Lence | Metal Blade Records

Sean Killian: Vocals

Phil Demmel: Guitar

Bobby Gustafson: Guitar

Christian Olde-Wolbers: Bass

Perry Strickland: Drums

Formed in 1985, Oakland thrashers Vio-Lence helped define and refine what came to be known as the Bay Area sound, dropping three seminal albums before splitting in 1993. Leaving behind a heady legacy, they reformed briefly a couple of times in the intervening years before becoming a full-time going concern once more in 2019. After playing a string of successful shows, the quintet started to think about new music and in 2022 they deliver Let The World Burn, a five-song EP showcasing their first new material in 29 years, which delivers on the classic Vio-Lence sound. “That came very naturally,” states founding guitarist Phil Demmel. “I hadn’t written a lot of thrash in the past 17 years or so but being the main songwriter for the band over the years I wanted that sound, I wanted that mid-80s raw thing, but I also wanted to capture our signature notes and structures and stuff like that.” Elaborates vocalist Sean Killian, “Each song has its own individual sound, they are all very thrash metal, there are grinding riffs, technical riffs, and plenty of speed. The lyrics are written freely with no restrictions and without compromise while the vocal patterns are typically unusual and delivered with a multitude of emotions.

Initially the plan was just to play a single show, as a thank you from Killian to those who had supported him through an extended illness that culminated in a liver transplant, giving him back his life. “From the time I woke up from my liver transplant surgery the one thing I kept thinking about was repaying everyone that supported me during my illness. Phil put together a charity golf tournament that raised a substantial amount of money that helped cover medical bills, and that event saved my family’s lives from being negatively impacted by my illness, plus there was a benefit show which so many musical legends participated in. Fans selling out the venue for that show is something that could never be repaid except with the same passion and affinity, which playing live could enable me to give, and when I heard the news that Phil had left Machine Head and was available I thought this was the moment for the return of Vio-Lence. I sent the man a text that said ‘Let’s do a show’.” With that show at The Metro selling out a thousand tickets in a few hours they announced a matinee show for the following day, which sold out just as quickly, making it clear that there was still a virulent hunger for Vio-Lence and their unique take on killer thrash. “We figured holy crap, it’s time to bring it! It was just like the old days, it was just like 1986 again with people flying around, the energy and the reciprocation and the stage diving, and the horrible PA sound,” laughs Demmel. “It was fun. We got Gary Holt [of Slayer and Exodus] up to play a song, all in all the reunion shows were amazing.” At that stage the prospect of new music was not on the table, instead just figuring out if they could get along, how the dynamic was going to work, if the chemistry for writing together even existed. However, tour offers were coming in and they jumped on several opportunities, Demmel referencing a show with Sacred Reich at The Regent in LA as the craziest they ever played, and having his mind blown that people were still going as crazy for the band all these years later. It was around that time that he and Killian started talking about the prospect of writing new material, concluding they were more disposed to making an EP. “I didn’t want to do a full-length, I figured three maybe four, and we settled on five tunes that could really encapsulate what we were doing,” says Demmel. “I went to Metal Blade and spoke with Brian Slagel saying we wanted to do this with them, we weren’t shopping labels, we weren’t looking for a bidding war or anything like that, we just wanted to do a record with them, and they were all into it.

Filling out the band’s ranks on Let The World Burn alongside Demmel, Killian, and original drummer Perry Strickland are former Overkill guitarist Bobby Gustafson and former Fear Factory bassist Christian Olde Wolbers, who individually bring a lot to Vio-Lence. “Bobby brings experience, he brings song structure, he knows how song structure works and riffs work, and he has ideas. He’s got an East Coast mentality, he was in a legendary band and he brings a new flavor, plus he’s a solid dude, an awesome human,” Demmel enthuses. “Christian is just a monster bass player, he has great musical sense, and song structure sense. He recorded our cover of “California Uber Alles” in our jam room, and he just brings a real pedigree, he’s a great dude and an awesome musician, a great package.” With Demmel acting as primary songwriter, the plan was to make something brutal and bludgeoning, a true thrash record, where the band were at when they wrote Eternal Nightmare in 1987. Each of the five songs is different to the last while remaining true to this remit, with “every beat, riff and note accounted for,” opener “Flesh And Bone” setting the scene and making it clear just how ruthless the band are in 2022. Then there’s “Screaming Always”, which is classic Eternal Nightmare-esque Vio-Lence, and the likes of the shorter “Gato Negro”, which though briefer still has a lot going on, and packs a solid punch. Both guitarists contribute solos to the songs, and there are a lot of harmonies, the two working well together. Lyrics as always come courtesy of Killian, who skews toward the darker side of existence. “When I write lyrics I try to get as dark and horrible as I can. Then I make changes and minor adjustments with words to bring the lyrics from pure evil to an emotional, painful suffering experience with the pure evil working to support it all. I want people to read the lyrics and create a picture in their mind that they wouldn’t normally envision, I want them to create that visual art in their head. The goal is for that artwork that they created to stay with them, registered in their memories, and to be brought forward occasionally to enjoy, letting them pull that record out for decades to come.

The album was tracked in Trident Studios in Pacheco, California by Juan Urteaga (Machine Head, Exodus), mixed by Tue Madsen (Dark Tranquillity, Heaven Shall Burn) and mastered by Ted Jensen (Alice In Chains, Death Angel), and the sessions went smoothly, with Demmel tracking his solos at home. “It was nice to be able to play things fifty times. I wanted to play all the solos single pass, which is something that I hadn’t done for a while, everything had been kinda punched in and chopped up, so it’s not all fluid, and these ones might not be first pass but they’re one pass. I want to be able to play them the way they’re supposed to be played, and I’m really proud of them.” With the EP dropping in March the band plan to tour as much as possible through the spring and summer, and are already writing its followup. “I’d like to do another EP rather than an album, and we’re working on the songs for it already, and hopefully we’ll get in to record by next fall,” says Demmel. “We want to constantly be releasing music, and constantly doing shows. At this stage we’re excited for everybody who’s still excited for this band. To them I say thank you for still listening to and supporting us, we’re excited to come play, so spread the Vio-Lence.

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