Woods of Ypres
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Woods of Ypres | |
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Background information | |
Origin | Windsor, Ontario, Canada |
Genres | |
Years active | 2002–2011 |
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Past members |
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Woods of Ypres was a Canadian doom metal band from Windsor, Ontario. The band was founded in 2002, initially consisting of three members: David Gold, Aaron Palmer and Brian McManus. Their line-up frequently changed afterward, with over 20 members in the band through its various incarnations, which saw operations later based out of Toronto from 2003 to 2007, and Sault Ste. Marie from 2008 to 2011. Their only constant member was multi-instrumentalist and frontman David Gold, with the band ending after Gold's death in December 2011, just before releasing their album Woods 5: Grey Skies & Electric Light, which won the 2013 Juno Award for the Metal/Hard Music Album of the Year.
History
[edit]Formation and transformation
[edit]Woods of Ypres was formed in Windsor, Ontario in 2002[1] by David Gold, Aaron Palmer and Brian McManus. The trio released the first Woods of Ypres demo, Against the Seasons: Cold Winter Songs from the Dead Summer Heat, the same year. After McManus' departure that same year, Woods of Ypres expanded to a quintet with new band members.[2]
That December, David Gold moved to Toronto to begin working on a full-length album, completely overhauling their line-up in the process. Following the departure of singer Chris Jones, David took over as Woods of Ypres' lead singer and guitarist. In 2004, the band's first full-length album, Pursuit of the Sun & Allure of the Earth, was released on David Gold's record label, Krankenhaus Records.
The third Woods of Ypres album, Woods III: The Deepest Roots and Darkest Blues, was released at the end of 2007. Contrasting the two albums, critic Laura Taylor wrote, "While Pursuit of the Sun verged on metalized Pink Floyd, Woods' latest unearths more of the band's black and dark metal inspirations".[3] In 2008, the band was featured on the cover of Unrestrained! Magazine.[4]
After a work stint in South Korea, David Gold moved the band to his hometown of Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario in 2008, where he united with existing local metal band Gates of Winter to both form the core of the new six-piece Woods of Ypres line-up, and join Gates of Winter himself on drums. After a series of line-up changes and departures, they recorded their fourth album Woods IV: The Green Album the following year. Released in November 2009, Exclaim! called it "the band's most amorphous and powerful creature so far."[5] Earlier in 2009, Woods of Ypres also put out a compilation of twelve of the songs from their three main Krankenhaus-released albums entitled Independent Nature 2002–2007 and a vinyl-only single release of their 2004 song "Allure of the Earth", which also featured a cover of that song by Australian cellists Sebastian Simpson and Chris Doig.
Sessions towards an unreleased EP named Woods 4.5: You Were The Light were made in Sault Ste. Marie in 2010 as well, but just two tracks from those sessions have been released as part of a vinyl-only single named Home in 2011, which has retroactively been referred to as Woods 4.5 in some interviews. Woods of Ypres announced their break-up in late 2010 partly due to frontman David Gold's move to Kuwait for work reasons, but it was announced that fall that the split was entirely false, and that Woods of Ypres had signed to Earache Records, who would later put out the band's last two studio albums.[6]
Woods of Ypres' line-ups had been noticeably unstable since their inception, with only David Gold participating on every release by the band. Woods of Ypres' live line-ups ranged from three to six members at differing points, with line-ups almost completely changing when Gold relocated the band, while two of their full-length albums only credit two musicians as full band members. Singles and compilations aside, the only band member to appear on two of the band's main albums other than Gold was keyboardist Jessica Rose, who performed on both Pursuit of the Sun & Allure of the Earth and Woods III.
All of Woods of Ypres's albums (except Woods V) saw their initial release or pre-2011 reissues on independent labels ran by David Gold,[5] including Krankenhaus Records from 2004 to 2009, and Practical Art Records from 2009 to 2011. While Krankenhaus released albums by a few different Canadian metal bands, Practical Art only released albums from musical projects that Gold was a performer on. As well, Woods of Ypres were notorious for their independently run and booked headlining tours of Canada and the United States.
Death of David Gold and break-up
[edit]Woods of Ypres played what would turn out to be their last concert in Richmond, Virginia on June 9, 2011. After the dismissal of Shane and Evan Madden shortly afterward, remaining band members David Gold and Joel Violette recorded the band's final studio album Woods 5: Grey Skies & Electric Light that August at Beach Road Studios in Goderich, Ontario.
On December 21, 2011, David Gold died at age 31, in a car crash near Barrie, Ontario.[7] Gold's death ended plans for Woods of Ypres to play their first European tour in early 2012, along with scuttling the planned debuts of new band members Brendan Hayter and Rae Amitay. Guitarist Joel Violette indicated in interviews that Woods of Ypres would not carry on recording or touring without Gold, effectively ending the band. Woods 5 was released on February 27, 2012, in Europe, with the North American release coming two months later. The band received a posthumous Juno nomination in the Metal/Hard Music Album of the Year category in February 2013, and won the award in April.
Official tribute concerts in Toronto and Sault Ste. Marie were held in April 2012, featuring bands such as Kittie and Novembers Doom. The Toronto concert served as the CD release party for Woods 5, while Sault Ste. Marie saw Woods of Ypres former band members Joel Violette, Bryan Belleau, and Rae Amitay play an acoustic set of Woods of Ypres material. A Woods of Ypres tribute album has been released,[8] while the surviving members of Woods of Ypres' final line-up have since joined forces in the New Brunswick-based black metal band Thrawsunblat.
Personnel
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Timeline
[edit]Discography
[edit]Studio albums
[edit]- Pursuit of the Sun & Allure of the Earth (2004, Krankenhaus Records)
- Woods III: The Deepest Roots and Darkest Blues (2007, Krankenhaus Records)
- Woods IV: The Green Album (2009, Practical Art Records, Earache Records)
- Woods 5: Grey Skies & Electric Light (2012, Earache Records)
EPs
[edit]- Against the Seasons: Cold Winter Songs from the Dead Summer Heat (2002, Krankenhaus Records, Night Birds Records)
Compilations
[edit]- Independent Nature 2002–2007 – compilation (2009, Krankenhaus Records)
Singles
[edit]- Allure of the Earth – vinyl single (2009, Krankenhaus Records)
- Home – vinyl single (2011, Practical Art Records)
References
[edit]- ^ "Woods of Ypres Songs, Albums, Reviews, Bio & More". AllMusic.
- ^ "The Seasons: Cold Winter Songs From The Dead Summer Heat overall more black metal". Retrieved August 9, 2016.
- ^ Wiebe Taylor, Laura (March 2008). "Woods Of Ypres: Deepest Roots and Darkest Blues", Exclaim!. Retrieved April 24, 2010.
- ^ Wiebe Taylor, Laura (February 2009). "Concert reviews: Woods of Ypres / Musk Ox / Eclipse Eternal / Piledriver / Detsorgsekalf / Endorphins / Into The Void", Exclaim!. Retrieved April 24, 2010.
- ^ a b Taylor, Laura (February 2010). "Woods Of Ypres: Woods 4: The Green Album", Exclaim!. Retrieved April 24, 2010.
- ^ "WOODS OF YPRES signs to EARACHE Records!". Ultimatemetal.com. Archived from the original on October 10, 2020. Retrieved October 8, 2020.
- ^ "Woods of Ypres Singer David Gold Dies at 31". Exclaim.ca. Retrieved October 8, 2020.
- ^ "Facebook Groups". Facebook.com. Retrieved October 8, 2020.
External links
[edit]- Canadian black metal musical groups
- Canadian doom metal musical groups
- Canadian musical quartets
- Musical groups from Windsor, Ontario
- Musical groups from Toronto
- Musical groups established in 2002
- Musical groups disestablished in 2011
- 2002 establishments in Ontario
- 2011 disestablishments in Ontario
- Juno Award for Heavy Metal Album of the Year winners