Bloodlet (band)

Bloodlet are an American hardcore punk band from Orlando, Florida that formed in 1992. Their style of music (which has sometimes been dubbed as "evilcore" by critics)[1][2] features elements of metalcore[2] and sludge metal, which has been noted for influencing the 1990s underground hardcore scene.[3]

Bloodlet
OriginOrlando, Florida, U.S.
GenresMetalcore, sludge metal
Years active19921998
20012003, 2014, 2017present
LabelsVictory Records, A389 Recordings, Stability Records, Structure Records, Smorgasbord Records, Translation Loss Records
Associated actsDamnation A.D., Adventures In Immortality, Gray Before My Eyes, Song Of Kerman, Hollow Leg, Junior Bruce
MembersScott Angelacos
Thomas Crowther
Matt Easley
Charles King
Art Legere
Past membersJohn Stewart Jr
Keith Dalrymple
Jeremy Illges

History

After releasing a demo tape and a few 7-inches during the early portion of their career, as well as collaborating with Damnation A.D. under the name Bloodnation to contribute to a compilation,[4] the group were signed onto Victory Records, who issued the band's debut Entheogen in 1996. After extensive touring, the group's second album The Seraphim Fall was issued in 1998, and the group quietly entered a hiatus.[3] The group would later reunite in 2001, and issue their third album Three Humid Nights in the Cypress Trees, which was released in 2002. The album was engineered by Steve Albini and was recorded at his Electrical Audio recording studio.[5] A music video was produced for "Holy Rollin Homicide", and the group would disband once more a year later.

In 2014, the group would reform for a special one-off performance at the A389 Recordings' 10th anniversary festival, performing with groups such as Integrity and Infest.[6] That same year the label also issued a double-LP reissue of Entheogen,[7] a limited edition live album,[8] and a limited edition 5" of a rare outtake titled "Embrace". The song was recorded in 1994, and was forgotten until a hardcore blog made a post about it years later.[9]

In 2017, the group made an appearance for This Is Hardcore 2017.[10] Since then, the band has been active and have toured.

Members

Current members

  • Scott Angelacos - vocals (19921998, 20012003, 2014, 2017present)
  • Thomas Crowther - guitar (2014, 2017present), bass (2002-2003)
  • Matt Easley - guitar (19921998, 20012003, 2014, 2017present)
  • Charles King - drums (19931998, 2014, 2017present)
  • Art Legere - bass (19941998, 20012002, 2014, 2017present), guitar (1996)

Former members

  • John Stewart Jr - drums (20012003)
  • Keith Dalrymple - bass (19921994)
  • Jeremy Illges - guitar (19941996)
  • Tyler Gray - bass (1996)

Discography

Studio albums

  • Entheogen CD/CS/LP (March 5, 1996, Victory) (Double LP edition issued by A389 Recordings in 2014)
  • The Seraphim Fall CD/CS/LP (March 10, 1998, Victory)
  • Three Humid Nights in the Cypress Trees CD/CS (June 4, 2002, Victory)

Singles and EPs

  • Bloodlet demo tape (1992, self-released)
  • Bloodlet 7" (1993, Smorgasbord)
  • Husk 7" (1993, Structure)
  • Shell 7" (1994, Stability)
  • Embrace 5" (2014, A389 Recordings/Stuck In the Past)
  • Viper in Hand 10"/Digital (2019, Translation Loss Records)

Compilation albums

  • Eclectic (November 1, 1995, Victory)

Live albums

  • Live On WFMU-FM (03.23.95) (April 19, 2014, A389 Recordings)
gollark: Laser diodes are just things which do that using semiconductors, somewhat like LEDs, and are powered by electricity.
gollark: No. Someone with more physics knowledge could answer better than me, but, very approximately: "laser" stands for "light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation", and describes a specific way to generate light through some magic process using a "gain medium" and optical feedback thing.
gollark: That would not actually be a laser.
gollark: I think you would need a hilariously expensive and large free electron laser for that.
gollark: Lasers are "bright" because the output light is "compacted" into a small area.

References

  1. Prato, Greg. "Bloodlet Biography". Allmusic Guide. Retrieved 2018-08-04.
  2. Taylor, Jason D. "Three Humid Nights in the Cypress Trees Review". allmusic.com. Allmusic Guide. Retrieved 2018-08-04.
  3. Gramlich, Chris (2006-01-01). "Bloodlet Don't Call It A Comeback". exclaim.ca. Exclaim!. Retrieved 2018-08-04.
  4. Ramirez, Carlos (2016-04-26). "Interview: Mike McTernan (Damnation A.D., When Tigers Fight)". noecho.net. No Echo. Retrieved 2018-08-04.
  5. n/a (2002-03-19). "Bloodlet enters studio to record full-length". lambgoat.com. Lamb Goat. Retrieved 2018-08-04.
  6. n/a (2013-09-26). "A389 Recordings announces 10th Anniversary Bash". lambgoat.com. Lamb Goat. Retrieved 2018-08-04.
  7. Zorgdrager, Bradley (2014-02-07). "Bloodlet: Entheogen/Embrace Review". excalim.ca. Exclaim!. Retrieved 2018-08-06.
  8. n/a (2014-03-14). "Bloodlet set to release 'Live On WFUM-FM'". lambgoat.com. Lamb Goat. Retrieved 2018-08-04.
  9. n/a (2013-11-13). "Bloodlet: unreleased material due out in January". lambgoat.com. Lamb Goat. Retrieved 2018-08-04.
  10. n/a (2017-03-27). "This Is Hardcore 2017 Announced". lambgoat.com. Lamb Goat. Retrieved 2018-08-04.
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