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<title>Skrape</title>
<link>http://altmusic.ru</link>
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<pubDate>Sat, 30 May 2026 15:50:40 +0000</pubDate>
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<description><![CDATA[Billy Keeton - vocals<br />
Will Hunt - drums/vocals<br />
Brian Milner - guitars/vocals<br />
Pete Sison - bass<br />
Randy Melser - guitar<br />
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Status:Disbanded in 2004<br />
site:skrape.net<br />
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&quot;If you can't fuck or fight to it, it's no good,&quot; proclaims Skrape drummer and band co-founder Will Hunt.<br />
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&quot;That's the context for us. It's Ota have rhythm and an incredible groove you can shake your ass to.&quot; Up the Dose has all that and more. The band's second album for RCA finds the Orlando-based quintet in a different musical head space from when they released 2001's brutal yet melodic New Killer America--which pummeled active rock radio in the States with the singles &quot;Waste&quot; and &quot;Isolated&quot;-- and rose quickly to become the twelfth best-selling album in Japan. A festival in Japan, a gig in Korea with that country's most famous band, Seo Taiji, and a U.S. tour with Disturbed found Skrape playing for thousands of fanatical converts. Skrape songs also found their way into video games, including Tony Hawk Pro Skater 4 and their album cover even won awards. Skrape also created their own video for &quot;What You Say,&quot; performance intercut with Japanamation, subsequent to the clip for first single &quot;Waste.&quot; Clearly a motivated bunch of musicians, Skrape also take life lessons to heart, as gleaned in the sentiments expressed on Up The Dose.<br />
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“Over the last few years there were a lot of highlights…and some lowlights,&quot; explains Hunt. &quot;And it all has to do with where we are at right now, which is a great place.&quot; A 2001 tour with the Pantera, Slayer and Morbid Angel &quot;gave us a lot of thick skin,&quot; Hunt says of the intense, aggro crowds they faced nightly. &quot;We were like, 'if you don't like us, well good, here's another one!’&quot; he laughs of Skrape's uncompromising performances and 'tude. Adds Keeton, “My experiences on tour with Phil Anselmo were life-changing to me as a musician, as a frontman and as a songwriter.”<br />
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The Pantera tour also weeded out any weak links in the band. So it was with a new guitarist (Randy Melser replacing axeman Mike Lynchard), a new management company and a renewed spirit that Skrape wrote and then recorded their sophomore effort with producer Jimbo Barton (Queensryche, Godsmack) in Miami, Los Angeles and Orlando. &quot;We wanted old school,” said Hunt. “We are big fans of how Jimbo's records sounded; sonically, they hold up.&quot; Barton also developed a strong bond with Keeton during the recording process. “He was able to bring my vocal performance up to another level entirely. He and I just clicked. Jimbo created a atmosphere that allowed me to explode vocally.”<br />
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Posted by skrape.net]]></description>
<pubDate>Fri, 15 May 2009 09:36:58 +0000</pubDate>
<link><![CDATA[http://altmusic.ru/page.php?id=253]]></link>
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