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Mudvayne |
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Mudvayne is an American rock band formed in Peoria, Illinois in 1996. Members are lead singer Chad Gray, guitarist Greg Tribbett, bassist Ryan Martinie and drummer Matthew McDonough. Signed onto Epic Records, Mudvayne has released four studio albums, two compilations albums, and two DVDs.
Mudvayne rose to fame in 2000 with their debut album L.D. 50, which peaked at number 85 on the Billboard 200, and has since been certified gold by the RIAA. The lead single from the album, "Dig", won the MTV2 Award at the MTV Video Music Awards in 2001. This was also the first time the award was ever presented to a metal band. In 2006 Mudvayne was nominated for Best Metal Performance at the Grammy Awards for the single "Determined" from the band's 2005 studio album Lost and Found. Mudvayne has four gold certifications by the RIAA, and has sold nearly three million albums in the United States.
History
Origins
Mudvayne initially formed in 1996 with Chad Gray, Greg Tribbet, Matthew McDonough, and Shawn Barclay. The original lead singer soon left which shortly after found their new lead Chad. Eventually, they adopted more melodic lines and released their demo, Kill, I Oughtta. In 1998, then bassist Shawn Barclay was replaced by current bassist Ryan Martinie.
Signing with Epic (1998)
A critical turning point for the band occurred in April 1998 when local promoter Steve Soderstrom hosted Soda Pop Production's "Original Hard Rock Music Showcase" at the now defunct Hub Ballroom in Edelstein, Illinois. Mudvayne along with fifty seven other Peoria bands answered the radio ad and was one of the twelve bands chosen to perform live on two stages. Soda Pop Productions followed the show up with "Shredfest" on the Peoria riverfront stage which Mudvayne also played. Steve Soderstrom contacted longtime friend and renown band manager Chuck Toler, in Madison, Wisconsin, who came down to a third show at the American Legion Hall in Washington, Illinois to see the band perform live. As a result Chuck Toler began managing the band and secured a recording contract with Epic Records.
L.D. 50 and The Beginning of All Things to End (2000–2001)
The band first hit the mainstream in 2000, when they were featured on the second stage of the Tattoo the Earth Art and Music Festival Tour. They scored their first hit single with the song "Dig" from their debut album L.D. 50. For this song, the band won the first ever MTV2 Award at the MTV Video Music Awards in 2001. The popularity of the song paved the way for the highly successful album (certified gold, sold over 500,000 as of 2001) and was followed by singles "Death Blooms" and "Nothing to Gein".
In 2001, they released an extended version of the Kill, I Oughtta EP titled as The Beginning of All Things to End and continued their frequent touring.
The End of All Things to Come (2002–2003)
During the L.D. 50 era, the band was famous for wearing extravagant make-up, seen in both their music videos and live concerts, and using unusual stage names such as Kud, Gurrg, RyKnow, and sPaG. With their second album, 2002's The End of All Things to Come, the band changed make-up styles from multicolored face paint to dressing up as aliens and changing the stage names, now they were Chüd, Güüg, Rüd, and Spüg. Mudvayne's reason for wearing such extravagant make-up was, according to the band, to add a visual aspect to their music and to set them apart from other run-of-the-mill metal bands. Mudvayne participated in the Summer Sanitarium Tour 2003, headlined by Metallica, and with the release of the 2003 single "World So Cold", Mudvayne abandoned their use of make-up entirely.
Lost and Found (2005–2006)
In 2005, their third album Lost and Found was released with the band members' real names and without any gimmicks.
In mid-2005, Mudvayne played on the main stage of Ozzfest. During this tour, Chad Gray wore a monkey suit without the head, had a fake, blood-spattered face with a mohawk, and carried a baseball bat around on stage with him while singing. The other members of the band were also dressed in an unorthodox fashion.
Mudvayne's 2005 singles have helped to increase their popularity further. "Determined" was included on the Need for Speed: Underground 2 soundtrack. "Happy?" was featured as the theme music of the WWE Vengeance pay-per-view for World Wrestling Entertainment in June 2005, and was also featured in MX vs. ATV: Untamed. The band was featured in an episode of The Sopranos. Their single "Forget to Remember" was featured in the film Saw II. This was the second Mudvayne song to be featured in a movie, after "Not Falling", the band's first single off The End of All Things to Come, in the 2002 film Ghost Ship. Mudvayne have also contributed to the Masters Of Horror series soundtrack with a song called "Small Silhouette". About 2 million copies of the album were sold worldwide.
By the People, For the People (2007–2008)
By the People, For the People is a compilation of demo/live versions of previously released songs (chosen by the fans), 2 b-sides, and a few introductions to some songs, 1 new song, and a cover of The Police's "King of Pain".
By the People, for the People is the second compilation album, and fifth album release by Mudvayne. It was released on November 27, 2007 by Epic Records. The album features a track listing chosen entirely by the band's fans, with the band determining which version appears on the record (e.g. live, demo, acoustic), as well as two new songs, "Dull Boy" and a cover of The Police's song "King of Pain" (both produced by Dave Fortman).
By the People, for the People is presented in a format where each song is introduced through a short interlude generally no longer than 30 seconds long, where Chad Gray debriefs the listener on surrounding facts such as where the song was recorded or performed live, or distinguishing a demo from an album version (obviously limited to in the case of demos). The album debuted at number 51 on the U.S. Billboard 200 chart, selling about 22,000 copies in its first week.
After the return of vocalist Chad Gray and guitarist Greg Tribbett from their touring commitments with side project Hellyeah, Mudvayne began the recording process for The New Game.
The New Game and the fifth full-length album (2008-2009)
The fourth studio album by Mudvayne was originally put on hold in the summer of 2007, due to vocalist Chad Gray and guitarist Greg Tribbett touring with Hellyeah. Following the tour, Mudvayne reunited and began recording the album with producer Dave Fortman, who also produced their previous effort, Lost and Found. Fortman reported to MTV that the album will be followed six months later by a second full-length record. He also attested that while the album should please listeners, it will also incorporate a distinct rock and roll sound unheard on previous Mudvayne records. "It's heavy and has great hooks," said Fortman, "but it also has some moments that are a little more rock n' roll that are really cool. It's not anything drastic, but every now and then you'll catch a little hint of old-school rock. Also, the tones are a little more earthy sounding and a little warmer than Lost and Found."
"Do What You Do", the first single from the album, entered airplay on September 23, 2008.
Mudvayne plans on releasing another full-length collection of new material next summer. The band is said to have most of the music for the second album written, but still needs vocal melodies on four songs. "We may go for even more of a metal approach on some of the songs to break it up a little bit," Fortman told Headbanger's Blog. "But who knows what they’ll come up with." Mudvayne are planning on releasing their 5th studio album on July 27, 2009.
Mudvayne will continue the New Game Tour in February 2009 with Nonpoint and In This Moment.
Musical style and influences
Mudvayne is known for performing a technical style of music which they have referred to as "math rock". Mudvayne was influenced by performers such as Emperor, King Crimson and Porcupine Tree. Mudvayne's musical style incorporates elements of death metal, speed metal, hardcore punk and progressive rock. Mudvayne's musical style has been described as alternative metal, extreme metal, hard rock, heavy metal, neo-progressive rock, nu metal, progressive metal, shock rock and thrash metal.
Band members
- Chad Gray (Kud, Chüd) — Vocals (1996–present)
- Greg Tribbett (Gurrg, Güüg) — Guitar, backing vocals (1996–present)
- Matthew McDonough (sPaG, sPüG) — Drums (1996–present)
- Ryan Martinie (RyKnow, Rü-d) — Bass (1998–present)
Discography
Main article: Mudvayne discographyMain studio albums
- L.D. 50 (2000)
- The End of All Things to Come (2002)
- Lost and Found (2005)
- The New Game (2008)
Other works
- Kill, I Oughtta (1997) — self-released demo; only 1000 CDs pressed
- L(ive) D(osage) 50: Live in Peoria (video, 2001) — concert at the Madison Theatre, Peoria, Illinois
- The Beginning of All Things to End (2001)
- Live Bootleg (2003) — sold exclusively from Mudvayne's website
- All Access to All Things (video, 2003)
- By the People, For the People (2007)
Awards
- Won – 2001 MTV Video Music Awards – MTV2 Award – "Dig" – This was the first time the award was ever presented.
- Nominated – 2006 Grammys – Best Metal Performance – "Determined"
References
- Dansby, Andrew (September 24, 2002). "New Mudvayne "To Come"". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
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(help) - Wiederhorn, Jon (November 4 2002). "Mudvayne Not Aliens At NY Show". MTV News. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
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(help) - Concorde2 (June 2, 2003). "Mudvayne @ C2 On Monday 2nd June 2003". Brighton News. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Montgomery, James (March 2, 2005). "Mudvayne Lose The Makeup, Find Inspiration In Isolation". MTV News. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
- Velez, Marisol (January 16, 2006). "Mudvayne pumps true blood into the Congress". The Inferno. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
- Qualls, Eric. "Need for Speed Underground 2 Soundtrack Revealed". About.com. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
- "ASIN:B000BC8SQA". Amazon.com. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
- "Chad Gray interview on Type 3 Media (2008)". Retrieved 2008-02-21.
- ^ "Exclusive: Mudvayne To Drop Two New Albums in Next Year". Headbangers Blog. Headbangers Blog. 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-14.
- Wilson, Scott (August 30, 2001). "Mud Brothers". The Pitch. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
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(help) - ^ Sheaffer, Caleb (April 9, 2003). "Mudvayne brings 'tongue-in-cheek' sensibility to BJC show". The Daily Collegian. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
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(help) - Kitts, Jeff; Tolinski, Brad (2002). "Mask Hysteria". Guitar World Presents Nu-Metal. Hal Leonard Corporation. p. 79. ISBN 0634032879.
- "Kylie Minogue, Gorillaz have new CDs". Billboard. November 30, 2007. Retrieved 4 January 2009.
Alternative metal crew Mudvayne let fans choose the track listing and album art for this pseudo-greatest-hits set
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(help) - Byrne, Michael (December 10, 2008). "Music: The Short List". Baltimore City Paper. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
Well-calculated alterna-metal band Mudvayne makes a whole bunch of money at Rams Head Live with 10 Years and a band called Snot.
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(help) - Weingarten, Marc ([August 18, 2005). "Same sound, cleaner faces for Mudvayne". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
extreme metal quartet Mudvayne
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(help) - "Anger, hard rock give 9 Slug edge". Baton Rouge, LA: The Advocate. July 28, 2005. Retrieved 4 January 2009.
Templet's angry lyrics and Davis' and Boley's intense metal music, that is "from the heart," have influences from hard-rock bands such as Pantera, Mudvayne, ...
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(help) - Potter, Tina (August 7, 2003). "Heavy metal's best ignite Seattle crowd on Metallica's Summer Sanitarium Tour". The Seattle Times.
Metallica, the elder statesmen of metal, assembled an untouchable lineup of metal acts to join them on a tour that reads like a who's who of heavy-metal heavyweights: Mudvayne and the Deftones, Linkin Park and Limp Bizkit.
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(help) - Beal, Jim (April 27, 2005). "Mudvayne heads heavy metal lineup". San Antonio Express-News. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
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(help) - Paton, James (June 6, 2008). "Concert injuries land promoters, venues in court". Denver, Colorado: Rocky Mountain News. Retrieved 4 January 2009.
Nicole LaScalia was knocked to the floor of Magness Arena and trampled by concertgoers moments after the heavy metal band Mudvayne took the stage.
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(help) - Weisblott, Marc (January 21, 2003). "Big With the Kids". The Village Voice. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
You know Trapt aren't vying for the affections of neo-prog Mudvayne fanatics when their singer, Chris Brown, feels Genesis got good only after Phil Collins took the mic.
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(help) - Berelian, Essi (2005). The Rough Guide to Heavy Metal. New York City: Rough Guides. p. 244. ISBN 1-84353-415-0.
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ignored (help) - D'Angelo, Joe (September 19, 2002). "Mudvayne Reaches The End". MTV.com. Retrieved 2008-12-27.
The Peoria, Illinois, progressive metal quartet has named their new album The End of All Things To Come
- Wedge, Dave (December 10, 2008). "There's no masking Mudvayne's prog-metal passion". Boston Herald. Retrieved 4 January 2009.
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(help) - Valdez, Christina Killion (December 31, 2008). "Fans 'Dig' Mudvayne". Rochester MN: Rochester Post-Bulletin. Retrieved 4 January 2009.
Mudvayne, the Grammy-nominated progressive rock and metal band, is helping keep rock on a roll in Rochester.
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(help) - "Deftones just want to have a blast". Telegram & Gazette. July 3, 2003. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
And fans will witness Mudvayne trying to remake itself from a costume-wearing shock-rock act into a just plain menacing hard-rock act.
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(help) - Stranzl, Justin (September 29, 2000). "London's largest rap-metal band thrashes with others at Crowbar". The Daily Collegian. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
Alt-metal outfits Ultraspank and Nonpoint are also slated to perform, as well as headlining thrash outfit Mudvayne.
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(help) - "Mudvayne guitarist new EMG endorser.". Music Trades. August 1, 2005. Retrieved 5 January 2009.
EMG'S ROSTER of endorsing artists now includes guitarist Greg Tribbett of hot metal-thrash band Mudvayne.
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External links
Mudvayne | |
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Studio albums | |
Extended plays | |
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Singles |
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