
mooncobra
Well-known member
1984 or so and I'm 18 years old...all I'm listening to is the early thrash that's just coming out(Metallica/Slayer etc).
But I'm playing bass in a ski resort circuit band doing Huey Lewis,the Romantix and classic rock and some hair "metal".
All the elder statesmen in my band were bagging on me for that noise coming from my walkman.
The summer of 85 I move back home to Arlington and head over the the Abbott's house and talk to Darrell and Vince about what the ski circuit was like. I tell them I want to play thrash now and Vince starts laughing at me.
"That noisey shit will never sell,dude!"
But Darrell says "I'll call Walter and get him over here."
Walt shows up 5 minutes later dragging his ESP yellow/black cheetah print guitar into the house.
Now when I say dragging....I mean dragging.
He was holding it by the neck,dragging it behind him in the front door and I watched it bounce over the threshold. No case. Just the guitar.
Just like a cave man dragging his club behind him.
Darrell hands me eRex's old Ibanez roadstar bass and Walt and I go to town for 20-30 minutes.
We blow thru a bunch of the deeper metallica cuts(no seek and destroy shit). Then most of Slayers first album.
All the fast shit.
We're both laughing like elementary school kids the whole time trying to shout out the vocals so we know where we are in the song.
After a while we stop and Walter says "You're in."
That was the beginning of Rotting Corpse.
I never played anything but thrash from that point forward.
Walter was a bigger influence on me than anyone else. I was so blown away by his rhythm playing I eventually quit the bass and switched to guitar.
But I'll never forget him dragging that ESP Star body into the house by its neck like it was just a weapon instead of a valuable/rare for its time guitar. It's one of my all time favorite memories.
Note....that ESP was a gift that the Pantera boys gave Walter for his birthday.
The strat style head stock had to be cut up because they only had 3 on a side tuning pegs available and nobody had money back then.
You had to make do with what you had. That's the Texas redneck way. "Grab a saw!!"
He smashed it to pieces several times at the end of gigs,then would bolt/glue it back together for the next gig.
I had a great misspent youth.
The folly of youth. I think back on my youth often these days. Carefree living. It was the best! My friends and I did some incredibly idiotic stuff. Looking back it’s an actual miracle we all came through intact.
Viva la Gorilla Gang! (may they live forever!)
-and I still am holding out hope that one day I might be allowed to enter this gang of illuminated and prestigious men.