Brymir

Brymir is a Finnish melodic death metal/symphonic metal-band from Helsinki founded in 2006.[1]

Brymir
Background information
OriginHelsinki, Finland
Genres
Years active2006 (2006)–present
LabelsRanka Kustannus
Out of Line Music
Spinefarm Records (2010–2013)
Associated acts
Websitebrymir.com
MembersViktor Gullichsen
Joona Björkroth
Sean Haslam
Jarkko Niemi
Patrik Fält
Past membersJanne Björkroth
Jaakko Tikkanen
Sami Hänninen

Biography

They were formed in the summer of 2006 during a music summer camp under the name LAI LAI HEI (named of the Ensiferum track of the same name). After the win of a camp-competition covering the Ensiferum track "Token of Time", the band quickly became more serious and started to compose their own music under the current name Brymir. Their first album Breathe Fire to the Sun (2011) still held some folk metal influences, but the band has moved away from these influences in their music towards their current melodic death metal / symphonic metal sound from their second album Slayer of Gods (2016) onwards.

Members

Current

  • Viktor Gullichsen – Lead vocals (2006–)
  • Joona Björkroth – Guitars, backing vocals (2006–)
  • Sean Haslam – Guitars (2006–)
  • Jarkko Niemi – Bass, vocals (2006–)
  • Patrik Fält – Drums (2013–)

Past members

  • Jaakko Tikkanen – Drums (2006–2010)
  • Sami Hänninen – Drums (2010–2013)
  • Janne Björkroth – Keyboard, backing vocals (2006–2018)

Live musicians

  • Petri Mäkipää – Drums (2013)
  • Antti Nieminen – Guitars (2017–)

Discography

Studioalbums

  • Breathe Fire to the Sun (Spinefarm Records) – 2011
  • Slayer of Gods (Ranka Kustannus) – 2016
  • Wings of Fire (Ranka Kustannus) – 2019

Singles

  • "For Those Who Died" (2016)
  • "The Rain" (2016)
  • "Chasing The Skyline" (2018)
  • "Ride On, Spirit" (2018)
  • "Wings of fire" (2019)
gollark: You can look it up.
gollark: Raspberry Pi Foundation.
gollark: The RPi Foundation actually also applied DRM to the v2 camera modules, you know.
gollark: Wait, are you suggesting computers are *bad*?
gollark: triangles

References

  1. "Brymir at metal-archives.com". Retrieved 26 December 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.