, industrial, hard rock, progressive rock and hardcore bands took to the various stages. This caused some discontent among some sections of the heavy metal fan base, but MFTB remained the single largest event on the calendar for Australian metal fans.

Overseas touring commitments for Alchemist meant the festival was not held in 2004, but returned in February 2005. That year, smaller versions of the festival were held in Brisbane and Perth. Alchemist also played at these shows.

On 25 July 2006, an announcement was made on the heavy metal radio show Full Metal Racket on Triple J that the festival that year would be the last. US death metal band Skinless headlined the show. In 2014 a documentary film, Metal Down Under , included a section on Metal for the Brain. [10]

Line-ups


Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Superheist</span> Australian nu metal band

Superheist is an Australian nu metal band formed in 1993. They have released two EPs, thirteen singles, one compilation/live album and five studio albums, two of which, 2001's The Prize Recruit and 2002's Identical Remote Controlled Reactions, reached the top 20 on the ARIA Albums Chart. After a twelve-year hiatus, their 2016 comeback album "Ghosts of the Social Dead" reached No. 3 on the AIR Charts and remained in the Top 10 for four weeks.

Blood Duster was an Australian extreme metal and stoner rock band from Melbourne. Their name came from the song "Blood Duster" by John Zorn, from the 1989 album Naked City.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alchemist (band)</span> Australian progressive metal band

Alchemist was an Australian progressive metal band from Canberra whose style combined death metal, progressive rock, psychedelic, Eastern, Aboriginal and electronic influences. The band formed in 1987 and released six studio albums, an EP and a compilation album. Work began on a new EP in 2010 but the band went on an indefinite hiatus and then split up. They are the only group to appear at every Metal for the Brain festival, an event they ran and organised from 1996. Alchemist also played at the Big Day Out and toured Europe several times.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Psycroptic</span> Australian metal band

Psycroptic are an Australian technical death metal band formed in Hobart, Australia in 1999. Mainstay members are Dave Haley on drums and his brother Joe Haley on guitar. Their lead vocalist, Jason Peppiatt, joined in 2004. In 2008 they signed to Nuclear Blast. As of August 2022, the band have released eight studio albums. They have undertaken Australian national tours supporting international acts, Incantation, Decapitated, Origin and Misery Index. Psycroptic have also toured Europe with Nile and with Deicide. In February 2019, the band started a co-headlining tour alongside Aversions Crown and support bands Within Destruction, Hadal Maw and Hollow World across Europe. They also headlined a 2019 tour in the United States in support of their album As the Kingdom Drowns.

Canberra is home to a number of important musical venues and institutions, including the Llewellyn Hall performance venue, part of the Australian National University School of Music, and a number of music festivals including Canberra International Music Festival, Canberra Country Blues & Roots Festival and the National Folk Festival. The local music scene includes many bars and nightclubs for local performers, mostly clustered in Dickson, Kingston and the City Centre.

Abramelin is an Australian death metal band, which formed as Acheron in 1988 and were one of the first such groups in the country. They were a main influence on the development of Australian heavy metal music in the early 1990s. The name change occurred in 1994 to avoid confusion with a similarly named international group; the new name was adopted from The Book of Abramelin, which concerns a mage of the same name. Members of Abramelin have also been in Blood Duster, The Berzerker, The Amenta, and Akercocke. Abramelin supported tours by Napalm Death (1995), Paradise Lost, Cathedral and Cradle of Filth (2001). They released two studio albums, Abramelin (1995) and Deadspeak (2000), before disbanding in 2002. Abramelin reformed in 2016. In May 2020 the band released their third album Never Enough Snuff.

Matt "Skitz" Sanders is an Australian extreme metal drummer and musician. In 1989 he founded a "hatecore" band, Damaged. He has played with many Australian heavy metal bands including King Parrot, Blood Duster, Abramelin, Walk the Earth, Suicide Bombers, Deströyer 666, and Sadistik Exekution. In 2006 he formed Terrorust with members of previous bands.

Armoured Angel were an Australian thrash and death metal band from Canberra, which formed in 1982 as Metal Asylum. The band's founding mainstay, Glen "Lucy" Luck provided bass guitar. They pushed the musical boundaries of the local thrash metal scene and were pioneers of Australian death metal. The group also helped establish Australia's metal festival, Metal for the Brain in 1991. They issued a studio album, Angel of the Sixth Order, in July 1999 before disbanding soon after.

Dreadnaught is a metal band from Melbourne, Australia. The group was formed out of the remnants of some Tasmanian bands including Fridge from Launceston who recorded an album in 1994.

Damaged was an Australian deathgrind band from Ballarat, Victoria, active from 1989 to 2004.

Lord Kaos is an Australian black metal band that formed in Sydney in 1994. For several years the group was the most prominent act of its style in the country with one founding member going on to record and perform with several Norwegian black metal bands including Dimmu Borgir. While Lord Kaos only released one album, the group was a considerable influence on the local heavy metal music scene as not only arguably the first but one of the few bands to record and perform Norwegian-style symphonic black metal.

Australian heavy metal music has its roots in both the Australian hard rock and pub rock tradition of the 1970s and the American and British heavy metal scenes. Since the mid-1980s, Australian heavy metal has been particularly influenced by foreign bands, particularly Swedish death metal, American thrash metal and black metal from Norway. Within Australia heavy metal has always remained part of the underground but since the mid-1990s many Australian metal acts have found widespread acceptance in overseas markets, particularly in Europe.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Misery (band)</span> Australian death metal band

Misery was an Australian death metal band from Brisbane, Queensland. Since forming in 1991, the band has released four albums and an EP, and are one of the earliest formed bands in their genre from their country. The band split in 2005, but has reformed four times for an East Coast Australian tour in support of final album in 2009, to support Taake on an Australian tour in 2017, for the 30th Anniversary of their debut album and play The New Dead Festival in Adelaide 15th April 2023.

Switchblade were an Australian five-piece metal band from Sydney, Australia, who formed in 2001 and disbanded in 2011. During their career they released two albums, and played support for bands such as Slayer, Machine Head, Exodus, Trivium and Nevermore during their respective Australian tours. They also appeared at Metal for the Brain and the Come Together Music Festival.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frankenbok</span> Australian heavy metal band

Frankenbok is an Australian heavy metal band from Melbourne. The band was founded in 1997 by guitarist Aaron Butler and vocalist Adam 'Hutch' Glynn and have since released three full-length albums and one EP. Frankenbok have toured Australia on numerous occasions, building a strong cult following in their homeland.

Australian thrash metal is a regional scene of thrash metal music that originated during the late 1980s.

Pod People are a doom metal band from Canberra, Australia that formed in 1991. The band has recorded six releases, playing a blend of stoner and sludge traits, with lyrics on themes of cannabis in their earlier works, to topics thematically based around The Divine Comedy. The band released one EP and several demo tapes with the original line up. The founding members later left the band during 1993–1996, which drastically altered the make up and sound of the band.

<i>Metal Down Under</i> 2014 Australian film

Metal Down Under is a 2014 documentary directed by Nick Calpakdjian. The film uses interviews, archival footage and animation to trace the history of heavy metal music in Australia. Calpakdjian partly funded the film through crowd-funding website Pozible. It was released in Australia on 22 August 2014 with distribution by MGM. On 1 September 2014 it debuted on the ARIA Top 40 Music DVDs chart at #4.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">King Parrot (band)</span> Australian grindcore band

King Parrot are an Australian grindcore band formed in Melbourne in 2010. They have released three studio albums: Bite Your Head Off (2012), Dead Set (2015) and Ugly Produce (2017).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Heaven the Axe</span>

Heaven the Axe is a heavy metal band, which formed in Wagga Wagga in 2007 by Phoebe Pinnock on lead vocals and her husband, Steve Watts, on rhythm guitar.

References

  1. 1 2 Bachelard, Michael (16 November 1991). "Street links help youth safety net". The Canberra Times . National Library of Australia. p. 3. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  2. Finnila, Richard (25 February 2005). "Like metal to a magnet". The Courier Mail. p. 46.
  3. Stanley, Jessica (21 December 2003). "Die-hard metal fans gather in Canberra for music festival". The Canberra Times. p. 3.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Haygarth, Nic (12 November 1992). "Good Times: A Little Help from Your Friends". The Canberra Times. National Library of Australia. p. 15. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  5. 1 2 "Times Out: Rock: Saturday". The Canberra Times. National Library of Australia. 14 November 1991. p. 22. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  6. "Metal concert". The Canberra Times. National Library of Australia. 15 November 1991. p. 16. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  7. "Farewell To Metal For The Brain | undercover.com.au, Music, News, Entertainment". webarchive.nla.gov.au. Archived from the original on 17 May 2010. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
  8. Winchester, Bree (2 January 2017). "Thank you ANU Bar, for some of the best nights of our lives". The Canberra Times. Fairfax Media. Archived from the original on 2 January 2017. Retrieved 2 January 2017.
  9. "The Last Metal for the Brain HTML info - Sat Nov 4th 2006". webarchive.nla.gov.au. Archived from the original on 18 December 2006. Retrieved 24 May 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  10. Calpakdjian, Nick; Animus Industries (2014), Metal down under : a history of Australian heavy metal, Australia Animus Industries Distributed by MGM, retrieved 20 August 2015
  11. "GOOD TIMES - Bachelors fuse jazz and dance - The Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 - 1995) - 14 Nov 1991". Canberra Times. 14 November 1991. Retrieved 24 May 2017.
  12. Leedham, Nicole (11 November 1993). "Metal for the Brain". The Canberra Times . National Library of Australia. p. 1. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
  13. Epitaph