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That Tour Was Awesome: Pantera/White Zombie/Eyehategod (1996)

white zombie first tour

“Somebody’s going down.” It was a mantra that caught on quick amongst the hard-partying bands on the Pantera / White Zombie / Eyehategod tour of 1996 (also known as War of the Gargantuas), but the joke turned sour fast when Pantera vocalist Phil Anselmo went down hard, overdosing after a show in Texas on this tour.

It was just one reason why this tour is one for the metal history books. Here’s another: New Orleans sludge legends/miscreants Eyehategod played arenas, opening up for platinum-selling artists, on this tour. Think about that for a minute. Plus, this was White Zombie’s last tour. And then there was the case of the missing cookies…

To celebrate the 20th anniversary of this most notable of arena tours, we caught up with Pantera vocalist Phil Anselmo, White Zombie bassist Sean Yseult, and Eyehategod vocalist Mike Williams to talk about all of the above and much more. Get ready: this is a wild, bumpy ride, and one that is best read while cranking up a few tunes each from each of the three bands that took part in this tour of terror. Yes, somebody went down, and that somebody got up again; not everyone from this tour is still with us today, so we raise a glass in salute to those who haven’t made it this far, and we look back with a rather astonished reverence with those who have at this most incredible, noteworthy, and downright unlikely of tours.

Pantera and White Zombie: add in Eyehategod and you just know it's trouble.

What do you recall about how the tour came to be?

Anselmo: Well, first and foremost, White Zombie and Pantera had played so many shows together prior to even being signed, because at the time our management was kind of a team. We both had a great following; at the time White Zombie was selling more records than us but they would not play after us because of obvious reasons—we’d blow them off the fucking stage every night no matter what, so they knew better than that. It came down to who the hell was going to open up this gig. I asserted my size 13s and said, “I know the band, and it shall be a band called Eyehategod.” And thus it was, at least for the first two months of the tour. And that was incredible, and groundbreaking. No arena-selling band in their right mind would take out Eyehategod at that time.

Yseult: We had toured with Pantera extensively before this, and we took Eyehategod out very early on when we first started headlining, so we were all friends, so it made sense. White Zombie and Pantera toured together a lot not only because we were kinda similar bands—we both played heavy metal with a groove to it—but also we had the same management so they were always keen on pairing us up. So it just made sense. And it was also our last tour, so it was a good send-off for White Zombie.

Williams: I don’t really know how it came together, besides the fact that I know they wanted to do a huge summer tour, and you couldn’t get any bigger at the time than White Zombie and Pantera. They were like the two biggest bands around at the time, you know? Phil and Sean—she was a part of it too, it wasn’t just Phil—but Phil was more active in doing this type of thing, bringing bands out that were super underground. He brought out Anal Cunt, Soilent Green, Neurosis back before anybody knew who the fuck they were. I think all those bands still get people coming up to them and saying, “Yeah, we saw you guys on that tour,” and they got new fans on that tour. Phil was always active with doing that. Later on he brought out Satyricon.

Eyehategod getting up to... well, we have no idea. But it is from this tour. (Photo by Sean Yseult)

What was the first night of the tour like?

Anselmo: I guess I had just flown in. It started off in such a neutral place, I don’t remember what city it was, but our tour manager, who was at the time I guess more interested in… I think he had done some gigs with flavors of the day, bands that were popular for like 27 minutes then disappeared, so he was thinking like a businessman or some stupid shit like that. Heavy metal wasn’t cool anymore; it was going out of style. We were just going extinct, so he warned me, and it was strange: I had just got there and he accosted me and said something like, “Listen, man, I don’t want you to freak out if this tour’s a little different.” I was like, “What do you mean by that?” He was like, “Well, it’s not going to be all sold-out shows, the kids are into different stuff, if you see half-packed arenas don’t freak out. It’s just the sign of the times.” I’m like, “Okay, way to kick off the tour, great for morale, I appreciate you doing that two hours before I hit the stage. Great pep talk.” Needless to say, that night sold out to the fucking gills, as did every other fucking night. He was wrong and, gosh, that felt good, it felt really good to prove his overzealousness wrong. It was great.

Yseult: I know it was totally insane. I remember the next day was a day off, and I think we were in Louisville, Kentucky. I know that we just all went apeshit as far as partying our asses off. KISS were playing a show and we were all on the guest list and backstage. By the time KISS got on stage they had herded me and my friend Shannon, all of Eyehategod pretty much, Phil, they had herded us into a room, which we thought was a meet and greet room, but nobody ever came to meet and greet us (laughs). We were just stumbling and falling down, it was a mess. One of my friends did a somersault down two rows of seats, it was just chaos. So we started off with a bang, and unfortunately, prophetically, our big quote we said early on was “Somebody’s going down. Somebody’s going down.” And unfortunately that did happen not much later in the tour—about a week or two in was when Phil ODed. We didn’t want to prophesize that, but we were saying that since day one, because we were just partying too hard.

Williams: We were playing clubs, we had never played anything that big in our lives. It was more or less like us just meeting everybody and saying hi to old friends. The first night was getting our IDs and laminates, feeling our way around. One funny thing was we had this gigantic banner that we had made with our logo on it, and the first night we forgot we had it, so at the last minute we were like, “Oh, shit; we need to hang that thing up.” We told the crew, like, “Yeah, we need to hang this banner.” And it was almost showtime. They hung it, and there was no time, and them just being like, “Well, we’re here for Pantera and White Zombie, we don’t give a fuck about this opening band.” The banner was basically shaped like a U, like hanging down on each side. We were just like, “God, that looks so stupid.” But we fixed that the next day or two. I remember after the show there was a huge meet and greet, which was every night, and that was just business as usual: getting drunk, [Pantera guitarist] Dimebag [Darrell Abbott] holding court, all these girls backstage, just craziness.

white zombie first tour

What were the crowds like throughout the tour?

Anselmo: Huge crowds. Incredible fucking response, incredible support. That damn Pantera audience has always been this force, this fantastic force of all sides of love and nature. They have been incredibly supportive and this is back in the day when kids still halfway remembered what it was like to have the circle pits, and we were doing a lot of outdoor sheds, so the first 60 to 100 rows were seated, then they had the lawns where they would light the bonfires and go bananas. That was great, man. And to take nothing away from White Zombie, they obviously had their crowd as well. But I found that their fans were our fans too and Pantera fans were White Zombie fans.

Yseult: Oh my god. Manic. Manic. My husband likes to call the photos of the crowds a sausage fest, because it’s a bunch of sweaty dudes moshing their asses off (laughs). You can look for miles and only see dudes. We were doing 10,000 seaters, and it was crazy. Great audiences, every night. Every night.

Williams: I know in Dallas, Texas, the night that thing happened with Phil, there was some outrageous number of people there. Every night there were thousands of people.

Eyehategod's Mike Williams, White Zombie's Sean Yseult (in a wig), and Pantera's Dimebag Darrell on this tour (photo courtesy of Sean Yseult).

What was crowd reaction to Eyehategod like?

Williams: I would say for the most part, people hated us. That’s any band that’s going to open for those two bands. And we didn’t expect anything otherwise. We figured it’d be like that. But then some nights, like in Minneapolis, for some weird reason people there were yelling out song titles, and we were like, what? This is weird. I mean, we were getting quarters thrown at our heads, bottles thrown at us. It was a typical Eyehategod show, just on a gigantic stage in front of thousands of people. But some nights they were respectful and they would give us respect, some nights you could tell they hated us more. It was all over the map.

Yseult: They were receptive; of course they weren’t moshing and going nuts, but they liked them. We all liked them. I’d be on the side stage watching every night, and I’d see Phil, and Phil would come out sometimes and give them a little support. They’re a great band, they’re really one of my favorite bands. They did well.

Anselmo: Especially early on in the tour, it was so interesting watching crowd reaction to this band Eyehategod (laughs). It was great. It was fucking great. Mike Williams would walk out there, “How ya’ll feeling out there?” Everybody would be saying, “Alright!”, you know. He gets his first little taste of this fucking massive audience, these fists in the air, the cheering. And sure enough, in perfect Williams-esque fashion, we were in San Jose, and he’s like, “How ya’ll feeling tonight? Alright, San Jose!” Everybody’s like, “Yeah! Alright!” and cheering. And he says, “How many of ya’ll out there got leukemia?” And, dude, I almost fell over. The brutal sense of humour that we all had. It was like, holy shit. Today you’d have 8,000 people tweeting, “How offensive.” We came from the school of GG Allin. Rock and roll is danger, man. Fuck off; it’s a dangerous thing. Rock and roll is a fucking weapon, man. Let’s go with it.

Mike, what was going through your head when you were making comments like the leukemia one Phil mentioned?

Williams: (laughs) Just comedy. Just being stupid. And seeing Phil at the side of the stage and making him laugh, making everybody laugh, really. There were so many private jokes going on, just weirdness, and as the tour went on it just got weirder and weirder. The tour started on the east coast, so by the time we got out there, wherever I said that at, I was probably just out of my mind. But there were other nights I’d see something in the newspaper, like in Phoenix, Arizona, they had some kind of militia thing, I didn’t even know what it was about, I had no clue. But [on stage] I was like, “Let’s hear it for the Viper Militia,” or something; I didn’t even know who it was. I remember in Miami I was shouting out some narco-terroristo drug dealer who had just got out of prison. Just stuff like that (laughs). People would start to cheer then they’d look at each other, like “What did he say?” It’s just funny. We all have a very strange, dark sense of humour.

I came across a comment online about the tour on a video on YouTube. The person said they were at a show on the tour, and when Eyehategod came on, they booed you off stage. He said he actually dug you, but they were just such hardcore Pantera fans, it was just his duty. He said the next day he went out and bought two of your CDs. It was just almost this ritual. But then he added, “Mike told us all to go fuck ourselves as he walked offstage.”

Williams: (laughs) Oh, every night I’d come out and the first thing I’d do is give everybody the double middle finger. Just “fuck you, we don’t care what you think,” because we didn’t. I mean, we would purposely… you’ve got all the other bands spread out on this giant stage, and just being punk rock or whatever, we would set up in a little half-circle like 10-15 feet across. It just felt more comfortable that way. But, yeah, people would boo. Definitely. And you could tell that that’s what they thought they were supposed to do, because especially in arenas, I mean, of course. People come and they boo the opening bands, that’s what they do. We were promoting the album Dopesick at the time, and tons of people are like, yeah, that’s my favorite album from that show. So we gained some fans.

Did all the bands on the tour get along?

Yseult: Yeah, really, we did. [White Zombie Vocalist] Rob [Zombie] was kind of to himself, he had his girlfriend on tour with him, and they weren’t really part of the hang, but the rest of us were all hanging out a lot. Especially in White Zombie me and [drummer] Johnny Tempesta were on the party wagon and having fun with the other bands.

Williams: Oh, yeah, we get along. The only person that was never around was Rob Zombie. He had his own dressing room, he had his girlfriend with him. I mean, I like Rob, Rob’s a cool guy and all, but he just seemed like a dick back then. I doubt he would care if I said that. He was just getting famous, and you start getting an ego or whatever, I guess. On stage, he’d go to the side of the stage and his girlfriend would come out and like straighten his hair for him, it was like, “Oh, god…” (laughs). But he’s a nice guy, he’s a cool guy.

Anselmo: We all got along. The only dick on the tour was Rob Cummins [Zombie]. Maybe he was going through a phase, and I gotta say, although he was a penis on the tour, he did, by all credit to him, come up to me about a year later and say, “Dude, I absolutely 100 percent acknowledge that I was a total flaccid dick and I apologize for being such a dick. I was in a bad place” [Rob Zombie declined to be interviewed for this story.] There was an instance, and this is fucking great… every band has their rider, Pantera’s was like, if there were 10 things on Pantera’s rider, nine of them were whiskey. There was one night where everybody found out, oh shit, Rob Zombie’s mad. Little Robert Cummins is angry. Of course, I chuckled, and I’m like, “Alright, what’s he mad about now?” Somebody stole his favorite cookies. His favorite cookies! How dare they steal his favorite cookies? And, “stole,” that’s the key. Like they were so precious, and sought after, and really hard to find at your general supermarket. There’s no recovery. So somebody stole his damn cookies. He had his security go on everybody’s bus to check (laughs) and see who had the cookies. Lo and behold, no one had the cookies! The driver for the venue messed up and forgot to get Rob’s cookies. This is really heavy-duty stuff I’m laying on you.

Yseult: Oh, shit (laughs). That’s hilarious. Oh my god. Yeah, that rings a distant bell in the fog, yes. In the back of my brain that does ring a bell. Well, good thing he didn’t get them traded out for the cookies we were getting passed around. One of the Pantera roadies was making these insane pot cookies, it was like an acid trip every time you ate one. There was a lot of that going on (laughs). And not even voluntarily—I remember walking by one of those guys, I think it was Phil, I’m not sure, I was walking by and I think I was saying something, and next thing you know one just got popped in my mouth. It was more like a little square, a brownie that time (laughs). It was like, “Okay, let me wash that down with some Jägermeister. Here we go.”

Williams: (laughs) Every single night, as soon as White Zombie finished—and they opened for Pantera, so they came on right after us, until the end of the tour because Deftones got on at the end—we would go in Rob’s dressing room and take all of his catering; like, everything. Because he’s gone, he’s headed to the next venue or the hotel or whatever. He’s gone and he doesn’t want that stuff, so there’s bags of unopened chips and cookies, Milk Duds, drinks, probably beer because I don’t even think he drank beer. So we’d just take all of that stuff and put it in our van. We were travelling in a passenger van; everyone else was on a bus. So we’d take all of his catering (laughs). I don’t really remember about him being mad about cookies, but I could be totally… there was a lot of drugs and alcohol on that tour, so it’s hard to remember.

What was the atmosphere like within your own band during this tour?

Anselmo: I’ll be honest with you. Everybody in Pantera, minus Rex Brown… so I guess I’ll have to say the Abbott brothers… it was strange, dude. Even when I first moved to Texas to join Pantera in 1987, if I made a friend outside of their own little clique, there was this strange jealousy, this oddball skepticism, there was always this second sideways glance, so the mere fact that I had brothers from New Orleans on this tour with me, there was jealousy, man. But thinking back to where I was, and the things that happened to me, by my own hand, by my own decision, by my own doing and nobody else’s, their distrust of my other friends or the Eyehategod crew in general, it was really unfounded, because I am the captain of my own fucking ship. Nobody influences me to make my decisions. I own up to own faults and mistakes, and there wasn’t one person on that fucking tour popping pills in my mouth, jabbing needles into my vein, nobody was doing any of that crap. Here we are in 2016, and I haven’t had a drink since February. There is some sort of silver lining here. The silver lining would be: don’t do hard drugs, kids. Don’t. Just don’t.

Yseult: Well, I gotta say, Rob and his girlfriend were pretty much to themselves and unfriendly, to put it in the nicest terms, so I decided I was going to bring my girlfriend who loves to fucking party and loves to kick ass and she’s kind of my bodyguard and best friend, and having her on the tour just kicked everything up to 11. It was pretty insane every night. She was great friends with Phil and Darrell and all of them, so we had a blast. I didn’t really care if the rest of the band was or not, I was just like, “This is our last tour, I’m going to have a good time.” I think [White Zombie guitarist] J [Yuenger] had fun, but I think it was a bit much for him, he’s not the full partier kinda guy, but Johnny definitely joined in.

Williams: Oh, we were having a blast. We were having the best time of our lives, man. There got to be routines formed, like after the show we would meet Dimebag, we’d have a set time to go meet him, we’d play dice and gamble, stuff like that. It was amazing, like, wow, we’re on this arena tour, we’re not getting paid much, but it was fun. We got to play every night and open for these giant bands. So, yeah, it was cool. I remember, I think it was that tour, there was a Lynyrd Skynyrd tape stuck in the van tape deck. I mean, I like the band and all but I was certainly totally sick of them after a while (laughs). So that drove me crazy, but besides that, we were having fun.

Sean, did you know it was going to be White Zombie’s last tour at the time?

Yseult: Yeah, we were… well, it was the last tour for Astro-Creep , and we knew we were going to take a year off. But I kinda knew that Rob didn’t really want to do the band anymore. I moved to New Orleans pretty much the next day after that tour and took the year off, and sure enough, after one year we had a phone call and Rob was adamant about not getting back together. It was definitely a given that it was the last tour for Astro-Creep , for sure.

white zombie first tour

Did anything particularly memorable or wild happen on this tour?

Yseult: Oh, god. Very tragically, of course, Phil ODed and that was not good, but there were many ridiculous fun times too. Every day was insane. Darrell would always come out and prank us, pretty much daily, on stage. One of the more hideous things he would do is he would put on this really ugly old-man mask and a cape, and he’d come out, and you had to try to get far away from him because he would open that cape up and he’d have this huge rubber fake dick, and he’d have it filled up with, I don’t know what, dish soap or something, and he’d start squirting it, and it’d be horrible, and ridiculous (laughs). He’d have other characters he’d do—he’d dress up like he was a technician, like a fix-it man, and he’d get down in the pit and start rearranging security guys and acting like he was telling them what to do. Really distracting when you’re on stage trying to play to the audience and you’d see him down there just kind of fucking with stuff (laughs). Very Andy Kauffman, very weird. Every day was something, especially with Darrell (laughs).

Williams: I got lice, somehow. I think I got it before I left home, because somebody had given me this old couch and I slept on it (laughs), and I had like dreads at the time, just ratty looking hair, and I slept on that couch a few times and then went on the tour, and it was just horrible. And I don’t think I told anybody about it for like three weeks (laughs), so it was just gross and horrible. But there were all kinds of memorable stuff. Phil’s situation in Texas… everybody was mad at us. Everybody was like, “Eyehategod did it.” Honestly, we didn’t do anything. We were just hanging out when it happened. There were all these people mad at us for that, but that blew over quick. Everybody would do their set and then everybody would just get wasted. But every night was memorable. There was something going on every night. It was just great.

Anselmo: Is this the tour I overdosed on? I think it is, man. So that would be pretty wild and horrific. But it was also significant. There was always this lack of understanding of how severe my injury was in the rest of the Pantera camp. We were this unstoppable Superman of a machine that were dedicated to going out and being as physical and intense as we possibly could every night, and you gotta think, man, we had been touring hard, hard, hard our entire career. It was all wear and tear. I’d always try to voice to them fellas, “I might need to take a break here.” But then I was in a catch-22, because every neurosurgeon that I would go to would turn me down, although I had MRIs clearly showing two blown-out discs. And once you blow out one disc, it causes infection and it creeps up your spine. The next disc is going to go, and if you don’t do anything about it, the next and the next and so forth. I was on three blown-out discs, man. And that’s the center of your body. That’s your core. I was at the point to where regular painkillers were just getting me high, and I will say that all pain pills and all that shit, all they’re doing is putting a band-aid on, and when they wear off, the pain is twice as horrible, the anxiety is miserable, so I was in a fucking dark place that no one else could feel. That was my biggest problem. So I had a lot of frustration because of the lack of understanding I was getting within the Pantera camp. When I turned to heroin, that was me closing the fucking door. That was me saying, okay, I’ve had enough, fuck off and let me suffer. Just let me suffer. I’ll get to these fucking gigs by hook or by crook and I most certainly chose the crook. Once again, I would never, ever advocate this, but at the time, as a young man, a confused young man caught in this catch-22 of the doctors not helping me, the band not understanding me, like what the fuck? What can I do now but carry on any way I possibly could? So I chose the worst possible route. After I overdosed—and these are my words—it was understood in my mind, I got it. There was no injury, there was no suffering, there was no anything, there was only a drug problem. There was only a fucking drug problem. And that was true. That was so fucking true. Any person out there who says they can do heroin and just walk away the next day, I’d have to doubt that severely. It numbed my body out so… I gotta choose my words… perfectly here, because it numbed me out perfectly so I could stand up straight for an hour a night and do my gig, and then suffer after the gig with an entire bottle of whiskey and anything else I could get my hands on that could make this fucking pain disappear. But every morning, I’d wake up with an ice pick slamming through my lower back, and it was a vicious cycle. It’s amazing I came back from it alive.

Eyehategod's Jimmy Bower (photo by Sean Yseult).

What was it like for you after you overdosed?

Anselmo: The night after I overdosed, we had this meeting. And all of a sudden I saw this change within our camp. I saw tears in Dimebag’s eyes that I’d never seen before, I saw this terror in [bassist] Rex [Brown]’s eyes… [drummer] Vince [Abbott] was always indifferent, I was just this nuisance or some shit like that, so I didn’t expect anything out of him. But the concern, it was like, finally, a bit of concern, but, yes, it’s for the drug problem. Got it. Understood. The very next night, so two nights after I overdosed, we went out and fucking kicked ass for the rest of the tour, starting that very next night. I overdosed in Dallas, Texas; I know we played Chicago shortly after that because my father came out to the gig to check on me, my step-dad came out, and that was rare because my father was a pretty absent in my life. The whole thing was a little weird, as you can imagine, for a while. But we finished that tour and I got myself cleaned up for a little, and of course relapsed later. Believe me, having to wake up after that and knowing the next gig was coming up, I called a meeting at soundcheck with all the bands on that tour, Eyehategod, their crew, White Zombie and their crew, and they were all sitting up on the stage while I stood in front of them in the audience pit, and I gave them a very heartfelt apology and said I was so sorry for bringing this blight down on this awesome fucking tour. Waking up from that overdose was maybe one of the most embarrassing, humiliating feelings I’ve ever felt in my entire life. Justifiably so.

Did you have to cancel any shows because of the overdose?

Anselmo: No. Not one show.

What was it like for you when Phil ODed?

Yseult: Bad. It was horrible for everyone. I was the only one left in the courtyard along with Kate, our caterer. They cleared everyone out. I’m not sure why we got to stay, or why we stayed. We were just kinda stunned. Then we saw them wheel him past us to the ambulance. At that point he wasn’t breathing. He was basically dead for a minute or two there. It was awful. It was just awful. Thank goodness he came back. But at that point there was all this horrible finger-pointing with management, I got reamed out and I was like, “I don’t even know what you’re talking about.” They thought that definitely a lot of us were in on this and were doing this and knew about it. I had no idea. I don’t think anybody from the White Zombie camp had any idea. When Rob and I started White Zombie we were going to see hardcore bands, we were going to see Minor Threat and Black Flag, it kinda started with that whole straight-edge thing. A few years later you start having a drink or two, but that was pretty much it, we didn’t ever get into hard drugs or anything. So I was shocked. Phil was always the epitome of health, this muscular guy, it didn’t seem like that was going on, so that was a big shock. We were just glad he made it through. We’re still very dear friends. He’s like a big brother. I’m glad he’s alright.

Williams: Well, it started out as… I mean, this sounds horrible and all, but I was waiting to… we were about to do some of the same stuff, you know? To be honest. I mean, people know my reputation. Now I totally regret all that, I’m glad I’m over that period of my life, but at the time, we were just like all excited, like, “Yeah, there’s drugs! We got drugs!” I guess he went into his dressing room or something, and all of a sudden everybody was freaking out. They said what happened, that he ODed. So, of course, at that point we were all freaking out. We were totally nervous that he was going to die. Everybody was scared. That was our friend, you know? Which goes to show you that messing with those types of drugs is stupid. It’s not just him, it’s all of us. So it went from some excitement in the air to this total dredge within a few seconds. Everything turned out fine, but it wasn’t cool. It’s never cool; it’s happened to other people I’ve known and I’ve been there, and it’s not cool at all. Never.

RIP: Dimebag circa the tour in question (photo by Sean Yseult).

Do you have any regrets about the tour? Phil, you might have just covered that.

Anselmo: I think we just covered that part. Because you take away that moment and the rampant drug-fuelled Phil Anselmo, I can look back at that young me and say my biggest regret would be that night, being way too bold for my own good, but you know, I wouldn’t change it, and the reason why is because it was an incredible wake-up call for me. I learned a ton on that fucking tour that has led me to be a better person in general. And everything I’ve said that might have been negative about Rob, I love the guy, and every time we see each other we laugh about the old days and this and that, and we talk horror films. We’re friends, and I really love the dude, I think he’s awesome. Just remember we’re talking about a time capsule.

Yseult: Oh, hell no (laughs). I really had the best time of my life every day. I was just looking through some old tour diaries; Darrell would have a go-kart waiting on the side of the stage for me sometimes, there was another time we hijacked some piece of machinery backstage we were driving around on it (laughs). Their bus driver would always be throwing around $100 bills left and right, like, “I’ll give you $100 if you eat that or drink that” or “give me a lock of your hair.” I think I had green hair at the time, so I was like, “Sure, I’ll cut off some hair for $100” (laughs). Just crazy shit. And you know, the drinks, the Black Tooth Grin, half the time I’d throw them over my shoulder they were so gross (laughs). It really was a blast. There might have been one or two people that weren’t having that much fun, but the rest… (laughs). And another thing Darrell would do, is he made up this really cool dice game. It was three dice, and different number combinations. He called me Junior, and he’d say, “Junior, get over here,” because he knows I like to play cards and gamble. So we’d be sitting on the ground in the parking lot outside of the arena playing this game, and I’d be out of money, and he’d say, “Don’t worry about it, Junior.” And again, the $100 bills, just throwing them down. Unbelievable. Those guys really lived and partied like rock stars. It’s funny because we were drawing the same crowds and making the same money, but we didn’t live like these guys (laughs).

Williams: Not one. No. I don’t have any regrets. I don’t have any regrets in my life, you know? Like that bad stuff I just talked about, I’m not going to sit back and regret things. It’s my life, I’ve lived it, done it, and that’s how it goes, you know? But that tour in particular, no, man. That was a blast. It was a great experience, we bonded as a band and as friends in Eyehategod, as well as with lots of other people that came along. It was great, man.

“Who here likes to fuck their own sister?”: For a small glimpse of the chaos, here’s an Eyehategod set from this tour:

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FAN TATTOOS

“it came from n.y.c.” box set out june 3rd, sean, j., & john appearing at monster-mania con, hey there zombie fiends, discography.

White Zombie crawled out NYC’s Lower East Side as an enigma and outcast, surprising themselves and others at the heights they reached. Formed in 1985 by Rob Zombie and Sean Yseult, the two met at Parsons School of Design. Sean arrived there via the high school program at the North Carolina School of the Arts, with a background in classical and blues piano and composition, classical violin, ballet and visual arts. She began performing blues improv in nightclubs at age eight. Rob came from Haverhill MA, with a strong obsession for the Misfits, Alice Cooper, and Kiss, and an even stronger obsession with movies.

Sharing a love of horror films, heavy metal and underground music they started White Zombie. Rob came up with the name and wrote lyrics, Sean wrote riffs. They recruited fellow Parsons’ student Peter Landau to play drums and guitarist Ena Kostabi to make their first 7″, “Gods on Voodoo Moon”. The record was recorded in 2 hours for $30 at a studio found in the phonebook, Batcave, picked for its name and low price. The minimum vinyl was pressed – 300 – and covers were made for “free” on a color xerox machine at Sean’s work. The band proceeded on in this manner, living in apartments with rats, no heat, no kitchen, and sometimes no electricity. They walked all over Manhattan, trying to sell vinyl to the local record stores like Bleecker Bob’s, Midnight Records and Free Being. They spent the rest of their time cutting cardboard up to package records off to college radio, making flyers, mixing up wheat paste in buckets and trudging all over the East Village, Soho and LES at 2am trying to paste them up while dodging policemen. And gigging. CBGB’s was home, other venues were 8BC, the Pyramid, NoSeNo, and the Love Club at Lismar Lounge. Bands they played with at this time were their neighbors in the East Village/LES: Pussy Galore, Honeymoon Killers, Live Skull, Raging Slab, Blind Idiot God.

Switching guitarists and drummers with alacrity, Rob and Sean settled on Ivan de Prume, who Sean had played with previously in a punk band. Still in high school, Ivan was a true Brooklyn metal head – the first time he met Sean and Rob to discuss playing together, he showed up in Washington Square wearing a cropped Ramones t-shirt with a jam box on his shoulder, blasting Metallica. Ivan played on the 2nd 7″, “Pig Heaven” and continued on the next 5 records through La Sexorcisto. Guitarist Tom Five was also in the band for a couple of years, playing on the third and fourth releases that gave White Zombie it’s underground notoriety. Rob and Sean found Tom at Parsons, through a flier they put up in the school cafeteria saying influences were “the Doors, Black Sabbath and Butthole Surfers.” Tom delivered on this description perfectly, playing organized chaos on his guitar. Kurt Cobain lauded “Psycho-Head Blowout”, Iggy Pop spoke highly of “Soul -Crusher”, Kim Thayil wore one of 12 hand -screened WZ t-shirts on a Soundgarden poster. The band toured the US, sleeping on floors of Babes in Toyland, SubPop, the Dwarves and L7 to name a few.

Their live shows were always an explosion, looking and sounding like tattered street urchins trying to put on a Kiss show. The image garnered quite a bit of interest: dreads, tattoos, every square inch of clothing dyed, ragged, patched and studded. It was a new look and a new sound.

The touring, self-released records and dedication was recognized by Caroline Records, who signed the band in 1988. They re-released “Soul -Crusher” and went on to put out the lp “Make Them Die Slowly” (89) and the “God of Thunder”(90) e.p.

Feeling growing pains and the influence of metal bands such as Metallica and Slayer, another personnel change was made and J. became the WZ guitarist with “God of Thunder”. J. moved to NYC from Chicago and had played in the punk band “Rights of the Accused” at the age of 14. Finally able to hone their sound and direction, Rob set out to change things drastically by collaging horror and cult film samples into the music. This was done at first by holding up a microphone attached to a cassette recorder to a television playing a VHS cassette. Already drawing attention for his unique vocals, lyrics, and illustrations, this was groundbreaking for the world of rock, heavy metal, and underground music.

The band left CBGB’s and started playing bigger venues: the Ritz, the Cat Club, L’Amours. After years of playing with art bands who mostly scratched their head at WZ, the metalheads at L’Amours embraced them. Things began to click: producer Daniel Rey took notice of the band, introducing them to A&R man Michael Alago. Alago had signed Metallica; now he signed WZ to Geffen records. La Sexorcisto was released in 1992, and after two years of dogged touring and a little help from Beavis and Butthead, White Zombie became a household name. Headlining stadiums with phantasmic lights, pyro, and film, the band was finally able to give the fans the show they had always wanted to. Two more drummer changes lead to Johnny Tempesta, who performed with the band on Astro-Creep and all subsequent touring. After a year and a half long tour, the band decided to call it quits while at the top of their game. Nothing was worse to the members than to watch a band flog a dead corpse; it seemed the perfect time to put the Zombie to rest.

There has never before or since been a band to combine such heavy music with sheer insanity, creativity and incredible live performances. The band members now live happily with heat, electricity, kitchens, and only the occasional rat.

E-mail your Fan Tattoos to [email protected] with the subject line “White Zombie Tattoo”

Johnny Tempesta

Peter landau, sean yseult, ivan de prume, ena (paul) kostabi, management (serious inquiries only):.

White Zombie is Managed by Brady Brock ([email protected])

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White Zombie

white zombie first tour

_________________________________________________________________________________________________

White Zombie was a Grammy Award-nominated American heavy metal band. White Zombie was cofounded by writer, vocalist and graphic artist Rob Zombie, after coming up with the band idea in 1985 while attending Parsons School of Design in his junior year. Zombie's girlfriend at the time, Sean Yseult, was the other co-founder.

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White zombie concert setlists & tour dates, white zombie at augusta civic center, augusta, me, usa.

  • Electric Head, Part 1: The Agony
  • Super-Charger Heaven
  • Thunder Kiss '65
  • More Human Than Human
  • Welcome to Planet Motherfucker/Psychoholic Slag
  • Blood, Milk and Sky
  • Real Solution #9
  • El Phantasmo and the Chicken-Run Blast-O-Rama
  • I Am Legend
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White Zombie at Centrum in Worcester, Worcester, MA, USA

White zombie at continental airlines arena, east rutherford, nj, usa.

  • Electric Head, Part 2: The Ecstasy
  • Grease Paint and Monkey Brains

White Zombie at Nissan Pavilion, Bristow, VA, USA

White zombie at meadows music theater, hartford, ct, usa, white zombie at blockbuster-sony music entertainment centre, camden, nj, usa, white zombie at coca-cola star lake amphitheater, burgettstown, pa, usa, white zombie at copps coliseum, hamilton, on, canada, white zombie at blossom music center, cuyahoga falls, oh, usa.

  • Children of the Grave

White Zombie at Hara Arena, Dayton, OH, USA

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Most played songs

  • Thunder Kiss '65 ( 118 )
  • Welcome to Planet Motherfucker/Psychoholic Slag ( 98 )
  • Black Sunshine ( 84 )
  • More Human Than Human ( 83 )
  • Super-Charger Heaven ( 74 )

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9sundays A.N.I.M.A.L. Anyu Nem Seedel Auroras Hope Bassnectar The Beautiful Ones BlackStar Republic Jasmine Cain The Cult Dead Empires Five Finger Death Punch Robert Flynn Future Punx Godsmack Hellbilly Deluxe The Hellcat Saints Machine Head Machine-X Vinny Mauro Mix Master Mike Motionless in White Papadosio Powerman 5000 Primus Psychostick Robbed Zombie Sevendust Six Sins Till Sunday Slash Strong Deformity TR3 Umphrey’s McGee Steve Vai Whiskey Sin White Pony Rob Zombie

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Artists covered

The Beatles Black Flag Black Sabbath Blue Öyster Cult KC and the Sunshine Band KISS Ted Nugent Queen Slayer

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Gigs seen live by

1,755 people have seen White Zombie live.

twinsofevil2012 Kenny502 rywy79 CannibalSnacks dexterstuffins arbour0713 DenHags gritter96 tag4771 amase21 xdoubleZx skholbrook shitcan666 mterrence5 renton444 DCRedMAchine Metalman75 mojoguy316 McFrooty rocknroll05 jonnytombstone Splatterhouse5 MetallicaFan58 Moe_Faux medusanyc fvcgosox Franu333 lococoms budaj halo33 Popprozac Jimmyvette cfmoran13 larz965 GlenW Metaliched kazone Johnbeatle JAP376 Sundays138 charlesu2 bootscootwookie LVTBDCTR RobotfromRocky4 SariLep JazzyJag fuckforever TQIV JBe1047499 acssve82

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25/11/1986; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. Band Residency, earliest known w/ Phil on vocals. 26/11/1986; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 27/11/1986; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 28/11/1986; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 29/11/1986; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 30/11/1986; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 01/01/1987; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 11/07/1987; Concert at The Rock Ranch, Munster, TX, USA. 12/07/1987; Concert at The Rock Ranch, Munster, TX, USA. 15/07/1987; Concert at Matley’s, Dallas, TX, USA. Band Residency. 16/07/1987; Concert at Matley’s, Dallas, TX, USA. 17/07/1987; Concert at Matley’s, Dallas, TX, USA. 18/07/1987; Concert at Matley’s, Dallas, TX, USA. 19/07/1987; Concert at Matley’s, Dallas, TX, USA. 20/07/1987; Concert at Matley’s, Dallas, TX, USA. 25/07/1987; Concert at The Roxy, Los Angeles, CA, USA. 26/07/1987; Concert at The Troubador, Los Angeles, CA, USA. 29/07/1987; Concert at Rocker’s, Phoenix, AZ, USA. Band residency. 30/07/1987; Concert at Rocker’s, Phoenix, AZ, USA. 31/07/1987; Concert at Rocker’s, Phoenix, AZ, USA. 01/08/1987; Concert at Rocker’s, Phoenix, AZ, USA. 02/08/1987; Concert at Rocker’s, Phoenix, AZ, USA. 03/08/1987; Concert at Rocker’s, Phoenix, AZ, USA. 12/08/1987; Concert at Saso’s, El Paso, TX, USA. Band residency. 13/08/1987; Concert at Saso’s, El Paso, TX, USA. 14/08/1987; Concert at Saso’s, El Paso, TX, USA. 15/08/1987; Concert at Saso’s, El Paso, TX, USA. 16/08/1987; Concert at Saso’s, El Paso, TX, USA. 02/09/1987; Concert at Cardi’s, Houston, TX, USA. Band residency. 03/09/1987; Concert at Cardi’s, Houston, TX, USA. 04/09/1987; Concert at Cardi’s, Houston, TX, USA. 05/09/1987; Concert at Cardi’s, Houston, TX, USA. 06/09/1987; Concert at Cardi’s, Houston, TX, USA. 12/09/1987; Concert at Circle In The Square, Shreveport, CA, USA. 13/09/1987; Concert at Circle In The Square, Shreveport, CA, USA. 16/09/1987; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. Band residency. 17/09/1987; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 18/09/1987; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 19/09/1987; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 20/09/1987; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 21/09/1987; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 03/10/1987; Concert at The Arcadia Theater, Dallas, TX, USA. 10/10/1987; Concert at The Arcadia Theater, Dallas, TX, USA. 25/11/1987; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. Band residency. 26/11/1987; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 27/11/1987; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 28/11/1987; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 29/11/1987; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 30/11/1987; Concert at Savvy’s, Fort Worth, TX, USA. 10/12/1987; Concert at Metalworks, Arlington, TX, USA. 11/12/1987; Concert at Metalworks, Atlington, TX, USA. 12/12/1987; Concert at Metalworks, Arlington, TX, USA. 31/12/1987; Concert at Metalworks, Arlington, TX, USA. with Katt Daquiri. 01/01/1988; Concert at Metalworks, Arlington, TX, USA. with Katt Daquiri. 02/01/1988; Concert at Metalworks, Arlington, TX, USA. with Katt Daquiri. 24/06/1988; `Power Metal` album released. 1st album with Phil Anselmo. 02/07/1988; Concert at Arcadia Theatre, Dallas, TX, USA. 20/10/1988; Concert at Joe’s Garage, Ft. Worth, TX, USA. with Katt Daquiri. 20/12/1988; Concert at The Basement, Dallas, TX, USA. opening for Circus Of Power. 06/03/1989; Concert at The Cat Club, New York, NY, USA. 19/05/1989; Concert at Joe’s Garage, Fort Worth, TX, USA. with Kerry King as special guest. 01/06/1989; Concert at City Limits, Dallas, TX, USA. 02/06/1989; Concert at City Limits, Dallas, TX, USA. 03/06/1989; Concert at City Limits, Dallas, TX, USA. 16/06/1989; Concert at Joe’s Garage, Fort Worth, TX, USA. with Tailspin. 17/06/1989; Concert at Joe’s Garage, Fort Worth, TX, USA. with Tailspin. 01/07/1989; Concert at City Limits, Dallas, TX, USA. with Katt Daiquiri. 14/07/1989; Concert at The Bear Creek Crossin’ Club, De Soto, TX, USA. 15/07/1989; Concert at The Bear Creek Crossin’ Club, De Soto, TX, USA. 17/07/1989; Concert at City Limits, Dallas, TX, USA. with Hammerhead. 09/11/1989; Concert at City Limits, Dallas, TX, USA. 10/11/1989; Concert at City Limits, Dallas, TX, USA. 14/12/1989; Concert at City Limits, Dallas, TX, USA. 15/12/1989; Concert at City Limits, Dallas, TX, USA. 16/12/1989; Concert at City Limits, Dallas, TX, USA. 31/12/1989; Concert at The Basement, Dallas, TX, USA. 30/03/1990; Concert at L’Amour, Brooklyn, NY, USA. opening for Sanctuary & Fates Warning, with Dead-On. 25/05/1990; Concert at Backstage, ??, TX, USA. 02/06/1990; Concert at The Basement, Dallas, TX, USA. video shoot. 01/07/1990; Concert at The Basement, Dallas, TX, USA. video shoot. 13/07/1990; `Cowboys From Hell` album released. 21/07/1990; Concert at The Basement, Dallas, TX, USA. album release show. 26/07/1990; Concert at Kinetix, ??, CA, USA. with Forte. album release show. 18/08/1990; Concert at The Stone, San Francisco, CA, USA. opening for Suicidal Tendencies. 19/08/1990; Concert at The Bren Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA. opening for Exodus & Suicidal Tendencies. 20/08/1990; Concert at After The Gold Rush, Phoenix, AZ, USA. opening for Exodus & Suicidal Tendencies. 21/08/1990; Concert at ??, Tuscon, AZ, USA. 23/08/1990; Concert at ??, Denver, CO, USA. 25/08/1990; Concert at ??, Milwaukee, WI, USA. 26/08/1990; Concert at The Vic, Chicago, IL, USA. opening for Exodus & Suicidal Tendencies. 27/08/1990; Concert at First Avenue, Minniapolis, MN, USA. opening for Exodus & Suicidal Tendencies. 29/08/1990; Concert at Mississippi Nights, St. Louis, MD, USA. 30/08/1990; Concert at Bogarts, Cincinatti, OH, USA. opening for Exodus & Suicidal Tendencies. 31/08/1990; Concert at The Agora, Cleveand, OH, USA. opening for Exodus & Suicidal Tendencies. 01/09/1990; Concert at ??, Columbus, OH, USA. 02/09/1990; Concert at ??, Detroit, MI, USA. 04/09/1990; Concert at ??, Toronto, ON, Canada. 05/09/1990; Concert at The Spectrum, Montreal, QC, Canada. opening for Exodus & Suicidal Tendencies. 06/09/1990; Concert at Saratoga Winners, Albany, NY, USA. opening for Exodus & Suicidal Tendencies. 07/09/1990; Concert at The Ritz, New York City, NY, USA. opening for Exodus & Suicidal Tendencies. 08/09/1990; Concert at The Ritz, New York City, NY, USA. opening for Exodus & Suicidal Tendencies. 09/09/1990; Concert at ??, Boston, MA, USA. 10/09/1990; Concert at ??, Athens, NY, USA. 11/09/1990; Concert at ??, New Haven, CT, USA. 12/09/1990; Concert at ??, Philadelphia, PA, USA. 13/09/1990; Concert at Painters Mill Theater, Owings Mills, MY, USA. opening for Suicidal Tendencies & Exodus. 15/09/1990; Concert at The Concrete Foundations Forum, Los Angeles, CA, USA. 20/09/1990; Concert at ??, Providence, RI, USA. 21/09/1990; Concert at ??, Newark, NJ, USA. 22/09/1990; Concert at The Fastlane II, Astbury Park, NJ, USA. with Skitzo. 24/09/1990; Concert at ??, Boston, MA, USA. 25/09/1990; Concert at ??, Washington, DC, USA. 26/09/1990; Concert at ??, Pitsburgh, PA, USA. with Eviction & Solitude. 27/09/1990; Concert at ??, Rochester, NY, USA. 28/09/1990; Concert at ??, Brooklyn, NY, USA. 29/09/1990; Concert at ??, ??, NY, USA. 01/10/1990; Concert at ??, Baltimore, MD, USA. 03/10/1990; Concert at ??, Cleveland, OH, USA. 04/10/1990; Concert at ??, Toronto, ON, Canada. 05/10/1990; Concert at ??, Detroit, MI, USA. 06/10/1990; Concert at ??, Chicago, IL, USA. 07/10/1990; Concert at 7th Street Entry, Minneapolis, MN, USA. 08/10/1990; Concert at ??, St. Paul, MN, USA. 10/10/1990; Concert at The Lone Star, Kansas City, MO, USA. 11/10/1990; Concert at The Diamond Ballroom, Chatanooga City, OK, USA. 12/10/1990; Concert at ??, Wichita, KS, USA. 13/10/1990; Concert at Cain`s Ballroom, Tulsa, OK, USA. with Forte & Klokworq. 16/10/1990; Concert at ??, Houston, TX, USA. 17/10/1990; Concert at ??, San Antonia, TX, USA. 18/10/1990; Concert at ??, Austin, TX, USA. 04/11/1990; Concert at ??, Orlando, FL, USA. 05/11/1990; Concert at ??, Ft. Lauderdale, FL, USA. 06/11/1990; Concert at ??, Jacksonville, FL, USA. 07/11/1990; Concert at The Masquerade, Atlanta, GA, USA. opening for Prong, with Mind Over Four. 08/11/1990; Concert at ??, Hickory, NC, USA. 09/11/1990; Concert at ??, Wilmington, NC, USA. 11/11/1990; Concert at ??, Hadley, MA, USA. 12/11/1990; Concert at ??, Provodence, RI, USA. 13/11/1990; Concert at ??, Boston, MA, USA. 14/11/1990; Concert at ??, New York City, NY, USA. 15/11/1990; Concert at ??, Albany, NY, USA. 17/11/1990; Concert at ??, Montreal, QC, Canada. 18/11/1990; Concert at The Diamond Club, Toronto, ON, Canada. opening for Prong. 19/11/1990; Concert at Peabody`s Downunder, Cleveland, OH, USA. opening for Prong, with Mind Over Four. 20/11/1990; Concert at ??, Cincinatti, OH, USA. opening for Prong, with Mind Over Four. 23/11/1990; Concert at ??, Columbus, OH, USA. 24/11/1990; Concert at ??, Detroit, MI, USA. 25/11/1990; Concert at ??, Chicago, IL, USA. 26/11/1990; Concert at First Avenue, Indianapolis, IN, USA. opening for Prong, with Mind Over Four. 27/11/1990; Concert at City Center Theater, Green Bay, WI, USA. 28/11/1990; Concert at ??, Minniapolis, MN, USA. 30/11/1990; Concert at ??, Des Moines, IA, USA. 01/12/1990; Concert at The Outhouse, Lawrence, KS, USA. opening for Prong, with Mind Over Four. 02/12/1990; Concert at The Diamond Ballroom, Omaha, NE, USA. opening for Exodus & Prong. 03/12/1990; Concert at ??, St. Louis, MD, USA. 04/12/1990; Concert at ??, Memphis, TN, USA. 05/12/1990; Concert at The Backroom, Houston, TX, USA. opening for Prong, with Mind Over Four. 07/12/1990; Concert at ??, Dallas, TX, USA. 08/12/1990; Concert at ??, Dallas, TX, USA. 11/12/1990; Concert at ??, Denver, CO, USA. 12/12/1990; Concert at ??, Salt Lake City, UT, USA. 14/12/1990; Concert at The Quake, Reno, NV, USA. 15/12/1990; Concert at The Stone, San Francisco, CA, USA. with The Horde Of Torment. 16/12/1990; Concert at ??, Fresno, CA, USA. 17/12/1990; Concert at ??, Las Vegas, NV, USA. 19/12/1990; Concert at ??, Long Beach, CA, USA. 28/12/1990; Concert at ??, New Orleans, LA, USA. 29/12/1990; Concert at ??, Shreveport, LA, USA. 31/12/1990; Concert at ??, Houston, TX, USA. 20/01/1991; Concert at The Beachem Theatre, Orlando, FL, USA. opening for Morbid Angel, Deicide, Devastation & Fatal Sin. 31/02/1991; Concert at KB Hallen, Copenhagen, Denmark. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 01/02/1991; Concert at Scandinavium, Gothenburg, Sweden. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 02/02/1991; Concert at Isstadion, Stockholm, Sweden. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 04/02/1991; Concert at Jaahalli, Helsinki, Finland. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 06/02/1991; Concert at Rockerfeller Music Hall, Oslo, Norway. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 08/02/1991; Concert at Grugahalle, Essen, Germany. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 09/02/1991; Concert at Alsterdorfer Sporthalle, Hamburg, Germany. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 11/02/1991; Concert at Eissporthalle, Berlin, Germany. opening for Annihilator. 12/02/1991; Concert at Eilenriedehalle, Hannover, Germany. opening for Annihilator. 14/02/1991; Concert at Saarlandhalle, Saarbrucken, Germany. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 15/02/1991; Concert at Oberschwabenhalle, Ravensburg, Germany. opening for Annihilator. 16/02/1991; Concert at Carl-Diem-Halle, Wurzberg, Germany. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 18/02/1991; Concert at Stadhalle, Offenbach, Germany. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 19/02/1991; Concert at Olympiahalle, Munich, Germany. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 20/02/1991; Concert at Bank-Austria Zelt, Vienna, Austria. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 21/02/1991; Concert at Eisstadion Liebenau, Graz, Austria. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 23/02/1991; Concert at Festhalle, Lucerne, Switzerland. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 24/02/1991; Concert at Palasport Palaresa, Bolzano, Italy. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 25/02/1991; Concert at Hala Tivoli, Ljublijana, Slovenia. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 26/02/1991; Concert at Dom Sportova, Zagreb, Croatia. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 01/03/1991; Concert at Teatro Tendastrice, Rome, Italy. opening for Annihilator. 02/03/1991; Concert at Palasport, Brescia, Italy. opening for Annihilator. 04/03/1991; Concert at Hanns-Martin-Schleyer-Halle, Stuttgart, Germany. opening for Annihilator. 05/03/1991; Concert at Friedrich-Ebert-Halle, Ludwigshafen Am Rhein, Germany . opening for Annihilator. 06/03/1991; Concert at Rhein-Mosel Halle, Keblenz, Germany. opening for Annihilator. 08/03/1991; Concert at The Bull Ring, Saragossa, Spain. opening for Annihilator. 09/03/1991; Concert at Velodromo De Anoeta, San Sebastian, Spain. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 10/03/1991; Concert at Palacio De Deportes, Madrid, Spain. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 12/03/1991; Concert at Transbordeur, Villeurbanne, France. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 13/03/1991; Concert at Sportivo De Cascais, Cascais, Portugal. opening for Annihilator. 15/03/1991; Concert at Rijnhal, Arnhem, The Netherlands. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 16/03/1991; Concert at Vorst National, Brussles, Belgium. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 17/03/1991; Concert at Le Zenith, Paris, France. opening for Judas Priest & Annihilator. 19/03/1991; Concert at The Marquee, London, England. with Slammer. 19/03/1991; In Store Appearance at Shades, London, England. 10/04/1991; Concert at Bogarts, Cincinatti, OH, USA. opening for Wrathchild America. 11/04/1991; Concert at The Alrosa, ??, ??, USA. opening for Wrathchild America. 13/04/1991; Concert at The Ritz, ??, ??, USA. opening for Wrathchild America. 14/04/1991; Concert at The Avalon Nightclub, Chicago, IL, USA. with Wrathchild America & Demeted Ted. 20/04/1991; Concert at Hammerjacks, Baltimore, MD, USA. opening for Wrathchild America, with Mystic Force. 24/04/1991; Concert at Center Stage, ??, ??, USA. with Wrathchild America. 25/04/1991; Concert at Andale Hall, Andale, ??, USA. opening for Wrathchild America. 28/04/1991; Concert at The Visage Nightclub, Orlando, FL, USA. with Wrathchild America. 30/04/1991; Concert at St. Bernard Civic Center, Chalmette, LA, USA. with Wrathchild America. 01/05/1991; Concert at ??, Shreveport, LA, USA. with Wrathchild America. 04/05/1991; Concert at The Arcadia Theater, Dallas, TX, USA. with Wrathchild America. 05/05/1991; Concert at The Showcase, San Antonio, TX, USA. with Wrathchild America & Byfist. 07/05/1991; Concert at The Diamond Ballroom, Oklahoma City, OK, USA. with Wratchchild America. 12/05/1991; Concert at The Limelite, Grove Street, Reno, NV, USA. with Wrathchild America & Absolut. 14/05/1991; Concert at The Stone, San Francisco, CA, USA. with Wrathchild America, Panic & Oblivion. 15/05/1991; Concert at The Bandstand, Anaheim, CA, USA. with Wrathchild America & Kill Era. 16/05/1991; Concert at The Whiskey A-Go-Go, Hollywood, CA, USA. with Wrathchild America. 19/05/1991; Concert at Chandler Compadre Stadium, Chandler, AZ, USA. opening for Flotsam & Jetsam & Sacred Reich, with Wrathchild America etc. 21/05/1991; Concert at The Outhouse, Boston, MA, USA. with Wrathchild America & Kill Whitey. ​25/05/1991; Concert at The Newport Music Hall, ??, ??, USA. with Wrathchild America. 26/05/1991; Concert at Bogarts, Cincinatti, OH, USA. opening for Wrathchild America. 31/05/1991; Concert at Saratoga Winners, Albany, NY, USA. with Wrathchild America. 03/06/1991; Concert at Toad`s Place, New Haven. ??, USA. with Wrathchild America. 07/06/1991; Concert at The Airport Music Hall, Allentown, PA, USA. opening for Wratchild America, with Gothic Slam. 14/06/1991; Concert at The Ritz Music Hall, ??, ??, USA. with Wratchild America, Violent Demise & Cornucopia Of Death. 02/08/1991; Concert at Pink’s Garage, Honalulu, HI, USA. with B.Y.K. 28/09/1991; Concert at Tushino Airfield, Moscow, Russia. opening for AC/DC, Metallica, The Black Crowes. 23/11/1991; Concert at The Ritz Theatre, Tampa, FL, USA. 29/11/1991; Concert at The Vatican, Washington, DC, USA. 14/01/1992; Concert at The Roxy, Atlanta, GA, USA. 17/01/1992; Concert at Hammerjacks, Baltimore, MD, USA. 23/01/1992; Concert at ENT Hall, ??, ??, USA. opening for Skid Row. 25/01/1992; Concert at Club 1000, ??, ??, USA. 19/02/1992; Concert at Club 367, St. Louis, MO, USA. with Krazan. 21/02/1992; `Vulgar Display Of Power` album released. also released/advertised as 20/02/1992 in some territories. 22/02/1992; Concert at Harpo’s, Detroit, MI, USA. 23/02/1992; Concert at The Vic, Chicago, IL, USA. with Fates Warning & The Plague. 25/02/1992; Concert at McNichols Arena, ??, ??, USA. opening for Skid Row & Soundgarden. 08/03/1992; Concert at Henry J. Kaiser Center, San Francisco, CA, USA. opening for Skid Row. 09/03/1992; Concert at Sacremento Exhibit Hall, Sacremento, CA, USA. opening for Skid Row. 10/03/1992; Concert at The Event Centre, San Jose, CA, USA. opening for Skid Row. 20/03/1992; Concert at The Astro Arena, Houston, TX, USA. opening for Skid Row. 28/03/1992; Concert at Cains Ballroom, Tulsa, OK, USA. with My Sister`s Machine & Crowbar. 31/03/1992; Concert at The Mirage Nightclub, ??, MN, USA. with My Sister`s Machine & Crowbar. 01/04/1992; Concert at The Mirage Nightclub, ??, MN, USA. 12/04/1992; Concert at RPI Fieldhouse, ??, ??, USA. opening for Skid Row. 24/04/1992; Concert at The Paramount, ??, ??, USA. opening for Skid Row. 17/05/1992; Concert at The Riverfront, ??, ??, USA. opening for Skid Row. 27/05/1992; Concert at Fargo Civic Memorial Auditorium, ??, ??, USA. opening for Skid Row. 03/06/1992; Concert at The Trocadero, Philadelphia, PA, USA. 04/06/1992; Concert at The Metropol, ??, ??, USA. 08/06/1992; Concert at The Auditorium De Verdun, Montreal, QC, Canada. opening for Skid Row. 12/06/1992; Concert at The Meadowlands, East Rutherford, NJ, USA. opening for Skid Row. 26/06/1992; Concert at The San Diego Sports Arena, San Diego, CA, USA. with White Zombie & Crowbar. 27/06/1992; Concert at The Hollywood Palladium, Hollywood, CA, USA. with White Zombie, Crowbar. 08/07/1992; Concert at Kanin Hoken Hall, Tokyo, Japan. with Outrage. 09/07/1992; Concert at Kohwan, Kaiken, Nagoya, Japan. with Outrage. 11/07/1992; Concert at Midoh Kaikan, Osaka, Japan. with Outrage. 13/07/1992; Concert at Club Citta Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan. with Outrage. 14/07/1992; Concert at Nakano Sanplaza, Tokyo, Japan. with Outrage. 17/08/1992; Concert at The Pacific Amph., ??, ??, USA 18/08/1992; Concert at The Warfield, San Francisco, CA, USA. with White Zombie & Trouble. 19/08/1992; Concert at The Pioneer Centre, Reno, NV, USA. 23/08/1992; Concert at The Mirage Nightclub, ??, MN, USA. with Trouble & White Zombie. 26/08/1992; Concert at The Riviera, Chicago, IL, USA. 27/08/1992; Concert at The State Theatre, Detroit, MI, USA. 28/08/1992; Concert at The Exhibition Center, Cincinatti, OH, USA. with Trouble. 01/09/1992; Concert at The Spectrum, Montreal, QC, Canada. with White Zombie. 02/09/1992; Concert at E.M. Leow’s, Worcester, MA, USA. with White Zombie & Trouble. 04/09/1992; Concert at The Roseland, New York, NY, USA. 05/09/1992; Concert at The Boathouse, Norfolk, VA, USA. with White Zombie & Trouble. 12/09/1992; Concert at Aeroporto Di Reggio Emilia, Italy. opening for Iron Maiden etc. `Monsters Of Rock`. 14/09/1992; Concert at Plaza De Toros, Barcelona, Spain. opening for Iron Maiden etc. `Monsters Of Rock`. 17/09/1992; Concert at Velodromo De Anoete, San Sebastian, Spain. opening for Iron Maiden etc. `Monsters Of Rock`. 18/09/1992; Concert at Las Arenas Plaza De Toros, Madrid, Spain. opening for Iron Maiden etc. `Monsters Of Rock`. 19/09/1992; Concert at Municipal Tent, Madrid, Spain. opening for Iron Maiden etc. `Monsters Of Rock`. 22/09/1992; Concert at Le Zenith, Paris, France. opening for Megadeth, with Body Count. 24/09/1992; Concert at The Ulster Hall, Belfast, Ireland. opening for Megadeth. 27/09/1992; Concert at N.E.C. Arena, Birmingham, England. opening for Megadeth. 28/09/1992; Concert at The Pavillions, Plymouth, England. opening for Megadeth. 29/09/1992; Concert at Hammersmith Odeon, London, England. opening for Megadeth. 30/09/1992; Concert at Hammersmith Odeon, London, England. opening for Megadeth. 01/10/1992; Concert at Newport Centre, Newport, Wales. opening for Megadeth. 03/10/1992; Concert at The Barrowlands, Glasgow, Scotland. opening for Megadeth. 04/10/1992; Concert at The City Hall, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, England. opening for Megadeth. 05/10/1992; Concert at The Apollo, Manchester, England. opening for Megadeth. 06/10/1992; Concert at Wessex Hall, Poole, England. opening for Megadeth. 07/10/1992; Concert at The Corn Eschange, Cambridge, England. opening for Megadeth. 16/10/1992; Concert at Burghal, Genk, Belgium. opening for Megadeth. 17/10/1992; Concert at Festhalle, Sempach, Germany. opening for Megadeth. 20/10/1992; Concert at The Docks, Hamburg, Germany. opening for Megadeth. 23/10/1992; Concert at Philpshalle, Dortmund, Germany. opening for Megadeth. 24/10/1992; Concert at Rijhal, Arnhem, The Netherlands. opening for Megadeth. 06/11/1992; Concert at The Commodore Ballroom, Vancouver, BC, Canada. 07/11/1992; Concert at The Roseland Theater, Portland, OR, USA. with Trouble. 08/11/1992; Concert at The Paramount Theater, Seattle, WA, USA. 10/11/1992; Concert at Sacremento Exhibit Hall, Sacremento, CA, USA. with Trouble. 11/11/1992; Concert at Huntridge Perf. Arts, Las Vegas, NV, USA. cancelled. 11/11/1992; Concert at The Event Center, San Jose, CA, USA. with Trouble. 12/11/1992; Concert at The Wilson Theatre, Fresno, CA, USA. with Trouble. 14/11/1992; Concert at The Starlight Bowl, SanDiego, CA, USA. 15/11/1992; Concert at The Anaconda Theater, Isla Vista, CA, USA. 16/11/1992; Concert at The Shrine Expo Hall, Los Angeles, CA, USA. 17/11/1992; Concert at Club Rio, Tempe, AZ, USA. 18/11/1992; Concert at The Amigo Center, Tucson, AZ, USA. 20/11/1992; Concert at The Fair Park Coliseum, Lubbock, TX, USA. 22/11/1992; Concert at The Myriad Exhibition Hall, Oklahoma City, OK, USA. 23/11/1992; Concert at Rockwave, San Antonio, TX, USA. 24/11/1992; Concert at The Unicorn, Houston, TX, USA. 25/11/1992; Concert at The Unicorn, Houston, TX, USA. 30/11/1992; Concert at The Edge, Ft. Lauderdale, TX, USA. with White Zombie. 01/12/1992; Concert at The Ritz Theatre, Ybor City, FL, USA. with White Zombie. 04/12/1992; Concert at The International Ballroom, Atlanta, GA, USA. with White Zombie. 05/12/1992; Concert at The Performance Hall, Nashville, TN, USA. with White Zombie. 10/12/1992; Concert at The Ranch Bowl, Omaha, Nebraska, USA. with White Zombie. 20/01/1993; Concert at The Marquee, London, England. with The Wildhearts. 21/01/1993; Concert at Elysee-Montmartre, Paris, France. with M.O.D.. 22/01/1993; Concert at Vooruit, Gent, Belgium. 24/01/1993; Concert at The Aladin, Bremen, Germany. 25/01/1993; Concert at The Docks, Hamburg, Germany. 26/01/1993; Concert at Huxley`s Neue Welt, Berlin, Germany. 27/01/1993; Concert at The Music Hall, Hannover, Germany. 29/01/1993; Concert at Pumphuset, Copenhagen, Denmark. 30/01/1993; Concert at Rocks, Odense, Denmark. 01/02/1993; Concert at The Paradiso, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. 02/02/1993; Concert at Noorderligt, Tilburg, The Netherlands. 03/02/1993; Concert at Real, Nurnberg, Germany. 04/02/1993; Concert at The Music Hall, Frankfurt, Germany. 05/02/1993; Concert at PC69, Bielfeld, Germany. 07/02/1993; Concert at Palagesto?, Milan, Italy. 10/02/1993; Concert at Nottingham Rock City, Nottingham, England. with Gruntruck. 10/02/1993; In Store Appearance at Way Ahead Records in Nottingham. 11/02/1993; Concert at The Town & Country Club, London, England. with Gruntruck. 11/02/1993; In Store Appearance at Rock It! Records in Croydon. 12/02/1993; Concert at The Newport Center, Wales. with Gruntruck. 13/02/1993; Concert at The Wolverhampton Civic Center, Wolverhampton, England. with Gruntruck. 14/02/1993; Concert at The Barrowlands, Glasgow, Scotland. with Gruntruck. 14/02/1993; In Store Appeareance at Tower Records in Glasgow. 15/02/1993; `Walk` single released. 16/02/1993; Concert at The SFX, Dublin, Ireland. with Gruntruck. (moved from 08/02). 04/03/1993; Concert at The Orpheum, Bostom, MA, USA. with Sacred Reich. 06/03/1993; Concert at The Concert Hall, Toronto, ON, Canada. with Sacred Reich. 07/03/1993; Concert at Le Spectrum, Montreal, QC, Canada. with Sacred Reich. 08/03/1993; Concert at Le Spectrum, Montreal, QC, Canada. with Sacred Reich. 09/03/1993; Concert at Ottowa Congress, Ottawa, ON, Canada. with Sacred Reich. 10/03/1993; Concert at Solide Rock, Quebec City, QC, Canada. with Sacred Reich. 12/03/1993; Concert at Palace Theatre, Albany, NY, USA. with Sacred Reich. 13/03/1993; Concert at Tower Theatre, Upper Darby, PA, USA. with Sacred Reich. 14/03/1993; Concert at The Agora Ballroom, Cleveland, OH, USA. with Sacred Reich. 15/03/1993; Concert at Michaels 8th Avenue, Glen Burnie, MD, USA. with Sacred Reich. 17/03/1993; Concert at Auditorium Theatre, Rochester, NY, USA. with Sacred Reich. 18/03/1993; Concert at Blind Melons, Cheektowaga, NY, USA. with Sacred Reich. 19/03/1993; Concert at The Roseland Ballroom, New York, NY, USA. with Sacred Reich. 20/03/1993; Concert at The Palladium, Warwick, RI, USA. with Sacred Reich. 21/03/1993; Concert at The Sting, New Britain, CT, USA. with Sacred Reich. 23/03/1993; Concert at Metropol, Pittsburgh, PA, USA. with Sacred Reich. 25/03/1993; Concert at Hara Arena, Dayton OH, USA. with Sacred Reich. (moved to April). 26/03/1993; Concert at Veterans Memorial, Columbus, OH, USA. with Sacred Reich. 27/03/1993; Concert at State Theatre, Detroit, MI, USA. with Sacred Reich. 28/03/1993; Concert at The Aragon Theatre, Chicago, IL, USA. with Sacred Reich. 02/04/1993; Concert at The Murat Theatre, Indianapolis, IN, USA. with Sacred Reich. 03/04/1993; Concert at The Sports Arena, Toledo, OH, USA. with Sacred Reich. 04/04/1993; Concert at Macauley Theatre, Louisville, KT, USA. with Sacred Reich. ??/04/1993; Concert at Hara Arena, Dayton, OH, USA. with Sacred Reich. (moved from 25/03 and was the last date of the tour, several dates were cancelled). 01/07/1993; Concert at DTE Energy Music Center, Clarkston, IL, USA. opening for Megadeth, with White Zombie. 02/07/1993; Concert at Cleveland Public Hall, Cleveland, OH, USA. opening for Megadeth, with White Zombie. 03/07/1993; Concert at Hara Arena, Dayton, OH, USA. opening for Megadeth, with White Zombie. 07/12/1993; Concert at Bilheteria Do Olympia, ??, Brazil. 08/12/1993; Concert at Bilheteria Do Olympia, ??, Brazil. 10/12/1993; Concert at Estacionamiento Del Poliedro, ??, ??. 07/03/1994; `I’m Broken` single released. 18/03/1994; `Far Beyond Driven` album released. also released/advertised as 21/03/1994 or 22/03/1994 in some territories. 25/03/1994; `Far Beyond Driven` album released in Japan. 25/03/1994; `Vulgar Video` released in Japan. 07/04/1994; Concert at The Tower Theater, ??, ??, USA. 10/04/1994; Concert at Fogel Sabourin, Montreal, QC, Canada. 13/04/1994; Concert at Roseland Ballroom, New York, NY, USA. 15/04/1994; Concert at The Agora Theatre, Cleveland, OH, USA. with Crowbar. 20/04/1994; Concert at The Aragon Ballroom, Chicago, IL, USA. with Crowbar. 21/04/1994; Concert at The American Theatre, ??, ??, USA. with Crowbar. 22/04/1994; Concert at The Memorial Hall, ??, ??, USA. 26/04/1994; Concert at The Civic Plaza, ??, ??, USA. 28/04/1994; Concert at The Warfield, San Francisco, CA, USA. 30/04/1994; Concert at The Civic Auditorium, Santa Monica, CA, USA. with Crowbar. 10/05/1994; Concert at ??, Tokyo, Japan. with White Zombie. 11/05/1994; Concert at ??, Osaka, Japan. with White Zombie. 13/05/1994; Concert at ??, Tokyo, Japan. with White Zombie. 14/05/1994; Concert at ??, Tokyo, Japan. with White Zombie. 14/06/1994; Concert at Donington Park, Donington, England. with Aerosmith etc.. `Monsters Of Rock`. 19/06/1994; Concert at Toledo Sports Arena, Toledo, OH, USA. 20/06/1994; Concert at Village Pantry, Deer Creek, ??, USA. 23/06/1994; Concert at The Coliseum, ??, ??, USA. 24/06/1994; Concert at The World Music Theatre, ??, ??, USA. with Sepultura & Biohazard. 29/06/1994; Concert at ??, ??, ??, USA. with Sepultura & Biohazard. 02/07/1994; Concert at Daytona Beach, Daytona, ??, USA. with Biohazard. 09/07/1994; Concert at PNE Forum, Vancouver, Canada. with Sepultura & Prong. 10/07/1994; Concert at Portland Meadows, Portland, OR, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 11/07/1994; Concert at ??, Seattle, WA, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 14/07/1994; Concert at Arco Arena, Sacremento, CA, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 15/07/1994; Concert at The Event Centre, San Jose, CA, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 17/07/1994; Concert at Irvine Meadows Amph., Irvine, CA, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 19/07/1994; Concert at San Diego Sports Arena, San Diego, CA, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 20/07/1994; Concert at Compton Terrace, Phoenix, AZ, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 22/07/1994; Concert at The County Coliseum, El Paso, TX, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 23/07/1994; Concert at The Convention Center, Abuquerque, NM, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 25/07/1994; Concert at Red Rock Amph., Morrison, CO, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 27/07/1994; Concert at Fair Park Coliseum, Lubbock, TX, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 29/07/1994; Concert at Starplex Amph., Dallas, TX, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 30/07/1994; Concert at South Park Meadows, Austin, TX, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 31/07/1994; Concert at Astro Arena, Houston, TX, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 03/08/1994; Concert at State Palace Theatre, New Orleans, LA, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 05/08/1994; Concert at Lakewood Amph., Atlanta, GA, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 06/08/1994; Concert at Blockbuster Pavillion, Charlotte, NC, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 07/08/1994; Concert at Walnut Creek Amph., Raleigh, NC, USA. with Sepultura. 09/08/1994; Concert at Starwood Amph., Antioch, TN, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 10/08/1994; Concert at Mid South Coliseum, Memphis, TN, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 11/08/1994; Concert at Riverport Amph., St. Louis, MO, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 13/08/1994; Concert at Apple River Amph., Somerset, WI, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 14/08/1994; Concert at Alpine Valley, E. Troy, WI, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 16/08/1994; Concert at Wings Stadium, Kalamazoo, MI, USA. with Sepultura & Prong. 17/08/1994; Concert at Polaris Amph., Columbus, OH, USA. with Sepultura. 19/08/1994; Concert at Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY, USA. with Prong. 20/08/1994; Concert at The Spectrum, Philadelphia, PA, USA. 07/09/1994; Concert at The Barrowlands, Glasgow, Scotland. with Downset. 08/09/1994; Concert at City Hall, Newcastle, England. with Downset. 10/09/1994; Concert at The Royal Court, Liverpool, England. with Downset. 11/09/1994; Concert at Newport Centre, Newport, Wales. with Downset. 12/09/1994; Concert at Brixton Academy, London, England. with Downset. 14/09/1994; Concert at Manchester Labatts Apollo, Manchester, England. with Downset. 15/09/1994; Concert at The Civic Hall, Wolverhampton, England. with Downset. 16/09/1994; Concert at The Pavillion, Plymnouth, England. with Downset. 24/09/1994; Concert at Isstadion, Stockholm, Sweden. with Downset & The Almighty. 26/09/1994; Concert at Stadhalle 4, Bremen, Germany. 28/09/1994; Concert at Gross Freiheit, Hamburg, Germany. 29/09/1994; Concert at The Stadhalle, Offenbach, Germany. with Downset & The Almighty. October 1, 1994 at Boschhalle, Wels, Austria 03/10/1994; Concert at Congresszentrum, Stuttgart, Germany. with The Almighty & Downset. 05/10/1994; Concert at Kulturzelt, Leipzig, Germany. 06/10/1994; Concert at Rudi-Sedermayer-Halle, Munich, Germany. with The Almighty. 07/10/1994; Concert at Stadhalle, Furth, Germany. 08/10/1994; Concert at Die Halle, Berlin, Germany. with Downset & The Almighty. 10/10/1994; `Planet Caravan` single released. 10/10/1994; Concert at Turbinenhalle, Oberhausen, Germany. 11/10/1994; Concert at Music Hall, Hannover, Germany. 12/10/1994; Concert at De Vereeningen, Nijmengen, Holland. with The Almighty & Downset. 13/10/1994; Concert at Le Zenith, Paris, France. with The Almighty & Downset. 15/10/1994; Concert at Velodrome Anoeta, ??, ??. with The Almighty & Downset. 16/10/1994; Concert at Pabellon Del Real Madrid, Madrid, Spain. with The Almighty & Downset. 17/10/1994; Concert at Cascais, ??, ??. with Downset & The Almighty. 19/10/1994; Concert at Vall D`Hebron, ??, Spain. with The Almighty & Downset. 21/10/1994; Concert at The Forum, Milan, Italy. with The Almighty & Downset. 05/11/1994; Concert at Logan Campbell Centre, Auckland, New Zealand. 06/11/1994; Concert at Wellington Town Hall, Wellington, New Zealand. 08/11/1994; Concert at The Festival Hall, Brisbane, Australia. 09/11/1994; Concert at The Festival Hall, Brisbane, Australia. 11/11/1994; Concert at The Entertainment Centre, Newcastle, Australia. 12/11/1994; Concert at The Entertainment Centre, Sydney, Australia. 14/11/1994; Concert at The Festival Hall, Melbourne, Australia. 15/11/1994; Concert at The Festival Hall, Melbourne, Australia. 16/11/1994; Concert at The Entertainment Centre, Adelaide, Australia. 18/11/1994; Concert at The Entertainment Centre, Perth, Australia. 20/01/1995; Concert at Memorial Coliseum, Winston Salem, NC, USA. with Type O Negative. 22/01/1995; Concert at Nashville Municipal Auditorium, Nashville, TN, USA. 24/01/1995; Concert at The University Of N. Florida, Jacksonville, FL, USA. 25/01/1995; Concert at The Expo Hall, Tampa, FL, USA. 26/01/1995; Concert at West Pal Beach Auditorium, West Palm Beach, FL, USA. 28/01/1995; Concert at Edge Concert Field, Orlando, FL, USA. 31/01/1995; Concert at Hirsch Memorial Coliseum, Shreveport, LA, USA. 02/02/1995; Concert at The Expo Square Pavillion, Tulsa, OK, USA. with Type O Negative. 03/02/1995; Concert at Dallas Fair Park, Dallas, TX, USA. 05/02/1995; Concert at The Shrine Mosque, Springfield, MO, USA. 06/02/1995; Concert at The Memorial Hall, Kansas City, MO, USA. 07/02/1995; Concert at The Civic Auditorium, Omaha, NE, USA. 09/02/1995; Concert at The Target Center, Minniapolis, MN, USA. with Type O Negative. 11/02/1995; Concert at Palmer Civic Center, Danville, IL, USA. with Type O Negative. 17/02/1995; Concert at The State Fair Coliseum, Detroit, MI, USA. with Type O Negative. 19/02/1995; Concert at Rhodes Arena, Akron, OH, USA. with Type O Negative. 21/02/1995; Concert at Ft. Wayne Coliseum Arena, ??, ??, USA. 22/02/1995; Concert at Louisville Gardens, Louisville, KY, USA. 04/03/1995; Concert at Auditorium De Verdun, Montreal, QC, Canada. with Type O Negative. 06/03/1995; Concert at Nassau Coliseum, New York, NY, USA. with Type O Negative. 13/03/1995; Concert at ??, ??, USA. with Type O Negative. 17/03/1995; Concert at Jonnyland, Corpus Christi, TX, USA. with Type O Negative. 30/03/1995; Concert at The Event Centre, San Jose, CA, USA. with Type O Negative. 31/03/1995; Concert at The Wilson Theatre, ??, ??, USA. with Type O Negative. 21/04/1995; Concert at Estadio Ferrocarril Oeste, ??, Argentina. 31/12/1995; Concert at ??, ??, ??, USA. 28/06/1996; Concert at LJVM Coliseum, Winston-Salem, NC, USA. with White Zombie. 29/06/1996; Concert at Hampton Coliseum, Hampton, VA, USA. with White Zombie. 01/07/1996; Concert at The Fox, Louisville, KY, USA. with White Zombie. 02/07/1996; Concert at Starwood Amph., Nashville, TN, USA. with White Zombie. 03/07/1996; Concert at Oak Mountain Amph., Pelham, AL, USA. with White Zombie. 05/07/1996; Concert at Jacksonville Coliseum, Jacksonville, FL, USA. with White Zombie. 06/07/1996; Concert at Miami Arena, Miami, FL, USA. with White Zombie. 07/07/1996; Concert at Orlando Arena, Orlando, FL, USA. with White Zombie. 09/07/1996; Concert at The Civic Center, Savannah, GA, USA. with White Zombie. 11/07/1996; Concert at Kiefer Uno L`Front Arena, New Orleans, LA, USA. with White Zombie & Eyehategod. 12/07/1996; Concert at The Summit, Houston, TX, USA. with White Zombie. 13/07/1996; Concert at Starplex Ampitheater, Dallas, TX, USA. with White Zombie. 15/07/1996; Concert at Freeman Coliseum, San Antonio, TX, USA. with White Zombie. 16/07/1996; Concert at Convention Centre Hall, Albuquerque, NM, USA. with White Zombie. 18/07/1996; Concert at Compton Terrace, Chandler, AZ, USA. with White Zombie. 19/07/1996; Concert at The Forum, Los Angeles, CA, USA. with White Zombie. 20/07/1996; Concert at The Sports Arena, San Diego, CA, USA. with White Zombie & Eyehategod. 22/07/1996; Concert at The Cow Palace, San Francisco, CA, USA. with White Zombie & Eyehategod. 23/07/1996; Concert at The Arco Arena, Sacremento, CA, USA. with White Zombie. 25/07/1996; Concert at Memorial Coliseum, Portland, OR, USA. with White Zombie & Eyehategod. 26/07/1996; Concert at Pacific Coliseum, Vancouver, BC, Canada. with White Zombie. 27/07/1996; Concert at The Gorge Amph., George, WA, USA. with White Zombie. 29/07/1996; Concert at Redrocks / Mcnichol, ??, ??, USA. with White Zombie. 01/08/1996; Concert at Kansas Coliseum, Valley Center, KS, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 02/08/1996; Concert at Riverport Amph., Maryland Heights, MO, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 03/08/1996; Concert at Sandstone Amph., Bonner Springs, KS, USA. with White Zombie. 05/08/1996; Concert at Target Center, Milliapolis, MN, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 06/08/1996; Concert at 5 Seasons Centre, Cedar Rapids, IA, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 07/08/1996; Concert at Marcus Amph., Milwaukee, WI, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 09/08/1996; Concert at Rosemont Horizon, Chicago, IL, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 10/08/1996; Concert at The Palace Of Auburn Hills, Detroit, MI, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 11/08/1996; Concert at Deer Creek, Noblesville, IN, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 12/08/1996; Concert at Wings Stadium, Kalamazoo, MI, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 14/08/1996; Concert at Hara Arena, Dayton, OH, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. cancelled. 15/08/1996; Concert at Blossom Music Centre, Cleveland, OH, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 16/08/1996; Concert at Copps Coliseum, Hamilton, ON, Canada. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 18/08/1996; Concert at Star Lake Amph., Pittsburgh, PA, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 19/08/1996; Concert at Blockbuster Ent. Centre, Philadelphia, PA, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 22/08/1996; Concert at The Meadows, Hartford, CT, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 23/08/1996; Concert at Nissan Pavillion, Bristow, VA, Canada. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 24/08/1996; Concert at Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 26/08/1996; Concert at The Centrum, Worcester, MA, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 27/08/1996; Concert at ??, Augusta, MA, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones. 28/08/1996; Concert at Knickerbocker Arena, Albany, NY, USA. with White Zombie & The Deftones 09/01/1997; Concert at Roy Wilkins Auditorium, St. Paul, MN, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 10/01/1997; Concert at Bruce Hall, Milwaukee, WI, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 12/01/1997; Concert at Pepsi Coliseum, Indianapolis, IN, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 14/01/1997; Concert at Wallace Civic Center, Fitchburg, MA, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 15/01/1997; Concert at The Strand, Providence, RI, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 16/01/1997; Concert at Metropolis, Montreal, QC, Canada. with Clutch & Neurosis. 18/01/1997; Concert at The Convention Center, Asbury Park, NJ, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 19/01/1997; Concert at The Roseland, New York City, NY, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 21/01/1997; Concert at Roberts Stadium, Evansville, IN, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 22/01/1997; Concert at Hara Arena, Dayton, OH, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 24/01/1997; Concert at Michigan State Fairground, Detroit, MI, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 25/01/1997; Concert at The Aragon Ballroom, Chicago, IL, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 26/01/1997; Concert at Rhodes Arena, Akron, OH, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 28/01/1997; Concert at The American Theater, St. Louis, MO, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 30/01/1997; Concert at Mammoth Events Center, Denver, CO, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 01/02/1997; Concert at Salt Air, Salt Lake City, UT, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 03/02/1997; Concert at Spokane Convention Centre, Spokane, WA, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 04/02/1997; Concert at Mercer Arena, Seattle, WA, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 05/02/1997; Concert at Salem Armory, Salem, OR, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 07/02/1997; Concert at San Jose Events Center, San Jose, CA, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 08/02/1997; Concert at Orange Pavillion, San Bernadino, CA, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 09/02/1997; Concert at Mesa Amph., Mesa, AZ, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 13/02/1997; Concert at Villa Real Convention Center, Mc Allen, TX, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 14/02/1997; Concert at Live Oak Civic Centre, Live Oak, TX, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 15/02/1997; Concert at Fair Park Coliseum, Dallas, TX, USA. with Clutch & Neurosis. 14/03/1997; Concert at Estadio River Plate, Mexico City, Mexico. opening for Kiss. 24/05/1997; Concert at The Nissan Pavillion, Bristow, VA, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. (May 24th – June 29th ‘The Ozzfest 1997’ tour). 26/05/1997; Concert at Coral Sky Pavillion, West Palm Beach, FL, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 28/05/1997; Concert at Blockbuster Pavillion, Charlotte, NC, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 31/05/1997; Concert at Alamodome, San Antonio, TX, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 01/06/1997; Concert at Starplex Arena, Dallas, TX, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 03/06/1997; Concert at Blossom Music Centre, Cuyahoga Falls, IO, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 04/06/1997; Concert at Deer Creek Music Centre, Noblesville, IN, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 07/06/1997; Concert at Star Lake Amph., Burgettstown, PN, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 08/06/1997; Concert at Blockbuster Entertainment Centre, Camden, NJ, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 10/06/1997; Concert at Riverport Amph., Maryland Heights, MS, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 12/06/1997; Concert at Pine Knob Music Theatre, Clarkston. MI, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 14/06/1997; Concert at Great Woods Theatre, Mannsfield MA, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 15/06/1997; Concert at Giants Stadium, East Rutherford, NJ, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 17/06/1997; Concert at Polaris Amph., Columbus, OH, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 19/06/1997; Concert at New World Music Theatre, Tinley Park, IL, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 21/06/1997; Concert at Alpine Valley Music Theatre, East Troy, WI, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 22/06/1997; Concert at Metrodome, Minneapolis, MN, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 24/06/1997; Concert at Mile High Stadium, Denver, CO, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 26/06/1997; Concert at Blockbuster Desert Sky Pavillion, Phoenix, AZ, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 28/06/1997; Concert at Thomas & Mack Centre, Paradise, NV, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 29/06/1997; Concert at Glen Helen Blockbuster Amph., Devore, CA, USA. opening for Black Sabbath etc.. 17/07/1997; Concert at Palacio De Los Deportes, ??, Mexico. with Anthrax. 19/07/1997; Concert at Auditorio Coca Cola, ??, Mexico. 04/09/1997; Concert at ??, Nashville, TN, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 05/09/1997; Concert at LJVM Coliseum, Winston-Salem, NC, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 06/09/1997; Concert at Cumberland City Arena, Fayetteville, NC, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 07/09/1997; Concert at The International Ballroom, Atlanta, GA, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 09/09/1997; Concert at The Electric Factory, Philadelphia, PA, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 10/09/1997; Concert at The Roseland, New York City, NY, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 12/09/1997; Concert at The Meadows, Hartford, CT, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 13/09/1997; Concert at ??, Asbury Park, NJ, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 14/09/1997; Concert at ??, Wheeling, WV, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 16/09/1997; Concert at Nautica, Cleveland, OH, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 17/09/1997; Concert at ??, Toledo, OH, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 18/09/1997; Concert at Wings Stadium, Kalamazoo, MI, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 19/09/1997; Concert at ??, Detroit, MI, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 20/09/1997; Concert at Toledo Sports Arena, Dayton, OH, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 21/09/1997; Concert at Riverbend Music Center, ??, ??, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 22/09/1997; Concert at ??, Kalamazoo, MI, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. (possibly moved to 18th). 23/09/1997; Concert at The Aragon Ballroom, Chicago, IL, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 24/09/1997; Concert at ??, Mineapolis, MN, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 26/09/1997; Concert at ??, Omaha, NE, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 27/09/1997; Concert at ??, Kansas City, KS, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 28/09/1997; Concert at Red Rocks, Springfield, MO, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 01/10/1997; Concert at The Sunken Gardens, San Antonio, TX, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 02/10/1997; Concert at Texas Sky, Corpus Christi, TX, USA. with Machine Head & Coal Chamber. 14/11/1997; Concert at The Hollywood Palladium, Hollywood, CA, USA. with Anthrax & Coal Chamber. 15/11/1997; Concert at State University, San Jose, CA, USA. 17/11/1997; Concert at The Memorial Auditorium, Sacremento, CA, USA. with Anthrax & Coal Chamber. 19/11/1997; Concert at Salem Armory, Salem, OR, USA. with Anthrax & Coal Chamber. 01/12/1997; Concert at Villa Real Convention Center, McAllen, TX, USA. with Anthrax, Coal Chamber & Pumb Jack. 03/12/1997; Concert at The UC Arena, Orlando, FL, USA. 05/12/1997; Concert at The Expo Hall, Tampa, FL, USA. 07/12/1997; Concert at Coast Coliseum, Biloxi, MS, USA. with Anthrax, Coal Chamber & Soilent Green. 16/01/1998; Concert at Fort Wayne Coliseum, Fort Wayne, IN, USA. 20/01/1998; Concert at Dayton Hara Arena, Dayton, OH, USA. 24/01/1998; Concert at Worcester Memorial Auditorium, Worcester, ma, USA. 26/01/1998; Concert at Central Maine Civic Centre, Lewiston, ME, USA. with Anthrax. 28/01/1998; Concert at The Pavillion Bell, ??, QC, Canada. with Anthrax & Coal Chamber. 29/01/1998; Concert at The Warehouse, ??, ??, USA. 31/01/1998; Concert at The Auditorium, Milwaukee, WI, USA. 30/05/1998; Concert at Zenith, Paris, France. 03/06/1998; Concert at Kisstadion, Budapest, Hungary. opening for Black Sabbath. `The Ozzfest `98`. 04/06/1998; Concert at Wels Rock, Vienna, Austria. opening for Black Sabbath. `The Ozzfest `98`. 06/06/1998; Concert at Filaforum Assago, Milan, Italy. opening for Black Sabbath. `The Ozzfest `98`. 09/06/1998; Concert at Atleticky Stadion, Prague, Czech Republic. opening for Black Sabbath. `The Ozzfest `98`. 10/06/1998; Concert at Spodek, Katowice, Poland. opening for Black Sabbath. `The Ozzfest `98`. 13/06/1998; Concert at Festival, Hultsfred, Sweden. opening for Black Sabbath. `The Ozzfest `98`. 14/06/1998; Concert at Provinssirock Festival, Seinjaki, Finland. opening for Black Sabbath. `The Ozzfest `98`. 16/06/1998; Concert at Arena Auditorium, Valencia, France. with Stuck Mojo. 20/06/1998; Concert at The National Bowl, Milton Keynes, England. opening for Black Sabbath. `The Ozzfest `98`. 22/06/1998; Concert at Football Stadium, San Sebastian, Spain. opening for Black Sabbath. `The Ozzfest `98`. 25/06/1998; Concert at Festival, Roskilde, Denmark. opening for Black Sabbath. `The Ozzfest `98`. 27/06/1998; Concert at Open Air Festival, St. Gallen, Switzerland. opening for Black Sabbath. `The Ozzfest `98`. 28/06/1998; Concert at The Metal Meeting, Dessel, Belgium. opening for Black Sabbath. `The Ozzfest `98`. 30/06/1998; Concert at The Spectrum, Oslo, Norway. opening for Black Sabbath. `The Ozzfest `98`. 31/12/1998; Concert at Bankone Ballpark, Phoenix, AZ, USA. opening for Black Sabbath, with Megadeth, Slayer & asst. 02/01/1999; Concert at Thomas & Mack Center, Las Vegas, NV, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 05/01/1999; Concert at The Forum, Los Angeles, CA, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 07/01/1999; Concert at The Pon, Anaheim, CA, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 08/01/1999; Concert at San Jose Arena, San Jose, CA, USA. opening for Black Sabbath, with Incubus. 11/01/1999; Concert at Rose Garden, Portland, OR, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 12/01/1999; Concert at Key Arena, Seattle, WA, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 14/01/1999; Concert at Delta Center, Salt Lake City, UT, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 15/01/1999; Concert at McNichols Arena, Denver, CO, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 17/01/1999; Concert at Target Center, Minniaplois, MN, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 19/01/1999; Concert at Rosemont Horizon, Chicago, IL, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 22/01/1999; Concert at Alamodome, San Antonio, TX, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 24/01/1999; Concert at Reunion Arena, Dallas, TX, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 25/01/1999; Concert at Compaq Center, Houston, TX, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 28/01/1999; Concert at First Union Spectrum, Philaelphia, PA, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 29/01/1999; Concert at Civic Arena, Pittsburgh, PA, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 01/02/1999; Concert at Bryce Jordan Center, State College, PA, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 03/02/1999; Concert at Fleet Center, Boston, MA, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 05/02/1999; Concert at Meadowlands, East Rutherford, NJ, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 06/02/1999; Concert at Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 09/02/1999; Concert at Marine Midlan Arena, Buffalo, NY, USA. opening for Black Sabbath, with Deftones. 11/02/1999; Concert at Forum, Montreal, Canada. opening for Black Sabbath. 12/02/1999; Concert at ??, Toronto, Canada. opening for Black Sabbath. 14/02/1999; Concert at The Palace, Detroit, MI, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 15/02/1999; Concert at The Palace, Detroit, MI, USA. opening for Black Sabbath. 30/04/1999; Concert at Foro Sol, Mexico City, Mexico. opening for Metallica, with Monster Magnet. 18/03/2000; album release party at The Clubhouse, ??, ??, USA. 27/03/2000; `Reinventing The Steel` album released. also released/advertised as 21/03/2000 in some territories. 17/04/2000; Concert at Arenan, Stockholm, Sweden. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 18/04/2000; Concert at ??, Oslo, Norway. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 19/04/2000; Concert at KB-Hallen, Stockholm, Sweden. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 21/04/2000; Concert at Columbiahalle, Berlin, Germany. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 22/04/2000; Concert at E-Werk, Cologne, Germany. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 23/04/2000; Concert at Maaspoort, Den Bosche, The Netherlands. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 25/04/2000; Concert at Newport Centre, Newport, Wales. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 26/04/2000; Concert at Wolverhampton Civic Hall, Wolverhapton, England. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 27/04/2000; Concert at The Apollo, Manchester, England. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 28/04/2000; Concert at The Barrowlands, Glasgow, Scotland. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 30/04/2000; Concert at Brixton Academy, London, England. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 01/05/2000; Concert at Ancienne, Brussels, Belgium. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 03/05/2000; Concert at Filaforum, Milan, Italy. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 04/05/2000; Concert at Palas, Bologna, Italy. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 05/05/2000; Concert at ??, Geneva, Italy. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 06/05/2000; Concert at Colosseum, Munich, Germany. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 08/05/2000; Concert at Kodeljevo, Llubljana, Slovenia. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 10/05/2000; Concert at Longhorn, Stuttgart, Germany. with Powerman 5000 & Satyricon. 12/05/2000; Concert at ??, Barcelona, Spain. 13/05/2000; Concert at ??, San Sebastian, Spain. 15/05/2000; Concert at ??, Villeurbanne, France. 16/05/2000; Concert at ??, Strasburg, Germany. 18/05/2000; Concert at ??, Paris, France. 18/06/2000; Concert at ??, Yokohama, Japan. 19/06/2000; Concert at ??, Tokyo, Japan. 22/06/2000; Concert at Umeda Heat Beat, Osaka, USA. 02/07/2000; Concert at Mars Music Amph., West Palm Beach, FL, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. (July 2nd – Sept. 2nd ‘The Ozzfest 2000’ tour). 04/07/2000; Concert at Lakewood Amph., Atlanta, GA, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 06/07/2000; Concert at AmSouth Amph., Antioch, TN, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 08/07/2000; Concert at Blockbuster Pavillion, Charlotte, NC, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 10/07/2000; Concert at GTE Virginia Beach Amph., Virginia Beach, VA, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 12/07/2000; Concert at Pine Knob Music Theatre, Clarkston, MI, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 14/07/2000; Concert at Nissan Pavillion, Bristow, VA, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 16/07/2000; Concert at Post Gazzette Pavillion, Burgettstown, PN, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 18/07/2000; Concert at Polaris Amph., Columbus, OH, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 20/07/2000; Concert at Blossom Music Center, Cuyahoga Falls, OH, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 22/07/2000; Concert at Blockbuster Sony Entertainment Center, Camden, NJ, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 24/07/2000; Concert at PNC Banks Art Center, Holmdel, NJ, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 26/07/2000; Concert at Saratoga Performing Arts Center, Saratoga Springs, NY, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 29/07/2000; Concert at Tweeter Center, Mansfield, MA, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 30/07/2000; Concert at Tweeter Center, Mansfield, MA, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 04/08/2000; Concert at New World Theatre, Tinley Park, IL, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 06/08/2000; Concert at Alpine Valley Music Theatre, East Troy, WI, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 08/08/2000; Concert at Riverbend Music Center, Cincinatti, OH, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 10/08/2000; Concert at Deer Creek Music Center, Noblesville, IN, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 12/08/2000; Concert at Float Rite Park Amph., Somerset, WI, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 14/08/2000; Concert at Riverport Amph., Maryland Heights, MS, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 16/08/2000; Concert at Sandstone Amph., Bonner Springs, KS, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 18/08/2000; Concert at Starplex Arena, Dallas, TX, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 20/08/2000; Concert at Houston Raceway Park, Houston, TX, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 24/08/2000; Concert at The Gorge Amph., George, WA, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 26/08/2000; Concert at Shoreline Amph., Mountain View, CA, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 28/08/2000; Concert at Sacremento Valley Amph., Marysville, CA, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 30/08/2000; Concert at Blockbuster Desert Sky Pavillion, Phoenix, AZ, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 02/09/2000; Concert at Glen Helen Blockbuster Pavillion, Devore, CA, USA. opening for Ozzy Osbourne etc.. 22/09/2000; Concert at Palacio De Los Deportes, ??, ??, ??. with Type O Negative & Puya. 07/11/2000; Concert at Mississippi Coast Coliseum, Biloxi, MS, USA. with Kittie. 08/11/2000; Concert at Boutwell Coliseum, Birmingham, AL, USA. with Kittie. 10/11/2000; Concert at Hard Rock Live, Orlando, FL, USA. with Kittie. 11/11/2000; Concert at USF Sundome, Tampa, FL, USA. with Kittie & Morbid Angel. 13/11/2000; Concert at Hampton Coliseum, Hampton, VA, USA. with Kittie. 14/11/2000; Concert at Mellon Arena, Pittsburgh, PA, USA. with Kittie. 16/11/2000; Concert at Tsongas Arena, Lowell, MA, USA. with Kittie. 17/11/2000; Concert at Hammerstein Ballroom, New York, NY, USA. with Kittie. 18/11/2000; Concert at First Union Spectrum, Philadelphia, PA, USA. with Kittie. 20/11/2000; Concert at Hara Arena, Dayton, OH, USA. with Kittie. 21/11/2000; Concert at Allstate Arena, Rosemont, IL, USA. with Kittie. 22/11/2000; Concert at US Cellular Arena, Milwaukee, WI, USA. with Kittie. 24/11/2000; Concert at The Pepsi Coliseum, Indianaplois, IN, USA. with Kittie. 25/11/2000; Concert at The Palace Of Auburn Hills, Detroit, MI, USA. with Kittie. 27/11/2000; Concert at The Target Center, Minneapolis, MN, USA. with Kittie. 28/11/2000; Concert at The Civic Auditorium, Omaha, NE, USA. with Kittie. 30/11/2000; Concert at The Memorial Coliseum, Fort Worth, TX, USA. with Kittie. 01/12/2000; Concert at The Nationwide Arena, Columbus, OH, USA. with Kittie. 02/12/2000; Concert at Rhodes Arena, Akron, OH, USA. with Kittie. 03/12/2000; Concert at Louisville Gardens, Louisville, KY, USA. with Kittie. 05/12/2000; Concert at The Myriad Center, Oklahoma City, OK, USA. with Kittie. 06/12/2000; Concert at The Freeman Coliseum, San Antonio, TX, USA. with Kittie. 08/12/2000; Concert at The Astro Arena, Houston, TX, USA. with Kittie. 09/12/2000; Concert at Fair Park Coliseum, Dallas, TX, USA. with Kittie. 08/02/2001; Concert at The Memorial Coliseum, Portland, OR, USA. with Soulfly & Morbid Angel. (Feb. 8th – Apr. 2nd; `The Real Steel` tour). 09/02/2001; Concert at Mercer Arena, Seattle, WA, USA. with Soulfly & Morbid Angel. 13/02/2001; Concert at Denver Coliseum, Denver, OH, USA. with Soulfly & Morbid Angel. 15/02/2001; Concert at The Family Arena, St. Charles, MO, USA. with Soulfly & Morbid Angel. 24/02/2001; Concert at The Delta Plex, Grand Rapids, MI, USA. 26/02/2001; Concert at Fort Wayne Coliseum, Fort Wayne, IN, USA. 27/02/2001; Concert at Toledo Sports Arena, Toledo, OH, USA. 13/03/2001; Concert at Mid Huson Civic Centre, Poughskeepsie, NY, USA. with Soulfly & Morbid Angel. 20/03/2001; Concert at Myriad Convention Centre, Oklahoma City, OK, USA. with Soulfly & Morbid Angel. 29/03/2001; Concert at Coast Coliseum, Biloxi, MI, USA. with Soulfly & Morbid Angel. 01/04/2001; Concert at Sunrise Musical Theatre, Miami, FL, USA. 02/04/2001; Concert at Hard Rock Live, Orlando, FL, USA. 13/05/2001; Concert at The Festival Hall, ??, Australia. 17/05/2001; Concert at Festival Hall, Melbourne, Australia. 25/06/2001; Concert at Copps Coliseum, Hamilton, ON, Canada. with Slayer, Morbid Angel & Static-X. (June 25th – July 26th; `Extreme Steel` tour). 29/06/2001; Concert at Van Andel Arena, ??, ??, USA. 01/07/2001; Concert at CSU Convocation Center, ??, ??, USA. 05/07/2001; Concert at Xcel Energy Center, St. Paul, MN, USA. 09/07/2001; Concert at Municipal Auditorium, Kansas City, KS, USA. with Slayer, Morbid Angel & Static-X. 11/07/2001; Concert at Denver Coliseum, Denver, CO, USA. with Slayer, Morbid Angel & Static-X. 14/07/2001; Concert at Smirnoff Music Centre, ??, ??, USA. 17/07/2001; Concert at America West arena, ??, ??, USA. with Slayer, Morbid Angel, Static-X & Skrape. 18/07/2001; Concert at Thomas & Mack, Las vegas, NV, USA. with Slayer, Morbid Angel & Static-X. 19/07/2001; Concert at Long Beach Arena, Long Beach, CA, USA. 21/07/2001; Concert at Cox Arena, San Diego, CA, USA. with Slayer, Morbid Angel & Static-X. 23/07/2001; Concert at Compaq Center, San Jose, CA, USA. 26/07/2001; Concert at Pacific Coliseum, Vancouver, BC, Canada. with Slayer, Morbid Angel & Static-X. 25/08/2001; Concert at Yokohama Arena, Yokohama, Japan. `Beast Feast` with Slayer etc.. Pantera`s final show. CANCELLED SHOWS: 13/09/2001; Concert at The Point, Dublin, Ireland. co-headline with Slayer. (Sept. 13th – Oct. 6th; `Tattoo The Planet` tour). Pantera cancels their appearances due to the Sept 11th attacks. 14/09/2001; Concert at The NIA, Birmingham, England. co-headline with Slayer. 15/09/2001; Concert at Wembley Arena, London, England. co-headline with Slayer. 16/09/2001; Concert at The SECC, Glasgow, Scotland. co-headline with Slayer. 18/09/2001; Concert at Brabanthal, Leuven, The Netherlands. co-headline with Slayer. 20/09/2001; Concert at Palavobis, Milan, Italy. co-headline with Slayer. 21/09/2001; Concert at Olympic Stadium, Athens, Greece. co-headline with Slayer. 22/09/2001; Concert at Boblingen Sporthalle, Stuttgart, Germany. co-headline with Slayer. 23/09/2001; Concert at Philipshalle, Dusselsorf, Germany. co-headline with Slayer. 25/09/2001; Concert at Spodek, Katowice, Poland. co-headline with Slayer. 26/09/2001; Concert at Zenith, Munich, Germany. co-headline with Slayer. 28/09/2001; Concert at Bercy, Paris, France. co-headline with Slayer. 29/09/2001; Concert at Brabnthallen, Den Bosch, The Netherlands. co-headline with Slayer. 30/09/2001; Concert at Sporthalle, Hamburg, Germany. co-headline with Slayer. 02/10/2001; Concert at Hovet, Stockholm, Sweden. co-headline with Slayer. 04/10/2001; Concert at The Ice Hall, Helsinki, Finland. co-headline with Slayer. 06/10/2001; Concert at The Arena, Berlin, Germany. co-headline with Slayer.

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Ultimate Classic Rock

25 Years Ago: White Zombie Breaks Up as Rob Zombie Goes Solo

White Zombie had no sooner risen from dingy New York clubs to the top of the heavy metal heap when frontman Rob Zombie  decided to close the book on the first chapter of his musical career.

The quartet — Zombie, bassist Sean Yseult, guitarist Jay Yuenger and drummer John Tempesta — announced its breakup in a joint statement issued by its label, Geffen Records, on Sept. 23, 1998.  "After 13 years, White Zombie has accomplished everything we set out to do," they said, "and we all felt it was time to move on."

Yet some members felt it more strongly than others. The breakup was initiated by Zombie, who had released his debut solo album,  Hellbilly Deluxe , the previous month. The album debuted at No. 5 on the Billboard 200 with 120,000 copies sold — the biggest opening week of his career — and went on to sell more than 3 million copies in the United States. Two days after the breakup announcement, Zombie appeared on  Late Night With David Letterman to perform his new solo single "Dragula."

White Zombie Wanted to Make Another Album — But Rob Zombie Had Moved On

Zombie had previously expressed a desire to get back into the studio with White Zombie after touring in support of Hellbilly Deluxe . The band was riding high on 1995's Astro-Creep: 2000 , which had peaked at No. 6 and reached double-platinum status, marking their greatest commercial success following the steady climb of 1987's  Soul-Crusher , 1989's  Make Them Die Slowly and 1992's  La Sexorcisto: Devil Music Volume One . (A successful remix album,  Supersexy Swingin' Sounds , arrived in 1996.) But when the band regrouped, Zombie had changed his tune.

Watch White Zombie's 'More Human Than Human' Video

"This thing had been dragging on forever," Zombie said in the aftermath of the breakup announcement (via MTV News ) "I was thinking about it that morning, and I called up [Yuenger] and said we needed to get everyone on the phone and talk it over and figure out what's going on."

READ MORE: Rob Zombie's 'Uncomfortable' First Meeting With Ozzy Osbourne

"I'm fine," the singer added. "Don't cry over spilled milk, I say. It just made sense now because we weren't in the middle of a tour or album or anything. It's not like this was Black Sabbath or Led Zeppelin or the Beatles , [with] the same four people, start to finish. And I'm still playing with John [Tempesta] now, so ... same shit, different day."

Not Everybody Was Happy About White Zombie's Breakup

Yseult, who dated Zombie for seven years during White Zombie's tenure, sounded less satisfied when she reflected on the group's dissolution years later. "After one year, we were supposed to be taking a break, and then we were gonna have a call and talk about getting back together and making a record. I knew that we weren't getting back together," she said on One on One With Mitch Lafon in 2016. "But the slap in the face was that [Zombie's] solo record came out, like, the next day. So he spent that year making a record, knowing that [White Zombie wasn't] gonna be a band again."

Watch Rob Zombie Perform 'Dragula' on 'Late Show With David Letterman'

Following White Zombie's demise, Yseult moved to New Orleans and largely shifted her focus to photography and design, holding several gallery exhibitions over the next two decades. She briefly toured with the Cramps in 2006, and in 2010 she published the visual memoir  I'm in the Band: Backstage Notes From the Chick in White Zombie . Yuenger worked as a recording engineer and producer, and Tempesta continued to play drums for Zombie until 2006 when he joined the Cult .

READ MORE:  White Zombie's Sean Yseult Talks Ballet, 'It Came From N.Y.C.' Box Set and 'God of Thunder'

Zombie, meanwhile, released a string of Top 10 solo albums and established himself as an accomplished horror filmmaker with titles such as  House of 1000 Corpses ,  The Devil's Rejects and two entries in the  Halloween franchise. His diverse resume and enduring solo success proved that he was never going to be content as just the mouthpiece of White Zombie.

"It was great what the band accomplished, but it was never really fun to do," the singer told  The Believer in 2017. "A lot of people try to rewrite the history about how it all ended, but the truth was, there's nothing weirder than when your band finally gets big and you're playing sold-out arenas and you're selling millions of records, and you dread being a part of it all. It wasn't some master plan to go solo. I was just like, I would rather do my own thing, be happy and have it be 10 times less popular."

Alice Cooper and Rob Zombie, Freaks on Parade Tour Kickoff

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WHITE ZOMBIE Reunion Roundtable – 30th Anniversary of La Sexorcisto: Devil Music Vol

WHITE ZOMBIE Reunion Roundtable – 30th Anniversary of La Sexorcisto: Devil Music Vol. 1

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WWE announces their first tour of Japan in more than five years

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WWE Live Tokyo

Having been on the other side of a global pandemic, 2019 does feel like a long time ago. But if you need a wrestling reminder, the picture above should do it. When WWE last toured Japan in 2019, the shows were main event-ed by tags featuring the now- retired Triple H (in his last matches, no less), the probably-retired Robert Roode , and former AEW World champion Samoa Joe.

However long it feels since WWE was last in Japan, the wait is about to be over there. Today (May 21), the announced the company they will be running three house shows in Osaka and Tokyo this summer:

WWE, part of TKO Group Holdings, today announced a long-awaited return to Japan with three live shows this July. The first show will take place at the Edion Arena in Osaka on Thursday, July 25. WWE Superstars will then return to perform in Tokyo for the first time since 2019, with back-to-back shows at the Ryogoku Arena on Friday, July 26, and Saturday, July 27. These events will mark WWE’s first return to Tokyo in five years, and the first return to Osaka in six years. WWE has a rich history of live events in Japan dating back to 1994. Fans attending the WWE Supershow Summer Tour will see their favorite WWE Superstars in action including “The American Nightmare” Cody Rhodes , Shinsuke Nakamura , Drew McIntyre , Bobby Lashley , IYO SKY , The Kabuki Warriors, and many more*. Tickets will be available at 10:00 a.m. on Saturday, June 1, 2024 from E-Plus, Lawson Ticket, Ticket Pia and Kyodo Tokyo. Fans interested in an exclusive presale can visit https://eplus.jp/wwe/ for more information on signing up. Thursday July 25 – Edion Arena in Osaka, Japan Friday July 26 – Ryoguko Arena in Tokyo, Japan Saturday July 27 – Ryoguko Arena in Tokyo, Japan Fans across Japan can watch WWE’s flagship programming broadcast exclusively on ABEMA platforms. This includes Raw and SmackDown both broadcast free-to-air in a primetime slot (9pm) in Japan every week with Japanese commentary immediately following first broadcast in the U.S. NXT is also available to watch on-demand via ABEMA Video, with all WWE Premium Live Events available to view exclusively live on ABEMA. *Talent subject to change.

WWE’s international touring took a while to get back up to speed once governments & businesses started lifting COVID restrictions, but by this point they’re doing as much or more than they ever have. A return to Japan was one thing they hadn’t booked. Now that they have, should we expect any other announcements while they’re there?

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Watch CBS News

Scottie Scheffler arrested for allegedly assaulting officer near fatal crash while on way to PGA Championship

Updated on: May 17, 2024 / 8:45 PM EDT / CBS/AP

Masters champion Scottie Scheffler  was arrested by police in Louisville on Friday morning on his way to the PGA Championship, with stunning images showing him handcuffed as he was led to a police car and charged with assaulting an officer after allegedly attempting to drive around traffic backed up from a pedestrian fatality investigation. Scheffler was released later in the morning and continued competing in the tournament.

Police said Scheffler was booked for second-degree assault of a police officer, third-degree criminal mischief, reckless driving and disregarding traffic signals from an officer directing traffic. In a statement to CBS News, Scheffler's attorney Steve Romines said the golfer "never at any point assaulted any officer with his vehicle" and added that "we will litigate this matter as needed."  

In a statement posted to Instagram , Scheffler said he was in a "very chaotic situation."

"There was a big misunderstanding of what I thought I was being asked to do," Scheffler said. "I never intended to disregard any of the instructions. I'm hopeful to put this to the side and focus on golf today."

Police said a pedestrian had been struck by a bus while crossing the road in a lane that was dedicated to tournament traffic. Police said the man died at the scene, CBS affiliate WLKY  reported . Traffic was backed up for about a mile in both directions on the only road that leads to Valhalla Golf Club, with dozens of police cars flashing red-and-blue lights near the entrance.  

Scheffler, the No. 1 player in the world, later started the second round shortly after 10 a.m. EDT. After finishing Friday's round, Scheffler told reporters he wouldn't discuss specific details about the incident, but he said he didn't know at the time that the accident ahead of him in traffic was fatal.

"I feel like my head's still spinning," Scheffler said. "I can't really explain what happened this morning. I did spend some time stretching in a jail cell — that was a first for me."

Scheffler expressed confidence that the charges would "get resolved, I think, fairly quickly."

Why was Scottie Scheffler arrested?

According to a police report, Scheffler was in an eastbound lane and pulled into the westbound lanes, where a uniformed detective was standing. The detective stopped Scheffler and attempted to give him instructions, but Scheffler "refused to comply and accelerated forward," according to the report.

The detective, identified as Det. Gillis, was dragged "to the ground" and suffered "pain, swelling, and abrasions to his left wrist," according to the report.

The detective was dressed in a high visibility reflective jacket when he stopped Scheffler's car to give instructions, the arrest sheet said. Gillis was taken to the hospital for his injuries.

The Louisville Metro Police Department said that all lanes were closed during the traffic fatality investigation.

"While an officer was directing traffic, an encounter with a motorist attempting to make entry into a restricted area ultimately led to the driver being arrested," the police said in a statement. "We are in the process of conducting a thorough investigation. We are appreciative that all parties involved are fully cooperating."

Romines said Scheffler was driving a marked player's vehicle and proceeding as he'd been instructed.

"I think the officer that was directing traffic was maybe not part of the event traffic detail and so that's where the miscommunication arose, and that's why we're here," Romines told WLKY.

ESPN reporter Jeff Darlington said he watched this unfold with Scheffler driving past a police officer a little after 6 a.m. in his SUV. He said police pulled Scheffler out of the vehicle, pushed him up against the car and immediately placed him in handcuffs.

In this still image made from video provided by ESPN, Masters champion Scottie Scheffler is escorted to a police car after being handcuffed near Valhalla Golf Club, the site of the PGA Championship golf tournament, early May 17, 2024.

"Scheffler was then walked over to the police car, placed in the back, in handcuffs, very stunned about what was happening, looked toward me as he was in those handcuffs and said, 'Please help me,'" Darlington said. "He very clearly did not know what was happening in the situation. It moved very quickly, very rapidly, very aggressively."

Darlington said whole the incident started with a "misunderstanding with traffic flow."

With cars backed up in the morning darkness, other PGA-marked vehicles tried to move slowly toward the entrance. Traffic finally began to move slowly a little before 7 a.m.

A spokesperson for the PGA of America identified the man who was struck by the shuttle bus as John Mills. In a statement, the PGA's Greg Dillard said Mills, a worker with one of the group's vendors, was going to work when he was hit.

"This is heartbreaking to all of us involved with the PGA Championship," the PGA said in a statement. "We extend our sincere condolences to their family and loved ones."

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear conveyed his condolences on social media , saying, "Our hearts are broken, and we continue to pray for the victim's family."

"The events that occurred afterward are the unfortunate result of this tragic incident, and we are hopeful that all parties involved can come to a resolution," Beshear said.

Scheffler also expressed his sympathies for the man who died.

"It truly puts everything in perspective," Scheffler said on social media.

The website for the Louisville Metropolitan Department of Corrections briefly showed a booking photo of Scheffler before the photo was removed. According to the website, Scheffler was released at 8:40 a.m.

Scottie Scheffler is seen in a police booking photo May 17, 2024.

Did Scottie Scheffler play today?

Scheffler returned to the course at 9:12 a.m. He made his way to the practice area around 9:30 a.m. and was welcomed by fans — one shouted "free Scottie!"

Scheffler seemed like his normal, relaxed self, sharing a few laughs on the driving range. Then he went out and made a birdie on his first hole of the day after sticking his approach shot to three feet. Scheffler finished Friday's round two strokes behind leader Collin Morikawa at nine strokes under par for the tournament, CBS Sports reports .

It was a surreal start to what already has been a wild week of weather — the Masters champion and top-ranked in the world, dressed in workout clothes with his hands in cuffs behind his back amid flashing flights.

Darlington said police were not sure who he was. He said an officer asked him to leave and when he identified himself being with the media, he was told, "There's nothing you can do. He's going to jail."

Darlington said another police officer later approached with a notepad and asked if he knew the name of the person they put in handcuffs.

Scottie Scheffler of the United States plays his shot from the 12th tee during the second round of the 2024 PGA Championship at Valhalla Golf Club on May 17, 2024, in Louisville, Kentucky.

Scheffler is coming off four victories in his last five tournaments. He was home in Dallas for the last three weeks waiting on the birth of his first child, a son who was born on May 8.

"I feel like my head is still spinning. I can't really explain what happened this morning," Scheffler said after remarkably posting another 5-under 66 Friday that kept him in the mix for a second straight major championship. He is seeking to become only the fifth player since 1960 to win the first two majors of the year.

Last month, Scheffler won his second  Masters Tournament  victory in three years, finishing 11 under and four strokes up on his closest competitors.

  • Scottie Scheffler

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Grand Tour – first-look review

A visually ravishing if emotionally and thematically opaque travelogue is the latest from Portuguese maestro, Miguel Gomes.

E arnest ethnographic documentary, steamy backlot melodrama and the existential travelogues of Joseph Conrad coalesce in another cinematic UFO from Portuguese filmmaker, Miguel Gomes, a quixotic and occasionally-exasperating treatise on how the west distorts and romanticises its cultural depictions of the east. Its high-profile premiere in competition at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival made for an interesting bluff for anyone who thought the pathfinding director had embraced the mainstream, as Grand Tour is quite possibly his most experimental and emotionally opaque feature to date.

Very much a continuation of the concerns and production methods employed to make previous features such as 2012’s Tabu and 2015’s epic Arabian Nights trilogy, there’s perhaps a whiff of unwanted familiarity to the way the film attempts to forcibly conjoin the fiction and non-fiction forms, and on the back of a single viewing, it was difficult to discern a purpose to this high-wire mode of storytelling. That’s not to say that the film is without its pleasures, as each shot offers a surprise of eccentric audio-visual juxtapositions that seem to operate on their own off-kilter and intuitive internal logic, and there’s also a light scattering of Gomes’ Martini-dry humour across proceedings.

Manderlay, 1918, and effete British bureaucrat Edward Abbot (Gonçalo Waddington) decides, for reasons that are never stated, that he will jilt his estranged lover, Molly Singleton (Crista Alfaiate), at the alter and ride the rails, roads and waterways wherever they take him, perhaps until he’s able to comprehend these obscure impulses. His “tour” takes him through Bangkok, Shanghai, Manilla, Osaka until the point where he’s curled up in a bamboo forrest, giant pandas in the near vicinity, and melting away with an opium pipe in hand. Along the way, Gomes gently leans on anachronism by sliding in documentary inserts resembling TikTok tourism (albeit with higher production values) which almost exclusively focus on local storytelling custom, such as puppet shows, folksong recitals and theatre performances – indeed, Grand Tour assiduously catalogues the range of ways out there to tell stories as it also tells its own.

A mid-point reset introduces us to Molly with her bonnet hat, toothsome smile and silly rasping laugh and we discover that she, with the same lack of logic as her betrothed, intends to track her errant beau on his jaunt and, one presumes, convince him that they should go back and tie the knot. We now have the same journey from Molly’s perspective, which sees her reject a mysterious and rich admirer in favour of continuing her wacky search for Edward. There’s always the nagging sense here that the ripe central storyline is the aspect of the film that Gomes and his writing committee (Mariana Ricardo, Telmo Churro and Maureen Fazendeiro) are least interested in, and unlike with Tabu, he gives us very little to be able to truly invest in the characters and their seemingly random peregrinations.

The film’s spry literary voiceover switches language in tandem with each new destination, emphasising the notion that all stories are different depending on who’s telling them, and where they are. Yet Grand Tour never settles on a tone or an obvious seam of enquiry that allows for a satisfying entry point into the often-dazzling material, its most successful moments of primal emotion coming from its ironic use of pop and classical standards. There is definitely some of the old Gomes magic here, but things just doesn’t feel as potent or intoxicating as usual.

Published 22 May 2024

Tags: Cannes Miguel Gomes

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The 12 Best Style Releases to Buy This Week: Stüssy, 424, Essentials, and More

From Stüssy Summer 2024 to 424's latest collection, here is a closer look at all of this week's best style releases.

Hopefully, you already have your Memorial Day weekend outfits in order. But there are still plenty more summertime events ahead that you'll need to plan for. This week is full of great drops from some of our favorite brands that you should definitely be considering.

Stüssy, 424, and Essentials are all releasing their latest season. There are also great drops from Barriers that celebrate Malcolm X, a new hiking boot by 18 East made in collaboration with Padmore & Barnes, some new logo pieces from Denim Tears, and even a new line of lightweight outdoor gear from The North Face if you'll be hitting the campsite soon. 

Check out how to buy all of this week's best style releases below. 

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Release Date: May 24 Where to Buy It: Stüssy Chapter stores and stussy.com Price: TBD

Stüssy returns with another season full of staples pieces perfect for your summer wardrobe. Baggy denim shorts, mesh jerseys, lightweight flannels, faded logo zips, nylon camo pullovers, and more will be up for grabs.

View this photo on Instagram

Release Date: Available now Where to Buy It: 424 Melrose Place and fourtwofour.com Price: $160-$2,300

Gulliermo Andrade's 424 recently released an impressive Spring/Summer 2024 collection. The best pieces are a camo suede jacket and matching Bermuda shorts. Other standouts include soccer jersey-inspired striped tops accented with religious patches, a bleached trench coat, and a hooded leather bomber jacket. Basics like hoodies, T-shirts, and zip-ups are also available in a variety of colors from black to baby blue.

Barriers Worldwide

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Release Date: Available now Where to Buy It: barriersworldwide.com Price: $65-$300

Barriers' latest collection is inspired by Malcolm X to celebrate what would have been his 99th birthday. Illustrations of the civil rights leader are positioned beside some of his memorable quotes on all-over print T-shirts and hoodies. Other pieces feature a special logo that places Barriers branding atop his signature "X" insignia. A vintage-inspired "X" snapback and Malcolm X action figure limited to 50 pieces round out the offering. 

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Release Date: May 22 Where to Buy It: fearofgod.com Price:  $35-$205

Fear of God's popular sub-label, Essentials, just released its latest collection. A wide variety of items like hoodies, T-shirts, nylon overshirts, knit polos, and sweat shorts are available in a range of earth tones. Most items feature a minimal rubber label. A lightwashed denim work jacket and jeans round out the latest drop. 

Denim Tears

Release Date: May 24 Where to Buy It: African Diaspora Goods and denimtears.com Price: TBD

Tremaine Emory's Denim Tears is dropping some new logo pieces on Friday. The African Diaspora Goods branding appears on hoodies, T-shirts, sweatpants, and caps in various colors. Crewnecks sport collegiate-styled "Denim" script across the chest. Rugby sweaters and black sweatsuits with red, green, and yellow logos down the sleeves and legs will also be available. 

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Release Date: May 24 Where to Buy It:  basketcase.gallery Price: TBD

Basketcase is opening its web store back up this weekend to release its Uniform collection. The drop puts an emphasis on denim with baggy shorts, flaired jeans, and straight-leggged slacks all available in a variety of washes. A limited series of vintage work shirts and flannels that have been tweaked with Basketcase branding and other embroidered graphics will also be up for grabs. 

18 East x Padmore & Barnes

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Release Date: Available now Where to Buy It: 18 East and 18east.co Price: $325

18 East has created its own footwear silhouette with Padmore & Barnes. The Oakledge Hiker Low features an Italian suede upper, Cordura fabric collar and and tongue, silver speed lace loops, co-branded orange leather insoles, and an all-weather Vibram Bifida sole. Brown and black colorways are both currently for sale.

Levi's Vintage Clothing

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Release Date: Available now Where to Buy It:  Levi.com , Levi’s app, and select Levi’s stores Price: $495

Levi's Vintage Clothing has recreated the oldest pair of blue jeans in its 171-year old archive that is believed to be from the 1870s. The 9Rivet, as its name suggests, has only nine rivets. Traditionally, jeans have 11 rivets. It is made with nine-ounce Plain Selvedge Cone Mills White Oak Denim. Details include one back pocket, an unriveted center-back cinch, and leather patch that predates 1875. Only 800 pairs have been produced. 

Awake NY x Happy Socks

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Release Date: Available now Where to Buy It: Awake NY flagship store and awakenyclothing.com Price: $28

Awake NY has teamed up with Happy Socks once again to create the perfect everyday pairs of socks. The classic white crew socks are available with green, blue, or burgundy stripes wrapping the ankle. A small "A" logo is also embroidered on each.

The North Face

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Release Date: Available now Where to Buy It:  Select The North Face stores and thenorthface.com Price: $40-$80

The North Face has introduced its new Lightrange line. The line of performance gear is constructed using a micro-grid weave technology that offers breathability and ultraviolet protection ratings above UPF 40+. Lightweight hoodies, T-shirts, running caps, bucket hats, and long sleeves are available in multiple colors. 

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Release Date: May 22 Where to Buy It: mschf.com Price: $40-$295

MSCHF's latest drop is inspired by the world's game. It includes a soccer ball complete with wavy logo hits made in collaboration with Umbro, pairs of socks, and a brand new warped sneaker nodding to classic soccer shoes. Unfortunately, it appears that the amazing jerseys that MSCHF has created are currently unavailable. 

Concepts x Sperry

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Release Date: May 24 Where to Buy It: CNCPTS stores and  cncpts.com Price: $150

For its latest footwear drop, Concepts has put a spin on Sperry's classic boat shoe. Each pair features a hairy suede upper and has been remixed with new sneaker elements like a lace toggle, translucent rubber sole, and reflective details. Orange, pink, green, blue, and purple colorways will be sold.

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IMAGES

  1. 20 Years Of White Zombie

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  2. Early White Zombie Revisited in 'It Came From N.Y.C.' Box

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  3. White Zombie Vintage Concert Poster from Henry J. Kaiser Auditorium

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  4. The Music and Movies of White Zombie, Pt. 1: An Introduction

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  5. White Zombie (1932) Bela Lugosi

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  6. White Zombie's Concert & Tour History

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VIDEO

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COMMENTS

  1. White Zombie Concert & Tour History

    White Zombie was a metal band from New York City, New York who were active between 1985 and 1998. In their most popular lineup, they consisted of Rob Zombie (vocals, guitar), Jay Yuenger (guitar), Sean Yseult (bass), and John Tempesta (drums). ... White Zombie Tours & Concerts . Date Concert Venue; Location Aug 08, 2023 Megadeth / Pantera ...

  2. White Zombie (band)

    White Zombie was an American heavy metal band that formed in 1985. Based in New York City, they started as a noise rock band, releasing three EPs and one studio album in that style before changing to a heavy metal-oriented sound that broke them into the mainstream. The albums La Sexorcisto: Devil Music Volume One (1992) and Astro-Creep: 2000 (1995) established them as an influential act in ...

  3. That Tour Was Awesome: Pantera/White Zombie/Eyehategod (1996)

    August 4, 2016 Greg Pratt. That Tour Was Awesome Eyehategod, Pantera, White Zombie. "Somebody's going down.". It was a mantra that caught on quick amongst the hard-partying bands on the Pantera / White Zombie / Eyehategod tour of 1996 (also known as War of the Gargantuas), but the joke turned sour fast when Pantera vocalist Phil Anselmo ...

  4. White Zombie

    Date: August 26th, 1995Venue: Donington ParkLocation: Castle Donington, EnglandOther Acts: Metallica, Slayer, Slash's Snakepit & moreTour: Astro Creep: 2000 ...

  5. White Zombie

    This is the very first time since the band broke up that 3/4 of White Zombie wi. Read More → . Hey There Zombie Fiends! Date: Oct 09, 2014. White Zombie finally has a website! Why now? ... who performed with the band on Astro-Creep and all subsequent touring. After a year and a half long tour, the band decided to call it quits while at the ...

  6. White Zombie

    White Zombie was a Grammy Award-nominated American heavy metal band. White Zombie was cofounded by writer, vocalist and graphic artist Rob Zombie, after coming up with the band idea in 1985 while attending Parsons School of Design in his junior year. Zombie's girlfriend at the time, Sean Yseult, was the other co-founder.

  7. White Zombie Concert Setlists

    Get White Zombie setlists - view them, share them, discuss them with other White Zombie fans for free on setlist.fm! setlist.fm Add Setlist. Search Clear search ... Artist: White Zombie, Tour: War of the Gargantuans, Venue: Coca-Cola Star Lake Amphitheater, Burgettstown, PA, USA. Edit setlist Show all edit options. Edit setlist songs;

  8. White Zombie

    -Heavy Metal from the USA-Feel free to restore the missing setlist, together with the running time per each song, in the comment section down below!As it was...

  9. White Zombie discography

    Director (s) "Thunder Kiss '65". 1992. Juliet Cuming. "Black Sunshine". Paul Andresen & George Dougherty. "Welcome to Planet Motherfucker". 1993. Cecilia Miniucchi.

  10. TourDateSearch.com: White Zombie tour dates

    In 2000, White Zombie was included on VH1's 100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock, ranking at No. 56. As of October 2010, the band has sold six million albums, according to Nielsen SoundScan. Search White Zombie Tour Dates

  11. White Zombie Tour Dates & Concert History

    Posters (13) List of all White Zombie tour dates and concert history. Find out when White Zombie last played live near you.

  12. List of White Zombie and Rob Zombie band members

    Rob Zombie's band onstage in 2015. Rob Zombie (Born Robert Cummings) is an American heavy metal vocalist. In 1985, he formed the band White Zombie with guitarist Paul "Ena" Kostabi, bassist Sean Yseult and drummer Peter Landau. The group remained active until 1998, with its final lineup featuring Cummings and Yseult alongside guitarist Jay "J." Yuenger and drummer John Tempesta.

  13. White Zombie;

    White Zombie; Listed Below is all of the known Tour Dates, Album, E.P. & Singles release dates that I have info on from these New York noisesters. ... 'Zombie Prong' tour). 24/01/1994; Concert at Cotillion Ballroom, Wichita, KS, USA. with Prong. ... 2000' live for the first time in Chicago. 20/03/2018; Rob Zombie releases; 'Astro Creep: 2000 ...

  14. Soul-Crusher

    Soul-Crusher is the debut studio album by American rock band White Zombie, released independently in November 1987 by Silent Explosion.It was the band's second and final release with Tom "Five" Guay on guitar. Building off the sound established on Psycho-Head Blowout, the band matured its sound while placing further emphasis on the individual roles of its players.

  15. Tour Dates History

    26/06/1992; Concert at The San Diego Sports Arena, San Diego, CA, USA. with White Zombie & Crowbar. 27/06/1992; Concert at The Hollywood Palladium, Hollywood, CA, USA. with White Zombie, Crowbar. 08/07/1992; Concert at Kanin Hoken Hall, Tokyo, Japan. with Outrage.

  16. Interview: White Zombie's Sean Yseult Awakens Sleeping ...

    In addition to tons of Yseult's personal photos, the book offers tour diaries, flyers (all the way back from when she and then-boyfriend Rob Zombie first conceptualized the band in Lower Eastside ...

  17. Tour 1993

    25. Feb. 1993 supporting White Zombie. Phoenix Concert Theater, Toronto, ON. Canada. 26. Feb. 1993 supporting White Zombie

  18. 25 Years Ago: White Zombie Breaks Up as Rob Zombie Goes Solo

    White Zombie had no sooner risen from dingy New York clubs to the top of the heavy metal heap when frontman Rob Zombie decided to close the book on the first chapter of his musical career.. The ...

  19. WHITE ZOMBIE Reunion Roundtable

    March 17, 2022. Streaming right now is Metal Injection's White Zombie La Sexorcisto: Devil Music Vol. 1 roundtable discussion! Watch as Frank Godla reunites 3/4 ths of White Zombie - Sean Yseult ...

  20. SEAN YSEULT Is Open To WHITE ZOMBIE Reunion At Hypothetical ROCK AND

    In a new interview with Ireland's Overdrive, former WHITE ZOMBIE bassist Sean Yseult was asked if working on "It Came From N.Y.C.", the 2016 box set collection of the band's early output, brought ...

  21. Tour Dates

    Freaks on Parade 2024. Fort Worth, TX. with Alice Cooper, Ministry, Filter. get tickets. Rob Zombie tour dates and tickets. Buy tickets for Rob Zombie concerts near you. See all scheduled Rob Zombie concert dates.

  22. White Zombie

    White Zombie. There are no upcoming events. Find concert tickets for White Zombie upcoming 2024 shows. Explore White Zombie tour schedules, latest setlist, videos, and more on livenation.com.

  23. WWE announces their first tour of Japan in more than five years

    WWE, part of TKO Group Holdings, today announced a long-awaited return to Japan with three live shows this July. The first show will take place at the Edion Arena in Osaka on Thursday, July 25. WWE Superstars will then return to perform in Tokyo for the first time since 2019, with back-to-back shows at the Ryogoku Arena on Friday, July 26, and ...

  24. Scottie Scheffler arrested for allegedly assaulting officer near fatal

    Scheffler, the No. 1 player in the world, later started the second round shortly after 10 a.m. EDT. After finishing Friday's round, Scheffler told reporters he wouldn't discuss specific details ...

  25. Grand Tour

    Grand Tour - first-look review. A visually ravishing if emotionally and thematically opaque travelogue is the latest from Portuguese maestro, Miguel Gomes. ... Little White Lies was established in 2005 as a bi-monthly print magazine committed to championing great movies and the talented people who make them. Combining cutting-edge design ...

  26. Rob Zombie

    Rob Zombie (born Robert Bartleh Cummings; January 12, 1965) is an American singer, songwriter, record producer, filmmaker, and actor.His music and lyrics are notable for their horror and sci-fi themes, and his live shows have been praised for their elaborate shock rock theatricality. He has sold an estimated 15 million albums worldwide. Zombie initially rose to fame as a founding member and ...

  27. Best Style Releases: Stüssy, 424, Essentials

    Price: $35-$205. Fear of God's popular sub-label, Essentials, just released its latest collection. A wide variety of items like hoodies, T-shirts, nylon overshirts, knit polos, and sweat shorts ...