Black Aria Explained

Black Aria
Type:studio
Artist:Glenn Danzig
Cover:Glenn Danzig - Black Aria album cover.jpg
Released:1992, 2000, 2006
Recorded:1987–?
Genre:Neoclassical dark wave, dungeon synth
Length:23:48
Label:Plan 9, E-Magine, Evilive
Producer:Glenn Danzig
Prev Year:1992
Next Title:Thrall-Demonsweatlive
Next Year:1993

Black Aria is an instrumental album composed by Glenn Danzig, the vocalist/songwriter for Danzig and previously of Samhain and the Misfits. It was released in 1992, and is Danzig's first album as a solo artist.

The mostly instrumental album is a departure from Danzig's earlier work in metal and punk rock, and debuted at number 1 on the American Billboard classical chart.[1] The original release was on Glenn Danzig's own label, Plan 9 Records, and like his Misfits and Samhain releases, was distributed by Caroline Records. The album was reissued in 2000 on E-Magine Records, and a sequel followed on Evilive Records in 2006. A third reissue occurred, again on Danzig's Evilive label in conjunction with Cleopatra Records, in July 2023, along with Black Aria II.

Music and recording

The album is largely modern instrumental classical music, and is very dark, with gothic metal tendencies.

Although it was not released until 1992, some of the material on the album was recorded as early as 1987. Select tracks from the album had served as intro music to early Danzig shows, and excerpts of some songs were included on Danzig's first two compilation home videos released by Def American Recordings in 1989 and 1991.

The first six song titles reference a soundtrack to John Milton's epic poem Paradise Lost, which describes Lucifer's rebellion from the Christian God, and his subsequent expulsion from Heaven with the angels who joined him. The final three tracks, written by Danzig while he was still in Samhain, reference Celtic mythology.[2] "The Morrigu" relates to The Morrígan, a mythical phantom queen. "Cwn Annwn" refers to the spectral hounds of the same name.

All tracks were written by Glenn Danzig, who also performed all instruments.[3] Engineering was provided by Nick Didia, Martin Schmelze, and Bob Alecca. Female voices were provided by Janna Brown and Reneé Rubach.

Artwork and packaging

The photograph of Glenn Danzig in the liner notes was taken by Anton Corbijn. The album's front cover is by renowned comic book and graphic artist Michael William Kaluta, who also drew the interior illustrations for Danzig's fourth album.

As the musical content of Black Aria is a departure from the music of the band Danzig, the album has a written disclaimer to warn buyers that it is not a rock record.

Credits

Production

References

  1. Web site: Glenn Danzig Unleashes 'Black Aria II' To Follow-Up His Classic Release. August 30, 2006. Metal Underground. 2011-06-13.
  2. Web site: Glenn Danzig chat. January 27, 2000. Trans World Entertainment. 2010-08-02. https://web.archive.org/web/20110716220649/http://www.the7thhouse.com/news/Articles/d6_twec.htm. July 16, 2011. dead.
  3. Web site: The Dark Knight Returns. Kitts. Jeff. September 1994. Flux Magazine. 2011-04-20.