"It gives you more power," he says. "The greatest fighters of all
time have always done better on the way up. Once they get there,
you know, it's all downhill." Luckily, the Brooklyn quartet has
been able to find a happy medium, never quite selling loads of
records, but gaining a strong following of hardcore fans along the
way. As vocalist-bassist Evan Seinfeld spins it, "Would you rather
have a million fans for a year, or would you rather have 100,000
for ten years?"
And therein lies the secret to Biohazard's success. As one of the
pioneering groups of rap-metal fusion, Graziadei, Seinfeld, drummer
Danny Schuler and guitarist Rob Echeverria don't write music for
the masses, they write what they know works for them. Their latest
release, New World Disorder, released last week, follows
suit, proving to be one of the band's most diverse and dynamic
albums to date. Themes on Disorder range from
anti-conformity ("Resist") to domestic violence ("Cycle of Abuse")
to the apocalypse on title track. "The record is really topical,"
says Seinfeld. "It delves deeply into a lot of different topics. It
goes from pure rage and anger to almost stoic sorrow and despair,
from joy and happiness to fear and paranoia. It covers all the
human emotions that we feel everyday, and people relate to it so
much."
Biohazard surely can relate. Just before the release of 1996's
Mata Leao, original guitarist Bobby Hambel left the group
with both sides citing the usual musical differences. Shortly after
the album's release, the band left Warner Bros., released a live
album, No Holds Barred, on Roadrunner Records, and
eventually signed with Mercury. During this work-related tumult,
various members of the band went through divorces and the suffered
through the deaths of close friends and family members. "New
World Disorder definitely has a part of all of us," says
Graziadei. "We spent a long time on this album, you know, it wasn't
something that we just slapped together. We put a lot of heart and
soul and tears into the album."
Biohazard are currently warming up on a short U.S. club tour before
heading out on the road with Insane Clown Posse, Coal Chamber and
Twiztid for a full-scale North American tour beginning in July. In
addition, Seinfeld is also spending some of his free time behind
bars: Seinfeld has secured a recurring role as inmate Jaz Hoyt on
the critically acclaimed HBO prison drama Oz. Seinfeld
joins rappers LL Cool J and Naughty By Nature's Treach as musicians
who have appeared on the show. According to the bassist, the
hardest part about filming is the early morning call times, but
acting wasn't as difficult as he thought it would be.
"When I have a scene with a series of lines, or when I get an
action part, I find it totally challenging," he says. "I love
testing myself and exploring new things, but ultimately what gets
me off is being in Biohazard."
JOE HAULER(June 17, 1999)
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.