Last updated: 22 hours ago
The German Purity Law, or Reinheitsgebot, limited beer to the inclusion of water, barley, and hops. Here in the Pacific Northwest, we do things a bit differently. Fermented heavy metal aged in oak barrels with notes of classical inspiration, Drunkelweizen stumbles forth with our blend of Drunken Folk Metal!
The debut album, Pioneers of Alcohol, is an ode to those in history whose life was ever entwined with the godly nectar, alcohol. Each track tells the glorious tale of one such great mind and culminates in the title track. The final songs are offered in tribute to those we did not recount, and fueled by their memory and more than a few drinks of our own.
The newest single, "A Frog (betrunken übersetzen)" is "Ein Frosch" from the debut album, barrel aged and completely re-recorded with a new drunken twist; all of the English lyrics have been replaced with German! Why would we choose to swap all of the English and German lyrics (given that the only German aside from the title was counting to twelve and "prost")? What is the likelihood that anything was pronounced correctly? Or that any of this makes any sense at all? Only the godly nectar of alcohol may answer these questions.
We invite you to lift up your drinking apparatus of choice (whether glass, stein, horn, or skull of thine fallen enemy) and join us in a toast to those that paved the way and all that the future has in store.
Cheers!
The debut album, Pioneers of Alcohol, is an ode to those in history whose life was ever entwined with the godly nectar, alcohol. Each track tells the glorious tale of one such great mind and culminates in the title track. The final songs are offered in tribute to those we did not recount, and fueled by their memory and more than a few drinks of our own.
The newest single, "A Frog (betrunken übersetzen)" is "Ein Frosch" from the debut album, barrel aged and completely re-recorded with a new drunken twist; all of the English lyrics have been replaced with German! Why would we choose to swap all of the English and German lyrics (given that the only German aside from the title was counting to twelve and "prost")? What is the likelihood that anything was pronounced correctly? Or that any of this makes any sense at all? Only the godly nectar of alcohol may answer these questions.
We invite you to lift up your drinking apparatus of choice (whether glass, stein, horn, or skull of thine fallen enemy) and join us in a toast to those that paved the way and all that the future has in store.
Cheers!
Monthly Listeners
17
Monthly Listeners History
Track the evolution of monthly listeners over the last 28 days.
Followers
63
Followers History
Track the evolution of followers over the last 28 days.
Top Cities
4 listeners