Alex Webster

Summary

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Alex Webster (born October 25, 1969) is an American musician who is the bassist and a co-founder of the death metal band Cannibal Corpse. He is one of two original remaining members, alongside drummer Paul Mazurkiewicz. He is also the bassist of Blotted Science and the supergroup Conquering Dystopia. Before Cannibal Corpse was formed, he was a member of Beyond Death.

Alex Webster
Webster performing in 2010
Webster performing in 2010
Background information
Born (1969-10-25) October 25, 1969 (age 54)
Akron, New York, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • songwriter
Instrument(s)Bass
Years active1987–present
Member of
Formerly of
Spouse(s)
Alison Webster
(m. 2001)

Music career edit

Webster was born in Akron, New York. When describing his relationship with music, he has stated "I just always liked music since I was a little kid. Music was always a soundtrack in my head to things going on in my life. I always wanted to play. I wanted to play drums when I was about three. I made a drum out of an old butter container and hit it with tinker toys. I was going to make music. Most people who are musicians didn't have to have anyone tell them to do it. I would never push music on someone, because it is something that doesn't need to be pushed. If you're going to make music, you're going to make it."[1]

Webster was originally part of the band Beyond Death, with ex-Cannibal Corpse guitarist Jack Owen, in 1987. Both met up with Chris Barnes, Bob Rusay and Paul Mazurkiewicz, all of whom were in the band Tirant Sin. Webster was the one to come up with the band's name, Cannibal Corpse. In an interview, he said that he thought it was a very catchy name for a band. He has a reputation for being friendly to his fans, often asking questions, and genuinely caring what his fans think, regularly answering questions on the band's forum.[2] Webster also recorded bass for Hate Eternal, Erik Rutan's death metal band. Rutan is the producer for Cannibal Corpse's albums that were released between 2006 and 2012, Kill, Evisceration Plague, and Torture. In 2005, Alex was contacted by guitarist Ron Jarzombek about a possible collaboration which became Blotted Science, an all-instrumental extreme metal project. They released their debut album, The Machinations of Dementia, in the fall of 2007.

When asked about his favorite Cannibal Corpse song, Webster answered: "I don't know, it would be hard to choose one that's the "best", but one of my favorites is "From Skin to Liquid", mainly because it was so different for us. It showed we didn't necessarily have to be playing at warp drive and have gory lyrics to be heavy."[3]

Bass playing edit

Webster is recognized as an extremely experienced and talented metal bass player. He can play at exceptionally fast speeds, and does a signature 3-finger walk (a "galloping" finger motion). He revealed in a making-of DVD for Cannibal Corpse's album The Wretched Spawn that he initially started playing guitar but changed to bass because he felt he could master the instrument more quickly. Unlike usual heavy metal bassists that play at high speeds, Webster is able to play his instrument without the use of a pick, while still retaining a clean clear tone, which helps maintain clarity in the complex and very fast lines he plays in conjunction with the heavily distorted guitars of Cannibal Corpse.

"When I was six years old I took some acoustic guitar lessons. It didn't really work out because I was six and didn't really want to learn "Mary Had a Little Lamb," and those were the kind of songs I was being taught. I wanted to play Elvis. I liked all the old 50s music. My dad had a bunch of old 50s records because that's when he was a teenager. Those were what I listened to, because when you're six you don't have the money to go buy stuff, so I just listened to his records. Nobody was going to teach me how to play the guitar like that, out in the country where I lived. I just gave it up until I was 13 or 14. I met a kid in school who played bass in the high school jazz band. He wanted to make some extra money and it was five bucks a lesson. He did a good job too. His name was Mike Hudson. I don't know if he plays anymore. I lost touch with him. He's the one that got me started. I always wanted to play in a band, and to learn how to play lead guitar was going to take like five years. But I really liked the sound of the bass. I liked AC/DC and figured I could do that. I thought I could learn Cliff Williams' bass parts faster than I could learn to play Angus Young's guitar parts. It was motivation, because I wanted to be in a band. I never wanted to sit around and play music by myself. I wanted to play with other people, and the fastest route to that was playing an instrument that wasn't a lead instrument, and bass was that. Now I've learned to make it a lot more difficult. I've made my job a lot harder than it probably needs to be. But it's just fun. In the beginning my concern was playing in a band."[1]

"I took some lessons from a friend of mine when I first started. He was in the school jazz band and he taught me the basics. I didn't take lessons for about a year, but I started again when I was a senior in high school. I've had about four different teachers throughout the years, but I never took lessons for more than a few months. I did, however, gain a lot from them and I've tried to learn as much on my own as I can. Anything I can learn about music or bass playing, I'll try to learn. I mean, the more you learn and the more you apply to your playing, it just makes you a better musician."[4]

"I liked the bass player from AC/DC. I really loved the stuff he did. Peter Baltes from Accept was another. I liked the really good guys too, but that seemed out of reach at the beginning. Geddy Lee from Rush and Steve Harris were like gods to me. Billy Sheehan was from Buffalo, and we all knew about Billy before the rest of the country did. Billy has been a legend in Buffalo for a long, long time. He's still one of my favorites. By the time I was listening to Cliff Burton I was getting a little better. I had been playing a year or so before I started listening to Metallica. I thought he was great. I always thought he could have been a little louder on those albums though. That's the thing. In thrash metal or any other kind of metal where the bass is playing exactly what the guitar is playing, automatically the bass went down in the mix. If you notice those older bands like Accept, the bass is doing something that's a little bit different from the guitar. It's more with the kick drum instead of playing the riff the guitar is doing. In thrash metal and then death metal, the bass player always wound up playing what the guitar player was doing most of the time. It's been a decade long fight for us to be heard in the mix."[1]

"I'd like to do some instructional material, but I'm still not sure if I'll try and do a DVD or book though. It will probably be easier to do a DVD, actually. Hopefully I'll be able to come up with some stuff that's worth releasing. I definitely won't put anything out until I'm sure it's of really high quality, and full of lots of good information. Also, you might have heard about the possibility of us doing a tab book. Well, we still haven't found a publisher for that."[5]

"I practice the most when I have something I'm working on that's difficult, like one of Pat's songs for example. I usually won't practice for more than 3 or 4 hours a day unless I'm really inspired, or I have some kind of deadline."[6]

Besides playing bass, Alex has also contributed to lyric and music writing on many occasions for the band, some examples being "Fucked with a Knife," "Puncture Wound Massacre," "I Will Kill You," "Devoured by Vermin," "Unleashing the Bloodthirsty," "Scavenger consuming death," "Scourge of iron" and "Murder Worship".

Webster is also known for his bass guitar solos/fills in such songs as "Addicted to Vaginal Skin", "Mangled", "The Undead Will Feast", "Crushing the Despised", "Fucked with a Knife", "Hammer Smashed Face", "The Discipline of Revenge", "Put Them To Death", "She Was Asking For It", "Staring Through The Eyes of the Dead", "Bloodlands", "They Deserve to Die", "Rabid", and "The Strangulation Chair".

From 2013 to 2015 Webster wrote a monthly tuition column for the UK's Bass Guitar Magazine.

Equipment edit

Webster currently uses Spector 'Alex Webster Signature Edition'[7] (based on Euro 5lx basses), DR Strings, and His signature Hammer Smashed Bass pickups by Seymour Duncan paired with a Darkglass Electronics tone capsule preamp wired for 18 volt operation. All of his signature basses have been set up by scooter at Granville guitars and are wired using 4 single stack knobs for reliability on a heavy tour rotation. (1 volume with both pick ups hardwired and 3 tone controls) Before his signature model, he used Modulus Quantum 5 and Spector Euro 5lx basses. He also used a white 1987 Fender Precision bass on the albums Eaten Back to Life and Butchered at Birth, an Ibanez Sabre SB900 on the album Tomb of the Mutilated, an Ibanez Soundgear SR1500 on The Bleeding and both a 1971 Precision Bass with EMG Pickups and a Badass bridge on the C# songs as well as a Spector NS Series 5-string bass that was rented on Vile. In the past, he used an Ampeg SVT200T with an Ampeg 8x10 cabinet, then switched to the SVT-4PRO head. Later, he signed an endorsement deal with SWR and used 2 SWR SM-1500 and 2 SWR Megoliath 8x10 cabinets. Currently he is using Aguilar DB 751 and DB810 cabinets. Not much of an effects user, however on the album Torture he stated that he began using a Darkglass Microtubes B3K switched to a B7kU (2016) overdrive pedal and commented that it's the heaviest tone he has achieved yet. He also uses a Radial Bassbone and a Boss TU-2 Chromatic Tuner, and a Seymour Duncan Bass Studio Compressor.

Personal life edit

Webster lives with his wife in Oregon, U.S. Alex told AllAboutTheRock.co.uk "the other guys all still live in Florida in the Tampa area. [...] I’ve just been going out whenever I need to do stuff with the band and then living here the rest of the time."[8]

He has his own home recording studio, where he recorded all the bass tracks for 2021's Violence Unimagined due to travel restrictions imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic. Webster told AllAboutTheRock.com: "The recording sessions for this new album took place last year around April to June [...] That was right in the middle of the most anxiety filled time of the pandemic – it was still a very new thing and all these travel restrictions were coming in place and nobody knew what was coming next. So I ended up staying and recording my tracks at my home studio in Oregon. [...] I know how to record at home and that wound up not being a problem [...] The technology exists these days to make remote recording a pretty seamless operation, you can record a Direct Line from your bass into ProTools and then you can send the recorded tracks over [to] the studio where they can be re-amped and that’s what Erik [Rutan] did! I actually recorded two channels, one was a clean Direct Line and the other was a Direct Line that had an Overdrive through a Darkglass pedal. But anyway, I think he just used the clean channel then put it into an Ampeg with a Darkglass pedal in front of that."[8]

Personality edit

Webster is prominently featured in the heavy metal documentary Metal: A Headbanger's Journey where he displays a depth of music knowledge.

Toby McCasker of Australian Heavy Metal media site Sinister.com said of Webster "Cannibal Corpse's bassist Alex Webster exudes a quiet, intellectual and particularly amiable persona which seems so at odds with the music that he is a driving force behind that one is immediately reminded of the old adage about not judging books by their covers."[9]

In an interview with About.com's Chad Bower, Webster said "I'm not very proud of myself if I lose my temper. That's something I would love to be able to change. I've worked on it throughout my life and hope to eventually have it conquered and react as peacefully as Gandhi in the worst situation."[1]

Webster is agnostic,[10] though he was "brought up with a fairly religious upbringing [which was] Protestant, Methodist".

Favourite music and musical influences edit

Webster has often stated that he is a big fan of Slayer:

"I got into them back in the mid 80's. I learned about them through word of mouth from some other metalheads at my school. They were the best of the evil thrash bands at the time. I can't really stress how much I and the other Cannibal guys listened to Slayer. They were a massive influence on us."[11]

In a 2006 interview with FourteenG.net,[4] Webster said that his favorite song lyrics would be "anything by Slayer", and that if any band could cover a Cannibal Corpse song, it would be Slayer.

Webster's five all-time favorite albums are (in descending order) Accept's Restless and Wild, Morbid Angel's Altars of Madness, Metallica's Master of Puppets, Iron Maiden's Powerslave and Slayer's Reign in Blood,[12] and, in a 2006 interview with LambGoat.com, Webster named his five favourite albums of the past five years as Spawn of Possession's Cabinet, Necrophagist's Epitaph, Aeon's Bleeding the False, Hate Eternal's I, Monarch, and Spastic Ink's Ink Compatible.[13]

As previously stated, Webster named the Morbid Angel album Altars of Madness one of his all-time favourites, citing "Chapel of Ghouls", "Immortal Rites", and "Visions from the Darkside" as his favorite tracks in particular; though prior to naming these three tracks, Webster states that "that whole album is so amazing, it's hard to choose [a favourite]".

Aside from Metal, Webster has also expressed a liking for Ohio New Wave band Devo,[4] and, when asked what a musical guilty pleasure of his was, he replied "there's some good songs from the first No Doubt album".[4]

Honors edit

The prehistoric giant marine worm species Websteroprion armstrongi is partially named after Webster.[14] Luke Parry, one of the scientists who described the species, said of the name, "Mats and I are both massive metalheads and think Alex Webster is a monstrously good bass player... (He) just seemed like the perfect fit for a giant worm with saw-like jaws."[15]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Interview with Alex Webster of Cannibal Corpse – Cannibal Corpse interview". Heavymetal.about.com. June 14, 2010. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
  2. ^ "Official Cannibal Corpse forum". cannibalcorpse.org. Archived from the original on September 11, 2011. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
  3. ^ "Official Cannibal Corpse forum". cannibalcorpse.org. Archived from the original on October 2, 2011. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
  4. ^ a b c d Karma E. "Cannibal Corpse interview". Fourteeng.net. Archived from the original on August 24, 2011. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
  5. ^ "Official Cannibal Corpse forum". cannibalcorpse.org. Archived from the original on September 11, 2011. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
  6. ^ "Official Cannibal Corpse forum". cannibalcorpse.org. Archived from the original on October 2, 2011. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
  7. ^ "Stuart Spector Designs, LTD – Makers of electric and bass guitars". Spectorbass.com. Archived from the original on September 19, 2012. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
  8. ^ a b Glashan, Rory (April 8, 2021). "Alex Webster of Cannibal Corpse Interview". All About The Rock. Retrieved June 24, 2023.
  9. ^ "SINISTER ONLINE - Confession: Alex Webster of Cannibal Corpse". Archived from the original on September 27, 2007.
  10. ^ Hartmann, Graham (August 7, 2012). "Cannibal Corpse's Alex Webster Discusses 'Torture,' Summer Slaughter + Religion". Loudwire. Retrieved June 24, 2023.
  11. ^ "Cyanide-Assassin's Journal – Alex Webster (Cannibal Corpse) interview". Last.fm. Archived from the original on December 4, 2007. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
  12. ^ Staff, Invisible Oranges StaffInvisible Oranges (November 5, 2012). "Interview: Cannibal Corpse's Alex Webster". Invisible Oranges - The Metal Blog. Retrieved June 24, 2023.
  13. ^ "Cannibal Corpse interview // Interviews // Features // Lambgoat". Lambgoat.com. July 15, 2006. Archived from the original on July 16, 2011. Retrieved September 14, 2011.
  14. ^ Eriksson, Mats E.; Parry, Luke A.; Rudkin, David M. (February 21, 2017). "Earth's oldest 'Bobbit worm' – gigantism in a Devonian eunicidan polychaete". Scientific Reports. 7 (1): 43061. Bibcode:2017NatSR...743061E. doi:10.1038/srep43061. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 5318920. PMID 28220886. S2CID 12024958.
  15. ^ This 400-Million-Year-Old Worm Monster Is Metal as Hell, by Rae Paoletta, at Gizmodo; published February 21, 2017; retrieved March 29, 2017