Bathory Lyrics — by Popularity
132 songs · Page 3 of 3
| 101 | Blood and Soil |
| 102 | Suffocate |
| 103 | Deuce |
| 104 | Psychopath |
| 105 | Distinguish to Kill |
| 106 | Century |
| 107 | War Supply |
| 108 | Grey |
| 109 | Schizianity |
| 110 | Judgement of Posterity |
| 111 | Die in Fire |
| 112 | The Rite of Darkness / Reap of Evil |
| 113 | Liberty & Justice |
| 114 | In Nomine Satanas |
| 115 | Rider at the Gate of Dawn |
| 116 | Witchcraft |
| 117 | The Return of Darkness and Evil |
| 118 | Burnin' Leather |
| 119 | Crawl to Your Cross |
| 120 | You Don’t Move Me (I Don’t Give a Fuck) |
| 121 | Black Diamond |
| 122 | Resolution Greed |
| 123 | Genocide |
| 124 | Ace of Spades |
| 125 | War Pigs |
| 126 | Song to Hall Up High / Home of Once Brave |
| 127 | In Nomine of Satan |
| 128 | Prologue / Twilight of the Gods / Epilogue |
| 129 | Call From the Grave (live) |
| 130 | [untitled] |
| 131 | Baptise in Fire and Ice |
| 132 | In Conspirasy With Satan |
Bathory Albums
About Bathory
Bathory was a Swedish extreme metal band formed in Vällingby in 1983, serving as one of the most influential pioneers of both black metal and Viking metal throughout their two-decade existence. Masterminded by the enigmatic Quorthon, the band began as raw, lo-fi black metal pioneers whose early works like "Holocaust" helped define the genre's primitive, atmospheric sound with shrieking vocals, tremolo-picked guitars, and deliberately crude production that created an otherworldly, demonic atmosphere. By the late 1980s, Bathory underwent a dramatic transformation, abandoning their Satanic imagery for Norse mythology and evolving into the creators of Viking metal with epic compositions like "A Fine Day To Die" and "One Rode To Asa Bay," which featured sweeping orchestral elements, clean vocals, and grandiose storytelling that painted vivid pictures of ancient Scandinavian battles and folklore. This stylistic evolution from the underground black metal of their early catalog to the cinematic, folk-influenced epics of their later work demonstrated Quorthon's visionary approach to metal, influencing countless bands in both the black and Viking metal scenes. With 50 albums across their 21-year career, including the posthumous "In Memory of Quorthon" trilogy released after the project's end in 2004, Bathory's legacy extends far beyond their 537-song catalog, having essentially created two entire subgenres of metal and inspiring everyone from Emperor to Amon Amarth. Their cultural impact on Scandinavian metal cannot be overstated, as they transformed extreme metal from a purely aggressive art form into something capable of both primal savagery and majestic beauty.