Thursday 26 June 2008

Videodrone

Videodrone   
Artist: Videodrone

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


Videodrone   
 Videodrone

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 12




Videodrone vocalist Ty Elam bagged groceries by day, so packed in friends' parents' living suite by night. In Bakersfield, California, a David Lynch-esque oil ithiel Town, on that point was no space to play omit country-western clubs, gay parallel bars and senior high schools. So Elam would get together carloads of friends and drive on into LA. In 1990 Videodrone was known as Cradle of Thorns, stylizing their synthetic aggro-electric sound that was influenced as very much by sub-B horror-movie soundtracks as the technoshriek arrangements hurtled out by their pals in Korn, their Central Valley homeboys. Getting talked into Korn's possess label was a happy convenience for the band. Yet long ahead signing with Korn's Reprise/Elementree mark, Cradle of Thorns signed in 1990 with well-thought-of indie label Triple-X, rest home of of Social Distortion, Jane's Addiction, and others. Well-known on the roaring Huntington Beach club shot, Cradle of Thorns released a short series of back-of-the-van one-off albums with Triple-X, including Remember It Day, Feed Us and Download This over a span of quaternion eld. Eventually at the urging of bassplayer Mavis, wHO liked Korn's Elementree Reprise subsidiary, bassist Fieldy Arvizu in agreement to produce a new COT record in 1998. With Korn playing as A&R reps with Elementree, Cradle of Thorns had one essential change to make. The boys changed to the call 'Videodrone' styled later on the David Cronenberg celluloid Videodrome, to observe their new label. They wanted a new name to go with their young feel -- futuristic, just placid in spades "80's." The well received new Videodrone CD featured Limp Bizkit's Fred Durst and Korn's Jonathan Davis on vocals. Their CD arrived on the heels of sold-out concerts with Korn and Rob Zombie.





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