S7N

S7N (pronounced "seven", /ˈsɛvən/)[3] is a Mexican heavy metal band from Mexico City, Mexico, founded in 2009 by guitarist and vocalist Mao Kanto and guitarist Guillermo García.

S7N
OriginMexico City, Mexico
GenresHeavy metal,[1] thrash metal[2]
Years active2009–present
Associated actsAgora
Websites7nmusic.com
MembersMao Kanto
Israel Monroy
Guillermo García
Lalo Olvera
Stu Zepeda
Past membersFabián Carreño
Adrián Mayorga

History

Formation, demos and Fearless (2009–2013)

S7N was formed in 2009[3] in Mexico City by guitarists Mao Kanto and Guillermo García. The name was adopted after Kanto's personal experience on July 7, 2007 (07-07-07). A few months later, guitarist Israel Monroy, bassist Lalo Olvera, and drummer Zared joined the band. During the early years, S7N performed as a cover band while writing their first original songs. Zared departed the band in 2012, leading to the inclusion of Fabián Carreño on drums and the beginning of the recordings for their debut album, Fearless. The album was released on November 25, 2013, with official videos released for "Blackout" and "Double Dealing".

Deadline and national success (2014–present)

The release of Fearless brought the attention of Mexican media, leading to S7N's participation as opening act for several artists during 2014, such as Havok,[4] Ghost,[5] and Napalm Death.[6] The album received a nomination for Best Metal Album at the Mexico Independent Music Awards.[7]

In 2015, "Blackout" was used as part of Netflix's Club de Cuervos soundtrack, on Season 1's Episode 7, as well as on EMP UNDERGROUND Volume One, a compilation for EMP Label Group. On March 14, the band played for the first time Vive Latino, the most important Latin rock festival in Mexico, on the Carpa Intolerante stage.[8] On May 9, they played Force Fest in Guadalajara on the Main Stage, sharing the lineup with Overkill and Judas Priest.[9] On September 12, S7N shared the stage with former Mötley Crüe singer John Corabi and Mexican bands such as Maligno and Agora at Hair Fest.[10]

Israel Monroy playing Knotfest Mexico 2017

During 2016, the band received further recognition, and they played their first concert outside Mexico at Rock Fiesta in Quartzsite, Arizona alongside some of the most iconic Mexican rock bands, such as El Tri, Caifanes, Café Tacuba, Maldita Vecindad, and Molotov.[11] This show marked their first appearance after Carreño's departure earlier that year,[12] with Agora's Eduardo Carrillo filling in for a couple of shows. Carrillo was also part of the recording of the band's sophomore album Deadline as co-producer along with fellow Agora's Manuel Vázquez at their own SoundMob Studio, with Los Viejos's Leo Padua performing drums. Deadline was released on June 17, after a successful crowdfunding campaign.[13] Later that year, the band recruited drummer Adrián Mayorga[14] and played main stage on October 15 at Slipknot's Knotfest, on the festival's second edition at Mexico.[15] To end the year, they closed the Agaves Stage at Coordenada festival in Guadalajara.[16]

On April 29, 2016, S7N released "Innocent Guilty" as the first single from Deadline through a lyric video. On May 5, 2017, "Bomb Maker" was released as the second single, with a music video directed by Lack of Remorse's singer Andrei Pulver.[17] S7N repeated their appearance at Knotfest Mexico 2017 after Asesino cancelled their participation.

Members

Current members

Former members

  • Zared - drums (2009–2012)
  • Fabián Carreño - drums (2012–2016)
  • Adrián Mayorga - drums (2016–2018)

Touring members

  • Eduardo Carrillo - drums (2016)

Timeline

Discography

Studio albums

Year Album details
2013 Fearless
2016 Deadline
  • Released: June 17, 2016
  • Label: Independent

Singles

Year Song Album
2013 "Blackout"

"Double Dealing"

Fearless
2014 "Blackoustic" Non-album single
2016 "Innocent Guilty" Deadline
2017 "Bomb Maker"

Music videos

Year Song Director
2014 "Blackout" Cheeno Mesdrage
2015 "Double Dealing" Cheeno Mesdrage
2017 "Bomb Maker" Andrei Pulver
gollark: Although it did access steam friends lists without permission.
gollark: I looked into it, and apparently it's not *obviously* doing spying.
gollark: Which means they think they can make a lot of money through it, hence apiohazard.
gollark: karbonite system pollution
gollark: Why do we have <#445375649511768074> and <#415981720286789634> but not #audio-games?

References

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