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American Head Charge, the Minneapolis-based industrial
metal band, which had its genesis nine years ago when
Martin Cock (then known as Cameron Heacock) and Chad
Hanks (now known as Mr. H.C. Banks III) first crossed
paths in a Minnesota rehab facility, has up to now
been known primarily for the radically dysfunctional
behavior of the band members.
We were definitely out of control on our first tour,
Ozzfest 2001, Mr. Banks admits. It wasn t enough
to just play our music; we also had to fire shotguns
on stage and throw pigheads at the crowd. Chalk it
up to a desperate bid for attention. The Head Charge
rap sheet which also includes getting into bloody
brawls with their fans, smashing equipment they couldn t
afford to replace, reacquainting themselves with hard
drugs and occasionally being locked up by the enraged
fuzz has served to obscure the fact that these free
spirits play the shit out of their instruments and
make brutally powerful music of uncommon distinction.
But this distorted (though hardly inaccurate) perception
of the band will likely change with the release of
The Feeding, a seething mass of avant metal, nightmare
grindcore and moshpit rock that alternates between
pummeling ferocity and passages of all-out grandeur.
It s a stunning display of primally extreme music that s
guaranteed to scare the hell out of your parents
The album had its genesis during the limbo in which
AHC found themselves after touring intensively behind
their acclaimed 2001 debut, The War of Art two years
of prolonged exile from the road and ongoing internal
tumult that found several bandmembers in a virtual
death match with their personal demons. Three guys
in the band jumped into the chemical deep end and two
of them went back to rehab, guitarist Bryan Ottoson
ruefully recounts. It got so bad I was nearly checked
into a psychiatric unit for suicidal behavior.
Inevitably, their struggles begat rage, and that could ve
paralyzed them. But what sets Head Charge apart is
an almost alchemical ability to transform their rage
at the world, each other and (perhaps most of all)
themselves into dark art. Hence, the worse their
situation got, the more inspired they became, as singer
Cock and bassist/guitarist Mr. Banks now collaborating
with Ottoson and keyboard manipulator Justin Fowler
-- stirred up a cauldron of new songs and brought them
to seething life with drummer Christopher Emery. While
the band s old label turned a deaf ear to their bold
sonic forays, emerging producer Greg Fidelman, who d
engineered the Rick Rubin-produced first album, embraced
the band s new material. The band managed to get out
of their deal, and sign with Nitrus/DRT. Rick Rubin
was gracious enough to let us leave American Recordings
without hassle. It could have been a litigious nightmare,
adds Mr. Banks.
With Fidelman at the helm, Head Charge spent four
months on the album, and it evidences an unlikely,
previously dormant self-discipline. Tellingly, whereas
the sprawling The War of Art ran well over an hour,
as if they could barely control their wild-eyed impulses,
The Feeding clocks in at a dense 41 minutes, the compression
serving to intensify their fury. The opener and first
single Loyalty sets the record s brutal tone, as
Cock spews recriminations with frightful conviction
while also revealing a scarred humanity in his natural
voice, a captivating tenor that sounds like the troubled
emanations of some fallen angel. Dirty would be an
infectious, balls-out rocker were it not for Cock s
Satanic howling, which transforms it into the soundtrack
to an exorcism. Walk Away delivers a hyper-melodic,
gloriously anthemic chorus, then proceeds to hack it
to pieces in characteristically deranged fashion. Easy
listening this ain t. And yet the closing To Be Me
achieves something close to serenity, like the eerie
calm after a thunderstorm or a nuclear holocaust. It s
almost hopeful, Mr. Banks acknowledges, sounding like
he can hardly believe it himself.
There s a line in Walk Away that perfectly encapsulates
this tormented but inspired band: We re dirty and
hungry and bitter and tired and broke and bruised and
battered, Cock shrieks in agony and defiance, adding,
with all due irony, so happy. Although Cock is the
band s primary lyricist, it was Mr. Banks who came
up with the words (he admits, quite unnecessarily,
that he was in a bad state at the time). Mr. Banks
recited the line his partner, who knew right away that
it would drop right into the hole he was looking to
fill in the song s crucial bridge section. For a while,
Mr. Banks says, that s what we wanted to call the
album with no spaces between the words. It just says
it all.
Also in the cosmic coincidence department is the filigreed,
intertwined guitar figure that opens and closes the
boldly provocative Ridiculed, The Feeding s roiling
centerpiece. The part is actually two guitars, and
the parts were conjured up simultaneously by Ottoson
and Cock in two separate parts of the studio, out
of hearing of each other. At the same moment, each
of them entered the main room eager to play their new
creations to the other band members and Fidelman. Only
then did everyone realize that the two parts magically
interlocked. Divine intervention? With this crew, that s
highly unlikely unless God has a truly twisted sense
of humor (and with AHC there s plenty of circumstantial
evidence to support that hypothesis).
Mr. Banks describes his band s dynamic as a constant
battle between Order and Chaos, and that s an apt
description of the corrosive yet savagely beautiful
sonic onslaught AHC delivers on The Feeding. In the
end, Order prevails if just barely which is a good
thing for American Head Charge and their ever-growing
legion of fans. If Chaos had come out on top, this
dangerously self-destructive but supremely talented
band would ve surely imploded, leaving nothing but
wrecked gear, lost souls and mangled body parts. Instead,
with all their limbs still attached and pulsing with
the endorphins of catharsis, AHC will spend 2005 on
the road and this time, hopefully, not the road to
perdition. |
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