ON NOVEMBER 9, 1995, Type O Negative’s Bloody Kisses became the first album released by Roadrunner Records to achieve gold certification in the US. Released two years earlier, the album’s fusion of doom metal, goth and hardcore had turned the band into stars of the 90s metal scene, and their six-foot-eight frontman, Peter Steele, was cemented as a talismanic icon. But their fortunes wouldn’t last.
“We always had a very negative tint on everything,” shrugs guitarist Kenny Hickey. “We never patted ourselves on the back and there weren’t words of encouragement. Every time we came off tour it felt like, ‘Well, that’s it –better get a job.’”
Although they’d always maintained an air of pervasive pessimism –proudly adopting the nickname ‘The Drab Four’ –Type O’s fifth album, World Coming Down, was especially bleak. Its lyrical narratives of drug addiction and familial loss were taken directly from Peter Steele’s experiences at the end of the 90s.
“Much of my recent time’s been taken up by funerals,” Peter revealed to Hammer at the time. In another interview, he quipped that “everyone else’s family is growing –mine’s shrinking”, responding to the interviewer’s polite congratulations that Kenny had recently welcomed his first child.
THE FACTS
RELEASED: 2003
ALBUM:
Life Is Killing Me
PERSONNEL: Peter Steele (vocals/bass), Kenny Hickey (guitar), Josh Silver (keyboards), Johnny Kelly (drums)
THE FACTS