Cedric Bixler-Zavala

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Cedric Bixler-Zavala

Background information
Born November 4, 1974
Redwood City, California, USA
Origin Flag of United States El Paso, Texas, USA
Genre(s) Progressive rock
Post-hardcore
Occupation(s) Vocalist
Instrument(s) Vocals, maracas, drums
Years active 1993-present
Associated
acts
The Mars Volta
De Facto
At the Drive-In

Cedric Bixler-Zavala (born November 4, 1974 in Redwood City, California) is the lead singer and lyricist of The Mars Volta, and was previously the lead singer and lyricist of At the Drive-In.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Raised in El Paso, Texas, Bixler-Zavala, along with close friend and collaborator Omar Rodriguez-Lopez fronts the acclaimed progressive rock group The Mars Volta. He was also the lead-singer of the seminal post-hardcore band At the Drive-In which broke up in 2001.

Bixler-Zavala's lyrics are often abstract to the point of seeming nonsensical. These lyrics often blend contrasting metaphors, usually dealing with grotesque, speculative fiction imagery. He has cited a variety of influences, such as Werner Herzog, Luis Buñuel, Neu!, Doctor Who, Syd Barrett, and Mexican folk tales. He has also experimented with bilingual lyrics, switching from English to Spanish several times within the course of a song. The Mars Volta's album De-Loused in the Comatorium was accompanied by a short novel of the same name, written in the same metaphorical style his lyrics are arranged by Cedric and Jeremy Ward. A lot of his vocal work operates in the higher register (displayed in songs such as Inertiatic ESP), but he also operates competently at a normal pitch.

Bixler-Zavala frequently does somersaults on stage, swings his microphone, salsa dances, sarcastically mocks the audience for fun (during At the Drive-In days), and plays the maracas. Previously Bixler-Zavala was a heavy drug user, but he has now quit using opioids along with bandmate Omar Rodriguez-Lopez following the overdose and death of Jeremy Ward, former sound manipulator of The Mars Volta.

Multi-instrumentalist Bixler-Zavala also played the drums in the experimental reggae dub group DeFacto, and occasionally played guitar and drums with At the Drive-In.

Under the pseudonym "Alavaz Relxib Cirdec", Bixler-Zavala contributed a 2-song single to the GSL Special 12" Single Series, released in December 2005. The inversion of his name is very appropriate, seeing as the musical styles shown on his GSL 12" single would be unexpected to an uninformed fan of his more mainstream contributions. Closer to the Dub of De Facto and the ambient experimentation shown in Omar Rodriguez-Lopez records than the prog-rock of The Mars Volta, the two songs Bixler-Zavala has produced under this alias are entirely instrumental, with the exception of samples of speech that can be heard on "Live Private Booths". "Live Private Booths" is a funky Fela Kuti-style jam featuring flute, drums, bass, guitars and samples, while "Sapta-Loka" is a more ambient exploration of eastern-style drones, with subtle, haunting instrumentation.

[edit] Discography

[edit] With El Paso Pussycats

[edit] With Los Dregtones

[edit] With Phantasmagoria

[edit] With The Fall on Deaf Ears

[edit] With At the Drive-In

[edit] With De Facto

[edit] With The Mars Volta

[edit] As Alavaz Relxib Cirdec

  • GSL: The Special 12" Single Series: December - Single (2005)

[edit] Guest appearances

[edit] Trivia

  • He is a playable character in the popular flash game series, Emogame.
The Mars Volta
Omar Rodriguez-Lopez | Cedric Bixler-Zavala

Isaiah Ikey Owens | Juan Alderete | Thomas Pridgen | Marcel Rodriguez-Lopez | Adrian Terrazas-Gonzales | Paul Hinojos

Former members
Eva Gardner | Jeremy Michael Ward | Jon Theodore
Discography
Albums: De-Loused in the Comatorium | Frances the Mute | Scabdates | A Missing Chromosome | Amputechture
Extended plays: Tremulant EP | Live EP
Singles: "Inertiatic ESP" | "Televators" | "The Widow" | "L'Via L'Viaquez" | "Viscera Eyes"