Lamb of God: Year of the Thrash
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Originally published in Guitar World, Holiday 2008
Guitar World talks with Lamb of God's Mark Morton.
In the final months of 2008, the talk of the heavy metal world has been the return of Metallica. But from the looks of it, 2009 will belong to Lamb of God. The Richmond, Virginia–based neo-thrash masters are currently in the studio laying down tracks for their fifth studio album, scheduled for release on Epic in February. The follow-up to 2006’s Grammy-nominated Sacrament, the as-yet-untitled album is hotly anticipated, and not only by the band’s fans.
“We’re champing at the bit to record the new stuff,” says guitarist Mark Morton. “It’s exciting to put the mics up in front of the cabinets, get some nice guitar tones and lay it all down. We can’t wait.”
Lamb of God—which also includes guitarist Willie Adler, singer Randy Blythe, bassist John Campbell and drummer Chris Adler—have been tracking the disc with producer Josh Wilbur (Limp Bizkit, Steve Earle) at various studios in New York City, Virginia Beach, New Hampshire and their hometown of Richmond. And while Morton says it’s too early in the process to reveal album or song titles, he’s more than happy to discuss the overall sound of the new material.
“Sonically, we go to a lot of interesting places on this record,” he says. “But the word that keeps coming to my mind is ‘thrash.’ There are a lot of thrash-inspired riffs in these songs. And while that’s always been a big part of our sound, so has the modern stuff. But this time there’s a real big Bay Area thrash influence that’s pretty undeniable to me, and that’s cool, because that music was the catalyst for me ever wanting to play heavy metal guitar in the first place.”
That said, it stands to reason that Morton is particularly excited for Lamb of God’s upcoming tour with the biggest of the Bay Area thrashers. After finishing up in the studio, the band will spend the month of December supporting Metallica on a portion of their U.S. jaunt.
“We’ve performed shows with nearly every band that influenced us,” Morton says. “Metallica is one of the few we haven’t played with. This is some dream-come-true kinda shit.”
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hankjmatt
June 17, 2009 at 3:40am
I bought ‘as the palaces burn’ the next day and i’ve bought (thats right i said ‘bought’ not download) all there cd’s the day they were released since then and they still havent released a dud yet. what metallica was in the 80’s and pantera was in the 90’s is what they are today. the best of todays generation.
club penguin
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alexajameson
May 25, 2009 at 10:26pm
Lamb of God rick my socks off. This post was a cracking read, my thanks. This was just what I was looking for, great resource. Bookmarked. FatCow Coupon | Paddy Power Promotional Code | JustHost Voucher Code
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alankissane
May 15, 2009 at 7:24am
i’m not a big fan of the modern metal stuff but i clearly remember the first time i head this band on MTV2 a few years ago they played the video for ‘11th hour’ and i was blown away!! i bought ‘as the palaces burn’ the next day and i’ve bought (thats right i said ‘bought’ not download) all there cd’s the day they were released since then and they still havent released a dud yet. what metallica was in the 80’s and pantera was in the 90’s is what they are today. the best of todays generation.
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