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Thrash metal

Wings of thrash soar throughout Aztec with Overkill & Exhorder

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Wings of thrash soar throughout Aztec with Overkill & Exhorder

Flagbearers of East Coast thrash metal that they are, Overkill has set itself apart for 35 years from virtually every band of any metal genre in one respect: hiatuses. More appropriately, lack thereof.  

While many artists who’ve been servicing metalheads over that span have taken multi-year breaks consisting of at least five years between albums, Overkill has set the unthinkable standard of releasing records every 1-3 years. In doing so, the brethren from New Jersey have managed to maintain original members in vocalist Bobby “Blitz” Ellsworth and bassist D.D. Verni, helping to explain recent album titles such as The Grinding Wheel and Ironbound (which Blitz spoke of exclusively with ATM aboard the 70000 Tons of Metal cruises in 2017 and 2012) as a testament to their fortitude and longevity. 

As if releasing 19 original studio albums (plus a covers effort and a few live offerings) between 1985-2019 isn’t enough, Overkill has done so while resisting temptation of dropping a greatest-hits record. Then again, maybe that’s because Overkill defines the true measure of the underground scene even in their 50s and 60s given that arguably their biggest “hit” is a profanity-laced cover by The Subhumans (not to be confused with The Subhumans coming to the Rock Box on April 18) or that their second biggest – “Hello From the Gutter” – gained notoriety only because Beavis & Butt-head made fun of it (heh heh, heh heh!).

Overkill, like many artists, spent the majority of its career without the benefit of radio or MTV mainstream airplay. But they’ve survived and persevered thanks to the undying dedication of Ellsworth and Verni plus longtime veteran lead guitarist Dave Linsk and rhythm guitarist Derek “Skull” Tailer. Add former Shadows Fall drummer Jason Bittner to the mix, and you have the unified team that brought its act, along with New Orleans’ Exhorder and Hydraform, to the Aztec Theatre last Wednesday night in support of 19th album The Wings of War. 

As evidenced by ATM’s footage below, plus Facebook Live clips of “Bring Me the Night,” new track “Distortion” and “Necroshine” here, Overkill was on fire once again. Playing, almost appropriately, to a lower-bowl filled/balcony-closed Aztec of approximately 600 fans (per a venue staffer), Overkill represented 10 of those 19 albums with thrash-pounding fury for those lucky enough to witness them, which included the band’s longtime drum tech Eddy Garcia of El Paso’s Pissing Razors. 

To their credit, Overkill switched things up a bit from recent tours in which their habit was to open with the first song off their newest album before diving head first into “Rotten to the Core” off 1985 debut Feel the Fire. This time, after upholding the first part of that tradition with punishing new opener “Last Man Standing,” Ellsworth and Co. blitzed into “Electric Rattlesnake” off 2012’s The Electric Age, saving “Rotten to the Core” for one of the encores (watch below). Likewise, “Elimination”, normally relegated toward the end, was the fourth song of the night before vastly underrated “Bring Me the Night” unleashed Overkill’s power surge. 

But speaking of one of Overkill’s best songs, off one of the genre’s most classic albums in 1987’s Taking Over, the group inexplicably left all tunes from that record off the menu. It would’ve been a blast to hear “Powersurge” or “Electro-Violence,” and at the very least “Wrecking Crew,” which has served as Overkill’s mantra for so long, it continued to brand one of the T-shirts at the merch booth (see 43-photo slideshow below). It also would’ve been great to hear something from 1988 follow-up Under the Influence besides “Hello From the Gutter” such as “Shred,” “Never Say Never” or “Drunken Wisdom.”

Bittner’s prowess on the drums rarely let up both with his arms and feet that pounded the double-bass unit. Somewhat ironically, one of his other former Shadows Fall mates – guitarist Jon Donais – has plied his trade for several years in the other most well-known East Coast thrash outfit — Anthrax. 

Exhorder, meanwhile, delivered the goods as the middle band on the bill. Hailing from New Orleans, vocalist Kyle Thomas was joined by former Superjoint Ritual and Phil Anselmo solo-band guitarist Marzi Montazeri plus bassist Jason VieBrooks and drummer Sasha Horn. Watch ATM’s Facebook Live footage of “Slaughter in The Vatican” and “Cadence of the Dirge” below, which was dedicated in part to drummer Reed Mullin of Corrosion Of Conformity, who died Jan. 27.

The pedigree of Exhorder’s members is just as credible and fierce as their music, serving notice they’re a force to be reckoned with. Thomas and Montazeri, for starters, comprise half of the Houston-based outfit Heavy As Texas, while Horn was part of Forbidden’s final lineup that parted ways in 2012. Not to be outdone, Montazeri was in Superjoint with Anselmo as well as Phil Anselmo & The Illegals, and his own solo record featured the vocals of Tim “Ripper” Owens, all of which Montazeri discussed in 2017 with yours truly (listen here).

The debate often rages: if there was a Big 5, which band would join Metallica, Slayer, Megadeth and Anthrax — Overkill, Exodus, Testament or Death Angel? Such a conversation is virtually pointless, other than to have fun arguing with your friends, given that each of those bands is deserving and there isn’t a Big 5, period. And there’s no denying they each perform gigs as if their lives depend on it. Because their way of making a living actually does. Three of those so-called secondary thrash bands hail from the West Coast. The mighty Overkill represents the Garden State. And for one night in the Alamo City, that became the Lone Star State because Blitz said so (watch below). And he’s been doing so for 35 years.

That’s a big (5) enough cause to rally around.

SETLIST: Last Man Standing, Electric Rattlesnake, Hello From the Gutter, Elimination, Bring Me the Night, Distortion, Necroshine, Under One, Bastard Nation, Mean Green Killing Machine, Feel the Fire, Ironbound. Encores: Coma, Rotten to the Core, Fuck You, Welcome to the Garden State/Fuck You ending

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Dirty rotten moshin' good time with D.R.I. & Co. at Bonds

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Dirty rotten moshin' good time with D.R.I. & Co. at Bonds

The anticpation was building, the bodies were banging, the pits began swirling. And the band was simply doing some last-minute tuning.

Welcome to a D.R.I. show. Where the music doesn’t have to officially begin before things get crazy.

So naturally, the calm before the storm last Friday night at Bonds 007 Rock Bar resulted in another tornado-like fury of pits and thrash as the three-decade-plus veterans from Houston made their mark again in the Alamo City. By show’s end, one burly patron was bleeding senselessly, holding a white towel to his shut right eye while streams poured down the left side of his bald head. In between, a sold-out crowd of roughly 300 on Bonds’ upper level enjoyed an intense night of Dirty Rotten Imbeciles, Wartorn and locals Metalriser and Isolaydead (see 74-photo slideshow below).

Although scheduled openers Cheesegrater Masturbation had to drop off the bill due to illness, there was plenty of pent-up energy to go around. A no-camera policy instilled by the headliners led to yours truly graciously being the only photographic access granted (though no video of D.R.I. songs was permitted). And neither the bands nor fans disappointed.

All four groups incited a wave of whirling dervishes, with one young male fan landing some unwanted exclusive dancing with a bouncer after bringing in his own can of beer. Aside from that, it was business as usual for the artists. D.R.I. vocalist Kurt Brecht on two occasions remarked how “this place has come a long way,” citing the band’s storied history with San Antonio, and Bonds in particular, since the late ‘80s. Favorites such as “Do the Dream,” “Who Am I (D.R.I.),” “Acid Rain,” “Slumlord,” “Dead in a Ditch” and 1989 MTV video “Suit and Tie Guy” warmed the cockles of fans’ hearts as only D.R.I. could muster.

The founding duo of guitarist Spike Cassidy and Brecht teamed with longtime drummer Rob Rampy, who’s on his second stint with the group, and bassist Greg Orr who replaced Harald Oimoen in 2017, on other classics such as “Abduction",” “I Don’t Need Society” and the once Slayer-covered “Violent Pacification.” And even though it’s been 24 years since D.R.I. has put out a full-length album, they also played tracks from 2016 EP But wait. . . There’s More including “Against Me,” “Anonymity” and “As Seen On TV” — which total 6 1/2 minutes of thrash combined.

Wartorn, the lone national group on the program out of Wisconsin, brought its politically infused Iconic Nightmare to Bonds for the first time (setlist in slideshow). Though the band’s intensity was no less than the rest, the crowd by that point was mainly salivating over the impending arrival of D.R.I. after the brutality brought on by locals Metalriser and Isolaydead.

Metalriser, led by founder and lone remaining original member in singer/rhythm guitarist Joel Estrada, lit up Bonds with several tracks from Demise including “D.I.Y.” (ATM footage below). The band also amazed with a stirring rendition of Metallica’s “Disposable Heroes” to close its set as Estrada has surrounded himself with a new lineup of lead guitarist Mario Prz Jr., bassist Nick Gamboa and drummer David Sanchez Jr.

Isolaydead, featuring singer/bassist Ricky Vela, guitarist Louis Cervantes and drummer Alex Carillo, got things started at 9:15 p.m. Although Isolaydead is certainly no stranger to Bonds, this night’s set spawned a rare display of moshing — in large part due to the removal of the bench tables to make way for D.R.I.’s infestation of stage diving and circular action — to tracks such as “No Blood Left” that undoubtedly made the local trio eager to set up on Bonds’ stage once again sooner than later.

As always, the professionalism and generosity of bar owners Dirce and John Eguia coupled with their staff made for another night to remember within the cozy walls of Bonds. Keep checking the Concert Listings of AlamoTrueMetal.com for more upcoming shows there and within surrounding areas as San Antonio readies to ring in 2020 with resounding beats of metal.

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Thrash titans Slayer take tour mates and S.A. to hell one last time

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Thrash titans Slayer take tour mates and S.A. to hell one last time

The kings of thrash metal took their South Texas fans on one allegedly final speed-of-light ride into hell. And they brought along a few friends capable of assuming the role atop the throne. 

Having announced a farewell tour eight months ago, Slayer finally made it back to the Alamo City on Wednesday night, unleashing a 90-minute sayonara to an estimated 3,000 fans at Freeman Coliseum. Spreading hate worldwide, condemning religion and musically commentating on topics such as terrorism from the perpetrators' perspective since 1983, Slayer has been responsible for breaking necks along its 35-year path of destruction -- even causing its singer/bassist, Texas resident Tom Araya, to cease headbanging several years ago.

But that didn't stop a swell of moshers, stationary-yet-appreciative onlookers and those witnessing the hellacious thrashers for the first (and final) time from being a part of history. 

Not to be outdone were Lamb Of God, Anthrax, Testament and the only non-American band on the bill Napalm Death from Birmingham, England. But as Lamb Of God frontman D. Randall Blythe appropriately announced, the reason everyone was there was Slaaaaaayer!

Playing nine years and a day to their Rockstar Energy Drink Mayhem Festival performance next door at the AT&T Center, Araya and his original remaining cohort, guitarist Kerry King, were again accompanied by longtime Slayer drummer Paul Bostaph and veteran shredder Gary Holt. With an inferno being lit even prior to the curtain dropping, Slayer burst onstage with the title track to its latest and final album, 2015's Repentless, as it has been doing since its release. 

Araya was adorned in a "Slayer vs. Slayer" shirt from the infamous Nov. 30, 1984, show here at The Villa Fontana. That evening marked the only time Slayer and San Antonio's version -- which included Riot bassist Don Van Stavern, guitarist Art Villareal and Machine Head drummer Dave McClain and was named S.A. Slayer -- shared a stage, when the "real" Slayer was touring in support of debut EP Haunting the Chapel.

Along with the usual staples "South of Heaven," "Chemical Warfare," "Disciple" and "Dead Skin Mask" (see setlist and 191-photo slideshow below), Slayer dusted off a pair of tracks it hadn't played in several years: "Payback" and "Dittohead." As one who goes nuts for rarely played tracks from an artist witnessed live many times, those two were arguably the highlights of the night.

While Araya's screams throughout several classics are bone-chilling, his barking of "Payback's a bitch . . . motherfucker!" is just as menacing. Especially considering the track closes God Hates Us All, which was released the morning of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, something ATM spoke about with Bostaph as Holt listened during the 2015 Mayhem Fest (watch here).

"Dittohead," meanwhile, was effectively the track that began Slayer's less-popular mid-'90s era, though it's just as punishing. Lasting less than two minutes with Araya tearing through King's lyrics such as "This fucking country's lost its grip, sub-conscious hold begins to slip, the scales of justice tend to tip," it's no wonder Slayer does thrash like no other. Even the lines, "Here in 1994, things no different than before, violence is what we adore" can hardly be argued are as relevant today, if not moreso.

Slayer has never compromised its sound or style, or catered to the critics -- reasons just as viable for its devoted following worldwide as for the music. Wednesday's show was another example, as the band eschewed the common encore and simply tore all the way through its 19-song performance that included flames shooting out in tune to the riffs, such as on "War Ensemble" (ATM footage below).

Perhaps a harbinger of things to come in all genres of music, two sign-language interpreters have been present throughout the tour. Perched atop their own mini-stage, they mouthed lyrics and expressed their air guitar, drums, and even cello intro on Anthrax's "Be All End All." Lindsay Richards-Cross could be seen screaming out to one of Araya's patented chills, the ending to "Mandatory Suicide," as flames burst around the band (see slideshow).

But it was Blythe who acknowledged the interpreters better, and more, than any other artist. Not only was he the only one to do so, the Lamb Of God frontman dedicated "Walk With Me in Hell" to them, pointing to Richards-Cross and saying, "This one's for you, sister!" Blythe added: "They made 'Good Morning America' the last time we did this shit," referring to a viral video from the tour's June 20 stop at the Austin 360 Amphitheater. Toward the song's end, the dreadlocked Blythe leaped off the stage and ran to the interpreters' set-up, joining his female friend in rocking out, her face lighting up in smiles as they did so.

Along with guitarists Willie Adler and Mark Morton and bassist John Campbell, Lamb Of God again was supporting Slayer at the Coliseum as it did in 2006. This time, they were joined on drums by Art Cruz, who's filling in for Chris Adler on this leg. Cruz was here in the spring behind the kit when Prong co-headlined Paper Tiger with Helmet (coverage here). The VIP section of fans flashed their horns at Willie Adler on occasion (see slideshow) as they rocked to brooding opener "Omerta" plus "Now You've Got Something to Die For" and "512."

Blythe wrote "512" about "a little shitty place I spent some time in" as he said on the band's live version of the track from Bonnaroo in reference to his Czech Republic jail sentence in 2013 for a manslaughter case stemming from a 2010 concert there. He dedicated it Wednesday to Anthrax, as Blythe was also the only frontman on the bill to ask for applause for each of the other openers (ATM footage here). Lamb Of God also dedicated closer "Redneck" to the late drummer Vinnie Paul of Pantera and Hellyeah because "he loved this song."

Speaking of Anthrax . . .

Vocalist Joey Belladonna, lead guitarist Jon Donais, rhythm guitarist Scott Ian and bassist Frank Bello were accompanied by their own fill-in drummer in Testament's Gene Hoglan, who pulled back-to-back double duty. Hoglan presumably was filling in for Charlie Benante due to his bouts with Carpel Tunnel Syndrome, which Benante addressed with ATM during the 2015 River City Rockfest (watch here). He also spoke with ATM for AXS.com during last year's 70000 Tons of Metal cruise (watch here) prior to coverage of the bands' two sets (here).

Though Anthrax was the middle band on this bill, it would've been nice to see them break out a different song or two. While "Caught in a Mosh" and "Indians" (ATM footage here) are mandatory at every gig, it's perfectly OK if they give covers "Got the Time" and "Antisocial" a rest for good in favor of others from its vast catalog, especially when they only have time for seven tunes. Anthrax, too, gave an ode to Paul and his late brother "Dimebag" Darrell Abbott by opening and ending the show with the "Cowboys From Hell" riff. No words were necessary. The riff spoke volumes.

But it would be nice if Ian stopped asking the crowd if it likes or loves thrash metal, given that he's been asking that for the better part of the past five years. Less talking more stomping from the band's co-founding rhythm guitarist would suffice. Regardless, Anthrax is always a treat to see live. Let's just hope they mix up the setlist next go-round (watch ATM's 2017 interview with Belladonna and Donais here and listen to a 2016 chat with Bello here).

Testament, the second band on the bill, had the largest mosh pits (see slideshow) thanks to staples "Practice What You Preach" and "The New Order." Like Anthrax, they performed seven songs, but Testament found time to dust one off like Anthrax should have, as Testament brought back 1994's "Dog-faced Gods." Vocalist Chuck Billy, guitarists Alex Skolnick and Eric Peterson, bassist Steve DiGiorgio and Hoglan always deliver no matter how much time they're allotted. Skolnick, in fact, will be delivering again in a different fashion when he brings his jazz fusion outfit, the Alex Skolnick Trio, to Fitzgerald's Bar on Thursday, Oct. 18 (tickets here). Peterson, meanwhile, is getting set for a Sept. 21 release of Dominion from his death-metal band Dragonlord.

Though Napalm Death had the unenviable task of a 4:30 set in the middle of the week, those who didn't have to work or simply blew it off caught the England deathcore band in fine form. Playing tracks such as "Standardization" and ending with an 80-second cover by The Dead Kennedys, Napalm Death picked up where Behemoth had left off on the first leg of this tour.

But in the end, it was all about Slayer's finality.

Though there was no mention, and none was expected, of original drummer Dave Lombardo -- who had several contentious back-and-forth dealings in his various stints but was no less of a contributor -- San Antonians will get their chance to see him with Suicidal Tendencies at the sixth annual River City Rockfest on Saturday, Sept. 22, outside the AT&T Center (tickets here). Original guitarist and chief songwriter Jeff Hanneman, however, received his tribute on closer "Angel of Death" with his name and "1964-2013" emblazoned on the logo in the shape of his favorite beer Heineken.

"Thank you. Thank you very much. We're going to miss you guys," Araya closed somewhat emotionally as he quickly walked off the stage. King took the opposite approach, triumphantly raising his arms and howling like a bear as Holt and Bostaph continued to toss out souvenirs. 

Considering Slayer's merch didn't make reference to this being a farewell tour, there's always hope for another visit. Or, more likely, some will end up joining the thrashiest band alive in the mosh pits of the abyss one day. Such folks can only hope they crank up the music down there, too.

SLAYER SETLIST: Repentless, Blood Red, Disciple, Mandatory Suicide, Hate Worldwide, War Ensemble, Jihad, When the Stillness Comes, Postmortem, Black Magic, Payback, Seasons in the Abyss, Dittohead, Dead Skin Mask, Hell Awaits, South of Heaven, Raining Blood, Chemical Warfare, Angel of Death

LAMB OF GOD SETLIST: Omerta, Ruin, Walk With Me In Hell, Now You've Got Something to Die For, 512, Engage the Fear Machine, Blacken the Cursed Sun, Laid to Rest, Redneck

ANTHRAX SETLIST: Cowboys From Hell riff/Caught in a Mosh, Got the Time, Madhouse, Be All End All, Evil Twin, Antisocial, Indians/Cowboys From Hell riff

TESTAMENT SETLIST: Brotherhood of the Snake, Rise Up, Dog-faced Gods, The Preacher, Practice What You Preach, The New Order, Over the Wall

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