Igor Cavalera

This article is about the percussionist. For the vocalist, see Igor Cavalera Jr..
Igor Cavalera

Igor Cavalera in São Paulo, 2006
Background information
Birth name Igor Graziano Cavalera
Also known as Igor Skullcrusher
Born (1970-09-04) September 4, 1970
Belo Horizonte, Brazil
Origin Belo Horizonte, Brazil
Genres Heavy metal, groove metal, thrash metal, death metal, alternative metal, hip hop, electronic music
Occupation(s) Musician, disc jockey
Instruments Drums, percussion, guitar, vocals
Years active 1984–present
Labels Cogumelo, Roadrunner, SPV
Associated acts Sepultura, Cavalera Conspiracy, Massacration, Nailbomb, Mixhell, Biohazard, Strife

Igor Graziano Cavalera (born September 4, 1970 in Belo Horizonte, Brazil) is a Brazilian musician. He is best known as the former drummer for Brazilian heavy metal band Sepultura, which he co-founded with his brother Max in 1984. Max left the band in 1996, and Cavalera himself would depart ten years later. The brothers have since reunited in the band Cavalera Conspiracy.

Biography

He, along with older brother Max, were the founding members of the Brazilian thrash metal band Sepultura. Cavalera is now the drummer for Cavalera Conspiracy. He has played in the bands Nailbomb and Strife, and guest drumming in "Brasileiro," a song by Titãs. As his hip-hop influences grew stronger he began to DJ. Cavalera is one half of DJ duo Mixhell, a project he founded with his wife Laima Leyton.

Cavalera started playing drums around 7 years old. He was into samba music as a child but, after watching Queen live in 1981 along with his brother Max, he started listening to rock music.[1] When Sepultura was formed, Cavalera was the youngest member at the age of 13, his brother Max was 14 at the time. Sepultura was a big success and gave Cavalera an early start. On April 21, 1984, Cavalera played, for the first time, on a real drum kit, which was borrowed from Helinho of the band Overdose, that also played that night.

After the band split with his brother Max (lead vocals/rhythm guitar) in 1996, their relationship underwent a crisis. In recent times their relationship has improved, with Max stating in an interview that a reunion with Sepultura was possible. Cavalera joined Max's current band Soulfly on stage at the 2006 tenth annual D-Low Memorial Show, to play the Sepultura songs "Roots Bloody Roots" and "Attitude". It was the first time the brothers had played together in ten years.

In 2006, with the release of Dante XXI, he began spelling his name "Iggor," preferring the way it looks. On January 13, 2006, it was announced that he was taking a break from the band due to the birth of his fourth child, initially leaving Sepultura temporarily. He later announced that he was quitting Sepultura due to "artistic incompatibility." Sepultura replaced him with Jean Dolabella.

Cavalera was scheduled to collaborate with underground hip hop artist Necro, on a project described by Necro as in the style of "old-school '80s thrash/death metal."[2] However, Necro mentioned later that the project will not go ahead. In 2008 he released the album Inflikted together with his brother Max in a project named Cavalera Conspiracy.

He is credited as having made a guest appearance on Biohazard's 2001 release Uncivilization on the track "Gone".

In 2012, Cavalera performed drums for the entire Strife album Witness A Rebirth, released via 6131 Records.

Personal life

Cavalera collects toys and football shirts and has many hobbies, including Brazilian jiu-jitsu, snowboarding, surfing, drawing and supporting Brazilian football club Palmeiras. He admires his father Graziano Cavalera as his role model. He has four children: Christian Bass Cavalera (b. November 7, 1996), Raissa Bass Cavalera (b. April 26, 2000), Iccaro Bass Cavalera (b. November 23, 2002), Antonio Leyton Cavalera (b. January 15, 2006) (the first with his current wife Laima Leyton) and a stepson Pedro Leyton Pereira. In 1996 he started the fashion label "Cavalera". He currently lives in London.[3]

Playing style

Cavalera cites drummers like Roger Taylor, Bill Ward, Dave Lombardo, Stewart Copeland and Mike Bordin among his major influences.[1][4]

In the early Sepultura albums his drumming was loud and fast, following the thrash metal norms of the 80s. He mastered this style by 1987–1991 (with Schizophrenia, Beneath the Remains and Arise). His innovative style in the album Chaos A.D. brought tribal elements into the songs. One example of his contribution is the introduction of the song "Territory" (1993, Chaos A.D.). He further developed this style in the 1996 Roots album, adding more tribal elements to Sepultura's music.

Throughout his career, Cavalera has been widely recognized as a hard-hitting drummer (acknowledged by producer Scott Burns during the recording of Beneath the Remains). In later years, Cavalera adopted a drumset conformation with upright toms and fewer cymbals, as seen in Live in São Paulo. In reference to his work on the Sepultura album Nation, Allmusic wrote "Drummer Igor Cavalera's timing and tempo couldn't be more perfect as the adrenaline heightens until the album's intensity burns right through the speakers."[5]

Discography

with Sepultura

Main article: Sepultura discography

with Cavalera Conspiracy

Guest appearances

References

  1. 1 2 Pertout, Andrián. "Sepultura: Igor Cavalera". pertout.com. Retrieved 2014-01-12.
  2. "Ex-SEPULTURA Drummer IGOR Joins Forces With 'Death Rapper' NECRO in New Project". Roadrunnerrecords.com. Retrieved 2011-10-09.
  3. "Cavalera Inverno 2011". Cavalera.com.br. Retrieved 2011-10-09.
  4. "Igo Cavalera interview" (in Italian). bloomriot.org. Retrieved 2014-01-12.
  5. Smith, Kerry L. (March 20, 2001). "Nation – Sepultura". AllMusic. Retrieved 2011-10-09.

External links

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