By Rhian Wilkinson
Jul 25, 2017 7:26
We sat down with Jo and Larissa of Venom Prison at Download Festival to talk about how being female-fronted challenges heavy music and what it means to be the heaviest band on the lineup, at the UK’s biggest heavy music festival.
A contested opinion maybe, but their unique take on death metal is unlike anything else over the weekend, and they are arguably the heaviest young band to make an appearance.
Let’s get the basics out of the way first, what does it feel like to be on the lineup for Download? “It’s massive and it’s so cool to play in between so many amazing and massive bands,” Larissa says. When Larissa speaks, it’s almost hard to imagine the furious intoxicating power that she holds on stage. She is exceedingly polite, rather softly spoken, and has an infectious laugh that bubbles out through the silver hair covering much of her face as she picks at the grass seed that mottles the grass we’ve sat down on.
There is a quiet fierceness to all the members of Venom Prison, but Jo has the kind of defiantly funny air that makes him instantly likeable. “Technically I can say I shared a bill with System Of A Down,” he says enthusiastically, the sentence almost jumping out of him. You get the feeling he could talk for hours if given the chance.
As well as being one of the most extreme bands on the lineup, they are one of the few featuring a female member. Challenging stereotypes across the board has received some resistance, but the band is quick to defend the scene’s acceptance of them. “I think everything is progressing and evolving. You can see that women have a place in metal and people don’t mind it at all,” Larissa says. “There are still shitty people, but there are always going to be shitty people. You just deal with it as and when it arises,” Jo adds. Larissa laughs back, “Like that show in Vienna!”