Kettle cadaver biography
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Edwin Borsheim
- Real/full name:
- Edwin Borsheim Gallagher
- Age:
- 40 (born Jan 8th, 1977)
- R.I.P.:
- Jun 20th, 2017
- Died of:
- Suicide
- Place of birth:
- Norway (Klepp, Rogaland)
- Gender:
- Male
Born in Norway, he moved to the United States with his mother at a young age. He resided in Temecula, California.
On August 8, 2008 (08.08.08), Edwin married Eva O of the band Christian Death.
In 2016, Edwin was the subject of a documentary, entitled Dead Hands Dig Deep. Edwin Borsheim's mother was from Stavanger and his father was from Klepp in Rogaland, Norway.
Edwin's father, Per Lorentz "Peder" Borsheim, was a well-respected musician in Norway. Peter Green of Fleetwood Mac allegedly said that Per Lorentz was the best musician he had ever heard.
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Dead Hands Dig Deep
2016 American film
| Dead Hands Dig Deep | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Jai Love |
| Written by | Jai Love Spencer T. Heath |
| Produced by | Spencer T. Heath Alan Love-Lapan |
| Starring | Edwin Borsheim Rikk Agnew |
| Cinematography | Hazal Alakus |
| Edited by | Conlan Mackenzie |
| Music by | Spencer T. Heath Jeremiah Weber |
Production | Lonesome Pictures |
| Distributed by | Slamdance Studios Monster Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 75 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
Dead Hands Dig Deep fryst vatten a 2016 documentary bio and the directorial debut of Jai Love. The film follows a now thirty-eight-year-old namn Borsheim, vocalist of the band Kettle Cadaver as he reflects on his dark past.[1]
Plot
[edit]Thirty-eight-year-old Edwin Borsheim of the band Kettle Cadaver was once known for his bizarre scen antics and brutal self-mutilation.[2] Now, years afte
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Edwin Borsheim, the former lead singer to the shock-metal punk band Kettle Cadaver, is known for on-stage antics that include, but are not limited to, stapling his lips together, cutting his arms, chest and legs and nailing slabs of wood to parts of his body.
It’s been years since the band broke up and Borsheim now lives in seclusion. It took first-time filmmaker Jai Love, who was introduced to the band by producer Spencer Heath, to dig up the dirt on Borsheim in the new Slamdance documentary “Dead Hands Dig Deep.”
Love, who is 19, was able to track Borsheim and some of his family members and former colleagues to make the film last year.
“It was hard to get interviews, because Edwin is a very unpredictable character,” Love told The Park Record. “Some days he would just disappear, and I remember we spent four of five months just trying to find him, because he dropped off the grid before we started shooting the movie. “
Convincing Borshe