Written interviews
  • 6 mins read

Interview: NUNSLAUGHTER

Stanley Hatt Stanley Hatt
  • Jun 1, 2026

magzin magzin

NUNSLAUGHTER have outlived trends, scenes, and more “next big things” than anyone can count. As Satanic Chaos Legions arrives, Don looks back on nearly forty years of Devil Metal, talks religion, death metal authenticity, chaos, and why hooks matter just as much as blasphemy.

Hail Don! Satanic Chaos Legions description mentions a space somewhere between Seasons in the Abyss and Earth A.D. – two records that balance violence with hooks. Do you consciously think about memorability when writing, or does catchiness almost irritate you in extreme metal?
Thank you. Yes, hooks is what makes the music memorable and NunSlaughter has lots of hooks in our music. Even dating back to the 80’s songs. Frankly it irritates me when music does not have a hook.

“Jesus Fucking Dies” is about as subtle as a hammer to the face. Do you still enjoy provoking people directly, or has society become too fragmented and desensitized for shock to function the way it once did?
We are not worried about shock value. There are extreme metal bands out there pushing the envelope. We are focused on writing good songs that people can remember.

NUNSLAUGHTER has always had a very direct anti-Christian stance, but a lot of modern “blasphemous” bands feel theatrical rather than genuinely confrontational. What separates authentic disgust from aesthetic cosplay to you?
I believe longevity has something to do with it as many bands started blasphemous and then became watered down. We have not backed down in fact I believe we have increased the blasphemy over the years. Theatrics are great but many times it is used to distract you from just how fucking boring the music really is.

Christianity is no longer the dominant cultural force it once was in many places. Does attacking it still feel rebellious in 2026, or has the meaning of blasphemy changed completely since NUNSLAUGHTER started?
Here in the United States it is becoming an increasing problem. There people over here actually think this nation was founded on Christianity. I mean pick up a book, idiots. Our main export is stupidity.

You’ve kept the “DEVIL METAL” identity uncompromising for decades, while many peers eventually drifted toward abstraction, philosophy, or irony. Was there ever pressure to become more “intellectual” about the band’s themes?
I am not sure who would pressure us, but no. We make the music we want and damn everyone else.  I mean this is death metal. Who the fuck wants to talk about philosophy or some lame abstract idea. Give me Satan or Give me Death.

NUNSLAUGHTER emerged before extreme metal had clear genre borders. When you started, did “death metal” actually feel like a movement, or was it just a handful of maniacs accidentally inventing something simultaneously?
It seemed to gain a real foothold in 1985 /1986 with bands finally getting a full length album out and people began to recognize it as a valid form of music. There were many bands before that but at least from what I can remember those were some defining years.

A lot of early death metal musicians talk about discovering extremity through isolation – hearing terrible-quality demos and imagining something even more evil than what was actually on tape. Do you think mystery and limitation helped make extreme metal more dangerous back then?
I have not heard that but I do agree. Sometimes its what you don’t hear makes the recording. I had a few recording from tape trading that I really liked, but many years later when it was remixed and officially released, it did not have the same impact.

You’ve been operating long enough to watch death metal go from tape-traded obscurity to algorithm-fed content. What’s been lost in that transition – and what, surprisingly, got better?
Accessibility is better and so is the ability to record a solid sounding recording. I do think the desire to make money and to manipulate the metal community has become an issue. People become “hive” minded. That is to say, when presented with a mediocre band if its marketed correctly then the band becomes a hit.

You’ve released an absurd amount of demos, rehearsals, splits and live material over the years. Did that flood of releases come from compulsion, preservation, chaos… or from never wanting NUNSLAUGHTER to feel too polished or “official”?
I admit it is a compulsion. I have to release or I begin to believe NunSlaughter is fading away. Most of the releases have their own charm and we have had the opportunity to reach metal heads all around the world be the sheer amount of release and that make me very proud.

Jim Sadist’s death clearly marked a turning point for the band. Looking back now, did grief make NUNSLAUGHTER more determined, or did it permanently change the chemistry and emotional intent behind the music?
It changed the chemistry of the band. Jim was a force, stubborn but a force none the less. He had a huge impact on me personally and the metal world as a whole. His passing made us more focused in the mission. Create death metal and that is what we have continued to do.

Your records often sound like they could collapse at any moment, but never actually do. How much of NUNSLAUGHTER’s identity comes from controlling chaos rather than simply playing aggressively?
Bands are usually best when they are almost going off the rails but somehow keep it going. That is where NunSlaughter spends most of our time. It adds to the aggression and keeps posers at bay.

You’ve played everything from tiny sweatbox clubs to major extreme metal festivals. Where does this music feel most dangerous to you now – in front of 50 die-hard fans or thousands of people treating it like an event?
I am more of a club guy, but I can’t speak for the rest of the band.  It is cool to be able to perform in front of a few thousand people so that you can get the message across to a swarm. There are only so many days you can perform, and the fests are where the most damage is done, but for me, it’s in front of 100 people going nuts in a club.

There’s a strange longevity to bands built around hatred and negativity. Why do you think anger ages better in extreme metal than idealism or optimism?
Many are nihilists and that adds to the fury of the music. Many people / bands mellow with age and I can understand it. At some time you get tired of fighting the system or you have other ideas that preoccupy your mind.

After nearly forty years of NUNSLAUGHTER, what still disgusts or inspires you enough to keep writing genuinely hostile music instead of becoming nostalgic about your own legacy? Thank you for your time!
Religion of all kinds but mainly Christianity because it directly affects my life. It hasn’t steered me wrong yet. You are welcome for the interview, thank you.

https://ffm.bio/nunslaughter-satanicchaoslegionsalbum

https://nunslaughter.bandcamp.com/

Stanley Hatt

Quality music fan since '80s.