Faith No More’s co-founder, keyboardist, and lyricist Roddy Bottom has said the influential band is on a “semi permanent hiatus.” This is from Roddy’s new Substack newsletter, in which he hopes to exchange ideas with fans as he closes on his upcoming memoir, currently in progress. There has been little information about the future of FNM since they canceled all of their tour dates and festival appearances in 2022, so Mike Patton could focus on his mental health. In late 2022 Patton gave an interview in which he stated he had not spoken to the members of his band since he canceled the dates. Mike has since worked mostly with Mr. Bungle, and now the reactivated Tomahawk. Roddy is slowly working on a new Imperial Teen album and other projects. Read an excerpt of Roddy’s newsletter and sign up at the link below. Continue reading
Tag Archives: hiatus
Frank Carter and The Rattlesnakes Announce Indefinite Hiatus, Final Headline Tour and Festival Dates Incoming
Frank Carter & The Rattlesnakes have announced an indefinite hiatus following the completion of their upcoming tour dates. The band recently released their acclaimed new album Dark Rainbow via the AWAL label. The band has had several headline tours and select festival appearances to promote the album. In a recent exclusive interview with Ghost Cult, Frank and Dean discussed the burnout they were feeling after 5 albums released in nine years and that a hiatus/open ended break might be coming. Good luck fellas! We’ll miss you. Continue reading
Veil Of Maya Announces a Hiatus, Cancels All Upcoming Tours and Festivals
Long-running Proggy Metal band Veil of Maya has announced an “indefinite hiatus” effective immediately. In a post to social media they announced they have canceled all upcoming shows and festivals, but they “will return.” The band released their Mother album in 2023 and just completed the return of The Summer Slaughter Tour this summer. Read the full statement below.
Subrosa Announces Indefinite Hiatus, Side Projects Announced
Atmospheric Doom Metal band SubRosa, one of the best bands in recent memory are going on indefinite hiatus. The band just announced the crushing news via Facebook. The band is not done making music, just making music together as they will split up and work on other musical endeavors and new bands for the time being. This is a major bummer, but hopefully, the band will reunite someday. Good luck!Continue reading
The Charm The Fury Announces Their Breakup
Dutch band The Charm The Fury have announced that the band is breaking up for now, with no further activity planned. The band who rose to prominence several years ago and played on every major festival in 2017, including Download UK, Graspop, Pinkpop and various support slots including Korn, Papa Roach, and Marilyn Manson. The band released their last album, The Sick, Dumb and Happy via Nuclear Blast. They released a statement to fans. Continue reading
Devin Townsend Puts Devin Townsend Project On Hiatus, Reveals Plans For Four New Albums
Devin Townsend has decided to put Devin Townsend Project on hiatus to work on the four albums he mentioned last year. Continue reading
Katatonia To Go On Hiatus And “Re-evaluate What The Future Holds”
Earlier this month Katatonia canceled their upcoming dates in Russia, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania due to a “sudden personal medical situation” affecting guitarist Roger Öjersson. Those dates were rescheduled for next year, and now they’ve revealed that they will be the final dates of The Fall Of Hearts tour. The band has also announced that after those dates, they will be going on a short hiatus. Continue reading
Lamb Of God’s Mark Morton Clears Up “Hiatus” Talk
Randy Blythe recently said that after their tour with Behemoth and Slayer, Lamb Of God would be going on hiatus. Continue reading
Lamb Of God Is Going On Hiatus After Their Summer Tour
As we all know by now, Lamb Of God will be hitting the road with Behemoth and Slayer this Summer. After that tour is over, the band has revealed that they will be taking a well deserved break. Continue reading
Back For Good – Brandon Saller of Atreyu
Atreyu are synonymous with the rise and fall (and now return?) of metalcore. From being one of the genre leaders when the style broke, and broke big, in the early 2000’s to putting the band on ice in 2011 when the scene had burned to the ground, if you think “metalcore”, the chances are Atreyu aren’t too far behind that thought. Four years have passed and they’re back with a new album Long Live, a new label (Spinefarm) and a new level of professionalism. Drummer, clean vocalist and one of the band’s leading song-writers Brandon Saller was only too happy to speak to Ghost Cult about the last four years and putting the band back together.
“We had been touring for so long, and our whole life had been Atreyu for so long” begins Saller, a most open, friendly and professional interviewee. “It started getting to a point where we were burned and didn’t want to be going through the motions for a pay check; this is our job, but we do feel we should enjoy it. We wanted to take a break, though we didn’t know if it was going to be permanent, or a year, or what, but we felt we had to stop for a while.”
“A few of us would talk here and there, but honestly it was quite a separation” concludes the sticksman.
After an intense decade that had seen five albums of continued success with Atreyu on a conveyor belt of album, tour, festivals (repeat ad infinitum) and with the members each giving the best part of their twenties to the band, the need to see life away from the same other four faces became pressing. “I think me and Alex (Varkatzas – vocals) probably went the longest (without speaking), I don’t think I talked to Alex more than a handful of times in that four years but not for any other reason than we were doing our own thing.
“We really did just need to live our own lives for a bit. A band is not a business; it’s like a marriage but with five people instead of two! When we separated it was – cool, we’ve seen enough of each other in the last 15 years, so let’s go do our own things.”
Slowly but surely as time went by, the itch began to return. Three years after they announced the hiatus came time to think about dusting off the war horse and riding out again…
“The question of when we would come back started to raise itself about a year ago. Everyone was asking if we were going to do a Curse (Victory) (ten year) thing, but we’ve always been a band that likes to try and move forward. Our first step was to get together to write and in the first batch of songs was ‘So Others May Live’ (which appears on Long Live) and it was “Oh, this feels good”, so we stepped it up to do a couple of shows.”
Dusting off a war horse and getting back in the saddle to take that first gallop are two very different things… “We were a bit scared we wouldn’t remember some of the songs!” laughs Saller. “It had been a long time, but it felt good getting back into it, honestly. It felt exciting.”
And (switching metaphors) once the wheels had started turning, the juggernaut was on the move. Considering the size and success of the band prior to their time away there was a lot of interest in what the band were doing. “We purposely tried to shut out everything out and pay attention to writing” states Saller. “The record label hadn’t heard a lick of music before they signed us, they just signed us due to our history and that was important to us because there were some labels saying “Yeah, we want to hear some demos”, but we were like “Fuck you, there’s five albums of demos you can listen to on itunes!””
The backdrop to Atreyu’s return was a changed scene that had seen their peers progress to previously unchartered heights – Avenged Sevenfold had hit number one (“I support them. I love that they’re one of the biggest bands in the world. Avenged… are some of my great friends, and they’re killing it”), Trivium continue to be in the ascendancy (#sorrynotsorry) and have begun to headline festivals, Killswitch Engage reunited with Jesse Leach to produce the storming Disarm The Decent (Roadrunner)… Just coming back wasn’t enough. Atreyu had to up their game.
“We do all take a lot more pride in it now” is Saller’s response. “We want it more now. We want to be great now. We rehearse more than we ever did, and really enjoy it.
“I don’t feel competition, it’s more important to be positive about each other. You have to build up and hold up your peers. We’re all playing to the same kids and if we don’t support each other there will be no scene. You look at a band like Bullet For My Valentine, who have their new album out and had a great first week and they’re killing it, and I’m really happy for them. I’ve been commenting on social media a lot about the new Trivium, and every new song that comes out from them is fucking awesome.”
“There’s a weird thing at the moment where bands come back and get together for a tour to rake in some money, but we’re more interested in moving forward with the band. continues Saller on being asked if calling the album Long Live was for the obvious reason. “We wanted the title to represent that we’re back, yes.
“We took a needed rest, but now we can get back to the game, and that’s a big part of the album title. We’re doing things on our own terms now, so there will be another Atreyu album, but it might not be for a year and half, it might be sooner, we might stop for another year; it’ll be what we feel like and what feels right. At the end of the day, we’re not going to go away.
“Atreyu will always be around.”
And so to Long Live, an album that starts off with a quadruple volley of thrashing intent, before kicking back, picking things up with some rocking fare and taking things home with a closing set of full on aggressive metalcore anthems. “It is an Atreyu fans record” affirms the proud songwriter. “It’s an abrasive, energetic, heavy record that hints back to more of our youthful writing, but still using all the things we’ve learned along the way.
“If you like any moment of our history there’s something for you on this album.”
Live Long is released on September 18 via Spinefarm Records.
STEVE TOVEY