Eparistera Daimones

Eparistera Daimones is the debut album by Swiss extreme metal band Triptykon, the most recent musical project of Thomas Gabriel Fischer (a.k.a. Tom G. Warrior), founding member of the pioneering heavy metal bands Hellhammer and Celtic Frost and industrial project Apollyon Sun.

The album was released by Prowling Death Records Ltd., under a licensing agreement with Century Media Records on 22 March 2010, and was released by Victor Entertainment Japan on 21 April 2010 with a bonus track, "Shatter". Upon its release, Eparistera Daimones was met with universal acclaim by both music critics and band fans.

Eparistera Daimones was produced by Thomas Gabriel Fischer and Triptykon guitarist V. Santura and recorded in V. Santura's own Woodshed Studio in southern Germany, in the course of the second half of 2009. Like Celtic Frost's Monotheist album, Eparistera Daimones was mastered by Walter Schmid at Oakland Recording in Winterthur, Switzerland.

The album features artwork by H. R. Giger and Vincent Castiglia.

The title of album is originally from Aleister Crowley's Liber XXV: The Star Ruby ritual. Eparistera Daimones (ΕΠΑΡΙΣΤΕΡΑ ΔΑΙΜΟΝΕΣ) in Greek means On my left hand the Daemones or To my left, the demons.

"Myopic Empire" comes from "Relinquished Body", a demo track from Celtic Frost's 2002 demo album Prototype.

Track listing
Japanese edition

Formats
Eparistera Daimones was released in several formats including CD, digipak CD, and double gatefold LP.

Personnel

 * Thomas Gabriel Fischer – vocals, guitar, keyboards, programming
 * V. Santura – guitar, vocals
 * Norman Lonhard – drums & percussion
 * Vanja Slajh – bass

Collaborations

 * Simone Vollenweider – additional vocals
 * A. Acanthus Gristle – additional vocals
 * Fredy Schnyder – grand piano
 * Nadine Rimlinger – violin

Production

 * Tom Gabriel Warrior and V. Santura – production, recording and mixing
 * Walter Schmid – mastering
 * Antje Lange and Tom Warrior – executive producers
 * Vincent Castiglia – band illustrations
 * H. R. Giger – cover art "Vlad Tepes"