Music News — April 15, 2015 at 8:25 am

COAL CHAMBER Release new Lyric video feat Al Jourgensen

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COAL CHAMBER  Premiere Lyric Video For “Suffer in Silence” Featuring Al Jourgensen

New Album ‘Rivals’ Out May 22 via Metal Blade/Rocket

Pre orders: www.nervegas.com.au/coal-chamber-rivals-cd 

COAL CHAMBER are ready to unleash another song from their upcoming new album Rivals.

The band have premiered “Suffer in Silence” which features guest vocals by Ministry front man Al Jourgensen!

Check out the lyric video HERE.

 

 

Dez Fafara on “Suffer in Silence” and working with Al Jourgensen:
“Al has been a close friend for many years, he’s a legend, and literally was the only guy I asked to be a guest on this record.
He came over to the house, we had BBQ a hell of a lot of wine then I had the pleasure of watching him in my home studio do what he does!  I fucking love this song so jam it loud!”
COAL CHAMBER will release their new album Rivals on May 22 in Australia via Metal Blade/Rocket.
This is the band’s first new album in over thirteen years.  With producer Mark Lewis at the helm, Rivals makes it seem as if COAL CHAMBER never took a break at all.
They picked up right where they left off and have delivered what some may consider their best work to date.
The first single from Rivals entitled “I.O.U. Nothing” can be streamed HERE.
The title track title track “Rivals” is available for streaming HERE.
While their implosion 12 years ago left a morass of questions and conjecture about what could have been, the members of COAL CHAMBER aren’t into dwelling on their past right now. Why the fuck should they?
With Rivals, they’ve written a new, emboldened chapter in their storied career, delivering beatdown riffage, lyrical diatribes and alluring sonic vistas the realm of heavy music can always use to move that culture forward.
The return of COAL CHAMBER is marked by two mindsets. The first signifies a celebration of friends who have experienced a greater clarity about them to want to come together in a practice space again.
The other mindset posits that they had a case of unfinished business they needed to take care of with bold strokes, lead-pipe cruelty and aural finesse.

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