In a new interview withĀ “Diary Of The Madmen – The Ultimate Ozzy Podcast”, bassistĀ Rudy Sarzo, who recently rejoinedĀ QUIET RIOTĀ after an 18-year absence, was asked if there are any plans to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the band’s classic third album,Ā “Metal Health”. He said (as transcribed byĀ BLABBERMOUTH.NET): “[Next] year we’re gonna be celebrating the recording of the album,Ā ‘Metal Health’. But the following year, in 2023, we’re going out promoting 40 years ofĀ ‘Metal Health’.”
As for whether fans can expectĀ QUIET RIOTĀ to performĀ “Metal Health”Ā in its entirety from front to back,Ā SarzoĀ said: “It’s an interesting thought. I guess if you’re gonna present it as performing it front to back and it’s not sequenced properly from front to back, even though we’ll probably wind up doing that and we do kind of like an arrangement of⦠For example, we do ā we have been doing this for over 20 years now ā starting with the riff toĀ ‘Metal Health’; that’s how the set begins. We started doing that way back ā kind of like a teaser. Then we go into the first song of the set. And then at the end we do [the song]Ā ‘Metal Health’. It’s kind of like what they call an ‘overture,’ except the overture is bits and pieces of all the music in a classical performance.
“I did something like that [when I was playing withĀ DIO],” he continued. “It was aĀ ‘Holy Diver’Ā celebration ā either a 20th or 25th anniversary. [‘Holy Diver – Live’] was recorded in 2005, so I think it was the 20th anniversary [of the original album]. But anyways, it was an anniversary. And withĀ DIO, we did playĀ ‘Holy Diver’Ā from front to back. So we did do that. And it was interesting, because we went into it, we actually played a lot ofĀ RAINBOW. We opened up withĀ ‘Tarot Woman’Ā fromĀ RAINBOW. And then I believe we did someĀ BLACK SABBATHĀ ā maybe, maybe not. But we definitely then, after we did the last song of the recordĀ ‘Holy Diver’, we finished it off with more material.”
RudyĀ was one of the members ofĀ QUIET RIOT‘sĀ “Metal Health”Ā lineup. He played bass on the classic LP, which sold over ten million copies and spawned the hitsĀ “Cum On Feel The Noize”Ā andĀ “Metal Health”Ā and on the follow-up recordĀ “Condition Critical”.
SarzoĀ appeared in the most notable music videos in theĀ MTVĀ age and toured with the band until 1985 and again from 1997 to 2003. During his years out of the band,Ā SarzoĀ was a member ofĀ OZZY OSBOURNE,Ā WHITESNAKE,Ā DIO,Ā BLUE ĆYSTER CULT,Ā QUEENSRÅøCHEĀ andĀ THE GUESS WHO.
JoiningĀ SarzoĀ inĀ QUIET RIOT‘s current lineup are guitaristĀ Alex Grossi, vocalistĀ Jizzy PearlĀ and drummerĀ Johnny Kelly.
DrummerĀ Frankie Banali, who joinedĀ QUIET RIOTĀ in 1982 and played onĀ “Metal Health”, died in August 2020 after a 16-month battle with pancreatic cancer. A month afterĀ Banali‘s death,Ā QUIET RIOTĀ announced that it would carry on.
GrossiĀ was in the last version of the band, from 2004 through 2007, before founding singerĀ Kevin DuBrowĀ passed away, and was asked byĀ BanaliĀ to return in 2010.
QUIET RIOTĀ went through two vocalists āĀ Mark HuffĀ andĀ Scott VokounĀ ā before settling onĀ PearlĀ in 2013.Ā PearlĀ announced his exit fromĀ QUIET RIOTĀ in October 2016 and was briefly replaced byĀ Seann Nichols, who played only five shows with the group before the March 2017 arrival ofĀ “American Idol”Ā finalistĀ James Durbin.Ā PearlĀ returned toĀ QUIET RIOTĀ in September 2019.
For a list of upcomingĀ QUIET RIOTĀ shows, visitĀ QuietRiot.Band.
SarzoĀ discussed his return toĀ QUIET RIOTĀ in a recent interview withĀ Adika Live!. He said: “My decision, in addition to [it] beingĀ Frankie‘s request that I return to the band, was a decision that I had to meditate on it, because it is that important. Not meditate whether it was the right decision to make or not ā no, that wasn’t the point ā it was to meditate about the timing of it. Because it could not be an abrupt decision that you drop everything you’re doing and you change the band.
“ReginaĀ [Frankie‘s widow] and I, we sat and we talked about it, and we said, ‘Okay, the best thing to do is to let everybody fulfill their commitments.’ Because I have commitments to the band that I’ve been playing in for the last five years,Ā THE GUESS WHO. And I wasn’t about to tell them, ‘Hey, I’m outta here, guys. Good luck.’ I’ve never done that. So I have commitments with them. AndĀ QUIET RIOTĀ has commitments with [longtime bassist]Ā Chuck Wright. And we felt that theĀ onlyĀ thing that we can do, really ā [we felt] that all these commitments must be fulfilled so our agreements with everybody is fulfilled.”
RudyĀ went on to say that he has been “making the transition” and “embracing again the wholeĀ QUIET RIOTĀ consciousness” by going “back and playing the songs” again. “And actually, it’s been wonderful because, I’ve gotta tell you, to be able to go back to something that you did 40 years ago with the musician I am today, I’m looking at the songs a little bit different, as far as my own contributions,” he said. “Of course, it’s not gonna be something that is gonna turn into completely something else, but there are certain note choices that I can improve on.”
Prior to his recent exit from the band,Ā WrightĀ had served off and on withĀ QUIET RIOTĀ for nearly 40 years, appeared on nine albums, and is known as the bassist forĀ QUIET RIOT‘s mega-hitĀ “Metal Health”Ā (Bang Your Head) andĀ “Don’t Wanna Let You Go”. He was a contributing songwriter on 1986’sĀ “QRIII”Ā and appeared in the band’s video forĀ “The Wild And The Young”, among others.Ā WrightĀ had been one of the band’s longest touring and recording members.
To celebrate what would have been iconicĀ MĆTĆRHEADĀ leaderĀ Ian Fraser "Lemmy" Kilmister's 76th birthday, the officialĀ MĆTĆRHEAD YouTubeĀ channel has released the next in theĀ "The Lƶst Tapes"Ā series, a previously unreleased concert from Norwich UEA which was recorded on theĀ "Snake Bite Love"Ā tour in 1998. Check it out below or atĀ this location. LemmyĀ died in December 2015 at the age of 70 shortly after learning he had been diagnosed with cancer. He had dealt with several health […]
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