Peter Baltes Lead Vocalsbreaking Up Again
| Take | |
|---|---|
| Accept live at Hellfest 2013 | |
| Background information | |
| Also known as | Band X (1968–1976) |
| Origin | Solingen, West Federal republic of germany |
| Genres | Heavy metallic |
| Years active |
|
| Labels |
|
| Associated acts | U.D.O. |
| Website | world wide web |
| Members | Wolf Hoffmann Mark Tornillo Uwe Lulis Christopher Williams Martin Motnik Philip Shouse |
| Past members | Udo Dirkschneider Gerhard Wahl Frank Friedrich Peter Baltes Hansi Heitzer Stefan Kaufmann Jan Koemmet Herman Frank Jörg Fischer Rob Armitage David Reece Michael Cartellone Stefan Schwarzmann |
Have are a German heavy metal band from the boondocks of Solingen, formed in 1976 by guitarist Wolf Hoffmann and old members Udo Dirkschneider (vocals) and Peter Baltes (bass). Their beginnings can be traced back to the late 1960s, when the ring got its beginning under the name Band X. Have's lineup has changed over the years, which has included different singers, guitarists, bassists and drummers. Their current lineup consists of Hoffmann, singer Marker Tornillo, guitarists Uwe Lulis and Philip Shouse, drummer Christopher Williams and bassist Martin Motnik. Hoffmann has been the sole constant fellow member since its inception, and he is the merely band member to appear on each album.
Accept played an important role in the evolution of speed[1] and thrash metal,[two] and they were part of the German heavy metallic scene, which emerged in the early to mid-1980s. They have too been cited as an influence or inspiration by a number of acts, including Metallica,[iii] [4] [5] [6] [7] Megadeth,[5] [viii] [9] Slayer,[v] [9] Pantera,[3] [4] [five] [6] Attestation,[iii] [4] [10] Anthrax,[4] [eleven] [12] Guns N' Roses,[five] [7] [8] [13] Mötley Crüe,[five] [13] [14] Alice in Chains,[5] [6] [7] Soundgarden,[5] [half dozen] Overkill,[v] Exodus,[5] and Annihilator,[15] as well as fellow Germans such as Helloween,[3] [iv] [16] Bullheaded Guardian,[4] [5] Doro,[17] Sodom,[3] [18] [19] Rage,[four] [5] and Grave Digger.[4] [v] Accept achieved its first commercial success with their fifth studio album Balls to the Wall (1983), which is the ring'south but anthology to exist certified gold in the The states and Canada,[20] [21] and spawned their well-known striking "Assurance to the Wall".
Have accept broken upwardly and reformed multiple times. They showtime divide upwards in 1989, several months after the release of Consume the Heat (which was their only album with Dirkschneider'southward initial replacement David Reece), but reformed in 1992 and released 3 more albums before disbanding once more in 1997. After briefly reuniting in 2005, Accept announced their third reunion in 2009, with former T.T. Quick frontman Mark Tornillo replacing Dirkschneider (who declined to participate),[22] and the band has recorded five albums with him: Blood of the Nations (2010), Stalingrad (2012), Blind Rage (2014), The Ascension of Chaos (2017) and Also Mean to Die (2021); each of those albums renewed Accept'south popularity in Deutschland and entered the elevation ten charts there.[23]
Biography [edit]
Early years (1968–1982) [edit]
Have's beginnings tin exist traced back to 1968 when Udo Dirkschneider and Michael Wagener formed a local band called Ring X, which eventually inverse its proper name to Take, influenced by a record of the same proper noun by Craven Shack.[24] For many years, Accept went through numerous line-upwards changes. This instability essentially kept the band on an amateur level, making sporadic appearances in festival concerts. Take'due south professional career began in 1976, with Udo Dirkschneider, Wolf Hoffmann, Gerhard Wahl, Peter Baltes, and Frank Friedrich, when they were invited to play at i of the first rock and roll festivals in Federal republic of germany — Rock am Rhein. Following the festival the ring were offered a recording deal. Their first recording was the self-titled Accept anthology, which was released in 1979, but did not reach much commercial success.
The first stable line-upwards of Accept was composed of vocalizer Udo Dirkschneider, guitarists Wolf Hoffmann and Gerhard Wahl, bassist Peter Baltes and drummer Frank Friedrich. Friedrich and Wahl quit the ring afterwards the release of Take and were replaced past Stefan Kaufmann and Jörg Fischer. This line-up recorded I'm a Rebel in 1980. The title rails originally was written for Ac/DC and recorded by the band but never released by them.[25] The album brought some media attention, the ring existence invited to make a televised advent.
In 1981, their adjacent anthology, Breaker, was released, and the band employed manager Gaby Hauke. Accept also joined Judas Priest'southward World Wide Blitz Tour and obtained attending exterior of Europe for the first time.
Restless and Wild was released in 1982, although Jörg Fischer quit the band a short fourth dimension before the recording took place. Jan Koemmet was hired as guitarist, merely departed from the ring before the recording of the album.[26] [27] Restless and Wild saw an evolution in the band's sound, which incorporated characteristics defining the genre afterward dubbed speed metallic.[ane] Gaby Hauke was credited as "Deaffy" on two of the tracks.
Mainstream success (1983–1987) [edit]
Accept's next release, Balls to the Wall, was released in 1983, at present with guitarist Herman Frank (ex-Sinner). The anthology was more conceptual, and included lyrical themes about politics, sexuality and human relationships. For example, "Assurance to the Wall" refers to slaves revolting against oppressing masters, while "Fight It Back" is about social misfits fighting against conformity. All songs were credited to Take and "Deaffy". Deaffy was director Gaby Hauke's pseudonym as the band'southward lyricist, although she did not officially claim ownership until the band had broken up for the 2d time.
During a 1983 show in their hometown, the ring met Jörg Fischer by chance and on Hauke's insistence, Fischer rejoined the band. A world tour followed through 1984, including the Monsters of Rock festival. By this time, the ring was supported by Bad Steve, a ring which was led by former Accept and Ring X members Dieter Rubach, Jan Koemmet and Frank Friedrich. The band also opened for Iron Maiden on their World Slavery Bout.[28]
Metallic Middle was released in 1985. Produced by Scorpions producer Dieter Dierks, it presented the ring's creative peak. Take toured the earth supporting the album,[29] and documented the live shows with the live mini-album Kaizoku-Ban.
The follow up, Russian Roulette, was released in 1986. In 1987, Udo Dirkschneider was fired from the band,[30] and after decided to commence on a solo career. Supporting this determination, the songwriting team in Accept wrote his entire solo anthology, released in 1987 as Fauna Business firm under the ring moniker U.D.O.
David Reece period and offset hiatus (1988–1991) [edit]
Parallel to work on Animal House, Take started to audition vocalists. The band tried out a few singers, including Michael White,[31] Ken Tamplin,[32] and Baby Tuckoo vocaliser Rob Armitage, whom they even featured in promo photos and metal mag interviews, and also recorded demos with. Armitage as well performed live with the band and 1 of the shows with him was reviewed by Metallic Hammer mag. However, American vocaliser David Reece was chosen and this new line-up recorded and released Eat the Rut in 1989. Accept toured in support of the anthology that year with bands similar Metal Church, W.A.S.P., Danzig and Armored Saint.[33] [34]
Accept'southward career came to a sudden halt, when Stefan Kaufmann sustained a serious injury to his back during the tour in back up of the album. He was briefly replaced by House of Lords drummer Ken Mary for the remainder of the US tour. By the time the tour ended in late 1989, the band decided that without Kaufmann, and with differences surfacing with Reece, it was time to cease their activities for the time being.
Reunion with Dirkschneider (1992–1996) [edit]
Former lead vocalizer Udo Dirkschneider (right) during Accept's reunion bout in 2005
The live album Staying a Life, recorded in 1985, was released in 1990 as a gift celebrating their career.
A few years later the ex-members met with Dirkschneider and decided to relaunch the ring with core members Hoffmann, Kaufmann, Dirkschneider and Baltes.
Their comeback album, Objection Overruled, was released in 1993 and was a qualified success in Europe and the United States. A earth bout followed, and another album, entitled Decease Row, was released in 1994. Kaufmann became unable to play in one case once again due to his recurring dorsum injury and Stefan Schwarzmann became the temporary replacement.
Predator was recorded in 1996, in Nashville, with Udo'due south long time (school) friend and producer Michael Wagener at the helm and with Michael Cartellone (from Damn Yankees) guesting on drums. Accept'south tour supporting Predator took place in North America, S America, Europe and Asia, with their concluding concert in Tokyo, Japan.
2nd hiatus and cursory reunion (1997–2005) [edit]
Between 1997 and 2005, all the members continued working on their own projects. In 2005, Accept received an invitation from various European promoters for a short summer European Festival bout with Accept's classic line-up (Hoffmann, Baltes, Dirkschneider, Frank and Schwarzmann). These festivals turned out to be a stunning success, with the last testify on 27 August 2005 in Kavarna, Bulgaria, at the Kaliakra Rock Fest.
Asked in May 2007 past Lords of Metallic if Accept were planning on writing and recording new material in the about future, Dirkschneider replied:
That would be a problem. Y'all know, information technology's piece of cake to play the former songs, considering they already exist. Especially for me information technology was easier, because I still do those classics with U.D.O., but for some of the guys it was a bit harder. Merely everybody did a neat chore on stage. I empathize that people want a new Accept album, but composing songs together would have been a disaster. That way nosotros would destroy more nosotros would create. Nosotros have a good relationship now and it'due south all-time to go along it that mode.[35]
On 14 May 2009, Udo Dirkschneider officially announced that he would not be participating in the rumoured Accept reunion.[36]
Return with Marking Tornillo and Blood of the Nations (2009–2011) [edit]
Mark Tornillo (pictured in the heart) with guitarist Wolf Hoffmann in Stockholm, May xx, 2010. Tornillo replaced Udo Dirkschneider as the ring's vocalizer, when Take reformed in 2009.
At the end of May 2009, rumours again surfaced of a possible Accept reformation, when bassist Peter Baltes revealed he spent a weekend at his house in Pennsylvania "shredding abroad" with guitarist Wolf Hoffmann. "Something astonishing is in the works", Baltes explained. "Every bit soon as I can, I'll permit everybody know. Let's brand the 'Metal Heart' beat once again."
A casual meeting betwixt Take and former T.T. Quick singer Marking Tornillo at this informal jam session meant soon after Tornillo was announced as the new vocalist.[22]
A new album was written and recorded with Andy Sneap (of Megadeth, Sabbat, Blaze, Exodus, Testament, Arch Enemy and Onslaught fame) as producer. Titled Blood of the Nations, it was the beginning original Accept album in fourteen years.[37]
The new line-up made their alive debut on eight May 2010 at the Gramercy Theatre in New York City, their first American concert in fifteen years.[38]
On 21 May 2010, the video for "Teutonic Terror" was number 5 on the worldwide video charts in all genres on MySpace, topping such artists every bit Miley Cyrus, Justin Bieber and Christina Aguilera. The video too topped the MySpace Global Metal Charts at number 1.[ citation needed ]
Wolf Hoffmann with Accept in Minsk, Belarus, 2011. Hoffmann has been Accept's guitarist since its inception in 1976.
On 13 June 2010, Accept opened for Air-conditioning/DC in Stuttgart, Germany, and on 25 June 2010, they headlined the Sonisphere festival in Romania and Turkey. With a set up of over two hours, classics like "Balls to the Wall", "Metal Center" and "Princess of the Dawn" were played along with the new anthology material. Blood of the Nations was released in Europe on 20 Baronial 2010, and made a chart debut at number four in the official German Media Command Charts, the band's 2d highest nautical chart debut in their career.[39]
Claret of the Nations was released on 4 September 2010 in Nippon, and on 18 September in the Usa. Accept spent eighty days on a summertime tour traveling over 65,000 km and playing for over 450,000 fans. In Oct, the band appeared at the prestigious Japanese Festival LOUDPARK outside of Tokyo to 40,000 fans along with Ozzy Osbourne, Motörhead and Stone Sour.
Within a month of the release of Blood of the Nations, Wolf Hoffmann told "Metallic Aviary": "We are already thinking about and writing for the next tape. Nosotros've all missed doing Accept and nosotros realized we missed doing this. Of grade we are not twenty years old anymore and not ready to do just anything to exist successful, we're not that desperate. [laughs] We are looking to exercise what makes sense and that's fun."[40]
Stalingrad and Blind Rage (2012–2014) [edit]
Take worked with Andy Sneap over again to produce their thirteenth studio album, completed in early on 2012. Entitled Stalingrad, information technology was released in April 2012.[41]
On eight April 2013, Wolf Hoffmann told Chile's Radio Futuro that Accept had begun writing new material for their fourteenth studio anthology and would "definitely go back to the studio as before long as [they] can."[42] Four months subsequently, on 9 Baronial at the Bloodstock Open up Air festival 2013, Wolf told Metal Shock Finland:
Our upcoming album is hopefully going to be out next yr. We've started working on writing some songs; we haven't recorded anything yet. But over the winter — maybe early next year — nosotros'll start recording information technology and attempt to get in every flake as skillful every bit the terminal ane, maybe even meliorate, if we succeed, we'll see... Information technology's going to be as heavy as the residuum.[43] [44]
Accept released their fourteenth studio album Blind Rage on 15 August 2022 and on their earth bout, they played in Australia for the very showtime fourth dimension.[45] Blind Rage became Accept's first album to debut at number ane on the charts in their home country.[46]
Departures of two members and The Ascension of Chaos (2014–2017) [edit]
On 28 December 2014, guitarist Herman Frank announced that he had left Accept again.[47] After that 24-hour interval, Accept announced that drummer Stefan Schwarzmann had also left the band.[48]
On 12 April 2015, Accept appear new guitarist and drummer, respectively Uwe Lulis and Christopher Williams.[49]
On 5 June 2015, prior to the band'due south performance at the South Park festival in Tampere, Finland, bassist Peter Baltes told Kaaos TV that Have planned to brainstorm work on a new anthology after the conclusion of the Blind Rage tour.[l] Asked in a July 2022 interview about the ring's future, guitarist Wolf Hoffmann replied, "We will continue for a few more than weeks, this run of touring, and and so we'll take a little break and come up back in the fall, but we're pretty much wrapping upward the Blind Rage tour at this betoken; it's the very last phase of this whole bike. And then the next album volition have to be written and to be recorded, and how long that'southward gonna take and when that'due south all gonna happen, who knows? But it'll happen; that's all I know."[51] Hoffmann stated that the new album would exist released around July or August 2017.[52] [53] Similar their previous iii albums, the album was produced past Andy Sneap, making it Accept's fourth collaboration with him.[52] [54] On 16 Apr 2017, Accept appear that the album, titled The Ascension of Chaos, would be released on 4 Baronial.[55]
On two June 2017, the band released the title track single digitally via Nuclear Blast accompanied by new artwork.[56] [57]
Split with Peter Baltes and Also Hateful to Die (2018–nowadays) [edit]
In a September 2022 interview with The Foundry, guitarist Wolf Hoffmann confirmed that Have had begun the songwriting process for the follow-upwardly to The Rising of Chaos. He stated, "We started putting down some riffs here and in that location, but the majority of the stuff will happen after we stop touring, because it's really hard to do this on the road for me."[58]
On 27 November 2018, bassist Peter Baltes announced that he had left Accept subsequently 42 years equally a member. According to the band, "Peter needed a alter in his life and we wish him all the best. He will always be part of the Accept family unit and to award his tribute to music history, we should all wish him well." With Baltes' departure, Hoffmann remains the last member of the original lineup in the band.[59]
Baltes was filled in on bass by Danny Silvestri for the ring's performance at the 2022 edition of the 70000 Tons of Metallic cruise. On 16 April 2019, former Uli Jon Roth sideman Martin Motnik was announced equally Baltes' permanent replacement.[threescore] Three days subsequently, Have released a special 7-inch single chosen "Life's a Bitch", which was their first song in two years and first one without Baltes.[61]
On ane November 2019, Have announced that Philip Shouse, previously a touring member, had joined the band equally their third guitarist, thus converting Accept to a sextet.[62]
On two Oct 2020, Accept released "The Undertaker" every bit the first unmarried from their upcoming sixteenth studio album As well Mean to Dice, released on 29 January 2021.[63] Their sixteenth studio anthology "Too Mean To Die", once again on Nuclear Blast, but narrowly missed the top of the High german charts. It was recorded during the Corona Pandemic in Nashville, TN and produced by Andy Sneap in the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland. Well-nigh their new metal album, the band said with a flash: "Nosotros are also mean to die! Weeds don't go away! ACCEPT won't go down!"[64] Touring in back up of the album began July 2, 2022 at Penn's Peak in the U.South. land of Pennsylvania. The band was due to tour Europe in January and Feb 2022 with Phil Campbell and the Bastard Sons; Flotsam and Jetsam were supposed to exist the other supporting deed, simply "many factors" forced them to withdraw from the tour.[65] [66] On November five, 2021, it was announced that the European tour had been postponed to Jan and February 2023.[67]
On 17 Feb 2022, Accept announced that they had signed a worldwide deal with Napalm Records.[68]
Band members [edit]
Electric current members
- Wolf Hoffmann – lead guitar, backing vocals (1976–1989, 1992–1997, 2005, 2009–present)
- Mark Tornillo – lead vocals (2009–present)
- Uwe Lulis – rhythm guitar (2015–nowadays)
- Christopher Williams – drums (2015–present)
- Martin Motnik – bass (2019–present)
- Philip Shouse – rhythm guitar (2019–nowadays)
Discography [edit]
- Studio albums
- Take (1979)
- I'm a Insubordinate (1980)
- Breaker (1981)
- Restless and Wild (1982)
- Balls to the Wall (1983)
- Metallic Heart (1985)
- Russian Roulette (1986)
- Eat the Heat (1989)
- Objection Overruled (1993)
- Decease Row (1994)
- Predator (1996)
- Claret of the Nations (2010)
- Stalingrad (2012)
- Blind Rage (2014)
- The Rise of Chaos (2017)
- Likewise Mean to Die (2021)
In popular culture [edit]
In the second season of Justified, the grapheme Coover is oftentimes seen with an Have shirt on.[69]
Take songs in other media [edit]
- Songs from Breaker album
- The German 1982 movie Nacht der Wölfe included an excerpt of "Starlight" as well as a glimpse of the album cover for Breaker as the female person lead puts the record on. "Run if You Can" is also featured in the film, and both songs appeared on the soundtrack album.
- "Fast as a Shark"
- Italian film Dèmoni (1985)
- Pic People Like U.s. (2012)
- Action/run a risk video game Brütal Legend
- "Balls to the Wall"
- PlayStation 2 game Guitar Hero Encore: Rocks the 80s
- PSP/PS2 game Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories
- Downloadable content for the multi platform guitar teaching game Rocksmith
- Movie The Wrestler (2008)
- Film Balls to the Wall (2011) directed by Penelope Spheeris
- TV bear witness Beavis and Butt-Head episode "Tornado", in which the championship characters ridicule the video
- The mission in GTA Online called "Ballas To The Wall", is a reference to the song.
References [edit]
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External links [edit]
| | Wikimedia Eatables has media related to Have. |
- Official website
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accept_(band)
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