Manmade God

Manmade God
Manmade God
Origin San Francisco, California, United States
Genres Post-grunge, hard rock
Years active 2001–2004
Labels American Recordings
Associated acts Forbidden
Website http://www.manmadegod.com
Past members
Steve Jacobs
Craig Locicero
Pann
James Walker

Manmade God was an American hard rock band from San Francisco. They gained prominence in 2003, touring with various mainstream acts and releasing one self-titled album in late summer. The group disbanded the following year, however, with the departure of its vocalist and an apparent split with their record label, American Recordings.[1]

Contents

History

Early years (2001-2002)

Formed upon the hiatus of Forbidden in 2001, Manmade God featured both its guitarist Craig Locicero and drummer Steve Jacobs. The new project was joined by bassist James Walker and filled out when Locicero came across a newspaper ad by Pann, a singer on the verge of ending his attempts at music success. The guitarist reflected, "Before Pann joined, we were more of a finger painting experiment; it never felt like a band. Pann just made all the difference, having direction and emotion."

Within two weeks of formation, Manmade God debuted at the Boomerang Club and played elsewhere in the San Francisco Bay area. They soon met Stone Temple Pilots drummer Eric Kretz who was impressed enough to produce their 3-song demo. While playing, the group soon realized they were not ready to showcase for major labels yet and continued recording. Their material caught the attention of Brian Joseph Dobbs who helped record their next demo at The Plant Studios in Sausalito, California.[2]

According to Locicero, "Every management company wanted us; major labels were knocking themselves over to get to us."[3] The demos with Dobbs gained response from American Recordings and prompted a private showcase with label head Rick Rubin. Manmade God signed in to American in October 2002 and soon began working on their self-titled debut with Dobbs as producer and Rubin as executive producer.[2]

Manmade God (2003-2004)

The band toured heavily the following year, playing alongside doubleDrive in spring. Throughout the summer, Manmade God toured across the US with established acts such as Adema, Powerman 5000, Ra, Spineshank, Taproot, and Type O Negative.[4]

Initially set for a July 29 release, Manmade God finally hit shelves on August 26, 2003. Locicero alleged years later that the delay was because the head of both Columbia and Island Records had "turned out" during the recording of Manmade God.

The album gained both positive and mixed reception; Robert L. Doerschuk of Allmusic offered a 3/5 rating and proclaimed, "Throughout their eponymous album, they hammer and thrash with a ponderous intensity. This has been familiar territory since Led Zeppelin trashed its first private jet."[5] IGN's Dave Doray gave a meager 5/10 rating, noting how it "just doesn't introduce us to anything new" while comparing the vocals to Chris Cornell and bass to Tim Commerford. However, positive response was given to the musical interplay on various tracks.[6] Melodic.net and MetalSucks.net offered stronger support with the latter calling it "tremendous" and describing Pann's vocal performance as "a soulful, gritty version of Filter’s Richard Patrick."[7]

Manmade God was compared stylistically to classic groups like The Doors, Led Zeppelin, and Black Sabbath. It was frequently said to have drawn heavily from the more contemporary grunge outfits Soundgarden and Stone Temple Pilots while owing credit to then-active supergroup Audioslave. The album boasted one single, "Safe Passage," which reached #36 on the Billboard's Mainstream Rock Tracks.

In December, the band headlined KSJO's Homegrown concert at The Edge in Palo Alto. Eric Kretz stood in for an allegedly injured Steve Jacobs for half of the show where Pann expressed to the crowd his disenchantment with the band's lack of exposure, spouting, "You guys are the first to know who we are, 'cause no one knows who we are." In addition to performing nearly every track from their debut album, Manmade God also played a new song entitled "Awakening" which Pann wryly noted would be on the band's next record if they make it that far.[8]

Manmade God toured into the following year but continued experiencing turbulence with their label. While performing with Soil in March, the band's touring support was pulled, further frustrating its members.[9]

Disestablishment and formation of Spiralarms

Having their touring support removed proved to be the last straw when, a week later, Pann left Manmade God. In a 2011 interview, Locicero reflected that, despite its promising future, Manmade God was "a victim of bad timing" because of label issues causing their album's delay. He elaborated:

"That alone wouldn’t have been a problem, but it was because it took so goddamn long that our singer just completely imploded in the process. He had somewhat of a meltdown. He wasn’t really much of a people person beforehand, so when we were out on the road, he started to get miserable and made all of us miserable. It’s sad because he is so talented. The songs that I was writing and the vocals that we were putting together were really special. It was just such a shame, but it was becoming so difficult for me that I literally one day said 'I’m done, I quit. I don’t want to do this with this guy.'"

Locicero added that while his decision may not have been the right one at the time, it allowed him to work on other projects in the future that Manmade God would have prevented.[3]

In April 2004, shortly after the demise of Manmade God, fellow California group Systematic also disbanded. It was reported soon after that Systematic frontman Tim Narducci was forming an as of yet unnamed group with the former guitarist, drummer, and bassist of Manmade God.[10] Narducci had in fact been friends with Locicero since the age of 15 and the two bonded through a common passion for heavy metal.[11] The new group officially named itself Spiralarms and played their first concert together at The Pound in San Francisco on June 5. Referring to himself as Manmade God's new frontman, Narducci explained, "We changed our name due a number of reasons, mostly political, but most importantly the sound. . . It's much different then what those guys [Manmade God] were doing before and much different even for myself." He also enthusiastically reported to have written sixteen complete songs with his new band.[1]

In early 2005, Walker suffered a shoulder injury that necessitated his removal from the group. This allowed the introduction of former Stone Temple Pilots drummer Eric Kretz who helped Spiralarms record their debut album.[12] By 2007, Locicero would be the only ex-Manmade God member to remain in Spiralarms and would also be back with the reunited Forbidden. Spiralarms would now include drummer Chris Kontos (ex-Machine Head and Testament), bassist Chris Lombardom, and keyboardist Brad Barth.[7]

Band members

Discography

  • Manmade God (2003)

Chart performance

Single Mainstream Rock Tracks Album
"Safe Passage" 36 Manmade God

References

  1. ^ a b Roth, Kaj Manmade God Becomes Spiral Arms Melodic.net (June 21, 2004). Retrieved on 2-06-11.
  2. ^ a b Manmade God - in Metal Bands MetalUnderground.com (2003). Retrieved on 2-06-11.
  3. ^ a b Forbidden's Alpha and Omega RadioMetal.com (January 17, 2011). Retrieved on 2-06-11.
  4. ^ Wippsson, Johan Manmade God Pushed Back To Aug.26th Melodic.net (July 27, 2003). Retrieved on 2-06-11.
  5. ^ Doerschuk, Robert L. Manmade God - Manmade God Allmusic (2003). Retrieved on 2-06-11.
  6. ^ Doray, Dave Manmade God - Music Review at IGN IGN.com (November 20, 2003). Retrieved on 2-06-11.
  7. ^ a b Neilstein, Vince MANMADE GOD MEMBERS RETOOL AS SPIRALARMS MetalSucks.net (October 16, 2007). Retrieved on 2-06-11.
  8. ^ Quelland, Sarah Mad Men Metro Silicon Valley (December 17, 2003) Retrieved on 2-06-11.
  9. ^ Manmadegod Singer Leaves MetalUnderground.com (2004). Retrieved on 2-06-11.
  10. ^ Roth, Kaj Ex Systematic Frontman To Form New Project With Manmade God Members Melodic.net (April 20, 2004). Retrieved on 2-06-11.
  11. ^ SpiralArms :: About This Artist ReverbNation. Retrieved on 2-06-11.
  12. ^ Eric Kretz officially joins Spiralarms BelowEmpty.com (March 27, 2005). Retrieved on 2-06-11.

External links


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