Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Sanrabb

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Associated acts
  
Gehenna

Years active
  
1993-present

Music group
  
Gehenna (Since 1993)

Name
  
Sanrabb Sanrabb

Instruments
  
Vocals, Guitar, Bass

Genres
  
Black metal

Origin
  
Stavanger, Norway

Role
  
Musician


Sanrabb

Albums
  
First Spell, Adimiron Black, Seen Through the Veils, Black Seared Heart, WW

Also known as
  
Sanrabb Aske Morten

People also search for
  
Dolgar, Amok, Dirge

Sanrabb is a Norwegian black metal musician and one of the founding members of black/death metal band Gehenna.

Contents

Biography

Sanrabb formed Gehenna in 1993, together with Dolgar and Sir Vereda. He has participated on all of Gehenna's releases, both as a vocalist and as a guitarist. In addition to Gehenna, Sanrabb has played in several other extreme metal bands, and he has done session live guitars for bands such as Mayhem and Satyricon.

Current

  • Gehenna - 1993–present (vocals, guitar)
  • Former

  • Neetzach - 1993-1994 (guitar)
  • Forlorn - 1996-1999 (vocals)
  • Satyricon - 1999 (session live guitar)
  • Mëkanïk - 2000 (guitar)
  • Cobolt 60 - 2002 (session live vocals and bass)
  • Shadow Season - 2003 (studio guest vocals)
  • Mayhem - 2004 (session live guitar)
  • Nattefrost - 2005 (studio guest vocals)
  • 122 Stab Wounds
  • The Deviant
  • Haggis
  • Blood Red Throne
  • Throne of Katarsis - 2009
  • Gehenna

  • Black Seared Heart (demo) (1993)
  • Ancestor of the Darkly Sky (7") (1993)
  • First Spell (1994)
  • Seen Through the Veils of Darkness (The Second Spell) (1995)
  • Malice (1996)
  • Black Seared Heart (Re-release of the 1993 demo, with bonus tracks) (1996)
  • Deadlights (EP) (1998)
  • Adimiron Black (1998)
  • Murder (2000)
  • WW (2005)
  • Neetzach

  • Pinseltronen (demo) (1995)
  • Forlorn

  • Forlorn (demo) (1996)
  • The Crystal Palace (1997)
  • Shadow Season

  • The Frozen (2003)
  • Nattefrost

  • Terrorist - Nekronaut Pt. 1 (2005)
  • Mëkanïk

  • Dër Mëkanïk Grööves (EP) (2008)
  • References

    Sanrabb Wikipedia