Randy Rampage
Randy Rampage | |
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Randy Rampage in 2007 at an art exhibit | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Randall Desmond Archibald |
Born | (1960-02-21)February 21, 1960 Vancouver, Canada |
Died | August 14, 2018(2018-08-14) (aged 58) Vancouver, Canada |
Genres | Hardcore punk, thrash metal |
Occupation(s) | Singer, musician |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, bass |
Years active | 1977–2018 |
Website | randyrampage |
Randall Desmond Archibald (February 21, 1960[1] – August 14, 2018), better known by his stage name Randy Rampage, was a Canadian musician and founding member, bass player and vocalist of the hardcore band D.O.A., often referred to as the "founders" of hardcore punk.
He was also the lead singer of the thrash metal band Annihilator in 1988–1989 and again from 1998 to 2000.
Career
He played on D.O.A.'s seminal early punk albums Something Better Change and Hardcore '81. Rampage left D.O.A. in 1981 but returned in the year 2000 after a nearly two-decade absence. He played on their 2002 Win the Battle album but then left the band again. He rejoined D.O.A. in 2007, remained in the lineup through 2008 and was featured on their album, Northern Avenger, produced by Bob Rock. On the eve of the Northern Avenger tour, it was announced that Rampage was leaving D.O.A. once again.
Rampage was the vocalist for the Canadian speed metal/thrash metal band Annihilator. He first joined the band in 1988, appearing on their debut album Alice in Hell (1989), and left after its accompanying tour. Around 1998, Rampage returned to Annihilator and recorded Criteria for a Black Widow (1999) with them, after which he left once again to rejoin D.O.A.
Rampage recorded a self-titled EP in 1982, Randy Rampage. It featured musicians also known as the Sick Ones: Chuck Biscuits, Brad Kent, Zippy Pinhead, and Benny Doro.
Randy was a key figure in Susanne Tabata's documentary film Bloodied But Unbowed, a historical look at the birth of the Vancouver punk rock scene and the development of hardcore punk on the west coast of North America during the 1978–1983 timeframe.
Randy Rampage had many other projects, including Rampage, Stress Factor 9, Fake It Big Time, Ground Zero, Iron Gypsy, Requiem, Riff Raff, and The 45s. Rampage's last project was Rampage, a band that included Duane Chaos (born Duane Nickull), The Great Baldini, Brent Johnson, Tim Bitz, Pinto Stiletto. Their LP was recorded by John Webster, but was unreleased at the time of his death.
Rampage died on August 14, 2018.[2]
Death
Rampage died on August 14, 2018, at his home in Vancouver from an apparent heart attack, aged 58.[3]
Discography
D.O.A.
- Something Better Change (1980)
- Hardcore '81 (1981)
- Win the Battle (2002)
- Northern Avenger (2008)
Annihilator
- Alice in Hell (1989)
- Bag of Tricks (1994)
- In Command (1996)
- Criteria for a Black Widow (1999)
- Total Annihilation (2010)
Stress Factor 9
- Brainwarp Mindspin (2006)
Randy Rampage
- Randy Rampage EP (1982)[4]
References
- ^ "Randy Rampage / Chris Walter – I Survived DOA [Book]". punknews.org. December 18, 2016. Retrieved May 28, 2017.
- ^ "RANDY RAMPAGE, Canadian Hardcore Legend And Former ANNIHILATOR Frontman, Dead At 58". Blabbermouth.net. August 15, 2018. Retrieved August 15, 2018.
- ^ "Vancouver punk legend Randy Rampage of DOA dies at age 58". Vancouver Sun. August 16, 2018. Retrieved August 16, 2018.
- ^ "Randy Rampage". rateyourmusic.com. August 2018.
External links
- Stress Factor 9
- Bloodied But Unbowed
- v
- t
- e
- Jeff Waters
- Aaron Homma
- Rich Gray
- Fabio Alessandrini
- Randy Rampage
- Mike Mangini
- Randy Black
- Joe Comeau
- Dave Padden
- (details)
- Alice in Hell
- Never, Neverland
- Set the World on Fire
- King of the Kill
- Refresh the Demon
- Remains
- Criteria for a Black Widow
- Carnival Diablos
- Waking the Fury
- All for You
- Schizo Deluxe
- Metal
- Annihilator
- Feast
- Suicide Society
- For the Demented
- Ballistic, Sadistic
- Metal II
- In Command
- Double Live Annihilation
- Live at Masters of Rock
- Bag of Tricks
- Total Annihilation
- Triple Threat