Karl Willetts

Karl Willetts (born 21 September 1966) is a death metal vocalist from England. He joined the British death metal band Bolt Thrower in 1988. Before that he drove the backline of the band. He stayed with Bolt Thrower until 1994, after the recording of ...For Victory. He left the band mainly because he wanted to go back to university and finish his degree.

Karl Willetts
Karl Willetts live with Memoriam at Roadburn Festival, Tilburg, April 2017
Background information
Born (1966-09-21) 21 September 1966
England
GenresDeath metal
Occupation(s)Musician
InstrumentsVocals
Years active1988–present
Associated actsBolt Thrower, Memoriam

Willetts rejoined as a session vocalist for the recording of Mercenary and left shortly thereafter because of financial reasons and lack of commitment. In the meantime, he got a job as a salesman of insurances besides other jobs. He resides in Solihull. Rumours persisted he had returned in 2001, but he did not. However, in November 2004, he actually did re-join Bolt Thrower after the departure of Dave Ingram. Willetts now has a degree in Cultural Studies from the Birmingham University. Willetts stayed in Bolt Thrower until the band broke up in 2016, following the death of drummer Martin Kearns the year before.

Willetts also did some guest vocals with UK punk band Doom on their Peel Sessions album[1] and UK death metal band Benediction on two accounts; one on "Jumping at Shadows" which appears on The Grand Leveller and Dark is the Season;[1] the other on "At the Wrong Side of the Grave", which is a cover of The Accüsed and appears on the Transcend the Rubicon album.[1]

Willetts was a vegetarian for a long while, but started eating meat prior to 2006.[2]

Discography

Bolt Thrower

Memoriam

  • For the Fallen (album) (2017)
  • The Silent Vigil (album) (2018)
  • Requiem for Mankind (album) (2019)

References

  1. "Interview vom Januar 1999 in Enschede und Osnabrück". Xs4all.nl.
  2. Karl Willetts. "Interview for DEATHTHRASHER MAGAZINE" (Interview). Interviewed by Armando Mutilator. The Gavin Spearhead Homepage. Archived from the original on 12 May 2014. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
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