Rob Dukes | |
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Rob Dukes with Exodus in Des Moines, Iowa (2005) |
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Background information | |
Born | March 8, 1968 Florida, United States |
Genres | Heavy metal, thrash metal |
Occupations | Musician, songwriter |
Instruments | Vocals, guitar, bass |
Labels | Nuclear Blast |
Associated acts | Exodus, Generation Kill |
Website | www.exodusattack.com |
Rob Dukes (born March 8, 1968) is the current vocalist for the American thrash metal band Exodus, and vocalist for his crossover thrash project Generation Kill[1]
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Dukes was born in Florida on March 8, 1968, living in Queens before moving to Nyack, New York, north of Manhattan. [1]. He describes his parents as being "kinda hippies"[2] who regularly played records by artists such as The Doors, Black Sabbath and Jimi Hendrix, which was the music he grew up on.
Dukes has stated in interviews that punk rock was his gateway into music: "I liked punk and hardcore, I really could identify with their angst and attitude and it wasn't complicated music like metal was, three chords and scream...I can do that". He also plays guitar, claiming that he was "mediocre" but "having fun" at first, with Randy Rhoads as a huge influence, although it took him a month to learn Rhoads' acoustic piece "Dee" from Ozzy Osbourne's Blizzard of Ozz album. On his beginnings as a singer, Dukes says: "I found out I could sing sitting in my room with an acoustic. I liked Maiden and Priest but could never sing that well, then I found Metallica, Megadeth, Exodus, S.O.D., Anthrax, Misfits and thought, "I can sing like that."
After being fired from a band he was part of in New York, Dukes rode his motorcycle on a 5 month, 11,000 mile trip to California, with no idea of career prospects.[3] Despite considering a career as a scuba diving instructor, Dukes ended up working as a guitar tech after living in Hollywood for two months. He met and befriended Jeff Hickey, a long time friend of Exodus. Working for Exodus, he played a demo tape created in 1996 to Gary Holt, Rick Hunolt and Tom Hunting. After Steve Souza departed the band, Dukes was offered the vocalist position and made his first appearance on the 2005 release Shovel Headed Kill Machine. To date, he has appeared on four studio albums.
Feature Interview in the Independent Documentary, "Riphouse 151: Could've Been's & Wanna Be's", which premiered on March 27, 2008 at Riverspace Arts in his hometown of Nyack, New York. [4]
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