It’s not always recognized in today’s “I want it all now” world, but
patience is a virtue. And Huntington Beach, California rockers Avenged
Sevenfold are being rewarded for remembering that golden rule. After
releasing two highly successful albums on an indie label (Sounding The
Seventh Trumpet and Waking The Fallen), the quintet is set to unleash
its major label debut, City Of Evil, on Warner Bros. Records. City Of
Evil, co-produced by Avenged Sevenfold, reunites the group with producer
Mudrock (Waking The Fall).
“We’re at the point now where we’ve come into our own,” vocalist M.
Shadows says of the ambitious City Of Evil, an 11-song collection that
gives a middle finger to the idea of categorization, bridging the sonic
guitar assault of Iron Maiden with the frenetic pace of Bad Religion and
the musicianship of Dream Theater. “In Southern California you’re
really brought up in the whole punk world. At the same time, we were
growing up listening to Pantera, Megadeath, Metallica and Slayer
records,” Shadows recalls. “So then you think, ‘I want to play in that
kind of band, but I want to play in this kind of band.’ Then you pass
that point and all of a sudden you’re just writing music and it comes
out naturally. But that’s what happens cause of all the different
influences we have. And we’re definitely not afraid to put anything in
our songs if we think it calls for it.”
Yes, Avenged Sevenfold can rock, as the band recently did at a sold-out
show at Hollywood’s Music Box Theater, where they turned the intensity
of the new tunes up from 11 to about a 20, but these are musicians as
well. However, as the group evidenced during the orchestral interlude in
“The Wicked End,” a perfect metal moment live complemented by a boys
choir and 14-piece string section, Avenged Sevenfold, in the tradition
of Zeppelin, Queen, and Guns ‘N’ Roses’ “November Rain,” meld their
intensity with a musical daring their hard rock forefathers would be
proud of.
Those looking primarily for a cathartic release live, as so many of the
kids moshing their brains out at the Music Box were, need only turn to
the ferocious energy of “Bat Country,” a song written for Hunter S.
Thompson about the band’s own adventures in Vegas, and the Maiden-esque
guitar and Shadows’ perfect caterwaul of the line “city of evil” (where
the album’s title stems from) in the opening “Beast & The Harlot.”
And while Avenged, whose influences range from Maiden, Pantera, and Guns
‘N’ Roses (Shadows calls Use Your Illusions 1 and 2 his favorite albums
of all time) to Billy Joel, Queen, and Elvis Costello, may not be your
typical hard rock band musically, they can hang with the best of them.
Epic nights of late night fun have followed this band around the
country, and it’s something all of the members freely acknowledge. They
like to party, and they like to drink: and plenty. Additionally, and
fitting with their chosen lifestyle, the members of Avenged could write
the A7X equivalent of the Zagut guide to strip clubs in America.
“Strippers and bands have this bond,” Vengeance says. “They totally do.
The band walks in and it’s like special treatment,” Shadows adds. So,
what makes a good strip club? “I like strip clubs that are out of
control,” he says, citing Vegas, New York and New Orleans (“It’s fucking
Bourbon Street. It better be crazy,” he says) as home to some of the
better establishments they’ve frequented.
Reflecting the complex personalities though that can lead a hard rock
band to throw in a beautiful Flamenco guitar solo near the end of the
new album’s savage “Sidewinder,” Avenged Sevenfold is far from just a
party band, and it shows on City Of Evil. The album is bursting with
displays of their virtuoso musicianship, from the intricate tempo
changes of “Burn It Down” to the tender acoustic intro into a Spaghetti
Western mixed with classical melody that provides the calm before the
storm in the savage “Strength Of The World.”
The group has learned a great deal having spent the last three summers
as part of the Warped tour. Shadows got some valuable advice from Fat
Mike of NOFX, besides how to play Texas Hold ‘Em. “He’s like, ‘You know
what, if you do this stuff long enough, you gotta fucking have fun. If
you can’t have fun on tour then you’ll never last,’” Shadows recalls. “I
think that’s a really important thing.”
Additionally, the quintet, which started on a Warped side stage,
graduated to the second stage, and then made the move last year to main
stage, a spot they’ll be returning to this year, learned a lot by the
gradual progression. “We’ve seen bands that we started out with that got
a little bit of a head start or an early break and they’re done. We’ve
learned so much more doing it from the ground up. We’ve got so many more
stories than other bands will have; so many more good times, bad times.
It has made us stronger as a band too,” Vengeance says.
Hard work is what also accounts for the band’s fiercely loyal following,
according to Shadows. “It’s rewarding ‘cause you know you have this
really solid core fan base that has been through a lot and they believe
in the band now as more than a band, it’s like a lifestyle,” he says.
“If anything happens we don’t ever fall, it’s like they’re holding us
up. We’re not on the radio, but everywhere we go we always have this
rabid group of fans. We would’ve never had that if we had some lucky
break and just jumped to the point we’re at now. I hope it gradually
keeps going up. The slower you go the more I think it builds underneath
you and we’re grateful for that. They can’t just get pulled out from
underneath us. There’s nothing you can grab to pull; it’s fans that love
that band. So, it’s very gratifying to be at this place now.”
biography avenget sevenfold
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