Set Teitan (born Davide Totaro; 12 September 1978) is an Italian extreme metal guitarist based in Sweden.[1]
Teitan joined the Swedish black/death metal band Dissection in 2004 as guitarist, contributing guitar and backing vocals to their final studio album, Reinkaos, released in 2006 shortly before frontman Jon Nödtveidt's suicide.[2][3] From 2005 to 2018, he performed as live lead guitarist for the black metal band Watain, participating in tours and recordings.[4] In March 2018, Teitan stepped away from Watain after a photograph emerged showing him extending his arm in a Nazi salute; the band described the gesture as made in jest and the ensuing controversy as "tiresome and irrelevant," emphasizing it did not reflect their ideology, but he withdrew to avoid distracting from their activities.[5][6] Teitan has also been involved in other projects, including the industrial black metal band Aborym and his solo outlet Teitan, through which he explores experimental black metal compositions.[1]
Early life
Childhood and initial musical interests
Davide Totaro, professionally known as Set Teitan, was born on September 12, 1978, in Rome, Lazio, Italy.[7]Details about Totaro's childhood and family life are not well-documented in public sources, with no records indicating a musical heritage among his relatives. Reliable biographical accounts focus primarily on his later professional activities, leaving his formative years and initial exposure to music largely unchronicled. This scarcity reflects the opaque personal histories common among figures in the extreme metal underground, where emphasis is typically placed on artistic output rather than pre-career anecdotes.
Musical career
Aborym (1997–2005)
Set Teitan joined the Italian industrial black metal band Aborym in 1997 as guitarist, at the age of 19.[1][8] His entry marked a pivotal shift for the band, which had reformed earlier that year under the leadership of bassist Malfeitor Fabban, incorporating Teitan's contributions on guitars, samples, and drum programming to develop a cyber-nihilistic aesthetic fusing extreme metal with electronic and industrial elements.[1][9]Teitan's role was central to Aborym's debut full-length album, Kali Yuga Bizarre, released on April 1, 1999, via Scarlet Records, where he provided guitar work and additional production elements like samples alongside bandmates Fabban and vocalist Yorga SM.[10][11] The album established Aborym's signature sound, characterized by aggressive black metal riffs layered over synths, programming, and noise, reflecting themes of technological decay and occult nihilism drawn from Hindu eschatology.[10] Teitan's technical guitar contributions emphasized speed and dissonance, blending raw metal aggression with experimental electronic textures to differentiate Aborym from traditional black metal acts.[1]During the band's evolution, Teitan continued performing and contributing on the 2003 album With No Human Intervention, released via Spitfire Records, where he handled guitars and samples amid a lineup featuring vocalist Attila Csihar and guest appearances by figures like Nattefrost.[12] This release intensified Aborym's industrial fusion, incorporating drum machines, codec manipulations, and cybernetic themes, with Teitan's riffing providing the metallic backbone to tracks exploring human obsolescence and machine dominance.[12] His eight-year tenure solidified Aborym's niche in the extreme metal scene, prioritizing sonic extremity over conventional song structures.[1]Teitan departed Aborym in 2005 following the completion of With No Human Intervention promotional activities, coinciding with broader lineup shifts including Csihar's exit to rejoin Mayhem.[13][1] His contributions during this period were instrumental in positioning Aborym as pioneers of industrial black metal, though the band's reliance on programming and samples drew mixed reception for diluting live authenticity in favor of studio experimentation.[12]
Dissection (2005–2006)
Set Teitan joined Dissection in 2005 as the band's second guitarist during its reformation, replacing earlier members to support the recording of the third studio album Reinkaos. The lineup included founder Jon Nödtveidt on vocals and guitar, bassist Brice Leclercq, and drummer Tomas Asklund, with Teitan contributing lead guitar parts and backing vocals to tracks emphasizing melodic black metal riffs and atmospheric structures reminiscent of the band's earlier work on Storm of the Light's Bane.[2] Recording took place at Black Syndicate Studios in Stockholm, Sweden, under production by the band and Nightmare Industries, incorporating Nödtveidt's thematic focus on occult and philosophical concepts tied to his Misanthropic Luciferian Order beliefs.[14]Sessions for Reinkaos occurred primarily in 2005, with finalization extending into early 2006 ahead of the album's May release through The End Records and Nuclear Blast. Teitan's guitar work featured technical precision and harmonic layering, aiming to blend Dissection's raw intensity with evolved songwriting that prioritized thematic depth over prior aggression, though some reports noted creative frictions within the group during production.[15] The album's sound maintained continuity in its epic, riff-driven approach, with Teitan's contributions helping to realize Nödtveidt's vision of chaos-order duality in tracks like "Starless Aeon" and "Reinkaos."[3]Dissection performed select live shows with Teitan in 2005, including festival appearances in Europe and South America, such as the Setembro Negro Festival in São Paulo on September 2, 2005, where the setlist drew heavily from past material to reassert the band's foundational black metal aesthetic. These outings were limited, focusing on promoting the impending Reinkaos while testing the reformed ensemble's cohesion, with Teitan's stage presence emphasizing synchronized guitar assaults and ritualistic energy aligned with the band's ideological stance. Further touring plans were curtailed following Nödtveidt's suicide by gunshot on August 13, 2006, in his Stockholm apartment, an act framed in media reports as a deliberate ritual aligned with his esoteric convictions, which immediately dissolved Dissection.[16]
Unanimated, Bloodline, and other projects
Set Teitan served as lead guitarist for the Swedish doom/death metal band Bloodline from 2000 to 2005, contributing to their album Werewolf Training, released in 2003 via Selbstmord Services, where he performed guitar on tracks emphasizing occult and werewolf-themed lyrics.[1][17] Bloodline, formed in 1999 in Sundsvall, Sweden, maintained an underground profile with Teitan's involvement overlapping his Aborym tenure, focusing on raw, atmospheric death metal without major commercial releases beyond demo-level production.[18]Teitan joined the Swedish melodic death metal band Unanimated as a guitarist around 2009, providing lead guitar parts on their third studio album In the Light of Darkness, released that year by Regain Records, which featured guest appearances from musicians like Sebastian Ramstedt of Necrophobic.[1][19] He continued contributing to Unanimated's revival, tracking lead guitars remotely from Rome for their 2021 album Victory in Blood on Century Media, amid challenges with rehearsal scheduling due to his commitments elsewhere.[1][20][8]Beyond these, Teitan pursued solo work under the moniker Teitan, releasing the experimental black metal album Weight of the Void on April 29, 2021, comprising nine tracks drawing from existential philosophy and featuring raw production with themes of ancient Mesopotamian mythology, such as "Enuma Élisj" and "Akkad."[21] This project emphasized his songwriting independence, blending black metal with philosophical undertones, distinct from band collaborations.[22] His sporadic session contributions in the European metal underground, including guitar and drum programming on select releases, sustained a focus on black and death metal aesthetics without long-term band affiliations post-2006.[1][23]
Watain live performances
Set Teitan joined Watain as a live guitarist in early 2007 alongside bassist Alvaro Lillo, coinciding with the release of the albumSworn to the Dark and the band's inaugural world tour, "Fuck the World". His tenure extended through the 2010s, where he supported promotional tours for Lawless Darkness (2010), including the World Death Tour with dates across Europe and North America from June to September 2010, and The Wild Hunt (2013), featuring appearances such as the December 8, 2013, concert at London's Electric Ballroom.[24][25] Teitan's role remained strictly performative, with no contributions to studio recordings, allowing the core trio—Erik Danielsson, Pelle Forsberg, and Håkan Jonsson—to handle composition and production.Watain's live presentations during this period embodied black metal's tradition of ritualistic intensity, incorporating elements like projected blood, pyrotechnics, and occasional animal carcasses to simulate infernal ceremonies and provoke audiences with overt Satanic imagery.[26] Teitan participated in this aesthetic by delivering guitar parts amid the physical demands of headbanging, stage dives, and crowd interaction, maintaining the band's reputation for uncompromised extremity that rejected sanitized concert norms.[27] Such shows, often culminating in frontman Danielsson's declarations of devotion to chaotic forces, underscored Watain's commitment to experiential immersion over mere musical playback.[26]Teitan's exit from the live lineup occurred in March 2018 following internal discussions, after which Watain continued touring with alternate configurations. His involvement bridged Watain's evolution from underground cult status to broader festival circuits, including events like Bloodstock Open Air, where the band's sets emphasized unrelenting aggression and visual provocation.[28]
Musical style and equipment
Influences and guitar technique
Teitan's influences draw from 1990s black metal and industrial genres, evident in his guitar work with Aborym, where the band's sound fused black metal riffing with industrial beats and dissonance to produce raw, experimental extremity.[29] This blend prioritized atmospheric tension through layered, harsh textures over conventional melody, aligning with causal principles of metal that emphasize visceral emotional release via sonic confrontation rather than accessibility.[30]
His technique employs high-speed tremolo and alternate picking for relentless riff propulsion, incorporating pinch harmonics and modal phrygian-dominant scales to evoke occult-like mysticism and aggression, as observable in Dissection's Reinkaos rhythm tracks and live renditions, where raw delivery supersedes showy virtuosity.[15] In live settings with Watain, Teitan handled lead parts including solos, maintaining fidelity to black metal's unpolished authenticity amid chaotic performances.[31]
Signature gear and production contributions
Set Teitan utilized the Gibson Flying V Gothic electric guitar, featuring an ebony or black finish, during his time with Dissection.[32] This model provided the sustain required for extended leads and riffs characteristic of black metal recordings.[32]
His amplification setup consisted of the Marshall JCM900 4100 100-watt 2-channel tube head, known for delivering high-gain distortion tones.[32] This was paired with Marshall JCM 900A Lead 4x12 angled extension cabinets to project the signal in live and studio environments.[32]
In production roles with Aborym from 1997 to 2005, Teitan contributed samples and drum programming, integrating electronic elements into the band's industrial black metal sound.[1] These efforts involved sequencing programmed drum patterns and layering sampled textures to achieve dense, mechanical rhythms.[33] Album credits confirm his involvement in these aspects across releases like Kali Yuga Bizarre (1999) and With No Humanity no (2003).[1]
Controversies
Nazi salute photograph and fallout
In March 2018, a photograph circulated online showing Watain's live guitarist Set Teitan (real name Davide Totaro) extending his right arm in a straight-armed gesture resembling the Nazi salute, or Sieg Heil, during a band performance.[34] The image, reportedly from an earlier live show, prompted widespread condemnation in metal media and fan discussions, with outlets framing it as evidence of Nazi sympathies amid black metal's history of controversial imagery.[35][36]Watain responded via a public statement, asserting that "the gesture on that picture was done in jest" and emphasizing it did not reflect the band's ideology, but noting the ensuing debate had become "tiresome and time-consuming."[5] To refocus on music, Teitan voluntarily stepped down from his live role, which he had held since around 2007; the band clarified no member was forced to leave and reiterated their opposition to politicizing performances.[6] Teitan issued no public denial or further comment on the gesture.Days later, a video surfaced from another Watain show depicting Teitan repeating the gesture, intensifying scrutiny and leading some observers to dismiss the "jest" explanation as insufficient given the repetition.[37] Within the black metal community, reactions diverged: critics, including mainstream metal journalists, linked the incident to broader patterns of far-right extremism in the genre's fringes, urging zero tolerance for such symbols.[38][39] Defenders, often from niche forums and band-aligned perspectives, contextualized it as deliberate provocation or anti-establishment theater inherent to black metal's aesthetic of transgression, decrying media overreactions as enforcing political correctness that stifles artistic expression.[40] No legal actions or further professional repercussions for Teitan were reported beyond his Watain exit.[6]
Impact and reception
Contributions to black metal
Set Teitan contributed to the development of industrial black metal through his guitar work and songwriting in Aborym from 1997 to 2005. On the band's debut full-length album Kali Yuga Bizarre (1999), he provided guitars, drum programming, and songwriting for tracks 4 and 8, helping fuse black metal's raw aggression with electronic and industrial elements.[7] This hybrid approach positioned Aborym as innovators within the genre, blending cyber-metal aesthetics with extreme metal extremity during the late 1990s and early 2000s.[29][41]In Dissection, Teitan served as rhythm guitarist and backing vocalist on the 2006 album Reinkaos, supporting the band's reformation after Jon Nödtveidt's imprisonment and enabling the completion of its production.[42] His technical proficiency, derived from Italian metal scenes, added precision to the album's guitar arrangements, which incorporated heavy metal influences into Dissection's established melodic framework.[14] While primary songwriting remained with Nödtveidt, Teitan's involvement ensured continuity in the band's output, contributing to black metal's persistence amid lineup disruptions.[43]Teitan's subsequent session and live performances with black metal acts, including Watain, injected consistent extremity into underground circuits, sustaining the subculture's vitality against mainstream dilution in the mid-2000s. His Aborym-to-Dissection trajectory exemplified the cross-pollination of industrial experimentation into orthodox black metal structures, fostering hybrid evolutions in European extremity.[44]
Critical and fan perspectives
Critics have commended Set Teitan's guitar contributions to Aborym, highlighting the wild solos and sticky riffs that integrate effectively with industrial electronics, facilitating a genre fusion that elevates the band's sound beyond conventional black metal.[45] In contrast, reviews of his tenure with Dissection, particularly on Reinkaos, often portray his input as secondary to Jon Nödtveidt's dominant vision, with some observers dismissing it as superfluous given Nödtveidt's handling of most leads.[46] Guest appearances, such as his solo on Arckanum's work, receive acclaim for enhancing atmospheric depth through ripping execution.[47]Fan reception, as aggregated on platforms like Rate Your Music, reflects solid but polarized musicianship, with Reinkaos averaging 3.2 out of 5 from nearly 3,000 ratings, underscoring technical competence amid debates over the album's departure from black metal orthodoxy.[48] Admirers frequently praise Teitan's unyielding aggression and rejection of mainstream dilution in projects like Watain live sets, viewing it as authentic to black metal's anti-conformist ethos.[49] Detractors, particularly following controversies, question ideological alignment and extremity, though overall community feedback emphasizes empirical skill in riffing and fusion over symbolic disputes.[37]Right-leaning fan defenses counter media-driven cancellations by prioritizing artistic liberty and verifiable proficiency, arguing that black metal's inherent provocation demands evaluation on musical merits rather than external moralizing, a stance echoed in scene discussions framing extremity as integral to the genre's causal essence.[49] This perspective critiques institutional biases in coverage, which amplify symbolic gestures while undervaluing Teitan's contributions to bands like Aborym's technical evolution.[39]