Arguably the most influential and successful European thrash metal band ever, Germany's
is also by far the most enduring. Like many of their European speed metal brethren,
's balls-out velocity, and capped it off with the nihilistic outlook typical of heavy metal since the seminal days of
.
's career also mirrored speed metal's rising and waning fortunes: building from strength to strength throughout the 1980s, only to fall on hard times in the 1990s. Now seemingly reborn in their third decade of activity,
are certified worldwide superstars who still tour as widely and frequently as bands half their age -- now that's resilience.
Originally named "Tyrant," and then "Tormentor,"
Kreator was founded in 1982 by vocalist/guitarist
Mille Petrozza, bassist
Rob Fioretti, and drummer
Jürgen Reil (aka
Ventor) in the industrial capital of Essen, Germany. They were still known as "Tormentor" when their first two demo tapes, one fittingly named "Blitzkrieg" (1983), and the other "End of the World" (1984), fell into the hands of thousands of heavy metal fans engaging in the era's bustling underground tape-trading network. Positive word of mouth soon attracted the attention of Germany's own metal start-up, Noise Records, which signed the newly re-christened
Kreator to a deal and immediately put them to work on their first album. Recorded in just ten days at Berlin's Musiclab Studios, 1985's
Endless Pain was a savage debut, but its crude thrashing quickly had the underground metal world a-buzzing with excitement. A second guitar player,
Wulf, was hired for touring purposes, and with the group's reputation preceding them, lucky fans within the band's modest touring radius were soon clamoring for tickets.
No sooner had they come off the road, then
Kreator were heading right back to Musiclab Studios, this time with producer
Harris Johns (
Helloween,
Voivod) to record their second album,
Pleasure to Kill. Unleashed in 1986 and still considered the band's first 'classic' album,
Pleasure to Kill raised the bar with more diversity of tempos and greater attention to technical execution, while losing nothing in terms of ferocity or speed. The band closed out the year with the
Flag of Hate E.P. (named after a re-recorded version of their earliest hit), and there seemed to be little doubt that
Kreator, along with fellow Germans
Helloween and Switzerland's
Celtic Frost (with whom they toured the U.K. a year later), were fast becoming Europe's top extreme metal contenders. Recorded at Hanover's Horus Studios with English producer
Roy Rowland, 1987's
Terrible Certainty did nothing to dent this perception, since, for once,
Petrozza and co. actually had a little time to work out the songs beforehand. The ensuing tour further established their reputation as dedicated road warriors, and saw
Kreator beefed up to a quartet once again with the addition of guitarist
Jörge Trebziatowski. Profits from these concerts would help finance yet another E.P. (product being something Noise never stopped asking for) entitled
Out of the Dark, Into the Light, released in August 1988.
By this time, all signs suggested that
Kreator were on the verge of a major breakthrough, and when Noise struck a deal with giant Epic Records for large-scale distribution in America,
Petrozza knew this was his chance of taking his band global. Mustering all of his creative juices and honing his songwriting, he led
Kreator into Los Angeles' Music Grinder Studios and brought in well-regarded producer
Randy Burns (
Megadeth,
Nuclear Assault, etc.) to guide them to another thrash metal landmark with 1989's
Extreme Aggression. With videos made for the ubiquitous title track and the venomous "Betrayer" getting plenty of exposure on MTV's
Headbangers Ball,
Extreme Aggression quickly became their biggest seller yet, and the subsequent North American swing with
Suicidal Tendencies introduced the band to many new friends. The tour also marked the debut of former
Sodom guitarist
Frank "Blackfire" Gosdzik, whose nightly lead guitar duels with
Petrozza are still the stuff of fond memory for
Kreator fans. Seeking to capitalize on the group's momentum, Noise rushed them back into the studio to whip up next effort,
Coma of Souls, released in October 1990. Unfortunately, the hastily conceived L.P. clearly suffered from the less than favorable circumstances in which it was created, seeming too much like a retread of earlier material and bogged down by filler. It should also be noted that, by the end of the 1980s, thrash and speed metal had largely run their course and mutated into death metal, leaving genre standard-bearers like
Kreator,
Anthrax, and even
Metallica, with a difficult choice: evolve or perish.
1992's appropriately named
Renewal seemed to answer that question by going straight to the source for help.
Kreator sought out renowned producer
Tom Morris (
Sepultura,
Morbid Angel, etc.) at his Morrissound Studios in Tampa to help them delve deeper into the death metal template. (One thing that needed no updating was
Petrozza's hissing, scratchy voice, which of course predated, and no doubt influenced, death metal's Cookie Monster vocal style.) Proving just how wary (perhaps too wary) the studio was of current trends,
Renewal also came slathered in industrial-metal techniques -- something that did not go over well with
Kreator and was later blamed for the album's disappointing showing. The excruciatingly taxing touring commitments that followed took the band as far as South America, but understandably left them physically and creatively exhausted, prompting
Petrozza to announce a protracted break to recover. Incredibly,
Kreator's silence was only broken three years later with the release of 1995's, somewhat back to basics,
Cause for Conflict -- their first effort for new label GUN Records. Hardly a successful comeback, the album found
Kreator confused and uninspired -- hopelessly out of touch with the day's reigning extreme metal trends, and surely traumatized by the recent departure of both
Fioretti and
Ventor (they were replaced by bassist
Christian Giesler and former
Whiplash drummer
Joe Cangelosi). Adding insult to injury, Noise Records chose exactly this difficult moment to release the
Scenarios of Violence set -- a collection of live recordings and remixed old hits that seemed to declare
Kreator's future prospects null and void.
Looking to remedy the band's tenuous situation,
Petrozza called upon former
Coroner guitar wizard
Tommy Vetterli to help him guide
Kreator into realms unknown, getting even further away from their roots on their next two albums, the highly experimental
Outcast (1997) and
Endorama (1999). Both of these veered into ever-slower pacing, added gothic and ambient elements, incorporated samples and loops, and even found
Petrozza trying a few different singing styles on for size. But even though they met with certain critical acclaim and signaled
Ventor's welcome return to
Kreator's ranks, neither of these albums managed to re-ignite the band's career. Yet again, timely retrospective releases like 1999's
Voices of Transgression (shedding light on the band's hit-and-miss second decade) and 2000's
Past Life Trauma (a near-flawless wrap-up of their first decade) provided some consolation for disgruntled old fans who had long abandoned
Kreator's floundering ship; but, unexpectedly, they also cleared the way for a rebirth of sorts.
This renaissance began to take shape following
Vetterli's departure and the signing of a new record deal with Germany's SPV label. Simply put,
Petrozza recommitted himself to thrash, and, after hiring Finnish-born second guitarist
Sami Yli-Sirnio, proceeded to write
Kreator's strongest album in years, with 2001's positively stunning
Violent Revolution. In keeping with
Kreator tradition, the consequent world tour became their most comprehensive and extensive ever. Thanks to
Violent Revolution's great success, it served to reintroduce and reestablish
Kreator as one of the world's premiere speed metal acts -- a feat that was commemorated with the group's first live album -- a lavish two-CD/DVD set appositely named (with some grammatical license)
Live Kreation/Revisioned Glory -- a couple of years later. The band returned in 2005 with the similarly-themed
Enemy of God, followed by
At the Pulse of Kapitulation: Live in East Berlin, 1990 in 2008 and the reliably thrash-heavy
Hordes of Chaos in 2009.
–
Eduardo Rivadavia, Rovi