Next in a series of interviews with Brazilian metal bands comes PANDEMMY. Founded in 2009 by lead/main guitarist Pedro Valença, PANDEMMY is a metal band that expanded their death/trash sound throughout the years with influences coming from in and outside metal. After Self-Destruction (demo 2010), Dialetic (EP 2011), Idiocracy (EP 2012), Reflections & Rebellions (Album 2013), the band released Rise Of A New Strike (2016), a marvel of an album: vigorious and versatile with an almost delicate feel for melody, a collection of superb songs that feels like a metal symphony. Wagner & Heavy Metal asked Pedro Valença about the band, their musical influences and their goal in life and music. 1. My first question about PANDEMMY. What is the exact line-up of the band? Pedro Valença - Hi Metalheads! We are PANDEMMY, Brazilian Death Thrash Metal band! The exact line-up of the band is Pedro Valença and Guilherme Silva (Lead Guitars), Rayanna Torres (Vocals), Marcelo Santa Fé (Bass Guitar) and Arthur Santos (Drums). 2. What is the metal scene like in Brazil at the moment? Is it growing and alive? Does is know many subgenres? If so, which of the subgenres is most popular? Pedro Valença – Brazil is a very big country. there are several metal scenes depending on the region. In general we have great bands and a good schedule of shows. Some cities have difficulties with venues and equipment. We still do not have the level of public that Europe and the United States have. This also hinders the creation of major festivals. Extreme music has more space in the current scene, because Sepultura and Krisiun are big bands that influence a lot of other bands. We also have great melodic bands like Angra, Hangar, André Matos, Terraprima and Hibria. 3. Does each band member bring their own specific influences or are all the band members into the exact same music? Pedro Valença – We have influences in common in Heavy Metal, especially in Death Metal (Carcass, Morbid Angel, Death) and Thrash Metal (Megadeth, Kreator, Destruction, Sepultura), but each member likes other types of music. 4. What is the writing dynamic among members of the band (does one person write or is song writing more a band effort)? Pedro Valença – Me and Guilherme are the main composers. When rehearsing new songs, any member thinks about the parts that can be modified. About the lyrics I also like to write them. 5. I hear many diffferent influences in the music of PANDEMMY (thrash, death, progressive metal). What are the influences of the band outside metal? Pedro Valença – Great question, my friend! We like pop music (Lana Del Rey, Michael Jackson, Adele, Dido, Alanis Morissette), some things from the 1990s (Pearl Jam, Rage Against The Machine, Soundgarden), hard rock (Uriah Heep, Gun Sin), blues, classical music and movie soundtracks. 6. I noticed that the band, sometimes, remembers a bit of DEATH. A band like DEATH (read: Chuck Schuldiner) implemented increasingly complex song structures into their thrash/death sound. How do you see your own musical development? Are there (musical) areas that you still want to explore? Pedro Valença – Thanks for the compliment! Chuck Schuldiner and Death is a great and present influence. I think we evolved on the second album. We like to keep a dynamic between the tracks. This dynamic can give the impression that we are technicians. Our compositions flow, are not intentional. We will never be something like Math Metal (?!) or Technical Death Metal. 7. What inspires the band the most when it comes to writing lyrics? Pedro Valença – The injustices of the world. Few lyrics approach personal issues. We are a heavy metal band that doesn’t support any conservatism. It’s sad to see headbangers supporting politicians like Donald Trump, Le Pen, Joko Widodo, Mauricio Macri or Jair Bolsonaro. These people hatch the egg of fascism. 8. Does the band believe in heavy metal (the kind of metal that you play) as a force that can change things for the good (as music that can raise awareness about, for instance, political and environmental issues)? Pedro Valença – Absolutely !!! Heavy Metal has come to break paradigms. See our heroes. They all grew up in oppressive environments, suffered from prejudice, addictions, any kind of violence. They made music based on their inner demons. We better understand life through these life experiences. I think Heavy Metal (and Rap) have great potential to change people for the better. Talking about politics, ecology and emerging issues (such as the new wave of fascism) is necessary. We cannot relieve the danger that the planet and society are in. 9. What was the biggest gig of the band sofar (in and/or outside Brazil)? Pedro Valença - Our most three shows was on Abril Pro Rock Festival (2012) supporting for Exodus, Ratos de Porão and Brujeria; Roça n’ Roll Festival (2011) in the state of Minas Gerais for Wacken Open Air Metal Battle Brazil and Hellcifest (2017) supporting to Abbath and Amon Amarth. When the economic crisis is over, let's plan our first tour in Europe. 10. Final question for now: do you have any specific goal in mind for the band (besides world domination)? Pedro Valença – Music is art. Entertaining or raising awareness are our goals. Make people feel good with our music. Make the most of shows, at most places, launch good albums and dominate the world. Thank you for interview. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram. Keep spreading the PANDEMMY! Note: Vocals on Rise Of A New Strike are from Vinícius Amorim. Rayanna Torres joined PANDEMMY after the release of that album.
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Coming from São Paulo, Brazil is Apophanous. A Progressive Thrash Metal band formed in the beginning of 2015 by Fabio Trevisan (Divine Holocaust, ACE23), Tiago Lima (Cimeries, Everhate) and Vitor Alcantara (Encanto Blasfemo, Divine Holocaust). From death metal mayhem till Dream Theater-kind of guitar soli and influences that go from Nevermore to Machine Head and Pantera, Apophanous is a metal band with a broad range of tricks on their sleeve. Last year they debuted with the EP "Obliteration Has Come". Wagner & Heavy Metal asked singer Vitor Trevison about the Brazilian metal scene (Is there metal after Sepultura? Spoiler: there was metal before Sepultura!) and their goals in music and life. 1. What is the exact line-up of this band? I (Vitor Alcantara) do the vocals, Alvaro Albuq is the bassist, Fabio Trevisan the drummer and Tiago Lima takes care of the guitars. 2. What is the metal scene like in Brazil at the moment? Is it growing and alive? Does is know many subgenres? If so, which of the subgenres are most popular? The Brazilian scene is always growing and we have great bands here from many subgenres. The most popular is Extreme Metal (Black/Death/Thrash) and Crust, Crossover and hardcore related genres. 3. Does each band member bring their own specific influences or are all the band members into the exact same music? Every member carries its own influence and we manage to bring it to our music without making it confusing or messy. It’s a challenge and a great exercise for us! 4. What is the writing dynamic among members of the band (does one person write or is song writing more a band effort)? It’s a collaborative process. Everyone brings with ideas and helps on the writing and song composing. 5. I hear many different influences in your music. Do you have influences outside metal? I am a fan of Crust (kind of Grindcore that hangs more to Punk than Metal - W&HM), Hardcore and also some Psychobilly and Horror Rock Bands and I like to explore elements of theses styles for my vocals. In our EP we made some experiments using non-metal genres such as tribal and Brazilian typical songs (such as baião) for reach a unique identity. 6. I noticed a t-shirt of DEATH in one band-pic. A band like DEATH (read: Chuck Schuldiner) implemented increasingly complex song structures into their trash/death sound. How do you see your own musical development? Are there (musical) areas that you still want to explore? I was me (Vitor) wearing a DEATH t-shirt on the promo-pic! I’m a huge fan of Schuldiner’s work and I consider him one of the greatest musicians of all time. He revolutionized the way of making metal music and taught us that we can experiment different elements and complex music on the metal genre and I think that there is an infinite universe of elements to explore and add in metal music. 7. What inspires the band the most when it comes to writing lyrics? Most of our lyrics are about psychological conflicts and the dark side of humanity’s mind. We have songs about psychopathy, nihilism, schizophrenia, etc. Some are inspired by movies or real facts like serial killers cases for instance. 8. Do you believe that heavy metal (the kind of metal that you play) can be a force that can change things for the good (as music that can raise awareness about, for instance, political and environmental issues)? Not alone metal but every kind of music can change things and can make people aware of our world and society. War can’t bring peace but music can! 9. What was the biggest gig of the band sofar (in and/or outside Brazil)? We haven’t played outside Brazil yet. The biggest gig was on Bertioga ( at São Paulo coastside) when we played with some big bands of our underground metal scene such as Claustrofobia, Sinaya and Surra! 10. Final question for now: do you have any specific goals in mind for the band (besides world domination)? Play outside Brazil, drink beer from every country and evolve as musicians and human beings! (I'll drink to that - Cheers!) |
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