Difference between revisions of "Henry's Anger"
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===Band information=== | ===Band information=== | ||
Formed in 1994 by Yates and former Addictive and Psychrist entity Coffey, the early line up of Henry's Anger was completed by guitarist Mal McAllister and vocalist Zeb Nowhere with a musical path mapped out in a similar direction to that of '''TOOL'''. | Formed in 1994 by Yates and former [[Addictive]] and [[Psychrist]] entity Coffey, the early line up of Henry's Anger was completed by guitarist Mal McAllister and vocalist Zeb Nowhere with a musical path mapped out in a similar direction to that of '''TOOL'''. | ||
The "Interfere" EP contained the track '(sic)' which became something of a favourite on Triple J's ''Three Hours of Power'' program. After this McAllister was replaced by Paddy Coffey and Nowhere was ejected shortly after for Jamie Thomas. | The "Interfere" EP contained the track '(sic)' which became something of a favourite on Triple J's ''Three Hours of Power'' program. After this McAllister was replaced by Paddy Coffey and Nowhere was ejected shortly after for Jamie Thomas. |
Revision as of 04:08, 30 September 2007
Band members
- Final line-up
- Rod Yates (bass)
- Matt Coffey (drums)
- Paddy Coffey (guitar)
- Steve Simmons (vocals)
- Former members
- Jamie Thomas (vocals) (1997 - 1999)
- Malcolm McAllister (guitar) (1994 - 1996)
- Zeb Nowhere (Michael Monighan) (vocals) (1994 - 1997)
Formed
Canberra, ACT, 1994
Band information
Formed in 1994 by Yates and former Addictive and Psychrist entity Coffey, the early line up of Henry's Anger was completed by guitarist Mal McAllister and vocalist Zeb Nowhere with a musical path mapped out in a similar direction to that of TOOL.
The "Interfere" EP contained the track '(sic)' which became something of a favourite on Triple J's Three Hours of Power program. After this McAllister was replaced by Paddy Coffey and Nowhere was ejected shortly after for Jamie Thomas.
The musical direction shifted somewhat towards a dark and disturbed and disturbed nu-metal style but the songwriting also matured, resulting in the Blacklining album winning them the title of Australia's best metal band from the UK metal mag Kerrang!. Audiences became more and more used to the band's presence as they supported the likes of Suicidal Tendencies, The Deftones and Mr Bungle, as well as the band's own heavy touring schedule, but perhaps the major breakthrough came when it toured with Strapping Young Lad in early 1999, two months before the release of the stunning Personality Test album, a remarkable issue which won the band an ARIA Award nomination for Best Rock Album.
With international interest looming in the band, and midway through a round of promotional shows for the album, Thomas left/was sacked from Henry's Anger, and the band was forced into inactivity for several months while a replacement was sought. In mid December 1999, former Mischling vocalist Steve Simmons was chosen as Henry's Anger's new singer, and virtually at the same moment they were added to the bill of the 2000 Big Day Out in Sydney. The band then toured with Sprung Monkey and featured as the national support for Skinlab's tour in May 2000. While a new EP was promised for August 2000, Henry's Anger suddenly announced they had split up shortly after a showstopping performance at Metal for the Brain in October 2000.
Simmons joined Cryogenic in late 2001 and Thomas, Yates and Paddy Coffey formed Brace around the same time.
Discography
Albums:
1997 | Blacklining | DC | |
1999 | Personality Test | Chatterbox |
EP:
1996 | Interfere | Different Drum |
Compilation tracks:
Year | Track Title | Album Title | Label |
---|---|---|---|
1996 | "Without Speech" | Grow Your Own 2 | Foghorn |
1997 | "(sic)" | Thirteen | ABC/EMI |
2000 | "Personality Test" | Full Metal Racket | ABC/EMI |
2000 | "Fragment" | Radio Rock Vol 1 | Columbia |