Prolific producer and singer/songwriter
Tim Skold specializes in corrosive industrial metal with a techno edge. Although he made his debut in the '80s as frontman of Swedish glam metal outfit
Shotgun Messiah (fka Kingpin), he found his dark calling in the mid-'90s as a rebranded solo artist bent on moving the body as much as disturbing the mind.
Skold's self-titled debut featured nihilistic anthems that veered close to contemporaries like
Gravity Kills and
Chemlab, as well as early-era
Nine Inch Nails. Through the decades -- bouncing between solo efforts and collaborative stints with like-minded acts such as
KMFDM/
MDFMK and
Marilyn Manson -- he maintained his solo artistic trajectory while producing and performing with
Newlydeads,
Ohgr,
Doctor Midnight & the Mercy Cult, and
Motionless in White.
Born
Thim Sköld in Skövde, Sweden, he grew up in an open family environment and spent his younger years inspired by
Kiss and
David Bowie, and learning bass guitar.
Skold met future bandmate Harry Cody during his teen years; the pair went on to form the glam metal band Kingpin in the late '80s. After releasing their debut, they changed their name to
Shotgun Messiah and issued an additional three albums, including 1989's eponymous effort that included their most prominent single, "Shout It Out." Bowing out with their final LP, Violent New Breed,
Shotgun Messiah ended and
Skold struck out as a solo artist.
Already dabbling in industrial by the end of the
Shotgun Messiah years,
Skold plunged into this full rebranding on his 1996 debut, Skold (RCA). A harsh blend of
Gravity Kills and
Broken-era
NIN, Skold included the single "Chaos" and was produced by
Scott Humphrey (
Rob Zombie,
Powerman 5000). During promotion of the album,
Skold met
Sascha Konietzko, frontman of
KMFDM. Focus soon switched from a burgeoning solo career to an official role with the industrial dance outfit as, just a year later,
Skold had joined the band and contributed to their tenth album,
Symbols.
Skold remained with the group into the early 2000s, co-writing and co-producing
Adios,
Attak, and the transitional offshoot,
MDFMK.
While with
KMFDM,
Skold assisted
Marilyn Manson with his 2001 cover of "Tainted Love." The following year, that partnership flowered into an official position in
Manson's band, with
Skold replacing
Twiggy Ramirez on bass and joining as producer. Now with a new band,
Skold plunged headlong into
Manson's world, putting his stamp on 2002's
The Golden Age of Grotesque; 2004's cover of "Personal Jesus"; a 2006 reimagining of "This Is Halloween" from The Nightmare Before Christmas; and 2007's
Eat Me, Drink Me. In 2008,
Ramirez was back in the band and
Skold returned to
KMFDM. In his absence,
Konietzko and co. had issued a trio of albums, but the partnership returned with vigor in 2009 on two albums released just a month apart: Skold vs. KMFDM and Blitz. And just as quickly as
Skold rejoined
KMFDM, he was back on his own.
Although he had continued writing solo material during his time with
Manson -- 2002's scrapped "Disrupting the Orderly Routine of the Institution" recordings became a popular fan bootleg, exchanged online as the Dead God EP and often erroneously attributed to
Marilyn Manson due to sonic similarities --
Skold wouldn't release an official sophomore effort until 2011, 15 years after his solo debut.
Anomie included the single "Suck." Within a month,
Skold unveiled yet another project,
Doctor Midnight & the Mercy Cult. The supergroup featured members of
Turbonegro,
Cadaver,
Apoptygma Berzerk, and
Extol and peddled a sleazy mixture of sludge rock and industrial metal, which was heard on their debut,
I Declare: Treason (
Season of Mist).
By 2014,
Skold had entered the studio to record another solo effort, which didn't arrive until 2016. His third LP,
The Undoing (Metropolis) landed at an ideal time, when younger bands such as
Youth Code and
3Teeth were doing their best to bolster an industrial revival.
Three decades after his debut,
Skold released his fourth solo effort, Never Is Now, in April 2019. ~ Neil Z. Yeung