Isengard (band)

Isengard was a pagan black metal solo project of Fenriz, famous for being the drummer of Darkthrone, created in 1989.

Isengard
OriginOslo, Norway
GenresBlack metal, pagan metal, folk metal
Years active1989–1995
LabelsMoonfog, Deaf, Peaceville
Associated actsDarkthrone, Storm, Valhall, Dødheimsgard
Past membersFenriz

It is rooted on Norwegian black/Viking metal and experimental rock on some tracks, and named after the large fortress Isengard in J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings book series.

History

The person/creature in Isengard's logo was taken from an old Lord of the Rings RPG called Middle-earth Role Playing. The original illustration represents Thuringwethil, the vampire from Tolkien's book The Silmarillion.

Fenriz created Isengard because he had many musical ideas that didn't fit in with the style and music of Darkthrone.

Fenriz performed all instruments and vocals himself.

Vinterskugge is a compilation of three demos recorded before the full-length album Høstmørke was recorded.

When asked how he felt about Isengard in a November 2007 interview, Fenriz commented that he doesn't "understand why people like it so much".[1] He stated that people like "the elements" which he doesn't like, namely the project's folk metal aspect.[1]

In 2016, Peaceville Records issued a two-song 7" entitled "Traditional Doom Cult".[2] Its A-side, "The Light", was recorded in 1989 whereas the B-side "The Fright" was recorded in the early 1990s.

It was announced that a third Isengard album entitled "Vårjevndøgn" would be released in October 2020, consisting of unreleased recordings from 1989-1993.[3]

Discography

  • Spectres over Gorgoroth (demo, 1989)
  • Horizons (demo, 1991)
  • Vandreren (demo, 1993)
  • Vinterskugge (compilation, 1994)
  • Høstmørke (1995)
  • Traditional Doom Cult (2016)
gollark: How long *is* the tmpim meeting?
gollark: Yes, kepler has a blæzefarm and enchant shop.
gollark: Was that sentence just an excuse to say "Kung Flu"?
gollark: 1337 koding.
gollark: It seems to have beaten potatOS, then.

References

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