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#uffe cederlund
stoneoferech · 5 days
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Entombed "Stranger Aeons"
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BELATED HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO A PILLAR OF THE "SWEDISH SOUND" & EXTREME MUSIC IN GENERAL.
PIC(S) INFO: Spotlight on live shots of Ulf "Uffe" Cederlund (b. October 3, 1971), c. mid 1990s, former guitarist in Swedish death metal bands NIHILIST, the mighty ENTOMBED, and current axeman in Swedish hardcore punk/D-beat band DISFEAR -- happy 52nd, Uffe! HAIL! 🎸🎂💢
Source: www.picuki.com/tag/entombedband.
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LG's been gone for 2 years.
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But I'm a baby because "emotion bad!" right? RIGHT? SILENCIO STUPIDO FANCULO! I will continue to talk about how we should love and protect these amazing musicians. I mean, I'm a FUCKING FANGIRL. This is a FUCKING FANGIRL ACCOUNT! As soon as you get on my shit you should know that! It's obvious... so I'm going to FANGIRL over these musicians. So here... LOOK AT THEM THEY'RE ALL BABES AAAAAAAAAAHHHHH PROTECT THEM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! SRFYHFGVYHFTYFDBGHDHHFFVJK wait... does LG's shirt say "slut"? 🤣💚🖤
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Entombed (Uffe Cederlund) & Darkthrone (Ted Skjellum aka Nocturno Culto)
Stockholm during the recording of the Soulside Journey album where Uffe was the guitar tech (September 1990)
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z34l0t · 1 year
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Prior to the explosion of Swedish death metal onto the international scene in the early '90s, Sweden had etched its musical heritage onto the world via its most famous export, the sweet pop sounds of ABBA. As the '70s gave way to the '80s, new Swedish artists such as Europe and Yngwie Malmsteen would steer the tiny nation’s sonic legacy in a much harder and heavier direction. 
And with the birth pangs of a darker and extreme sound of metal slowly finding favor with the youth as the decade wore on, Sweden was ripe for the birth of a sound that would go on to become known as the “Sunlight Sound”.
The seed that led to the development of the Sunlight Sound was planted in Stockholm in 1988 when a local teenage band, Nihilist, hired a young up-and-coming engineer and producer named Tomas Skogsberg to record their second demo cassette, Only Shreds Remain. 
Skogsberg had first set up his Sunlight Studios as a makeshift facility as early as 1982, and during the next several years - while holding down a day job - he’d spend his nights learning his trade by recording local punk and pop bands. By the time Nihilist enlisted Skogsberg’s services, Sunlight had transformed into a full-blown recording studio with a growing clientele, and Skogsberg had left his day job to concentrate on his studio work.
During the recording sessions for the demo, Nihilist guitarist Leif Cuzner [who passed away in 2006] experimented by cranking all the knobs on his Boss HM-2 pedal to maximum, and, in turn, the first vestiges of the buzzsaw sound took shape. 
Nihilist imploded soon after the demo’s completion, with the remaining members forming a brand-new band, Entombed. The band entered Sunlight Studios in December 1989, and with Skogsberg again helming production duties, they recorded their debut album, Left Hand Path. This album would crystalize the heavily distorted harsh guitar sound that would, with time, come to be labelled the buzzsaw sound - because it sounded like a swarm of bees.
“I had worked with some bands prior to Entombed who had a similar kind of music, but I didn’t find that real sound until I worked with Entombed,” Skogsberg says. 
“Entombed’s Uffe Cederlund was a very good guitarist, so it was easy to work with him. We could try different things together, so using a Boss HM-2 [distortion pedal], we would try this and we would try that. In a couple of hours, we had stumbled upon the sound. But it wasn’t like, ‘Oh wow, what have we created here?’ It was more like, ‘This is the sound!’”
While Cederlund agrees the Boss HM-2 pedal was integral to the overall development of the buzzsaw sound, a combination of dropped tunings and a Peavey combo amp played a pivotal role too. “On Left Hand Pathwe tuned down to B,” Cederlund says. 
“We used .10 to .46 strings so it was kind of sloppy, but I’m sure that had something to do with the sound too. I played all the rhythm guitars on an Ibanez X-series electric guitar, while Alex [Hellid, Entombed lead guitarist] played his leads on a B.C. Rich.
"We used a small Peavey Studio Pro 40 combo amp for the ‘buzzsaw’ guitar sound, along with an HM-2 Boss pedal and a 50-watt Marshall combo for the non-‘buzzsaw’ sound with a Boss DS-1 pedal. The amps were mic’ed up with a 58. The HM-2 pedal was very important, of course, as we were always looking for ‘the sound,’ but Leif had something going on on the Only Shreds Remaindemo, which was something Nicke [Andersson, Entombed drummer] wanted to explore. 
"It took us some time to know what we were doing, but it was basically ‘break rules!’ I’m sure Tomas did a lot of stuff on his board to come up with the sound too, but it wasn’t like we knew what we were doing. We knew when it sounded good, but we didn’t know how to get the sound. Tomas could meet us with that, as he didn’t know either. It was more like, ‘Yeah, it sounds fucking brutal, let’s go for that!’”
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The board Cederlund mentioned is an '80s customized desk that still sits at the control center of Sunlight Studios today. Says Skogsberg, “There was this one time where a friend helped me run a little bit more electricity into the desk. I told him, ‘It will sound like how I want it to sound.’ 
But he checked it and said, ‘Oh no, there’s too much electricity going into the desk now, so I have to change it.’ And he did. But I thought, ‘No, it’s not the same desk anymore.’ So I made him change it back. He told me that because there was too much electricity going into it, he could not promise that one day it wouldn’t explode! So I treat it like an old car - I just don’t touch it. I do feel it is something that is good for sound.”
After five days of recording and another two days spent mixing, the album was done and dusted. Little did producer and band know the earth-shattering effect the album and its unique sound would come to have when it was unleashed in the summer of 1990. 
Becoming fully identified with Swedish death metal and the whole Stockholm-based scene during the early part of the '90s, Sunlight Studio differentiated itself from the death metal sound that was starting to come out of the pioneering Morrisound Studios in Tampa, Florida.
“Compared to the Florida death scene, bands from Sweden had something special,” Cederlund says. “They were much sloppier, but with good energy, something people all over the world liked. There were bands from all over the world but somehow the Swedish stood out. I guess part of it was because of Tomas and Sunlight being this machine, being able to help bands record and sound OK.”
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The studio saw an array of metal bands filter through in the aftermath of Left Hand Path’srelease, with the likes of Grave, At the Gates, Necrophobic, Dismember, Katatonia and Amorphis tapping the services of Skogsberg and his studio. In 1993, Skogsberg helmed Entombed’s third album, Wolverine Blues. 
While not straying far from the Sunlight Sound, it expanded on its template, adding elements of hardcore punk and hard rock. For Skogsberg this was a marriage of his two favorite styles: rock ‘n’ roll and punk, in turn creating a sub-genre that he calls “death ‘n’ roll.”
The increasing demand from bands all seeking the “the sound” kept Skogsberg adhered to a high-pressure, never-ending schedule of recording, engineering and production sessions throughout the decade. At the turn of the millennium, a much-needed change of pace was long overdue. 
In 2002 he relocated his studio from the busy environs of Stockholm to the countryside near Norrtälje, about an hour’s drive north of Stockholm. Surrounded by dense forest areas and antiquated road structures, it brought Skogsberg a laidback lifestyle and less-pressured way of working. 
And though the Sunlight Sound reached its zenith in the early '90s, it remains in demand today with many bands travelling the distance seeking that “Holy Grail of death metal” sound and to work with Skogsberg.
Looking back today, Cederland is very proud of the legacy of the album and Sunlight. “I was happy, young and thought life was pretty great,” he says. “We were recording an album for Earache Records and that was the label we wanted to work with. We did allow a lot of mistakes that we probably wouldn’t have done today, as when I listen to the album now, that’s all I hear. 
"I think it’s a pretty good album but I honestly think the guitars are way too low on Left Hand Path. Digby [Pearson] of Earache Records got an advance tape with only guitars and drums, and he said a couple of times that it’s one of the most brutal recordings ever!”
Does Cederlund believe that, were it not for Entombed and Skogsberg, Swedish death metal may not have happened and would have taken a different trajectory? “It’s hard to say if it would have happened with Sunlight or Left Hand Path,” he muses. 
“I’m sure something would have happened. It did later, and with much greater success, like with In Flames, Opeth or At the Gates, though it took the world a long time before it got it. But maybe that wouldn’t have happened either - I don’t know. All I know and think is that it would have sounded different.”
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zephryouspet · 3 years
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Entombed early 90s
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bullheadroadbull · 3 years
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rp-kat · 6 years
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Entombed
1990
Holocaust Zine  #4
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burden-in-my-hand · 7 years
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I am my own God
See the truth beyond Through endless lies thy kingdom come Glorified wisdom illumination tool Self deceit it's the golden rule
Live your life you're gonna die your own death There's no one above that's gonna take your breath
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slavghoul · 3 years
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Tobias wrote a short article for this month's issue of Sweden Rock Magazine dedicated to the late LG Petrov and the bands he played in, one of which was Morbid. The article is about how Repugnant came to cover Morbid’s Another Vision.
Top photo: Repugnant in the rehearsal room in Enskede Gård in autumn 2001, a few months after the release of the band's second demo "Draped in Cerecloth"
Bottom: Repugnant in July 1999
Forge on Morbid
I saw a video from Morbid's gig in Bredäng sometime in the mid-90s. I thought that one song in particular was absolutely superb, but since it wasn't on the "December Moon" demo or the "Last supper..." demo, I assumed it was an unreleased Morbid song or a cover.
For several years in Repugnant I talked about wanting to make a recording of that song but it was a bit tricky to "take it out", i.e. learn how to play the song from the video because it was sparse sounding to say the least. And I really needed the lyrics to the song.
Sometime in the early 2000s, Repugnant's guitarist Johan Wallin was talking to Uffe Cederlund at some gig at Kafé 44, whereupon I was informed that it was Morbid's unreleased song "Another Vision". "Great", I thought, and asked Johan to check three things: "Is it recorded, so that you can hear how it's played more clearly? Who wrote it? And can we get the lyrics to it?"
Then it took a turn and Johan came back with the answer that it was Zoran [Jovanovic] who had written the song, who of course we credited on our album "Epitome of Darkness" (recorded in 2002, first released in 2006). There was no other recording of "Another Vision" except the one from Bredäng and there were no lyrics available, so I had to write them myself. I tried to formulate the lyrics as I imagined Pelle Dead would have done them, even though I understood that he probably never had anything to do with the song. Anyway, "Another Vision" is a fantastic song from one of Sweden's best death metal bands ever and I was so proud that we got it.
As for Lars-Göran Petrov, for me he was one of extreme metal's few true aesthetes, an idol. An amazing and, for lack of a better word, tone-setting singer who inspired so many but was hard to imitate. He entertained audiences and always seemed so happy on stage which was also odd, especially when the genre in the 90s became darker and more serious and in the 2000s became more commercial. Now it's common for showmen to front the show, because the crowd-pleasing context demands it, but L-G always drove the same Ozzy-minded style of charm and playfulness mixed with metal attitude whether you're watching an old Nihilist clip or a clip from last year. Total authenticity.
Lars-Göran Petrov was unique and is irreplaceable.
— Tobias Forge, Ghost/Repugnant
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RISING ALTERNATIVE METAL PRACTIONERS -- THE "SWEDISH SOUND" WAS A DISTANT MEMORY.
PIC INFO: Spotlight on the era of ENTOMBED that too few have learned to embrace, the line-up during the recording of their "Same Difference" album, c. 1998.
PERSONNEL (L to R): Alex Hellid (guitars), Uffe Cederlund (guitars), LG Petrov✝ (vocals), Jörgen Sandström (bass guitar), and Peter Stjärnvind (drums).
"Yes, it was a big adjustment when Nicke left. I remember feeling stressed out, a little unsure if we still had it in us, if we could pull it together , if we were still good enough. Today, I love that we made this album. I remember the period after this, when we got going again, as among the most upbeat times in the band."
--UFFE CEDERLUND (guitarist) on Nicke's departure and his ultimate thoughts on the "Same Difference" album
Source: www.iheart.com/artist/entombed-29512.
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festering-remains · 3 years
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Entombed - Left Hand Path (1990)
Blast this death metal masterpiece in honor of LG Petrov!
1. Left Hand Path 2. Drowned 3. Revel in Flesh 4. When Life Has Ceased 5. Supposed to Rot 6. But Life Goes On 7. Bitter Loss 8. Morbid Devourment 9, Abnormally Deceased 10. The Truth Beyond 11. Carnal Leftovers 12. Premature Autopsy
Lars-Göran Petrov - Vocals Uffe Cederlund - Guitars & Bass Alex Hellid - Guitars Nicke Andersson - Drums & Bass
Recorded at Sunlight Studio, Stockholm, December 1989. Produced by Tomas Skogsberg & Entombed.
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“What man has created Man can destroy Bring to light That day of joy”
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raisedonrock · 4 years
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Young Darkthrone with Uffe Cederlund in Sweden
Scan from Black Death and beyond
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zephryouspet · 3 years
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entombed early 90s
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riffrelevant · 5 years
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ENTOMBED 'Clandestine - Live': Historic Album's 25th Anniversary Performance Release
ENTOMBED ‘Clandestine – Live’: Historic Album’s 25th Anniversary Performance Release
Article By: Pat ‘Riot’ Whitaker, Senior Writer/Journalist ‡ Edited By: Leanne Ridgeway, Owner/Chief Editor
Between the end of 1991 and the beginning of 1992, depending on where one lived, the world of extreme heavy metal was changed forever with a landmark release. (more…)
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rp-kat · 7 years
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Nihilist
1989
Eternal Torment Zine #7
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