S.A. Slayer

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S.A. Slayer
Also known asSlayer
OriginSan Antonio, Texas, U.S.
GenresHeavy metal, speed metal
Years active1981–1984
LabelsRainforest Records
Under den Linden Records
Past membersSteve Cooper
Don Van Stavern
Ron Jarzombek
Art Villarreal
Robert Catlin
Dave McClain
Chris Cronk

S.A. Slayer, originally known as Slayer, was an American

Dave McClain, and vocalist Chris Cronk (Fates Warning, Jag Panzer, Karion, Talisphere, Target 7).[1][2]
The latter was soon replaced by Steve Cooper and the band signed a record deal with local upstart label Rainforest Records and proceeded to record six songs for a proposed EP at B.O.S.S. Studios with producer/engineer duo Bob O'Neill and Rick Shrieves. The Prepare to Die EP was released in 1983 and "Slayer" became one of the top metal draws of the Texas scene. The band changed their name to S.A. Slayer following a cease and desist lawsuit from founder of Metal Blade Records, Brian Slagel, on behalf of thrash metal band Slayer.[3] However band member Don Van Stavern denies that the band received a cease and desist letter, while Brian Slagel, denies having sent a cease and desist letter.[4]

History

Guitarist Art Villarreal left the band in 1983 and joined forces with former Slayer band-mate, powerhouse vocalist Chris Cronk, bassist Pete Perez, and drummer Frank Ferraira to form one of the most influential power-progressive metal units to ever come out of the South Texas metal movement, Karion.[5] His replacement was local guitar prodigy Ron Jarzombek who made his recording debut on Slayer's first and what would turn out to be only full-length album, Go For The Throat, again produced and engineered by the team of Bob O'Neill and Rick Shrieves. However, the album's release was put on hold indefinitely when Rainforest Records closed their doors. It would be another four years until obscure L.A.-based label Under den Linden Records bought the master tapes and issued the LP posthumously in 1988 under the altered moniker "S.A. Slayer" as to avoid confusion with the California-based speed–thrash metal outfit of the same name ("S.A." standing for "San Antonio"). Coincidentally, both bands had shared a bill at San Antonio's infamous rock venue "Villa Fontana" in what has been dubbed as the "Slayer vs. Slayer battle of the bands" when the latter were touring behind their Haunting the Chapel EP. The show was the penultimate San Antonio appearance of S.A. Slayer, on November 30, 1984. The show was conceived, produced and promoted by south Texas concert production company Omni Entertainment. A boutique organization created by two high school students committed to growing the burgeoning San Antonio underground heavy metal scene by booking national touring acts and giving local heavy hitters the opportunity to open.[6]

Musical influences

According to the December 2009 interview in the San Antonio Backbeat magazine, Art Villarreal and Bobdog Catlin claim the band's biggest influences at the time were

Kill 'em All album, in 1983.[7]

Go for the Throat

After the album was released, the band encountered trouble with their label, Rainforest Records, who did not want to release an album that may result in legal action from the Los Angeles Slayer, backed by a much larger label at the time. Further, the band's distributor, Dutch East Indies was also dealing with its own legal problems stemming from the Dead Kennedys Frankenchrist album.[8]

Disbanding

The band's final show was at another famous San Antonio rock music venue, "The Cameo" (also the venue that Metallica played one of its first Texas concerts in their first tour out of California, with S.A. Slayer as one of the opening bands) with Nasty Savage a few weeks after the Slayer vs Slayer show.[9]

Three-fifths of the band's lineup – vocalist Steve Cooper, bassist Don Van Stavern, and Dave McClain – joined up with former

Riot guitarist Mark Reale in the short-lived Narita. The three performers could not refuse the offer, as S.A. Slayer were at the time struggling for a solution, including changing the band's name, and all the band members had idolized Reale for a long time. Reale and Van Stavern eventually spun off Narita into a new version of Riot also featuring vocalist Tony Moore and drummer Bobby Jarzombek, formerly with San Antonio's Juggernaut.[10]

Founder Bobdog Catlin would eventually go on to found (with Scott Womak and Harlan Glenn) Juggernaut, and has performed on shows and recordings with numerous bands since then, including Pigface, and San Antonio experimental music outfit Pseudo Buddha. A prominent figure in the San Antonio retail music business, he has most recently teamed up with original co-founder of S.A. Slayer, Art Villarreal, to form Martyrhead, a band focusing solely on covers of the 1970s and 1980s releases of Motörhead.[11]

McClain would move to California where he joined a succession of bands, including Turbin, featuring former

Metal Massacre XI), before moving on to Arizona thrashers Sacred Reich, and eventually Bay Area heavies Machine Head.[12]

Guitarist

Marty Friedman, members of Cynic offshoot Gordian Knot, Jeff Loomis, and Obscura. In 2005 Jarzombek formed the all-instrumental technical extreme metal outfit Blotted Science along with bassist Alex Webster of Cannibal Corpse fame and is once again busy with Watchtower.[13][14]

Vocalist Steve Cooper was recruited by San Antonio locals Juggernaut for the recording of their sophomore effort Trouble Within in 1987 before doing a brief stint with fellow Metal Blade Records recording artists Exxplorer. Cooper would succumb to kidney failure due to complications of type 1 diabetes on May 14, 2006.[15]

Both Slayer releases have been bootlegged extensively in places like Germany, Greece, the Netherlands and Brazil. A semi-official CD re-issue of Prepare To Die, limited to 1000 numbered copies, appeared sometime in 2004. A limited number of a sound mixer recording of the final S.A. Slayer show, "Slayer Vs. Slayer" occasionally auctions on eBay.[16]

Members

Former

  • Steve Cooper – vocals (1983–1984)
  • Chris Cronk – vocals (1982)
  • Robert "Bob Dog" Catlin – guitars (1982–1984)
  • Ron Jarzombek – guitars (1984)
  • Art Villarreal – guitars (1982–1983)
  • Don Van Stavern – bass (1982–1984)
  • Dave McClain
    – drums (1982–1984)

Discography

  • Prepare to Die EP – 1983 (Rainforest)
  • Go for the Throat LP – 1988 (Under den Linden)

See also

  • Slayer, the other band by the same name

References

  1. ^ Metal-archives.com
  2. ^ Backbeatzine.comArchived December 21, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Buffkin, Travis. "SA Slayer Guitarist Bob Dog Catlin Drops Some Knowledge". San Antonio Current. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  4. ^ Everley, Dave. "Slayer vs Slayer, Battle of the bands interview". Loudersound. Retrieved February 15, 2024.
  5. ^ "KARION: S.A. SLAYER, RIOT, HELSTAR Members' Early Works To Surface". BLABBERMOUTH.NET. September 19, 2006. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  6. . Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  7. ^ Ron Thomas (2011). Karion – Iron Shadows (CD Liner).
  8. ^ LLC, SPIN Media (1988). SPIN. SPIN Media LLC. p. 68. Retrieved July 19, 2018. Dutch East Indies Dead Kennedys Frankenchrist.
  9. ^ Backbeatzine.com Archived December 21, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ Nowlin, Sanford. "Power Metal Band Riot V is Sweeping Across Europe This Summer". San Antonio Current. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  11. ^ "Night After Night, Nov. 20, 2009". San Antonio Express-News. November 19, 2009. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  12. ^ "S.A. SLAYER Featuring MACHINE HEAD Drummer DAVE MCCLAIN: Early Recordings To Be Re-Released". BLABBERMOUTH.NET. January 26, 2014. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  13. ^ "Rigged: Ron Jarzombek of Blotted Science, Spastic Ink, and Watchtower - GearGods". GearGods. August 28, 2014. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  14. ^ "Ron Jarzombek of Blotted Science". Prog Sphere. October 4, 2010. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  15. ^ "Former S.A. SLAYER, JUGGERNAUT Vocalist Passes Away". bravewords.com. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
  16. ^ "First Official S.A. SLAYER CD Reissue Coming Out Next Month". Metal Shock Finland (World Assault ). January 26, 2014. Retrieved July 19, 2018.

External links