Cradle of Filth piano sheet music of popular songs

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Beginner
Sheet music, chords Cradle of Filth - White Hellebore
4.7 (57)
0148
Piano&Vocal.Easy
PianoVocal
Advanced
Sheet music, chords Cradle of Filth - White Hellebore
4.4 (16)
0111
Flute
Flute
Beginner
Sheet music, chords Cradle of Filth - White Hellebore
4.5 (50)
0169
Piano.Easy&Chords
PianoGuitar
Sheet music, chords Cradle of Filth - White Hellebore
4.5 (40)
0141
Guitar&Vocal.Tab
GuitarVocal
Beginner
Sheet music, chords Cradle of Filth - White Hellebore
4.9 (40)
0151
Piano.Easy
Piano
Sheet music, chords Cradle of Filth - White Hellebore
4.1 (23)
0116
Guitar.Chords&Tabs
Guitar
Sheet music, chords Cradle of Filth - White Hellebore
4.6 (22)
0144
Guitar.Chords
Guitar
Sheet music, chords Cradle of Filth - White Hellebore
4.6 (40)
0138
Ukulele.Chords&Tab
Ukulele
Sheet music, chords Cradle of Filth - White Hellebore
4.7 (14)
099
Piano.Solo&Chords
PianoGuitar
Advanced
Sheet music, chords Cradle of Filth - White Hellebore
4.4 (44)
0123
Vocal
Vocal
Advanced
Sheet music, chords Cradle of Filth - White Hellebore
4.8 (42)
0132
Violin
Violin
Sheet music, chords Cradle of Filth - White Hellebore
4.2 (14)
0132
Ukulele.Tab&Vocal
Ukulele
Cradle of Filth are an English extreme metal band formed in Suffolk in 1991. The band's musical style evolved originally from black metal to a cleaner and more "produced" amalgam of gothic metal, symphonic metal and other metal genres. Their lyrical themes and imagery are heavily influenced by Gothic literature, poetry, mythology and horror films. The band consists of its founding member, vocalist Dani Filth, drummer Martin "Marthus" Škaroupka, bassist Daniel Firth, guitarists Marek "Ashok" Šmerda and Donny Burbage, and keyboardist Zoe Marie Federoff. The band has broken free from its original niche by courting mainstream publicity. This increased accessibility has brought coverage from the likes of Kerrang! and MTV, along with frequent main stage appearances at major festivals such as Ozzfest, Download and even the mainstream Sziget Festival. They have sometimes been perceived as Satanic by casual observers, even though their lyrical references to Satanism are few and far between; their use of Satanic imagery has arguably always been more for shock value than any seriously held beliefs.