Nuclear Death

Nuclear Death
Origin Phoenix, Arizona, USA
Genres Death metal/Grindcore
Years active 1986-2000
Labels Wild Rags
Past members Lori Bravo
Steve Cowan
Phil Hampson
Joel Whitfield

Nuclear Death was a death metal band formed in 1986 in Phoenix, Arizona. They were the first band in the extreme metal genre with a female vocalist,[1] Lori Bravo.

Their style was compared to bands like Impetigo, Blasphemy, Autopsy, Deceased, and Repulsion.

Biography

Nuclear Death were formed on March 23, 1986, by Lori Bravo (vocals, bass), Phil Hampson (guitar), and Joel Whitfield (drums). Their first demo, Wake Me When I'm Dead, was released later that same year, receiving positive reviews from American and overseas zines. They were notable as at the time very few death metal artists had female singers. Their second demo, Welcome to the Minds of the Morbid, followed in 1987, on the back of which Nuclear Death signed a contract with Richard Campos from Wild Rags, a record label, fanzine and record dealer in California.

In 1991, the band released their more controversial work, entitled Carrion for Worm, containing many songs considered to be in bad taste, such as "The Human Seed", "Lurker in the Closet: A 'Fairy' Tale", and "Greenflies". Carrion for Worm featured vocals by Chris Reifert, singer from popular death metal band Autopsy, on two songs, "Cathedral of Sleep" and "Vampirism".

On May 23, 1992, Nuclear Death played a notorious concert in Puerto Rico, with label partners Impetigo. Later that year they released For Our Dead, a four-track single containing a rerecorded version of 1987's "The Third Antichrist" from Welcome to the Minds of the Morbid.

After the break-up of Nuclear Death, Lori went on to form a new band, Raped, in 2002. Joel Whitfield joined Eroticide in 1991.

Band members

Discography

Demo cassettes

Full-length albums

Rereleases

DVDs

External links

Reviews

References

  1. Female Fronted Heavy Metal, 1976-1989