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GARY HOLT On KERRY KING’s New Music: ‘I’ve Heard It’s Really, Really, Really Good’

GARY HOLT On KERRY KING's New Music: 'I've Heard It's Really, Really, Really Good'

Gary Holt says that he has not heard any of the music from the new project led by SLAYER‘s founding guitarist Kerry King.

The EXODUS leader, who spent almost nine years touring with SLAYER, responded to a question about Kerry‘s new band during an interview with Full Metal Jackie‘s syndicated radio show. He said: “First, I’ll say I’ve heard none of it. Not a note. I’ve heard it’s really, really, really good. So, I can’t wait to hear it.”

He continued: “Kerry, the time I spent playing with him was remarkable. He’s just one of the world’s most crushing rhythm guitar players. People don’t realize how punishing he is with his right-hand picking technique. And just playing with him, it was a joy; it was awesome. So I can’t wait to see it.

“I saw that [Kerry and his new band have] announced shows. And then it becomes, like, ‘Well, I’m busy. He’s busy. I hope I’m around some time when he’s playing where I can catch it.’

“I haven’t seen a single SLAYER member since the last show,” Holt revealed. “It’s kind of crazy. We all scattered and haven’t seen anybody. We text, but I haven’t laid eyes since bro hugs and ‘I’m out.'”

Gary also reflected on his time with SLAYER, calling it “remarkable. The farewell tour was really incredible,” he said. “I really tried not to think about the finality of it all until it got to that last show.

“On the anniversary of the final show, I always post the same picture and it’s the last band photo we ever did, and we look like we’re on our way to our own funeral. For the first time ever, SLAYER looked visibly nervous, and it shows in the photo. We look scared to death.”

Holt began filling in for SLAYER guitarist Jeff Hanneman at live shows in 2011, and became the band’s full-time co-guitarist as of 2013, while remaining a member of EXODUS. Holt played on SLAYER‘s final album, “Repentless”, which came out in 2015.

More than three years ago, SLAYER drummer Paul Bostaph revealed that he is involved in Kerry‘s new project. Paul told Australia’s Riff Crew that the new band will “sound like SLAYER without it being SLAYER — but not intentionally so. I mean, Kerry‘s been writing songs in SLAYER his entire career, and he has a style,” he explained. “And that style, as a songwriter, you just don’t change your style because your band is done… So, all I can say is if you like heavy music and you like SLAYER, you’ll like this.”

Kerry‘s new band, called simply KERRY KING, has announced two shows so far: May 9, 2024 at the Welcome To Rockville festival at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida, and May 16, 2024 at the Sonic Temple Art & Music Festival at the Historic Crew Stadium in Columbus, Ohio.

A year ago, Kerry said that he was angry over the prospect of SLAYER calling it quits when the subject was first broached. Asked in an interview with Metal Hammer magazine for his reaction when the conversation to end the band arose, the now-59-year-old guitarist said: “Anger… what else? It was premature. The reason I say ‘premature’ is because my heroes from my childhood are still playing! I can still play, I still want to play, but that livelihood got taken away from me.

“But, anyway, on to the next chapter, I guess,” he continued. “We were on top of the world, and there’s nothing wrong with going out on top of the world, it’s a good way to go out. So, bravo for that. But do I miss playing? Yeah, absolutely.”

In the same interview, King also hinted that SLAYER fans will be happy with the musical direction of his yet-to-be-announced new band. “If you know my work, you know what it’s going to sound like.”

Back in October 2021, Holt told Metal Hammer that he agreed SLAYER retired too soon. “We were still playing at the top of our game, we were totally killing it,” he said. “The band had a lot of years left in it, but I guess when it’s time, it’s time. When you decide to walk away from something, walk away. I can’t tell anybody they made the wrong decision. Better to go out on top than go out unable to play your own songs, and this shit isn’t easy. Playing ‘Angel Of Death’ at 70 years old would be fucking hard. But it was time for me to come back, let’s put it that way. I was really missing my first family.”

Two years after he revealed that he had more than two records’ worth of music written for his new band, King stated about the new material’s direction: “You know me, so you know what it’s going to sound like. I played this new song for a buddy, and I said to him, ‘If there’s anything I’ve written in the last few years that sounds like SLAYER, it’s this.’ And he said, ‘That sounds like you could have pulled it off of any SLAYER record.’ I actually made that riff up backstage at a SLAYER show. We were walking to the stage and I got my phone out and recorded it so I wouldn’t forget it.”

King went on to say that he expects his new band to start out by playing “much smaller” venues than SLAYER did at the end of its four-decade run.

“Had it have been up to me then I’d have been out in 2020,” he said. “But that thing called the pandemic fucked everything up for everyone. You know, I waited on that, because it had to run its course. I didn’t want to be the guinea pig; I didn’t want to learn how to tour again. I already did my dues; I don’t want to have to prove myself again.

“Have I been dragging my feet? Yeah, because I wanted this [pandemic] shit to get sorted. I won’t be dragging my feet much longer.”

One day after SLAYER played the final show of its farewell tour, Kerry‘s wife Ayesha King said that there is “not a chance in hell” that the thrash metal icons will reunite for more live appearances. In August 2020, she once again shot down the possibility of her husband and bassist/vocalist Tom Araya sharing the stage ever again under the SLAYER banner.

After Ayesha shared three photos of Kerry holding their cat in slideshow-type Instagram post, a fan wrote: “No Tom, No SLAYER Kerry. Stop thinking SLAYER without @tomarayaofficial”. Ayesha then replied: “don’t worry, they’ll never be SLAYER again! You can rest easy”.

Just a few days earlier, Kerry told Dean Guitars that he had plenty of musical ideas for his upcoming project. “I’ve been very, very lucky with riffs in 2020,” he said. “Maybe because I can’t go anywhere — I don’t know — but riffs have certainly not been a problem. And looking forward into the future, what that means for me is I’m gonna be able to cherrypick the best stuff. And it’s good stuff. I’ve got more than two records’ worth of music, but to be able to go through that and cherrypick the best 11 or 12 [songs]… That first record should be smoking.”

When SLAYER first announced that it was embarking on its final tour back in January 2018, Ayesha assured fans that they would “always get music” from her husband.

King has said in previous interviews that his post-SLAYER musical efforts would not be much different from the sound fans have grown accustomed to hearing from him.

“If someone quit, I’m not going to go around with a made-up SLAYER,” he told AZCentral.com back in 2010. “But my next band would sound like SLAYER, that’s all I know.”

SLAYER‘s final world tour began on May 10, 2018 with the band’s intention to play as many places as possible, to make it easy for the fans to see one last SLAYER show and say goodbye. By the time the 18-month trek wrapped at the Forum, the band had completed seven tour legs plus a series of one-off major summer festivals, performing more than 140 shows in 30 countries and 40 U.S. states.

Image credit: STL Tones

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