| 12 Gauge | ||||
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| Studio album by Kalmah | ||||
| Released | February 24, 2010 (see release history) |
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| Recorded | May–August 2009 Tico-Tico Studios, Finland |
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| Genre | Melodic death metal | |||
| Label | Ranka | |||
| Kalmah chronology | ||||
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12 Gauge is the sixth studio album by the Finnish melodic death metal band Kalmah.
The album was released in Japan on February 24, 2010, Canada on March 2, Europe on March 3, and will be released in North America on April 6.
Contents |
Recording and mixing took place from May to August, 2009, at Tico-Tico Studios. By May 12, Janne Kusmin's drum tracks had been laid down.[1] In the online studio diary, Kusmin writes, "I had to change some foot parts because I could not play them as good I wanted to. Reason for this is too little practicing."[1] Timo Lehtinen completed the bass tracks around May 19. Pekka Kokko and Antti Kokko had their rhythm and lead guitar parts finished by May 28. By the middle of June, Pekka had recorded vocals for five tracks and Antti finished all his solo work. After a summer break, the band returned in August to record Marco Sneck's keyboards and complete both Pekka's and the pig unit's group vocals. Mastering for the disc took place at the Cutting Room in Sweden.[2]
The band's promo photo session was lensed by Vesa Ranta at a gloomy swamp, documented by Antti Kokko in a two-part video called "The Call of the Wild." These, and five other short videos, were uploaded to YouTube by Antti Kokko to document the making of 12 Gauge.[3]
The track Bullets Are Blind was released in December 2009 on a 2-CD collection included with the 35th anniversary issue of Soundi magazine.[4]
The video takes place in a winter forest, with the band members dressed warmly in heavy clothing.[5]
The music video was shot on February 20, 2010 in Pudasjärvi, Finland, in freezing temperatures. The band explained, "The thermometer was pretty low, −37 °C (−34.6 °F) as we started. By the end of the day, it was −27 °C (−16.6 °F). It was freezing, but anyways we managed to pull it [off]." The intro to the song was not used in the video.[6]
The video was uploaded to the official Spinefarm YouTube channel on March 1.[5]
| # | Title | Length | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Rust Never Sleeps" | 5:16 | |||||||
| 2. | "One of Fail" | 4:10 | |||||||
| 3. | "Bullets Are Blind" | 4:27 | |||||||
| 4. | "Swampwar" | 4:19 | |||||||
| 5. | "Better Not to Tell" | 3:58 | |||||||
| 6. | "Hook the Monster" | 4:04 | |||||||
| 7. | "Godeye" | 4:25 | |||||||
| 8. | "12 Gauge" | 5:50 | |||||||
| 9. | "Sacramentum" | 6:28 | |||||||
| 42:57[7] | |||||||||
| Japanese edition bonus track | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # | Title | Length | |||||||
| 10. | "Cold Sweat" (Thin Lizzy cover) | 3:10 | |||||||
| Chart (2010) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Finland[8] | 15 |
| Region | Date | Label | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | March 2, 2010 | CD | |
| Europe | March 3, 2010 | CD, vinyl[9] | |
| Japan | February 24, 2010 | King[10] | CD |
| North America | April 6, 2010 | Fontana Universal[11] | CD |
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