Cellar Darling
Cellar Darling is a three-piece heavy progressive folk rock band from Lucerne, Switzerland, formed in the summer of 2016 by former Eluveitie members Anna Murphy, Merlin Sutter, and Ivo Henzi.[1][2] The band emerged following the departure of its founding members from Eluveitie due to musical differences, allowing them to pursue a more experimental sound blending progressive metal, rock, folk, and classical elements, prominently featuring traditional instruments like the hurdy-gurdy and flute.[3][1] Cellar Darling signed with Nuclear Blast Records and released their debut album, This Is the Sound, on June 30, 2017, which charted in Switzerland, Germany, and the United Kingdom, showcasing their unique fusion of heavy riffs with folk melodies.[4][1] Their sophomore album, The Spell, followed on March 22, 2019, as a concept album accompanied by an audiobook and animated videos, earning critical acclaim including the Progressive Music Award for Best Video for "Insomnia" in September 2019.[1] In 2021, they released the standalone single "DANCE," originally intended for The Spell, further highlighting their evolving progressive style.[1] The band continues to tour internationally across more than 45 countries, performing at festivals and building a dedicated following for their live energy and intricate instrumentation, and as of 2025, is working on their third studio album.[1][5][6]History
Formation
Cellar Darling was formed in the summer of 2016 by vocalist and hurdy-gurdy player Anna Murphy, guitarist Ivo Henzi, and drummer Merlin Sutter, all of whom had been core members of the Swiss folk metal band Eluveitie for over a decade. The trio departed from Eluveitie in June 2016 following a difficult and highly publicized split driven by internal conflicts, which strained relationships within the larger eight-piece ensemble. Opting to remain together due to their deep friendship and shared creative vision, they established Cellar Darling as a streamlined trio to pursue progressive folk metal unencumbered by previous band dynamics.[2][7][1] The band's name originated from Murphy's 2013 solo album Cellar Darling, which she had released while still in Eluveitie; the title evokes hidden, dormant ideas stored in a "cellar" now emerging as precious and illuminated "darlings," mirroring the group's intent to revive suppressed musical concepts with folk elements at their core. This decision to maintain a trio format allowed for intimate collaboration, emphasizing heavy riffs, atmospheric hurdy-gurdy, and folk-inspired melodies without additional members.[8][9] On September 23, 2016, Cellar Darling independently released their debut single "Challenge," paired with a bonus track "Fire, Wind & Earth," which quickly drew enthusiastic responses from global audiences and showcased their evolving sound. The group performed their first live shows that December, debuting on the 4th in Zurich, Switzerland, as support for Amorphis at Komplex 457, followed by another appearance in Amsterdam opening for The Gentle Storm. These initial performances in Switzerland and nearby Europe highlighted their commitment to folk metal roots while testing new material before a supportive home crowd.[10][11][12]Debut album and label signing
In January 2017, Cellar Darling signed a record deal with Nuclear Blast Records, marking a significant step in their transition to a professional recording career.[1] The band described the label as feeling like "home" after their previous experiences, enabling them to focus on producing their debut material without prior constraints. Following the signing, the band recorded their debut album, This Is the Sound, at New Sound Studio in Pfäffikon, Switzerland, with production handled by Tommy Vetterli.[13] The album was released on June 30, 2017, featuring 14 tracks that showcased the band's blend of progressive and folk elements, recorded entirely in Switzerland to capture an authentic, introspective sound. Prior to the full release, the band issued three singles: "Black Moon" in May 2017 and "Avalanche" in June 2017, both exploring themes of personal struggle through abstract narratives—"Black Moon" depicting an apocalyptic inner turmoil influenced by cultural end-times visions, and "Avalanche" portraying an intimate deathwish amid isolation and cult-like surrender.[14] To promote This Is the Sound, Cellar Darling embarked on initial European tours, including support slots with Lacuna Coil in late 2017, which helped build their live presence.[1] The album received positive reception, debuting at number 16 on the Swiss Albums Chart, where it spent three weeks, and reaching number 88 on the German Albums Chart.[15][16]The Spell
Following the success of their debut album, Cellar Darling announced their sophomore effort, The Spell, on January 18, 2019, revealing it as a concept album centered on occult and psychological themes.[17] The narrative follows a mysterious woman who falls in love with Death, who then ensnares her in an eternal spell, blending dark fairytale elements with introspective exploration of immortality and obsession.[18] Lyrics and the overarching concept were crafted by vocalist Anna Murphy, drawing from ancient folklore while incorporating progressive folk metal structures to advance the storyline across 13 tracks.[19] Production began in late 2018, with the band evolving toward a darker, more intricate sound compared to their self-titled debut.[20] The album was co-produced by Tommy Vetterli and Anna Murphy, with additional contributions from Fredy Schnyder; Vetterli also handled mixing and co-engineering alongside Murphy.[19] Recording took place across multiple Swiss studios, including New Sound Studio in Pfäffikon, Zürich, for the bulk of the sessions, and Soundfarm Studios in Lucerne for guitars and drums on tracks 1, 3, 4, 5, and 8.[19] Mastering was completed by Tony Lindgren at Fascination Street Studios in Sweden, resulting in a 63-minute runtime that emphasizes atmospheric depth through hurdy-gurdy, flute, and layered soundscapes.[19] The Spell was released on March 22, 2019, through Nuclear Blast Records, marking the band's continued partnership with the label.[17] Key singles included "Insomnia," a surprise teaser dropped in November 2018 that introduced the album's proggy, chaotic energy and hinted at the protagonist's restless psyche as an entry point to the narrative.[17] The title track "The Spell," released on January 19, 2019, served as the second single and pivotal chapter, depicting the moment Death casts the enchantment, with its moody atmosphere and soaring melodies underscoring the story's emotional core.[17] Critically, The Spell received widespread acclaim for its ambitious storytelling and genre-blending innovation, often described as a "masterpiece" in progressive metal circles.[21] Reviews highlighted its immersive production and Murphy's commanding vocals, earning an 8.9/10 from Sonic Perspectives for its "ceaselessly ambitious" sequences, and a 9/10 from The Metal Report for its "magical" beguiling quality.[22][23] The album won the Progressive Music Award for Best Video for "Insomnia" in September 2019.[24] To support the release, Cellar Darling embarked on The Spell European Tour in October and November 2019, headlining shows across France, Germany, the UK, and other countries, with support from acts like Forever Still and Oceans.[25] The tour featured nearly the full album in setlists, allowing fans to experience the concept's progression live, and solidified the band's growing presence in the European metal scene.[26]Post-2019 developments
Following the release of their second studio album The Spell in 2019, Cellar Darling issued the single "Dance" on January 8, 2021, an 11-minute progressive track inspired by the historical dancing plague of 1518 in Strasbourg, which afflicted hundreds with uncontrollable dancing for days.[27][28] An accompanying music video was released on March 23, 2021, directed by the band and featuring choreographed dance sequences to evoke the plague's mania.[29][30] The COVID-19 pandemic severely disrupted the band's touring plans in 2020 and 2021, resulting in the cancellation of multiple live dates across Europe.[31] In response, Cellar Darling launched a "Lockdown Content" series on their official website, sharing behind-the-scenes updates, acoustic performances, and virtual livestreams, including the full concert Live at Soundfarm Studios filmed in an intimate home setting to maintain fan engagement without physical gatherings.[32][33] These adaptations delayed broader promotional activities for "Dance" and postponed album-related tours.[34] Live performances resumed in 2023 with a European headline tour, marking a return to stages after pandemic restrictions eased. A notable 2024 highlight was their appearance at Uprising Festival in Leicester, UK, on May 25, where they delivered a set including tracks from The Spell and earlier works, drawing strong crowd response for their progressive folk-metal sound.[35][36] In late 2024 and early 2025, the band announced additional touring commitments, including headline shows in Portugal on March 29 in Lisbon at República da Música and March 30 in Porto at Mouco, their first performances there in seven years.[37] Concurrently, Cellar Darling confirmed ongoing work on their third studio album, first teased in early 2023 as being in active development with initial writing sessions underway.[38] By March 2025, social media updates highlighted studio progress toward completion, with the band prioritizing recording after a brief touring hiatus in late 2024, though specific thematic elements remain undisclosed beyond their signature blend of folklore and progressive narratives. As of November 2025, the third album remains in development with no release date announced.[39][40][41]Musical style and influences
Musical style
Cellar Darling is classified as a heavy progressive folk rock and metal band, blending Celtic folk elements with modern heavy riffs and progressive structures.[1][10][23] The band's core sound features the signature integration of traditional folk instruments such as the hurdy-gurdy and flute alongside keyboards, creating earthy and melodic textures that contrast with guitar-driven heaviness and dynamic, powerful drumming.[10][1] This combination produces a genre-bending style that incorporates rock, heavy metal, folk, classical, and progressive influences, emphasizing melodic soaring and intricate arrangements over straightforward aggression.[10][42][7] Their musical evolution is evident from the debut album This Is The Sound (2017), which delivered a raw, eclectic energy mixing folk-metal intensity with rock and progressive elements, to the sophomore release The Spell (2019), where the sound shifted toward more atmospheric and expansive progressive frameworks with heavier passages and refined folk integrations.[1][10][7] This progression reflects a departure from the heavier folk-metal style of their prior Eluveitie era, focusing instead on lighter, boundary-pushing experimentation.[43][23] Production techniques in their albums highlight layered vocals for emotional depth and experimental soundscapes that enhance the juxtaposition of dark and light tones, contributing to immersive, progressive folk rock atmospheres unique to each release.[1][42][10]Influences and themes
Cellar Darling draws from a diverse array of musical influences, prominently featuring traditional Swiss and Celtic folk elements through the use of instruments like the hurdy-gurdy and transverse flute, which evoke earthy, ancestral sounds central to their identity.[10] The band also incorporates progressive rock inspirations, evident in their cover of Queen's "The Prophet's Song," a track that highlights the classical harmonies and expansive structures they admire in the genre, as shared by vocalist Anna Murphy and drummer Merlin Sutter, who cite Queen alongside acts like Yes, King Crimson, and Emerson, Lake & Palmer from their formative listening experiences.[44] Heavy metal influences further shape their sound, blending with progressive and folk components to create intricate, boundary-pushing compositions.[45] Lyrically, Cellar Darling explores recurring themes of psychological introspection, often rooted in personal turmoil following the members' departure from Eluveitie, where emotions like depression and resilience are transformed into metaphorical narratives, as Murphy describes turning raw feelings into poetic stories.[46] Nature serves as a frequent motif, reflecting ecological concerns and the raw power of the environment, such as in tracks inspired by avalanches symbolizing overwhelming forces. Occult mysticism permeates their work through dark, fantastical elements, while historical events provide grounding, exemplified by the 1518 dancing plague that informs the song "Dance," linking past hysteria to modern existential pressures.[47][48] The band's conceptual approach reaches a pinnacle in their 2019 album The Spell, a narrative journey depicting a girl's ill-fated love with Death in a modern dark fairytale, traversing emotional states from obsession and melancholy to fleeting peace and mortality's embrace.[49] This motif, drawn from the "Death and the Maiden" archetype, juxtaposes light and shadow to probe deeper human vulnerabilities, with Murphy noting how her own happier mindset contrasted the story's gloom during its creation.[50] The lyrics employ a poetic, metaphorical style that invites personal interpretation, weaving introspection with mystical and natural imagery to foster immersive storytelling.[51]Band members
Current members
Cellar Darling consists of a stable core trio formed in 2016 by former Eluveitie members, with no lineup changes reported as of 2025.[1][2][52] Anna Murphy serves as the band's lead vocalist, hurdy-gurdy player, and multi-instrumentalist, incorporating flute and keyboards into their progressive folk metal sound.[1][53] Having spent over a decade with Eluveitie prior to Cellar Darling's inception, Murphy brings extensive experience in folk-infused metal arrangements and has also pursued solo projects emphasizing her vocal and instrumental versatility.[1][54] Her contributions include co-writing songs, co-producing albums, and narrating the audiobook adaptation of the band's concept album The Spell.[1][46] Ivo Henzi handles guitar and bass duties, often engineering and producing the band's recordings to blend heavy riffs with atmospheric elements.[1][53] Like his bandmates, Henzi's background includes more than a decade in Eluveitie, where he honed his skills in guitar work and production.[1] Within Cellar Darling, he plays a key role in songwriting, contributing ideas that drive the collaborative jamming sessions central to the band's creative process.[1][52] Merlin Sutter provides drums, delivering dynamic rhythms that fuse folk intricacies with metal intensity.[1][53] His prior tenure in Eluveitie spanned over ten years, establishing him as a foundational percussionist in the Swiss folk metal scene.[1] Sutter actively participates in songwriting and production, helping shape the band's progressive structures since its formation.[1][5]Live and guest musicians
Cellar Darling has occasionally augmented their core trio with guest musicians on recordings to enrich the folk and progressive elements of their music. On their debut album This Is the Sound (2017), violinist and violist Shir-Ran Yinon contributed string arrangements, while Brendan Wade provided uilleann pipes, adding authentic Celtic textures to tracks like "The Magician" and "A Snake's Dream."[13][55] Pianist Fredy Schnyder also participated in piano arrangements throughout the album, enhancing its atmospheric depth.[56] For the follow-up album The Spell (2019), several of these collaborators returned. Shir-Ran Yinon again handled string arrangements on tracks such as "Love" and "Freeze," incorporating violin and viola to amplify the album's thematic intensity.[19] Fredy Schnyder (credited as Fred Schnyder Hiedl) served as a guest performer on grand piano, organ, dulcimer, harmonium, and glockenspiel across multiple songs, providing subtle folk-infused layers that supported the narrative-driven compositions without overshadowing the trio's sound.[57] These guest contributions were pivotal in realizing the band's vision of blending heavy progressive folk rock with intricate instrumentation, particularly for evoking the mystical and emotional themes central to their work. In live settings, Cellar Darling maintains their trio formation but has employed additional touring musicians for select performances to handle expanded arrangements, especially during larger tours requiring fuller sonic presence. For instance, during their 2019 European tour promoting The Spell, the band was joined onstage by an unnamed bassist and keyboardist, who helped replicate the album's dense folk-metal orchestration and ensured a robust live delivery of complex pieces like "Insomnia" and "The Spell."[58][59] These occasional additions focused on supporting the folk elements—such as hurdy-gurdy harmonies and atmospheric keys—allowing the core members to emphasize vocals, guitar, and drums while preserving the intimate trio dynamic for smaller venues. Despite these enhancements, the band has not pursued permanent expansions, consistently prioritizing their streamlined lineup to retain the raw energy that defines their performances.Discography
Studio albums
Cellar Darling has released two studio albums to date, both through Nuclear Blast Records. Their debut, This Is the Sound, marked the band's introduction as a standalone entity following the departure of key members from Eluveitie. Produced by Tommy Vetterli and Anna Murphy, with mixing by Vetterli and engineering by Vetterli and Murphy, the album was recorded at New Sound Studio and Soundfarm, then mastered at Fascination Street Studios.[13] It features 14 tracks with a total runtime of approximately 60 minutes, blending folk elements with progressive metal. The album entered the Swiss charts at number 16 on July 9, 2017, and remained for three weeks.[15] In Germany, it peaked at number 88 upon entry on July 7, 2017.[60] The track listing for This Is the Sound is as follows:| No. | Title |
|---|---|
| 1 | Avalanche |
| 2 | Black Moon |
| 3 | Challenge |
| 4 | Hullaballoo |
| 5 | Six Days |
| 6 | The Hermit |
| 7 | Water |
| 8 | Fire, Wind & Earth |
| 9 | Rebel |
| 10 | Klangmauer |
| 11 | Midnight Blues |
| 12 | This Is the Sound |
| 13 | Tomcy's Shadow |
| 14 | Hedonia |
| No. | Title |
|---|---|
| 1 | Pain |
| 2 | Death |
| 3 | Love |
| 4 | The Spell |
| 5 | Burn |
| 6 | Hang |
| 7 | Sleep |
| 8 | Insomnia |
| 9 | Freeze |
| 10 | Fall |
| 11 | Drown |
| 12 | Love Pt. II (Reprise) |
| 13 | Death Pt. II (Reprise) |