Osvaldo Civile

"Civile" redirects here. It is not to be confused with Civil.
Osvaldo Civile

Osvaldo Civile on the cover of the magazine Epopeya #22, April 1999, in photograph intended as cover art for the Eternos CD
Background information
Also known as Cetorca, Borracho
Born October 21, 1958
Caseros, Buenos Aires
Died April 28, 1999 (aged 40)
Genres Thrash metal
Instruments Guitarist
Years active 1982–1999
Associated acts V8, Horcas

Osvaldo Daniel Civile (October 21, 1958 – April 28, 1999) was an Argentine heavy metal guitarist. He was the guitarist for the bands V8 and Horcas.

Biography

Civile was born in Caseros, Buenos Aires, and began his music career in the band Té de brujas. The guitarist of V8, Ricardo Moreno, left the band in 1982 for health reasons and proposed Civile as his replacement. The drummer Alejandro Colantonio left the band as well, and was replaced by Gustavo Rowek. The lineup of Civile, Rowek, Ricardo Iorio and Alberto Zamarbide is the most famous one of the band. They recorded two long plays, Luchando por el Metal (English: Fighting for metal) and Un Paso Mas En La Batalla (English: Another step in the battle). The band moved to Santos, in Brazil, attempting to continue their career there. The project was abandoned and the band returned to Argentina in 1985, but Civile stayed in Brazil because his wife was ill.[1]

Civile returned to Argentina in 1988. He created a thrash metal band, Horcas.[2] Civile was the lead guitarist, Adrián Zucchi the second guitarist, Eddie Walker the bassist, Gabriel Ganzo the drummer, and Hugo Benítez the singer. Zucchi left the band, which recorded its first LP, Reinará la tempestad (English: The tempest will rule), in 1990. The second work, Oíd mortales el grito sangrado (English: Hear, mortals, the bleeding cry), had two new members, Oscar Castro as second guitarist and Norberto Yañez as drummer. They played with Metallica, Motörhead, Exodus, Kreator and Ratos de Porão.[1]

The band got a new singer, Christian Bertoncelli, and went many years without new productions. Horcas took part in the Metal Rock Festival, a festival with the bands Rata Blanca and Logos, closed by a reunion of V8. Gustavo Rowek and Alberto Zamarbide were members of those two bands. The reunion was controversial because Ricardo Iorio, leader of V8, refused to take part in it. The reunion of V8 was recorded in a live CD, "Homenaje".[1]

The third CD, Vence (English: Triumphs), was made with a new line-up. Sebastián Coria as the second guitarist, Guillermo de Luca as drummer, and Walter Meza as vocalist. The band became popular again. They headed the second edition of the Metal Rock Festival, this time a common festival.[1]

The band recorded a new CD, Eternos (English: Eternals), in January 1999. The art for the CD, published in an interview by the magazine Epopeya #22 (April 1999), included photos of Civile playing truco with the Grim Reaper (who was Walter Meza with a hood).[1] He performed in his last concert with Horcas on April 23 at the pub El Duende. He commented to the band that he was planning to retire from music. In the following days he saluted other people close to him. He committed suicide on April 28 at his house, shooting himself in the chest.[3] Newspapers that reported Civile's death used the pictures of him with the Grim Reaper to accompany the story.[2] Gustavo Rowek pointed out that Civile had problems with alcoholism and frequent episodes of depression.[3] He was buried at the Podesta Municipal Cemetery. The band edited the Eternos CD and continued their career, but used different cover art for it.[1]

Discography

With V8

With Horcas

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Serani, Fernando (May 1999). "Despidiendo a las huestes" (23). Epopeya. pp. 28–29.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Horcas Biography, Music Might.com, retrieved 22 December 2013
  3. 3.0 3.1 Cristian Vitale (May 6, 1999). "Osvaldo Civile (1958-1999)" (in Spanish). Página 12. Retrieved November 17, 2013.

External links