Slayer
пятница, 12 августа 2011 г.
Slayer Interview
Mar 10 2011
Slayer is embarking on the Jagermeister Fall Music Tour with fellow thrash titans Megadeth and Anthrax. They just released three DVDs, and coming up next month is the Vinyl Conflict collections of all the Slayer albums on vinyl. I spoke to guitarist Kerry King about those releases, the tour, their recent “Big 4” gigs in Europe with Metallica, Megadeth and Anthrax along with other topics.
Chad Bowar: What have you been doing during your touring break?
Kerry King: Relaxing
How has Tom's neck been holding up on tour after his surgery?
He doesn't headbang anymore, so he's pretty golden.
You've been playing the Seasons In The Abyss album in its entirety. Do you prefer that to a greatest hits type set?
I don't like being married to an entire album, because it manipulates what you can do in the set. When we're only playing an hour and ten minutes on this tour, and the album takes up 45, it basically leaves 5 or 6 songs.
Anthrax is the opening band on this tour. What do you think of Joey Belladonna's return to the group once again?
I think that's the era that more people know from Anthrax. It leans to being more credible. It's kind of like Dave Ellefson coming back to Megadeth, and they are playing Rust In Peace. I think it makes more sense than still having James LoMenzo, even though LoMenzo is an old friend of mine.
Is there anyplace left in the world that you still want to play live that you haven't been to?
I'm sure there's more than one, but the one I'd like to go to, and I really don't have a reason why, is South Africa. A number of bands have, but we never have made it.
Now that you're older, do you spend more time taking in the sights of some of the places you go to on tour?
If we have a day off I might venture out. Some places, which might be the only time I ever go, I'll look for something to get into. When we go to Greece there's always a lot of cool historical stuff to see in Athens. The one time we went to Cairo to do a video we knew we would probably never get back there, so we tried to take in what we can.
How did the idea for the Vinyl Conflict release come about?
Good question. I would imagine it's record company people trying to figure out how to make record companies mean something in a world where record companies don't mean much and are in decline all the time. It's a cool idea. I'm looking forward to having one myself.
It seems like vinyl is making a comeback the past few years.
A lot of kids didn't have the chance to go through vinyl like people from my era did. For them it's a new means of getting cool art and things like picture discs. It's a new medium for a younger generation. People are really getting into audiophile stuff, and this is geared towards them, too.
The sound quality of albums is better than a compressed MP3 file.
Yes, and I never knew that until my wife's audiophile dad pointed it out to me. I said, “there is something to this!” He played me an album and a CD and the disc sounded more compressed.
Do you own a turntable?
No, it will just be in my house for decoration. I don't really have a big stereo system set up. As much as I am from the era of 8 tracks, cassettes and albums, I have graduated to the iPod. All you need is an iPod dock and you're rocking.
What has been the response to the three live DVDs that were released recently?
I remember trying to get the Live Intrusion one put out well over five years ago. I was thinking about it one day, and how it had never been released on DVD. It took a long time for that to happen for some reason, but it's out, and I'm happy about it. I'm sure a lot of people that don't have VHS players anymore are stoked about it.
Do you have a timetable for the next Slayer studio album?
Not really, because our record has been out for a year, and we've only been touring for about three months. There is a gigantic future of touring for us on this record. I wouldn't be surprised if we were touring through next summer.
Do you write songs on the road, or do you wait until you're at home in album writing mode?
Generally the latter. But on my down time I can be working on some stuff. Not so much at home, but at gigs between the time you get there and the time you go on. We're usually at the gig by four o'clock and we don't go on until 9:45, so if I don't have any press I'm there stroking my dick for five hours.
How did the “Big 4” shows compare to your expectations?
I had a great time. I thought it was going to be a very cool thing for the fans, but when it was all done, it was really cool for me, too.
Was there a ton of extra press attention for the tour?
The first show especially, but there was press at every show. Everywhere you turned someone wanted to talk to you about it. It's a good thing. It shows that it was important.
The simulcast of one of the shows in movie theaters was a cool idea.
Yeah, my wife had to go see that, because she wasn't with me at that show. I heard right away that it was cool from friends and fans that went and saw it.
When I interviewed Joey from Anthrax, he thought there was about a 70 percent chance a U.S. “Big 4” tour will happen at some point. Do you agree?
Yeah, I have no problem with those odds. The only thing I think it would depend on is getting all the bands logistically able to do it. As far as I know everybody is totally into it, from Metallica to Megadeth to Anthrax to us. I totally want to bring it to the U.S., South America, Australia, Japan, Western Europe, anywhere it hasn't been. I think it was that important of a tour where people should be able to be a part of it rather than just see it at the cinema.
It would be cool to add some other classic thrash bands like Exodus and Testament and make it a day long event.
That would be awesome, but it would be even more people to figure out how to logistically do it.
Slayer will soon be celebrating your 30th anniversary. Could you have ever imagined you'd be still together and have this level of success?
Not at all. When you're younger, 40 sounds old. And when you're 40, 50 years old sounds old. I don't feel 50. I don't feel 20, but I certainly don't feel 50.
Will Slayer still be playing on your 40th anniversary?
I hope not. (laughs) At my age now, it doesn't sound appealing, but 10 years from now, who knows? Maybe we'll still feel like a bunch of kids.
What have been the high and low points in your 30 years in the band?
There haven't been too many low points. There have been a lot of high points. Everytime you get one, you don't think there's going to be a higher one, and then something cooler comes along. It's kind of like wait and see what's going to happen, because you never know where we're going to be in a year.
Biography
Slayer is a thrash metal band from US, formed in 1981. The band was founded by guitarists Jeff Hanneman and Kerry King. The band was credited as one of the “Big Four” thrash metal bands, along with Metallica, Anthrax, and Megadeth.
Slayer’s musical traits involve fast tremolo picking, guitar solos, double bass drumming, and shouting vocals. The band’s lyrics and album art, which cover topics such as death, deviants, suicide, genocide, necrophilia, insanity, Nazism, religion, Satanism, serial killers, and warfare have generated album bans, delays, lawsuits and strong criticism from religious groups and the general public. Slayer is best known for speaking through perspective without being necessarily sympathetic to the cause of their inspiration.
Since their debut record in 1983, the band has released two live albums, one cover album, one box set, three DVDs, one VHS, two EPs, and eleven studio albums, four of which have received gold certification in the United States. The band has received three Grammy nominations, winning one in 2007 for the song “Eyes Of The Insane”, and one in 2008 for the song “Final Six”. They have headlined music festivals worldwide, including Unholy Alliance and Ozzfest.
Slayer was formed in 1981 in Huntington Park, Los Angeles, California. The Band was formed by guitarists Jeff Hanneman and Kerry King when they met at a tryout for a local band. Tom Araya soon joined on bass and vocals, and drummer Dave Lombardo joined last later in 1982. They played in a style reminiscent of early Exodus, influenced heavily by punk acts Minor Threat, Stooges and Heavy Metal bands Venom and Judas Priest.
“Black Magic”, the heaviest, darkest, and most evil song at the time (according to some), was written in February, 1983, and marked Slayer’s definite venture into thrash metal. They secured a spot on the compilation appeareance “Metal Massacre III” in 1983, contributing the speed metal song “Aggressive Perfector”. They also recorded two demos in 1983, and became a popular live act in the Los Angeles area. (In 1983, Bob Gourley filled in for Dave for one gig. He later appeared in Dark Angel (US).) Their debut LP, Show No Mercy, was recorded in November, 1983.)
A live EP was recorded in the studio in front of 50 of their closest friends in January, 1984, and after that “Show No Mercy” was released. The “Haunting the Chapel” and “Live Undead” EPs followed.
After 1985’s “Hell Awaits”, Slayer were signed to Rick Rubin’s Def Jam record label, better known for acts like Run DMC. This led to three studio albums, including the brutal “Reign in Blood”, as well as a 1991 live double CD, “Decade Of Aggression”.
Dave Lombardo left the band in 1987 for several weeks, and was replaced for a few live gigs by Tony Scaglione (Whiplash (US)), and then again left in 1992. Finally, in 1994, Paul Bostaph from Forbidden was brought in, and three more albums were recorded.
Then, in 2001, Bostaph left to join Systematic, and Lombardo, who had been in Grip Inc. and Fantomas rejoined the band.
Interesting facts:
It’s official that Slayer is the most covered metal band in the world aside from Metallica and Iron Maiden.
Tom Araya (born Tomas Enrique Araya June 6, 1961 in Vina del Mar, Chile. He has provided guest vocals to recordings by other artists, including “Iron Gland” from Alice in Chains’ album Dirt, and “Terrorist” from Soulfly’s album Primitive. His brother is John Araya (Bloodcum (US), Thine Eyes Bleed)
Kerry King recorded a guitar solo for “No Sleep Til’ Brooklyn” by the popular hip-hop/rock group Beastie Boys.
Tom Araya’s brother John (Bloodcum (US), Thine Eyes Bleed) worked as an sound engineer for Slayer in their early days.
According the book of Jarek Szubrycht (Lux Occulta) “Bez litosci. Prawdziwa historia zespo?u Slayer”, Greg Hall was asked to play with Slayer after Tony Scaglione left the band in January 1987. It never happens because Lombardo returned to the band.
Gene Hoglan, the legendary drummer who has played in bands such as Dark Angel (US), Strapping Young Lad and Death, used to be a Slayer lights man and roadie on the Show No Mercy tour, and was asked to be Dave Lombardo’s drum tech on the Haunting North America tour (‘84), but knocked it back to pursue his own music career. He even did backup vocals on the album Show No Mercy (the song Evil Has No Boundaries).
Birth Dates:
Tom Araya (06 June 1961 Vina del Mar, Chile)
Jeff Hannemann (31 January 1964 Oakland, CA)
Kerry King (03 June 1964 Los Angeles, CA)
Dave Lombardo (16 February 1965 Havana, Cuba)
Paul Bostaph (26 March 1964 Newark, CA)+
Rumor has it the band was originally known as Dragonslayer, after the 1981 movie of the same name. However, when King was asked “How did you come up with the name Dragonslayer?” King responded “We never did; it’s a myth to this day.”
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