
Cephalic Carnage
Cephalic Carnage is an American deathgrind band formed in Denver, Colorado in 1992. The band comprises vocalist Leonard Leal, guitarists Steve Goldberg and Brian Hopp, drummer John Merryman and bassist Nick Schendzielos. Cephalic Carnage has released six studio albums and toured in North America, Europe and Japan.
Cephalic Carnage
Denver, Colorado, U.S.
1992–present
Relapse, Headfucker
- Leonard Leal
- John Merryman
- Steve Goldberg
- Nick Schendzielos
- Brian Hopp
- Zac Joe
- Anthony Chavez
- Tom Clenin
- Doug Williams
- Howard Hubbard
- Jawsh Mullen
Cephalic Carnage play a technically proficient deathgrind style, progressively experiment with other genres, and incorporate songs of joke nature into their albums, such as parodies of black metal or metalcore. They refer themselves as "rocky mountain hydro grind".[1]
History[edit]
Conforming to Abnormality and Exploiting Dysfunction (1992–2001)[edit]
Cephalic Carnage formed in Denver, Colorado, in 1992 by vocalist Leonard Leal, drummer Anthony Chavez, bassist Tom Clenin, and guitarist Zac Joe. The quartet recorded a demo EP titled Scrape My Lungs in 1993, but then took a break until 1996, when they recruited drummer John Merryman, guitarist Steve Goldberg and bassist Doug Williams.[2][3] Merryman also collaborated with Secret Chiefs 3.[4] Soon after the reformation, their second demo EP Fortuitous Oddity was released. During 1997, Cephalic Carnage financed its own tour across the United States.[2][3]
In 1998, the band caught the attention of Italian record label Headfucker Records, which released the band's debut album Conforming to Abnormality that year. Williams left in 1999 and joined Origin. He was replaced by Jawsh Mullen, and the band toured at the Milwaukee Metalfest in 1998, the Dallas Grindfest, the Ohio Deathfest and the Denver Hatefest in 1999.[2][3]
In 2000, Cephalic Carnage signed to heavy metal record label Relapse Records and released its second album Exploiting Dysfunction, which included a tour with Napalm Death and The Dillinger Escape Plan.[2][3]
Lucid Interval and Anomalies (2002–2006)[edit]
Lucid Interval, the band's third album, was recorded in early 2002 and released in August that year.[2][3] The band toured a month later in Canada[5] and subsequently in the U.S. with German thrash metal veterans Kreator and Destruction.[3][6] In May 2003, the band undertook the "North American Contamination" tour alongside Mastodon and others. That September, Cephalic Carnage and Madball supported Hatebreed on the North American "Rise of Brutality" tour.[3]
In September 2004, the band recorded its next album, Anomalies, with producer Dave Otero. Darren Doane directed a promotional music video for "Dying Will Be the Death of Me",[3] which premiered at MTV's Headbangers Ball.[7] The song parodies American metalcore with its music, lyrics and vocals.[8] In March 2005, Anomalies was released, and the band toured in North America once again.[3]
Mullen exited in January 2006 to prioritize his education and other acts,[3] and the band soon found replacement Nick Schendzielos.[9] In March, the band's recording studio was robbed.[10] They played several shows in the United States in April, and an extensive European tour followed in June[3] with Darkest Hour.[11]
Musical style[edit]
AllMusic describes the style of Cephalic Carnage as "crazy concoction of truly experimental grindcore, death metal, and jazz".[2] Their music varies from deathgrind,[20][21] technical death metal,[22] occasional surf rock,[23] instrumental, to flamenco interludes[24] or violin-and-sax ambient jams.[25] Their early style is typically progressive and technically proficient, with some comedic songs. Their later work developed into a more experimental,[26] complex direction.[24]
Cephalic Carnage is also known for its humorous songs. Popmatters points out some examples: "On past albums, the band has taken satirical swipes at the overtly image-oriented black metal ("Black Metal Sabbath") and the oversaturated, angst-ridden metalcore sound ("Dying Will Be the Death of Me"), and even in live settings, they're not above taking the odd spontaneous piss-take to bring some levity to a situation. One notorious YouTube clip has a fight starting in the pit at a Cephalic show in Toronto, and in an inspired moment, the band launches into a rousing excerpt from "Eye of the Tiger", to a raucous ovation from the kids."[22]