I did read one of Tom's books. Which I still have. Are you Morbid? A good read for anyone who takes an interest of not reading what everyone else is reading. Thanks to Tom's book. It sparked a little of me to write a book. Now, I find it very relaxing to let my mind rest by understanding another artist, who many admire for his sincerity.
As always Tom expresses a genuine quality aspired as one humbled individual now, considering his upbringing. Something not all are able too achieve once they create music that brings people together. Although my music has changed . I'd grew as a teen listening to his music not knowing anything about his band or what any of them looked like until 20 years later. So I'm glad that there is this internet where I have an opportunity to learn about musicians who's music I'd been growing up with. As a kid I enjoyed lots of music and I'm glad that I did. I'm always finding it interesting how they went about , becoming . Thank you Tom.
@@mikerauter1859 Yes, the same one who recognized that that album is shit, who recognized that he was wrong...or are we all perfect????.... the same one who is a reference for the scene with albums that are masterpieces, that He is respected and a reference for all extreme metal and today with Triptykon he continues to kick ass...absolute master!!!! 💪🍻
Having a unique and heartfelt approach towards music is what is inspiring….. people are very often put down when told they are technically not proficient enough…A shame, because it’s important but not essential…So watching this man of integrity is a source of inspiration, and the notion that chance or circumstance are making us who we are maybe even more than our intentions and goodwill . Glad to see he fought his way through, thanks to music.
Truer words were never spoken. I got into extreme metal right from the start with Venom in the early 80's and it just got better and better in that decade. Every week some new band was coming out with something astonishingly amazing. As far as I'm concerned, Celtic Frost are the most important extreme metal band of all time. They took what Venom and the big Four were doing, but took it into uncharted lands, far beyond what anyone else could even contemplate. Thrash, Death and Black Metal all owe Tom, Martin , Stephen and Reed a huge debt of gratitude.
When i turn on the auto-captions, Tom keeps talking about a certain Kelly Frost, whom i don't have the pleasure to know; this leads to the old Homeric discussion on pronouncing the band's name correctly - whether it should be /keltik/ or /seltik/. So, next time you're in doubt, remember Kelly, ... for we are the Kelts of Europe and the name of that band was (K)Celtic Frost.
Saúde bocal tem nada haver mano, isso aí se deve por ele ter uma mandíbula muito pequena. Mano faz o favor de excluir seu comentário em conteúdo inglês,tu parece aqueles mexicanos. Vlw flw.
Did Celtic Frost ever go back and remaster To Mega Therion to their liking? I recall there were a couple EPs that have tracks from it with different mixes. Do these EP’s indicate that the Band was trying to correct the mix?
They did start a remix of To Mega Therion, which was going to have bass tracks by Martin Eric Ain and production by Harris Johns, but I guess Noise Records pulled the plug on that one
@@MCCrleone354 Most versions released after 1999 are remastered. Not sure if there are different remasters or if they are still using the '99 one... I have the deluxe digibook CD from 2017 and it sounds great. That said, I don't have an original pressing to compare it to. I think you're right about the band not being totally happy with the sound of To Mega Therion at the time, the Tragic Serenades EP from 1986 had 2 re-recorded tracks from that album. Allegedly it was to both try to improve the production as well as use Martin's bass tracks as he wasn't on the album.
and wikipedia and others sites..cites them thrash..they aren't thrash they have anything on thrash..for sure black and death and also doom with hardcore punk influences.
I loved this interview. I never new how hard Tom's childhood was. I have been a fan since 1984 when I was 12. I followed every album to the present day. Truly fascinating history.
I think that there were videos and articles where he clearly states that its pronounced Keltic. But many people should look into why he chose the name Celtic Frost. Its quite interesting
Thanks for re-upload. This was a very personal interview of Tom where he talked about his childhood,his parents, his struggles. I don't know why it was removed but I'm glad you re-uploaded it
In the end of 80's we heard that Tom' s childhood, juvenile days were hard. I had no idea how. Being so lonely isn't something health. I'm glad he survived sound & safe after that! He became an important professional musician! God(s) keep(s) bringing accomplishments upon him. o/
Sad the record industry fucked these guys. Independent labels and being your own company seems to be the way to go. Most bands migrate in this direction. After getting fucked! These guys are an amazing talent !!
K so. I'm.way late here. Wow!! I've always told.people.that this guy is a true artist and I've always found his art moving and thought he was probably a cool guy. What a fucking cool human being he is!! So down to earth. Honest. Humble. And very deep thinker. I like his stuff even more