Posts Tagged ‘alex skolnick’
Tuesday, March 5th, 2013

In this exclusive feature special to this blog, today we present the gig report from CLIFF BURTON’S first gig with METALLICA which took place on this date, thirty years ago today. It was truly a momentous occasion in the history of Bay Area Thrash and all of metal as Cliff’s addition to the band truly set them apart from the pack in the scene. Re-printed with permission originally as is ran Metal Mania #10, 1983, and more recently appeared as a critical chapter in the book MURDER IN THE FRONT ROW. Written by BRIAN LEW and HAROLD OIMOEN (D.R.I.), MITFR came out last year from Bazillion Points.
METALLICA, THE STONE, MARCH 5, 1983
by Brian Lew, excerpt from Metal Mania #10, 1983

Six months have passed since METALLICA’s dubious San Francisco debut opening for BITCH in September of ‘82, but in those two hundred-odd days the group has built up a large, rabid following in the Bay Area. This particular show was dubbed “The Night Of The Banging Head” and was the debut of new bassist, Cliff Burton. As a crowd of three hundred or so filed into The Stone, the scene was set for what turned out to be the heaviest show in recent S.F. HM history!
Opening the show were LAAZ ROCKIT and EXODUS. The awesome EXODUS bludgeoned the bangers into submission and induced some wild thrashing on the dance floor with such murderous tunes as “Whipping Queen,” “Die By His Hand,” and “Impaler.” Despite an ecstatic crowd response, EXODUS were denied an encore, but they nonetheless wreaked havoc on craniums and left many a sore neck!
On the other hand, East Bay PRIEST/CRUE clones LAAZ ROCKIT were criminally lacking in originality. Although they do have a good stage presence and show, utilizing some effective lighting, and their new guitarist definitely improves them as a performing unit, their weak, predictable material overshadows these good points. At last, LAAZ completed their allotted set and were gone. Then it was time…
METALLICA, those Supreme Metal Gods, those Purveyors of Raging Sonic Decapitation, those Rabid Vodka-Powered Maniacs, blew our faces off as they stormed onstage through a flurry of smoke and blinding light and got things really banging with “Hit The Lights” and it was time to DIE!!!

As is their style, the band went from power to power as they steamed through “The Mechanix” and “Phantom Lord”, leaving the headbanging horde thrashed and raging, and it was only three songs into the set! The autobiographical “Motorbreath” was as fast as ever and even more plaster cascaded from the ceiling. At this show, the group was incorporating some new lighting and effects and the results were staggering! Their live show is now complete and is the most effective of any club band I’ve seen!
Next up was the fiery cauldron of “Jump In The Fire” and then that “war machine that eats its way across the land,” “No Remorse”! DEATH, DEATH, RESOUNDING DEATH!!! And still METALLICA mercilessly hacked through their list of nuclear soul shatterers. “Seek And Destroy” found its target and drilled our eardrums as the headbanging and thrashing of the crowd (and band) intensified.

The moment many had been waiting for soon arrived. Bassist Cliff Burton’s solo spot!!! Cliff built his solo from a haunting classical guitar-sounding ballad up to a crescendo of some of the fastest, most apocalyptic bass raging ever performed! Step aside Steve Harris, Bill Sheehan and Joey DeMaio!

Throughout his symphony, Cliff (a.k.a. God!) utilized his wah pedal to attain sounds that most would believe impossible; you could swear he was playing lead guitar, not bass. As his solo built up to its conclusion, drummer supreme Lars Ulrich (now playing double bass) and maestro of the six string Dave Mustaine leaped into an awesome jam session that had heads bobbing violently and hair flying in all directions. Then, in one swift action, they were rejoined by vocalist/rhythm guitarist/rager James Hetfield and sped into that ear bleeding anthem “Whiplash.”

As the crowd “banged their heads against the stage like they never did before,” the group continued to go mental right along with them! Closing the set were the two DIAMOND HEAD classics “Am I Evil?” and “The Prince,” which were played, in traditional METALLICA fashion, faster than Sean Harris, et al, could ever dream possible!
For their well-deserved (and loudly requested) encores, METALLICA brought back a song they performed in their early days, BLITZKRIEG’s bombastic “Blitzkreig” (Raging Metallic Death!!!) and then obliterated everyone and everything as they sliced into that anthem to end all anthems, the almighty ode to headbangers “Metal Militia”!!
With the addition of Cliff Burton, METALLlCA now have the heaviest and fastest lineup ever assembled. With dates confirmed for them in New York in early April (including a headlining show on the 1st and a support slot with VANDENBERG on the 8th), and their debut album expected in late spring, things are definitely beginning to happen for this band!
by Brian Lew
(Special thanks to Brian Lew for the blog, the use of the MITFR images and especially to Bazillion Points)
Tags: alex skolnick, Bay Area Thrash, Bazillion Points Publishing, Berekely, BLIND ILLUSION, Brian Lew, Cliff Burton, crossover, D.R.I., DEAD KENNEDY’S, DEATH ANGEL as little kids, Debbie Abono, discharge, East Bay, El Duce, EXODUS, forbidden, Gary Holt, gbh, Harald Oimoen, hardcore, Heathen, Ian Christie, Larry LaLonde, Les Claypool, Megadeth, meta reviews by Keefy, metal history, Metallica, Motorhead, Murder In The Front Row:Shots From The Bay Area Thrash Metal Epicenter, Oakland, Paul Baloff, Possessed, Primus, punk, robb flynn, Ron Quintana, Ruthie's Inn, slayer, testament, The Ramones, The Stone, Thrash Metal, Vio-lence, Whiplash Zine, Wolfgang's Posted in GUEST BLOGS, METAL HISTORY RE-REVISTED | No Comments »
Friday, December 21st, 2012
Here is Keefy’s final Top Ten from his overall Top 40 Metal Albums of 2012 list! Enjoy!

#10. CRYPTOPSY- Cryptopsy (Self Released)
To paraphrase comedian Chris Rock, I’m tired of apologizing for CRYPTOPSY. I was in the minority among people when I loved The Unspoken King. I’m sure as people are reading this; they are scratching their heads again. No matter, CRYPTOPSY has silenced all their critics with an album that matches the best work of their career. A brutal slab of technical death metal on every level the album is great for all the reasons that made the band stellar in the first place. Obviously, people talk about the inhuman level of Drummer FLO MOUNIER. However, the real strength of the band is returning guitarist and writer JON LEVASSEUR and mainstay guitarist/uber producer CHRISITAN DONALDSON. The songs they wrote are superb. I was nervous about Oliver Pinard being able to replace ERIC LANGLOIS on bass, but even he was great too! Lastly, MATT MCGATCHY‘s performance provides the shut the fuck up moment of the year to all the haters. Well done sirs!

#9. PRONG- Carved Into Stone (Long Branch Records/SPV)
I thought my birthday came early this year when PRONG’s new album came out. PRONG has always been one of my favorite bands and all of their recorded output has been always been strong. Carved Into Stone is actually the bands best album since 1996′s Rude Awakening. Not only is the album full of sick tunes, but over the top, guitar playing in general is terrific. TOMMY VICTOR (DANZIG, MINISTRY) has been known for two things in his career: great songs and being a riff master general. The album displays an unexpected depth for any record in 2012. Packed with just the right touch of technical mastery and catchy songwriting to please and the hardcore soul, which hearkens back to Tommy’s NYC metal roots. The performances from TONY CAMPOS (SOULFLY/ MINISTRY/STATIC-X/ASESINO/POSSESSED/OTEP) and ALEXI RODRIGUEZ (ex-3 INCHES OF BLOOD) are matched perfectly too, making this one of the baddest power trio’s around.

#8. GOJIRA – L’Enfant Sauvage (Roadrunner)
GOJIRA albums, when they come out, are an event. The metal world waits with baited breath and the results are always stellar. Armed with a new deal from Roadrunner, the band put out L’Enfant Sauvage over the summer to roars of approval. Perhaps, even I was too cynical to believe that GOJIRA would continue to get increasingly popular as they stayed true to who they were? L’Enfant Sauvage is a great blend of the Progressive Rock/Metal, Tech Death, old-school Death Metal and Thrash influences they are known for. Then there is their subject matter: they are one of the most thoughtful and socially conscious bands around, lyrically. The album hits the right mood on every level, every time and has the musical confidence of a band much more senior in years. Songs like “Explosia”, “The Axe” and “Liquid Fire” are going to be talked about in metal head circles for years to come.

#7. CANNIBAL CORPSE- Torture (Metal Blade)
Like a beautifully marbled steak or a legendary work of art, CANNIBAL CORPSE truly does get better with age. It seems likely that much like SLAYER, the death metal godfathers will keep right on trucking on to oblivion, making skull splitting, gore filled albums for as long as they can. Torture is perfect in every way and all of the things you love about the band are in the mix. Perhaps due to being the most collaborative written album in the bands history, the sound from song to song is quite eclectic. Not like Dubstep, power-ballad eclectic, mind you, but the band has figured out how to blend different song styles seamlessly. Inventive new chord structures and riffs, hard to fathom bass lines and stupendous drumming are all topped off by GEORGE “CORPSEGRINDER” FISHER‘s impeccable voice from hell. Plus, don’t forget the grooves. Oh those crushing grooves! Nobody writes a grooving-ass, brutal riff better than ALEX WEBSTER. The band continues to be the yard stick by which all death metal music and consequently, all death metal bands are measured.

#6. C.O.C. – C.O.C. (Candlelight)
That C.O.C. was able to make a comeback as a trio at this point in their career is not a surprise. The fact that they reunited to make an amazing album is not even a question. What I am surprised by, is that it seems like the rest of the world has caught up to the sound of the band and the love from fans and the press is over flowing. When last we saw C.O.C. as a trio it was the 80s and they were mostly an underground phenomenon. Lots of bands like to say they were influenced by the Sludgy, Crossover Doom masters, but in this age of the Internet; flattery goes a long way to help a new bands rep.To hear WOODY WEATHERMAN tell it, the reunion circuit was totally un-interesting to the band, unless they were gonna make new music. C.O.C., the album has more quality and vitality than many of the upstarts of the genre they helped put on the map. MIKE DEAN‘s bass is full of fuzz and style; Woody‘s soloing is on fire and REED MULLEN, back for the first time in over decade, drums and sings like a man possessed. Let us not forget the poignant political lyrics, much welcomed in these troublesome times of a divided America. You might say the metal world needed C.O.C. to come back, as much as they needed to make a comeback themselves.

#5. MESHUGGAH- Koloss (Nuclear Blast)
What can you say about MESHUGGAH that hasn’t been said already? It’s not hard to run out of superlatives when talking about the most influential metal band of the last fifteen years. Whether Koloss was going to be great or not was likely not debatable. What was up for grabs, was what direction these geniuses would take the iconic music we have all come to expect. The results were stunning. Can you change things up, and still be the same band? By definition no, but that is MESHUGGAH for you. Koloss is a collection of songs much like the rest of the bands’ storied catalog: brutal, and complex. Most of the songs feature a pulsing groove that has come to the fore in the bands work of late. Every beat and riff is a maelstrom of twisting delight, overlapping time signatures and finger-defying licks galore. Most of all, the album sets another technical high water-mark for guitarist FREDRICK THORDENDAL and drummer TOMAS HAAKE.

#4. TESTAMENT- Dark Roots Of Earth (Nuclear Blast)
The return of TESTAMENT to their former level of greatness is nothing short of a triumph for all of metal. 2008′s Formation of Damnation was an excellent comeback album, after almost a decade of no new music. In the interim years since getting back together, they have toured tirelessly around the world, reignited their chemistry and fulfilled the promise of their early career. Dark Roots of Earth takes the concept of the old-school Thrash style, added a modern sensibility and took it all one step further. Only EXODUS and ANTHRAX have been able to pull of the feat of making new music for modern ears, staying true to their past and begin able to add a level of panache. ERIC PETERSON finally got his dream come true by getting GENE HOGLAN to write and record drums for a TESTAMENT album. The unrelenting bottom end of the songs gives the band a new power they have never had. Every song is a gem. “Native Blood” is one of the catchiest, yet grooviest songs I’ve heard in ages. The chorus is also the best of 2012. CHUCK BILLY‘s ageless voice carries the day and ALEX SKOLNICK displays the chops that verify his legions of fans. Even GREG CHRISTIAN is heard from, with some excellent bass lines. Dark Roots of Earth is all killer and positively no filler.

#3. BARONESS- Yellow And Green (Relapse)
One of the most anticipated albums of 2012 did not disappoint when BARONESS dropped the latest in their color-themed recent discography. The band made no pretense that this album would be not be metal and frankly, that was OK by me. If you have been following the band, they have been less concerned with the trappings of fitting in, in their career up to this point. They instead stayed true to their artistic authenticity. What BARONESS delivered is a double-album of incredible songs, displaying great chops and the best dynamics overall of any album on this list. Some of the songs are quite heavy, but more often than not, that heaviness never came the expense of melodies or tones. “Take My Bones Away” was my out and out favorite song of the entire year. “March To The Sea” was another stone cold rocker, the likes that haven’t been heard since the heyday of QUEEN or THIN LIZZY. Some of the best moments are the most unexpected ones; like the freak-out synth work in “Cocanium”. All of the keyboard work is stellar as is the bass playing, which band leader John Baizley played all of too. “Back Where I Belong”, “Eula” and “Board Up The House” will also rank at the top of the bands’ song book for years to come. The “Green” side of the double set is equally tuneful and more mellow, but no less mint song-craft wise. Finally, tying it all together is the brilliant cover artwork, the years’ best; also by Baizley once again.

#2. DYING FETUS- Reign Supreme (Relapse)
DYING FETUS is such a great band in its current incarnation that one almost forgets there were entire years in their history marked by upheavals and departures. The present day lineup has been intact since 2007 and the comfort level they have together creating the most brutal Death Metal possibly known to man is sky high. Through it all, JOHN GALLAGHER has been the one constant: constantly growing as a guitarist and writer and constantly writing pissed the fuck off, baffling and sick lyrics. Reign Supreme might be remembered years from now as one of the top three releases of the bands’ career with its non-stop violence inspired songs. GALLAGHER and his p-i-c SEAN BEASLEY crush it out of the park on the guttural vocals. Beasley, who was always an underrated bassist for the genre, plays some of the best passages ever recorded for the instrument in the context of technical death metal. TREY WILLIAMS also one-ups his performance from Descend Into Depravity, being a might less technical, but still precise as fuck and bludgeoning as all hell. His blasts are far and away my favorite of any drummer on album this entire year. The album is a masterpiece of death metal brilliance, and that is really saying something considering how deep the sub-genre is these days.

#1. IHSAHN- Eremita (Candlelight)
In what was a high quality year at the top of the heap of metal music, IHSAHN‘s fourth solo outing is my choice for the album of the year. It’s not the sexy choice compared with typical years past, but it is the best choice, by far. Eremita is a sprawling, ambitious album full of musical twists and turns, yet perfectly coalescing into a sensible piece of art. In an interview I conducted with him for Metal Army he talked about the creative process as a continual evolution, a death followed by a rebirth. That would just begin to cover the emotional and lyrical depth in the music. In many ways, this is the album that IHSAHN, famously known as the legendary front man of EMPEROR, has been building up to for his entire career. His mastery as a composer, guitarist, vocalist and lyricist is without equal at this point in his career. Musically the songs cover the gamut of emotions and styles and reveal a complexity that mirrors the artist himself. Songs like “Arrival”, “The Paranoid”, “Something Out There”, “The Eagle And The Snake” and “Departure” are among the best of the year. Topping off the package are the guest performances by the likes of DEVIN TOWNSEND, JEFF LOOMIS, EINAR SOLBERG (LEPROUS), JEFF MUNKENBY on sax and IHSAHN’s wife HEIDI S. TVEITEN‘s enchanting vocal turns, which sends the quality of the album into the stratosphere.
 Genius level achieved.
KEEFY PREVIOUS TOP METAL ALBUMS OF THE YEAR
2011: TOMBS- Path of Totality
2010: EXODUS: Exhibit B
2009: MASTODON: Crack The Skye
2008: OPETH: Watershed
2007: MACHINE HEAD: The Blackening
2006: MASTODON: Blood Mountain
2005: MESHUGGAH: Catch Thirty-Three
2004: MACHINE HEAD: Through The Ashes Of Empires
Tags: 3 Inches of Blood, alex skolnick, Alex Webster, Alexi Rodriguez, Anthrax, Asesino, Avant Garde, Baroness, C.O.C., Candlelight, Cannibal Corpse, Carved Into Stone, chuck billy, cryptopsy, Danzig, Dark Roots Of Earth, death, Death Metal, descend into depravity, Devin Townsend, djent, doom, Drummer FLO MOUNIER, drummer/vocalist REED MULLEN, dying fetus, EINAR SOLBERG, emperor, EREMITA, eric peterson, EXODUS, FREDRICK THORDENDAL, Gene Hoglan, George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher, Gojira, GREG CHRISTIAN, guitarist JON LEVASSEUR, guitarist/uber producer CHRISITAN DONALDSON, HEIDI S. TVEITEN, Ihsahn, Jeff Loomis, JEFF MUNKENBY, John Gallagher, Koloss, leprous, Long Branch Records, L’Enfant Sauvage, MATT MCGATCHY, Meshuggah, METAL BLADE, mike dean, Ministry, Nuclear Blast, Otep, Possessed, power groove, prog, Prog Metal, Proggressive Death Metal, Prong, Queen, reign supreme, reviews by Keefy, roadrunner, rock, SEAN BEASLEY, slayer, sludge, Soulfly, spv, Static-X, tech death, testament, Thin Lizzy, Thrash Metal, Tomas Haake, Tommy Victor, Tony Campos, Top Albums, Top Ten Metal Albums of 2012, Torture, Trey Williams, woody weatherman, Year End Best Metal Album Lists, Yellow and Green, “Native Blood” Posted in Album Reviews, Reviews, Top 10 Lists | No Comments »
Friday, June 22nd, 2012

SickDrummer.com, Perseverance Holdings and our friends at Relapse Records are among the sponsors of the DEATH TO ALL TOUR which kicks off tonight in that most metal of cities San Francisco, CA. The tour celebrates the life and music of CHUCK SCHULDINER of DEATH. With DEATH and later CONTROL DENIED Chuck blazed an innovative trail in music and has been followed by nearly every death metal that followed in his shadow. This is not an exaggeration, but widely acknowledged and not just by his peers and loved ones, but by many bands both from yesterday and the present. Performing music from a career spanning set list with be an all-star group of Chuck’s former band mates and giants of death metal like GENE HOGLAN (Individual Thought Patterns/Symbolic), SEAN REINERT (Human), STEVE DIGIORGIO (Human/Individual Thought Patterns), Scott Clendenin (The Sound of Perseverance), PAUL MASVIDAL (Human), Shannon Hamm (The Sound of Perseverance), and Bobby Koelble (Symbolic). Handling vocal duties will be by Steffen Kummerer of OBSCURA and Charles Elliott of ABYSMAL DAWN/BEREFT who are both greatly influenced by Chuck. Some of the guest artists who will join certain shows are RICHARD CHRISTY of CHARRED WALLS OF THE DAMNED (ex-DEATH), Alex Skolnick and Chuck Billy of TESTAMENT, Paul Ryan of ORIGIN, Craig Locicero of FORBIDDEN, Travis Ryan of CATTLE DECAPITATION,Trevor Strnad and Ryan Knight of THE BLACK DAHLIA MURDER and Emil Werstler of DAATH/CHIMAIRA. GORGUTS will open most of the shows.
Not only will this be a celebration of Chuck’s life, but will help make a lasting impression for the future at every show. Each night is a benefit show to raise awareness for the Sweet Relief Musicians Fund which provides support to career musicians in need of support while facing illness, disability or age related issues. This cause hits especially close to home for Chuck’s family and friends and one he’d gladly support. Please come out to this rare opportunity to pay tribute to a legend, see an amazing collection of talent and hear some songs that haven’t been performed anywhere since DEATH was active as a band. Please come out to support this tour and support live music, especially underground bands.
DEATH TO ALL 2012 TOUR DATES:
6/22/2012 – The Regency Ballroom – San Francisco, CA
6/23/2012 – House of Blues – Los Angeles, CA
6/26/2012 – House of Blues – Chicago, IL
6/28/2012 – Irving Plaza – NYC, NY
6/30/2012 – The Beacham – Orlando, FL
*Postponed until 2013* 7/01/2012 – The Masquerade – Atlanta, GA
*Postponed until 2013* 7/03/2012 – House of Blues – Dallas, TX
Tags: abysmal dawn, alex skolnick, Bereft, cattle decapitation, Charles Elliott, Charred Walls Of The Damned, chimaira, chuck billy, chuck schuldiner, control denied, daath, death, emil werstler, forbidden, Gene Hoglan, Gorguts, individual thought patterns, Obscura, Origin, Paul Masvidal, Paul Ryan, Richard Christy, Sean Reinert, Steffen Kummerer, Steve DiGiorgio, symbolic, testament, the black dahlia murder, The Sound of Perseverance, Travis Ryan, Trevor Strnad Posted in The Bunker | No Comments »
Friday, March 30th, 2012
Metal Army caught up recently with Brian Lew, co-author of the excellent Murder In The Front Row book that we reviewed recently. The book is a visual document of the early days of Bay Area Thrash metal, which still has ripples being felt the world over today. In addition to the book, Brian is still in the photo pit at many shows today and blogs about his experiences. Although he doesn’t like to be thought of as a historian of the scene, he was cool enough to share some keen insights the book uncovered with us.

MAA: What led you and Harald Oimoen to come together an Murder In the Front Row?
BL:That comes with a bigger back story. Harold and I have known each other since we were teenagers. We met at these early shows when because we were both taking pictures .We always talked about putting a book together. The timing of the book kind of just happened naturally. Harald was talking to some people who suggested Bazillion Points. And I have a blog and unbeknownst to me Ian Christie had been reading my blog for a couple of years. Harald contacted Ian and he said ‘why don’t you do a collaboration with Brian?’ So Ian suggested that Harald and I do the book together and it was really Bazillion Points putting us together. Now we’ve known each other over thirty years, but we hadn’t really been in touch with each other that closely until we put this book together. Now we totally reconnected as brothers and friends because of this book.
MAA: Why did you pick up a camera the first time?
BL: For me this all started when I was in High School. At the time I was taking an elective class in photography. So I had access to a camera. At the same time I had started to go to all of these metal shows. Back then you didn’t need a photo pass, even for big for the big shows. You could go into an arena or an open air event with a big telephoto lens and just take pictures. But for the underground bands and the club shows it was a completely eye opening experience for me. You could go to these small shows, see some great bands, stand against the stage, not get crushed by 10,000 people and actually focus a camera and take these photos. As with everything surrounding this book, everything that happened was all luck. I had access to a camera, I was going to all these shows, I made friends with all of these bands. It all happened by luck.
 The authors hold up their life's work. This is the one book every metal head should own.
MAA:Why did you start the Whiplash fanzine back in 1982?
BL: For a lot of young kids may find it hard to comprehend, but the closest thing to a fanzine today is a blog. Back then if you were passionate about something you had to do a fanzine. Early on I was writing for early fanzines. I became friends with KJ Doughton who ran the original METALLICA fan club. He had a fanzine called Northwest Metal. After the whole tape trading/pen-pal scene I met KJ, I wound up writing a few things for his fanzine. At the same time I had met Ron Quintana with Metal Mania and I wrote for them. My friend Sam Kress and I were realizing we could do this too. That is where Whiplash started. We had the drive and felt like we could do it to. We wanted our own outlet to do this. To do a fanzine, it’s not like now where anyone who can type and post and has a computer can do a blog. We wanted to do it right. It wasn’t just a matter of typing up the text. There wasn’t even a word processing program back then. We had to take our handwritten notes and typed notes to a print shop and it was typeset. There wasn’t even a Kinko’s. It was a print shop and we would typeset it. We had to do the layouts and everything. What drove us into Whiplash was our passion for the scene and these bands. It was our life! For Sam Kress and I, it was our attempt a doing a fanzine and we were inspired by these other guys. Metal Mania was a huge influence on us because Ron Quintana was and still is a corner stone of this scene. At the same time there were all of these other fanzines from all over the world. I grew up in the suburbs and to get these fanzines was amazing. All these people from all over the world like and all over different parts of the US, we realized we were all a like. We were into the same bands and the same things. With the Internet now you can find out about something with a click of a button. It was almost like a religious experience like ‘Someone in Holland knows about EXODUS?’ It was a mind-blowing realization that these fans, these other people were like us all over the world.
 Paul Baloff epitomized the entire Bay Area Thrash scene. Photo by Brian Lew.
MAA: Some of your photos are some of the best known, iconic shots associated with these acts? How does that make you feel?
BL: To be honest I still don’t have my head around it. METALLICA is always the band people want to talk to me about since they are the biggest band of our generation. They are not just the biggest metal band, but they are like the LED ZEPPELIN of our generation. It still bugs me out to hear “Seek and Destroy” on the FM radio stations. For METALLICA, since they are the most in the public eye I’m still too close to it. A lot of this happened when we were just still kids. That was the other thing too, what Harald and I wanted to present in this book. Any other publisher besides Bazillion Points would wanted to do a book just about METALLICA. That would be the most mainstream, that would sell the most books or whatever. But to Bazillion Points credit, Ian Christie is a fan and he knows the history of metal. He realized there was a bigger story there. Harald and I wanted to make sure the one band we wanted to pay homage to was EXODUS. Not that we had anything against any other bands. Within the scene EXODUS were the heart and soul of the scene. But EXODOS and especially Paul Baloff was the personification of our entire scene. That whole East Bay, Ruthie’s Inn, Oakland, Berkeley thing. Violent, but with a sense of humor and attitude. I don’t know if outside of the Bay Area that people will appreciate that. Every local scene has a band that would be the main band. In our scene it was EXODUS, they always symbolized the old scene for me and Harald. We wanted to pay homage to that. That is where the title of the book came from, the line is from “Bonded By Blood”. Gary Holt was the first band person to sign on and wanted to contribute something. It was very important to me to have Gary involved. He was there from the beginning. It was also important to have ALEX SKOLNICK and ROBB FLYNN also contribute something which means a lot. Gary is like king of the scene, like the godfather so to speak. Alex and Robb grew up in the scene and they went on to their own success. Any other book would have wanted something written from a METALLICA member which would have been amazing, but we couldn’t do it with the schedule. On the other hand I’m happy to get these three guys involved because they don’t get the props. It’s really cool. The band that can trace their roots and DNA straight back to the original scene with their music is MACHINE HEAD because of VIO-LENCE and Robb Flynn. Robb and Phil Demmel met at Ruthie’s Inn. They were fans before they started playing, before they were friends. Someone like Robb Flynn started playing guitar because of the scene. It worked out really great to have three representatives of all three waves of the original scene.
 METALLICA's first show with Cliff Burton. Photo by Brian Lew
MAA: Was it important to you and Harald to present a warts and all view of those times?
BL: When we first started one of the first things we decided that we didn’t want a lot of writing in the book. Early on we did not want the book perceived as a history book. We did not want to be perceived as experts. A lot of books play out with people pumping up their own egos saying things like ‘I was was there and you weren’t there’ and we didn’t want that. We wanted it to be a time capsule. If you were there you would be reminded and if you weren’t you could get the vibe of it from the pictures. It was sort of like a yearbook and that is a general description of the vibe of the book. When you look at a HS yearbook the captions are there with the pictures and testimonials. And there of pics of people hanging out, but why are they there. So by just looking at the picture you can get a feel for the vibe. Bazillion Points got it right way, what we wanted to do. With the writing, because it was so spare the intros that Harald and I wrote are very personal. We both wear our hearts on our sleeve. That is a very sacred time for us. Sometimes you will see a photo and it was like ‘Whoa! There is Cliff Burton and he is hanging out with a bunch of anonymous dudes’. At the same time we made a point of trying to identify everybody in the photos. As often as possible if we knew someone in the photo we tried to name them. It goes back to that yearbook vibe. That was Harald’s idea and I hadn’t even thought about it. It goes back to that yearbook vibe. It’s been cool because people I haven’t talked to in years bought the book. And they showed their kids the book and their names are in the captions. It means a lot to them. We went for a more minimalist approach and it worked out.
MAA: Aside from bringing you and Harald together, what else made the Bazillion Points relationship the right one to put this book out?
BL: The Bazillion Points guys are passionate about it and above all they know music, not just metal. The the thing I loved when I first got to know Ian Christie, the thing I love about him the most is he’s a total freak for details. Ian, Harald and I were talking about hating when you get a book and the details are wrong. You just know there is wrong stuff in there like dates of shows, the venue is wrong, wrong captions and who is in the pictures. The minutiae stuff normal people don’t give a shit about, really matters to me and pisses me off when it’s wrong. Ian is the same way. If we didn’t know the show details for a photo, we just didn’t identify it. The just shows the attention to detail they have and it shows in every book they do.
 For those under a certain age, zines were the blogs of their day.
MAA: Everyone has opinions about the Big Four and EXODUS. Who are the truly underrated bands from the Bay in you opinion?
BL: That is hard for me to say to be honest because I am so close to it. Like EXODUS, not that they haven’t gotten their due, but hey way they influenced everyone in the scene. METALLICA moved up here. They became a local band, but they came from Los Angeles. EXODUS was 100%, East Bay born and bred. METALLICA was very important and they influenced bands globally. EXODUS influenced more of the local bands. From EXODUS you can draw a direct line to MACHINE HEAD. From EXODUS you get BLIND ILLUSION and Les Claypool went on from there and formed PRIMUS. I don’t think that line of influence is even known, that PRIMUS came from Bay Area Thrash. And Larry LaLonde was in POSSESSED and then went on to PRIMUS. And how many bands have PRIMUS influenced? It wasn’t like a contest to me. It wasn’t who’s best, who’s worst. To me, in my head it’s about the scene. To me the scene is bigger than any band in my mind.

MAA: Bay Area thrash is over 30 years old. What was the catalyst in the Bay Area that made this music happen?
BL: You can see some photographic evidence in “Murder”…that the “crossover” happened here at least two years before it happened anywhere else. I grew up in the burbs, about forty-five minutes away. When I started to hang out with guys like Ron Quintana who grew up in San Francisco, they were always more opened minded than us. They were listening to THE RAMONES in 1980. Growing up in the burbs, THE RAMONES were the last punk band I would have given a shit about. The original East Bay people and San Francisco people, they were listening to the punk stuff earlier on before the rest of the country. I think the Bay Area, maybe because of the “Summer of Love” for what ever reason, was more open, more liberal and maybe it’s a hippie influence. Like sort of a “live and let live” sort of thing. But I think people in the Bay were first to listen to other aggressive forms of music earlier than other areas were. In the early 80s, EXODUS listened to a ton of DEAD KENNEDY’S in 83-84. When SLAYER and MEGADETH first came up here for the first time and visited The Bay for the first time they were just playing local shows, there weren’t on tour. They would spend a weekend or five days up here and just play five shows and then just hang out here. They would become a local band for the week. I can’t speak for them, but that had to have influence on them. I’m sure they were listening to punk already too, but they saw a metal scene where there wasn’t that animosity towards punk. They heard EXODUS listening to that music and went back home with that. There was a little of that rivalry between the styles, sure. I was resistant to punk in the beginning because I just didn’t get it. There definitely was that rivalry between the metal heads and the punks like everywhere else. But I think that line broke down earlier here than it did other places. I remember going to see MOTORHEAD and seeing punks with the liberty spikes. And I was like ‘What the hell? What are they doing at MOTORHEAD?’ I didn’t get the correlation in my teenage brain, but punks were looking for fast and aggressive music and we were looking for fast and aggressive music. Once that light bulb went off in my head that was it. So in 1984 when I heard GBH and DISCHARGE it made total sense. Again, this may be getting a bit away from what Harald and I wanted out of this book. We don’t want to be thought of as experts about the scene at all. But in my own personal opinion I can say that might be the reason the Bay area scene developed the was it did. It was a little more open minded, a little bit earlier than other places.
(Special thanks to Brian Lew, Harald Oimoen and Bazillion Points. You can buy Murder In the Front Row here.)
by Keith (Keefy) Chachkes
Tags: alex skolnick, Bay Area Thrash, Bazillion Points Publishing, Berekely, BLIND ILLUSION, Brian Lew, Cliff Burton, crossover, D.R.I., DEAD KENNEDY’S, DEATH ANGEL as little kids, Debbie Abono, discharge, East Bay, El Duce, EXODUS, forbidden, Gary Holt, gbh, Harald Oimoen, hardcore, Heathen, Ian Christie, Larry LaLonde, Les Claypool, Megadeth, meta reviews by Keefy, metal history, Metallica, Motorhead, Murder In The Front Row:Shots From The Bay Area Thrash Metal Epicenter, Oakland, Paul Baloff, Possessed, Primus, punk, robb flynn, Ron Quintana, Ruthie's Inn, slayer, testament, The Ramones, The Stone, Thrash Metal, Vio-lence, Whiplash Zine, Wolfgang's Posted in Feature Interviews, Interviews | No Comments »
Monday, March 12th, 2012
Murder In The Front Row (Bazillion Points)

I write often on these (web) pages about my love and reverence for thrash metal. It is one of the few truly American genres of music, even if its roots and influences spawned elsewhere. I was already into hard rock and some of the more original metal bands as a little kid like BLACK SABBATH and JUDAS PRIEST when I first heard thrash metal. After discovering Ride the Lightening (thanks again to my bff Curtis) thrash is what I wanted to hear and play. This music quite literally changed the course of my life. Thirty years or so later many of the classic bands of that era still relevant today and kicking ass. With so many new young bands adopting this music as their own and calling it modern thrash or neo thrash, metalheads of all generations are looking back for nostalgia and the confirmation of history. That history might be best represented in the book Murder In the Front Row: Shots From The Bay Area Thrash Metal Epicenter (Bazillion Points) by Brian Lew and Harald Oimoen. Epicenter is the right word and both Lew and Oimoen grew up in the thick of the action in the early 80s. They weren’t just there when thrash metal was forming, they were living through this history through their friendships with many of the scenes biggest names and players. They happened to be in the right place and the right time and usually they had their cameras pointed at the stage or somewhere else equally important.
Some of the pictures are elegant, terrific examples of concert photography at its finest. Some shots became the fabric of the thrash culture with both Lew and Oimoen contributing to album art work and flyers in the early days. I would be that many people have seen their work and never knew the names associated with the pictures. Later on Lew would go on to do the Whiplash fanzine and magazines and albums and Oimoen too would contribute photography to a generation of bands before joining his pals in D.R.I. on the bass. Most of the best work in the book however is the “you are there” pics of the hijinks and hilarity of just a group of young people hanging out and making that great scene what is was. They captured a view of this world that few have seen or only heard about. You get to see not just METALLICA, but the earliest pictures of EXODUS, SLAYER, POSSESSED, TESTAMENT, DEATH ANGEL as little kids, FORBIDDEN, VIO-LENCE, MEGADETH, HEATHEN, PRIMUS and many others. You also got unexpected gems like famed manager and scene “mom” Debbie Abono chilling and drinking a forty rather casually, SLAYER’s first bay area show, tons of candid pictures of Cliff Burton, Paul Baloff in his many chaotic forms of metal awesomeness and Lars Ulrich making breakfast in his undies. Some of the most compelling shots are not perfect from a photography standpoint, but rip open time itself and put you in the moment, transporting you there. They were all sweating, drinking, fighting, moshing, slamming, surfing, stage diving at home or at places like Ruthie’s Inn, The Stone or Wolfgang’s among other places of lore. This isn’t some slick and foofy book made for the sake of taking money from die-hard fans. It was done with care and love and that fact is obvious on every gorgeous page. Also, despite the large amount of early METTALICA images in the book, their story is only part of the story of thrash so that is reflected. The book also features chapters lovingly written by the authors and Bay Area Thrash icons like Ron Quintana, GARY HOLT, ALEX SKOLNICK and ROBB FLYNN. Their own accounts of the times of their life serve the book tremendously by adding even more context and weight. This is a must have item not just for every fan of this music, but ought to be the one coffee table book that every metal head can be proud of having. You can buy the book from Bazillion points at their website.
GRADE: A
By Keith (Keefy) Chachkes
Tags: alex skolnick, Bay Area Thrash, Bazillion Points Publishing, Brian Lew, Cliff Burton, D.R.I., DEATH ANGEL as little kids, Debbie Abono, El Duce, EXODUS, forbidden, Gary Holt, Harald Oimoen, Heathen, Megadeth, meta reviews by Keefy, metal history, Metallica, Murder In The Front Row:Shots From The Bay Area Thrash Metal Epicenter, Paul Baloff, Possessed, Primus, robb flynn, Ron Quintana, Ruthie's Inn, slayer, testament, The Stone, Thrash Metal, Vio-lence, Whiplash Zine, Wolfgang's Posted in Reviews | No Comments »
Friday, September 10th, 2010
Tsongas Center, Lowell MA

My first love in all of metal is and will always be thrash metal. Even though I grew up on the roots of the metal genre like Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, Iron Maiden, Judas Priest and others like everyone my age, when I discovered thrash in the mid-80′s I found my musical home. The wave of euphoria that captured me back then still resonates now when I hear or see my favorite acts today doing what and I suspect many of you true believers feel the same way. I never got to see the “Clash of the Titans” tour twenty years ago, but there was no way I was missing the event of the summer this time around. Even though The American Carnage Tour was postponed for six months from the original date, my excitement for this show never wavered.
Having never been to this venue and knowing TESTAMENT was going to on very early I busted my friends chops so we could get there early. No sooner had we gotten just into the venue and our tickets scanned I heard the strains of intro music “For The Glory Of” a full fifteen minutes earlier than listed on the tickets. I raced down to the floor of the arena in time to catch “More Than Meets the Eye” the official first song of the night. The giant arena and impressive stage set up suited the band who have been on the road for more than two years now bringing thrash to the masses. The band ran all over the stage and up and over the drum riser the entire night. Using the allotted time to play a mix of classic hits and recent jams the band wasted no time with pleasantries, just bringing the thrash! “Dog Faced Gods” was next and it was great to see many old school heads in the place singing along to all the words. Another classic “Practice What You Preach” followed and the band was just on fire. Chuck Billy is one of finest front-men in all of metal, his ginormous form and ominous voice an ever imposing presence. He is a tremendous showman and a story teller, always whipping the crowd up like few I have seen. The entire band was excellent as usual, but it was great to see lead guitarist Alex Skolnick back with the band since he missed the spring tour with other commitments. He is one of the all-time great soloists and always delivers live. After the mosh-heavy madness of “Into The Pit” the band rounded out their brief time with some of the heavier material in their catalog. Playing the superbly thrashy “DNR” and the great singalong “3 Days in Darkness” were great to hear. I would have liked to see Dave Lombardo come to the stage and join them for those songs since he co-wrote them. Closing with the “Formation of Damnation” complete with its groovy- mosh pit worthy ending and yet another wall of death moment, TESTAMENT took a bow and left the stage all too soon for my tastes.
(more…)
Tags: alex skolnick, Black Sabbath, Chris Broderick, chuck billy, Clash of the Titans, Dave Lombardo, Dave Mustaine, David “Junior” Ellefson, Dean Guitars, double-neck “Flying V”, Endgame, great years in metal 1990, Iron Maiden, Jeff Hanneman, Judas Priest, Kerry King, Led Zeppelin, Marshall Amps, Megadeth, Rust In Piece, seasons in the abyss, Shawn Drover, slayer, testament, The American Carnage Tour, Thrash Metal, Tom Araya, world painted blood Posted in Live Show Reviews, Reviews | No Comments »
Tuesday, August 10th, 2010
TESTAMENT guitarist on “The Shred Epidemic.”
Alex Skolnick has penned a blog for GuitarPlayer.com on this growing epidemic: “I don’t consider myself a ‘shredder.’ I realize this is a statement that may be surprising to some, but it’s true. There are those who call me a shredder and I don’t take it as an insult. But I hope there’s more to me as a musician — otherwise I should just quit now.
“For one moment, let’s compare the role of a guitar player to that of a cook. ‘Shredding,’ that oft-used term to describe fast soloing, can be compared to its culinary equivalent. In other words, whether we’re talking about scales and modes or cabbage and chicken, both scenarios involve chopping items into very small bits. A less literal but more pragmatic comparison might be the following: ‘shredding’ within a piece of music is like adding any strong ingredient such as basil or hot pepper to a recipe. Used tastefully, it can enhance an existing dish with a touch of spice and intensity. But used unsparingly and egomaniacally, it can overpower the creation and ruin it entirely. Who wants to eat a dish where all you taste is one ingredient?
“I’ve been described as a shredder by radio hosts and fans. Knowing they mean it endearingly, I smile and take it with a proverbial grain of salt (that other potentially overpowering ingredient). But when labeled as such by websites, blogs, magazines, and those on-line music guides, especially the ones that have the gall to use the word ‘genius’ to describe themselves, it can be difficult to digest. Sometimes it causes heartburn.”
Read the entire blog at GuitarPlayer.com.
(via blabbermouth)
Tags: alex skolnick, guitar player, testament Posted in The Bunker | No Comments »
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