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<title><![CDATA[Animosity]]></title>
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Stay current on the latest Animosity music videos, news and more on MTV - the leader in music news, video premieres and entertainment online.
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<title><![CDATA[Metal File: Jesu, Obituary, Animosity & More News That Rules]]></title>
<description><![CDATA[<p type="articleSubhead">Justin Broadrick explains why he hit bottle, rock bottom before launching latest project.<br/>By Chris Harris and Jon Wiederhorn</p>
<p>
<a href="http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1553090/20070222/jesu.jhtml">
<img type="photo"
src="http://www.mtv.com/shared/promoimages/bands/j/jesu/news_070222/281x211.jpg"/>
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<br/>
<i type="articlePhotoCaption">Jesu</i>
<br/>
<i type="articlePhotoCredit">Photo: Tina Korhonen/ Hydrahead Records</i>
</p>
<p type="articleText">	

<p>
With just hours before taking an April 2002 flight from London to Los Angeles, where his band Godflesh were to begin a North American tour, singer and guitarist Justin Broadrick suffered a nervous breakdown.
</p><p>He was broke, his girlfriend of 13 years had just left him and he was tired of playing in his pioneering industrial-metal band &#8212; but unsure how to cut the cord. "It was a real Brian Wilson moment," Broadrick recalled of the incident that paved the way for the emergence of his new band, Jesu. "I felt paralyzed by the stress, which had been building for several months, and I literally couldn't get out of bed. I was numb and couldn't move, so when the car came to pick me up to take me to the airport, I ran and hid at another friend's house in Birmingham [England]."
</p><p>The incident had substantial consequences. Ex-Killing Joke bassist Paul Raven had been brought on for the two-month tour, as had ex-Swans drummer Ted Parsons. Bus companies had been hired, High on Fire and Halo had been booked to support. And everyone who lost money came after Broadrick.
</p><p>"I was getting death threats from the bus company in L.A.," Broadrick said. "I lost close to $35,000, which I did not have at all. I was broke and had to sell my house and pay off all my debt on credit cards. I pretty much did nothing for four months besides drink heavily."
</p><p>When he finally felt motivated to begin writing again, Broadrick cast his creative energies in an entirely new direction and expanded upon a batch of dense, billowing and intensely emotional songs he had been toying with over the previous couple of years. Rooted equally in post-rock, pop and metal, the music branched far beyond the self-imposed constraints of Godflesh and featured sedated vocals that sometimes barely registered above the droning rhythms.
</p><p>"After the first two Godflesh albums, we became far too self-conscious about what we should and shouldn't be," Broadrick said. "So, for me, Jesu is all about losing that self-consciousness, letting melody come to the forefront and drop all the screaming and shouting. Physically and mentally, I didn't feel the need to do that anymore, and I didn't want to turn into the Rolling Stones or that sort of music."
</p><p>Broadrick worked on the new songs in the studio with Parsons and bassist Diarmuid Dalton. In 2004, the band released the EP <i>Heartache,</i> and followed with their bleakly beautiful self-titled debut in 2005.
</p><p>"After everything that had happened, doing Jesu was very cathartic," Broadrick said. "I didn't escape into making that album, I immersed myself in it. It was about as indulgent as you could be, and I reveled in the depression of it. I had to go that low to see the sun again. I had to take myself as far down as possible to actually feel I was alive again."
</p><p>The band's new album, <i>Conqueror</i> &#8212; which follows their 2006 EP, <i>Silver</i> &#8212; is melancholy, but not as depressing as <i>Jesu.</i> Songs like "Old Year," "Transfigure" and "Medicine" are slow, textural and enveloping, sounding something like a far heavier version of Slowdive or Sigur R&#243;s.
</p><p>"I think the weight of the songs is probably even heavier than most of the Godflesh records, it's just in a different context," Broadrick said. "The bleakness is inherent, and I don't think it's something that can ever be removed from my music. No matter how much I explore melody, that's something I'll never shake off."
</p><p>Neither, apparently, will Broadrick shake off bad luck. Jesu were scheduled to fly to the U.S. to begin a tour with Isis Thursday in San Diego, but because their work permits have not yet been cleared by U.S. Customs, the band will miss at least the first week of the tour. The news came just weeks after Jesu learned that Dalton wouldn't be allowed in the country because he was busted 20 years ago for drug possession. Dave Cochrane, who played with Broadrick previously in Ice, God and Head of David, will replace him for the tour. Also, Parsons is sitting out the tour to spend more time with his family, and Intronaut drummer Danny Walker will fill in. Until Jesu's paperwork is sorted out, Intronaut will replace them on the Isis tour.
</p><p>The rest of the week's metal news:
</p><p>So, that rumor about <b>Lamb of God</b> being on the bill for this summer's Family Values Tour? Not true, the band claims. A purported lineup hit the Internet this week, with <b>Korn</b> listed as the trek's headliners, along with <b>Evanescence</b>, <b>Aiden</b> and, oh yes, Lamb of God. But the band has not "committed to any summer tour." That settles that. ... Dates for <b>Animosity</b>'s upcoming headlining run with <b>As Blood Runs Black</b>, the <b>Faceless</b> and <b>Beneath the Massacre</b>, have been revealed. The outing, called "Brutalitour," launches April 28 in Worcester, Massachusetts (at this year's New England Metal &amp; Hardcore Festival), with gigs booked through May 26 in Berkeley, California. ...
</p><p><b>Mastodon</b>, <b>Priestess</b> and <b>Mouth of the Architect</b> have rolled out a bunch of live dates, including stops in San Antonio (March 19); Oklahoma City (March 20); Columbia, Missouri (March 21); Colorado Springs, Colorado (March 23); Salt Lake City (March 24); Seattle (March 26); Spokane, Washington (March 27); and Portland, Oregon (March 28). ... <b>Arsis</b>, <b>Ion Dissonance</b> and <b>Beneath the Massacre</b> will hit the road together in March and April. The first gig is set for March 21 in Buffalo, New York, with dates scheduled through April 14 in Lake Station, Indiana. ...
</p><p><b>Obituary</b> will return to the studio in March to begin recording their next studio effort. According to frontman <b>John Tardy</b>, the band is "still working on the new CD and are getting really excited about these new songs. This is some pretty sick sh--. I still do not know what we are going to do about a record label. We are still talking with a few labels and trying to work something out. Hopefully something gets done soon, so we can move forward and concentrate on future events." In the meantime, you can catch the band's live set starting March 24 in Hollywood at the Los Angeles Murderfest. ...
</p><p><b>Circle of Dead Children</b> have introduced <b>Matt Francis</b> as their newest drummer; he replaces <b>Mike Bartek</b>, who left the band in June. "At a point when we had all but thrown dirt over our own casket, life has once more been injected with the vacancy of the drum position being finally filled," frontman <b>Joe Horvath</b> said in a statement. "We plan to soon begin work on a yet-to-be-titled sixth release due out [this] summer. Matt's addition drives the band to its most caustic and explosive level to date." ... <b>He Is Legend</b> have added to the fold guitarist <b>Mitchell Marlow</b>, who was briefly a member of <b>Glassjaw</b> and did some time with <b>Classic Case</b> as well. The band is touring with <b>Killswitch Engage</b>, <b>Chimaira</b> and <b>Dragonforce</b> through April 8 in Chicago. ...
</p><p><b>Inked in Blood</b> guitarist <b>Matt McDonnell</b> had a recent brush with death but is recovering and doing fine. According to the band, McDonnell was found on the floor of his home February 11, "cold, sweating and barely able to breathe." He was taken to a nearby hospital, where, after being put into a drug-induced coma, he was diagnosed with acute pneumonia, pleurisy and a severe staph infection in his lungs. He was released Tuesday with strict orders to rest and recover for the next month and a half. McDonnell said the incident has given him "a new lease on life. I feel extremely lucky to have been given a second chance." The band will release its sophomore full-length LP this summer, and, once the guitarist is better, plan to tour in support of the outing. ... <b>Children of Bodom</b> mainman <b>Alexi Laiho</b> revealed at the Finnish Metal Expo in Helsinki last weekend that the band will begin working on material for its next album this week, with plans to begin recording the effort this fall. The LP could be out early next year, he said.
</p>

</p>
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<link>http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1553090/20070222/jesu.jhtml</link>
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<pubDate>23 Feb 2007 06:00:00 EST</pubDate>
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<title><![CDATA[Metal File: Animosity, Alice Cooper, Withered, Blood Freak, Into The Moat & More In This Week's Hard News]]></title>
<description><![CDATA[<p type="articleSubhead">Band scrambling to find venues to play following Hellfest cancellation.<br/>By Chris Harris and Jon Wiederhorn</p>
<p>
<a href="http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1507913/20050818/animosity.jhtml">
<img type="photo"
src="http://www.mtv.com/shared/media/news/images/a/Animosity/sq-animosity-press-05.jpg"/>
</a>
<br/>
<i type="articlePhotoCaption">Animosity</i>
<br/>
<i type="articlePhotoCredit">Photo: Metal Blade Records</i>
</p>
<p type="articleText">	

<p>
The last thing San Francisco grindcore virtuosos Animosity wanted to hear was that the festival for which they'd been confined to a van for 72 hours &#8212; driving in one straight shot, from San Diego to New Jersey &#8212; was canceled. But unfortunately, 15 minutes after arriving in the Garden State, frontman Leo Miller said he got the call: No Hellfest this year, kids.
</p><p>Like many of the 150-plus other bands that'd traveled to Trenton to perform at the three-day metal fest that was canceled Wednesday night (see <a href="/news/articles/1507846/20050818/killswitch_engage.jhtml">"Three-Day Metal Hellfest Canceled Over Insurance Snag"</a>), Animosity have spent the last 24 hours scrambling to find a venue &#8212; be it a club, skate park or someone's basement &#8212; that'll let them gig.
</p><p>"It's pretty f---ing amazing what people are doing," Miller explained. "They're pretty on top of it, pulling shows together. The thing is, most of these last-minute shows are going to be pretty decent, because all of these headlining-type bands now don't have shows to play." So far Animosity &#8212; rounded out by drummer Navene Kopperweis, bassist Dan Kenny, and guitarists Frank Costa and Chase Fraser &#8212; have been in touch with Turmoil, Most Precious Blood and Converge to discuss a possible "Let's make the best of it" gig, the singer said.
</p><p>As of press time, nothing had been firmed up for Animosity, who'll be touring through late September with Ed Gein and Curl Up and Die. Other acts did manage to set up shows of their own &#8212; the much-anticipated reunion of Lifetime will happen on Sunday at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park, New Jersey, with the Bouncing Souls and the Loved Ones, while God Forbid will perform Friday night (August 19) at the Starland Ballroom in Sayreville with Chimaira, Unearth, Madball, Nora, If Hope Dies, the Banner and Six Feet Under.
</p><p>As if trying to justify a weekend in Jersey's not enough to worry about, Animosity have the release of their second disc, <i>Empires,</i> coming up this week; the disc hits stores on Tuesday through Black Market and Metal Blade. Miller's anxious for people to hear it.
</p><p><i>Shut It Down</i> came out in 2003 through Tribunal, when the bandmembers weren't even old enough to drive, "and it was recorded in 2002, so the music's pretty old and doesn't represent us in the way we want," said Miller who like much of the group, is 18. "It's not how we play anymore. On the other hand, <i>Empires</i> totally does. There's nothing on it that pisses us off when we hear it."
</p><p>As the band's matured &#8212; and for a bunch of dudes who still can't legally drink, that word holds even more true &#8212; so too has Animosity's sound. "When we started, we were just trying to emulate the bands we wanted to be like," Miller said. "It was kind of like we were just taking influence from similar bands and trying to be like other bands. Now we're listening to a bunch of weird, progressive music from the '60s and '70s. We're no longer trying to be like all the other bands that we play with."
</p><p>The rest of the week's metal news:
</p><p>All three members of reformed West Coast gore-grind band <b>Blood Freak</b> were killed in a car accident last weekend. According to their label, the bandmembers left their native Anaheim, California, the morning of August 12 and were heading for Seattle, where they'd planned to record their second outing, <i>Live Fast, Die Young, &amp; Leave a Flesh-Eating Corpse.</i> Outside Portland, Oregon, the band's van veered off the road. "Exactly what went 'wrong' isn't known yet," reads a statement posted on Razorback Records' Web site. "We hope to have more details soon. What we do know is that [we] mourn the deaths of our fellow gore-hounds in Blood Freak." ... Throughout their 24-year history, <b>Ministry</b> have hardly been the most organized or deadline-oriented band on the planet. That may soon change. Frontman <b>Al Jourgensen</b> has just announced new tour dates nearly nine months in advance. The jaunt with the band's alter ego, <b>Revolting Cocks</b>, and <b>Spyder Baby</b> will begin in San Antonio on May 6 and run through June 25 in Cleveland. Ministry's remix album, <i>Rantology: The Definitive Collection Celebrating 25 Years of Service,</i> which features the new song "The Great Satan," comes out September 27. ...
</p><p><b>Alice Cooper</b> will launch a North American tour with <b>Cheap Trick</b> on August 20 in Cincinnati, with dates running through September 16 in Los Angeles. Cooper will then play 15 more solo dates, ending October 29 in Tacoma, Washington, before heading to England. Cooper's new album, <i>Dirty Diamonds,</i> was released August 2. ... "Waking Up Dead," a film about the seedy underworld of '80s metal as seen through the eyes of <b>Skid Row</b> and <b>Saigon Kick</b> member <b>Phil Varone</b>, will debut August 26 in New York. The unflinching documentary was directed by Emmy Award-winning journalist Fabio Jafet and was filmed over a four-year period. ... The biggest-ever band of Antarctican space warriors, <b>Gwar</b>, will release a quadruple-DVD box set on October 18. The package will feature videos for "Rendezvous With Ragnaro," "It's Sleazy," "Gwar: Tour de Scum" and "Dawn of the Day" and more. ... Atlanta death-metal band <b>Withered</b> will release their first disc, <i>Memento Mori,</i> on September 20. The band will launch a U.S. tour on August 27 in Washington, D.C. ...
</p><p><b>Every Time I Die</b> have scheduled dates with <b>High on Fire</b>, the <b>Red Chord</b>, the <b>Chariot</b> and the <b>Esoteric</b> from September 7 in Poughkeepsie, New York, through October 24 in State College, Pennsylvania. Every Time I Die's fourth album, <i>Gutter Phenomenon,</i> comes out August 23. ... Vancouver punk outfit <b>Black Halos</b> will launch a North American tour on August 25 in Portland, Oregon. Dates run through October 9 in San Bernardino, California. The band will be touring to support its third album, <i>Alive Without Control,</i> which came out June 28. ... <b>Into the Moat</b> were forced to cancel six shows after their guitarist, <b>Robert Shaffer</b>, quit the band in the middle of their tour with <b>Soilent Green</b>. It wasn't the only recent shake-up for the band; bassist <b>Joshua Thiel</b> quit due to always ambiguous "medical reasons" on the first date of the tour, leaving the group to continue as a four-piece. ... Sludge metallers <b>Brand New Sin</b> have been tapped to open up the upcoming <b>Black Label Society</b> tour, which kicks off October 14 in St. Petersburg, Florida. The five-week trek, which follows the band's brief September run with <b>Life of Agony</b>, wraps November 20 at the Fillmore in San Francisco.
</p>

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<link>http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1507913/20050818/animosity.jhtml</link>
<category>News Article</category>
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<pubDate>18 Aug 2005 09:17:00 EDT</pubDate>
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<title><![CDATA[Animosity - Tooth Grinder]]></title>
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<a href="http://www.mtv.com/overdrive/?artist=1238234&amp;vid=222328">Tooth Grinder</a>
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Artist: <a type="Artist" href="http://www.mtv.com/music/artist/animosity/artist.jhtml">Animosity</a>
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<li type="videoLabel">Label: Black Market Activities</li>
<li type="videoDirector">Director: Richie Valdez</li>
<li>Album: <a type="videoAlbum" href="http://www.mtv.com/music/artist/animosity/albums.jhtml">Animal</a>
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<pubDate>11 Apr 2008 12:00:00 EDT</pubDate>
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