Reinventing Metal: The True Story of Pantera and the Tragically Short Life of Dimebag Darrell
By Neil Daniels
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Reviews for Reinventing Metal
2 ratings1 review
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Everything written in this book was from somebody else’s info. What a been nice to have some updated information or some other personal stuff with the band.
Book preview
Reinventing Metal - Neil Daniels
Copyright © 2013 by Neil Daniels
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, without written permission, except by a newspaper or magazine reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review.
Published in 2013 by Backbeat Books
An Imprint of Hal Leonard Corporation
7777 West Bluemound Road
Milwaukee, WI 53213
Trade Book Division Editorial Offices
33 Plymouth St., Montclair, NJ 07042
Printed in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available upon request.
www.backbeatbooks.com
To Darrell Lance Abbott,
also known as Dimebag Darrell,
R.I.P.
(August 20, 1966–December 8, 2004)
Contents
Foreword by Jeff Waters
Acknowledgments
Introduction
PART ONE
The Glam Metal Years
1. At Hell’s Gates: The Birth of the Panther
2. Rock Out: The Making of Metal Magic
3. Heavy Metal Rules: Pantera Unleashes Projects in the Jungle
4. Onward We Rock: The Release of I Am the Night
5. Rock the World: Phil Anselmo, Power Metal, and the Dawn of a New Era
PART TWO
Southern Cowboys from Hell
6. At the Cemetery Gates: Finding a Label
7. Psychos from the South: The Release of Cowboys from Hell
8. Demons Be Driven: The Release of Vulgar Display of Power
9. Strength Beyond Strength: The Release of Far Beyond Driven
10. Five Minutes Alone: Communication Breakdown and Band Tension
PART THREE
The Great Southern Trendkillers)
11. Underground in America: The Release of The Great Southern Trendkill
12. Hell’s Wrath: Band Life Ain’t Easy
13. Southern Shredders: Ozzfest, Official Live, and Some Much-Needed Downtime
14. Goddamn Electric: Pantera Hit the Studio for Reinventing the Steel
15. Immortally Insane: Pantera on Tour
16. We’ll Grind That Axe for a Long Time: The Inevitable Breakup of the Band
Epilogue: A Decade of Domination—The Tragic Death of Dimebag Darrell and the Enduring Legacy of the Panther
Afterword by Brian Slagel
Discography
Sources
Photo Insert
Foreword
When I first met Pantera, my band Annihilator had released Alice in Hell , which was considered an international hit record. Then we did our second album ( Never, Neverland ) and it was an even bigger success. We did a worldwide headlining tour for all of 1990 and were just finishing up when Judas Priest asked us to be their special guest on their mega-album Painkiller . I’d heard that Glenn Tipton chose Annihilator for the tour and Rob Halford picked the opening act. Glenn liked our record, which was amazing for me, as I was their number-one fan as a teen.
Rob’s pick was a new band called Pantera. He said he thought they were going to be huge, famous, amazing, and groundbreaking. I don’t think a lot of people listened to him—we didn’t! None of the people on tour—not even the fans that were at these shows—had any idea what was going on. There was actually a bit of a negative reaction to Pantera. We shared a tour bus with them and, despite the clear cultural differences, we all got along, for the most part, in the name of metal, and having an amazing time supporting one of our favorite bands.
Back in ’91, a singer with a shaven head, tattoos, and baggy shorts, jumping around like a monkey and putting his middle finger in the air, was not what a European traditional heavy metal fan base was looking for onstage. Phil Anselmo looked more like a punk rocker; a Henry Rollins/punk rocker–type guy. It was absolutely something that was not around in heavy metal. If you can believe this, there were shows where they would get booed, and they were even happy to get off the tour halfway through. There were actually shows where they would walk offstage early, as the crowd was sometimes not happy with the aggressive attitude being shown to them by Phil, Rex Brown, and Diamond (as he was known then) Darrell Abbott. They were really good but we didn’t clue in to just what these guys were about to do; nor did the fans or a lot of the press. Rob Halford got it, though. He got it way before the tour started. He saw another legend coming up.
I would meet them at their shows in Vancouver for years to come. The most memorable was on the Reinventing the Steel tour. I’d followed them in the ’90s through music video channels, and of course everybody was wearing Pantera T-shirts. I knew they were a big band, but I didn’t really get it until I saw that last tour. Kerry King or Tom Araya (from Slayer) had me on their guest list, but to be safe I got Phil Anselmo to put me on his, too. Early in the afternoon, I hung with the band and crew, talked about old times, and spent the rest of the day with Phil. I just assumed it was a double bill, or that Pantera were a special guest. I’m standing on Kerry’s side of the stage, watching Slayer. The kids are going crazy. It was an awesome reaction, as always, for Slayer. I thought, How the fuck does Pantera follow that? How do you follow what I just saw from Slayer? Jesus Christ! And what happens next? Pantera came out with a slick light show, a bigger stage show, bigger explosions, pyro, flames, massive, powerful riffs, grooves, and sounds.
And then I realized: Oh my God, they’re the fucking headliners! That blew my mind—Pantera were even bigger than I thought they were! I was like, Jeff, you idiot, you’re still getting it wrong after all these years. It was amazing to see full hockey arenas, with two bands of this caliber, playing in these venues. This was an era where traditional heavy music was literally banished to the underground by labels, press, the industry . . . unless you were playing a new kind of metal.
Pantera were an inspiration to musicians, fans, and bands like mine—bands that were simply trying to hang in and survive the roughest decade in real metal music. On a personal note, they left me with a great lesson that many young (and older) bands can learn from: No matter what you think of a band or a musician, never pass judgment on what you think is their potential . . . or else they might surprise you and make you look like a total idiot.
Jeff Waters
Annihilator
annihilatormetal.com
Acknowledgments
Thanks to the following rockers and metalheads for making this book possible and for their ongoing support: Buddy Blaze, Steve Blaze, John Dittmar, Bernard Doe, Damon Duperre, Marc Ferrari, Joe Giron, Terry Glaze, Donny Hart, Gary Hetrick, Kenny King, Steve Kleinberg, Lenise Lopez, Bernadette Malavarca, Joel McIver, Jason McMaster, Mörat, Rick Mythiasin, Jamie Nelson, Walter O’Brien, Derek Oliver, Dave Peacock, Rick Perry, Martin Popoff, Karla Pronschinske, Paul Rees, Derek Shulman, Brian Slagel, Stuart Taylor, Kyle Thomas, Walter Trachsler, John Tucker, Mary Vandenburg, Jeff Waters, Jerry Warden, Frank White, and Neil Zlozower.
Thank you again to the following people for allowing me to interview them for the purposes of this book: Buddy Blaze, Steve Blaze, John Dittmar, Bernard Doe, Damon Duperre, Marc Ferrari, Joe Giron, Terry Glaze, Donny Hart, Gary Hetrick, Kenny King, Steve Kleinberg, Lenise Lopez, Jason McMaster, Mörat, Rick Mythiasin, Walter O’Brien, Dave Peacock, Rick Perry, Paul Rees, Derek Shulman, Brian Slagel, Stuart Taylor, Kyle Thomas, Walter Trachsler, Jeff Waters, Jerry Warden, and Neil Zlozower.
Thank you again to the following people for allowing me to quote from their work for the purposes of this book: Chris Akin, Jason Arnopp, Vik Bansal, Bobby Black, Tony Bonyata, Nick Bowcott, Rich Catino, Spence D, Colin Devenish, Robyn Doreian, Patrick E. Douglas, Cameron Edney, Dave Everley, D. X. Ferris, Janiss Garza, Brandon Geist, Chris Gill, Mike Gitter, Joshua Gropp, Kenny Herzog, Shannon Joy, Jeff Kerby, Christopher Krovatin, Elliot Levin, Brandon Marshall, Keith McDonald, Therese McKeon, Metal George, Metal Odyssey, Gerri Miller, Mörat, H. P. Newquist, Justin M. Norton, Jeff Perlah, Rafi, Ramsey Ramirez, Steven Rosen, Amy Sciarretto, Roger Scott, Debbie Seagle, Lisa Sharken, Joshua Sindell, Skwer, Tazz Stander, Brad Tolinski, Jason Wellwood, David Lee Wilson, Ian Winwood, and James Zahn.
Apologies if I have missed any names—it was not intentional! Honest.
Visit neildaniels.com and neildanielsbooks.wordpress.com for details on my other books.
Introduction
With twenty million albums sold and an enduring legacy, Pantera’s influence on modern metal is assured. Their story is a tragic and complicated one, however, not only because of the murder of guitarist Dimebag Darrell Abbott, on December 8, 2004, but also because of the bad blood and hostility that continues to exist between the three surviving members.
Reinventing Metal is the first biography to tackle the story of one of the most innovative and influential metal bands of the past twenty years. It’s a story that begins in Arlington, Texas, in the early ’80s, at a time when American metal was just coming to fruition in the form of Californian thrash-metal bands like Metallica, Exodus, and Slayer, and New Yorkers like Anthrax.
In the beginning, Pantera were part of the glam-metal scene, but as 1986 dawned and thrash-metal bands began to make their mark, Pantera became something far more aggressive. With the arrival of a new front man from New Orleans, the no-bullshit Phil Anselmo, a new era began. Pantera’s major-label breakthrough, Cowboys from Hell, and its mesmerizing follow-up, Vulgar Display of Power, are still regarded as among the greatest metal albums in popular music history.
Despite the reverence bestowed upon them, however, the band had a relatively short life span. From 1983 to 2000 they released only nine studio albums, the first four of which have been permanently deleted by a band that was never interested in trading on past glories (hence the song Yesterday Don’t Mean Shit
). Yet Pantera’s impact on metal is still keenly felt more than a decade after their bitter, highly publicized split.
There have been notable spin-off bands, including the successful Down and Superjoint Ritual projects, led by singer Phil Anselmo, and Damageplan, formed by the late guitarist Dimebag Darrell and his elder brother, Vinnie Abbott. But they will forever be overshadowed by Pantera, who were one of only a handful of American metal bands to fill arenas around the world in the ’90s (a famously difficult period for metal following the rise and eventual disintegration of the pompous, metal-hating Seattle grunge scene).
Pantera had an enormous influence on nu metal, groove metal, metalcore, and grindcore, and also earned the respect of the bands that inspired them in the first place, such as Black Sabbath, Kiss, Van Halen, and Metallica. There will never be a reunion—there could never be without the driving force of Dimebag Darrell—but with the various reissues and compilations to have seen the light of day since the band’s split, there remains a constant thirst for all things Pantera.
Despite the success Pantera achieved, however, there has to date been only one related biography, Black Tooth Grin: The High Life, Good Times, and Tragic End of Dimebag Darrell Abbott by Zac Crain (2009). The other Dimebag-related book is A Vulgar Display of Power: Courage and Carnage at the Alrosa Villa by Chris Armold, which was published in 2007. The latter is an interesting read, although perhaps in bad taste considering its focus on Dimebag’s murder. Dimebag Darrell’s family released an official pictorial book, He Came to Rock, in 2008. But those books deal with Dimebag; Reinventing Metal is a book about the band.
This biography was written without the cooperation of the band, but I did speak to numerous people associated with them: friends who grew up with the Abbott brothers in Arlington, former roadies, and even former band members from the early years, as well as record company personnel from the Cowboys from Hell period onward. They know the story of Pantera as well as anyone else does.
There remains a tight veil around the band, and I did meet some resistance in writing this book, but it needed to be written. Such is the level of security around Pantera that once word began to spread about my attempts to interview those associated with the band’s past or present, a number of potential interviewees dropped out, not wanting to sever ties with or potentially upset the band. One unnamed interviewee even went so far as to retract his interview after a very enjoyable transatlantic phone conversation; others simply refused to reply to my correspondence and reportedly warned off others from speaking to me. Rex Brown and Phil Anselmo have since announced their own autobiographies, but this book tells the band’s story from all sides.
Pantera really were a unique band, innovative and dangerous. Reinventing Metal will tell you why.
Neil Daniels
September 2012
neildaniels.com
Part One
The Glam Metal Years
1
At Hell’s Gates: The Birth of the Panther
Kiss Alive. It made me wanna play music!
—Vinnie Paul to Ramsey Ramirez of Magx Online, 2010
When Pantera started life in 1981 they were a very different band, fronted not by the iconic Phil Anselmo but by a Texan singer named Donny Hart. They were called Pantera’s Metal Magic, and they sounded as fanciful and frivolous as the name suggests. The initial lineup consisted of eleventh grader Vince Abbott (Vinnie Paul Abbott) on drums and his younger brother, Darrell, on guitar, plus bassist Tommy Bradford, guitarist Terry Glaze (who was in the same class at Arlington High School as Vinnie), and the aforementioned Hart on vocals.
They were just a bunch of kids playing around, getting their feet wet, copying their rock star heroes. Hart owned a PA system and had previously played in a band with his high school buddy Bradford. Vinnie had been in bands too. Bradford was the quiet, Charlie Watts member of the band; he and Hart would attempt to play some of their favorite songs, including complicated epics like Led Zeppelin’s Stairway to Heaven.
When Glaze moved into the neighborhood, the three budding musicians became friends. Things were falling into place.
Although Vinnie was fairly quiet growing up, he was an extremely proficient drummer. He was also somewhat cunning. When Bradford, Hart, and Glaze said they wanted to play with him, Vinnie told them he would only join if he could bring his kid brother along too. Vinnie was an excellent musician, but the others weren’t really interested in Darrell. Vinnie, on the other hand, didn’t think very much of Hart. The compromise was that both could stay in the band.
The six-piece lineup of Pantera’s Metal Magic made their live debut in the drama hall of Vinnie’s school, James Bowie High School. It was something of a novelty for the other kids at the school to have classmates who could actually play rock music, as Donny Hart remembers:
I can vividly recall one particular moment. I can’t remember what song it was on but out of the corner of my eye could see something flying past me, and that’s Darrell doing a knee-slide. I think we did three concerts [in total]. I went to Sam Houston High School, and in my second year of high school we did concerts there, too, just as we did at James Bowie High School, and then in between those two we did a concert at a community center that was more like a party. We just handed out flyers and spread word of mouth and we had so many kids show up that the cops came and shut us down.
The core of the band was undoubtedly the Abbott brothers. Before he became known as Diamond Darrell, the younger Abbott was born Darrell Lance Abbott on August 20, 1966, in Ennis, Texas, to parents Carolyn and Jerry. Jerry was known locally as a country musician and producer. Darrell got into music relatively late compared to other famed guitarists. The story goes that one Christmas, Jerry asked him if he wanted a BMX bike or a guitar; Darrell chose the bike. However, after discovering first Black Sabbath and then Kiss, he asked his old man if he could trade in the BMX for a Hondo Les Paul, which he played through a small Pignose amp. Darrell’s fate was sealed. Initially, I just used the guitar as a prop,
he later told Guitar World’s Brad Tolinski. I’d pose with it in front of a mirror in my Kiss makeup when I was skipping school.
Before long Darrell had mastered the lead riff to Deep Purple’s hard rock monster Smoke on the Water.
Jerry showed his son how to play barre chords, while Darrell soon discovered the Electro-Harmonix Big Muff Pi fuzz and feedback distortion. But the impact of Kiss guitarist Ace Frehley cannot be overstated. Darrell would dress up as Frehley, complete with the Kiss makeup, and stand in front of the mirror with his fake starburst orange-pink Les Paul guitar, posing as his rock idol, imagining himself as an extrovert rock star.
One of Darrell’s childhood buddies was Gary Hetrick, who was also a cousin of Rita Haney, Darrell’s future on/off girlfriend. He was the biggest Kiss fan,
Hetrick recalls. "We used to walk up to this little store called U-Totem when the Kiss cards came out. We bought Kiss cards there and would open them on the back steps of Short Elementary School. We used to go to a drugstore and . . . get all the magazines like Sixteen, and they were always just covered with Kiss posters. We tried to get every new poster we could find."
Little did Darrell know that, many years later, at the height of their popularity, Pantera would end up opening for their shock-rock heroes. When he met Frehley as an adult, he asked the Kiss guitarist to autograph his chest; such was Darrell’s dedication to the band that he then had the autograph tattooed so it could never be washed off.
After Frehley, Darrell’s biggest influence was undoubtedly the eccentric Dutch-born American shredder Eddie Van Halen, whose band Van Halen released their self-titled studio debut in 1978. He also loved the music of British rock band Def Leppard—particularly their first album, On Through the Night, which made greater use of the twin-guitar sound than did latter-day Leppard albums—and was a big fan of Angus Young of AC/DC and Michael Schenker, the German guitarist formally of Scorpions and the British band UFO.
Initially, Darrell’s influences were not particularly wide-ranging in that he did not stray outside of popular music. He wasn’t into jazz or classical; in fact, the only remotely classical influence he had was Randy Rhoads of Quiet Riot and the Blizzard of Ozz. There were also local influences, like Bugs Henderson and Jimmy Wallis, and of course ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons, a fellow Texan, was another major source of inspiration. The band’s gritty, hard-nosed blues-rock would provide a template for Pantera, who retained some touches of the blues—a genre lost on many other metal bands—even in their later years. (It is almost obligatory for Texans to like ZZ Top’s music in the same way that New Jerseyites tend to love the music of Bruce Springsteen.)
Darrell’s tastes broadened over time. He also enjoyed the music of a number of blues artists and country singers, such as Merle Haggard and David Allan Coe, and would develop a fierce appreciation for the soul/funk-influenced hard-rock band King’s X. He learned quite early on—through his father—that great musicians have eclectic tastes and influences in music. It’s unlikely that he would have turned out to be such a great player if he had only ever listened to Ace Frehley.
As well as showing Darrell various different chord shapes, Jerry also taught his son to play a number of songs, including the J. J. Cale classic Cocaine,
subsequently made famous by Eric Clapton. He also showed his son how to tune a guitar. Aside from that, Darrell was almost totally self-taught, and did not take guitar lessons. The last thing he wanted to do was to go home and learn a riff from a chord sheet. He listened to the music and learned by ear. The process was