1. G'day Anthony the Beast! How is it going in New York? What have been up to lately? Anything crazy!!
Hello and a big hell yeah to all my boys down under. New York has changed quite a bit from my days doing gigs. There were a ton of clubs to play and a whole different scene going on. I play drums occasionally with the one and only Guitar Pete and do gigs here and there. The only thing crazy still is me.
2. How and when was the beast formed?? Give us some background information on that classic moment in history! The early days of the Beast.
The Beast was formed thanks to Guitar Pete. We were neighbors and best friends since I could remember. We grew up playing in bands together. I played drums and of course Pete the guitar. He was recording his next album with Axe Attack for Heavy Metal America. When asked by the label if he had any other projects he bought me in to the mix. We sat up in Pete's room and put together the songs that would become Has Arrived. I was angry and pissed off at the scene on Long Island it was hair metal and pretty boys playing all the gigs around town. The Beast was ready to freak these fools out. We recorded the album in two 5 hour sessions at our friends studio. We took the finished tapes to a new label that was being started by Pete's label called Napalm Records. They loved the record and I was signed. Next came the record release party at The Cat Club in New York City.
3. Did you play and go crazy in any bands before the beast?
I played in rock bands and funk bands and did what I had to do to make it as a musician. I was playing drums in clubs and shitholes since I was 14 years old. When I was 17 I packed up my drums and hooked up with my boys from High School and flew to Florida and worked six nights a week playing funk and soul music. I was down to my last twenty dollars when we landed a gig at the coolest club in Miami. Hookers used to watch from the windows out the club and give me the thumbs up and yell out that's my man!
4. I know The Beast did 2 albums. First one being The beast has arrived in 1985 on Napalm Records and Carnival of Souls in 1987 on Maze records. Was there anything released or even recorded but not released from the Beast? How did the record deals come about etc.
Well you already know how I got signed for Has Arrived so here's how it went down for Carnival of Souls. The first gig officially was at The Cat Club in NY. It also was a record release party for Napalm Records. The jerk off that booked the club was not gonna give The Beast a gig. They leaned more toward glam and hair bands. With the radio station WBAB and the their Metal DJ, Fingers the show was set up so The Beast was in. The night of the show I met a bunch of guys from The Bronx, a tough section of New York. These guy went fucking ballistic during my set moshing, stage diving, headbanging and general mayhem. That night film director Adrian Lyne was in the club with his daughter. He calls the club the next day looking for The Beast. The owners of the Cat Club are like holy shit Paramount Pictures wants to use me in a movie which turns out to be Fatal Attraction. Long story short now I'm getting mad respect from the owners of the club and Pete used this upcoming film offer to spark a deal with Maze Records. The producers of the movie wound up going in a different direction with the film and I was not in but it gave me a lot of clout and got my name out there and a second record deal. Funny how shit works out sometimes.
Well now your gonna be in for a surprise, here is some info that has never been released till now....The Beast has Arrived was written and recorded by just me and Pete no other musicians were used. I played all the drum tracks and Pete did all guitar and bass tracks. It was hard to find guys that could play this stuff. Not that it was insanely hard to play but to get the feel of the songs we wrote. Most guys were playing lame rock and pussy rock and never listened to a Ramones record or The Clash, Sex Pistols, Suicidal Tendencies....so we did everything ourselves!! It was a blast to record and the record really wrote it self, I had so many ideas that it took about 2 weeks to write the songs. Me and Pete were playing so long together we knew where each other was gonna fart just about. The guys that recorded us became great friends of ours and really got in to the spirit of the album and helped us through the process.
6. What was reception like to the first album like at the time? Was there many gigs supporting the record? How did they go down with the headbangers?
I started playing gigs out on Long Island where I lived and the reaction was fear.....by the girls that followed the glam bands about. The reaction from a lot of the other bands and guys that came to the shows loved The Beast!! I did a lot of funny gross shit on stage to freak people out so the chicks would always be like "whats wrong with him". I loved it though. Has Arrived got great response from people thanks to the support of the local radio Metal show on WBAB hosted by Fingers who loved The Beast and always promoted the shows and played the record. Punks and Headbangers always loved the live shows because there would be mayhem and shit would get broke and sound men would go crazy cause there shit would get fucked up. I was'nt a real Beast gig unless I owed money for some microphones or something by the end of the night.
McDonalds Man wrote itself it put me in the middle of it by saying I was some poor bastard who went in to get some burgers and got caught in the middle of that incident. I was easy to get ideas from the TV news it was always a ton of bad depressing stories. Fans used to come to the shows and wear those paper hats that employees wear at McDonalds and I used to crack up. Some times befoe a show I would stop at McDonalds and buy a big bag of hamburgers and throw them to the crowd.
8. What is the song poison dart all about?
Poison Dart was basically about the AIDS epidemic that was running rampent through New York at the time. I was again watching too much TV and the news was beating this story into everyones head.
I guess I gave you some of the answers to this question already, Fingers is still around and still hosting Fingers Metal Shop on the radio, I love this guy and will always be a brother to me. There were two scenes that I was involed in. Long Island where I lived and New York City where I would hang out and play gigs as well. New York had an awesome music scene and people embraced The Beast. Long Island well there were alot of scumbellys who were pissed that I had a record deal and would open for major acts and just basically jealous assholes. I did have my friends and fans on Long Island too and they would come to the gigs and support me but it was more of a pretty boy rock hair band scene on the Island.
10. Time to go deep into the memory vaults again haha the next album you released was Carnival of souls in 1987 a more polished album than the first one. Give us some background on the atmosphere, the classics, and the recording process surrounding that classic record.
Carnival of Souls was signed to Maze music, Pete knew Zoran Busic who ran the label and got him interested because of the movie buzz that was going around from Paramount Pictures. Pete and I locked ourselves into his room and started the writing process pretty much the same way Has Arrived began. Riffs were laid down and recorded on a small 4 track machine and I sat there with pen and paper and let loose what ever was going on in my head at that time. It seems when ever you have turmoil going on in your life your creative flow is at it's best. An old bass player friend of ours had just built a studio and offered to record the record for us at no charge. Pete bought in his drummer from Axe Attack, John "Cujo" Sherry and Pete again doing the bass tracks. There was no pressure because of the free studio time and the boys from Up All Night studio were bought in to mix the record. The album is way more polished than Has Arrived because we did'nt want to make the same sounding record again. I don't think it took more than two weeks to record the album, the material was kickin around for a while so it fell into place quickly.
11. Was the reception to the second album better than the first album? How was the gigs around this record like? Did you maniacs make progress?
Carnival of Souls was recived well, again the live gigs and radio support from Fingers helped alot. There was a club on Long Island called Sundance that was booking major acts, I knew the owner from his days of being a booking agent with all the bands on the Island. He gave us the opportunity to open for Suicidal Tendencies, Bad Brains, MOD, 24-7 Spyz, Death Angel to name a few. The gigs in New York helped as well, my friend Handsome Dick Manitoba would have us open at CBGB's and my other friends Circus of Power would let us open at the Cat Club and so on. There were alot of Metal radio programs that supported the album and fanzines and metal magazines always gave it pretty good reviews.
12. What happened after the second album? I'm guessing the beast folded not long after the second album? What lead to the end of the beast?
After Carnival of Souls had been out for a while I started writing more songs with another guitar player named Rob Ruymaker. We did a 5 song demo tape called Beastreality and had interest from some more indie labels, Roadrunner was one of them and believe it or not Atlantic was scouting us as well. There were plenty of players that had come through The Beast. Writing songs was what we were trying to focus on right at this point. We kept playing out and had interest from Steve Thompson who had mixed Appitite for Destruction for Guns and Roses. He's a local guy who used to catch our set out at the clubs and signed Guitar Pete to a deal with Giant Records.
13. Did you do anything else musically after the beast was laid to rest?
After The Beast was "laid to rest" Pete had started a real down and dirty blues band. Yeah I know the "blues"!!! But when you get right down to it I found a real love for this music, it was so dark and primitive. He needed a drummer and I was in. Pete got an independent label to sign him for an album which I played drums on and co-wrote a song for. The album was called Burning Bridges by The Guitar Pete Blues Band. It was a blast to record with my best friend and brother Pete. We played tons of gigs and still when he needs me I'm there with sticks in hand.
14. What are your musical and non musical influences personally and for the beast?
Some of the music that influenced me was the stuff I grew up on. Led Zeppelin Black Sabbath
Deep Purple on the metal end and I loved Iggy Pop James Brown Sex Pistols The Clash The Ramones X Fear etc etc it just goes on and on. TV is always a big influence it's on all the time how can it not seep into your head. Loved horror movies growing up so I'm sure some of that's in there too.
15. Has the thought of doing another the beast album and returning to the stage ever crossed your mind?
The Beast like a lot of other bands has done its time so to speak. It's a struggle to keep the machine going. It's a lot of work and at this time in the music world it's not the same. Back in the 80's you had a whole scene dedicated to this and other indie music. There were fanzines and radio stations that promoted our kind of music. Sad to say most of the stuff being played out there blows!
16. Has there been any interest in re-issuing the albums and other rare and unreleased songs? Would you like to see it happen?
There is a shit load of material laying around I'm putting something together to post on The Beast fb page. It's a track that wound up on a compilation cd called When the Wind Blows. Other stuff like I Hate Lucy, Garbage Town and Voodoo Master to name a few I would love to see put out. I think both Beast albums are still around someone posted all the tracks from Carnival of Souls on YouTube and supposedly they got the tracks from a reissue.
17. Do you still follow or keep a eye on what's happening in the metal/punk scenes these days? What do you think of it and all these kids going retro and worshipping everything 80's & 70's haha. What do you listen to these days?
I think it's great that kids discover the roots to their music and what ever turns you on then go for it. I listen to everything these days and I still love the stuff from the 80's. I love old blues music punk metal just too much to even tell you about even jazz.
18. Ok Anthony the Beast, Many thanks for taking the time to answer the questions and bringing some light back to the days of the Beast! Any last words? Good luck and all the best!
I want to thank The Rubbish Mob and Joe Steel for keeping The Beast alive I knew this would be the start of a great friendship. Take care all and can't wait to hear what The Rubbish Mob come up with next!
Facebook page > https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Beast/205383716145517
Interview by J Steel April 2012
Hey! Nice interview with Anthony from The Beast! Actually I am the guy who put "Carnival Of Souls" up on yt. Just got "...Has Arrived" transferred digitally to CD so maybe I´ll put that on yt, too. Most tracks from that record on yt have poor quality. Wait for it... ;D The Beast is definitely a band too good to be forgotten. So let´s keep Anthony´s band alive for ever! Again: Thanks for this interview! Cheers!
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