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LAMB OF GOD drummer ART CRUZ launches his first apparel collection

30-01-2024

LAMB OF GOD drummer Art Cruz has launched his first apparel collection. He states: “I wanted it to be something everyone could wear. With the help of designer/illustrator Ken Adams, we created a design that not only honors my culture, but celebrates the union of my influential identities.”

Last June, Cruz was asked, as part of Jonathan Montenegro‘s “My 3 Questions To” series, to name his top three drummers of all time. He responded: “It’s a tough one. Honestly, I always have to say my first inspiration — I just got finished, actually, watching a video of Woodstock — (CarlosSantana. He’s not a drummer. However, to me, the entire entity of Santana and his music is very percussion backed — it’s very percussion. So, as a kid, that’s what I first listened to, it’s what I first saw, it’s what I first was around my entire childhood. So that’s what got me into drums. So I stuck with that. So Santana — I have to classify him as one of my favorite drummers. Weird, but it’s the truth.

“After that, I would have to say most definitely Mike Portnoy (DREAM THEATER),” he continued. “A huge part of my career. Good friend now — thank God. He influenced me to really think outside the box and get creative and have that Portnoy factor in my playing. And I’m sure, if you are a drummer, you can hear that in my playing.

“And then my third… That’s really hard, man — top three’s hard. But I will probably have to say… David Garibaldi, the drummer from TOWER OF POWER. I’m a very funky dude,” Cruz added.

“Notice how not all these guys are metal, or metal at all, but those are the guys that influenced me early.

“To give you some bonus fours and fives — Dave Lombardo (SLAYER) and Chris Adler (LAMB OF GOD). And a bonus six — Joey Jordison (SLIPKNOT).”

In a 2022 interview with Finland’s ChaoszineLAMB OF GOD guitarist Mark Morton was asked if Cruz, who has been the band’s drummer of the past six years, was more involved in the songwriting process on LAMB OF GOD‘s latest album, “Omens”, than he was on 2020’s self-titled effort. He responded: “I think so. Yeah, I’d say so. Not that he wasn’t involved in the first one — he was very involved in the first one — but I think his confidence was up. And I think psychologically, everyone, especially him, was ready to have a bigger impact sonically on the record and to have more personality in the drums rather than… I think on the last album, the self-titled album, he played phenomenally but he stuck very close to traditional LAMB OF GOD movements, and on this album he stretched out quite a bit.”

Morton continued: “I think it’s about finding a balance about staying true to the historic sound of the band and how the band has sounded; you don’t wanna come in sounding radically different. But I think we’re all ready, and have been ready, to allow him to grow within the context of LAMB OF GOD, and he’s done that for sure.”

Cruz filled in for original LAMB OF GOD drummer Chris Adler on several of the band’s tours before being named Adler‘s official replacement in July 2019.

Art spoke about his contributions to “Omens” — which arrived in October 2022 via Epic Records — during an appearance in June 2022 on “The Garza Podcast”, hosted by SUICIDE SILENCE guitarist Chris Garza. “The first, self-titled one we did, it was great, man — we wrote some great songs,” he said, referring to 2020’s “Lamb Of God”, which marked his recording debut with LAMB OF GOD. “But I was still learning their vibe. I was green to that level of… Those guys had been doing it for 28, 29 years — almost 30 years — and I’m the new guy, a young kid coming in. You have to go through the trenches in every which way. And that first album was a very secure, safe way for all of us to just, ‘Here’s the tunes. Let’s figure it out. Learn how we work.’ And this one that’s coming out, ‘Omens’, they really let me spread my wings and they really let me play me — they let me be me.

“I’m always inspired by LAMB, and LAMB is a signature sound,” he continued. “LAMB OF GOD, to me, is that sound as a unit. It’s a unit — it’s not one individual. It’s Randy (Blythe, vocals), it’s Mark (Morton, guitar), it’s Willie (Adler, guitar), it’s John (Campbell, bass), it’s Chris. That’s, to me, what LAMB OF GOD was. So I’m not far off from that. That’s what inspired me to be listening to metal and shit. It’s my favorite metal band of all time. So to take that inspiration and then become my own person, my own player, from WINDS OF PLAGUE to AZUSA to my first band ENTHRAL to PRONG, to finally come to this point, and this is the album. It’s all of those bands, it’s all of those struggles, all of those trenches, all of those challenges, all of those tours — this is the album that I was able to really… And then the last LAMB OF GOD album, that is what built me to be to this ‘Omens’ album, for real. And we’re just getting started, man — we’re so just getting started. And I’m ready. And I’m mentally in a better place to do that, and I’m ready to do it. And the band is, they’re my brothers.”

The band tracked “Omens” with longtime collaborator Josh Wilbur (KORNMEGADETH) live in the room together at Henson Recording Studios (formerly A&M Studios) in Los Angeles, California, a location that birthed classics from THE DOORSPINK FLOYDRAMONES and SOUNDGARDEN, among others.

LAMB OF GOD released their last album “Omens” on October 2022, through Nuclear Blast. “Omens” was the follow-up to LAMB OF GOD‘s self-titled album, which arrived in June 2020. That effort marked LAMB OF GOD‘s first recordings with drummer Art Cruz, who joined the band in July 2019 as the replacement for the group’s founding drummer, Chris Adler.

In August 2022, LAMB OF GOD bassist John Campbell told Germany’s EMP that “Omens” is “a fairly dynamic record. There’s a few other little surprises and tweaks,” he said. “But we recorded it differently this time. We went to Los Angeles and all of us in the same room and same time recording, which gave us some leeway to make changes as things happened and just kind of feel it out in a different way than we’ve done in the past, which would be everybody kind of going in their corner recording and it gets assembled later. So it was a real team effort on this one, in the recording — all the way through it’s been a team effort — and in the recording especially, when we were all in the same room doing that stuff, it was great. I got to spend three and a half weeks working on a record instead of four or five days — working on the recording of the record.”

Also in August of last year, Campbell was asked by Knotfest what led to the decision to record “Omens” live in the studio. John responded: “Well, we’ve been doing this so fucking long, we had to do something different. I believe that was producer Josh Wilbur‘s idea to do that. I know he had a great place worked out to do that in. And we had just kind of been doing it the same way over and over and over again, and we were looking to get a little more excitement into it and maybe see if that couldn’t produce a different feel on the record.”

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