Lyrics Database
Lyric System - Favorite Lyrics

No additional links for Meshuggah yet.

 Add Latest Lyrics to My Yahoo  Add latest lyrics to my newsreader
Send these Meshuggah
lyrics to a friend!






Lyrics >  Artist Lyrics M >  Meshuggah Lyrics

 Search: 
  
   |   
Login:  Password:  
 |  Forgot password?   |  Register  




Catch 33 Lyrics 2005
I Lyrics 2004
Nothing Lyrics 2002
Chaosphere Lyrics 1998
Destroy Erase Improve Lyrics 1995
None Lyrics 1994
Contradictions Collapse Lyrics 1991
All Meshuggah albums ]
Add album ]
Meshuggah

Welcome to Meshuggah Lyrics!

If you're looking for Meshuggah lyrics, then you can stop looking. You'll find the latest lyrics for all Meshuggah songs and albums, and you can read the Meshuggah biography. If the lyrics aren't enough Meshuggah for you, just follow the links from the menu to find even more Meshuggah resources.

Do you know about song lyrics we're missing? Did you find a lyrics mistake? Do you want to request Meshuggah lyrics? Register as a member (It's free, no strings attached, and your information is only used to communicate information about your free account.) today. Our registered members can make requests, add new artists, add new lyrics and more.

We appreciate your visit and hope you will decide to register here at Lyric System. We look forward to hearing from you!

All Meshuggah songs ]
Add song ]


Meshuggah
Posters

[ All posters ]


Meshuggah Biography

Offering a complex form of metal that combined the sweeping adverturism of math rock, the oddball tempos of experimental jazz, and the stunning brutality of thrash metal, Meshuggah raised the bar for metal bands everywhere upon their debut. The roots of Swedish metal band Meshuggah were planted in 1985; originally named Metallien, the founding line-up included frontman Roger Olofsson, guitarists Peder Gustafsson and Fredrik Tordendahl, bassist Janne Wiklund and drummer Orjan Lundmark. After a few demos made the rounds, Metallien broke up and Fredrik Thordendal continued the band with a different lineup and a different name. The original lineup of Meshuggah also included vocalist Jens Kidman, guitarist Johan Sjogren, bassist Jorgen Lindmark and drummer Per Sjogren. A handful of demos followed before Kidman left the group to form a new outfit, Calipash, with guitarist Torbjorn Granstrom, bassist Peter Nordin and drummer Niclas Lundgren; the surviving members of Meshuggah soon disbanded, and when Granstrom left Calipash, Thordendal assumed guitar duties in the new band. Kidman and Thordendal then agreed to reclaim the Meshuggah name, and in 1989 the band released a three-song mini-LP; after signing to Nuclear Blast (and swapping Lundgren for new drummer Tomas Haake), they issued the full-length Contradictions Collapse in 1991. Second guitarist Marten Hagstrom was recruited for 1993's None EP, followed two years later by Selfcaged; in the interim, however, the group was forced to maintain a low profile -- first Thordendal severed a finger in a carpentry accident, then Haake injured his hand in a mysterious grinder mishap. Destroy Erase Improve appeared later in 1995, and won over critics with their heady tempos and abstract approach. In 1997 Meshuggah returned with The True Human Design EP; that same year, Thordendal's side project, Special Defects, released their LP Sol Niger Within. Meshuggah reunited for 1998's Chaosphere, a thunderous album that was unbearably dense in its songwriting and scope. Several successful tours followed, and their incredible abilities were starting to get recognized by mainstream music magazines, especially those dedicated to particular instruments. Once they left the touring circuit, the band was surprisingly quiet, cooking up new material for a few years while on a rarities disc marked the time. But in the summer of 2002, they released Nothing, a masterpiece of atmosphere that added psychedelic touches to their ever tightening sound. Unique in almost every way, the album didn't make much of a mainstream impact but had metal fans banging their heads to 7/4 tempos and esoteric lyrics. A good word from Ozzy Osbourne's son Jack scored the band a spot on the annual Ozzfest tour, where they flourished on the second stage, often stealing the show with their original and savage math metal. After a brief break, Meshuggah released the I EP in 2004. Composed of a single epic track, the complex arrangements of I were just a hint of what was to follow. Their next album, Catch Thirty-Three, was released the following year and proved to be their most ambitious to date. ~ Jason Ankeny and Bradley Torreano, All Music Guide