Martin Henriksson

Hans Martin Knut Henriksson (born 30 October 1974) is a former Swedish musician best known for his work with death metal band Dark Tranquillity and was one of the original members, and the main songwriter for the band until he left them in 2015.

Martin Henriksson
Martin Henriksson of Dark Tranquillity
Background information
Birth nameHans Martin Knut Henriksson[1]
Born (1974-10-30) 30 October 1974
Gothenburg, Sweden
GenresMelodic death metal, heavy metal
InstrumentsGuitar, bass
Years active1989–2015
LabelsCentury Media, Osmose Productions, Spinefarm
Associated actsDark Tranquillity

Biography

When Dark Tranquillity formed in 1989 Henriksson was the bassist up until 1999. He switched to guitar when their ex-guitarist Fredrik Johansson quit, but recorded bass again once on Construct when the band had no bassist at the time. He composed much of the band's music throughout his tenure, especially between Projector and Fiction.

Although Henriksson had been inactive with the band since 2015 it wasn't until January 2016 that he started to realize he didn't want to be in the band anymore. His official resignation became effective March 31, 2016 when Dark Tranquillity announced Henriksson's departure from the band.[2]

Style

In Dark Tranquillity, he plays both rhythms and melodies. He is known for his smooth playing style, while Niklas Sundin, Dark Tranquillity's other guitarist, has a more harsh style. He normally does not play solos (Sundin usually performs them).[3] Some exceptions to that are the songs 'Focus Shift' and 'Lost to Apathy', in whose videos Martin is seen playing slow, smooth leads. His riffs are sometimes complemented with pick slides and harmonics. When he was on bass (using picks), he also played melodies.

Equipment

Martin's main stage guitars include a Gibson Explorer and a Gibson Les Paul Studio Lite. He previously used Rocktron Prophesy rack mounted pre-amps, but after the Damage Done tour, he and Niklas Sundin begun using Peavey 5150 and Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier amplifiers along with Behringer V-AMP 2 PRO modeling processors. In the making off We Are The Void, they show a Peavey 6505s.

gollark: It would probably result in horrible things, but still.
gollark: I do sometimes wish I could chain together prefixes.
gollark: Ah, they're up to survey feet now.
gollark: It's probably better than being stuck on bad units forever.
gollark: I'm not sure how much that would actually cost. If a lot, maybe some sort of incremental approach could somehow work.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.