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#Sepultura

Local thrash guitarist soars with Soulfly in hometown birthday show

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Local thrash guitarist soars with Soulfly in hometown birthday show

There’s little doubt that Max Cavalera is regarded within the heavy metal community as being at the forefront of Brazilian metal. And just in case anyone would think his co-founding of Sepultura with his brother Igor wouldn’t justify that on its own, Cavalera has graced the industry with other outfits such as Soulfly, Cavalera Conspiracy, Killer Be Killed and Nailbomb.

Yet somehow, Cavalera may have been upstaged as far as “the story” goes when Soulfly returned Feb. 3 to the Rock Box. And he certainly didn’t seem to mind.

With Cavalera recently recruiting San Antonio / San Marcos native Mike DeLeon as Soulfly’s touring guitarist for the next nine weeks, the show marked the latter’s homecoming — on his birthday no less.

A member of Pantera vocalist Philip H. Anselmo’s solo band Philip H. Anselmo & The Illegals as well as guitarist in San Antonio death-metal band Flesh Hoarder, DeLeon had the time of his life in one of his first gigs with Soulfly. And that was long before Cavalera introduced the band prior to encores “Eye For An Eye” and “Jumpdafuckup.”

Cavalera had the packed Rock Box serenade DeLeon with “Happy Birthday” and chants of “Metal Mike, Metal Mike!” as the man of the hour headbanged his mane. Then, after pointing to DeLeon and saying, “This guy is the fucking best,” Cavalera inexplicably twice called him Mike DeLeTron, although he may have been trying to make a play on words for the Soulfly tribe by calling him DeLeTribe.

Another possibility is that Cavalera confused DeLeon with the man to Cavalera’s immediate right — bassist Mike Leon.

That was a joke, folks.

But seriously, the former Havok bass player and Texas guitarist differ in first and last names by only two letters.

Soulfly thrashed and “destroyed this fucking place,” as is Cavalera’s wont. Also accompanied by his son Zyon on drums (click here to watch ATM’s interview with Max and his two sons from Soulfly’s 2016 tour kickoff at the now-defunct Korova), the band emphasized Soulfly’s first four albums dating back to the 1998 self-titled debut with several Totem tracks mixed in.

That included “Filth Upon Filth,” which blended with older tunes “Prophecy,” “Fire,” “Porrada” and “Bleed,” all of which can be viewed below.

It wouldn’t be a Cavalera show regardless of the band name on stage without some Sepultura, so the fired-up frontman pulled out “Refuse/Resist” before offering up the lone Nailbomb tune of the night, both of which can be viewed below.

The nine weeks are sure to fly by for DeLeon, a man who last fall was actually filling in for Zakk Wylde at the initial rehearsals for the reunited Pantera and informed this writer of that fact at a Steve Vai concert Oct. 9, roughly three months before it became national news.

And while Cavalera has made it clear that it’s been his intent to have revolving members on tour in Soulfly, DeLeon may in fact wake up several weeks from now and wonder if the whole journey has been a dream.

If that’s the case, he’ll have some photos and videos to look back on and perhaps one day tell his kids he didn’t just share the stage with the Ayatollah of Rock N’ Rolla for nine weeks. He’ll be able to say he shredded it and killed it.

And flew the flag for South Texas in the process.

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Cavalera brothers revisit their roots times two

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Cavalera brothers revisit their roots times two

Max and Igor Cavalera have been coming to San Antonio and South Texas basically since the beginning of their seminal band Sepultura. In other words, longer than they once went without speaking to one another. And that was for a full decade.

The brothers who make up the first family of Brazilian heavy metal carved separate paths during those tumultuous years. Singer and rhythm guitarist Max, of course, went on to other bands and projects such as Cavalera Conspiracy, Soulfly, Nailbomb and Killer Be Killed. Igor remained in Sepultura through 2006 before departing. And as Max revealed here exclusively to Alamo True Metal six years ago during Soulfly’s United States tour kickoff at The Korova, the tragedy that struck the Abbott brothers of Pantera influenced him to bury the hatchet with his own sibling.

Nowadays, Max and Igor are using their pent-up energy more constructively — by making music together once again. But in 2022, they’ve gone back to their roots, as was the case last Thursday as Cavalera Conspiracy performed Sepultura’s 1989 and 1991 albums Beneath the Remains and Arise, respectively, to an enthusiastic and appreciative crowd of 700 reported as sold out at the Rock Box.

From the moment Max Cavalera bellowed, “We’re going old school on your ass,” the heads began banging and the bodies started surfing across the barrier following warmup acts Cephalic Carnage from Denver, Healing Magic of Phoenix and local thrashers Metalriser (see 53-photo slideshow and ATM video footage of each artist below).

Venue security was quickly put to work with every word of encouragement uttered by Max Cavalera, particularly when he ordered the crowd to “Destroy this fucking place!” Metalheads didn’t need to be told twice as the pits swirled virtually throughout the entirety of both albums. Watch bonus ATM Facebook Live footage of “Sarcastic Existence” and “Slaves of Pain” from the former record and “Arise” and “Dead Embryonic Cells” from the latter.

With former Havok bassist Mike Leon (who’s also in Soulfly) and lead guitarist Daniel Gonzalez providing the riffage, Cavalera Conspiracy / classic Sepultura, if you will, took names, took notice and conquered the Rock Box as expected. Following “Orgasmatron,” they even broke into a snippet of Slayer’s “Raining Blood” (ATM footage below). At one point, Max Cavalera couldn’t resist offering a bit of “Territory” from one of Sepultura’s albums not scheduled to be played — Chaos A.D. — though that seemed to make the complete exclusion of Sepultura’s most popular song “Roots Bloody Roots” that much more conspicuous by its absence.

The opening acts provided their own brand of metal. Whether it was everyone’s cup of tea would’ve been in the eyes and ears of the beholders.

Cephalic Carnage is a veteran group that has been around nearly as long (1992) as Sepultura. Fronted by lone remaining original member Lenzig Leal, who’s a grindcore version mostly in look and somewhat in sound of AC/DC’s Brian Johnson, the quintet displayed its humor among the distortion and carnage of its style by dedicating a song to masturbaters in the audience and having the crowd chant “Weed” and “Beer.” Metalcore and grindcore don’t do much for this writer, but Cephalic Carnage did win points by paying homage on “Sleeprace” (ATM footage below) to San Antonio’s own S.A. Slayer (for those reading this outside the Alamo City and Texas, Google ‘em). You can also watch them on “Piecemaker” and below after donning a few silly masks on finale “Black Metal Sabbath.”

Healing Magic, a singer/guitarist and drummer duo from Arizona, headbanged its way through a noisy yet appreciative and energetic set that included “Solar Valley” and “Leaving Ashes” (ATM footage below)

But it was veteran (yet still young) local thrashers Metalriser that stole the show among the three openers. Continuing to be led by founder, singer and rhythm guitarist Joel Estrada, Metalriser is always a treat to see in action not only because they’re one of the heaviest bands on the local scene, but because they bring the angst and energy every time out. Case in point is provided on "Hell’s Gates” and below on finale “D.I.Y.” Bassist Nick Gamboa has provided a shot in the arm to Estrada’s somewhat frequent lineup changes for the past three-plus years, while guitarist Mario Prz Jr. and new drummer Brandon Mascheo helped amp up the level of thrash more intensely than most openers do, but one that was worthy of setting the stage for the Cavaleras.

All in all, seeing the Cavaleras in action together never gets old and only reinforces their influence on many of metal’s bands from across the globe. To say that the crowd went home happy, sweaty and some maybe even a bit battered and bruised would be to underscore just how good of a time was had by all. Max Cavalera would likely be the first to tell you that’s what heavy metal is all about.

Well done, first family of Brazilian heavy metal.

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