Kriadiaz, pronounced (Cree-uh-dee-yaz) is a new band put together by 
former Mushroomhead guitarist Dave "Gravy" Felton. This is a brutal 
metal outfit who's influence drips with southern sludge metal in the 
vein of Pantera, Crowbar and Down. The 13 song offering is rife with 
catchy riffs that would make Dimebag proud. Earth shaking bass lines, 
pounding drums and vocals that call to mind Phillip Anselmo in his 
prime. Stand out tracks include : "Blood Line" with it's bluesy acoustic
 intro that kicks straight into a blistering verse, chorus, bridge that 
reminds the listener of something from the Vulgar Display Of Power 
album. "Feed The Rats", "Long Time Gone" and "Soul Chaser" plod along 
with chunky riffs and face melting guitar solo's. If "Ten Lives Lived" 
doesnt invoke images of insane mosh pits with it's stomping riffs then 
you need to check your pulse. "Torch The Earth" rages along at a 
mid-pace with  fist clenching rythms and a bluesy solo piece that calls 
to mind a heavy metal Lynyrd Skynyrd. "Stoner Funeral" is a doom-fueled 
instrumental that will chill the spine and get the heads of every metal 
purist nodding in tempo. If your sick of breakdown riddled music, and 
all the Meshuggah wannabe's crowding the scene right now, then Kriadiaz 
will be a breath of much needed fresh air you will surely enjoy. I had 
the pleasure of chatting with former Mushroomhead/current Kriadiaz 
guitarist Dave "Gravy" Felton to get the scoop on this awesome new band 
and some insight on his former band as well. Enjoy this interview!!!
Jaymz : The production on the Kriadiz album is awesome. Where did you record?
Dave : We recorded it locally with our boy in Cleveland in his basement. He mic'd everything up and we just went for it.
Jaymz : How long did the recording process take for this Kriadiaz album?
Dave : It's taken a while because we've been recording on and off while
 I was touring with Mushroomhead. It's been spaced out about a year and a
 half. With my Mushroomhead schedule and all the other guys in Kriadiaz 
work schedules, it was hard to get a consistent ammount of time. Plus 
being able to get time with the producer as he has stuff going on too. 
But not being on a label there was no pressure to force an album out 
which was cool so we could take our time and get it done right. 
Everything's come out really well and I just picked up the final master 
copy today and have been driving around for a couple hours listening to 
it. It will be on itunes evenutally. Also you can order it from my 
personal Facebook page, or from the Kriadiaz page. There's also some 
live audio and video up on there too. Everybody in the band is super 
cool, I've known these guys for years.  We have a blast on the road, 
doing shows. Any big success or not, it doesn't matter.  At this stage 
in the game I just want to have a good time and jam.
Jaymz : I have to ask the burning question. Why did you split from Mushroomhead?
Dave : Well honestly I haven't even gotten a straight answer.  I was kicked out in an email. And I haven't even spoken to my 
brother(Mushroomhead drummer Skinny) yet.
So I haven't spoken to 
him, and this was like the third week in January that I was told I had 
to leave. Jeff, and I were in a band called Hatrix, and then we started 
Mushroomhead off that. We were kind of based off of Mr. Bungle, which 
was an early Mike Patton band. They wore jumpsuits and halloween masks. 
There was Mr. Bungle, then Mushroomhead then Slipknot, and then that 
whole controversy with Slipknot which started before I was a member of 
Mushroomhead. As far as that whole Slipknot thing, I don't give a shit 
about that, and I have no beef with those dudes at all.
The 
Mushroomhead thing, most of the material, I ended up writing. But that 
wasn't the intent when I first joined the band. I ended up doing the 
majority of the writing. I mean the music, I suck at lyrics.
I 
joined right when the band signed with Universal. We were touring for 
the XX album. So when we started working on the XIII album
I would 
have 4 or 5 tune ideas and we came off the road and the band was 
scheduled to go into the studio 2 weeks later. At that time certain 
dudes weren't contributing. For years that's how it's been.  We were on a
 major label, on a world stage. I didn't want to go out there and sound 
half assed. I didn't claim ownership of the band but I considered myself a
 legitimate member for what I contributed.  For me it wasn't
a job.  
It was something I cared about and it was part mine.  I don't care who 
started it and who was in the band longer than me.  I didn't consider it
 a job, so I didn't see that I could be "Fired" from it.
Also I 
don't drink or smoke or any of that shit so that might be part of the 
problem. They can do whatever they want on their own time, but when it 
holds up progress I have a problem with it.
Jaymz : How did Kriadiaz form and how did you guys meet/get together?
Dave : I've know these guys for a long time.  I started it as an outlet
 to get out what I couldnt get out before. In Mushroomhead I was sort of
 on a leash.  I wasn't playing to my full potential.
Also have you 
heard of the band 216? It was a band featuring myself with J-Mann and 
Skinny of Mushroomhead. In Mushroomhead the guys got wrapped up in side 
projects.  But why would you take (what 216 was) and throw it on the 
back burner? I wanted to keep going, and I wanted to keep making music. 
So for people to get stuck up because they have a certain level of 
success is stupid to me. I got tired of waiting to make another 216 
record. To me it felt like someone had something personal against me. So
 I had to start this new project. I've never wanted anything but to take
 things as far as they can go and succeed. Part of the reason I got 
booted from Mushroomhead was that my opinions were just too much for 
some people to handle.
Jaymz : Listening to this Kriadiaz 
album, I clearly hear influences from Pantera, Crowbar and Down. Lots of
 groovy southern sludge metal going on. Was that your main influence on 
this album?
Dave : Well I'm definitely into those bands for sure.  
But I also come from that era that those guys come from.  The late 70s, 
early 80s was a great era in music. Black Sabbath, Queen, Led Zeppelin.  
If it sounds like Pantera, Crowbar, ect. that's great! Those are some of
 my favorite bands. I don't hve to try to write like that.  It just 
naturally comes out that way Ive had people tell me that Mushroomhead is
 a cross between Faith no more and Pantera, so that influence has always
 been there. Ive always been influenced by guitar players that have that
 "fire" in their playing. Technicality is great, but there's something 
about the style that certain people have that just does it for me. Even 
if youre not into blues, Stevie Ray Vaughn is one of my favorite 
artists. His put his heart and soul into every performance. Dimebag was 
like that too. Those elements made me what I am.
Jaymz : Your guitar sound on this Kriadiaz album is really thick and brutal. What gear did you use on the recording?
Dave : I've had an Ibanez deal for a long time now, but I havent talked
 to them since ive been out of Mushroomhead. I have a bunch of Ibanez RG
 7 strings. Those are basically the guitars I've been using The stock 
models, but slightly customized with pickups that I like. The amps are 
Randall Titans.  I had a deal with Randall a few yrs back and I'm still 
using them and touring with them for the past 7, 8 years.  I haven't had
 any problems with those things. I was using marshall 800s but I got 
tired of changing the tubes every year. I have these Randalls and i 
didn't like them that much at first, but I monkeyed around with them, 
and I've
been using them ever since. I also use a Yngwie Malmsteen 
overdrive pedal with a noise supressor attached to it.  The only other 
thing I throw into the mix is a wah pedal for some solos. My setup is 
really as simple as you can get.  Organic is the perfect word to 
describe it.
Jaymz : Are there any immediate touring plans for Kriadiaz?
Dave :  The Summer is basically booked up.  There's no  label deal or 
distribution thing yet.  I'm just in the local phase with everything 
working back from the ground up. I just want to try to get a 
distribution deal at the moment.  I have a couple agents I've talked to 
about touring, and they're ready to book something whenever I want.  The
 problem is that the other guys have "real" jobs, so it's not like 
theyre going to quit their jobs so we can tour.  I'd like to see if we 
could get a small deal, maybe get on a festival.  Just something 
worthwhile for everyone to do.  You need that big push to get the 
exposure. I believe that if you have something genuine and honest, 
people are gonna latch on to it. Ive heard tons of good feedback locally
 and such, but that only goes so far.  I'm grateful for that, but 
getting to that next level and getting fans to rally behind you isn't 
the easiest thing. We've been playing out for the past couple of years, 
but kind of under the radar. I'm not using the Mushroomhead thing to try
 and get fans that way. The last thing I want to do is confuse fans with
 yet another Mushroomhead related project. But fans are loyal and they 
want to support. I cant get over the fact that 216 sold 10,000 albums in
 Cleveland alone and was playing huge, packed shows to 500-600 people a 
night.  I don't know why people would want to put that on the back 
burner.  It's like having a winning lottery ticket in front of you and 
not cashing it in, being like "I'll wait till tomorrow".
Jaymz : How do you feel about the current state of the Metal scene in general?
Dave : That's a good question because I don't really know.  It's weird.
  It seems like these metal trends come and go fast.  A few bands do 
really good, then another band comes out that sounds like them. Metal is
 a strange animal.  It's like super popular for the most part, but its 
hard to get people to rally around certain bands, until they get to  a 
certain level.  It's constantly transitioning.  I know as far as the 
Cleveland scene, for me, I'm starting from scratch.  I have friends 
helping me book shows, but I'm basically nobody at the moment.  There's a
 shit ton of underground bands that nobody knows about in the Cleveland 
scene.  It would be cool if people would branch out a little bit, and 
not only like and listen to what they're comfortable with.
Jaymz : Are there any new bands out that your digging and listening to?
Dave : I like that band Volbeat. They're pretty heavy and remind me 
alot of Life Of Agony which I also loved, especially River Runs Red.  I 
listen to Volbeat on XM radio and it's refreshing to hear those guys.  
They're heavy and it's really cool. That band Kyng stands out too.  I 
hear them on XM as well. Those guys are pretty cool. I heard some 
amazing death metal band that I cant remember their name at the moment 
on XM the other day. The drummers in those bands always blow me away. 
Death metal drummers play with such finesse and grace. You see these 
rock drummers like Tommy Lee, they're just bashing it out, but death 
metal drummers like Gene Hoglan look so relaxed playing a million miles 
an hour, it's crazy.
Jaymz : Do you have any advice for young, upstarting musicians looking to start a band and get involved in the Metal scene?
Dave : Yea, don't do it!   LOL! Go to school! Get a real job!  Because 
25 yrs down the road you'll be like "I followed my dream, and I'm still 
the broke dude I was 25 yrs ago!" No, seriously, keep playing and keep 
moving forward. I love what I do,  I'm not on a national level anymore, 
but I still dig it. If you're in it to be in a competition or to try to 
sell an image you're in it for the wrong reason. If you're having fun 
doing it, then do it.
Jaymz : Who are some of the bands you've had the most fun touring with?
Dave : There's been several awesome bands I've had fun on the road 
with. Weve toured with Lamd Of God, Shadows Fall, Avenged Sevenfold. 
We've had fun with all of those guys. The Lamb Of God guys, we bonded 
with them a lot.  They're just fun, cool dudes.  No gimmick at all.  
They just get up there and do their thing. I would love to be in their 
shoes, just getting to be myself, bring the metal, and throw down.  I'm 
all about the honesty. When it came to Mushroomhead, I loved it for what
 it was, but sometimes it was just beating a dead horse in a way.  I 
just wanted to take it a little farther. But I loved it for what it was.
 I felt gifted to be in that postion, to just tour and make records for a
 living.  It's sort of like hitting the lottery in a way. We toured with
 Dope several times.  Theres a lot of ridiculous things going on with 
those cats.  Lots of debauchery. (haha) I don't know if you've seen 
those Mushroomhead Vol. 1 and 2 dvd's.  A lot of it was my footage.  I 
did a lot of editing on those dvd's. There's a ton of really funny and 
cool stuff that didn't make it.  I have all the tapes.  Every now and 
then I hook it up and show it to some people. The Dope guys were just 
crazy.  Lotta fun with those dudes.
Jaymz : If there was one band in music history, currently going or defunct, who would you want to jam with most?
Dave :  There's several.  I'd like to jam with the remaining Pantera 
dudes. I would love that, to jam with Vinnie Paul and co. would be 
amazing. Also double trouble, Stevie Ray Vaughan's band. Dude there's a 
million,  Yngwie Malmsteen, he'd make me look like a chump, he'd put me 
to shame, but I'd love to jam with him.  I don't have an ego, It's just 
music.  It's supposed to be fun. I'd like to jam with the Queen guys, i 
know this is all far fetched but I'd love to jam with them. I dig the 
White Stripes, some of the stuff Jack White does.  He's a badass.  He's 
got that bluesy style. He's got a similar style to me.  That would be 
really fun. I always get envious when I'm watching the Palladia channel,
  all concerts nonstop.  One of the coolest things I've seen, was The 
Foo Fighters are in an arena and they're covering Zeppelin with John Paul
 Jones. Dave Grohl is a basher.  I like him playing drums more than 
playing guitar and singing. He's a rocker. It's all good.  I'd jam with 
that dude! I'd love to just collaborate with anybody. I'd like to have 
enough credibility to be able to do it.
Dave : As far as the Mushroomhead thing goes, My sound never seemed to come across the right 
way, and I didn't really write 100 percent.  I wasn't myself in the
writing all the time.I had about 80-90 percent to do with writing 
everything on those records.  If it doesn't sound like me, I'm just
throwing in a differnt style on there.  I have played keyboards and bass
 on almost every Mushroomhead record. We would sit down, I would just 
make up keyboard things on the spot.  I know some music theory, so I can
 figure things out on piano. Half the stuff on Savior Sorrow album was 
scratch tracks. If you listen to Save Us you can hear the guitar part is
 the same notes as the keyboard part on Embrace The Ending, and the 
lyrics on Embrace are left over lyrics from Save Us. On the last record i
 was asked to play a bunch of keyboards, and i was like no, I'm not 
doing someone else's job for free. 
Not to bash anything, but that 
was one of my points.  We have this killer studio, Why are these albums 
lacking the tightness you can hear on Pantera and Crowbar albums?  The 
master of the new Kriadiaz is just cleaner and  more in check. Doing it 
at a home studio we pushed it to the limit with the sound.  We recorded 
with just a tower, monitor, and a keyboard.  AS long as you can pop it 
in, and it kicks you in the balls, that's all I care about. 216 was 
heavy too, but we spent a ton of money recording in a big studio, but it
 just doesn't have the same characteristics. Quality isn't always what's
 important.  The characteristics of the music has to come across. 
"Cowboys From Hell" and the Crowbar albums prove that. When the songs 
are good and the production is done right, you can't go wrong.
Jaymz : Whats in the immediate future for Kriadiaz
Dave : We're trying to branch out as much as we can.  We're playing in NJ in August.
We're playing Philadelphia the day before that.  Champs is the name of the place in NJ.
We're playing with Stygeon. They toured with Mushroomhead, That's how I have a contact with them.
Dave : As far as the Mushroomhead controversy with me leaving is concerned...Are you guys
really gonna kick me out because I hurt your feelings with the truth? 
We're in our 40's. If you don't have thick skin by now and you don't 
know your place by now, go see a psychiatrist. 
And for everyone 
wondering about all the personell changes in the lineup. Maybe the 
problem isn't with the guys who have been kicked out, maybe the problem 
is with the guys that are still there.
You can hear cuts from the Kriadiaz album every Thursday night from 7pm to 10pm EST at www.brutalexistenceradio.com and you can find Kriadiaz and keep up with them at http://www.facebook.com/kriadiaz


 
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