Eyehategod

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Eyehategod
Origin New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Genre(s) Sludge Metal
Doom Metal
Years active 1988–present (On and off)
Label(s) Century Media
Emetic Records
Associated
acts
Outlaw Order
Arson Anthem
Down
Crowbar
The Mystick Krewe of Clearlight
Corrosion of Conformity
Superjoint Ritual
Anal Cunt
Cripple Bastards
13
Website www.eyehategod.com (Currently redirects to www.myspace.com/eyehategod)
Members
Mike Williams
Jimmy Bower
Brian Patton
Joey LaCaze
Gary Mader
Former members
Steve Dale
Mark Schultz
Vince LeBlanc
Daniel Nick
Charles Alexander
Joey Delatte
Chris Hilliard

Eyehategod (also abbreviated and referred to as EHG) is an American Sludge metal band from New Orleans who formed in 1988. They have become one of the most important bands to emerge from the NOLA metal scene. Throughout the years, their core line-up has remained the same, with the exception of the bass guitarist, a slot which has seen several come and go.

Eyehategod have noted The Melvins, Black Flag, and Black Sabbath as key influences to their sound. Heavy, detuned, and bluesy guitar riffs dominate the band's sound. They are combined with walls of feedback and tortured vocals to create a harsh misanthropic vibe. Their records had been released consistently by Century Media Records though the band's most recent output is on Emetic Records, not including the numerous splits released under various labels. The band is friends with Anal Cunt and performed with A.C. for the first show after Seth Putnam came out of his coma.

Contents

Very little is known about early Eyehategod. Jimmy Bower and Joey LaCaze founded the band in 1988, and they recruited Mike Williams, Brian Patton and Steve Dale. The band then recorded the demo Lack of Almost Everything in 1990 and sent it out to various labels. They eventually got signed to a small French label Intellectual Convulsion, and released their first album, In the Name of Suffering. In the Name of Suffering was a far more primitive and raw sound than later releases (as it was recorded very cheaply and the band members were fairly inexperienced at the time), and had a more hardcore feel to it. Very few copies of the album were printed on the original label before they promptly dissolved, leaving Eyehategod again to shop for labels. They were soon picked up by Century Media however, and Century promptly re-released In the Name of Suffering as it is known today.

Eyehategod then went on to record Take as Needed for Pain in 1993 with their next bassist, Mark Schultz. The album was recorded at Studio 13, the thirteenth floor of an abandoned department store on an old canal street in New Orleans. The band got together daily during this period to put down tracks for the album. At the time, Mike Williams was homeless (having been thrown out by an ex-girlfriend) and was living in an abandoned, flea-infested room above a strip club just a few minutes away from the studio. The sound of Take as Needed for Pain was very much more what the members had intended than In the Name of Suffering, and it shows a cleaner, more distinct sound, with better defined riffs. The southern rock, blues and doom influences are also more distinctly felt on this album. After the release of the album, the band toured extensively with acts such as Buzzov*en, White Zombie and Corrosion of Conformity. After touring, the band members briefly spread out in different directions. Mike Williams busied himself contributing to Metal Maniacs magazine. Jimmy Bower drummed on Crowbar's Broken Glass as well as Down's debut album, NOLA. Brian Patton recorded Soilent Green's debut album, Pussysoul.

The band had been recording several demos, which were released on various 7" records and splits on various labels, but finally in 1996 settled down to record a full length record, with Pepper Keenan of Corrosion of Conformity as producer, and new bassist Vince LeBlanc. At the time, Mike Williams was living in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn in New York City, and so had to travel between there and New Orleans frequently for the recording sessions. The recording sessions were infamously chaotic, and involved the studio owner reportedly calling Century to ask if the band were insane, and threatening to kick them out. This particular incident occurred after Mike Williams had attempted to record the sound of smashing glass for the introduction to the album, by smashing a bottle on the floor of the studio. In the process he slashed his hand open badly and bled all over the studio floor (this recording did make it to the record as the introduction to the first track, "My Name is God (I Hate You)"). One of the band members then apparently smeared the words "Hell" and "Death to Pigs" in Mike's blood. Brian Patton and Joey LaCaze then flew out to San Francisco to mix the album. This album was far more chaotic than their previous, but still retained the distinct southern, bluesy feel, distancing it from In the Name of Suffering. The band then embarked on a US tour in the spring of 1997 to support the album, supporting White Zombie and Pantera, bringing their music to a far wider audience, raising the profile of sludge metal, and becoming (in)famous as one of its founding acts.

Eyehategod then went through a period of internal disputes, and went on unofficial hiatus as its members scattered again to record and tour with their various side-projects; namely Soilent Green, Corrosion of Conformity and Crowbar. Eventually, in 2000, the band reconvened (again with a new bassist, this time Daniel Nick) to compile their various Take as Needed for Pain and Dopesick era singles, 7 inches and split records into one record, Southern Discomfort. This reconvention gave them the impetus to knuckle down and record another album, and that album was 2000's Confederacy of Ruined Lives. The album was a much more polished, sober affair, and so sounded distinctly more like a sequel to Take as Needed for Pain than Dopesick. After its release, the band then toured extensively (embarking on a world tour for the first time, with dates in Europe and Japan), while its members still juggled their various side-projects. During this time, Down recorded their second album, and Bower formed the mostly instrumental band, The Mystick Krewe of Clearlight, as well as Soilent Green releasing their third album. Mike Williams also founded Outlaw Order and Arson Anthem. During all this activity, Eyehategod found time to compile and release their live album 10 Years of Abuse (and Still Broke) (which was mainly released due to a contractual obligation with Century Media), and record and release yet more split records and 7 inches. With the release of their live album, the band were free of their contract with Century, and chose to sign to Emetic Records (with their fifth and current bassist, Gary Mader) for the release of their 2005 stop-gap compilation album, Preaching the "End-Time" Message, much in the vein of Southern Discomfort, but this time with some unreleased studio tracks.

Following the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, singer Mike Williams and his now ex-girlfriend Alicia Morgan (a member of sludgecore band 13) were arrested in Morgan City, Louisiana on a narcotics charge. Williams spent 91 days in the Morgan City Jail, and kicked his legendary heroin habit. With the help of his Eyehategod bandmates and supporters such as Phil Anselmo, Williams was released from jail on December 2, 2005. The band played a set at the 2006 Mardi Gras festival, the first since the disaster. Emetic Records released a various artists tribute album to Eyehategod on March 20, 2007, titled For the Sick. The band are playing a few shows in the American South in May, and are confirmed to play at the Chaos in Tejas festival in Texas.

Date of Release Title Label Type
1990 Lack of Almost Everything Self-Released Demo
December 1, 1992 In the Name of Suffering Century Media Studio album
November 22, 1993 Take as Needed for Pain Century Media Studio album
1994 Whore/Untitled split with 13 Ax/ction Records Split EP
1994 "Ruptured Heart Theory" Bovine Records Single
1995 Untitled split with 13 Slap-A-Ham Records Split EP
April 2, 1996 Dopesick Century Media Studio album
1997 In These Black Days: A Tribute to Black Sabbath Vol. 1: Split with Anal Cunt Hydra Head Records Split EP
January 25, 2000 Southern Discomfort Century Media Compilation album
September 19, 2000 Confederacy of Ruined Lives Century Media Studio album
May 29, 2001 10 Years of Abuse (and Still Broke) Century Media Compilation album
2002 They Lie to Hide the Truth/The Age of Bootcamp split with Soilent Green Incision Records Split EP
2004 I Am the Gestapo/Self-Zeroing split with Cripple Bastards Southern Lord Records Split EP
2004 Live in Tokyo Press Pause Media/Cassettes DVD
2004 99 Miles of Bad Road 2+2=5 EP
May 27, 2005 Preaching the "End-Time" Message Emetic Records Compilation album

The band also appear on several compilations, namely the Gummo soundtrack, Cry Now, Cry Later series of 7 inches, and appear on the Melvins tribute album We Reach: The Music of the Melvins covering "Easy As It Was".

While Jimmy Bower was busy playing drums for Down, the other four members of Eyehategod formed a side-project called Outlaw Order (abbreviated to OO%). The band released a limited edition 7" EP in 2003 called Legalize Crime, which has since been re-released on CD with a bonus live track and is available through Eyehategod's webstore. The criminal theme is apparently because at the time of formation, all 5 of the members were on probation, and have consistently been in trouble with the law. Marc Shultz is currently serving a prison sentence and so has been replaced by Justin Grisoli. The band have recorded their 13 track debut full-length and will release it sometime soon, they are "waiting for a label worth a fuck".

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