| Voivod 2004
bio by John Book and Greg Prato
Voivod (singer Denis "Snake" Belanger,
guitarist Denis "Piggy" D'Amour, drummer Michel Langevin,
and bassist Jean-Yves Theriault) was one of the first thrash bands
out of Canada to gain popularity outside of their home country.
From their beginning in the early '80s, their main goal was to
be different from anyone else and thus they incorporated odd musical
tempos and futuristic story lines into their songs, often dealing
with technology taking over the world. Voivod opened the way for
other Canadian thrash bands and for metal bands with their unique
styles of performing and writing.
Such early releases as 1984's War and Pain and
1986's Rrrroooaaarrr! showed that the quartet was aligned to the
then up-and-coming thrash metal movement (Metallica, Slayer, Anthrax),
eventually letting their prog-rock influences (Pink Floyd, Rush,
King Crimson) seep in on 1987's Killing Technology and 1988's
Dimension Hatross. By the time of their major-label debut for
MCA, 1989's Nothingface, Voivod had perfected their thrash metal/prog
rock style, resulting in the most commercially successful release
of their career - spearheaded by a video for their cover of Pink
Floyd's "Astronomy Domine" (which enjoyed airings on
MTV's Headbangers Ball) and a headlining club tour over a pair
of bands that would soon change the landscape of alt- rock by
the early '90s, Soundgarden and Faith No More.
But just as it appeared as though Voivod may be
able to break through to a wider audience, Theriault left the
group right after the release of 1991's Angel Rat as the album
quickly sunk from sight while the rest of the rock world focused
their attention on the burgeoning alt- rock/Seattle movement.
The Outer Limits followed two years later, which was followed
shortly thereafter by Belanger's exit from the band. By the mid-'90s,
Voivod's lineup had been scaled down to a trio - newcomer Eric
Forest doubled on vocals and bass, resulting in such releases
as 1995's Negatron and 1997's Phobos. 2000 saw the release of
the odds and ends compilation Kronik as well as the live set Lives.
In early 2001, the remaining members decided to call it a day
when Forest departed, only to reunite several months later with
Belanger back on board and with former Metallica member (and longtime
Voivod fan) Jason Newsted filling in on bass.
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