"A Kingdom To Disappear” // Genre: Metal/ Alternative // Release: February 24th 2017

Anyone who is trying to apply the mechanisms of a successful career in Heavy Metal to Pyogenesis is in for a huge surprise. The based Metal act wholeheartedly renounced every single business rule from the very start, defied conventions and grinningly granted themselves absolution. They launched a career that was destined to fail on paper. Yet, these reckless Swabians quickly turned into one of the most exciting, most innovative and most legendary bands to emerge in the nineties.

Someone who is looking for salvation in the antics of Swedish (1991), who is en passant inventing (1992) only to embrace stunning Rock harmonies (1995) and tear it all down again at the brink of the new millennium is not making music for fame and money. Instead, it’s all about catharsis, about proving all those soulless drawing board projects and heartless mechanisms wrong. “We are making music purely for self realization”, front man

Flo V. Schwarz emphasizes. “If you’re able to be successful with it, cool. If not, also cool, it’s just an extra.” Pyogenesis truly did what they wanted to do. And, in 2002, went into anonymity after delivering six stunning records and becoming the pioneers of an entire generation.

13 years without a new album had to trickle into oblivion until this German PROMO hydra stirred again – a time, note well, in which the music industry changed radically. “When we released our last album before our break in 2002, neither YouTube nor Facebook were a thing”, Flo V. Schwarz looks back on the times of “She makes me wish I had a gun”, their most successful effort yet. And finally, in 2015, they triumphantly returned with “A century in the curse of time”. The silence was broken. “I wrote songs more or less constantly but simply wasn’t ready for a release”, says the vocalist and guitarist. “We went away on our own free will Anna Walter and returned likewise when the time was ripe.” [email protected] phone:+49 (0) 40-67509788 420 It was imperative, back then, to bring back one of Germany’s most wilful ships on the exceptional course it so untameable sailed between 1991 and 2002: A course of uniqueness TRACKLIST that set Pyogenesis apart from all the other bands. What made them so unique was their belief that genres and drawers are nothing but obsolete. Despite their bottomless variety, though, 1. Sleep Is Good (Intro) they retained a remarkable rigour and a trademark sound that was recognizable even among a 2. Every Man For Himself And God Against 1,000 other bands. Their huge melodies and their unparalleled harmonies are a red thread in their career and render the question whether they are playing Metal, Rock or something else All utterly meaningless. No matter what they do – Pyogenesis are Pyogenesis. Period. That was 3. I Have Seen My Soul what made their first decade of their chimeric work so exceptional. That is what’s continuing to 4. A Kingdom To Disappear (It’s Too Late) do so now. 5. New Helvetia 6. That’s When Everybody Gets Hurt Who, like them, raided the hunting grounds from extreme Death Metal to straight in-your-face 7. We (1848) Rock sans reservation is living music to the fullest. That is also what is distinguishing their latest opus “A Kingdom To Disappear”. Naturally, it’s not the work of juvenile “Sturm und Drang” 8. Blaze, My Northern Flame culprits anymore – and still it’s brimful with inventive talent, pioneering deeds and diversity. 9. Everlasting Pain

Success stories like this are most welcome among the artists Flo V. Schwarz recruited for his * available as Digipak, Vinyl and Boxset label Hamburg Records, a new field of work that was responsible for his move from Stuttgart to Hamburg and for the lengthy break of his band. “The company is big enough now, allowing me to focus on my own band again.” That’s what brings us the next Pyogenesis album only 18 LINE UP months after “A century in the curse of time”, a sequel to the Victorian trilogy they started with the last album. “Both are in the same musical vein, both are united by the same background of Flo V. Schwarz Guitar & Vocals social changes in the 19th century”, Schwarz states. “This record embraces each and every of Gizz Butt Guitar & Backing Vocals the band’s creative eras.” Malte Brauer Bass & Backing Vocals Jan Räthje Drums Fans couldn’t be happier with an announcement like this. Like it’s the most ordinary thing to do, “A Kingdom To Disappear” merges blast beats, melancholic grandeur, symphonic elements and proper Metal craftsmanship into a cohesive masterpiece, adding some intoxicating new WEBSITES flowers to the exuberant Pyogenesis flora. It’s not the nineties anymore, to be sure. However, fearless pioneers like Pyogenesis emphasize that this is no reason whatsoever to stop being www.pyogenesis.com innovative. www.facebook.com/pyogenesis