The
saga and legend of Fozzy began in 1999 in the backstage area at the
Alamodome in San Antonio at a WCW show...that was the day that I met
Rich Ward.
Now I'd seen Rich play live with Stuck Mojo in Orlando the year before,
but I'd not met him before. I was a fan of his band and I didn't know
until that day that he was a fan of mine, but it was great to know that
the feeling was mutual. I was turned on to Mojo by my friend Geoff,
when I mentioned to him that I was going to check out a Testament concert.
Geoff told me to make sure to check out Mojo, who were opening, as they
were an excellent band, so I did just that.
I was immediately impressed by the band and was even more impressed
by their use of wrestling terminology throughout the set and the arrangement
of wrestling dolls on the amps during the gig. I didn't introduce myself
as I didn't want to bug the guys, so I was glad to finally meet up with
Rich.
Have you ever met someone that you immediately felt a kinship with right
off the bat? That's what it was like when I began talking to The Duke.
We had similar tastes in music, which was apparent when we found out
that we were both Journey and Stryper fans! What are the chances of
finding that backstage! So we had a great chat and went our separate
ways. A few months later I met up with Rich again backstage in Greenville,
SC. This time during our conversation, after discussing our various
beginnings in junior high school bands, we decided that if the opportunity
ever presented itself, that we would get together and play a show that
would consist of nothing but covers of our favorite bands from yesteryear.
Rich already had played with a local musicians cover band, that consisted
of whoever happened to show up that week, called Fozzy Osbourne and
he invited me to sit in whenever I could. I agreed and once again we
went our separate ways.
Fast forward a few months and I was sidelined from wrestling with a
severely sprained ankle, which was going to keep me out of action for
4 months. When that happened, I called Rich and we decided to once again
unleash Fozzy Osbourne upon the world, this time with me in the band.
Rich called a few promoters that he knew and a few weeks later we debuted
in Marietta, GA at a place called The Hangar. The lineup consisted of
me on vocals, Rich on guitar, Mojo drummer Frank Fontsere, Mojo bassist
Dan Dryden and a guitar student of Rich's named Ryan Mallam on guitar.
Needless to say, without a day of rehearsal, we weren't exactly Dream
Theater...but there was something there. So much so, that the word spread
about the band so quickly, that we were offered a record deal by Palm/Megaforce
Records, without ever being heard OR seen! The label head honchos were
very interested in the project featuring members of Mojo and Y2J and
so it was done...Fozzy was signed.
It
was at this point that Rich and I decided that there were a million
cover bands and tribute bands in the world and it didn't need another
one...unless there was a twist. That's when we decided to implement
a Blues Brothers/Spinal Tap/Traveling Wilbur's story line, where we
would all adopt characters and play it as if the songs that the band
were covering were really our songs that were stolen from us while we
were stuck in Japan due to a bad record deal. We also decided to drop
the Osbourne and remain just Fozzy...although we entertained the idea
of naming ourselves The Big City Knights for a short time. Glad we didn't
use that one!! Anyway, the label dug the whole concept and they even
tapped us to do a 30 minute "mockumentary" based on the history
of the band.
The
movie was made, along with the help of Dee Snider, Zakk Wylde, Mike
Portnoy and Sebastian Bach, all who were happy to play along with the
legend of how Fozzy had created and influenced all things metal. The
movie played to rave reviews on MTV and Much Music and the first record,
FOZZY, was released in Oct of 2000. The single and video, EAT THE RICH
was also well received and enjoyed solid airplay. We played a handful
of shows, including WWE Sunday Night Heat and that was it for almost
7 months.
I
don't really know why it took us so long to get back on track, but when
we reconvened over half a year later, we added another guitar player,
Mike Schneider. We now sported a three pronged axe attack that got even
more pompous when our good friend and uber metal producer Andy Sneap
joined the band for the ricockulous FOUR axe attack. Thankfully that
lineup only lasted for 4 shows...it was just too heavy and preposterous
for the ears to comprehend. It was hilarious to see 5 Les Paul's (I
used to play guitar during the encore as well) on one stage though!!
We were still doing all covers at this time but that was about to change...
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