Corrosion of Conformity | |
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Corrosion of Conformity live at Reds, Edmonton, 2005 |
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Background information | |
Origin | Raleigh, North Carolina, USA |
Genres | Heavy metal, stoner metal, sludge metal, crossover thrash (early) |
Years active | 1982–present |
Labels | Sanctuary, Columbia, Metal Blade, Relativity, Caroline, Southern Lord |
Associated acts | Down, Snake Nation |
Members | |
Reed Mullin Woody Weatherman Mike Dean Pepper Keenan[1] |
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Past members | |
Karl Agell Phil Swisher Simon Bob Sinister Eric Eycke Robert Stewart Benji Shelton Jimmy Bower Jason Patterson |
Corrosion of Conformity (also known as C.O.C.) is an American heavy metal band from Raleigh, North Carolina formed in 1982. For almost the majority of its existence, the band has consisted of guitarist Woody Weatherman, bassist Mike Dean (who left in 1987 but rejoined six years later), drummer Reed Mullin (who left in 2001 but rejoined nine years later) and vocalist and rhythm guitarist Pepper Keenan (who joined the band in 1989). After a hiatus in 2006, Corrosion of Conformity returned in 2010, without Keenan who is currently in Down (although it has been disputed whether Keenan has left the band).
To date, Corrosion of Conformity has released seven studio albums, two EPs, one compilation, and one live album. Three independent albums, Eye for an Eye (1984), Animosity (1985) and Blind (1991), attracted the attention of Columbia Records, who signed the band in 1993. They released Deliverance, their most successful album to date, in 1994. Their next three albums, Wiseblood (1996), America's Volume Dealer (2000) and In the Arms of God (2005) were also critically acclaimed. Corrosion of Conformity is currently working on an eighth studio album, which is due for release in February 2012.
Contents |
Corrosion of Conformity (C.O.C.) was formed in Raleigh, North Carolina by bassist and vocalist Mike Dean, guitarist Woody Weatherman and drummer Reed Mullin in the early '80s.[2] Their hardcore punk-oriented 20-track debut Eye for an Eye—the only album featuring the vocalist Eric Eycke—was released in 1984 (later re-released by Caroline Records during 1989).[3] Soon after, Eycke left the band and C.O.C. continued as a three-piece with Dean and Mullin sharing the vocal duties on the 1985's follow-up Animosity.[2] In 1987, COC recruited Simon Bob Sinister away from their fellow Carolina band and Death Records labelmates Ugly Americans. The band's 1987 release, Technocracy, featured the hectic thrash musicianship of COC with a cleaner vocal style than they had in the past.
Mike Dean departed in 1987 and Simon Bob soon followed, leaving COC in a state of flux for a couple of years. The remaining members re-tuned the line up and searched for a new vocalist, even posting a classified in Flipside Fanzine for a singer similar in sound to "James Hetfield or Ozzy Osbourne" to go with their new metal sound. Caroline Records released some old tracks with Mike singing during this time with the aptly named Six Songs with Mike Singing EP.
Mike Dean also participated in Snake Nation.
After much searching, Karl Agell was recruited on vocals, Phil Swisher on bass and Pepper Keenan as a second guitarist. COC gravitated towards a more straightforward heavy metal sound. By 1991's Blind they had become a heavy metal band. Blind was the first COC album to receive mainstream attention. The video for "Vote with a Bullet" received airplay on MTV and the album cracked the Billboard Heatseekers chart in early 1992. The album has sold around 250,000 copies in the US to date.
In 1993, Agell and Swisher left the band and formed the band Leadfoot, Dean returned and Keenan took over lead vocals. The following year COC signed to Columbia Records, and the release of Deliverance saw the band move toward Southern metal, a sound that they also carried onto the Wiseblood and America's Volume Dealer albums. In 1994, their song Big Problems was featured on the Clerks soundtrack. The song Clean My Wounds was also featured in the anime movie Tekken: The Motion Picture.
Deliverance was the band's biggest selling album. This was mainly due to the singles "Albatross" and "Clean My Wounds" becoming Top 20 hits on rock radio and the album managed to spend almost four months on the Billboard 200, peaking at No. 155.[4] On the Heatseekers chart, it peaked at No. 5 and lasted almost a year on that particular chart. US sales for the album were just over 440,000 by the end of 2005 and this album should be eligible for Gold status within the next few years.
Wiseblood was released in October 1996. Despite producing a Top 30 radio hit with "Drowning in a Daydream" and a worldwide tour with Metallica, the album failed to match the sales set by the previous album. Total US sales to date are just over 150,000. "Drowning in a Daydream" was nominated at the Grammy Awards in 1998 for "Best Metal Performance".[5]
Soon after the release of Wiseblood, Columbia dropped COC, who then moved to Sanctuary Records. The band released its first album for its new label, America's Volume Dealer, in November 2000. The album was even more of a commercial failure than Wiseblood not even managing to make the Billboard 200. However, the single, "Congratulations Song", did give the band another Top 30 hit. No videos were made from the album. Mullin left the band in 2001. Over the next few years, the band worked with a series of drummers: Jimmy Bower of Eyehategod, local Raleigh percussion professor Merritt Partridge, Stanton Moore of Galactic and Reed's former drum technician Jason Patterson, who previously played drums in the Raleigh-based rock band Cry of Love.
In April 2005, COC released In the Arms of God to much critical acclaim. The album performed much better than their previous effort, debuting at No. 108 on the Billboard 200 and even topping the Heatseekers chart.[4][6] This was achieved without even one radio hit from the album. A video was made for the song "Stonebreaker" which saw airplay on MTV2's recently revived Headbanger's Ball. The band spent the rest of the year touring the US and Canada. They were the opening acts for Motörhead and Disturbed and also went on headlining tours with Crowbar, Fu Manchu, Alabama Thunderpussy and Danko Jones all providing support. A European tour was scheduled for September/October 2005 but was later cancelled, after Hurricane Katrina ravaged Keenan's hometown of New Orleans. A co-headlining UK tour with Clutch commenced in January 2006.
Corrosion of Conformity was on hiatus from 2006 to June 2010, while Pepper recorded and toured with Down. From March 2009 to June 2010, Karl Agell and Reed Mullin occasionally performed with Jerry Barrett, Scott Little, and Jason Browning (Browning eventually replaced by TR Gwynne) as "COC-Blind", playing the Blind album. Reed Mullin and Mike Dean along with Jason Browning are also touring in a new band called "Righteous Fool", and have released a self-titled EP on Southern Lord Records.
On May 12, 2010, Blabbermouth.net reported that the Animosity lineup of Corrosion of Conformity was reuniting and working on a new album. They are planning some early-August shows lined up for the West Coast, although they have not yet been officially announced.[7] The band is still open to recording again as a four piece with Pepper when the time is right, according to a message on the official C.O.C. website on May 15, 2010.[8] Pepper currently, has not left the band.[9]
Pepper joined his band mates on stage on June 17 2011 at the Hellfest (Clisson, France) to play Vote with a Bullet as well as on June 19 2011 in Bilbao (Spain) where they additionally performed together on Señor Limpio. Pepper stated that he looks forward to working on some Deliverance type material in the near future with the band. The band has finished recording and mixing their new album as a 3-piece and plan a worldwide release on Feb. 28th 2012 via Candlelight Records.
They have also collaborated with a number of other artists: James Hetfield of Metallica contributed vocals to the song "Man or Ash" on Wiseblood; Warren Haynes of the Allman Brothers' Band and Gov't Mule played slide guitar on "Stare Too Long" on America's Volume Dealer; and Stanton Moore of Galactic played drums on In the Arms of God.
Members of COC have also participated in collaborations: Keenan plays guitar with the metal supergroup Down, and Dean contributed vocals to a track titled "Access Babylon" on Dave Grohl's Probot project. Also Pepper is on Metallica's Garage Inc CD playing guitar and singing the second verse of the Lynyrd Skynyrd song "Tuesday's Gone", he is also in the documentary "Some Kind of Monster" auditioning to be Metallica's replacement for Jason Newsted.
Releases | ||
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↙Studio albums | 7 | |
↙Live albums | 1 | |
↙Compilation albums | 1 | |
↙EPs | 3 | |
↙Singles | 10 | |
↙Music videos | 6 |
Year | Album details | Peak chart positions | Sales | |||||
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US [4] |
US Heat. [6] |
FIN [10] |
FRA [11] |
SWE [12] |
UK [13] |
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1984 | Eye for an Eye
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— | — | — | — | — | — | |
1985 | Animosity
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— | — | — | — | — | — | |
1991 | Blind
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— | — | — | — | — | — | US: 250,000 |
1994 | Deliverance
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155 | — | — | — | — | — | US: 440,000 |
1996 | Wiseblood
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104 | — | 39 | — | — | 43 | US: 150,000 |
2000 | America's Volume Dealer
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— | — | — | — | — | — | |
2005 | In the Arms of God
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108 | 1 | — | 196 | 41 | 147 | US: 8,967[14] |
2012 | Corrosion of Conformity[15]
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— | — | — | — | — | — | |
"—" denotes a release that did not chart. |
Year | Album details |
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2001 | Live Volume
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Year | Album details |
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1987 | Technocracy
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1989 | Six Songs with Mike Singing
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2010 | Your Tomorrow Parts 1 & 2
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Year | Album details |
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2010 | Playlist: The Very Best of Corrosion of Conformity
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Year | Song | Peak chart positions | Album |
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US Main. [16] |
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1992 | "Vote with a Bullet" | — | Blind |
"Dance of the Dead" | — | ||
1994 | "Albatross" | 19 | Deliverence |
"Broken Man" | — | ||
1995 | "Clean My Wounds | 19 | |
"Seven Days" | — | ||
1996 | "Drowning in a Daydream" | 27 | Wiseblood |
"King of the Rotten" | — | ||
2000 | "Congratulations Song" | 24 | America's Volume Dealer |
2005 | "Stonebreaker" | — | In the Arms of God |
"—" denotes a release that did not chart. |
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