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The Principle of Evil Made Flesh

The Principle of Evil Made Flesh is the debut studio album by English extreme metal band Cradle of Filth. It was released on 24 February 1994 through Cacophonous Records, following three demos released between 1991 and 1993. The album's sound is significantly more raw than on subsequent releases, and frontman Dani Filth's vocals differ from his later style and technique. The album is a then-unusual hybrid of gothic metal and black metal.[1][2] This would be the only album featuring guitarist Paul Ryan and keyboardist Benjamin Ryan; guitarist Paul Allender also left the band at this point, but returned five years later for Midian.

The Principle of Evil Made Flesh
Cover design by Nigel Wingrove
Studio album by
Released24 February 1994
RecordedAcademy Music Studio, Dewsbury, England, September–November 1993
GenreExtreme metal
Length52:34
LabelCacophonous
ProducerRobert "Mags" Magoolagan
Cradle of Filth chronology
The Principle of Evil Made Flesh
(1994)
V Empire or Dark Faerytales in Phallustein
(1996)

Some of the tracks from this album were later re-recorded for V Empire (1996), Bitter Suites to Succubi (2001), Evermore Darkly (2011) and Midnight in the Labyrinth (2012).

Musical style

In the book The Gospel of Filth, Gavin Baddeley describes the album and its place within (or alongside) the contemporary black metal scene:

Principle did share several characteristics with the Scandinavian black metal emerging at the time, above and beyond the kindred fascination with all things dark and devilish. Cradle's debut is their rawest recording, chiming with the crude underproduction now demanded by black metal purists (though how much of that rawness was due to inexperience and budgetary limitations is another matter). It's still the only Cradle of Filth recording accepted as "true" black metal by many in the murkier corners of the underground... [but] there were as many things separating Cradle of Filth from the emerging black metal pack as they had in common. Just as important to Cradle's developing identity as the metal bands they grew up with in the 1980s and their contemporaries in the '90s was the dark verse and literature of the 1880s and '90s, produced by the artistic deviants of the day, known as the Decadents... Under the icy influence of the Norwegians, black metal had become a nihilistic, savage world of darkness and suffering, with little space for sensuality... Cradle pioneered a slick gothic image, emphasising the seductive aspects of the dark side...[1]

John Serba of AllMusic described the album's musical style:

Utilizing flowery classical flourishes, tangible melodies, nimble death/thrash riffing, a coherent—albeit crushing—rhythmic battery and the deranged, multifaceted caterwaul of vocalist Dani Davey, The Principle of Evil Made Flesh brought a musical sensibility to the black metal table that was absent in early genre releases by Emperor, Enslaved and Mayhem. Boasting a blatant goth influence—i.e., lengthy keyboard intros, intermittent operatic female vocals, Davey's black 'n' blood take on romantic poetry [...] and slightly tongue-in-cheek vampire and occult imagery—Cradle came across as a lean combination of key influences, including Venom, Iron Maiden, Bathory, Possessed, Celtic Frost and Slayer, all spot-welded to the miscreant clatterings of Norway's finest.[2]

He further commented that "Principle made waves in the early black metal scene, putting Cradle of Filth on the tips of metalheads' tongues, whether in praise of the band's brazen attempts to break the black metal mold or in derision for its 'commercialization' of an underground phenomenon that was proud of its grimy heritage […]."[2]

Speaking to Ryan Bird of Kerrang! in 2008, Dani Filth remembered the following:

First and foremost we just wanted to make a good-sounding record. We were in the same studio that bands like Paradise Lost, Anathema and My Dying Bride had all been in before, and we were aiming for a really moody, dramatic vibe that had become synonymous with the British metal scene, but at the same time we wanted the ferocity of the European scene. It ended up being a very underground record, but we weren't actually trying to do that. We wanted to make a very big sounding record, and I think even to this day it's a record with a very unique flavour. Back then people in the extreme metal hadn't become quite as jaded and as cynical as they seem to have become these days, so it was generally received quite well. It took a little while to worm its way into people's heads, but I think it opened a lot of people's eyes in the process.[3]

Lyrical content

Despite comments made by backing vocalist Andrea Meyer styling herself the band's "Satanic advisor",[4] the album's lyrics make scant mention of Satan or Satanism. Specific references only appear on the intro track "Darkness Our Bride" (the chant "Agios o Satanas"), and indirectly on the track "Of Mist and Midnight Skies" (a line about "Satanic decree"). Paul Ryan's credit in the sleeve notes is for "Satanic war noise", however, and the lyrics do express anti-religious sentiments throughout, in tracks such as "The Forest Whispers My Name" and "A Crescendo of Passion Bleeding".

The album contains many mythological and occult references, encompassing Set, the Valkyrie, Hecate, Baphomet, Artemis, Bastet, Astarte, Ishtar, Khem, Uzza, Eve, Aleister Crowley (through quotation of "Do what thou wilt"), Diana and Lilith. The sleeve also quotes Hegel, Swinburne and Hitler ("Weltmacht oder Niedergang"). Dani Filth explained the album's overwhelmingly female pantheon in The Gospel of Filth:

The personification of evil as a woman comes down to a really simple equation with me. If you're going to write very intimately about a character, I'd rather be intimate with a woman... I'd rather worship a female entity than a male one. If God's representative on Earth was male, it seems logical to me that the opposite would be female, especially with the traditional symbolic association between femininity and the moon. In a sense, we venerate woman as the author of original sin, and therefore, the reason for man straying from God...[5]

Sixteen years on from Principle, Lilith reappeared as the central character of Cradle of Filth's 2010 concept album Darkly, Darkly, Venus Aversa.

Album art

The cover is a stock image from Nigel Wingrove's Redemption portfolio.[6] The CD booklet also features a Baphomet pentagram and a more traditional pentagram graphic, as well as photos of the band members wearing corpse paint, inverted cross necklaces and T-shirts featuring the black metal acts Marduk and Darkthrone.

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [2]

AllMusic wrote, "Principle, in retrospect, doesn't quite live up to the quality control exhibited on later records, the album leaving plenty of room for the group to grow into its studded S&M gear. Too often, Dani's vocals are reduced to generic death-puking or heavy-handed, Tom Warrior-style monotone narration, and the spiky guitar riffs of the title track and 'A Crescendo of Passion Bleeding' are relatively primitive by CoF standards."[2]

Track listing

All lyrics are written by Dani Filth; all music is composed by Cradle of Filth (Filth, Paul Allender, Paul Ryan, Robin Graves, Benjamin Ryan and Nicholas Barker).

No.TitleLength
1."Darkness Our Bride (Jugular Wedding)" (instrumental)2:00
2."The Principle of Evil Made Flesh"4:34
3."The Forest Whispers My Name"5:06
4."Iscariot" (instrumental)2:33
5."The Black Goddess Rises"6:48
6."One Final Graven Kiss" (instrumental)2:15
7."A Crescendo of Passion Bleeding"5:30
8."To Eve the Art of Witchcraft"5:28
9."Of Mist and Midnight Skies"8:10
10."In Secret Love We Drown" (instrumental)1:29
11."A Dream of Wolves in the Snow"2:10
12."Summer Dying Fast"5:39
13."Imperium Tenebrarum" (hidden track)0:49
Total length:52:34

Personnel

All information from the album booklet.[7]

Cradle of Filth

Additional musicians

  • Frater Nihil – vocals and lyrics on "Imperium Tenebrarum"
  • Darren White (Anathema) – additional vocals on "A Dream of Wolves in the Snow"
  • Soror Proselenos – cello
  • Andrea Meyer – female vocals

Production

  • Mags – producer, mixing
  • Nilesh – mastering
  • Chris Bell – photography
  • Paul Harries – photography
  • Mark – photography
  • Nigel Wingrove – art direction

References

  1. ^ a b Baddeley & Filth 2010, pp. 48–50.
  2. ^ a b c d e Serba, John. "The Principle of Evil Made Flesh – Cradle of Filth : Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards : AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved 11 August 2012.
  3. ^ Bird, Ryan (15 November 2008). "Treasure Chest. Dani Filth". Kerrang!. No. 1236. p. 54.
  4. ^ Baddeley, Gavin (1994). Lucifer Rising. Nemesis Publishing. p. 211.
  5. ^ Baddeley & Filth 2010, pp. 63–64.
  6. ^ Baddeley & Filth 2010, p. 49.
  7. ^ (1994). "The Principle of Evil Made Flesh liner notes". In The Principle of Evil Made Flesh [CD booklet]. Cacophonous.

Sources

principle, evil, made, flesh, debut, studio, album, english, extreme, metal, band, cradle, filth, released, february, 1994, through, cacophonous, records, following, three, demos, released, between, 1991, 1993, album, sound, significantly, more, than, subseque. The Principle of Evil Made Flesh is the debut studio album by English extreme metal band Cradle of Filth It was released on 24 February 1994 through Cacophonous Records following three demos released between 1991 and 1993 The album s sound is significantly more raw than on subsequent releases and frontman Dani Filth s vocals differ from his later style and technique The album is a then unusual hybrid of gothic metal and black metal 1 2 This would be the only album featuring guitarist Paul Ryan and keyboardist Benjamin Ryan guitarist Paul Allender also left the band at this point but returned five years later for Midian The Principle of Evil Made FleshCover design by Nigel WingroveStudio album by Cradle of FilthReleased24 February 1994RecordedAcademy Music Studio Dewsbury England September November 1993GenreExtreme metalLength52 34LabelCacophonousProducerRobert Mags MagoolaganCradle of Filth chronologyThe Principle of Evil Made Flesh 1994 V Empire or Dark Faerytales in Phallustein 1996 Some of the tracks from this album were later re recorded for V Empire 1996 Bitter Suites to Succubi 2001 Evermore Darkly 2011 and Midnight in the Labyrinth 2012 Contents 1 Musical style 2 Lyrical content 3 Album art 4 Critical reception 5 Track listing 6 Personnel 7 References 7 1 SourcesMusical style EditIn the book The Gospel of Filth Gavin Baddeley describes the album and its place within or alongside the contemporary black metal scene Principle did share several characteristics with the Scandinavian black metal emerging at the time above and beyond the kindred fascination with all things dark and devilish Cradle s debut is their rawest recording chiming with the crude underproduction now demanded by black metal purists though how much of that rawness was due to inexperience and budgetary limitations is another matter It s still the only Cradle of Filth recording accepted as true black metal by many in the murkier corners of the underground but there were as many things separating Cradle of Filth from the emerging black metal pack as they had in common Just as important to Cradle s developing identity as the metal bands they grew up with in the 1980s and their contemporaries in the 90s was the dark verse and literature of the 1880s and 90s produced by the artistic deviants of the day known as the Decadents Under the icy influence of the Norwegians black metal had become a nihilistic savage world of darkness and suffering with little space for sensuality Cradle pioneered a slick gothic image emphasising the seductive aspects of the dark side 1 John Serba of AllMusic described the album s musical style Utilizing flowery classical flourishes tangible melodies nimble death thrash riffing a coherent albeit crushing rhythmic battery and the deranged multifaceted caterwaul of vocalist Dani Davey The Principle of Evil Made Flesh brought a musical sensibility to the black metal table that was absent in early genre releases by Emperor Enslaved and Mayhem Boasting a blatant goth influence i e lengthy keyboard intros intermittent operatic female vocals Davey s black n blood take on romantic poetry and slightly tongue in cheek vampire and occult imagery Cradle came across as a lean combination of key influences including Venom Iron Maiden Bathory Possessed Celtic Frost and Slayer all spot welded to the miscreant clatterings of Norway s finest 2 He further commented that Principle made waves in the early black metal scene putting Cradle of Filth on the tips of metalheads tongues whether in praise of the band s brazen attempts to break the black metal mold or in derision for its commercialization of an underground phenomenon that was proud of its grimy heritage 2 Speaking to Ryan Bird of Kerrang in 2008 Dani Filth remembered the following First and foremost we just wanted to make a good sounding record We were in the same studio that bands like Paradise Lost Anathema and My Dying Bride had all been in before and we were aiming for a really moody dramatic vibe that had become synonymous with the British metal scene but at the same time we wanted the ferocity of the European scene It ended up being a very underground record but we weren t actually trying to do that We wanted to make a very big sounding record and I think even to this day it s a record with a very unique flavour Back then people in the extreme metal hadn t become quite as jaded and as cynical as they seem to have become these days so it was generally received quite well It took a little while to worm its way into people s heads but I think it opened a lot of people s eyes in the process 3 Lyrical content EditDespite comments made by backing vocalist Andrea Meyer styling herself the band s Satanic advisor 4 the album s lyrics make scant mention of Satan or Satanism Specific references only appear on the intro track Darkness Our Bride the chant Agios o Satanas and indirectly on the track Of Mist and Midnight Skies a line about Satanic decree Paul Ryan s credit in the sleeve notes is for Satanic war noise however and the lyrics do express anti religious sentiments throughout in tracks such as The Forest Whispers My Name and A Crescendo of Passion Bleeding The album contains many mythological and occult references encompassing Set the Valkyrie Hecate Baphomet Artemis Bastet Astarte Ishtar Khem Uzza Eve Aleister Crowley through quotation of Do what thou wilt Diana and Lilith The sleeve also quotes Hegel Swinburne and Hitler Weltmacht oder Niedergang Dani Filth explained the album s overwhelmingly female pantheon in The Gospel of Filth The personification of evil as a woman comes down to a really simple equation with me If you re going to write very intimately about a character I d rather be intimate with a woman I d rather worship a female entity than a male one If God s representative on Earth was male it seems logical to me that the opposite would be female especially with the traditional symbolic association between femininity and the moon In a sense we venerate woman as the author of original sin and therefore the reason for man straying from God 5 Sixteen years on from Principle Lilith reappeared as the central character of Cradle of Filth s 2010 concept album Darkly Darkly Venus Aversa Album art EditThe cover is a stock image from Nigel Wingrove s Redemption portfolio 6 The CD booklet also features a Baphomet pentagram and a more traditional pentagram graphic as well as photos of the band members wearing corpse paint inverted cross necklaces and T shirts featuring the black metal acts Marduk and Darkthrone Critical reception EditProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic 2 AllMusic wrote Principle in retrospect doesn t quite live up to the quality control exhibited on later records the album leaving plenty of room for the group to grow into its studded S amp M gear Too often Dani s vocals are reduced to generic death puking or heavy handed Tom Warrior style monotone narration and the spiky guitar riffs of the title track and A Crescendo of Passion Bleeding are relatively primitive by CoF standards 2 Track listing EditAll lyrics are written by Dani Filth all music is composed by Cradle of Filth Filth Paul Allender Paul Ryan Robin Graves Benjamin Ryan and Nicholas Barker No TitleLength1 Darkness Our Bride Jugular Wedding instrumental 2 002 The Principle of Evil Made Flesh 4 343 The Forest Whispers My Name 5 064 Iscariot instrumental 2 335 The Black Goddess Rises 6 486 One Final Graven Kiss instrumental 2 157 A Crescendo of Passion Bleeding 5 308 To Eve the Art of Witchcraft 5 289 Of Mist and Midnight Skies 8 1010 In Secret Love We Drown instrumental 1 2911 A Dream of Wolves in the Snow 2 1012 Summer Dying Fast 5 3913 Imperium Tenebrarum hidden track 0 49Total length 52 34Personnel EditAll information from the album booklet 7 Cradle of Filth Dani Filth lead vocals lyrics Paul Allender lead guitar Paul Ryan rhythm guitar Robin Graves bass Benjamin Ryan keyboards Nicholas Barker drumsAdditional musicians Frater Nihil vocals and lyrics on Imperium Tenebrarum Darren White Anathema additional vocals on A Dream of Wolves in the Snow Soror Proselenos cello Andrea Meyer female vocalsProduction Mags producer mixing Nilesh mastering Chris Bell photography Paul Harries photography Mark photography Nigel Wingrove art directionReferences Edit a b Baddeley amp Filth 2010 pp 48 50 a b c d e Serba John The Principle of Evil Made Flesh Cradle of Filth Songs Reviews Credits Awards AllMusic AllMusic Retrieved 11 August 2012 Bird Ryan 15 November 2008 Treasure Chest Dani Filth Kerrang No 1236 p 54 Baddeley Gavin 1994 Lucifer Rising Nemesis Publishing p 211 Baddeley amp Filth 2010 pp 63 64 Baddeley amp Filth 2010 p 49 1994 The Principle of Evil Made Flesh liner notes In The Principle of Evil Made Flesh CD booklet Cacophonous Sources Edit Baddeley Gavin Filth Dani March 2010 The Gospel of Filth FAB Press ISBN 978 1 903254 50 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Principle of Evil Made Flesh amp oldid 1130346863, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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