TESTAMENT’s CHUCK BILLY Tells Why He Auditioned For SEPULTURA After MAX CAVALERA’s Departure

13-03-29_Paaspop_Testament_Chuck_Billy_01

In an interview with Eonmusic, TESTAMENT frontman Chuck Billy said that he auditioned for SEPULTURA  for the lead-singer position when Max Cavalera left the band in 1996.

He said: “Yeah, around that time was right before [TESTAMENT made] the ‘Demonic’ record, so we had finished our Atlantic [Records] contract, and we were shopping for a new deal,” Chuck explained. “We didn’t really have a deal yet, and at the last minute, I just said, ‘You know what? Maybe I should try to find a band that’s solid, that’s going to keep touring and continue on,’ and at that point, SEPULTURA was taking auditions, and I think it was at the end [of the audition process] that I decided, ‘Screw it, I’m going to do it.’ I think I did three songs; I did ‘Refuse/Resist’, I did ‘Territory’, and I wrote my version of ‘Choke’, and gave it to them. But by the time I had delivered, they had already made their decision for [the appointment of new singer] Derrick [Green], which in the end, was probably the way it all should have worked out.”

Asked if it would have been a strange feeling to be performing with a new bunch of guys after playing with the same band for most of his career, Chuck said: “It would have been, yeah. I don’t know if I was really prepared, and if they would have said, ‘Okay, you’re in,’ I would have said, ‘Well, let me think about that!’ I don’t know what I would have done. I just did it on the spur of the moment, like, ‘F**k it! What have I got to lose?!'”

SEPULTURA guitarist Andreas Kisser spoke about Billy‘s audition for the band during a 2015 appearance on “The Jasta Show”. He said: “Chuck [laid down his vocals over] the [demo version of a then-new SEPULTURA song called] ‘Choke’ … Because we sent the instrumental [version] of a new song [to prospective singers to record their vocals over]. We didn’t want anyone to sing ‘Roots [Bloody Roots]’ or ‘Refuse/Resist’, because we didn’t want a clone. We wanted somebody to bring new ideas, to bring SEPULTURA to a different path, to a different level. And Chuck Billy, he did… He used more of the guttural [vocal style on his audition tape]. And it works. Because, recently, we did a ‘Metal Allegiance’ jam at NAMM in Los Angeles, and we played some SEPULTURA stuff with Chuck Billy singing, and it was great, man — it was great. So he did a great job. But, you know, he’s Chuck Billy; he’s TESTAMENT. We wanted somebody new.”

TESTAMENT released their eleventh studio, Brotherhood of the Snake, on October 28 through Nuclear Blast. It is the band’s first studio recording with bassist Steve DiGiorgio since First Strike Still Deadly (2001). Brotherhood of the Snake also marks TESTAMENT‘s fifth collaboration with Andy Sneap, who had mixed and engineered all of their albums since The Gathering (1999) and produced Dark Roots of Earth (2012).