Euronymous
Øystein Aarseth (22 March 1968 – 10 August 1993), better known by his stage name Euronymous, was a Norwegian musician who co-founded the black metal band Mayhem, serving as its guitarist and a driving force in the genre's early development.[1] He established the record label Deathlike Silence Productions, which released influential albums by Mayhem and other acts like Burzum, and opened the Helvete record shop in Oslo in 1991, which became a central hub for the Norwegian black metal scene known as the Black Circle.[1][2] Euronymous advocated theistic Satanism, viewing Satan as a literal entity opposed to Christianity, and expressed extreme misanthropic views that emphasized chaos and anti-Christian actions within the scene.[3] His leadership influenced the "second wave" of black metal, characterized by raw production, dissonant melodies, and thematic extremity, though the scene gained infamy for events like the 1991 suicide of Mayhem vocalist Dead (Per Yngve Ohlin), after which Euronymous photographed the scene and created skull-fragment necklaces.[1] The black metal community's associations with church arsons—such as the 1992 burning of the Fantoft Stave Church—occurred under Euronymous's indirect influence through Helvete gatherings, though he did not personally commit the acts.[2] Tensions escalated with ideological clashes, including Euronymous's reported communist leanings conflicting with Varg Vikernes's emerging pagan nationalism, culminating in Euronymous's murder by Vikernes on 10 August 1993 in his Oslo apartment, where he was stabbed multiple times; Vikernes claimed self-defense amid threats but was convicted of premeditated murder.[2][1]Early Life
Childhood and Formative Years
Øystein Aarseth was born on 22 March 1968 in Surnadal Municipality, Møre og Romsdal county, in western Norway, an area characterized by its agricultural economy.[4] Details of his early childhood remain sparse in public records, with his family maintaining privacy over personal matters following his death.[5] By his mid-teens, Aarseth had relocated toward the Oslo region and immersed himself in heavy metal subcultures, drawing initial inspiration from thrash and emerging extreme metal acts.[6] In 1984, at age 16, he co-founded the band Mayhem alongside bassist Jørn Stubberud (Necrobutcher) and drummer Kjetil Manheim, initially focusing on death metal influences before evolving toward black metal aesthetics.[6] This period marked his formative shift into underground music production and scene-building, as he adopted the stage name Euronymous and began experimenting with guitar techniques suited to raw, aggressive sounds.[7]Entry into Metal Scene
Øystein Aarseth, who adopted the stage name Euronymous, first engaged with heavy metal as a teenager in the early 1980s, drawn to the genre's aggressive sounds amid Norway's limited local scene.[8] His early influences included foundational heavy metal acts such as Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden, and Judas Priest, alongside thrash metal bands like Slayer, which shaped his initial musical tastes before exposure to more extreme styles.[9] By the mid-1980s, Aarseth had gravitated toward pioneering extreme metal bands including Venom, Bathory, Celtic Frost, and Mercyful Fate, whose raw, satanic-themed speed metal and emerging black metal aesthetics inspired him to pursue a similar intensity.[10] These groups represented the first wave of black metal, emphasizing lo-fi production, occult imagery, and anti-commercial rebellion, elements Aarseth aimed to emulate and amplify.[11] In March 1984, at age 16, Aarseth co-founded Mayhem with bassist Jørn "Necrobutcher" Stubberud and drummer Kjetil Manheim, establishing his formal entry into the metal scene through this Oslo-based band.[4] Mayhem's initial sound blended thrash and speed metal riffs with deathly vocals, reflecting the scarcity of extreme metal activity in Norway at the time and positioning the group as early local innovators.[8] The band's formation occurred against a backdrop of imported tapes and fanzines, as domestic infrastructure for such music remained nascent until the late 1980s.[10]Musical Career with Mayhem
Formation and Deathcrush Period (1984–1989)
Mayhem was formed in 1984 in Oslo, Norway, by guitarist Øystein Aarseth (Euronymous), bassist Jørn Stubberud (Necrobutcher), and drummer Kjetil Manheim, initially playing a raw style influenced by thrash and early extreme metal acts.[12][13] The band's early lineup lacked a permanent vocalist, with session contributions from Eirik Nordheim (Messiah) for rehearsals and initial recordings.[14] In 1986, Mayhem self-released the demo Pure Fucking Armageddon as a cassette tape, featuring tracks like "Voice of a Tortured Skull," "Carnage," and "Ghoul," recorded in low-fidelity conditions that emphasized speed and aggression over polish.[15][16] The demo, limited to around 100 copies, circulated primarily within underground metal circles and showcased the core trio's instrumentation alongside vocal efforts from Messiah and Sven Erik Kristiansen (Maniac).[17] Maniac joined as full-time vocalist in 1986, enabling the band to record their debut EP, Deathcrush, between February and March 1987 at Creative Studios in Oslo.[18] The EP, comprising six tracks—"Silvester Anfang" (1:56), "Deathcrush" (3:33), "Chainsaw Gutsfuck" (3:33), "Witching Hour" (1:42, a Sarcófago cover), "Necrolust" (3:27), and "(You Must) Burn!" (2:48)—was released in August 1987 on 1,000 copies of 12-inch vinyl through Posercorpse Music, a label founded by Euronymous to distribute extreme metal.[19][20] Its sound blended thrash riffs, blast beats, and screamed vocals, marking an early pivot toward the raw aesthetic later associated with black metal, though still rooted in death and speed metal influences.[18] Following Deathcrush, Mayhem maintained activity through live performances, including shows in Norway such as a 1986 gig in Ski and international appearances like one in Debrecen, Hungary, in 1988, and a U.S. date in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on May 6, 1989.[21][22][23] Lineup instability emerged, with Maniac departing in 1988 amid personal conflicts, leaving the band to rely on session vocalists and rehearsals; Necrobutcher also temporarily exited due to internal tensions.[24] Euronymous continued promoting the band via Posercorpse, which reissued Deathcrush in limited runs and supported underground distribution, though sales remained niche within Europe's metal scene.[19] By late 1989, the group focused on refining their sound in rehearsals, setting the stage for further evolution amid growing interest in Scandinavian extreme metal.[25]Dead's Tenure and Shift to Black Metal (1990–1991)
During 1990, Mayhem conducted several live performances featuring vocalist Per Yngve Ohlin (Dead), including a February 28 show in Sarpsborg, Norway, captured on the bootleg The Dawn of the Black Hearts, which showcased a raw, atmospheric sound with Dead's distinctive high-pitched shrieks diverging from the band's earlier thrash-influenced death metal style on the 1987 Deathcrush EP. These performances, alongside a November 1990 gig in Leipzig, East Germany, and a December show in Izmir, Turkey, highlighted evolving compositions like "Freezing Moon," emphasizing slower tempos, tremolo-picked riffs, and necrotic themes that presaged second-wave black metal's sonic hallmarks.[26][27] The band's rehearsals in a rented house outside Oslo further refined this direction, with Dead's lyrics delving into suicide and decay, fostering an anti-cosmic aesthetic under Euronymous's guidance.[28] Dead's stage persona amplified the shift, incorporating self-mutilation—such as cutting his arms during sets, leading to hospitalizations—and rituals like wearing decayed clothing and applying corpse paint, which influenced the scene's visual extremism and distinguished Mayhem from contemporaneous death metal acts.[29] Euronymous, as guitarist and de facto leader, steered the music towards misanthropic intensity, rejecting commercial viability for ideological purity, though no studio album materialized before Dead's death.[30] On April 8, 1991, Dead died by suicide in the band's Oslo-area house, slashing his wrists and throat before shooting himself in the forehead with a shotgun; Euronymous discovered the body hours later, photographed the scene, and reportedly delayed notifying authorities while retrieving a photo roll.[28][29] This event, while tragic, cemented Mayhem's notoriety, with Euronymous later distributing the suicide image as the cover for The Dawn of the Black Hearts bootleg in 1991, symbolizing the perilous commitment to their aesthetic.[31] The loss disrupted recordings but propelled the black metal ethos, as Euronymous leveraged it to propagate the subculture's rejection of mainstream norms.[32]De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas and Final Recordings (1991–1993)
Following vocalist Per "Dead" Ohlin's suicide on April 8, 1991, Mayhem sought a replacement, initially attempting to re-enlist former singer Sven Erik Kristiansen (Maniac) before settling on Hungarian vocalist Attila Csihar, known from the band Tormentor, in late 1991.[33][34] The lineup for the ensuing sessions included Euronymous on guitar, Jan Axel Blomharg (Hellhammer) on drums, Csihar on vocals, and Varg Vikernes (of Burzum) on bass.[35][36] Recording for the debut full-length De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas commenced in 1992, with sessions spanning multiple locations including Grieghallen Studios in Bergen; Vikernes laid down the bass tracks during this period before quitting the band in early 1993 due to escalating personal and ideological conflicts with Euronymous.[37][35] Several tracks incorporated lyrics originally written by Dead, reflecting the album's thematic emphasis on occultism, death, and Satanism, while Euronymous handled guitar riffs and production oversight through his Deathlike Silence Productions label.[38] Csihar's vocals were captured in spring 1993, contributing to the album's distinctive, ritualistic style amid the band's shift toward atmospheric black metal.[34] These sessions represented Euronymous's final musical output with Mayhem, as he was stabbed to death by Vikernes on August 10, 1993, at his Oslo apartment; the murder stemmed from mutual distrust, including Vikernes's claims of Euronymous planning to kill him.[39] Despite the tragedy, Hellhammer completed post-production, leading to the album's release in May 1994—posthumously featuring Euronymous's performances and cementing De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas as a cornerstone of second-wave black metal.[35][36]Helvete and Black Metal Promotion
The Record Shop as Epicenter
In May-June 1991, Øystein Aarseth, known as Euronymous, established Helvete, a record shop at Schweigaards gate 56A in Oslo, Norway.[40][41] The name "Helvete," translating to "Hell" in Norwegian and derived from Norse "hels víti," reflected the shop's thematic intent.[41] The interior featured black-painted walls, a red "Helvete" logo, medieval weapons on display, and burning candles, creating an intentionally grim and atmospheric space that aligned with black metal aesthetics.[41] This setup drew in like-minded individuals, transforming the modest storefront into a cultural nexus. Helvete functioned as the primary gathering point for the emerging Norwegian black metal scene, attracting musicians from bands including Mayhem, Burzum, Emperor, and Thorns within months of opening.[41][42] Regulars convened there to exchange demo tapes, discuss extreme music ideologies, and form alliances, with metal scene chronicler Jon "Metalion" Kristiansen describing it as "the creation of the whole Norwegian Black Metal scene."[41] Euronymous designated the core group of attendees as the "Black Circle," an informal collective he coined to denote the inner circle of devotees committed to advancing black metal's underground ethos.[41][40] The shop not only hosted these interactions but also served as a distribution hub for rare recordings via Euronymous's Deathlike Silence Productions label, amplifying the scene's reach and cohesion.[42] Several participants temporarily resided in the premises, intensifying its role as a communal epicenter beyond commercial sales.[41] Operations ceased in early 1993 amid escalating rent costs and heightened police and media attention following associated controversies.[41]Inner Circle Dynamics and Recruitment
Helvete, established by Euronymous in Oslo during May or June 1991, served as the primary hub for the nascent Norwegian black metal scene, drawing in local enthusiasts through its specialization in extreme metal records and mail-order services.[41] The shop's dimly lit basement functioned as an informal gathering space where regulars convened to share music, rehearse ideas, and immerse in subcultural rituals, fostering a sense of exclusivity among participants committed to anti-mainstream aesthetics.[43] Euronymous coined the term "Black Metal Inner Circle" to denote this core group, portraying it as a dedicated cadre of like-minded individuals gravitating around the store.[44] The dynamics within this circle revolved around Euronymous' authoritative vision, emphasizing theistic Satanism as obligatory for authentic black metal expression and rejecting any deviation toward "trendy" or commercial influences.[45] He positioned himself as the scene's central figure, collaborating with nearby acts like Thorns and Darkthrone to share resources such as rehearsal spaces, while enforcing a lifestyle of brutality, face paint, spikes, and ideological opposition to normalcy—exemplified by the departure of bassist Necrobutcher for adopting a conventional family life.[43] This cult-like structure demanded total immersion, with Euronymous advocating for acts symbolizing loyalty, such as church arsons, to mirror religious devotion and distinguish "true" adherents from posers.[45] Tensions arose from his insistence on purity, leading to disbandments of non-compliant bands and a hierarchical atmosphere where personal authority superseded collective consensus.[45] Recruitment occurred organically via Helvete's role as an epicenter, attracting adolescent and young adult Norwegians alienated by mainstream culture and lured by the shop's underground ethos and Deathlike Silence Productions releases.[1] Euronymous targeted "total madmen" embodying self-destructive tendencies and unwavering dedication to the black metal archetype, as seen in his selection of vocalist Occultus for Mayhem due to his alignment with this extreme profile.[43] The circle expanded through personal networks and ideological propagation, incorporating figures from emerging bands who frequented the store and adopted its militant Satanist stance, though Euronymous' letters and statements reveal an intent to formalize it into a more structured "Black Circle" or "Black Metal Mafia" by late 1992.[46] This process prioritized ideological vetting over musical talent, ensuring recruits perpetuated the scene's adversarial dynamics against societal norms.[45]Ideological Propagation Through Deathlike Silence Productions
Deathlike Silence Productions (DSP), established by Øystein Aarseth (Euronymous) in Oslo around 1988, served as a dedicated outlet for black metal recordings that embodied his ideological framework of theistic Satanism and vehement opposition to Christianity.[47] The label's inaugural release, Merciless' The Awakening in 1990, introduced death metal elements but aligned with Euronymous' push for extreme, uncompromised underground music as a vehicle for cultural provocation.[48] By prioritizing bands affiliated with the Black Metal Inner Circle, DSP functioned to cultivate a militant subculture centered on devil worship and anti-Christian rhetoric, rejecting LaVeyan rationalism in favor of belief in a literal Satan as an adversarial force against religious institutions.[47][3] Euronymous leveraged DSP to propagate these views through curated releases that emphasized lyrical and thematic extremity, often tying into broader misanthropic and totalitarian sentiments he espoused to incite notoriety within the scene.[47] For instance, Burzum's self-titled debut in 1992 and Aske in 1993, despite Varg Vikernes' emerging pagan leanings, were distributed via DSP, extending the label's influence to hybrid Norse-Satanic narratives that reinforced rebellion against Christianity.[48] Similarly, Abruptum's Obscuritatem Advoco Amplectere Me (1993) and In Umbra Malitiae Ambulabo... (1994) amplified occult darkness, while Mayhem's posthumously issued De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas in 1994 crystallized the raw, ritualistic Satanism Euronymous advocated, with tracks invoking infernal imagery and ecclesiastical desecration.[48][47] The label's limited catalog of nine releases, including Enslaved's Vikingligr Veldi (1994) and Sigh's Scorn Defeat (1993), prioritized quality over quantity to sustain ideological purity, often handling distribution through partnerships like Voices of Wonder Records from late 1992 onward.[49] This selective propagation linked DSP directly to the Norwegian black metal scene's escalations, such as church arsons, by disseminating music that glorified anti-Christian acts and framed them as extensions of satanic warfare.[47] Euronymous' vision positioned the label not merely as a commercial entity but as an institutional arm of the Inner Circle's worldview, fostering a network where artistic output reinforced causal ties between aesthetic extremity and real-world antagonism toward Christianity.[47]Beliefs and Ideology
Theistic Satanism and Anti-Christian Stance
Øystein Aarseth, known as Euronymous, identified as a theistic Satanist, maintaining that Satan existed as a literal deity worthy of worship rather than a symbolic archetype.[45][3] This stance contrasted sharply with atheistic variants like LaVeyan Satanism, which he dismissed as insufficiently committed to genuine devil worship and overly "humane" in its humanism.[50] Euronymous argued that black metal bands must explicitly profess devotion to Satan to qualify as authentic, using this criterion to enforce ideological purity within the Norwegian scene he influenced.[51][45] His theistic Satanism framed Satan not merely as rebellion but as an active force against cosmic order, aligning with misanthropic and anti-cosmic themes in early black metal lyrics and rhetoric.[52] Euronymous promoted this through his label Deathlike Silence Productions, selecting and distributing music that "cultivates and worships Satan" while rejecting material lacking such dedication.[51] He viewed Satanism as essential to the genre's essence, stating in interviews that true black metal involved serious cultivation of evil and death, beyond superficial gore or humor.[51] This belief extended to personal practice, as he reportedly incorporated satanic rituals and imagery into Mayhem's performances and recordings to evoke genuine darkness.[53] Euronymous' anti-Christian stance positioned Christianity as a historical instrument of oppression, originating from "decadent and degenerated Romans" to enforce obedience and suppress individuality.[54] He advocated its eradication, seeing it as antithetical to satanic freedom and a barrier to authentic self-realization, which he believed demanded rejection of religious slavery.[55] In line with theistic Satanism's inversion of Christian theology, Euronymous treated Satan as the true liberator opposing a tyrannical God, a perspective he enforced among associates at Helvete by requiring anti-Christian commitment.[3] This ideology fueled broader scene antagonism toward churches, though Euronymous emphasized ideological warfare over mere provocation.[56]Political Views: Totalitarianism and Misanthropy
Euronymous expressed a preference for totalitarian systems, particularly extreme communist regimes, which he admired for their capacity to enforce suffering and control over populations. In a 1992 interview, he stated his interest in "extreme countries like Albania, Kampuchea, North Korea and so on," praising dictators such as Nicolae Ceaușescu, Joseph Stalin, and Pol Pot, and declaring, "Ceausescu was great, we need more people like him, Stalin Pol Pot too."[57] He advocated for elements of such governance, including "secret police, cold war and worshipping of dictators," as well as "bugging and spying on people, torture chambers in police stations and that people suddenly ‘disappear’," viewing these as mechanisms to perpetuate fear and oppression.[57] While acknowledging that "real communism would be the best possible system," Euronymous qualified this by emphasizing his personal hatred for humanity, explaining, "BUT as I HATE people I don’t want them to have a good time, I’d like to see them rot under communist dictatorship."[57] This stance reflected his earlier involvement in Rød Ungdom, the youth organization affiliated with Norway's Marxist-Leninist Communist Party, during the 1980s.[4] His support for totalitarianism was thus intertwined with a rejection of egalitarian outcomes, prioritizing brutality and subjugation over prosperity, as he sought regimes that aligned with black metal's aesthetic of extremity rather than ideological purity.[57] Central to these views was a profound misanthropy, evident in his explicit opposition to human welfare and positive social values. He proclaimed "Death to ‘love, peace and fun’! Hate, War and Sodomy!" and aspired to "spread terror, fright and hate in the world," framing black metal as a vehicle for such sentiments.[57] Euronymous dismissed compassion outright, refusing hypothetical aid to "starving children in Africa" with the retort, "They can die," and fantasizing about accumulating wealth solely "to watch the children in Africa starve to death on video."[57] These statements underscored a deliberate cultivation of hatred toward humanity, positioning totalitarianism not as a means to societal improvement but as an instrument to exacerbate human misery in line with his ideological framework.[57]Perspectives on Extreme Music and Subculture
Euronymous defined black metal primarily by its thematic content rather than musical style alone, asserting that "black metal has nothing to do with the music itself" and that bands qualify as such only if their lyrics are explicitly Satanic and they worship Satan.[51] He contrasted this with death metal, which he viewed as centered on the worship of death, emphasizing that any metal variant could fit these categories based on ideology over sound.[51] In a 1993 interview, he reiterated that a Satanic concept underlay black metal, rejecting superficial trends and insisting it was not a casual pursuit but a serious commitment to evil.[56] He criticized the commercialization and normalization of extreme metal genres, lamenting how death metal had become "something normal, accepted and FUNNY" due to mainstream accessibility, which eroded its "mystic and evil atmosphere."[51] Authenticity, for Euronymous, required rejection of profit motives and societal approval; he outlined "moral laws" prohibiting bands from earning money on their work or adopting "openminded" attitudes like vegetarianism or peace advocacy, which he derided as aligned with moral policing.[43] Through Deathlike Silence Productions, he aimed to counter this by releasing "pure EVIL on vinyl" and fostering a cult-like dedication to grim music, declaring it time to "STRIKE BACK" against dilution.[51][43] Within the black metal subculture, Euronymous advocated elitism and antagonism, stating he did not seek respect from "trend people" but rather for them to "HATE and FEAR," as mutual respect undermined the scene's essence.[51] He described black metal as rooted in hatred of humankind, limiting alliances to a select "inner circle" rather than broad friendships, and viewed the underground's rigid rules as obsolete, urging a shift toward perverse soul-corruption over blind conformity.[56][43] This philosophy positioned the subculture as an exclusive bastion for "exciting personalities" producing intricate, non-riff-focused music, distinct from foreign trends and geared toward propagating evil rather than entertainment.[56]Controversies and Conflicts
Church Arsons: Involvement and Rationales
Øystein Aarseth, known as Euronymous, participated in the arson of Holmenkollen Chapel in Oslo on August 21, 1992, alongside Varg Vikernes and Bård Eithun (Faust).[58] Vikernes and Eithun were later convicted for this act, while Euronymous avoided charges due to his murder in August 1993.[58] He also photographed the ruins of Fantoft Stave Church, destroyed by arson on June 6, 1992—perpetrated by Vikernes—and used the images for promotional materials related to the black metal scene.[58] Additionally, Euronymous and Vikernes planned but did not execute a bombing of Nidaros Cathedral to coincide with the release of Mayhem's album De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas.[58] Euronymous's rationales for these acts stemmed from his advocacy of theistic Satanism and opposition to Christianity's cultural dominance in Norway. He promoted church arsons as symbolic declarations of war against the church, viewing them as essential to embodying black metal's adversarial ethos and generating notoriety for the subculture.[59] In interviews, he emphasized Satanism as an obligatory element of black metal, framing destructive actions against Christian institutions as a means to provoke fear, chaos, and ideological confrontation rather than mere vandalism.[56] This contrasted with pagan motivations attributed to others like Vikernes, as Euronymous's stance prioritized Satanic rebellion over nationalist reclamation.[60]Exploitation of Band Member Tragedies
On April 8, 1991, Mayhem's vocalist Per Yngve Ohlin, stage-named Dead, died by suicide at age 22 through self-inflicted knife wounds to the wrists followed by a shotgun blast to the forehead, at the band's house in Oslo, Norway.[61][29] Guitarist Øystein Aarseth, known as Euronymous, discovered the body and photographed the scene prior to notifying authorities, later stating this action helped cultivate Mayhem's image of extreme authenticity.[28] He collected fragments from Ohlin's shattered skull, fashioning them into necklaces that he distributed selectively to supporters as symbols of dedication to the band's ideology.[62] These artifacts and the suicide imagery were leveraged to amplify perceptions of Mayhem's commitment to misanthropic and satanic themes within the nascent Norwegian black metal subculture.[28] The photograph Euronymous took of Ohlin's corpse—depicting the body amid brain matter and blood—appeared as cover art on the unauthorized live album Dawn of the Black Hearts, recorded during a February 28, 1990, performance in Sarpsborg but released in February 1995 via Warmaster Records.[63] Though postdating Euronymous's own death in 1993, the image's origins trace to his deliberate documentation and promotion of the tragedy, which band associates later described as a calculated step to differentiate Mayhem from less "genuine" acts in the scene.[28] No comparable exploitation occurred with other Mayhem personnel during Euronymous's tenure, as subsequent member changes lacked fatal incidents under his influence.Rivalries, Especially with Varg Vikernes
Øystein Aarseth, known as Euronymous, and Varg Vikernes initially collaborated closely within the Norwegian black metal scene, with Vikernes contributing bass tracks to Mayhem's De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas and Euronymous releasing Burzum's early albums through his Deathlike Silence Productions label.[64][2] Their alliance frayed amid financial disagreements, as Euronymous withheld royalties owed to Vikernes from Burzum sales—estimated at around 60,000 Norwegian kroner (approximately $5,600 at the time)—instead using the funds to cover personal debts and label expenses.[2][37] Ideological clashes exacerbated the rift, with Euronymous embracing theistic Satanism alongside reported communist sympathies, while Vikernes advocated pagan Odalism emphasizing pre-Christian European traditions and ethnic nationalism, dismissing Satanism as mere aesthetic posturing.[64][2] Vikernes accused Euronymous of inauthenticity, alleging he was of partial Sami (Lappish) descent and engaging in homosexuality—claims rooted in Vikernes' ethnonationalist worldview—further fueling personal animosity.[2] Euronymous, in turn, viewed Vikernes' high-profile church arsons, such as the June 6, 1992, burning of the Fantoft Stave Church, as attention-seeking disruptions that threatened the scene's cohesion, prioritizing his own business interests in Helvete and the label over Vikernes' provocations.[65] Tensions peaked with mutual threats of violence; Euronymous confided to associates, including former Mayhem bassist Jørn "Necrobutcher" Stubberud, his intent to kill Vikernes, reportedly to assert dominance or create a sensational act akin to prior scene tragedies.[64] Vikernes, claiming self-preservation, later asserted that Euronymous planned his torture and murder—possibly for a snuff film—and had encouraged the 1991 suicide of Mayhem vocalist Dead, interpreting these as patterns of exploitation.[2][66] Vikernes' February 1993 interview with Bergens Tidende, in which he boasted of church burnings, intensified scrutiny on the scene, prompting Euronymous to temporarily shutter Helvete and heightening their power struggle over influence in the "Black Circle."[2] These conflicts reflected broader rivalries in the insular scene, where Euronymous' centralizing authority clashed with Vikernes' independent, disruptive ethos, though unsubstantiated claims of premeditation on either side remain contested, with Vikernes' self-defense narrative rejected in his 1994 murder conviction.[64][65]Instruments and Technical Contributions
[Instruments and Technical Contributions - no content]Influences
Influences on Euronymous
Euronymous' guitar playing and Mayhem's early sound drew heavily from first-wave black metal and extreme thrash acts, with Venom identified as the foundational influence that introduced raw aggression and satanic themes. In a 1993 interview shortly before his death, he specified that Venom served as Mayhem's initial major inspiration, followed by Bathory's epic pagan and occult motifs, Hellhammer's primitive darkness, and the Teutonic thrash of Sodom and Destruction, which collectively pushed the band toward faster tempos, dissonant riffs, and corpse paint aesthetics.[39] These influences extended to Euronymous' advocacy for black metal as a vehicle for theistic Satanism, distinct from atheistic variants like Anton LaVey's Church of Satan, which he publicly rejected in favor of a literal belief in evil forces as an inversion of Christian doctrine. His misanthropic ideology, emphasizing opposition to compassion and support for totalitarian structures to enforce elitism and chaos, appears self-derived from the genre's anti-establishment ethos rather than specific philosophical texts, though he expressed admiration for authoritarian models that suppressed individualism and religion.Euronymous' Influence on Black Metal
Øystein Aarseth, known as Euronymous, exerted significant influence on the Norwegian black metal scene through his establishment of Deathlike Silence Productions in the late 1980s, a label dedicated primarily to black metal artists.[67] The label released key early works, including Merciless's The Awakening in 1990, Burzum's self-titled debut in March 1992, and planned Mayhem's De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas before his death.[49][48] With only nine total releases, the imprint focused on raw, ideologically driven black metal, helping shift local bands from death metal toward the genre's second wave by emphasizing satanic and anti-Christian themes.[68] In 1991, Euronymous opened Helvete, a record shop in Oslo that served as the epicenter for the nascent black metal community, attracting figures like Varg Vikernes and fostering what became known as the "Black Circle."[42] The shop, named after the Norwegian word for "hell," functioned not only as a distribution point for underground releases but also as a ideological hub where Euronymous promoted theistic Satanism and encouraged acts of provocation against Christianity, influencing the scene's aesthetic of corpse paint, misanthropy, and extremism.[41] This gathering spot facilitated the exchange of ideas and tapes among musicians, solidifying black metal's distinct identity separate from broader metal subgenres.[69] As Mayhem's guitarist and driving force, Euronymous shaped the musical template for Norwegian black metal with the band's early demos and the 1994 album De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas, which featured his compositions and production oversight, emphasizing tremolo-picked riffs, blast beats, and atmospheric grimness.[70] His insistence on purity in the genre—rejecting commercialism and demanding adherence to anti-cosmic, Satanist principles—helped define black metal's elitist subculture, though it also bred internal conflicts.[45] Events tied to Mayhem, such as vocalist Dead's suicide in April 1991, which Euronymous photographed and exploited for promotional photos, further mythologized the scene's association with death and transgression, amplifying its notoriety.[64]