Dead Soul Tribe-Dead soul Tribe (2002)

I. Powertrip
II. Coming Down
III. Anybody There?
IV. The Haunted
V. The Drowning Machine s
VI. You
VII. Under the Weight of My Stone
VIII. Once
IX. One Bullet
X. Empty
XI. Cry for Tomorrow
XII. Into...
XIII. ...Into the Spiral Cathedral
"This album is a kind of diary about
the past two years of my life." This is how Devon Graves describes the
debut album of his new band, Dead Soul Tribe. "The lyrics aren't
especially philosophical, but they are very personal. You don't need to read
between the lines because the words are clear enough and say exactly what I
want to say.."
Devon Graves is the alter ego of Buddy
Lackey, the former singer of the US metal band, Psychotic Waltz. And with the
change of name Devon has brought about both a musical and a personal
transition. Not so fundamental that you can't recognize the thread running
through his life as an artiste, but rather one which underlines the
singer/guitarist's huge creative versatility. In Dead Soul Tribe he has built
up a band in which he can realize his ideas as a songwriter, singer and
instrumentalist more definitively and purely than ever before. He says,
"Even though I'm still very proud of the albums I did with Psychotic
Waltz, Dead Soul Tribe is something very different. Our songs are still heavy,
but the chords, the harmonies are darker and more atmospheric. The sound is
really deep and more homogeneous than those of Psychotic Waltz. I didn't allow
any compromises whatsoever."
His words apply especially to songs such
as the opener, ´Powertrip`, ´The Haunted`, ´Once`, ´Empty` and the final song,
´...Into The Spiral Cathedral`, in which Graves varies between hymn-like
arrangements, beautiful little acoustic parts, atmospheric compositions and
powerful, far-reaching prog metal. The album was produced and mixed in Graves's
own ´Digital Black Limited` Studio in Vienna. "The ideas for the songs
just sort of appeared on their own. I just played guitar riffs and licks to see
what I could make out of them. Or I stood under the shower, or sat around at
home and suddenly a melody would pop up in my head. I have the feeling that I
wasn't being creative in the traditional sense, it was just my natural
inspiration turning into sounds."
His new band, Dead Soul Tribe, features
drummer Adel Moustafa, a very capable young musician with Austrian and Egyptian
parents. When Graves met him, Adel didn't even have his own drumkit. But the
fabulous reputation enjoyed by the boy was underlined during the first practice
session. "A rock band is only as good as its drummer," Graves says,
stressing the importance of the rhythm section. "And apart from
that", he adds, grinning, "Adel is a great looking guy. And how a
band looks is no small thing."
Moustafa is accompanied by Roland Ivenz,
a very notorious bass player due to his dreadlocks and his experience in an
Austrian punk band. It was from there that he brought rhythm guitarist Volker
Wilschko - again with dreadlocks - with him, to share the guitar parts with the
head of the band. Graves himself sings, plays lead guitar, adds his own
hard-kicking riffs and, in the manner of Psychotic Waltz, also adds several
interesting flute parts. Even experts in the field may not know that Graves is
an excellent guitarist in addition to his qualities as composer, singer and
flutist. "I've always played guitar, even before I joined Psychotic
Waltz," he explains. "I'm not one of these guitar heroes who can play
a million notes a minute, so my talents weren't in much demand in the early
Nineties, when Steve Vai, Paul Gilbert and Joe Satriani were the big names of
the day. I play more of an old school style-I'm a big fan of Jimi Hendrix and
Jimmy Page. My strengths are the phrasings which make playing that much more intensive."
Devon Graves is particularly proud of his
voice, which puts a special stamp on all the songs of the album. "My voice
sounds a lot more natural than it used to do," is the way he characterizes
his vocal evolution. "With Psychotic Waltz my voice never sounded like I
wanted it to be. But now, the sound that comes out of my mouth is the same that
I have in my head. So that's pretty satisfying."
It's a satisfaction that he had to fight
for long and hard because Graves can look back on a pretty hard time with huge
personal problems. "I think they were the two most painful years of my
life, but now I'm more balanced and happier than ever before. I don't even try
to speak to people generally any more, with my songs, but more to reach people
who understand me."
Graves is hoping to do just that in a
more personal manner from Summer 2002 at Dead Soul Tribe concerts. Because he
wants to get back onto the stage as quickly as possible-being as he is, so
convinced of the musical and visual qualities of his new band. "We've
already given a few shows, for example at the ´Monsters Of Metal` in Vienna. A
lot of fans came up to me after the show and complimented us not only on the
music, but also on the musicians' strong visual presence."
For ten years Devon Graves (a.k.a. Buddy
Lackey) was the frontman of the San Diego based band, Psychotic Waltz. Their
debut album, A Social Grace was described by many representatives of the press
as a "work of the century" when it was released in 1991. In the same
year Psychotic Waltz played at the legendary Dynamo Festival in
Eindhoven/Holland, and released their very strong Into The Everflow two years
later. Lackey used the involuntary break in the band's activities, caused by
guitarist Dan Rock's broken arm, to produce his solo album, The Strange World
Of Buddy Lackey. When Rock's arm was mended, Psychotic Waltz continued in their
winning vein with Mosquito. Several subsequent line-up changes in the band
followed. Bleeding was the last album with Lackey as singer.
His announcement in September 1997 that
he was leaving the band came as a surprise. I felt I needed to leave the band
he explains, looking back without anger. "I wanted to put my own ideas of
what I wanted my music to be into practice in a more consequential way. "
And it is this that can now be found on the debut album of his new band, Dead
Soul Tribe. Graves is certain: "Everyone that liked the albums I did with
Psychotic Waltz is going to like Dead Soul Tribe. And those that weren't all
that keen on Psychotic Waltz are guaranteed to like my new band." So it's
a call to every soul - dead or alive ....