Scandinavian metal legends
Entombed were at the forefront of the death metal uprising, releasing their influential debut,
Left Hand Path, in 1990, just as the movement was beginning to proliferate internationally. By the time death metal had become a mass phenomenon in the mid-'90s, however,
Entombed had begun experimenting with different approaches, sometimes to much acclaim (as in the case of
Wolverine Blues) and occasionally to disregard (
Same Difference). Nevertheless, it was the band's debut,
Left Hand Path, that held up best over the years. Canonized as a death metal classic -- one of the earliest, in fact --
Left Hand Path's buzzsaw guitar riffs and varied tempos, in particular, differentiated
Entombed from seminal Earache Records labelmates such as
Napalm Death,
Carcass,
Terrorizer, and
Morbid Angel, who, with their unrelentingly lightning-fast tempos and blastbeat drumming, were more in line with grindcore than death metal. Successive
Entombed releases on Earache --
Crawl (EP, 1990),
Stranger Aeons (EP, 1991),
Clandestine (LP, 1991),
Hollowman (EP, 1993),
Wolverine Blues (LP, 1993) -- were well received on all counts; however, like many death metal bands of the time,
Entombed had to endure a revolving door of bandmembership, most noticably in the songwriting department.
To Ride, Shoot Straight and Speak the Truth (1997) marked a couple major changes for
Entombed: it was the band's first since leaving Earache (a celebrated indie with major-label ties) and establishing their own label, Threeman Recordings, and it also was the band's last to feature talented drummer/songwriter
Nicke Andersson, who chose to focus full-time on his other band,
the Hellacopters, for which he sang and played guitar. Consequently,
Entombed languished for a couple years, though
Uprising (1999), the first in a series of potent back-to-basics albums to follow throughout the ensuing decade, signaled a return to form (i.e., "death & roll," as it was coined).
The roots of
Entombed lie in the band
Nihilist, which was formed in Stockholm, Sweden, in 1987 by drummer/guitarist
Nicke Andersson, guitarist
Alex Hellid, and guitarist/bassist
Leif "Leffe" Cuzner (each was around 15 years old at the time, born in 1972-1973).
Nihilist recorded a number of demos between 1988 and 1989 (i.e.,
Premature Autopsy,
Only Shreds Remain,
Drowned -- all of which were compiled, along with session recordings, and released by Threeman in 2005 as
Nihilist [1987-1989]), and these recordings included additional members: vocalist
Lars-Göran Petrov (aka
L.G. Petrov), guitarist
Ulf "Uffe" Cederlund, and bassist
Johnny Hedlund. Of particular note, the
Only Shreds Remain demo, recorded over the course of two days in December 1988 at Sunlight Studios in Stockholm with producer
Tomas Skogsberg, was perhaps the first death metal recording from Scandinavia to circulate widely among the underground metal tape-trading network that at the time was comprised almost exclusively of British and American bands. While opening for the
Lee Dorian-fronted lineup of
Napalm Death in Stockholm,
Nihilist gave one of their demo tapes to a representative of Earache Records. Impressed, the label later offered the band a recording contract. Meanwhile, bassist
Johnny Hedlund left
Nihilist after the
Drowned demo in August 1989, subsequently forming
Unleashed, another Scandinavian metal pioneer. Guitarist/bassist
Leif Cuzner had previously left the band, for his parents moved his family to Canada.
Nihilist disbanded after
Hedlund's departure; with little hesitation, however, the remaining members --
Andersson (drums),
Hellid (guitar),
Cederlund (guitar), and
Petrov (vocals) -- then chose to re-form as
Entombed. With bassist
David Blomqvist taking the place of
Hedlund, the rejuvenated band returned to Sunlight Studios and recorded the
But Life Goes On demo on September 23, 1989, once again working with producer
Tomas Skogsberg. Shortly thereafter,
Entombed was back at Sunlight working with
Skogsberg, this time on their debut album for Earache,
Left Hand Path (1990), which was comprised largely of reworked
Nihilist songs. Bassist
Lars Rosenberg joined the lineup after the completion of the album, on which
Andersson and
Cederlund were co-credited with bass. Of greater consequence, vocalist
Lars-Göran Petrov left the band.
Entombed in turn recruited
Orvar Säfström of the band
Nirvana 2002 to sing on
Crawl (1990), a three-song EP. However, when it came time to record
Clandestine (1991),
Entombed's second album, drummer
Nicke Andersson assumed the vocal duties; he also wrote the bulk of the album, earning sole or co-credit for each song. For purposes of touring, the band recruited another vocalist, former
Carnage bassist
Johnny Dordevic. Yet by the time
Entombed embarked on the Gods of Grind tour (a showcase of Earache bands also including
Carcass,
Cathedral, and
Confessor) in fall 1991,
Petrov had reclaimed his membership as the band's vocalist.
With
Petrov back in the lineup, the high-profile Gods of Grind tour behind them, and two acclaimed albums to their name,
Entombed went about working on their third album,
Wolverine Blues (1993). Once again written largely by
Andersson,
Wolverine Blues proved a significant departure from
Entombed's previous efforts. For one, the band scaled back the velocity of their music, from the breakneck tempo shifts of their prior material (à la death metal) to a crushing mid-tempo groove (à la
Pantera circa
Vulgar Display of Power). Secondly, the band adopted more traditional verse-chorus-verse songwriting structures with memorable hooks. Plus, the vocals were comprehensible. These changes clearly set
Entombed apart from their death metal peers, but the absolutely brutal delivery of the music, especially the signature buzzsaw guitars and
Petrov's menacing vocals (more yelling than growling), also set the band apart from the mainstream. Moreover, Earache had aligned itself with Columbia Records, a partnership that promising indie cred with major-label distribution. The six-track
Hollowman EP (1993) was the first
Entombed release to benefit from the Earache/Columbia partnership; featuring an instrumental version of "Wolverine Blues," the EP drummed up significant interest in the forthcoming album. Released in two versions, one a Marvel Comics promotion featuring Wolverine from X-Men,
Wolverine Blues sharply divided fans upon its release. Death metal purists abhorred the stylistic change in direction, while other fans were pleased to see the band push forward creatively into fresh territory, especially now that a legion of similar-sounding death metal bands had arisen in the wake of
Left Hand Path. Even to this day, fans remain divided over
Wolverine Blues; without question, though, the greater accessibility of the music did attract a new wave of fans to
Entombed, and the album is generally acknowledged as a high-water mark for the band, as it would become a regular benchmark for judging the quality of future releases.
Following the release of
Wolverine Blues,
Entombed toured Europe with
Napalm Death and released the
Out of Hand single. Bassist
Lars Rosenburg then left the band in 1995;
Jörgen Sandström, the former bassist/vocalist of
Grave, filled his slot. Among other changes,
Entombed secured new management, left Earache, and signed to EastWest. This new label deal didn't work out, unfortunately:
Entombed recorded a new studio album, but the label didn't release it and ultimately dropped the band for business reasons. The label woes endured by
Entombed ultimately motivated them to form their own label, Threeman Recordings, and procure distribution deals for various regions (for instance, Music for Nations in the U.S.).
To Ride, Shoot Straight and Speak the Truth, the band's fourth full-length, was finally released in 1997; Earache concurrently released
Entombed, a compilation of previously released non-LP material.
To Ride, Shoot Straight and Speak the Truth was well received (for example, earning a second-place vote in European magazine Metal Hammer's best-of-1997 poll, as well as earning the band a slot opening for
Machine Head on tour) and was fairly similar in style to
Wolverine Blues, though noticeably rougher around the edges and a little less memorable in terms of songwriting.
Andersson, the band's drummer and primary songwriter, left
Entombed at this juncture, choosing to dedicate himself full-time to his other band,
the Hellacopters, which was considerably acclaimed at the time. Drummer
Peter Stjärnvind was brought in almost immediately, for touring commitments remained, carrying on well into 1998 (including the band's first North American dates since the Gods of Grind tour in 1991). Upon the completion of touring,
Entombed worked with producer
Daniel Rey on
Same Difference (1999); not only was it the band's first album without
Andersson's songwriting, but it was their first without
Tomas Skogsberg's production. Largely written by guitarist
Uffe Cederlund,
Same Difference was a clear departure for the band, taking them much further away from their death metal roots than
Wolverine Blues had. Whereas
Wolverine Blues had divided fans,
Same Difference reunited them in disregard, if not outright disdain. Earache once again released a back-catalog item concurrently, in this case
Monkey Puss: Live in London (1999), a CD/DVD recording of
Entombed from the European leg of the Gods of Grind tour, circa March 1992. An EP of covers,
Black Juju (1999), was also released around this time, as
Entombed returned to the road, touring with
Meshuggah and
Skinlab, respectively.
To relief of many fans and the praise of critics,
Uprising (1999) signaled a return to form for
Entombed, who recorded and mixed the purposefully raw album with producer
Nico Elgstrand over the course of only 18 days. A tour of Europe and Canada in support of
Iron Maiden followed, along with solo dates. Deemed a classic in some corners,
Morning Star (2001) was a similarly raw-sounding effort, though considerably more dynamic in terms of tempo and mood; some likened it to the work of prime-era
Slayer. In commemoration of
Entombed's 15th anniversary, Threeman compiled
Sons of Satan Praise the Lord (2002), a double-disc covers collection that was wide-ranging in source material (from
Venom to
Bob Dylan). Also in 2002,
Entombed performed a special concert at the Swedish Royal Opera House with the Royal Ballet Ensemble; the performance was recorded and later released as
Unreal Estate (2004). Co-produced by the band with
Per Gunnerfeldt,
Inferno (2003) was also similar in sound to
Uprising and
Morning Star (i.e., raw), though it too had its own peculiarities: a comparison was drawn to stoner metal by some, while others likened the rough-hewn production unfavorably to that of
Metallica's ill-fated
St. Anger (2003). Stateside editions included a bonus EP,
Averno, comprised of extra material from the
Inferno sessions, along with a couple videos. Besides a lot of touring during this period,
Entombed experienced another round of departures: bassist
Jörgen Sandström left in January 2004, replaced by
Nico Elgstrand; guitarist
Uffe Cederlund left in September 2005, going unreplaced; and drummer
Peter Stjärnvind left in 2006, replaced by
Olle Dahlstedt.
Now a four-piece,
Entombed released the five-song
When in Sodom EP on June 6, 2006 (i.e., 6-6-6), and the
Serpent Saints: The Ten Amendments LP in 2007. This pair of releases -- the first new material from
Entombed in three years, and without the songwriting of
Cederlund, who had written most of the band's songs following the departure of
Andersson -- fortunately found the band revitalized and as brutal as ever. In general,
Serpent Saints was reviewed in glowing terms, with many critics declaring it on a par with
Uprising and
Morning Star. Candlelight USA, the album's stateside distributor, marketed it as "
Entombed's best work since
Wolverine Blues!" ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide