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The "Infliktour" supporting the debut album began on 30 May 2008, when Cavalera Conspiracy played its first official concert at the Electric Weekend festival in Madrid, Spain. Due to recording commitments with Gojira, Duplantier was unable to join Cavalera Conspiracy on tour. He was replaced by Johny Chow of [[Fireball Ministry]]. The group has performed in several festivals in Europe and North America, including [[Pinkpop Festival|Pinkpop]], [[Download Festival|Download]], [[Monsters of Rock]] and the [[Ozzfest]].
The "Infliktour" supporting the debut album began on 30 May 2008, when Cavalera Conspiracy played its first official concert at the Electric Weekend festival in Madrid, Spain. Due to recording commitments with Gojira, Duplantier was unable to join Cavalera Conspiracy on tour. He was replaced by Johny Chow of [[Fireball Ministry]]. The group has performed in several festivals in Europe and North America, including [[Pinkpop Festival|Pinkpop]], [[Download Festival|Download]], [[Monsters of Rock]] and the [[Ozzfest]].

On the 31st of January, 2010, they announced they're going back to the recording studio in April.


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 18:22, 6 February 2010

Cavalera Conspiracy

Cavalera Conspiracy is a heavy metal supergroup formed by Brazilian brothers Max Cavalera (vocals, guitar) and Igor Cavalera (drums), along with American guitarist Marc Rizzo and French bassist Joe Duplantier. The band originally formed in 2007 as Inflikted but changed its name for legal reasons. The group's creation marked the end of a 10-year feud between the Cavalera brothers, who founded Sepultura in the early 1980s. They remained together in that band until December 1996, when Igor, guitarist Andreas Kisser, and bassist Paulo Jr. suggested to Max that the band cancel its contract with his wife and manager Gloria, saying she paid more attention to him than the band. Disagreeing, Max decided to leave Sepultura.

Max then formed a new band, Soulfly, and his brother Igor recorded four studio albums with Sepultura before leaving the band in January 2006. In July 2006, Max received an unexpected call from his brother, and by the end of the conversation, Max had invited Igor to visit him in Phoenix, Arizona, to perform in a Soulfly show. Igor joined Soulfly in concert and performed two Sepultura songs. After the show, Max suggested they begin a new project, and Igor accepted. To complete the band, Max chose Soulfly guitarist Marc Rizzo and the Gojira frontman Joe Duplantier to play bass guitar. The group then recorded their debut album at Undercity Studios in Los Angeles with engineer and co-producer Logan Mader in July 2007. Named after the band's original moniker, Inflikted was released through Roadrunner Records on 25 March 2008.

On Inflikted, the group's musical style combines elements of Sepultura and the Cavaleras' hardcore punk roots, and the straightforward death metal fused with riffs and guitar solos of the thrash metal and groove metal that Sepultura created between Beneath the Remains (1989), Arise (1991) and Chaos A.D. (1993). According to Allmusic, the release of Inflikted "brings to fruition one of the most anticipated yet most improbable reunions in heavy metal history,"[1] while in the words of Joel McIver, "Those thousands praying for the Max-era Sepultura line-up to reform can get off their knees: the key reunion has happened."[2]

The "Infliktour" supporting the debut album began on 30 May 2008, when Cavalera Conspiracy played its first official concert at the Electric Weekend festival in Madrid, Spain. Due to recording commitments with Gojira, Duplantier was unable to join Cavalera Conspiracy on tour. He was replaced by Johny Chow of Fireball Ministry. The group has performed in several festivals in Europe and North America, including Pinkpop, Download, Monsters of Rock and the Ozzfest.

On the 31st of January, 2010, they announced they're going back to the recording studio in April.

History

Background

A man in his thirties, singing into a microphone while playing guitar.
Max stated that leaving Sepultura was the worst decision he had to make in his life.

On 16 August 1996 at 1:43 a.m., Max Cavalera's stepson Dana Wells, was killed in a car accident at the age of 21 in Phoenix, Arizona. At the time, Cavalera was the lead vocalist for Sepultura which was on tour promoting its sixth studio album, Roots, in England with Ozzy Osbourne. After hearing the news, Ozzy and his wife Sharon Osbourne hired a private plane to take Cavalera and his wife and manager, Gloria, back home.[3] After the funeral, Max returned his focus to Sepultura, and the band resumed its European tour. Then, following a sold-out show at London's Brixton Academy on December 16—later documented on the live album Under a Pale Grey Sky—drummer Igor Cavalera, guitarist Andreas Kisser, and bassist Paulo Jr. told Max they wanted to replace numerous members of the band's staff, including Gloria.[3] Andreas, Paulo and Igor proposed ending the contract with Gloria and hiring a new manager for Sepultura, saying that she paid more attention to Max than the band. The trio suggested that she could continue as personnel manager of Max but that someone else should manage the band. Gloria refused. Max felt betrayed by his mates, especially his brother.[4]

Max decided to leave Sepultura, as he felt that his band mates were "biting the hands that feed". In an interview with Revolver magazine's May 2008 issue, Max explained that Gloria had worked for Sepultura for two years without earning one dollar, just for the passion of the music. Disagreeing with the other Sepultura members, Max said, "If this is how it's going down, I'm out. I quit. I can't just put a mask on and backstab a bunch of people that trust me." Later, Max stated that "it was the worst decision he had to make in his life".[3]

His departure from Sepultura caused a 10-year feud between the Cavalera brothers. During this period, Max formed a new band, Soulfly, which has released six studio albums. Igor continued as Sepultura's drummer, appearing on the group's next four studio records before leaving in January 2006 to work on his DJ project, Mixhell, and to spend more time with his family.[3]

In July 2006, while Soulfly was on tour, Max received a call from his brother, and by the end of the conversation, Max had invited Igor to visit him in Phoenix for the tenth anniversary of D-Low, an annual memorial show for Dana.[5] At the concert, Igor joined Soulfly and performed two Sepultura songs, "Roots Bloody Roots" and "Attitude," for which Dana had written the lyrics.[3] In an interview with Chad Bowar for About.com, Max stated that performance was "the birth of Cavalera Conspiracy".[5] After the show, Max suggested they begin a new project after Soulfly finished touring. Max confessed to Bowar that he had lied to Igor when he said all the songs were ready when he had only finished one. He added, "It was one of those good lies. Everything rolled from there. What I like about the Conspiracy is that nothing is really planned. One thing leads to another. There's no pressure and it feels like a different project than anything I've done."[5]

Name

Before talking with his brother, Max wrote a song entitled "Inflikted," inspired by Sepultura's visit in 1992 to Indonesia where they saw a "crazy ritual". Describing what he saw, Max said, "There was self-inflicted pain, knives, blood, fire. It was insane. It stuck in my head." Max stated that "Inflikted" was supposed to go to the Soulfly's sixth studio album Conquer, but he wanted to do the song with Igor. For legal reasons, they could not use Inflikted as the band name.[6] According to Max, "A lot of people had used it before, so he had to come up with something else." When trying to find a name, he "blurted out" Cavalera Conspiracy, and Igor liked it. Max added, "I think I like it better than Inflikted. It has a ring to it that connects me and Igor as two brothers back together."[5]

Inflikted

A man playing a percussion instrument
In 2006, Igor left Sepultura to work on his DJ project, and to spend more time with his family

To complete the band, Max chose Soulfly guitarist Marc Rizzo and vocalist Joe Duplantier of Gojira. Rizzo was his choice because, according to Max, he and Rizzo "play together in Soulfly and musically we are like twin brothers". Max also said that he talked to Rizzo about going back to the roots of the mid-1980s thrash metal, which he did with Sepultura. Max continues, "Marc was completely into it and he did great. He surpassed what I asked him to do." Max stated that Duplantier was Gloria's idea, as he did not know him at all. He added, "We had no idea who the guy is, he's from a different continent and we don't speak French. I did know the Gojira CD. But I like the element of surprise and danger Joe brought."[5]

In July 2007, the band recorded their debut album at Undercity Studios in Los Angeles with engineer and co-producer Logan Mader[3] (who played in Soulfly for a year after leaving Machine Head in 1999)[5] and Lucas Banker of the Dirty Icon production team.[7] The album included guest appearances of bassist Rex Brown on the song "Ultra-Violent", and Max's stepson Ritchie Cavalera singing on "Dark Ark".[7] Inflikted, named after the band's original moniker, was released through Roadrunner Records on 25 March 2008.[1][6] Commercially, Inflikted did not have greater sales, reaching moderate positions on the charts. The album reached the top 30 on Austria, Finland and Germany, and the top 40 on Australia and Belgium. Having sold more than 9,000 copies during its first week, Inflikted peaked at number 72 on the Billboard 200 chart.[8]

The Infliktour supporting the debut album began on 30 May 2008, when Cavalera Conspiracy played its first official concert at the Electric Weekend festival in Madrid, Spain.[9] However, for this live performance and the subsequent European tour, the band had to replace Duplantier, who was unable to join Cavalera Conspiracy on the road as he was recording Gojira's fourth studio album, The Way of All Flesh. He was replaced by Johny Chow of Fireball Ministry.[10] Between June and mid-July 2008, the band performed in several festivals, including appearances at the Pinkpop Festival, Rock am Ring and Rock im Park, Download Festival,[11] Graspop Metal Meeting,[12] Eurockéennes,[13] among others.[14]

The band then returned to the United States for a North American tour from mid-July to August 2008, featuring headling dates with The Dillinger Escape Plan, Throwdown, Bury Your Dead, and Incite.[15] Cavalera Conspiracy also performed at the Monsters of Rock festival, which was held on July 26 at McMahon Stadium in Calgary, Canada,[16][17] and the one-day Ozzfest at the Pizza Hut Park on August 9.[18] During its tour, Cavalera Conspiracy performed on several dates with Judas Priest at the Priest Feast throughout Eastern Europe, but both bands cancelled their shows in Australia and New Zealand, which were scheduled for September 2008.[19] In a press release, promoters claimed the cancellation was due to "logistic and freight issues", but Max Cavalera wrote on the band's website that they were "banned" from performing in New Zealand and Australia because someone—whom he did not specify—"deemed" them an "inappropriate" band and "too inflammatory".[20]

Due to commitments of Max with Soulfly and Igor with Mixhell, Cavalera Conspiracy was put on hold until August 2009, when the band regrouped to touring in Europe and Japan,[21] including shows at the Ankkarock, Summer Sonic, Pukkelpop, and Trutnov festivals, and two September 2009 dates in Austria and Russia.[22]

Style, lyrics and reception

Revolver's Jon Wiederhorn, pointed out that although the songs were arranged and recorded quickly, Inflikted sounds neither hastily executed nor incomplete. There's a connection between Max's riffing and Igor's drumming; a chemistry that comes only from musicians who learned to play together and honed their craft through years of studio sessions and live shows. Wiederhorn described Inflikted as an "explosive flashback to the remorseless thrash and primal groove-metal Sepultura created between 1991's Arise and 1993's Chaos A.D. [...] The songs are raw and simple, yet graced with syncopated drum runs, experimental guitar flourishes, and sonic frills inspired by Max's love of reggae and Igor's fascination with DJ culture. The vocals are primal and savage, emboldened by a sense of urgency that's equal parts desperation, rage, and celebration."[3]

On Inflikted, Max was the group's songwriter and lyricist. At the time of the album recording, he was watching the same four movies almost every day: Apocalypse Now, City of God, A Clockwork Orange, and La Haine. Max revealed to Revolver that wanted to do something different, and it gave him a lot of ideas. He said, "What came out of this album was more than enough to fill the void of not working together for so long. It's pretty intense. From the first moment, it's war."[23]

Allmusic's Eduardo Rivadavia, said that release of Inflikted "brings to fruition one of the most anticipated yet most improbable reunions in heavy metal history." Rivadavia expressed that Duplantier "generally just keeps a low sonic profile and his nose out of trouble, but Rizzo's contributions really can't be overstated. [...] His otherworldly soloing and inventive melodic lines often serve as the creative catalysts responsible for the most inspired moments."[1] Keith Carman of Exclaim! praised the group's musicianship on Inflikted, saying that "it wouldn't be a stretch to proclaim that Inflikted, with its detuned grunt, bombastic lyrics and hyperactive drumming, is the album that should have succeeded Sepultura's widely-acclaimed 1996 powerhouse Roots."[23] Like the former, Adrien Begrand of PopMatters wrote enthusiastically for both Cavalera Conspiracy and Inflikted.[24]

Sure, it's not a Sepultura reunion, but having Max and Igor performing on record for the first time in a dozen years is as close as we'll ever get, and not only does Cavalera Conspiracy's Inflikted revisit the post-thrash sounds of 1993's Chaos A.D., but it manages to outshine anything Sepultura has put out in the last dozen years. Rounded out by Soulfly lead guitarist Marc Rizzo and, most impressively, Gojira frontman Joe Duplantier on bass and rhythm guitar, the band is as solid a metal supergroup as you'll ever come across, and the album's eleven tracks benefit hugely from the chemistry between the four musicians.

Joel McIver of Record Collector wrote: "Inflikted is gobsmackingly violent. The Cavaleras don’t hit their best form often (Sepultura’s work has been generic since 1995, and Soulfly are always patchy) but, perhaps fuelled by the expectations, they’ve hit it here. The 11 tracks combine hardcore punk (without the crappy production) and thrash metal (without the clichés) to produce an insanely fast record loaded with references to their best work: Sepultura’s Beneath the Remains and Arise. It’s too modern to sound close to those records, of course, but in terms of attitude and riff weight it matches them beat-for-beat and riff-for-riff. Those thousands praying for the Max-era Sepultura line-up to reform can get off their knees: the key reunion has happened."[2]

Members

Discography

References

  1. ^ a b c Rivadavia, Eduardo. "Inflikted review". Allmusic. Retrieved 30 July 2009.
  2. ^ a b McIver, Joel (April 2008). "Sepultura siblings' triumphant return". Record Collector (348): 88. ISSN 0261-250X.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Wiederhorn, Jon (May 2008). "Brothers in arms". Revolver (68): 82–88. ISSN 1527-408X.
  4. ^ Miyazawa, Pablo (7 March 2008). "Teorias da conspiração". Rolling Stone Brasil (in Portuguese). Retrieved 9 November 2009. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ a b c d e f Bowar, Chad (27 March 2008). "Max Cavalera interview". About.com. Retrieved 30 July 2009.
  6. ^ a b Monger, James Christopher. "Cavalera Conspiracy biography". Allmusic. Retrieved 30 July 2009.
  7. ^ a b Harris, Chris (1 February 2008). "Soilent Green inspired by cartoon squids". MTV News. Retrieved 30 July 2009.
  8. ^ Harris, Chris (4 April 2008). "Max Cavalera says 'he would like to see' a Sepultura reunion". MTV News. Retrieved 9 November 2009.
  9. ^ Setti, Daniel (31 May 2008). "Cavalera Conspiracy abre triunfalmente turnê mundial na Espanha". Globo.com (in Portuguese). Retrieved 6 November 2009. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  10. ^ "Cavalera Conspiracy taps Fireball Ministry bassist for European tour". Brave Words & Bloody Knuckles. 1 June 2008. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  11. ^ "Max Cavalera plays Sepultura greatest hits show at Download". NME. 15 June 2008. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
  12. ^ "Kiss zorgt voor vuurwerk op Graspop". Het Laatste Nieuws (in Dutch). 29 June 2008. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  13. ^ Martin, Nicolas (6 July 2008). "Cavalera Conspiracy: les deux frères plus soudés que jamais". L'essentiel (in French). Retrieved 7 November 2009. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  14. ^ "Cavalera Conspiracy's tour itinerary". Brave Words & Bloody Knuckles. 1 June 2008. Retrieved 7 November 2009.
  15. ^ "Cavalera Conspiracy announce first North American tour". Brave Words & Bloody Knuckles. 6 May 2008. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  16. ^ Harris, Chris (15 April 2008). "Ozzy Osbourne announces Monsters of Rock headlining gig". MTV News. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  17. ^ "These Monsters really do rock". Canada.com. 27 July 2008. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  18. ^ Maternowski, Todd (10 August 2008). "Ozzfest review". Pegasus News. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  19. ^ "Judas Priest turn up volume at Vector Arena". The New Zealand Herald. 26 June 2008. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
  20. ^ "Judas Priest cancels Auckland show". Stuff.co.nz. 3 August 2008. Retrieved 25 October 2009.
  21. ^ Zahn, James (11 September 2009). "Talking music and horror with Max Cavalera". Fangoria. Retrieved 25 October 2009. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  22. ^ "Cavalera Conspiracy 2009 tour dates announced". Brave Words & Bloody Knuckles. 27 June 2009. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
  23. ^ a b Carman, Keith (May 2008). "Cavalera Conspiracy's Max Cavalera". Exclaim!. Retrieved 18 November 2009.
  24. ^ Begrand, Adrien (26 August 2008). "Inflikted review". PopMatters. Retrieved 19 November 2009.