CMX profile picture

CMX

CMX - Cloaca Maxima

About Me

CMX: a brief biographyCMX remains one of the most accomplished and appreciated Finnish rock bands. It is one of the very few groups that has managed to attain both critical acclaim and commercial success. A brief history follows.Cloaca Maxima (which is long for CMX) was founded in 1985 by Aki Yrjänä, Pekka Kanniainen and Kimmo Suomalainen. Yrjänä is the only remaining founding member in the band. The group's early musical influences were metal (from Black Sabbath to Metallica), punk (Sex Pistols and such) and progressive rock (Yes, Genesis, Jethro Tull, Rush).The success of the first demos came as a surprise for the band, which suddenly found itself having a recording deal. The first ep Johannes Kastaja (John the Baptist) was released by a bedroom label called P-Tuotanto, and soon afterwards CMX moved to a renowned indie record company Bad Vugum to make their first album.The debut Kolmikärki (Trident) was released in 1990. The album is an undisputed hardcore classic: loud, fast and refreshingly manic. Songs like Suuri äiti (The Great Mother), however, suggested that the musical spectrum of the band was probably not limited to what was on the debut. And the lyrics were an issue unto themselves. Yrjänä's lyrical themes are far removed from the conventionalities of pop music. The erudite and eclectic songwriter often deals with arcane matters in archaic language, and this has intrigued many of the people it hasn't baffled. Over the years, Yrjänä has become one of the most respected lyricists in the country. He has also published four books of his poems, all commercially successful.When CMX released its second album Veljeskunta (The Brotherhood) in 1991, hardcore had already become a thing of the past. Appropriately enough, Veljeskunta begins with a tribal-like incantation and then moves on to kick some serious musical butt. The overall sound is hard (but not as in hardcore) and heavy (but not as in heavy metal), but the occasional slow piece allows the listener to catch his breath. The beautiful Kätketty kukka is the gem of the album, and the song continues to be an audience favourite. In 1991, though, CMX did not perform that often in concert, but whenever it did, the energetic frenzy of the gigs was both frenzied and energetic. After a couple of personnel changes the band found a combination that would last many a year: Aki Yrjänä (bass / vocals), Janne Halmkrona (guitars), Timo Rasio (guitars) and Pekka Kanniainen (drums).While Veljeskunta was sonically a slightly flawed album, the group was clearly one that would go places. And one of the places they subsequently did go was the room where they signed a recording deal with EMI, the multinational that would release their future albums. In 1992 the band came up with Aurinko (The Sun), which was a great step forward. The compositions were more refined than on the previous two albums, and quite a few guest musicians were invited to play violins, bass clarinet and other instruments. The album also contains the first CMX hit, Ainomieli. It was never released as a single, though.In early 1994, CMX surfaced again with Aura, a surprisingly mellow and very manifold album. Aura is dominated by the presence of a string orchestra which gives some of the slower pieces an almost symphonic quality. Only two songs remind the listener of the old, metallic CMX, whereas the rest of the album moves through different stages of pop, rock, meditative music and punkish tango. The album went to Top 5, and the haunting ballad Ruoste was a big hit. This was also the point where some of the old die-hard fans got irate about the band's new direction. One assumes that they found headbanging in slow motion to be somewhat frustrating.The 1995 album Rautakantele (The Iron Kantele; and if your dictionary knows the word "kantele", it's a pretty good one) was arguably a step backwards. Many of the songs on Aura had been difficult or downright impossible to pull off live, and Rautakantele returned to a more band-oriented approach. This, however, was not regression. The songs were very carefully crafted, and Rautakantele doesn't lack diversity, either: it starts off with a classic CMX rocker and ends with a hymn. Pelasta maailma turned out to be yet another CMX hit, getting a lot of airplay on the radio.November 1996 saw the release of yet another album, Discopolis. It broke new ground by bringing in modern technology and trends. Loops is the key word. However, the technology in no way pushes the musicians aside. Rather, the musicians allow technology to support their playing in whatever ways it can. Discopolis got a very mixed reception, and it was also the first CMX album to sell gold. Since then, most of the earlier CMX albums have also reached gold status.In the autumn of 1997, the band released a 3 cd compilation titled Cloaca Maxima, which contained both all the hits and, more importantly, most of the b-sides and rarities that had become completely unavailable over the years. Cloaca Maxima was highly successful and showed that a lot of people had been pining for the extra tracks. The release of Cloaca Maxima also turned out to be the end of an era for the band: the drummer Pekka Kanniainen decided toresign. He was soon replaced by Tuomas Peippo, who played on the extremely successful Cloaca Maxima tour and proved to be a versatile percussionist who could hit things hard and often. However, CMX have only played very few of the old hardcore songs on stage since the day Pekka Kanniainen left. Simplistic as those songs sound, they are excruciatingly difficult to play on the drums, and Pekka Kanniainen may well be Finland's best hardcore hard-hitter.In the summer of 1998, the band began to write their seventh studio album, which was to be christened Vainajala. They rented a cabin far from the noises and disturbances of city life, and in that safe seclusion they sat down to create more of their characteristically disturbing noises. The album was produced by Billy Gould, the bassist of the late and great Faith No More.When Vainajala was released in the autumn of 1998, it shot straight to number one in the charts. This was greeted by both enthusiasm and disgust. Once again some of the ultra-faithful fanatics accused the band of diluting their music and selling out. This criticism was not entirely without factual basis: all the concerts on the Cloaca Maxima tour had been sold out, and this kind of success was to continue. But the more important fact is that if the band had decided to write music according to the wishes of its audience, that would've been a case of "selling out".Sometime during the Vainajala tour in 1999, CMX announced that it would quit touring. The group had seen everything the Finnish touring scene had to offer, and fatigue was creeping in. The press, true to itself, misunderstood the announcement and wrote big headlines saying that CMX would stop performing altogether. Much confusion around, much umbrage taken, many questions pouring in from the fans. CMX played its "last" concert in July 1999, in the beautiful atmosphere of Ilosaarirock, Joensuu.CMX was not quitting. In fact, the band's next effort would be a double album, titled - wait for it - Dinosaurus Stereophonicus. The package, which contained approximately two hours of music, was released toward the end of the year 2000. While the album never went to number one (its release coincided with the release of the new U2 album, which shot to the top of the charts), it got an unanimously positive response and quickly reached gold status. Dinosaurus Stereophonicus is an ambitious album even for CMX. Since the band had no immediate plans for touring, the group didn't need to worry about live requirements in the studio. So they brought in choirs, made startlingly complex arrangements and occasionally abandoned their time-honoured tradition of having two guitars in every song. Some of the songs will not work live because they contain too much stuff, and some contain so little stuff that half the band would have nothing to do.Dinosaurus Stereophonicus is an almost "quaint" album in the sense that the production is not very modern (some of the tricks are very seventies in their atmosphere). Also, the compositions owe much to such names as Black Sabbath, Pink Floyd, King Crimson, Peter Gabriel and so on. As one journalist put it: Dinosaurus Stereophonicus made prog popular again. Whether the album really is the classic it has been claimed to be remains to be seen.Some time after Dinosaurus Stereophonicus came out, the band realised that they wanted to perform again. They did not, however, want to do yet another tour of Finnish clubs. The group decided to play festivals only, and the summer of 2001 saw CMX playing about ten festival gigs to extremely enthusiastic audiences who were more than happy to see their favourite again. It took a while for the band to regain its on-stage confidence, but some of the shows were among the finest CMX has ever done. This is the opinion of both the band and the fans.In 2002, CMX surfaced (or plunged into the depths, depending on your point of view) again with Isohaara. It was a return to a more direct approach after the colossal and occasionally bombastic Dinosaurus Stereophonicus. Isohaara is often regarded as an oddity of sorts, not exactly a failure but somehow lacking in something that is difficult to define. It did, however, contain one of the biggest hits the band has ever done, Minun sydämeni on särkynyt (My heart is broken). And there are many excellent songs on the album: Pohjoista leveyttä, Minne paha haudattiin (featuring quite possibly the band's first guitar solo without a hint of irony in it), Isohaara and Tuulilukko. So maybe the "weakness" of Isohaara lies only in the fact that it didn't really break any new ground for the band.After Isohaara, CMX became a touring band again, much to delight of its fans. Their gigs continued to sell out, which was at least partially due to the fact that there were never too many of them. This has been the group's strategy from day one: never to over-expose themselves, never to be too available. And so, when CMX hit the road for a selection of shows, the gigs sold out, which they still do with amazing regularity.If Isohaara was something of a creative pause or an inhalation, then the next album Aion, released in 2003, was a creative burst or an exhalation: quite possibly their best album up to that point and an undisputed masterpiece. Strangely enough, both the fans and the critics seemed to agree on this.Aion was a hard, cold, demanding and progressive album; the lyrics were full of anguish but the album still managed to end on a hopeful note. The band was of the opinion that Kuoleman risteyksestä kolme virstaa pohjoiseen (Three Leagues to the North from the Crossing of Death - and in case you're wondering, the title doesn't really roll from the tongue in Finnish, either) was the best song they'd produced up to that point, and it is easy to see why: this ambitious, quirky and beautifully orchestrated track was as progressive as the band had ever been, and the lyrics dealt with the apparent futility of life, the value of immediate experience over mere knowledge, and other throwaway issues like that.Sivu paholaisen päiväkirjasta (An Excerpt From the Devil's Diary) was, lyrically speaking, a harbinger of things to come, although it wasn't possible to know it at the time. But something was clearly in the air: A. W. Yrjänä had previously concentrated on themes that some deemed archaic, but this was a clear departure from that style. The lyrics were close to sci-fi, which led some people to speculate that Yrjänä was at home both in the future and in the past, it was only the present moment he felt exiled from.After Aion, it was time for another compilation. The successor of Cloaca Maxima was titled, imaginatively enough, Cloaca Maxima II, and once again the most memorable material resided on the 3rd cd consisting of b-sides and rarities. A number of years ago, the band had decided on a new strategy for its b-sides: the whole track would be conceived, written and recorded during a single studio day. The results, naturally, varied, but what was lacking in refinement was often balanced by an abundance of spontaneity, and although most of the songs wouldn't have fit on an album, their quirkiness made them very worthwhile. Besides, songs like Punainen nro. 6 or Ehdota jotain parempaa are classic CMX.The next album, Pedot (Beasts) came out in 2005, and it was a brother of Rautakantele and Isohaara. This means that it didn't really contain anything drastically new, it was simply a collection of fine CMX songs. Well, actually, the title track did break new ground for the band: if you listen carefully, or actually if you listen at all, you can hear Tuomas Peippo play double bass drums. You know, the same fast and steady pattern that was first made famous by Rainbow in Kill the King and then re-popularized by Metallica in Fight Fire With Fire, and the same pattern that just about every metal band uses today in just about all of their songs.Once again, the lyrics of Pedot contained subtle hints of what was to come. At least four songs on the album deal with stars, space, the future, the death of celestial bodies and so on. Something was clearly in the air. A change was on its way.The nature of the change was revealed on Talvikuningas (The Winter King, 2007), the most recent CMX album and their undisputed masterpiece. This progressive science-fiction concept album (I'm not kidding) was released in the fall of 2007 as a limited edition only, and it sold out in a matter of something like nanoseconds. The audience response was overwhelmingly positive, and the band was unabashedly proud of what it had done. Small wonder: the album is clearly their best yet.Talvikuningas tells the story of the winter king, who nevertheless remains an enigmatic figure in the end. He is clearly a creature of overwhelming power, but this power doesn't translate into happiness in his personal life. Wars are waged, romances are ruined, civilizations are destroyed and clones cloned. A captain of a star ship sails somewhere, unaware of his past and future, and a king bereft of all solace and beauty yearns for a love lost long ago.Musically, Talvikuningas breaks new ground and incorporates some new elements from the past. This is the first time that CMX visits its hardcore roots with Tuomas Peippo on the drums. Much of the music is metallic, hard, cold and tense, but the occasional "balladic" moments are extremely beautiful. The musicologically inclined listener will notice the abundance of odd rhythms (particularly seven) and chromatic scales. So, musically speaking, the winter king is a distant relative of the crimson king.Coming up next: who knows.©1995-2007 Tero Valkonen

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 12/25/2005
Band Website: cmx.fi
Band Members: A.W. Yrjänä - vocals & bass
Janne Halmkrona - guitars
Timo Rasio - guitars
Tuomas Peippo - drums

Influences: Tornio.
Sounds Like: Why don't you just listen?
Record Label: EMI Finland
Type of Label: Major

My Blog

CMX music videos

Check out CMX music videos on Youtube!
Posted by CMX on Sun, 24 Sep 2006 07:58:00 PST