Spiritual Beggars

Spiritual Beggars
Background information
Origin Halmstad, Sweden
Genres Stoner metal[1]
Years active 1994–present
Labels Music for Nations, Inside Out Music
Associated acts Arch Enemy, Carcass, Carnage, Grand Magus, Mercyful Fate, Opeth, Firebird, Firewind, Evil Masquerade, The Quill, The Mushroom River Band
Website http://www.spiritualbeggars.com/
Members Michael Amott
Apollo Papathanasio
Sharlee D'Angelo
Per Wiberg
Ludwig Witt
Past members Christian "Spice" Sjöstrand
Roger Nilsson
Janne "JB" Christoffersson

Spiritual Beggars is a stoner metal band from Halmstad, Sweden, formed by Michael Amott, who is known from Arch Enemy, Carcass and Carnage. The band is heavily influenced by 1970s hard rock and incorporates elements of psychedelia into its music.[2]

Biography

Spice Era

Spiritual Beggars was formed in 1993 by Michael Amott. Amott started the band after he left Carcass. Spiritual Beggars debuted with the self-titled Spiritual Beggars in 1994 and have subsequently released albums as Michael's schedule, which also includes being a full-time member of Arch Enemy, permits.

The second album, Another Way To Shine (1996) was nominated for a Swedish Grammy. The album featured artwork by the legendary artist Hans Arnold, depicting the members of the band in a fairytale world.

The third album, Mantra III, saw the band adding Per Wiberg on keyboards. Spiritual Beggars toured Europe with Fu Manchu and made several festival appearances in support of the album.

The fourth album, Ad Astra, was released in 2000 and enjoyed strong sales across Europe and in Japan. The band toured heavily on their Chasing The Stars tour that followed, supporting bands such as Iron Maiden, Monster Magnet, and Queens Of The Stone Age, as well as playing festivals and headlining shows in Europe and Japan.

JB Era

2002 saw the release of the band's fifth studio recording, On Fire. This album featured a new line-up following the departure of original singer Christian "Spice" Sjöstrand. The replacements were Janne "JB" Christoffersson of Grand Magus, who had been recommended to Amott by a mutual friend, while Roger Nilsson joined to handle the bass.

On Fire album was musically and vocally more melodic and saw the band delving deeper into 1970s hard rock for inspiration. A 2003 European tour featured Spiritual Beggars alongside Clutch, Spiritu and Dozer was completed in support of the album, which was followed by a tour of Japan with Clutch as the opening act.

Spiritual Beggars' sixth album, Demons, was released in Japan in March 2005 and in Europe on June 20, 2005. Demons was released in two versions – a single CD version and a two-CD version, which includes live material recorded in Japan during 2003. The touring on this record was limited to a three-date Japanese tour with Dio and a headline performance in London, UK.

Apollo Era

In early March 2010, it was announced that Spiritual Beggars had entered the studio to record their first studio album in five years. The album featured new singer Apollo Papathanasio of Firewind and Evil Masquerade. This album, Return To Zero, was released in Europe on August 30, 2010, in Japan on August 25, 2010 and in North America on October 12, 2010. Following the release, the band played shows in Greece, Japan, Belgium, France and Finland.

Their performance at Loud Park Festival in Japan on October 17, 2010 was recorded and released as the Return to Live: Loud Park 2010.

Apollo's second album with Spiritual Beggars, Earth Blues, was released on April 15, 2013. The album has been noted for drawing influence from Deep Purple.[2]

Members

Former members

Touring/Session members

Discography

Albums

Singles/EPs

Live

Compilation Appearances

References

  1. Huey, Steve. "Spiritual Beggars > Biography". Allmusic. Macrovision. Retrieved 19 June 2009.
  2. 1 2 Ward, Chris. "Spiritual Beggars – Earth Blues". thisisnotascene.com. Retrieved 25 May 2013. External link in |work= (help)
  3. Metal Storm Stefan Isebring
  4. Discogs Stefan Isebring

External links

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