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March Spotlight - October 31
The underground Heavy Metal scene is certainly not for everyone. From the dreams of
glitz and glamour that certain giants from the 80s and even modern bands that thrive from
paycheck to paycheck, making it is the be all end all for some. Not that there is anything
wrong with living off of what you love to do. It's just almost scary how certain members
of the human race can turn their integrity inside out at the flip of a dollar and history
has proven, with exception (always), success to do more harm than good, especially if a
band has or had any kind of staying power. Greed is a terrible thing. For others, its not
always about being in the Top 40, having your video on Headbangers Ball, being on a major
label, sharing the stage with the most happening band(s), free scrotum waxing, getting a
gold record, etc. Some don't care too much about that. Metal is a lifestyle to some and
that has definitely been proven over the years by a certain US band.
October 31 have one main goal, to produce the most uncompromising, no frills Heavy Metal
they possibly can spew forth. The latest, "No Survivors", further proves this
being the heaviest October 31 yet, and just as memorable as the rest. Now is the part
where I give a rundown of the recordings and line-up changes of October 31 from the
beginning to the present. Don't forget to breathe.
Originally concocted as a side project to King Fowley's old school Death Metal thrash
attack, Deceased; October 31 began the first demo days immediately after Brian Williams
was brought on board. Fowley and Williams clicked right away on a personal and songwriting
level. Reminiscing about the glory days of 80's Heavy Metal and how they wanted to make
their own mark with the traditional aspects that define the genre. This was the mid 90's
mind you and finding other members could be quite the task. Years before the trendy Power
Metal boom, meeting musicians that wanted to play Heavy Metal was hard enough, let alone
the style Fowley and Williams desired. Keep in mind that they lived (and still do) about 6
hours away from each other. The burning ambition that churned between the two could not be
put on hold and in 1996, the "Voyage to Infinity" cassette demo was recorded,
marking the only O31 release with Casey Sayles (bass) and Frank Bauguess (rhythm/acoustic
guitar), local friends of Brian Williams. Oblivion Studios, the same studio that will
spawn Deceased's zombie thrash classic "Fearless Undead Machines" years later,
would be the studio of choice and practically every session that followed.
The demo showed a mixture of Thrash, Power, subtle Doom and Classic Heavy Metal that could
be compared to bands like Nasty Savage, Attacker, Killer, Griffin, Exciter and the endless
list of unappreciated cult legends. Appropriate covers of "Child of the Damned"
(Warlord) and "Harder Than Steel" (Jag Panzer) further proved that the
intentions of October 31 derived from true Heavy Metal, loud and proud. This line-up
however didn't last very long as a local scene friend of King Fowley joined for the
permanent bass position, Jim Hunter (Revelation/While Heaven Wept/Blacklord/Twisted Tower
Dire/every band in the vicinity of Northern Virginia). An old friend of Brian Williams,
Kevin Lewis, began his first attempt at the rhythm position and the writing process but
quit the band shortly before it was time to record the first full-length, 1997's "The
Fire Awaits You". Leaving all the guitar parts to Brian Williams, left to figure out
all the guitar tracks that he never played, "The Fire Awaits You" was still a
defining record for October 31. The production is modest yet effective. The opening track,
"The Warlock", takes everything that was so greatly intense from the Whiplash
"Power and Pain" album, the majority of "The Fire Awaits You" churn an
atmosphere being dark, heavy, melodic, and most importantly, memorable. Another obscure
cover landed on Side B, "Day of the Saxons" from Witchkiller. The CD was
released by RIP Records while the vinyl didn't come out officially until 1999 by Fowley's
own Old Metal Records.
Kevin Lewis returned once again in 1998, attempting the full-time rhythm guitar position
as the "Visions of End" EP writing and recording process began. Completely
finished in under a week, "Visions of the End" is still one of my favorites and
a most impressive EP. Despite one of the most ridiculous and maybe only covers of Lizzy
Bordern's "Give 'em The Axe" that I've ever heard (mostly due to Fowley's
interpretation of the vocals), this is arguable the greatest October 31 release. Full of
pure energy yet never straying too far from that dark, doomy vibe and building their epic
qualities with tracks like "The Legend of the Haunted Sea". Old Metal Records
released "Visions of the End" on CD and again in 1999 with a different cover.
Attached was the long out of print "Voyage to Infinity" demo already mentioned.
Around this time the decision was made by King Fowley to have a live singer, being more
comfortable with the drum duties for shows yet keeping his vocal position for the studio
only. Once again, old friends of both Fowley (Chuck Parsons) and Williams (Shawn Pelata)
were chosen among the fight for Metal supremacy. Parsons, having a more characteristic but
rugged voice, showed energy on stage, but lacked the real abilities of a strong Heavy
Metal singer and showman; Pelata being the mirror opposite, great voice-no stage presence.
October 31 played a handful of shows with each vocalist around this time but under the
demanding role that being in O31 calls for, going their separate ways was in order.
In 2000 "Meet Thy Maker" was released. Rip Records put out the original CD while
Metal Blade Europe released the "Visions of the End" bonus CD version. What
should have been possibly their best at that point, consisting of a bigger production,
more keyboards, melody and acoustic sections, "Meet Thy Maker" suffered from a
quirky final mix and many of the moments on the album being much too melodic for Fowley's
street vocal style. Still, tracks like "For There is War!" showed that October
31 were not about to slow down. A cover of Saxon's classic "Power and the Glory"
near the album's end has become a staple in closing their live set. Also that year, RIP
put out the reissue of the "Visions of the End" EP with the original cover art
but still being inferior to the 10 track 1999 Old Metal Records release, which made for a
pretty pointless reissue.
October 31 had landed on many compilations, played every dive on the east coast, recorded
two more cover songs "I Don't Know" (Ozzy/guitar solo courtesy of Deceased's
very own Mark "Chainsaw" Adams) and "Public Enema Number One" (Iron
Maiden) along with just as great an accomplishment as any, playing the Wacken Open Air
Festival in Germany. Things were moving right along until the road of optimism was brought
to a halt once again by Kevin Lewis, deciding to leave the band once more. Dave Castillo
(ex Hatred/VA) was brought in to fill in on drums for certain shows, allowing King to run
the stage and some shows were only played as a three piece, Fowley/Hunter/Williams.
Northern Virginia's Twisted Tower Dire members Tony Taylor and Scott Waldrop were next to
serve their time in the revolving door positions. Taylor having a very melodic voice that
would havee been best suited for the "Meet Thy Maker" album and Waldrop's
natural ear for great harmonies seemed to set the stage for what would be possibly the
best October 31 release yet. Sadly, only a 7" single birthed from this line-up in
2002. Maniacal Records released a redone version of "Salem's Curse" along with
Judas Priest cover "Electric Eye", pressed in a small quantity. While the single
showed much promise of things to come, disagreements within the band left Tony Taylor and
Scott Waldrop out of October 31 while Jim Hunter shortly joined the bass position for
Twisted Tower Dire, keeping his position in October 31.
As if that wasn't enough of a catastrophe, Fowley's darkest days shortly followed.
Following the death of his mother, two blood clots and a sudden stroke left him for dead.
This not only stopped the advancing of the band they had worked so hard at, the iron fist
of sickness left Fowley's recovery process a slow one. Thankfully, strong will and
determination prevail as King makes a full recovery. Before King's sudden streak of
horrible luck, Jason Tedder, being the best rhythm guitarist O31 has ever had is the next
contestant after Waldop, makes his entrance as the rhythm guitarist in Williams' side
band, K-Octave (who also has Shawn Pelata on vocals). Dave Castillo also gets a permanent
spot on the drums as King takes his rightful position as the front man. "Stage
Fright" gets released by Thrash Corner Records in 2003, capturing a moment in time at
Classic Metal Fest 2 with obviously no overdubs. Another demo is recorded, a cover of
"Missing in Action" (Q5) that gets lumped in the same category as the Lizzy
Borden cover by yours truly, an amazing vocal performance from Fowley on "Danger
Zone" (Black Sabbath) and original brain smasher "Powerhouse", which has
yet to get an official release.
Finally, having a steady line-up and with the drive of making Heavy Metal music still
abundant within the group, October 31 release their long awaited "No Survivors"
album. "No Survivors", being their
heaviest and fastest recording to date, lands October 31 back in the valid music category.
William's leads are furious as ever, Castillo keeps the fast yet original style of Fowley
on past records keeping up the rhythm section with Hunter as Tedder helps add a huge
multi-tracked guitar sound that has never been heard on any O31 recording, producing a
slightly more stripped down and in your face direction. After breaking off their contract
with Metal Blade Records and deciding not to put it out on Fowley's other label,
Battlezone Records, "No Survivors" is released on CD by Thrash Corner Records in
2005.
This sky is the limit for October 31. Having played hundreds of shows all across the
United States over the past 10 years, persevering over all life's many obstacles, October
31 is proof that some bands still play for the sheer love of Heavy Metal. With plans of
another album and a possible tour(s), they're just getting things warmed up.
--Agent of Steel
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