Charon (band)
Charon was a Finnish gothic metal band from Raahe, Finland.
Charon | |
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Background information | |
Origin | Raahe, Finland |
Genres | Gothic metal |
Years active | 1992–2011 |
Labels | Spinefarm Records Diehard Records Emanzipation Productions |
Associated acts | Northern Kings, For My Pain..., Harmaja |
Members | Juha-Pekka Leppäluoto Antti Karihtala Teemu Hautamäki Lauri Tuohimaa |
Past members | Jasse Von Hast Pasi Sipilä |
Biography
Charon was founded in 1992 by Antti Karihtala, Teemu Hautamäki, Pasi Sipilä, and Jasse Hast and was originally a brutal death metal act.[1] After releasing three promo albums and two demos, all self-released, the band signed a record deal with Emanzipation Productions. Through Emanzipation, Charon released their first two full-length albums Sorrowburn and Tearstained in 1998 and 2000 respectively. After touring with fellow Finlanders Sentenced, the band parted ways with Emanzipation and signed to Spinefarm Records.
During the summer of 2001 Charon recorded their third studio album Downhearted. Prior to the release of the full album, the single Little Angel, which rose to number 5 on the Finnish singles chart,[2] was released. In early 2002, Downhearted was released, and it proved to be just as popular as the single. The album rose to the number 3 slot on the Finnish Album Charts[3] while the video for the song "Little Angel" hit No. 1[4] on the Nordic Video List.
The summer following the release of Downhearted the band went on tour in their native Finland, and directly thereafter the band toured through Europe with Nightwish and After Forever. Then in April 2003, the band released another single, In Trust of No One, which made its debut at No. 1 on the Finnish Singles Chart.[5] Five months later the Religious/Delicious single was released, followed quickly by the band's fourth studio album The Dying Daylights. Immediately after the releases the band went on tour in Finland to support the album.
In November 2003, guitarist Jasse von Hast left the band, citing a lack of interest in playing for the group and boredom with band-related activities as reason for doing so.[6] Lauri Tuohimaa stepped in and officially became the band's new guitarist in January 2004. Charon then went on yet another tour through Finland to support The Dying Daylights.
After several more tours and the release of the single Colder, the band released its fifth album Songs for the Sinners on August 31, 2005. Since then the band has toured extensively in Europe and Russia. Concerning further releases, the band stated, during the summer, that they had six new tracks ready to record. Then, that autumn, another update was posted on the bands site stating that they have spent the last few weeks recording five new tracks for a demo and that they are currently negotiating a new record deal.
On June 3, 2011 the band has posted a news release on their website stating that they have decided to disband after summer concerts in their native Finland.[7]
Members
Last line-up
- Juha-Pekka Leppäluoto - Vocals
- Lauri Tuohimaa - Guitar
- Antti Karihtala - Drums
- Teemu Hautamäki - Bass
Former members
- Jasse von Hast - Guitar
- Pasi Sipilä - Guitar
Discography
Albums
- Sorrowburn (1998)
- Tearstained (2000)
- Downhearted (2001)
- The Dying Daylights (2003)
- Songs for the Sinners (2005)
Singles
- "Little Angel" (2001)
- "In Trust of No One" (2003)
- "Religious/Delicious" (2003)
- "Ride on Tears" (2005)
- "Colder" (2005)
Compilation Albums
- A-Sides, B-Sides & Suicides (2010)
Official videos
- "November's Eve"
- "Little Angel"
- "Colder"
- "Ride on Tears"
References
- MusicMight - Charon
- Finnish Singles Chart - 02.12.2001 Archived 2008-12-16 at the Wayback Machine
- metalfromfinland.com Archived November 8, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- "Spinefarm Records - Charon biography". Archived from the original on 2007-10-12. Retrieved 2007-11-10.
- Blabbermouth report - 8.9.2003 Archived 2008-12-16 at the Wayback Machine
- Blabbermouth report - 25.11.2003 Archived March 18, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- www.charon.fi Archived August 30, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
External links
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