Wagner Lamounier
Wagner Lamounier | |
---|---|
Birth name | Wagner Moura Lamounier |
Also known as | Antichrist |
Born | Belo Horizonte, Brazil | April 30, 1969
Genres | |
Instruments | |
Years active |
|
Associated acts |
Wagner Moura Lamounier (born April 30, 1969) is a Brazilian economist and musician who achieved fame for having been the original vocalist of Brazilian thrash metal band Sepultura, and for having created and led the first-wave black/thrash metal band Sarcófago from 1985 until it disbanded in 2000.
Life and career[]
Lamounier sang briefly with Sepultura during the early part of the band's career,[1] contributing the lyrics to the song "Antichrist" (a reference to his own moniker)[2] featured on the band's first release Bestial Devastation. He then moved to his own band (Sarcófago) which, while less commercially successful than Sepultura, is widely hailed as a major influence on the most extreme spectrum of metal music, being revered by black, thrash and death metal fans. Ten years after leaving the band, he revealed personal information about his former bandmates. In response, Sepultura's former frontman, now with Soulfly, Max Cavalera wrote a song called "Bumbklaatt" about him.[citation needed]
Lamounier had not been active in the music industry since Sarcófago split in 2000, and he is currently a professor of economic science and applied statistics at Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais in Belo Horizonte, Brazil.[3] Despite this, in 2012 he formed the stoner metal band The Evil, with their debut album being released in 2017.[4]
References[]
- ^ Jon Wiederhorn: CAVALERA CONSPIRACY.
- ^ [1]
- ^ Vice Magazine
- ^ [2]
- 1969 births
- Living people
- English-language singers from Brazil
- Brazilian heavy metal guitarists
- Brazilian male guitarists
- Brazilian heavy metal singers
- Brazilian economists
- Brazilian people of French descent
- People from Belo Horizonte
- Sepultura members
- Black metal singers
- Black metal musicians
- Death metal musicians
- Rhythm guitarists
- Brazilian musician stubs