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Static-X is an American industrial metal band from Los Angeles, California, formed in 1994.The line-up has fluctuated over the years, but was long-held constant with band founder, frontman, vocalist and rhythm guitarist Wayne Static until his death in 2014.
List of studio albums, with selected chart positions and certifications Title Album details Peak chart positions Sales Certifications; US [1]US Hard Rock
[29] [30] Sevendust and Coal Chamber have announced a co-headlining tour around the United States that begins on March 28 and runs through April 28, 2013. [ 31 ] Black Out The Sun is Sevendust's first album to score No. 1 on the Billboard charts, landing number one on the "Top Hard Music Albums" in the first week of its release and is the band ...
Time Travelers & Bonfires is the tenth studio album by American rock band Sevendust, released on April 15, 2014.It includes several previously released songs re-recorded as acoustic versions, as well as six new acoustic tracks. [2]
Project: Regeneration Vol. 2 is the eighth studio album by American industrial metal band Static-X. It features 14 tracks, with some of the final material written and recorded by the late vocalist Wayne Static . [ 5 ]
Eisen has claimed that a number of the tracks on the 2020 Static-X album Project Regeneration Vol. 1 were co-written by him and Wayne Static. He went on to accuse the band of attempting to alter the compositions in order to deny him songwriting credits, and to say that a legal claim he made against the band was the reason for the album's delay.
Cannibal Killers Live is a CD/DVD box set by American industrial metal band Static-X.It is the first time the band has released a live album, and contains footage from a live performance in Spokane, Washington. [1]
This Is Static-X, it was commented that the songs for the album would have guitar solos; however, this didn't happen. The opening sample of the track "A Dios Alma Perdida", a synthetic arrangement with a filtered voice speaking in what sounds at times like English (notably closing with an eerie "It's me!"), is from the 1978 film Laserblast.