Church of Misery explained

Church of Misery
Origin:Tokyo, Japan
Genre:Doom metal, stoner metal
Years Active:1995–present
Label:Doom Records, Bad Acid, Game Two, Man's Ruin, Southern Lord, Kult of Nihilow, Diwphalanx, Dada Drumming, Calculon, A Pile of Dirt, Rise Above, Metal Blade
Associated Acts:Salem, Sonic Flower, Skull Pit, Cathedral, Repulsion, Earthride, Blood Farmers
Website:churchofmisery.net
Current Members:Tatsu Mikami
Kazuhiro Asaeda
Fumiya Hattori
Toshiaki Umemura
Past Members:Hiroyuki Takano
Yasunori Takada
Yasuto Muraki
Junichi Yamamura
Hideki Fukasawa
Junji Narita
Ikuma Kawabe
Yoshiaki Negishi
Tom Sutton
Nobukazu Chow
Tomohiro Nishimura
Hideki Shimizu
Takenori Hoshi
Kensuke Suto
Scott Carlson

is a Japanese doom metal band from Tokyo, formed in 1995.[1] Church of Misery's musical style melds early Black Sabbath-style doom with psychedelic rock;[2] most of the band's songs are about serial killers and mass murderers.[3]

The band has gone through many line-up changes, with bassist Tatsu Mikami being the sole constant member throughout the years.

History

Beginnings and line-up changes (1995–2008)

Church of Misery formed in 1995 with a lineup of Mikami, vocalist Kazuhiro Asaeda, guitarist Tomohiro Nishimura and drummer Hideki Shimizu. This line-up recorded the Vol. 1 album, released in 1997 by Doom Records without the band's consent (it was later officially reissued in 2007 by Japan's Leaf Hound Records).[4] In 1996, vocalist Nobukazu Chow replaced Asaeda. The band's first EP, Taste the Pain, was released in 1998 by Bad Acid Records, followed by the Murder Company EP in 1999 on Man's Ruin Records. Singer Yoshiaki Negishi and drummer Junji Narita replaced Chow and Shimizu, respectively, in 2000.

In 2001, Southern Lord Records issued the band's official debut full-length album, Master of Brutality. After its release, founding guitarist Nishimura was replaced briefly by Osamu Hamada and then by Takenori Hoshi.

New singer Hideki Fukasawa joined in time for the band's second full-length album, The Second Coming, released in 2004 by Japanese label Diwphalanx Records. That same year, Leaf Hound released Early Works Compilation, collecting the first band's two EPs, cover versions and other material from 1998-2000. Guitarist Tom Sutton replaced Hoshi in 2006.

They released numerous split albums and EPs between 1998 and 2006, including two with Sourvein, with whom they toured Europe in 2006.

Church of Misery performed at the Roadburn Festival in 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2012.[5]

Departures, line-up changes and recent activities (2009–present)

The band's third album, Houses of the Unholy, was issued in 2009 by Rise Above Records and Metal Blade Records. Following its release, prior vocalist Negishi rejoined, lasting until 2011, while Sutton was replaced first by Kensuke Suto and then by Ikuma Kawabe. Fukasawa rejoined on vocals for their fourth album, Thy Kingdom Scum (2013).

In 2014, Church of Misery toured Europe three times, the first being a support slot for Monster Magnet. Following the band's extensive summer tour, Fukasawa, Kawabe and Narita collectively quit, leaving Mikami as the only remaining member of the group.[6]

Members

Current

Former

Session

Timeline

Discography

Studio albums

Singles and EPs

Live albums

Compilation albums

Compilation appearances

Home videos

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Steve Huey . Taste the Pain - Church of Misery | Songs, Reviews, Credits . . 1999-03-23 . 2020-03-14.
  2. Web site: Church of Misery Interview | Metal Blast!. 20 April 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140420212516/http://www.metalblast.net/interviews/church-of-misery-interview/. 10 October 2020. 2014-04-20.
  3. News: 25 Songs That Tell Us Where Music Is Going: Make Them Die Slowly (John George Haigh). Darnielle. John. 2017-03-09. The New York Times. 2017-03-09. 0362-4331.
  4. Web site: Church Of Misery - Vol.1 (1997, CD) . Discogs.com . 2001-09-04 . 2020-03-14.
  5. News: Opwarmen voor Roadburn met Shining, Enslaved, Brant Bjork, Jesu.... Griffioen. Ingmar. 14 April 2010. 3VOOR12. 8 September 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110214181319/http://3voor12.vpro.nl/artikelen/artikel/43351123. 14 February 2011. dead.
  6. Web site: Church of Misery Facebook page. Facebook.com. 2 January 2016.