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Angel Witch (official band page)



Last Updated: 11/29/2009

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Status: Single
State: London and South East
Country: UK
Signup Date: 9/26/2008

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Tuesday, July 28, 2009 
The full Angel Witch set from Roadburn 2009 is posted below:

Saturday, May 02, 2009 
Thursday 23rd April

It is four thirty in the morning and we’re at Stansted fucking Airport.  Tired is not really enough of a word to sum up what we’re feeling.

We rehearsed yesterday afternoon – it all seemed to go well, which is usually a bad omen.  Will went home and got three hours sleep.  Kevin, Andrew and Chris stayed up and drank sherry before getting in a cab the the airport.  Oh dear...

Loads of familiar people on the flight, the Orange Goblin lads, some folk from Terrorizer a couple of Metal Hammer people and faces that you always see at gigs.  No-one’s really that talkative at this hour though, imagine that!

Uneventful flight, it’s the usual Ryanair indignity – herded on and off like cattle, but we’re only in the air for an hour, so its soon over.
Chris gets pulled aside by security at Eindhoven airport.  As usual.  Apparently, in Mexico, the police pulled guns on him because they thought he was Osama Bin Laden!

Onto the shuttle bus with Orange Goblin and we’re whisked off to the hotel, all we want is  a shower and a sleep.....  

Oh great!   We cant check in till midday (or “maybe one...” apparently) and it’s only ten.  Off for a bite to eat and a couple of Margaritas at a café bar called Havana (honestly, the Margaritas are purely to knock us out so we can get a few hours sleep after check in).  

We check in, we sleep.

Cut to five  o’clock.

We’re in the venue rested and clean – Baroness, Orange Goblin, Motorpsycho, Wolves in the Throne Room and the Devils Blood are all highlights – plus a load of free beer tokens, some great catering and Goblin guys blasting out Witchfinder General, Maiden and Quo in their disco in the main bar.  A great night, but can’t stay out too late, we’ve got a show to do tomorrow, so we’re all tucked up by one am.

Friday 24th April

Fuck!  It’s our second gig with this line up and we about to play a two thousand capacity room!  

Let me tell you – you do not want to be in the Angel Witch dressing room right now.  We are different people today – you can cut the fear with a knife.

It’s a funny thing stage fright, it spreads like wildfire – one minute you’re OK then you catch a glimpse of fear in someone else's eyes and well, then you’re rabid with it as well.  Of course, this is not rational – if you are adequately rehearsed and reasonably competent as a player then logic dictates that you will be just fine when you get on stage.  And anyway, all your nervous energy turns into adrenaline and fuels your performance - everyone knows that.  But when that panic strikes, all rationality goes out of the window and you’re left dry heaving and convinced that you’re going to die on your arse as soon as you play your first note.  

So, after a brief change over and no soundcheck at all, we hit the stage with ‘Sweet Danger’, the adrenaline has us playing fast.  Too fast.  Who chose this as an opener anyway?  Mind you, heads are banging all over the place in the crowd so it obviously makes sense,  a good start then.  ‘Confused’, ‘Gorgon’, ‘White Witch’, ‘Baphomet’... the songs rush past, and despite a dismal onstage sound it all goes well – by the time we do Angel Witch and everyone joins in we realize that we had nothing to worry about.  So why do we freak out so much?

A faultless performance then?  Not quite.  Will’s hand seizes up up with cramp during Atlantis and he can’t fret notes - literally, not at all.  The racket coming from the bass cab bears no resemblance to any song ever written, let alone the one we’re playing.  So he stomps his tuner on to cut the signal and concentrates on a bit of foot on monitor action until the feeling returns.    Even losing the bass for a verse or two really doesn’t harm the set that much at all (probably sounds better).

A quick wash and brush up and it’s upstairs to watch Cathedral and Saint Vitus, have a couple of cheeky beers and wind down a bit.  In all - a good day.

Saturday 25th April

Early start today – off to the airport again.  Will and Chris jump on a plane to Liverpool with Cathedral (Will is tour managing them and Chris does their sound) - they’re off to Hammerfest in North Wales. Kevin and Andrew go back to London.  Everyone’s tired – but chuffed.

A big thank you to Walter, Jurgen and the rest of the amazing Roadburn crew for a warm welcome and great couple of days.

The moral of the story?  Warm your hands up before you go on stage – all you need to do is couple of stretches and play a few riffs, and anyway, it might just take your mind off your nerves, you twat!
Monday, April 27, 2009 
T SHIRTS We've just made some new T Shirts of the debut Angel Witch album cover. Full colour print on Fruit of the Loom Heavy Cotton shirts - photos are in our photos section. Available in: Small / Medium / Large & Extra Large Note- we made small shirts as opposed to girlie / skinny fit shirts - due to the fact that the print wouldn't work on a skinny. However, a small works fine instead. All shirts (including postage & packing) are priced at: UK & Europe - £10.00 (GBP) Rest of World - £11.00 (GBP) paypal to will@riseaboverecords.com Please write "ANGEL WITCH T SHIRT ORDER" in the subject header when you send a paypal payment. This will help us identify and process your order faster. Also, if you need to contact us about the order - please mail to email address above as opposed to messaging us through myspace.
Tuesday, December 16, 2008 
Below is a history of Angel Witch, as penned by Dave Ling in the 2005 re-issue of the s/t album.

This has not been updated since Dave's original text, which was written in 2005, but we will ad an addendum at some point soon.

For some interesting stories check out Dave's site:

http://www.daveling.co.uk/

For a band that eventually became so influential, it's odd to consider the indifference (and in some cases derision) that Angel Witch endured during their original burst of activity. In recent years, the band's occult-influenced oeuvre has become appreciated by a legion of doom-metal enthusiasts, but at the time Angel Witch faced stiff opposition from the press, rival musicians, the record industry and many rock fans.
The group began life in the South London suburb of Beckenham at the tail end of the 1970s, guitarist Kevin Heybourne having served an apprenticeship with several local minnows. Among them was the funk-rock act Deadline, believe it or not. However, along with rhythm guitarist Rob Downing and a now forgotten rhythm section, Heybourne formed Lucifer in 1977, trading in the name when he learned of another group that shared it. The quartet already had a song called 'Angel Witch' in their repertoire, so that became their new moniker.
Various musicians came and went before 17-stone bassist Kevin 'Skids' Riddles walked in the door, joining Heybourne and drummer Dave Hogg in a power-trio line-up. Hard gigging at venues like the Ruskin Arms in East Ham began to develop Angel Witch a fanatically loyal following. Although some laughed at their mixture of Satanic lyrics, thunderous riffs and bombastic rhythms, the band stuck to their guns, making no secret of their love of Black Sabbath. Indeed, they'd sometimes encore with the latter's 'Paranoid'.
Having contributed the track 'Baphomet' to the legendary Metal For Muthas compilation (included here), Heavy Metal Soundhouse DJ Neal offered a spot on the Metal Crusade tour, alongside the likes of Iron Maiden, Saxon, Praying Mantis and Sledgehammer. As the New Wave Of British Heavy Metal took off, Angel Witch were also invited to record a session for Radio 1's Friday Rock Show. Comprising the songs 'Sweet Danger', 'Angel Witch', 'Angel Of Death' and 'Extermination Day' it was broadcast on 14th March of 1980 (again, you'll find all these tracks here). 'Extermination Day' was later included on the BBC's Metal Explosion collection. The single 'Sweet Danger' (b/w 'Flight 19' and 'Hades Paradise' – both flipsides also included) scraped into the UK's Top 75, its single-week stay delighting the band's critics by making them the nation's least successful chart act till that point.
1980's Reading Festival confirmed the NWOBHM's arrival, Angel Witch joining Maiden, Def Leppard, the Tygers Of Pan Tang, Samson, White Spirit, Praying Mantis and Sledgehammer on a thoroughly impressive three-day bill. The previous month, they'd also appeared at Motörhead's Heavy Metal Mayhem Barn Dance at Bingley Hall in Stafford on a bill completed by Saxon, Girlschool, Vardis and Mythra.
"I still have bloody excellent memories of those times, there was so much energy – everyone was buzzing," Heybourne recalled in 1998 of the NWOBHM. "Musically, there was a lot of variety. When I saw Girl at the Music Machine, I thought, 'What the hell are they doing lumped in with it all?'"
Iron Maiden and Def Leppard were the fortunate acts whose careers took of the quickest, and legend still abounds of the fateful occasion when Angel Witch had an "off night" at the Music Machine and an EMI Records A&R man decided to sign Maiden instead.
"We were headlining and went on extremely late," admits Heybourne of the incident. "We'd had a few too many drinks… it was a big mistake."
Angel Witch – whose sound was once famously described as: "the first Sabbath album played through a cement mixer" – would always be deeply unfashionable. They could smash attendance records at the 'old' Marquee Club in Wardour Street, where only AC/DC ever attracted more punters, but the next step up the latter always seemed tantalisingly out of reach.
Dave Hogg, who'd soon be replaced by Dave Dufort, complained in 1980: "When we played at Hammersmith Odeon, we sent tickets out to record companies for our support slot. But on the night, the only empty seats were those 12 or so."
"There was more of a glamour to bands like Def Leppard," reflected Heybourne in 1998. "We had Fatty [Riddles] and Skinny [himself] up at the front, and this hippy [Hogg] on drums. For some people that was a bit weird, but we never pretended to be anything we weren't."
Although Hogg played on Angel Witch, highly experienced former E.F. Band man (and brother of Girlschool's Denise) Dufort succeeded him on the stool soon after it hit the racks in late 1980. Sounds, the era's leading UK music weekly, was merciless in its condemnation, writer Paul Suter dismissing the record as "40 minutes of undiluted torture… the aural equivalent of a Blackburn refuse tip… a bass sound tremendous only in its weediness… as limp as a blancmange umbrella in a rainstorm… the vinyl answer to fouling the footpath."
Soldiering on in the wake of such a massacre would always constitute an uphill struggle, and although Angel Witch issued a single called 'Loser' (along with its B-side 'Suffer' it's among this disc's bonus tracks) they folded after a gig at the Marquee in September 1981, citing: "A difference of opinion over management and a breakdown in the working relationship of the three members."
However, just six months after joining the band Deep Machine, Kevin unveiled a new-look Angel Witch at a gig at Maidstone Technical College. Singer Roger Marsden, plus the ex-Deep Machine duo of bassist Gerry Cunningham and drummer Ricky Bruce completed the revised Witch. This reunion was also to short-circuit, however, and in May 1983 Kevin formed Blind Fury with ex-Satan singer Lou Taylor. Blind Fury released an album called Out Of Reach in 1985, but Heybourne had long since quit to reunite Angel Witch once again, taking bassist Pete Gordelier with him.
Dave Hogg returned for July 1985's second album, Screamin' 'N' Bleedin', which also featured the lead vocals of Dave Tattum. With Hogg heading for the door again, Angel Witch recruited ex-Dexy's Midnight Runners percussionist Spencer Hollman for Frontal Assault.
"Oh God, those albums were a total mistake," groans Heybourne looking back on the era. "I was trying to get into more melodic stuff, but there were terrible productions and awful pressings. It was a weird time for me. I was watching the American bands and realising we were being blown away. They had so much professionalism."
Angel Witch had been namechecked by several Bay Area (San Francisco) thrash-metal bands, so in 1990 Kevin and a line-up completed by rhythm guitarist Grant Dennison headed to California for what seemed like a last throw of the dice. A successful gig at LA's Troubador spawned the Angel Witch Live album, and Heybourne decided to stay. Goldelier, Dennision and Hollman were invited to follow suit, but declined.
Heathen guitarist Doug Piercy, former Exodus drummer Tom Hunting, Lääz Rockit bassist John Torres all signed up for a US incarnation of Angel Witch. Alas, Kevin's dreams were to be shattered when he was deported back to Britain with nothing but the clothes he wore and, in his own words, "looking like a fucking vagrant."
In 2000, the Witch began boiling her cauldron again. An excellent new line-up completed by guitarist Keith Herzberg, bassist/vocalist Richie Wicks and drummer Scott Higham played Germany's Wacken Festival, the buzz resulting in the Sinister History anthology, a belated UK release for the Resurrection album and the Live At The LA2 CD. Curiously, ex-Tigertailz man Ace Finchum then auditioned to replace the departed Higham, and with Wicks joining the Tygers Of Pan Tang, all seemed lost once again. However, in the summer of 2002 the rhythm section agreed to give things one more try.
This time it was Heybourne's turn to pull the plug, mystifying his band-mates by reviving the American line-up instead. There was further live action, including a spot at 2003's Bang Your Head festival and a Ruskin Arms warm-up, but we await the new studio album that's been mooted.
"I'm still writing material," confirms Kevin. "This year is also the 25th anniversary of the first album, so there is a possibility we could do something again. It would be a shame if Angel Witch were to be laid to rest, but I can't say anything for definite about future plans."
So many years later, it's hard not to feel that Angel Witch were the right group at the wrong point in time.
"The Bay Area bands definitely took ideas from ourselves, Witchfynde and Diamond Head," Heybourne had told me years later. "But they had chances that were denied to us. In our day, everything was so controlled by the record companies. Metallica had seen other bands get screwed and insisted on a hands-off attitude. It's a luxury I wish I'd had."
So, will this expanded re-issue of their debut album afford the Angel Witch legacy a belated reappraisal? Alas, it's probably too late for such miracles. But the music's quality speaks far louder than mere words.

Dave Ling
Classic Rock/Metal Hammer magazines
London, 25th April 2005