Heavy metal band Moonspell
formed in 1989 in Lisbon, Portugal, originally known as Morbid God. The band renamed
itself Moonspell in 1992. Moonspell released its first EP in 1994, a year
before the release of its debut album. Through its early years, the band moved
from folk-tinged black metal to gothic metal to experimental metal and back to
doom metal. Vocalist Fernando Ribeiro
is the sole original member in the band; he also is the author of three poetry
books and a collection of short stories, all in Portuguese, and a bilingual autobiography
of the band, XX 20 Anos/Years. The
band's ninth and most recent studio album is 2012's double CD, Alpha Noir/Omega White. The band is
presently comprised of Ribeiro, guitarist Ricardo
Amorim, keyboardist/guitarist Pedro
Paixão, bassist Aires Pereira
and drummer Miguel Gaspar.
At the Gramercy
Theatre tonight, Moonspell did not fall easily into any metal subcategory.
Performing many songs from its history which were never before played live in
the United States, Moonspell sometimes cranked Judas Priest-styled songs, at other times crunched Metallica-type heavy creepers and still
at other times sounded like a lofty progressive metal band, building a song's dynamics
through changing rhythms. In the middle of the set, a series of songs slowed
the tempo for so long that the moshers took a long break. Synthesizers and
programmers are uncommon in metal, but here they were used to enhance the eerie
atmosphere of many of the songs' flourishes, almost like a spooky movie
soundtrack. The unifying sound throughout the performance was a dark,
mysterious gravity to Ribeiro's singing and the band's musicianship. Ribeiro both
growled and sang in deep, ominous tones. Chugging, down-tuned guitars riffs and
double-bass drum percussion often shadowed Ribeiro with heavy, driving force. All
in all, the scope and depth of Moonspell's concert proved fascinating. Ribeiro fittingly
ended the set by acknowledging a defunct New York band with a similar sound; he
dedicated the last song, "New Tears Eve," to the late Peter Steele,
the deep-voiced singer, songwriter and bassist for goth-metal outfit Type O Negative.

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