Gabriel (lead vocals, lead/rhythm guitar)
Alex (lead/rhythm guitar)
Zakk (bass)
Steven (drums)
Ever since he was eight years old, Gabriel Garcia knew
exactly what he wanted to do with his life — write songs, sing lead and play
shredding guitar for a hard-rocking band. "My cousin used listen to Iron Maiden,
Megadeth, Pantera and all that stuff," Gabriel remembers. "He played it for me,
and he taught me how to play guitar. And then I just practiced my ass off."
Gabriel learned fast; six years later, at an age when most budding guitarists
are still getting their chops together and dreaming of future stardom, his band
Black Tide has already opened for Ozzy Osbourne and Lamb of God on the mainstage
of OZZfest 2007, and are preparing to unleash Light From Above, their debut
record for Interscope.
Don't let Black Tide's youthfulness fool
you; Gabriel may be only fifteen, and his three bandmates all under twenty, but
this Miami-based band is unquestionably the real deal. Gabriel, guitarist Alex
Nunez, bassist Zakk Sandler and drummer Steven Spence hit the stage with a
street gang's confident swagger, and back it up with a combination of
raw power and highly developed chops that would easily shame bands ten years
their senior. "We're young, and we come from Florida," says Zakk, "but
that doesn't mean we're a boy band or a novelty. We rehearsed
our album every day in our guitaris's garage, in the middle of the
summer in Miami. We weren't working on our choreography, and we
certainly weren't waiting around for our next song to come in the
mail!"
Though they're too young to remember the Eighties,
Black Tide's music draws from the best hard rock and thrash from the
era (think Guns N' Roses, Megadeth, Metallica, Iron Maiden and Skid
Row) while giving it a 21st century kick up the ass. "Shockwave," the
band's calling card and the album's opening track, is an utter
classic — all bloody-knuckled thrash riffs, squealing guitars, rampaging drums,
in-your-face vocals and an instantly memorable chorus. The rest of Light From
Above is up to the same impressive standard; anthemic, take-no-prisoners tracks
like "Shout," "Black Abyss," "Let Me," "Live Fast Die Young," the Maiden-esque
"Warriors of Time" and their spot-on cover of Metallica's "Hit The
Lights" will punch any metal fan squarely in their pleasure centers.
Despite the obvious influences, what makes Black
Tide's music sound so fresh is the fact that all four members harbor
vastly different musical obsessions. "We all agree with the Iron Maiden,
Pantera, Megadeth — everyone's into 'em — but we all kind of
branch off from there," Zakk explains. "Alex is really into grind and
crust-punk, and he loves bands like Bad Brains, Dead Kennedys and Phobia. Steve
is into Rush, Dream Theater and newer metal stuff like Killswitch Engage and All
That Remains. Gabriel's into Satriani. Vai and Death, all that shred
kind of stuff; and I'm into Meatloaf, Lynyrd Skynyrd and the Doors.
Things that really don't make sense together, but it works for us!"
Black Tide first started playing Miami-area clubs about four
years ago, shortly after Zakk — at the time, a lead guitarist for a rival group
— agreed to fill in for a couple of gigs on bass. ("How quickly two shows become
four years," Zakk laughs.) Though Gabriel was only ten at the time, none of the
older guys were remotely fazed by the idea of playing in a band with him. ""It
wasn't weird at all to be in a band with a ten year-old," Zakk
explains, "Because it was just like, 'This kid is fucking
talented!'"
After playing countless house parties and club gigs, Black
Tide scored their big break when they talked their way onto the main showcase at
the 2006 Florida Music Festival. "We did three songs in front of all these
industry people, and everyone was like, 'What the fuck was that? Who
were those kids'" Zakk recalls. "All of a sudden, we started getting
all these calls from major labels."
Interscope signed Black Tide and flew them to Chicago, where
they recorded their debut album, Light From Above, at Groovemaster Studios, with
Johnny K (Disturbed, Machine Head, Soil) producing. "They took four Miami boys
and threw us into the middle of the Chicago winter," laughs Zakk. "There was
nothing we could do except work on the record day and night." After the album
sessions wrapped, the band scored their coveted main stage slot on OZZfest 2007.
"It was crazy, man," says Gabriel. "Sharing the stage with Ozzy and Lamb of God,
it was just an awesome feeling. I've been listening to Lamb of God
constantly for the past two years; then we got to meet them, and they turned out
to be really cool." "We learned so much about touring on OZZfest," adds Zakk.
"We learned what the pros do. It was our first real tour, so it was like, '
Okay — this is how you properly soundcheck; this is how you properly
sing into a mic; this is what you should never say to a crowd in
Detroit!'"
After ending 2007 on another high note — a six-week tour with
Avenged Sevenfold — the band is ready to take it to a whole other level with the
release of Light From Above. You read it here first — 2008 is the Year of Black
Tide. |