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Baroness play an eclectic brand of heavy metal, embracing the ferocity and sharp technique of new-millennium metal but with melodic accents and intelligent guitar work that suggest the influence of indie rock and post-punk bands. Based out of Savannah, Georgia, the group emerged in 2004 with a pair of EPs, and issued their full-length debut, Red Album, in 2007 via Relapse Records. 2009's
Blue Record was the band's first studio effort to chart, and helped push
Baroness to the forefront of an increasingly diverse metal scene, bridging the gap between indie and progressive rock and stoner/sludge metal. That LP's success paved the way for acclaimed endeavors like the double LP
Yellow & Green (2012) and the adventurous
Gold & Grey (2019).
The four original members of
Baroness -- John Baizley on guitar and vocals, Brian Blickle on guitar, Summer Welch on bass, and
Allen Blickle on drums -- are all originally from Lexington, Virginia, but they pulled up stakes and relocated to Georgia when they formed the band in mid-2003.
Baroness made their recording debut in 2005 with First, a three-song EP released through Savannah-based indie label Hyperrealist Records. A second EP from
Baroness, simply called Second, appeared in stores later the same year.
In 2006,
Baroness teamed up with another offbeat but powerful band from Savannah,
Unpersons, for a split EP entitled
A Grey Sigh in a Flower Husk, released through At a Loss Records. In 2007,
Baroness signed with the well-respected independent metal label Relapse Records, and in the fall of 2007 they issued their first full-length disc, Red Album, followed by extensive touring. Guitarist Pete Adams joined the band in 2008 replacing Brian Blickle. In the fall of 2009, the group released its sophomore effort,
Blue Record.
Baroness spent the following year touring, opening for bands like
Metallica,
Mastodon, and
Deftones before heading back into the studio to begin work on their third album, the critically acclaimed
Yellow & Green, which would arrive in 2012.
After the release of the album, while on tour in England,
Baroness were involved in a terrible accident when their tour bus went over the side of a viaduct near Bath, falling 30 feet. Though many of the bandmembers and their crew were injured, with Baizley suffering a broken arm and leg and
Allen Blickle and bassist Matt Maggioni (who had earlier replaced Summer Welch) both hospitalized with fractured vertebrae, there were no fatalities. After recovering from their injuries,
Baroness began scheduling tour dates again in 2013, though the announcement they would be on the road again was followed shortly by the announcement that Blickle and Maggioni would be parting ways with the band. Bassist
Nick Jost and drummer Sebastian Thomson were recruited to take their place, and made their live debut on a headlining tour later that year. The live album
Live at Maida Vale would arrive in the summer of 2013, and would be the last release from the band to feature their pre-accident lineup.
After a period of recovery and encouragement from
Metallica's
James Hetfield (who had survived a bus crash that killed bassist
Cliff Burton),
Baroness re-entered the studio with producer
Dave Fridmann (
Flaming Lips,
Sleater Kinney, etc.) and recorded ten new songs that dealt with the crash, its aftermath, and the band's determination to continue. The album
Purple was issued on the band's newly formed Abraxan Hymns label in the fall of 2015, and landed the group a Best Metal Performance Grammy nomination for the song "Shock Me." Guitarist Pete Adams left the fold in 2017 to focus on his family, making room for new six-stringer Gina Gleason, who made her studio debut on the ambitious double LP
Gold & Grey in 2019. ~ Mark Deming