* En anglais uniquement
Coal Chamber broke out of the Los Angeles alternative metal scene in 1997 with a sound often compared to
Korn, although both bands formed around the same time and are quality representations of the scene's overall sound -- the heavy, detuned guitars of the murkiest
Black Sabbath; grungy, noisy textures reminiscent of
White Zombie or
Tool; the white-knuckle intensity of
Pantera and hardcore punk; and perhaps a few hip-hop-influenced beats à la
Biohazard.
Coal Chamber were formed in 1994 by vocalist/lyricist
B. Dez Fafara and guitarist Miguel "Meegs" Rascon, who met through a classified ad; the two added drummer Mike "Mikee" Cox and bassist
Rayna Foss, the latter of whom heard about auditions through her roommate,
Fafara's future wife. A huge local buzz following gigs at the Roxy and the Whisky a Go Go, along with a demo tape championed by
Fear Factory's
Dino Cazares, got the band an opportunity to sign with Roadrunner Records late in 1994, but
Fafara suddenly quit due to disagreements with his wife over the band. By the spring of 1995,
Fafara changed his mind and returned, a decision that ultimately cost him his marriage, but a renewed sense of energy helped
Coal Chamber regain their Roadrunner deal by the end of the year.
Their self-titled debut was released in 1997;
Chamber Music followed two years later. The album was a minor success but its mixture of goth rock imagery and nu metal thuggery made for an uneven album. They toured heavily behind it but by the time it came time to record the next album, bassist
Rayna Foss-Rose was gone to raise her daughter, leaving the band with Nadja Peulen. Nadja took
Foss-Rose's place during her pregnancy between the first two albums, but she accepted the invitation to come back as a full-time member during the recording of the next record. The resulting album,
Dark Days, was released in the spring of 2002.
By May of that same year, the band had begun to fall apart, sparked by an on-stage altercation between
Fafara and Rascon. The following year, after issuing a remix and rarities compilation called
Giving the Devil His Due, the bandmembers announced that they had officially broken up, with
Fafara continuing on with his new band,
Devildriver, with whom he would go on to release six studio albums. In 2011
Coal Chamber began hinting at a possible re-formation, and by 2013 they made it official, performing at Download 2013 and hitting the road with
Sevendust,
Lacuna Coil, and
Stolen Babies. Rivals, the band's first studio recording in 13 years, arrived in early 2015 via Napalm Records. ~ Steve Huey