Fredrik Åkesson

Fredrik Åkesson

Fredrik Åkesson at Hollywood, California in 2009.
Background information
Also known as Kulle
Born (1972-07-18) 18 July 1972
Origin Stockholm, Sweden
Genres Progressive death metal, Death metal, progressive metal, progressive rock, doom metal, hard rock
Occupation(s) Guitarist, musician, songwriter
Instruments Vocals, guitar
Years active 1992-present
Associated acts Opeth, Talisman, Arch Enemy, Krux, Tiamat
Website www.fredrikakesson.com
Notable instruments
ESP Signature model
PRS Guitars

Karl Fredrik Henry Åkesson[1] is a Swedish heavy metal guitarist. He is a current member of Opeth.[2] He is also active in Krux,[3] Monsters of Metal and Talisman.[4]

Biography

Åkesson has been playing guitar since the age of 12. His early musical influences include Michael Schenker, Uli Jon Roth, Yngwie Malmsteen and George Lynch. Marcel Jacob, founder of Talisman, held auditions in 1992 to find a new guitar player after Jason Bieler left them to play with Saigon Kick; the 19-year-old Åkesson was selected for the position. He spent almost four years with Talisman and after five records decided to leave them for a heavier outfit. Åkesson, Mats Levén, John Levén, and Rickard Evensand formed a band called Eyeball who would later change their name to Southpaw. In 1998 Åkesson was appeared on two albums: Southpaw's debut album and Naïve by Clockwise. He also recorded a version of Journey's classic "Send Her My Love" with Clockwise for a tribute album that was never released.

In Åkesson he returned to record and tour with Talisman. They worked on two new studio efforts: Cats and Dogs (2003) and 7 (2006) plus a live album called Five Men Live (2005) which was released on DVD as World's Best Kept Secret. In 2004, Åkesson filled in for Tiamat guitarist Thomas Petersson on tour and was featured in the The Church of Tiamat DVD release in 2006. He also appeared on the Sabbtail album Night Church, again with Mats Levén.

Åkesson co-wrote two tracks on the album Optimus by John Norum and appeared in the recordings. He also played with melodic death metal band Arch Enemy from 2005 to 2007, having been recruited when original Arch Enemy guitarist Christopher Amott took an 18-month break from September 2005 until his return in March 2007. Åkesson also played on the Krux album II, released in 2006. In 2007, he appeared with Krux in the Sweden Rock Festival.

On 17 May 2007 the progressive death metal band Opeth announced that Åkesson would replace departed guitarist Peter Lindgren. Åkesson's first tour with the band was the Progressive Nation Tour with Dream Theater and Between the Buried and Me. Åkesson's first album with Opeth was Watershed (2008) in which he co-wrote the song "Porcelain Heart" with Mikael Åkerfeldt. The album Heritage was released in September 2011, also with one song (the bonus track "Pyre") co-written by Åkesson.

Endorsements

Fredrik Åkesson had an endorsement arrangement with ESP Guitars which continued into 2007. He also had his own signature model.[5] Since joining Opeth, Åkesson switched to PRS Guitars with Marshall JVM 410 amps and cabs. In the "Porcelain Heart" videoclip he can be seen using a PRS Mark Tremonti Signature guitar. In 2009, Fredrik has switched to Blackstar Amplification, using the Series One 200. In addition to his Blackstar amps, Fredrik also uses Fractal Audio's Axe FX effects processor. He left Blackstar in 2012, switching his endorsement to Marshall amps. In 2011, PRS guitars produced his signature model PRS.

Discography

With Opeth

With Krux

With Arch Enemy

With Tiamat

With John Norum

With Sabbtail

With Talisman

CD singles and promos with Talisman

With Human Clay

With Southpaw

With Clockwise

References

  1. "Ratsit - Gratis upplysning pЕ fЖretag och privatpersoner". Ratsit.se. 1972-07-18. Retrieved 2012-02-27.
  2. "Mikael Åkerfeldt Says Opeth's Contribution To 'God Of War' Soundtrack Is 'Very Odd'". Blabbermouth. 31 January 2010. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
  3. "Vocalist Mats Levén Sings Rainbow Classic In Swedish Commercial". Blabbermouth. 17 February 2009. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
  4. "Talisman: New Album, Tour In The Works". Blabbermouth. 13 March 2009. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
  5. "Electric Sound Products". Espguitars.co.jp. Retrieved 2012-02-27.


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