
Among the youngest bands
ever to storm the metal genre, Death Angel has come to be known as one of the
most influential bands to emerge from the thriving Bay Area Thrash Metal Scene
in the early 1980s, an era when one could catch Cliff Burton.
In 1986, a Death
Angel demo produced by Kirk Hammett (Metallica) titled "Kill As
One" sparked the interest of Enigma Records. Then, in 1987, Death Angel's
debut, "The Ultra Violence," was released. Drummer Andy Galeon was
just 14 years old at the time. The album was a full-frontal assault on the
ears, buzzing with the group's youthful energy, and "The Ultra
Violence" sold 40,000 copies in just four months. Another innovative
recording, "Frolic Through the Park," followed, marking Death Angel's
evolution both lyrically and musically. "Bored," another track from
the band's second release, highlighted the cutting-edge band's inventive
dynamics, and won a spot on MTV's "Headbanger's Ball."
Geffen Records
was impressed enough with Death Angel's television premier to offer the band a
deal, and Death Angel became the first band of their breed to appear on the
major label's roster. At Geffen, the band released what is widely regarded
as one of the most original and accomplished thrash metal albums ever recorded,
"Act III." The record pushed the limits of the genre to create
something truly unique, a definitive work that is essential to any metal fan's
music collection. Death Angel's masterful songwriting ability was once again on
display nationwide in 1990, as the videos for "Seemingly Endless Time' and
'Room With A View' saw heavy rotation on MTV.
Death Angel's world tour between 1986 and
1990 included two sold-out tours of Japan. in fact, nearly every
date on the Act III World Tour, which included storied venues such as The
Warfield Theater in San Francisco, The Ritz in New York, and England's Hammersmith Odeon, were
sold out to capacity, a remarkable achievement for any band, but particularly
stunning for such a young group, not to mention one comprised of cousins.
Death Angel's trajectory to fame was
tragically cut short in 1990, when the band's tour bus crashed in the Arizona desert.
Drummer Andy Galeon was critically injured, and would need more than a year to
recover. During this downtime, vocalist Mark Osegueda left the band and moved
to New York
to pursue a life outside of music. The remaining members went on to form The
Organization, and released two full-length albums under that name. The
"O," as they came to be known, toured extensively throughout the United States and Europe, including two
appearances at Holland's famed Dynamo Open Air
Festival, a support slot on Rob Halford's "Fight" tour, and as the
main support for the Motorhead tour in Europe.
After the "O" disbanded in
1995, the band members went on to pursue other musical projects, including
"The Past," (Rob, Andy, Dennis, Gus), Big Shrimp (Dennis, Andy),
Smokestack (Rob, Andy), Silver Circus (Mark), and Swarm (Rob, Andy, Mark). The
latter incarnation toured the United States
for three months in 2001, supporting Jerry Cantrell (Alice in Chains).
Death Angel resurfaced in 2001 to perform at a cancer benefit for
frontman Chuck Billy (Testament) called "Thrash of the Titans." The
response was so great that many offers came quickly in 2002, beginning with a
"secret" gig in San
Francisco, and sold it out under the psuedo name,
"Kill As One."
The show was a warm up for 2 dates in Holland including the famed Dynamo Open Air Festival and a
pre-event show at the Effenaar club in Eindhoven
which sold out before the band even arrived in Europe.
Since then DA has toured Europe as
co-headliner of the "No Mercy Festivals" in April 2003, supported
METALLICA at the Fillmore in San Francisco,
supported ANTHRAX in the US,
as well as a few shows with HALFORD. Death Angel have just a brand new album The Art of Dying.
For updates keep visiting us here, www.deathangel.com.

Thanx
to Cédric for Auto-Graphed Picture