CORROSION OF CONFORMITY, CROWBAR And MOTHERSHIP To Team Up For North American Tour
November 6, 2018CORROSION OF CONFORMITY, CROWBAR and MOTHERSHIP will join forces for a North American tour in early 2019. WEEDEATER and THE OBSESSED will provide support on select dates.
The details are as follows:
With WEEDEATER:
Jan. 19 - San Antonio, TX - Alamo City Music Hall
Jan. 20 - Oklahoma City, OK - Diamond Ballroom
Jan. 21 - Kansas City, MO - The Riot Room
Jan. 22 - Denver, CO - Gothic Theatre
Jan. 24 - Phoenix, AZ - Crescent Ballroom
Jan. 25 - Las Vegas, NV - Fremont Country Club
Jan. 26 - San Diego, CA - Brick By Brick
Jan. 27 - Los Angeles, CA - Teragram Ballroom
Jan. 29 - San Francisco, CA - Slim’s
Jan. 31 - Portland, OR - Hawthorne Theatre
Feb. 01 - Seattle, WA - Neumos
Feb. 02 - Vancouver, BC - Rickshaw Theatre
Feb. 04 - Edmonton, AB - Starlite Room
Feb. 05 - Calgary, AB - Marquee
Feb. 07 - Winnipeg, MB - Park Theatre
Feb. 08 - Minneapolis, MN - Fine Line
Feb. 09 - Chicago, IL - Bottom Lounge
Feb. 10 - Flint, MI - Machine Shop
Feb. 12 - Cleveland, OH - Beachland Ballroom
Feb. 13 - New York, NY - The Gramercy Theatre
With THE OBSESSED:
Feb. 16 - Boston, MA - Brighton Music Hall
Feb. 17 - Philadelphia, PA - Underground Arts
Feb. 18 - Baltimore, MD - Ottobar
Feb. 20 - Toronto, ON - Opera House
Feb. 21 - Pittsburgh, PA - Mr. Smalls Theatre
Feb. 22 - Raleigh, NC - Lincoln Theatre
Feb. 23 - Atlanta, GA - The Masquerade
Feb. 24 - Tampa, FL - Orpheum
Feb. 26 - Pensacola, FL - Vinyl Music Hall
Feb. 27 - Nashville, TN - The Cowan
CORROSION OF CONFORMITY's latest album, "No Cross No Crown", came out in January via Nuclear Blast Entertainment. The LP is the group's first studio effort with guitarist/vocalist Pepper Keenan in more than a decade.
"No Cross No Crown" was recorded in North Carolina with longtime producer John Custer. CORROSION OF CONFORMITY cut the disc in about forty days over the course of a year.
CORROSION OF CONFORMITY guitarist Woody Weatherman told Guitar Interactive Magazine about "No Cross No Crown": "This record was approached a little differently than previous [albums]. We didn't spend a lot of… There was, like, no pre-production; we didn't have much of an idea of shit before we all showed up. It was, like, just… we showed up, [and] we'd do four- or five-day sessions."
"As we were writing the songs, it started to take shape," Pepper added. "And once again, it was becoming something more than we… as a unit, it became bigger than the sum of its parts. And so once you get to that thing where it's in your head and you're consumed by it, if it ain't right, it's wrong. You've just gotta keep going at it."
"There were several things that we threw in the trash," Woody continued. "We'd spend half a day on somebody's idea, and if it wasn't working after half a fucking day, throw it in the fucking trash and move to the next thing."
Pepper went on to say that CORROSION OF CONFORMITY's music still sounds as valid today as it did when it was first recorded. "I think we can look back at C.O.C.'s career, you can look at [all the albums] and go… It sounds weird to say it, but they stand the test of time," he said. "And it's really important that it doesn't sound dated. I don't want it to sound like it's the new millennium or the '90s or whatever; it's gotta sound like… when you play it 20 years later, it still sounds correct."
"It's been a conscious thought of ours for a long time," Woody added. "'Let's not make a record that sounds like it was made in 1991 or something. Although we're making a record in 1991, let's try not to do that. Let's make it sounds like it's…' Like Pep said, in 20 or 30 years, it still sounds relevant."
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