Steve Kmak

Steve Kmak
Birth name Steven Kmak
Also known as Fuzz
Born September 5, 1970 (1970-09-05) (age 41)
Genres Nu metal, hard rock
Occupations Bassist
Instruments Bass guitar
Years active 1996–2003
Labels Giant, Reprise
Associated acts Disturbed

Steve "Fuzz" Kmak (born September 5, 1970) is an American bass guitar player, best known for his work with the heavy metal band Disturbed.[1]

Contents

Disturbed

Kmak founded the band Brawl in 1994 with guitarist Dan Donegan and drummer Mike Wengren. They played small clubs in Chicago before singer David Draiman answered their ad, after which they changed the band name to Disturbed. They then produced their first studio album The Sickness, released in 2000.

Before joining Marilyn Manson's 2001 European tour, Kmak was unable to play with the band due to a shattered ankle, caused by falling out of a fire escape outside Disturbed's rehearsal hall in Chicago.[2] He took the fire escape to exit the building while the elevator was being used to move their equipment downstairs. After a successful operation, doctors highly recommended that Kmak skip the tour to avoid more severe damage to his foot. But he did perform with the band on January 11 and 12, 2001 at Disturbed's show in Chicago.[2] During the European tour, Marty O'Brien replaced Kmak until he was able to tour again.

In 2002, the band released Believe, being the last album with Kmak as bassist.

In 2003, after finishing the Music as a Weapon II Tour, Kmak was fired from the group because of "personal differences" between him and David. He was replaced with John Moyer, who is the current bass player.

On December, 2011; David Draiman was asked via Twitter about the reason Kmak was fired off the band. According to Draiman, Fuzz was fired because of his "jealously" and his "willing to sink the ship we were all sailing on, for spite"[3]

Personal life

Fuzz currently lives in Chicago, with his wife and two children.

Equipment

Kmak used Music Man Sting Ray basses, usually 5-string.

Discography

Brawl

Disturbed

The Sickness (2000)

Believe (2002)

The Lost Children (2011)

References