by Alex HendersonStylistically, the part-British, part-Hungarian band To-Mera has not been easy to categorize. Most of their fans would agree that they fall into the metal category, but the band has not been affected by one type of metal exclusively; To-Mera's adventurous and experimental work has been described as everything from progressive metal to gothic metal to alternative metal, and they have also incorporated elements of death metal and black metal. But To-Mera's influences have by no means been limited to metal. Metal-wise, they have been influenced by everyone from Dream Theater and Symphony X to Dark Funeral, Meshuggah, Opeth and Lacuna Coil, but they also have non-metal influences that include jazz, European classical music, East European folk and world music. Directly or indirectly, To-Mera's experimentation owes something to non-headbangers who range from Yes to Tori Amos to Chick Corea's 1970s fusion powerhouse Return to Forever. Very few metal bands have been serious about incorporating jazz elements, but electric fusion and acoustic, straight-ahead post-bop have both left their mark on To-Mera's material.
To-Mera was founded in South Oxfordshire, England in early 2004 by Hungarian vocalist Julie Kiss (who was born in the early 1980s and favors an ethereal, angelic vocal style that owes a lot to goth-rock and gothic metal) and British bassist Lee Barrett; the band's name reflected Kiss' interest in Egyptology. Kiss was a former lead vocalist for Without Face (a Hungarian gothic metal band that was formed in 1997), while Barrett was best known for his contributions to Extreme Noise Terror but also had alternative metal combo Disgust and the industrial-oriented Mussolini Headkick on his résumé. Kiss and Barrett soon recruited Hungarian drummer Akos Pirisi, and guitarist Tom MacLean (formerly of the bands Forlorn Hope and Fubar) was hired after talking to Kiss at a Dillinger Escape Plan concert in London; MacLean explained to Kiss that he had been a big admirer of her contributions to Without Face, and she decided that they were on the same page musically. During the summer of 2005, To-Mera's Kiss/Barrett/MacLean/Pirisi lineup recorded the band's first demo, which was mixed by producer Brett Caldas-Lima in France. Not long after recording that demo, To-Mera became a quintet with the addition of Hugo Sheppard on keyboards. To-Mera's first demo led to a deal with Candlelight Records, and they recorded their official debut album, Transcendental (which reunited them with Caldas-Lima), for Candlelight in 2006. It was also in 2006 that Pirisi left his position as To-Mera's drummer and was replaced by Paul Westwood, who had been a member of the London-based band Foe. And when Sheppard left To-Mera in 2007, Hen (who had been with the band Haken) was hired as To-Mera's new keyboardist. Not long after Candlelight released To-Mera's second album, Delusions, in early 2008, co-founder Barrett announced his departure from the outfit; Mark Harrington (who had been with a London-based band called Demagogue) was hired as To-Mera's new bassist.