blog-lighthouse

After playing more than a hundred shows to support Asylum, band members found a common interest toward movie scores and orchestral death metal and decided on a major shift in musical direction. Filled with emotion, drama and heaviness, Lighthouse is an epic symphonic death metal album where the band found its sound and really came together.

Here’s the story behind the album…

Chapter OneLighthouse (Part I)

Wolf Rock LighthouseCornwall, England25 September 1981

My name is Brian Callaghan, guardian of the Wolf Rock Lighthouse. Seamen trust my light to guide them through the night, the fog and the storm. I came here in exile a long time ago, for I’m not worthy of living among others. Soldiers who fought at war are left with timeless scars but my greatest sorrow doesn’t come from the battles, and it’s still haunting my thoughts to this day. Exile makes sense when a man loses everything. I’m not sure of the reasons pushing me to put these words down on paper, even my old diary is falling apart…Maybe writing my memoirs will help me find peace, redemption, who knows? But first, let’s start from the beginning, when there was happiness in my life. That was before the War…

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Cold ocean breeze
Beating up my wrinkled face
Seeking for solitude
Here I am

Old sailor
Born and raised by the sea
Seeking for redemption
Here I am

Exile can change one’s life into eternity
So here I am, in my home, my lighthouse

When the Sea shall give up her dead
Lit the light on one fateful night

Memories turned loose in my head
Still catching up on me
Even here on Wolf Rock

Rust won’t fade away on the corroded hull of my soul

Exile can change one’s life into eternity
So here I am, in my home, my lighthouse

A ship out there trying to break free
Bright and clear my light shall they see

As fast as unexpected
The winds have shifted
Forces of nature are unleashed
The Ocean is awaking
Awaking
In the evening
The battle as began
Against the Sea

Chapter TwoOffshore

Celtic SeaEngland23 August 1939

I once had a most happy life, but that was before the war. So many lives were lost, and so many others like mine were ruined forever…

I remember those years like if it was yesterday, I would never be that happy again for the rest of my life. Captain and owner of a fishing boat, the “Anna” named after my wife’s, we were able to live a simple but good life. We had a beautiful house in town and our little girl Kelly was pretty and gentle, just like her mother. At the time, Anna was pregnant of our second child and, while I was gone fishing, she taught English at school. Those were our best years; we thought we had our whole life in front of us. That was before we heard of Germany invading Poland…We didn’t know our nation was going to take such a leading role in that growing conflict, but we knew we would get involved to a certain level.

On the twenty third of August 1939, i was excited to see my wife and daughter after more than a month at sea, this was going to be my last fishing run ever. Soon, war and conscription would turn our lives upside down and definitively put a seal on our destiny…

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Free as the southern wind swirling above the sea
Summer warming up my heart

Stay where you are
From my view I can see you
In this soothing cyan blue

Free as the southern wind swirling above the sea
Summer warming up my heart
Good morning oh lovely day
Heading green shores, heading home

Beyond horizon I can see you from afar
We couldn’t ask for happier times
Our whole life in front of us

Free as the southern wind swirling above the sea
Summer warming up my heart
Good morning oh lovely day
Heading green shores, heading home

Unaware of clouds to soon darken skies
Unaware of tragedy to soon seal our fate
Darken skies
Seal our fate

Waves softly whipping the Anna’s shell
The song of seagulls rising from the sky
Rising from the sky

Chapter ThreeConscription

Port IsaacCornwall, England15 October 1939

That day we received a letter and I silently looked at my wife, we both knew it was no ordinary one. I opened the envelope and immediately fell in shock to my knees, the letterhead showed a famous logo, that of the British Army… I couldn’t put my eyes off those two simple words: “Military Service”. I remember thinking about my father who fought the Great War of 14-18 and never came back. Will I share his fate and let my kids grow without a father? Oh dear Anna, I wish that day never came… But a man must overcome his fears and find the courage to do his duty. Two weeks later, on a rainy morning, I had to leave my family and everything I ever cared about.

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Ho dear father, I pray to you today
Will I share your fate?
Share your fate today
The life of a man
The sacrifice of war
In shock to my knees
I’m going to war today

No husband should abandon their wife
Nor a child grow without a father
No brave man can avoid his duty
This burden he must bear

This is a rainy morning
Heavy hearts
Farewell my loves
A great deal is at stake
I’m leaving for the fight today

Ho dear father, I pray to you today
Will I share your fate?
Share your fate today
The life of a man
The sacrifice of war
In shock to my knees
I’m going to war today

Chapter FourAt War

SomewhereNorth Atlantic Ocean12 May 1940

My Dearest Anna,

It was so delighted to read your letter. I am still in the land of the living and keeping well. Learning that the birth of Liam went well is a great gift in this time of war. I am now even more concerned with your security and that of our children. I have corresponded with my sister in Coventry and she will arrange for you to move to her house. Her husband is also at war, she can use some company. Loren and her daughter Donna will be of great help with Kelly and the new born.

Although I’m missing you very much, I’m adapting to life and my duties on the HMS Fighter. Training is now over and we have been sent on the Atlantic to protect the convoys going from America to England, they are vital to the success of our war effort. I’m in charge of a small crew who will throw depth charges at U-Boats. Every day we learn about one or more of our vessels being sunk by a German submarine, we’re all afraid but also feverish in the waiting of our first engagement with them. We’re eager for a chance to sink some of those Nazis down to the seafloor.

I cannot quite express my feelings, I’m participating in the greatest battle the British army has ever fought. I cannot tell if it is God’s will that I should come through and it is a strange feeling that every letter I write to you may be the last one. If I fall in battle, my only regret would be to leave you and our beloved children.

Your love, Brian

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The ground is shaking
The sky is burning
The sea is boiling
Nations are taking up arms
Aside the Allies, Aside the Axis
Nations from around the world
Taking up arms

Training is over
I am now a Navy soldier
I’ll have to risk my life onboard
To protect the convoys

We are afraid
But also feverish
To engage the enemy
For first action to come

From fisherman to soldier – At War!
Onboard a Navy destroyer – I’m at War!

Dearest Anna, Beloved Children
Is it God’s will that I should come through?

My dearest Anna
I’m still in the land of the living
You gave birth I now have a son
This is a great gift in these times of War
Times of War

The ground is shaking
The sky is burning
The sea is boiling
Nations are taking up arms
Aside the Allies, Aside the Axis
Nations from around the world
Taking up arms

Chapter FiveBattle of the Atlantic

HMS FighterNorthern Atlantic Ocean21 September 1940

For all HMS Fighter crew men, war really began on that day. I remember being asleep when “action stations” were sounded. We were all running to our battle stations when we heard a first explosion followed shortly by a second one. Once on the deck we could see that a large merchant ship from the convoy we were escorting had been hit by a torpedo. In minutes half of the ship was immersed and dozens of men were screaming for help, fighting not to freeze and drown into the cold Atlantic waters. The second ship that had been hit was a Navy Corvette, it was in flames and sinking fast. At that precise moment, looking at the two targeted vessels, I remember feeling the proximity of death, it was lurking around. There was no more certainty about any of us being alive the next day, and if we made it through that battle, it would only be a reprieve until the next one. We were ordered to load the depth charges and we did so in silence. My heart was pumping blood violently and my entire body was shaking but I followed the orders and proceeded like I had been trained for. With a bit of luck our ship was going to be spared and we would get a chance to retaliate. After witnessing two other vessels being hit by torpedoes, we felt the HMS Fighter shifting direction and moving faster. Four U-Boats had been detected and we were going after one of them. Dropping depth charges for the first time, seeing and earring them detonate under water was exhilarating. We felt we could make a difference, we wanted those Nazi bastards down to the seafloor. For twelve hours we played hide and seek with the enemy trying to force it out of water, watching for any sign of it being damaged by one of our bombs. Despite our efforts, we finally lost its track and had to go back to the convoy who was resuming its course toward England.Germany believed it could win the war by preventing America from supplying Britain with war materiel and fuel. On our first action, the Allies convoy HX134 of 42 merchantmen going from Halifax to Liverpool lost 11 ships. The Kriegsmarine U-Boats suffered no loss.

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Allies beware, Wolf Packs are out there
Pray to reach port safely, pray to be spared
So many will not make it – so many
Swallowed by the Ocean – Into the deep
So many will not make it – so many
Eaten alive by the Sea

SOLDIERS BE READY
Hungry wolves, hunting parties
Searching for days, seeking for preys
The vastness of the Ocean
Into the vastness of the Ocean
Cut its chain supply – To starve, to deprive
Make sure the enemy is not fit to fight

A game of strategy – The battle of the Atlantic
Suffocate the Enemy – The battle of the Atlantic

Heart beating fast, hands shaking
Prepare the guns, load the charges
With courage face the threat
With courage… protect

A game of strategy – The battle of the Atlantic
Suffocate the Enemy – The battle of the Atlantic
Soldiers be ready – The battle of the Atlantic
Prepare to fight the Nazis – The battle of the Atlantic

Allies beware, Wolf Packs are out there
Pray to reach port safely, pray to be spared
So many will not make it – so many
Swallowed by the Ocean – Into the deep
So many will not make it – so many
Eaten alive by the Sea

Heart beating fast, hands shaking
Prepare the guns, load the charges
With courage face the threat
With courage… protect

Chapter SixStrategy of Terror

CoventryWest Midlands, England14 November 1941

Daily Herald

The Coventry Blitz: ‘Hysteria, terror and neurosis’

The German Luftwaffe has bombed Coventry in a massive raid which lasted more than 10 hours and left much of the city devastated. According to one report, some 500 enemy aircraft took part in the raid. Wave upon wave of bombers scattered their lethal payloads over the city. The night sky, already lit by a brilliant moon, was further illuminated by flares and incendiary bombs.

“The whole city was ringed with leaping flames, bathed in brilliant moonlight and a few searchlights were sweeping the smoke-filled sky.” – Local survivor

Initial reports suggest the number of casualties is about 1,000. Intensive anti-aircraft fire kept the raiders at a great height from which accurate bombing was impossible. 4,330 homes were destroyed and three-quarters of the city’s factories damaged.

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As dawn broke over a ruined city
Horrific scenes of destruction
Buildings were consumed by flames so intense
The city’s sandstone brickwork glowed red

Thousands of bombs had been dropped on the city
The air stank of burning flesh
Devastation is here
Bodies laid in the streets

Together – In an air raid shelter
They had to run away
Together – In an air raid shelter
Now hand and hand they pray
They had to run away
Run away

The atmosphere becoming even more fetid
More fetid and fearful

As dawn broke over a ruined city
Hiding from death in fear – Devastation is here
Buildings were consumed by flames so intense
The city’s sandstone brickwork glowed red

Together – In an air raid shelter
They had to run away
Together – In an air raid shelter
Now hand and hand they pray
They had to run away

The atmosphere becoming even more fetid and fearful

Crouched in the corner of a bomb shelter
Bombed homes and burning streets
A strategy of terror

Chapter SevenThe Capsizing

HMS FighterNorthern Atlantic OceanDecember 1941

It had been four weeks since I was back from permission. The two other times I could go to Coventry and spend some time with my family were great but this third permission was very special because I could attend my son’s second birthday. Kelly and her mom seemed ok but I knew they didn’t tell everything, life was not easy for anyone during wartime. Although that permission had been a joyful moment I was very concerned and tried to hide it from everyone. I did not talk about the success of the Kriegsmarine on the Atlantic nor of the great dangers we were facing at sea. I only talked about the funny moments and camaraderie among the crew men. I spoke about the new friends I had made and how courageous they were, especially Dr White, a recently graduated young psychiatrist who came from America by himself to enroll and fight the Nazis on our side instead of getting on with his career. He was my best friend and confident on the HMS Fighter.

December 1941 would happen to be a turning point, the worst moment of my life. Never would I have thought taking part in such dramatic events. Never would I have thought losing so much, including myself…

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Anti-submarine warfare, chock waves in the depths
Steel hard shell
Stretching, contracting, tearing and finally breaching

Damaged Enemy
Forced to emerge
Defenceless survivors
The wolves surrender

Hold out your guns soldiers
Follow orders, take no prisoners
Hold out you guns Soldiers
Chose a target, pull the trigger
Make sure they live to suffer

Don’t hesitate
Let go your hate
It is time for revenge
One by one fascist sons they fall
Shoot but don’t kill, let them crawl

Hold out you guns Soldiers
Chose a target, pull the trigger
Make sure they live to suffer
Hold out you guns Soldiers
Abandon them wounded bastards
Hold out you guns Soldiers
In the name of our comrades fallen

Steel hard shell – Teared – breached
Steel hard shell – Stained blood red

Midshipman Callaghan. It is my painful duty to inform you that your wife, two children and sister are deceased. They were killed in the Coventry blitz in the night of the November 14th. A bomb blew up the air raid shelter where they were hiding. I, Admiral Scott Williams of the royal navy Corps, relieve you of duties for a period of 4 weeks so you can grieve and mourn the loss of your family. We are deeply sorry for your loss. We will do everything in our power to end up the German’s tyranny for good, so the World can be free once more.

Bomb their cities – Torch their houses
No sympathy for Germany
Destroy their tanks, planes and vessels
Have no pity for the Nazi

Humiliate, Eradicate
Wipe Off the Boche
Exterminate

Hang the Fürher – Fascist leaders
Crush their Army – All their soldiers

Humiliate, Eradicate
Wipe Off the Boche
Exterminate
Humiliate, Eradicate
Wipe Off the Boche
Avenge
Terminate

Chapter EightThe Funeral

Port IsaacCornwall, England22 December 1941

On this cold morning I buried everything that I ever cared of; my family. Even though I couldn’t have known that this madness was going to kill my wife and children, I will always blame myself for sending them to their death in Coventry. Alas that these evil days were mine, the young perished and the old remained. No parent should have to bury their children.

“For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven. A time to be born, a time to plant, a time to pluck up what is planted and a time to die. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? As it is written; even though I walk through the darkest valley, I will fear no evil, because you are with me. For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation will be able to separate us from the love, from the love of God that is in Jesus Christ. Amen.”

Chapter NineThe Last Moments of War

HMS FighterNorthern Atlantic OceanSeptember 1944

At first it didn’t feel right to try to kill some other guys I didn’t even know, but that was because I hadn’t buried anyone yet.

When I left for war I gave an oath, a military oath, that if need be I’d give my life for the cause. I never thought my family members would be the ones paying the high price of war with their lives. Up to this day my soul still hurts, I’m broken and devastated. It would have been better for me to be wounded in an arm or a leg, my body would hurt, not my soul.

After the burial of my family members I was even more devoted to defeating the Nazi but now I was also eager for revenge. At one point I had developed so much hatred that I had no pity whatsoever, I could kill with a smile…

In the last moments of war I had earned so much trust from our captain and commanders that I was given more and more responsibilities onboard. What it got me to witness and participate to made me realise how inhuman and bestial we all had become. We now knew about the Nazi extermination camps as well as about the mass rape and murder perpetrated by the Red Army troops in territories they occupied …. And let’s just say that, the Allies… we’d like to think that we were as pure as the driven snow but in fact, some of our actions were cruel and sadistic as well. We sometimes acted inhumanly, individually as well as collectively. Months and months after it had been clear that we would win, we kept bombing German cities pointlessly; the worst was the firebombing of Dresden. Like Coventry, Dresden was told to be an important manufacturing center but, for many of us, its destruction was pointless in victory; it had more to do with revenge and terror. Between 125 000 and 200 000 refugees, women and children were killed in this holocaust…

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Raging Battles – Fire and thunder
Sinking Boats – Crashed planes – Burning vessels

High ranked officer made prisoner
Fisherman now soldier made torturer

Beware enemies the end justifies the means
Beware enemies

We are avengers – Bringer of justice
Bearer of death
We are victorious – Victorious
Unrepentant and blameless

Now for sure I know the good guys
Unstained and pure as the driven snow

Now for sure I know the bad guys
Rapers and murderers – As evil as can be

At first it did not feel right
I had not buried children and wife
At first it did not feel right
But now I go with a smile

In the Last Moments of War
We are victorious, unrepentant and shameless

I left for war
Giving an Oath
My life for the cause

In the Last Moments of War
We are victorious
In the Last Moments of War
We are unrepentant, shameless
Shameless

Chapter TenThe Exile

England1945 – 1981

On 8 May 1945 Germany surrendered to the Allies and the Soviet Union. War in Europe was over and celebrations were going on everywhere. I was torn by the feelings of war and I knew I was not the only one. Of course, I was happy that we defeated the Nazis, but pride and patriotism were tinged with shame and guilt. Guilt of having made it through intact while losing my family and so many war buddies, ashamed of what I had become, of what I was capable of… I couldn’t help but think that for every man that we killed there was a wife, a child or a parent crying for their loss. By moments, I cowardly placed my desire for raw revenge above my wish for a noble justice. I had sullied myself and felt the tremendous weight of my actions and their consequences.

By the end of the war I remember realizing that, of all my time serving on the HMS Fighter, I couldn’t remember any bird in the sky or fish in the Ocean. Of course, they were there, but I don’t remember seeing any of them. Isn’t it strange? Everything was black and grey, only the blood spilled was another color, red… At war there are no heroes and incredible feats, there are simply people who are busy doing inhumanly human things.

War was over and my whole world had been broken. I had no one to go back to and nowhere that I felt I could call home anymore; I sold my house with all my belongings and just left. The seasons passed by, followed by the years; I moved a lot, working here and there earning enough money to get drunk with cheap booze, day after day. By some miracle I managed not to kill myself and, one day, I saw an ad in the newspapers saying ‘Wanted !!! Keeper for the Wolf Rock’s lighthouse’. Surrounded by the sea, Wolf Rock was perfect for a man who was seeking solitude. This Lighthouse that I can now call home is where I have spent the last 31 years alone, all by myself.

Final ChapterLighthouse (Part II)

Wolf Rock LighthouseCornwall, England26 September 1981

For all of those years that I have been a lighthouse keeper, night after night I would look up to the sky searching for stars. It made me realize that there is only one story, the oldest; us human beings searching for some light into the dark, for a lighthouse beam into the fog and the storm, for something bright and worth living for into our lives. Although darkness was dominant for most of my life, I can now say that I have learned a great lesson; the amount of light one can see depends on his outlook, on what he puts his attention to. Easier said than done but, despite all the misfortune, I have learned not to wallow in self-pity. I know for sure that somewhere a child is laughing, unaware of what human kind is capable of, his cheeks red to have played outside for too long before diner. That true innocence might be somehow what we need to hang on to. Anyways… excuse an old man’s thoughts, a storm is rising and I have a job to do. This is the end of my diary. I’m happy I have told my story, I am old and feel close to the end now. To whoever will find this journal just remember; the world is made of light and darkness, don’t let your eyes get used to the dark too much, keep looking for the light; don’t let go, you will find it somewhere, somehow… This is your responsibility alone, you owe it to yourself and to the ones that you love, the remaining like the ones who are already gone…

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Act I: Grief

Shall grief’s bitter cold overwhelm me
Like a winter storm on a vast and angry sea
How much longer can I keep strong
Enjoy again the ocean’s pure song
Shall I wither and fall like an autumn leaf
From this deep sorrow, from this painful grief

We go through this world but once
And from what we’ve taken for granted
Only remains silence

Exile has changed my life into eternity
So here I am – Here I am
We pass through this world but once
And only remain silence
So here I am – Here I am
In my home, my Lighthouse

Shall grief’s bitter cold overwhelm me
Like a winter storm on a vast and angry sea
For all the seasons of my life
I’ve tried to conceive an image of you
On that peaceful shore across the sea
Where we shall meet and love again

We pass through this world but once
And from what we’ve taken for granted
Only remains silence

Act II: Storm

On this wild sea, dazzled by such forcefulness
I can only bow down before so much fierceness

Winds, so strong they cannot breathe
Waves, rise and rise as high as the sky
Storm, ferocious and fearless
Alas for the fair ones; doomed to drown into darkness

The storm is raging
Yet, only I can save them
I might have to face death
I’m prepared for this sacrifice

Making my way through this whirlwind
Separated by a wave, so close yet so far
I can see them fighting for their lives
On the verge of despair our arms finally reach

Shall grief’s bitter cold overwhelm me
Like a winter storm on a vast and angry sea
For all the seasons of my life
I’ve tried to conceive an image of you
On that peaceful shore across the sea
Where we shall meet and love again

We pass through this world but once
And from what we’ve taken for granted
Only remains silence

Act III: Redemption

All is not lost
A Last act of grace
A redeeming cry
You by my side

Onward to my last ride
On a bright twilight
To extinguish my light
On one faithful night


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