Gwar Bio
GWAR (an acronym for God What an Awful Racket) is thrash metal's answer to the more mainstream satire of Spinal
Tap. Gory, sexually perverse, and scatological in the extreme,
GWAR was formed at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond as an experiment in marketing strategy by several musicians, art students, and dancers. The group claims to consist of all-powerful interplanetary warriors, descended from aliens stranded in Antarctica and initially created from the lowest filth in the universe, who have come to Earth to sexually enslave and/or slaughter the human race. All members perform under aliases; the main group consists of
Oderus Urungus (vocals, born David Brockie), Balsac the Jaws of Death
(guitar, born
Steve Douglas), Flattus Maximus (guitar, born
Peter Lee), Beefcake the Mighty (bass, born
Michael Bishop), and Jizmak the Gusher (drums, born
Brad Roberts). Auxiliary characters include Techno-Destructo (occasional vocals, born
Hunter Jackson), Slymenstra Hymen (born Danyelle
Stampe), The Sexecutioner (born Charles Varga), and Sleazy P. Martini (manager, born
Don Drakulich). The group performs in bizarre costumes made of latex and
papier-mache, and their stage show features fake pagan rituals, corpses spewing washable bodily fluids on the audience, and sometimes a mechanical giant maggot. Not surprisingly, authorities in several locations have not taken kindly to the group -- Charlotte, North Carolina fined Urungus on an obscenity charge and banned them for a year, while police in Athens, Georgia shut down a
concert in 1993. With the help of the ACLU,
Gwar sued and settled out of court, donating their award to charity.
Gwar is best appreciated with its visual aspects, which are far more creative than their music; indeed, the group received a somewhat stunning Grammy nomination in 1993 for its long-form home video Phallus in Wonderland. |
Gwar Biography |
Gwar Pictures |
Gwar have survived numerous personel changes over the years, something easier for this band than most as the "characters" never change only those playing them. Despite a decline in media attention,
Gwar have proven to be a consistent live act and with each new stage act they have recorded a new album. Unlike most career bands though,
Gwar have released almost as many full-length videos as they have albums. Along with the previously mentioned Phallus in Wonderland they have also assaulted the eyes with
Skulhed Face (1994), Rendezvous with Ragnarok (1997),
Dawn of the Day of the Night of the Penguin (1998) and
It's Sleazy (2001). Musically, Gwar's early gem
Scumdogs of the Universe (1990) is considered to be one of their most entertaining. Their subsequent albums, including
This Toilet Earth (1993) and We Kill Everything (1999), have repeated many of the shock themes that gained them notoriety early on. After a few Gwar-less years, the band returned in 2004 on a new label, DRT Entertainment, with a new album War Party. The following year Live at Fuji was released. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
Bio From: VH1 |