Debauchery (band)
This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2020) |
Debauchery | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Also known as | Maggotcunt |
Origin | Stuttgart, Germany |
Genres | Death metal, death 'n' roll |
Years active | 2000–present |
Labels | Nuclear Blast, Massacre Records[1] |
Website | debauchery |
Debauchery is a German death metal band from Stuttgart.
History
[edit]Founded in 2000 as Maggotcunt before changing their name in 2002, Debauchery was formed by the current vocalist, guitarist and bass guitarist Thomas Gurrath and the former drummer Dani.
The band's themes are mainly war and death, often involving the fictional god Khorne from the science fiction universe Warhammer 40,000 and its followers.
Gurrath was formerly a philosophy teacher at a Stuttgart high school until his role in Debauchery was discovered in May 2010. He was given the choice between keeping his teaching job or his band, and chose the latter.[2]
Members
[edit]Current
- Thomas "The Bloodbeast" Gurrath – vocals, guitars
- Dennis "The Bloodpriest" Ward – bass guitar
- Oliver "The Bloodhammer" Zellmann – drums
Former
- Ronald Squier – drums
- Dani – drums
Additional musicians
- Tomasz – drums
- Joshi – guitars
- Simon Dorn – guitars
- Marc Juttner – bass guitar
- Thomas Naumann – guitars
- Günther Werno – keyboards
Discography
[edit]- Kill Maim Burn, 2003
- Rage of the Bloodbeast, 2004
- Torture Pit, 2005
- Kill Maim Burn Re-Release, 2006
- Back in Blood, 2007
- Continue to Kill, 2008
- Rockers & War, 2009
- Germany's Next Death Metal, 2011[3]
- Kings of Carnage, 2013
- Fuck Humanity, 2015
- Thunderbeast, 2016 (split)
- Enemy of Mankind, 2018
- Blood for the Blood God, 2019 (compilation)
- Monster Metal, 2021
- Demons of Rock 'n' Roll, 2022 (split)
References
[edit]- ^ "DEBAUCHERY Signs with MASSACRE RECORDS". 28 February 2013.
- ^ "Death metal teacher sacked" Archived 10 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Orange News (UK), 6 May 2010
- ^ "DEBAUCHERY: all info on 'Germany´s Next Death Metal'". Archived from the original on 25 May 2011. Retrieved 8 February 2011.