Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Oldschool Thrash Metal Bands: PANTERA (pt. 7)

The Abbott brothers officially broke up Pantera in 2003, also the year when their “Best Of” compilation album was released (on September 23), when the Abbott brothers concluded that Anselmo had abandoned Pantera and would not return. The break-up of the band was not amicable and subsequently a war of words was waged between the former bandmates via the heavy metal and musical press. The Abbott brothers and Pantera crew members claimed that they tried numerous times to contact Anselmo over the phone to reorganize Pantera, but Anselmo maintains that they never called him. Caught up in the torrent was Rex Brown, who later said “It was a bunch of he said, she said nonsense that was going on, and I wasn’t going to get in the middle of it.”[3] Anselmo’s comment in a 2004 issue of Metal Hammer magazine saying that “Dimebag deserves to be beaten severely” typified Pantera’s internal conflicts; Anselmo insists that this comment was tongue-in-cheek, and he was angered his comment ended up on the cover of the “god damn” magazine.[3] This explanation was soon dismissed by Vinnie Paul, who said shortly after the 2004 murder of his brother that he had personally listened to the audio files of the interview and that Anselmo had not been misquoted or misrepresented, but said the exact words which appeared in the article.[3]

In July 2004, Vulgar Display of Power went double-platinum, and The Great Southern Trendkill went platinum the next month.[17]

Damageplan and Darrell’s murder (2004)

After Pantera’s breakup, Darrell and Vinnie formed a new band, Damageplan, with vocalist Pat Lachman and bassist Bob Zilla. The group released their first album, New Found Power, in February of 2004. The album was a commercial success; over 44,000 copies were sold in its first week alone and within a year over 100,000 copies were sold. However, some fans felt that Damageplan’s material did not measure up to that of Pantera.[3]

Tragedy struck on December 8, 2004. Damageplan was performing in support of their album at a show at the Alrosa Villa in Columbus, Ohio when, less than a minute into the first song of their set, mentally unstable Nathan Gale, 25, went onstage and shot and killed Darrell. Gale also killed fan Nathan Bray, 23, club employee Erin Halk, 29, and Pantera security official Jeff “Mayhem” Thompson, 40, and injured longtime Pantera and Damageplan drum technician John “Kat” Brooks and Damageplan tour manager Chris Paluska before being shot dead by Columbus police officer James Niggemayer.[22]

Aftermath (2004-present)

When Anselmo called in the aftermath of the murders, Rita Haney, Darrell’s girlfriend, answered one of Anselmo’s calls and said she would “blow Anselmo’s head off” if he attended Darrell’s funeral.[3] Dimebag himself was interred with his guitar, acquired from Eddie Van Halen, not long after. Not long after Dimebag’s murder, Anselmo received a heated message from Vinnie, which (according to Anselmo) went along the lines that Anselmo’s day was coming. Anselmo’s rebuttal was that everybody’s day is coming and that if his day should end before Vinnie’s it would not change anything, except for Vinnie to go through ‘losing another brother’. Public comments made by Phil Anselmo following the shooting suggested that he had considered reuniting with the band prior to Darrell’s death.[23] However, one year after the murder Vinnie stated in an interview that this reunion was never going to happen.[24]

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