Fireball Ministry
Fireball Ministry | |
---|---|
Origin | Los Angeles, California |
Genres | Heavy metal, stoner metal, hard rock |
Years active | 1999–present |
Labels |
Bongload Records Small Stone Records Nuclear Blast Liquor and Poker Music |
Associated acts | Cavalera Conspiracy, The Company Band, , L7, Soulfly, Systematic, Stone Sour |
Website | Official Site |
Members |
James A. Rota II Emily Burton John Oreshnick Scott Reeder |
Past members |
Helen Storer Janis Tanaka Yael Johnny Chow |
Fireball Ministry is an American heavy metal band from Los Angeles, California formed in 1999.
Biography
Conceived in Cincinnati in the late 1990s by James A. Rota II and Emily Burton, the band moved to New York City before settling in Los Angeles. In 2000 they performed at the two-day "November Dismember" metal-music festival in San Bernardino California, playing on the second day. The festival was situated at the National Orange Show fairgrounds in two hangars.
After several years appearing with various big name bands in the genre (Danzig, Anthrax, Motörhead, Slayer) but without a breakthrough in album sales they have polished their own sound to continue gaining a wider following. The tracks "King" and "Flatline" appeared in the big wave surfing documentary Billabong Odyssey (2003). The track "King" was also selected by Bam Margera and appeared on his Viva La Bands compilation. The band teamed up with Bam's brother Jess Margera when they toured Europe with CKY in 2004.[1] The track "The Broken" was included in the WWE video game WWE SmackDown! vs. RAW 2006 for the PlayStation 2.
The band went through four different bass players, starting with Helen Storer, who played on the Où Est la Rock? CD and was replaced by Fu Manchu bassist Brad Davis on FMEP, who was himself replaced by former L7 bass player Janis Tanaka on The Second Great Awakening. Former Systematic 4-stringer Johny Chow then took the place of Tanaka for the Their Rock Is Not Our Rock album, which was recorded at Dave Grohl's 606 West studio and like their previous works was produced by genre legend Nick Raskulinecz. In another connection helped by Margera they supported CKY on their 2005 Adio Footwear-sponsored tour, having already opened for them on their UK Tour in 2004. Original drummer John Oreshnick took a leave of absence due to family issues in the Fall of 2006 to be replaced by Yael during their recent tour. Yael and Johny Chow were former bandmates in My Ruin. Yael subsequently left the band in Winter 2006, and Oreshnick rejoined.
Rota considered becoming an ordained minister, but was persuaded not to on account of possible legal and taxation issues. However, he did eventually become ordained and performed wedding ceremonies for Matt Deis of CKY and Erica Beckmann in November 2005, and Bam Margera and Melissa Rothstein in February 2007.
In an interview for blabbermouth.net in May 2007, James Rota stated that "we (Fireball Ministry) are in the stages of writing a new album". In the same Interview, Rota also referred to what would later become The Company Band EP, Sign Here, Here and Here. On 14 June 2008, Rota stated that three tracks had been recorded for the as yet unnamed fifth Fireball Ministry album, and was also working on a full length Company Band Album and a third, unspecified project to be announced by the end of 2008. However, Johny Chow was on tour playing bass guitar with Cavalera Conspiracy and Stone Sour.
Inspiration
The band's imagery draws heavily from Christianity, with "ministry" in their name, the albums The Second Great Awakening, and Their Rock Is Not Our Rock, a reference to Deuteronomy 32:31. MTV.com described the band's music as having "a musical chemistry between the members... that makes their songs buzz with warmth".[2]
Current members
James A. Rota II – Guitar/Vocals
Emily Burton – Guitar
John Oreshnick – Drums
Scott Reeder-Bass
Former members
Helen Storer – Bass, founding member (1999–2001)
Brad Davis – Bass (2001–2002)
Janis Tanaka – Bass (2002–2004)
Yael – Drums (2006)
Brad Prescott - Mandolin (2016)
Discography
- Studio albums
- Où Est la Rock? - (August 16, 1999)
- The Second Great Awakening - (October 7, 2003)
- Their Rock Is Not Our Rock - (October 18, 2005)
- Fireball Ministry - (March 16, 2010)