Drowning Pool

  • Dallas, TX
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  • Rock
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  • 1996
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About Drowning Pool

When a band rocks as hard as Drowning Pool, when the music demands to be heard at maximum volume, and when the energy level surpasses the word intense, there’s only so much that a recording studio can capture. The solution: release a live album, the aptly titled Loudest Common Denominator, a limited edition treat for the loyal and growing fan base culled from time on the road and the radio.

“Nothing will ever compare to, or get into the groove of, a live show when we’re in the studio,” says Drowning Pool drummer Mike Luce. “Sweating in the clubs, traveling in a van or bus six to twelve hours to make it to load-in, that’s where it all comes from. That, and the interaction with the crowd when we’re onstage.”

It’s all there on Loudest Common Denominator, as Luce, vocalist Ryan McCombs, guitarist C.J. Pierce and bassist Stevie Benton give their all. “It’s not 45 minutes or an hour deadlocked without deviating,” says the drummer about Drowning Pool in concert. “Some bands are in that world, but this is live — the camaraderie between us, involving the crowd, the impromptu breakdowns in the songs and winging it on the fly. We don’t just run through the songs and get the hell out. We live for that hour onstage and that’s why we take it so personally. You can’t capture that in the studio.”

On a scale from 1 to 10, when measuring the highs and lows of Drowning Pool’s 12-year career, Luce candidly states that the band has experienced both extremes. When success comes — and it often does — it’s euphoric, he says. But when there were crashes — and there were a few —“You pick up and move on. It isn’t easy, but it’s life. The highs and lows make you appreciate everything that’s good. Stuff happens, terrible stuff, to everybody. You try to use it somehow to make something good come out of it.”

Three albums — 2001’s Sinners, certified platinum within six weeks of its release, 2004’s Desensitized, and 2007’s Full Circle — all charted on the Billboard Top 200 and brought Drowning Pool their share of hits, including “Bodies,” their calling card anthem and tribute to the mosh pit. Eight years later, the song remains a crowd favorite and reminder of those highs and lows of which Luce speaks.

“To use a Spinal Tap reference, at the highest times we were cranked up to 11,” he says. “It was the greatest. We were all young, and we’d wanted this all our lives. To play music with your friends for a living — it’s better than winning the lottery. These are dreams and aspirations that I’d had since I first held a pair of drumsticks in my hand. We got lucky, we were on Cloud Nine — to be the Ozzfest darlings, in Rolling Stone, on MTV. We felt like the band was on its way to world domination. Nobody sees the black cloud around the corner.”

That “black cloud” was unimaginable tragedy, when front man Dave Williams was suddenly taken by rare undiagnosed heart condition, hypercardiomyopathy. When such a loss occurs, “It rips everything from under you,” says Luce. “We went from 11 to low zero. Our friend, our brother, was taken away and there was nothing we could do. What can you do? Sure, you feel selfishly shortchanged; you think about all the ‘what ifs.’ Then what? Sulk? Quit? We could have, but we chose to move forward. It’s a constant up and down.”

And so they did what they do best: continued to make records and toured. Touring: it’s what Drowning Pool has always done. It’s how they built and maintain their fan base. With front man, Ryan McCombs, formerly of SOiL, a new record label, Eleven Seven Music, and a new album, Full Circle, both band and their loyal fans agreed that it was the right move.

“We believe, and we’ve heard it from audiences and people we’ve met, that they see Ryan [fronting the band] and they see Drowning Pool again,” says Luce. “If we can go from everybody knowing us as a band on one record, and two records later there’s a completely different guy and people call us the same band and say, ‘You look happy again,’ and as a listener in the crowd they feel they are at a Drowning Pool show again, that’s awesome. The music is preserved, it has a signature, and for whatever style it is, I think we have it. We didn’t want to change the name of the band out of respect for Davey and everything we did together. He helped us to get here, and I hope people can see and understand that. We were all four in a band together. It’s easy to play armchair quarterback after a game and say, ‘I would have done that differently.’ But that’s not your call. As a musician, I couldn’t imagine playing in this band without the three guys in it right now. That would change the fingerprint of the sound.”

On the heels of 300 shows over the course of two years, Drowning Pool decided to capture that sound permanently with the release of their long-awaited live album, Loudest Common Denominator. Included among the 13 tracks are classics “Tear Away,” “Bodies,” “Step Up,” and new favorites “Enemy,” “Soldiers,” and bonus acoustic demo versions of “37 Stitches” and “Shame.”

Loudest Common Denominator is a “live” album in the truest sense of the word: directly from the board and front of house. “Our sound guy, recorded the shows,” Luce explains. “There are no overdubs on the album, just a few tweaks here and there. I tend to run on in speech and I’ve been known to say stuff to the crowd to get them going, so there was some “Edit Mike out of there in those places!” But other than that, it’s all live takes. People listening to the CD can tell that it’s a live presentation of the band. Everything is in there.”

The music industry is always a fight for survival, Luce agrees, and he is confident that Drowning Pool will continue to forge ahead and make inroads to further carve their name in rock and roll history. “You get up and continue with your brothers,” he says. “With Loudest Common Denominator, we’re planting some more roots. Stevie, C.J., Ryan and I love playing music, and we’re thankful that people still want to hear what we do.”
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Music

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  • Saturday Night
    drowning-pool
    Video
    Saturday Night
  • Saturday Night (Official Music Video)
    drowning-pool
    Video
    Saturday Night (Official Music Video)
  • Let the Sin Begin
    drowning-pool
    Video
    Let the Sin Begin
  • Turn So Cold
    drowning-pool
    Video
    Turn So Cold
  • Feel Like I Do
    drowning-pool
    Video
    Feel Like I Do
  • Shame
    drowning-pool
    Video
    Shame
  • 37 Stitches
    drowning-pool
    Video
    37 Stitches
  • Enemy
    drowning-pool
    Video
    Enemy
  • Killin' Me
    drowning-pool
    Video
    Killin' Me
  • Bodies
    drowning-pool
    Video
    Bodies

Interviews & Exclusives

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  • Bang out with Drowning Pool on Headbangers Ball.
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    Bang out with Drowning Pool on Headbangers Ball.
  • Headbangers Ball | 7/5/10 | Drowning Pool
    drowning-pool
    playlist
    Headbangers Ball | 7/5/10 | Drowning Pool

Photos

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  • Drowning Pool
    Courtesy of Wind-Up Records
  • Drowning Pool
    Drowning Pool
    Drowning Pool
    Amy V. Cooper
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    Drowning Pool
    Drowning Pool
    Amy V. Cooper
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    Drowning Pool
    Drowning Pool
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  • Drowning Pool
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News

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  • Drowning Pool
    Drowning Pool 'Devastated' Arizona Killer Played Its 'Bodies' Song | Billboard.com
    www.billboard.com
    to violent acts. "We find it inappropriate to imply that our song or rock music in general is to blame for this tragic event," the band said. "It is p...
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  • Drowning Pool
    Drowning Pool Debut New Singer on 'Resilience'
    www.billboard.com
    Drowning Pool guitarist C.J. Pierce says having to search for another lead singer following Ryan McCombs' departure in 2011 was "frustrating. I went t...
    Read More

Tour Dates

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  • May 22 Wednesday
    New Orleans, LA, US Hangar 13
    Buy Ticket
  • May 24 Friday
    Saint Petersburg, FL, US State Theatre
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  • May 26 Sunday
    Jacksonville, FL, US Brewsters Roc Bar
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  • May 29 Wednesday
    Lexington, KY, US Busters
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  • May 30 Thursday
    Flint, MI, US The Machine Shop
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  • May 31 Friday
    Dayton, OH, US McGuffy's House of Rock
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  • Jun 11 Tuesday
    Pittsburgh, PA, US Altar Bar
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  • Jun 12 Wednesday
    Poughkeepsie, NY, US The Chance
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  • Jun 14 Friday
    Watertown, NY, US Watertown Fairgrounds Arena
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  • Jun 15 Saturday
    Rochester, NY, US Montage Music Hall
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  • Jun 16 Sunday
    Portland, ME, US The Asylum
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  • Jun 17 Monday
    Nashua, NH, US Evolution Entertainment Complex
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  • Jun 18 Tuesday
    Providence, RI, US The Ruins @ the Colosseum
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  • Jun 25 Tuesday
    Huntington, NY, US The Paramount
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  • Jun 26 Wednesday
    Milwaukee, WI, US US Cell Stage
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  • Jun 27 Thursday
    Toronto, ON, Canada Virgin Mobile Mod Club
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  • Jun 28 Friday
    Buckley, MI, US Southside Festival Grounds
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  • Jul 11 Thursday
    Prairie du Chien, WI, US Unknown venue
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  • Jul 21 Sunday
    Sauget, IL, US Pop's Concert Venue
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  • Jul 27 Saturday
    Lewiston, ID, US Boomers Garden
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  • Jul 30 Tuesday
    Salt Lake City, UT, US In The Venue
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  • Aug 1 Thursday
    Colorado Springs, CO, US Black Sheep
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  • Aug 2 Friday
    Denver, CO, US Summit Music Hall
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Discography

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  • Resilience (2013)
    Drowning Pool
    Resilience (2013)
    Eleven Seven
  • Drowning Pool [2010] (2010)
    Drowning Pool
    Drowning Pool [2010] (2010)
    Eleven Seven
  • Loudest Common Denominator (2009)
    Drowning Pool
    Loudest Common Denominator (2009)
    Eleven Seven
  • Full Circle (2007)
    Drowning Pool
    Full Circle (2007)
    Eleven Seven
  • Desensitized (2004)
    Drowning Pool
    Desensitized (2004)
    Wind-Up Records
  • Sinner (2001)
    Drowning Pool
    Sinner (2001)
    Wind-Up Records
  • Aphonia (1989)
    Drowning Pool
    Aphonia (1989)
    Fundamental Records
  • Satori (1988)
    Drowning Pool
    Satori (1988)
    Nate Starkman
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