Rob Zombie

Rob Zombie
Rob Zombie at Ozzfest.
Rob Zombie at Ozzfest.
Background information
Birth name Robert Bartleh Cummings
Also known as Rob Zombie, Robert Wolfgang Zombie, Rob Straker
Born January 12, 1965 (1965-01-12) (age 44)
Haverhill, Massachusetts, United States
Genre(s) Heavy metal, Shock rock
Occupation(s) Musician, Songwriter, Screenwriter, Film director, Film producer
Instrument(s) Vocals
Years active 1985-present
Associated acts White Zombie, Alice Cooper, Danzig, Powerman 5000, Scum of the Earth, Marilyn Manson, Ozzy Osbourne
Website http://www.robzombie.com/

Robert Bartleh Cummings[1] (born January 12, 1965), better known by his stage name, Rob Zombie, is an American musician, film director, screenwriter and producer.

He founded the heavy metal band White Zombie,[2] and as a solo musician sold a further 15 million albums.[3] Five of his albums have been certified platinum and another two have been certified gold, making him the artist with the most gold and platinum discs on the Geffen Records label.

Zombie has also established a successful career as a film director, creating the movies House of 1000 Corpses, The Devil's Rejects, the 2007 remake of Halloween, and the upcoming Tyrannosaurus Rex.

Contents

Biography

Personal life

Zombie was born Robert Cummings Jr. to a saleswoman mother and a furniture-crafter father. He has a younger brother, Michael, who is now known as Spider One of the alternative-metal band Powerman 5000. After years working in carnivals, his parents settled down to raise their sons in Haverhill, Massachusetts, a suburban town Zombie considered sinister yet lacking in excitement. He was driven by boredom to watch more than eight hours a day of television and was soon fascinated by horror movies.

Zombie has been a longtime fan of The Ramones, The Misfits, shock-rocker Alice Cooper, British heavy-metal pioneers Black Sabbath and Judas Priest, Metallica and many more. The styles of these musicians continue to be a strong influence on him to this day. Zombie attended, but did not graduate from, Parsons The New School for Design in New York and Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. Zombie got his start in entertainment by working as a bike messenger for Pee Wee's Playhouse. It was during this time that he met future White Zombie band-mate Sean Yseult.

On October 31, 2002 he married long-time girlfriend Sheri Moon after almost 13 years of dating. The two had met at Toad's Place, a concert venue, in New Haven, Connecticut through mutual friends.[4] Ten days before their planned wedding date, the couple eloped on Halloween. She has appeared, usually as the lead actress, in all of his films, and is also featured in his live rock shows.

Zombie is also a longtime vegetarian after being affected by slaughterhouse footage he saw in high school.[5] For Thanksgiving of 2007, Zombie used his notoriety and joined forces with PETA to record a message with PETA's 2007 holiday hotline. The message itself gave details about the lives and gruesome slaughtering of turkeys and a plea to choose an alternative for the holiday.[6].

Zombie has various tattoos forming sleeves on both arms, most of them featuring horror/science fiction imagery. These include the Creature From the Black Lagoon, sinister clowns, demons, and skulls. He designed almost all of the tattoos himself. His most recent tattoo is of a small clown with a popcorn box [7]. The tattoo was done by Rob's tour manager, who is also a tattoo artist.

White Zombie (1985–1998)

Main article: White Zombie (band)

White Zombie was an American band named after the 1932 film White Zombie, which starred Bela Lugosi. Based in New York, White Zombie was originally a noise rock band in the vein of fellow New York band Sonic Youth and Texas Experimental Punk band Butthole Surfers. White Zombie was known for combining heavy-metal music with driving guitar riffs (as on "Super-Charger Heaven"), overlayed with lyrics heavily influenced by horror films and pseudo-Satanic imagery. Unlike other metal bands of the 1990s, White Zombie was almost exclusively a "fantasy" band, writing songs not about real life, but about surreal horror fantasies.

Following their signing to Geffen Records, White Zombie achieved commercial success, with two 2x platinum albums and a large number of their songs featured in movies and TV shows (notably Beavis and Butthead). The group officially disbanded in 1998 shortly after the release of singer Zombie solo album Hellbilly Deluxe.

In November 2008 Geffen/UME released Let Sleeping Corpses Lie, a 5 CD/1 DVD boxed set which includes all 64 original studio recordings from White Zombie's career. The package also contains nine music videos (including their breakthrough Grammy-nominated hit "Thunder Kiss '65"), and 10 live performances of such classics as "I Am Hell" from The Beavis & Butt-Head Experience. In an interview[8] to promote the release of Let Sleeping Corpses Lie, Rob Zombie made it clear that a reunion with his White Zombie band mates was unlikely, saying, "I don't want fans to think it's the beginning of anything."

Solo career (1998–present)

In 1996, Zombie collaborated with Alice Cooper on the song "Hands of Death (Burn Baby Burn)" for the X-Files tie-in CD Songs in the Key of X. It was Zombie's first work outside of his band White Zombie. The song was nominated for a Grammy for Best Metal Performance the same year, but lost to Nine Inch Nails for their song "Happiness in Slavery".

Zombie formed his own solo band in 1998. John Tempesta (drums) came directly from White Zombie, and was joined by Mike Riggs on guitar and Blasko (Rob Nicholson) on bass. They recorded and released Zombie's debut solo album, Hellbilly Deluxe, in 1998, produced by Scott Humphrey. The album was a success, selling three million copies domestically. This album contained the hit singles "Dragula", "Living Dead Girl" and "Superbeast". The Dragula title was inspired by the '60s TV series The Munsters; the DRAG-U-LA was a dragster built from a coffin driven by Grandpa. Episode footage of the drag race was included in House of 1,000 Corpses. White Zombie dissolved after the release of Hellbilly Deluxe. Zombie toured extensively to promote the debut album, releasing American Made Music to Strip By in 1999, an album of remixes from Hellbilly Deluxe.

Zombie next released The Sinister Urge in 2001 (the title taken from a 1961 film by Edward D. Wood), again produced by Scott Humphrey. This release contained the singles "Never Gonna Stop (The Red Red Kroovy)", "Feel So Numb" and "Demon Speeding". While the album still featured Zombie's signature heavy metal sound, it was also more experimental than Hellbilly Deluxe, such as including brass instruments on "Go To California." The album has been certified platinum.

Zombie released his first greatest-hits album Past, Present & Future, in 2003, containing hit songs both from his solo band and White Zombie. It also featured covers (The Commodores' "Brick House" and The Ramones' "Blitzkrieg Bop") and unreleased songs ("Two-Lane Blacktop" and "Girl on Fire").

After a 2002-2003 world tour, Mike Riggs and John Tempesta left Zombie to form a similar band, Scum of the Earth. This put plans for another tour or new album on hold. Instead, between 2003 and 2005, Zombie released two self-directed horror films, House of 1000 Corpses and The Devil's Rejects.

In 2005, Zombie returned to the music world by recruiting former Marilyn Manson guitarist, John 5, and former Alice Cooper drummer, Tommy Clufetos. Blasko and Humphrey remained, and the five began recording Educated Horses, which was released in 2006. Stylistically, Educated Horses is Zombie's most experimental release. In contrast to the heavy metal sound of his first 2 albums, this one has a more alternative metal sound to it. The single "Foxy Foxy" can be described as his most "party-going" song. The other 2 singles, "Let It All Bleed Out" and "American Witch", featured his signature heavy sound. It was also his 1st album to not contain heavy amounts of horror—either in the artwork, songs, or even his physical appearance (Zombie is dressed in regular clothes on the album cover, and his dreadlocks are gone). However, the songs "Seventeen Year Locust" and "The Scorpion Sleeps" featured song topics of creepy-crawlies. Following the release of the album he toured the U.S. with Lacuna Coil.

20th Century Masters: Millennium Collection: The Best of Rob Zombie was also released in 2006 by his label, Geffen Records. It contains songs similar to his 1st greatest-hits album, but there are also songs on this release from Educated Horses. In 2007 Zombie released his first Live CD, this was supposed to be accompanied by a live DVD & picture booklet, but so far only the CD has surfaced. Blasko, Zombie's bass player, left the band after the Educated Horses Tour, shortly before the American Witch Tour (The 2nd leg of the tour), to play bass with Ozzy Osbourne. To fill in, Zombie hired Piggy D. of Amen and Wednesday 13 fame as a permanent replacement.

On May 31, 2006, Zombie was joined by guitarist Slash (Guns N' Roses, Velvet Revolver), Gilby Clarke (formerly of Guns N' Roses) on rhythm guitar, Scott Ian of Anthrax on bass, Tommy Lee of Mötley Crüe on drums and special guest Ace Frehley of Kiss also on lead guitar. The occasion was a one-time supergroup tribute to Kiss for the first annual VH1 Rock Honors Award Show. They played one song, "God of Thunder," before handing it off to the honoree. Zombie then went on tour with Ozzy Osbourne.

Zombie has also started work on a currently untitled follow-up to 2006's Educated Horses. In may of 2008 he posted an update on his website stating:

"Well, we have for the first time ever written more songs than we need for an album. Everything isn't 100% finished, but everything is moving along great. No release date yet." In August of 2008, a new (instrumental) song entitled "Tyrannosaurus Rex" , featuring John 5 on guitar, was uploaded onto Zombie's MySpace music page. In a interview published in December 2008, Rob spoke about his new band lineup ( John 5, Piggy D, and Tommy C), and how happy he was with his new band members, saying, "I've never had a band that I could call my good friends until now[9]."

Zombie has his own official Youtube channel, which he created on 12 December 2005. He has two "blog" videos explaining his tours and another one wishing his fans a happy Halloween. On the latter video, Zombie recommends Halloween horror videos to his fans.

Rob Zombie recently released a new single entitled 'War Zone' for the soundtrack for the Punisher film.

The song entitled "The Great American Nightmare" is the opening theme for the Howard Stern Show on Sirius Satellite Radio.

Music Video Direction

Rob is Responsible for the direction of all White Zombie's music videos (With the exception of "Black Sunshine," "Thunderkiss '65," and "Welcome to Planet Motherfucker.) as well as all of the videos during his solo career. He has even lended a hand to other artists, directing the videos for Ozzy Osbourne's "Dreamer," Black Label Society's " Stillborn," Powerman 5000's "Tokyo Vigilante #1," Prong's " Rude Awakening," and The Ghastly Ones' "Hauling Hearse" (who were signed to Rob's own record label Zombie-A-Go-Go Records).

Film career

Rob Zombie attending the 2007 Comic Con to promote Halloween.

House of 1000 Corpses was Rob Zombie's directorial debut and his first horror film. Zombie wrote the screenplay as well as directing the film. It took four years to make (1999–2003), and was finally released by Lion's Gate Films in 2003, after Stacy Snider, then-head of Universal Pictures, sold the film to them. It featured a great deal of violence and gore. The movie told the tale of a group of unlucky teenagers who stumble upon the Firefly Family, a family of sadistic and vicious murderers. The film was shot in a surreal and over-the-top style that alternated between dark and campy humor. The film was mostly panned by critics but had its share of fans.

The House of 1000 Corpses' sequel, The Devil's Rejects, which Zombie also wrote and directed, showcased a much different style. Whereas House was at times comedic and bizarre, Rejects was darker, more serious and grittier. Released in 2005, Rejects had the Firefly Family on the run from the law and a particularly vengeful sheriff whose brother had been murdered by them in the first film. It had a higher critical reception than Corpses.

Zombie contributed to the 2007 exploitation film Grindhouse, by Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino by directing a faux trailer, called Werewolf Women of the S.S., starring his wife, exploitation veterans Udo Kier and Sybil Danning, and Nicolas Cage, who appeared free as a favor.

Zombie next wrote and directed Halloween, a reimagining of the 1978 classic that was released August 31, 2007. Although it was a success and opened at number #1 at the box office with $26 million, it registered only 27% at Rotten Tomatoes[10]. It would go on to gross over $78 million, his biggest hit yet and the highest grossing "Halloween" film of all time (when not adjusted for inflation).

Zombie is also the executive producer of the forthcoming animated film The Haunted World of El Superbeasto, based upon his comic book series, The Adventures of El Superbeasto (which appeared in his Spookshow International comic book). The film is due for a 2008 release. It features Paul Giamatti, Rob's wife Sherri Moon, and Rosario Dawson[11].

Zombie will next be directing a new movie for Dimension Films known as Rob Zombie's Tyrannosaurus Rex.

In one of Rob's earlier attempts at film making in the 90's Rob was asked to help with the third movie in The Crow series, but his script was rejected.

TV host

On Friday, October 13, 2006, Zombie became the host of TCM Underground on the Turner Classic Movies channel. It premiered with the screening of a double feature of Ed Wood's Plan 9 From Outer Space and Bride of the Monster. Until January 2007, Zombie hosted a different double bill every Friday night at two in the morning.[12] He also Hosted Fearfest '08 for AMC, Counting down 8 horror films before and on Halloween.

Filmography

Discography

Main article: Rob Zombie discography

Solo band members

Current lineup
Previous members

References

[13]

  1. Rocker Zombie does horror in Halloween, MSN, 2007-11-18, http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=326074, retrieved on 2007-12-14 
  2. "films.site=MensHealth&channel=guy.wisdom&category=life.lessons&conitem=878503d513066010VgnVCM100000cfe793cd____ Rob Zombie's School of Cool". Men's Health (2007-08-28). Retrieved on 2007-09-06.
  3. McClintock, Pamela (2007-08-28). "Rob Zombie pacts with Dimension", Variety. Retrieved on 2007-09-06. 
  4. "Interview with Sheri Moon Zombie". sherimoonboards.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-26.
  5. "Blog about Rob Zombie". peta.org. Retrieved on 2007-05-13.
  6. "PETA Holiday Feature". peta.org. Retrieved on 2007-11-20.
  7. "Rob Zombie: All Boxed Up". SuicideGirls.com (3 December 2008). Retrieved on 2008-12-03..
  8. "Rob Zombie: All Boxed Up". SuicideGirls.com (3 December 2008). Retrieved on 2008-12-03..
  9. "Rob Zombie: All Boxed Up". SuicideGirls.com (03 December 2008). Retrieved on 2008-12-03..
  10. http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1179254-halloween/ Halloween review on Rotten Tomatoes
  11. "Rob Zombie: All Boxed Up". SuicideGirls.com (03 December 2008). Retrieved on 2008-12-03..
  12. "TCM 2006-2007 Programming Slate". TCM Movie News (2006-12-01). Retrieved on 2006-12-09.
  13. Next Rob Zombie movie to be titled Tyranosaurus Rex Feb 9. 2008

External links

Year Film
2003 House of 1000 Corpses
2005 The Devil's Rejects
2007 Werewolf Women of the SS (Grindhouse Trailer)
Halloween
2008 The Haunted World of El Superbeasto (producer)
2009 Halloween II (producer)