
‘People recycle the same old racism': Sheffield metal stars Malevolence on their big break – and how to confront online hate
'It was completely by coincidence,' guitarist and vocalist Konan Hall tells me on a video call from his home in Sheffield. 'But everyone started tagging us in signs saying 'Keep your distance because of Covid'.' Lead singer Alex Taylor can't help but laugh, joining the call from his place just up the road. 'It was free marketing!'
The song amassed millions of streams by the time restrictions were lifted, and that momentum has only been built on in the years since, as the band toured with scene megastars such as Lamb of God and Trivium. Their impact on live crowds is now as famed as their high-octane music: footage of a venue-wide circle pit that they incited at the Hammersmith Apollo went viral in 2023, and last year they set a new record for crowd-surfers at Derbyshire's Bloodstock festival, scoring 901. There was pandemonium when they played a secret set at Download festival last weekend: 'Make these security guards fucking work!', Taylor told the crowd. But their music isn't just mindless mayhem, reflecting as it does on mental health struggles and online hatred.
Thanks to its heaviness and richness, their upcoming album Where Only the Truth is Spoken is one of the most anticipated heavy releases of the year. Much of it was made at the California studio of vaunted metal producer Josh Wilbur (Korn, Gojira, Avenged Sevenfold), while its drums were recorded at Dave Grohl's Studio 606 in California. 'We used the same console Fleetwood Mac used for Rumours,' Hall says. 'There was a Nirvana Nevermind drum kit photo on the desk. Going from being a kid, loving those bands, to using the same gear was a dream come true.'
Malevolence were already well over a decade into their career when the pandemic hit. Co-guitarist Josh Baines, bassist Wilkie Robinson and drummer Charlie Thorpe have been playing shows since they were 11, and they started jamming with Hall in the mid-2000s, when he was 15. Taylor completed the lineup in 2010, and Hall calls the five-piece's early days gigging in the north of England 'some of the best years of our lives. We'd play for free beer.'
The members had to balance their touring schedule with full-time careers, and they still take the occasional outside job to this day. 'Konan's done a bit of building work, I've done security, Josh was working in bars,' Taylor says. He adds that the jobs were 'a means to an end to allow us to go on, like, two-week European tours in our friend's Vauxhall Zafira'.
In April 2020 they released the ballad The Other Side, which was about the trauma of a serious break-up and featured melodic vocals from Hall. Performing it at Download festival the following year, Taylor told the audience 'It's OK to not be OK', and talked candidly about losing loved ones to addiction and suicide. The singer later revealed that four of his friends took their own lives within a two-month span during the pandemic.
He tells me that that experience inspired him to open up lyrically. 'All I'd ever really known was the band,' he says. 'You kind of have this thing where you have your band life, your personal life and your work life, and it's almost expected to keep them in separate boxes. But, having such sad things happen, it made me realise: this is all entwined.'
As a result, Where Only the Truth Is Spoken exposes more of the vulnerabilities behind this barrel-chested band. Through its acoustic verses and climactic choruses, Salt the Wound is about the question, in Taylor's words, of 'how far do you expect the people around you to fix your problems before it then becomes an issue for them and drags them down?'
Meanwhile, hardcore rager If It's All the Same to You is about the singer cutting ties with family members 'who've had their minds warped by what they've read on the internet. I just don't have the time for people who just repeat and recycle the same old racist bullshit. It's very much a song of: you keep that energy well away from me. You get people who are like, 'Oh, he's just stuck in his ways. He's always been like that.' I'm like: well, no, that's not acceptable any more.'
In November, Malevolence will play their biggest-ever headline shows in London and Manchester. Taylor wants Where Only the Truth Is Spoken to crack the UK Top 10, while Hall wants to headline Download one day: 'You can't get bigger than that!'
But there's a larger goal: the band hope their honesty regarding mental health and real-life struggles will guide fans through their own challenges. 'That's way more important to me than, like, playing a bigger room,' says Taylor. 'It's about bridging that gap [between artist and audience] and hopefully helping people through whatever it is that they're going through in life, whether it be mental health struggles, loneliness, anger or sadness.'
Where Only the Truth is Spoken is released 20 June on Nuclear Blast Records
In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie. In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
2 minutes ago
- The Sun
Drag Race stars fight back tears as they pay tribute to late The Vivienne in trailer for new documentary
DRAG Race stars are seen fighting back tears as they pay tribute to The Vivienne in the trailer for a new documentary about the late star. James Lee Williams, 32, died from a cardiac arrest caused by the effects of taking the drug, it was revealed earlier this year. 10 10 10 10 The TV star, who won the first series of RuPaul 's Drag Race UK, was was found dead in the bath at home near Chester on January 5. James, who went by the pronouns they/them, was discovered by a neighbour after worried friends were unable to get hold of them. Now the first trailer for The Vivienne 's new documentary, which pays tribute to the much-loved star, has been released. Called Dear Viv, the BBC film celebrates the life of James and also hears from people who knew and loved them. The touching doc features interviews with their Drag Race friends, including Raja, Danny Beard, Michael Marouli, Cheryl Hole, Tia Kofi, and Baga Chipz. In one particular heartbreaking moment, Raja is seen attempting to hold back tears while preparing to speak to the cameras. Celebrity Big Brother star Danny Beard is also shown breaking down when asked to speak about James. The tear-jerking trailer comes to an end with a message from Viv, who is heard saying: "It's really nice to show people that you are a real person under all that glamour." FAMILY'S GRIEF In April, James' sister Chanel Williams opened about how their family "continue to be completely devastated". In a BBC Newsnight special, she candidly shared that the drag queen legend had hidden their substance struggles for years. Heartbreaking new details of The Vivienne's ketamine struggle revealed by family Chanel told how they only discovered James' addiction after they opened up about it on RuPaul's Drag Race in 2019. At the time, the drag star said: "I couldn't leave the drugs at the party, it was constant." They bravely revealed how Ketamine use saw them hospitalised three times in the space of a month. The Vivienne was commended at the time for raising awareness of substance abuse while appearing on the show. 10 10 Despite staying sober for period of time, James' family were unaware they had relapsed shortly before his death. Chanel told the BBC: "Had I asked the questions or just looked for the signs, would the outcome be different?' "He was at the height of everything he was doing and I think because he'd said it in such an open platform, it's really difficult to come back and say you're struggling again." The grieving sibling also questioned whether James' fame made them feel they had to hide away amid their relapse. Chanel continued: "To think that if we'd known, or if he'd have felt able to talk and really reach out for the help that was needed, the outcome could've been different." The family are now workin to raise awareness around the dangers of Ketamine - and see it changed to a Class A drug. Ketamine is used by vets as a horse anaesthetic but is misused as a party drug. STAR CAREER James shot to fame six years ago, when they won the first season of RuPaul's Drag Race UK. The drag star went on to compete in an all-winners season of the franchise in the US in 2022 - the only Brit to do so. James also starred on BBC Three show The Vivienne Takes On Hollywood in 2020 and appeared on Channel 4 's Celebrity Hunted For Stand Up To Cancer two years then came third place on Dancing on Ice in 2023. 10 10


The Sun
2 minutes ago
- The Sun
MAFS star ‘heartbroken and devastated' as she's dumped via text after whirlwind romance
MARRIED At First Sight UK star Marylise Corrigan has split from her new love after believing she had finally found The One. The reality star went public with her new romance in September last year, telling fans that she had 'found happiness' after suffering heartbreak on the main series. 6 6 6 However, just a year later, Marylise and her mystery man, who was not part of the reality world, have gone their separate ways. A source told The Sun Online: " Marilyse is really upset and can't believe she's ended up single again. "She was dumped over text after falling head over heels. "It was a whirlwind romance and in hindsight she feels she was love bombed." 'Lovebombing' is a term used to describe those who try to win over someone's affections by quickly showering them with excessive gestures – including compliments, gifts and declarations of love – in order to 'secure' the person's trust and love. In many cases, lovebombing results in an intense emotional attachment, which some use to then manipulate or control the person involved. Marylise first shot into the public eye by participating in the sixth series of the E4 reality show in 2021. She was matched by the experts with Franky Spencer, a former soldier and a strength and conditioning coach. Despite ups and downs, the pair confirmed their vows in the final episode and planned to move forward together away from the programme, but split four months later after their romance "dried up" and they became "more like friends". Marilyse told The Sun at the time: 'A few weeks after the reunion we went our separate ways, we didn't even fall out, we just mutually agreed that maybe we were not each other's future. Married At First Sight's Franky tells Marilyse When I speak you don't speak. 'It's really sad as we got on really well and Franky has a heart of gold but outside the experiment, I had to think, 'Do I want to be with this person forever?'" Marylise then went on to date Matt Murray, 34, a groom who took part in the MAFS experiment in 2022, and had famously ditched his bride for another on the programme. However, after just six months together they split as well, with Marylise later explaining it felt "too intense". When Marylise went public with her new romance in 2024, she declared she had "found happiness" with the mystery man, posting pictures of them on holiday together. "When you've been on a TV show people think that you're going to be really high maintenance", she said. "They think that you're going to have high expectations, that you're all about the glitz and glam, when actually, I'm completely the opposite. "Yes, I like to go out to an event every few months but I'm totally down to earth and normal. "And I think that being on a TV show means you do attract the wrong kind of people as well." 6 6 6


The Sun
2 minutes ago
- The Sun
I'm A Celeb lines up scandal hit star who dropped out of 2024 show amid ‘worst year of his life', say bookies
BOXER Tommy Fury is highly likely to get tapped for a second chance on I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here!, according to bookmakers. The embattled boxer and Love Island alum, 26, was meant to head to the Aussie jungle for the show's 2024 series but pulled out just weeks before it was set to start. 5 5 5 5 Tommy was believed to have dropped out of I'm A Celeb for a more lucrative offer, but it also came out a time when his personal life was in the pits. The TV star battled with booze and late nights, and struggled with fame, leading to the end of his high profile relationship with his Love Island girlfriend, Molly-Mae Hague. Bookmakers Ladbrokes have Tommy at short 2/1 odds to finally head Down Under this winter. "Tommy Fury dealt I'm A Celebrity chiefs a knockout blow last year by turning his back on the show, but the latest odds suggest he'll finally be set for a rumble in the jungle," Alex Apati of Ladbrokes said. While Tommy has not made any hints about his I'm A Celeb plans, he has managed to get his life back on tracks, including reuniting with Molly-Mae, with whom he shared two-year-old daughter, Bambi. Tommy's battle to give up booze and sort out his life has been documented in the BBC3 documentary The Good, The Bad, The Fury, which airs tonight. It tracks his recovery from booze and return to the ring, after a difficult year following his split from Molly-Mae. Viewers will see in the documentary how Tommy was so drunk, he did not remember Molly-Mae walking out on him last summer. 'I was actually drunk at that point," he says in the doco about their relationship ending. "So I don't actually remember it well, which was even more upsetting.' Watch awkward moment Tommy Fury is quizzed over his engagement to Molly Mae after booze battle and cheat claims He goes on: 'Having a drink is what cost me my entire family.' In the documentary Tommy, who is the half-brother of ex-world champion Tyson, 'bares all about the demons that drove him to drink' but denies allegations of cheating. Tommy reckons: 'I feel like whatever doesn't kill you makes you stronger. 'It's a long way behind me now. "I'm not that person any more.' 5