Casey Chaos Explained

Casey Chaos
Birth Name:Karim George Chmielinski
Birth Date:9 October 1970
Birth Place:Trenton, New York, U.S.
Occupation:Singer, songwriter
Years Active:1982–present
Current Member Of:Amen

Karim George Chmielinski (born October 9, 1970), known professionally as Casey Chaos, is an American musician, best known as the lead singer of Amen. His music has encompassed a number of styles, including hardcore punk, death rock and nu metal.

Early life

Karim Chmielinski was born on October 9, 1970, in Trenton, New York.[1] [2] [3] When he was seven, his parents separated and Casey moved with his mother to Melbourne, Florida. By age 10 Casey was touring professionally as a skater.

Career

1982–1990: Disorderly Conduct

In 1982, fellow skateboarder Duane Peters played him a tape by the band Black Flag. Chmielinski became enough of a fan that he started corresponding with Henry Rollins and his friend, Ian MacKaye.[4] After seeing Black Flag for the first time live, Casey's life was forever changed. He then decided to start his own band. He created Casey and the Skate Punx, and recruited bassist Scot Lade, drummer Bill Irwin (drums) and his childhood friend from New York, guitarist Ken Decter (aka Duke Decter). They later changed the band name to 'Disorderly Conduct'.

They began writing songs and playing the Florida punk scene. Between his powerful voice and the band's high-energy presence, they became well-known and popular, with people traveling from as far as Atlanta to catch their shows.[5] Between 1984 and 1986, their songs were included in three punk compilation albums.[6] [7] [8] In 1986, they independently released the album Amen.[9] That was followed a year later by the six-track EP Atrocity.

1990–present: Amen

In 1990, Chaos and Decter moved to Los Angeles, changed their band name to 'Amen'. Chaos met Rikk Agnew, who invited him to sit in as bassist on a concert by his band Christian Death.[10] He then asked Chaos to sing on his new solo album,[11] and play bass on Christian Death's new album, Iconologia, for which Chaos also wrote or co-wrote three songs.[12]

Chaos then wrote and recorded the album Slave, for which he played all of the instruments.[13] He released it under the Amen name in 1994 and began to put together a new lineup: Paul Fig and Sonny Mayo on guitar, John Fahnestock (aka John Tumor) on bass and Shannon Larkin on drums.

The band was eventually signed to Roadrunner Records which, in 1999, released a split EP with Misfits,[14] the five-track EP Coma America[15] and their debut album, Amen.[16] To support the album, Amen went on a tour of North America with Slipknot, Machine Head and Coal Chamber, among others.[17] Amen parted ways with Roadrunner records and they were quickly picked up by This Is An I Am Recording!, the Virgin Records sub-label of producer Ross Robinson and went into the studio to record the album 'We Have Come For Your Parents'. In 2001, this album was released and was met with critical acclaim.[18] After the release of 'We Have Come For Your Parents' Roadrunner re-released Amen due to the popularity of the band and press that they were getting.

In March 2002, Chaos announced that Amen had been dropped from Virgin after internal restructuring of their recording division.[19] [20] Amen had just recorded 20+ tracks for their new album and Virgin refused to release them. Amen went onto tour whilst they searched for a label to release new material under.

In 2004, Daron Malakian of System of a Down had founded his own label, through Columbia Records, called EatUrMusic Records. Malakian and Chaos had met at the 2002 Big Day Out festival in Australia and had become friends. Chaos put together a new lineup, recruiting bassist Scott Sorry, drummer Luke Johnson, and guitarists Matt Montgomery (aka Piggy D.) and Rich Jones. Amen was the first band Malakian signed and the label released Amen's Death Before Musick in 2004, along with a video for the single "California's Bleeding".[21] The band then embarked on a world tour in promotion of this release.

In 2005 Chaos released a compilation box set. This included previously unreleased Amen and Disorderly Conduct track in addition to remixes of previously released songs. The 4-CD boxed set was a limited edition release of 2,000 copies Pisstory, A Catalogue of Accidents/A Lifetime of Mistakes, which was a .[22]

In 2007, Amen were invited to perform on The Henry Rollins Show, a weekly talk show hosted by musician Henry Rollins on IFC. Amen performed three songs, two of which aired live: "Coma America" and "Liberation", with the third "Another Planet" release in IFC.com. The performance aired internationally on July 13, 2007, on the 14th episode of Season 2. Between the two songs, Chaos made political death threats and it became the first of the show's episodes to have material cut by IFC, although it ran the full performance on its website. Amen then went on a full tour of Europe including a co-headline slot with Kreator, at the Damnation Festival hosted at the University of Leeds. Amen booked a full European tour.

In 2014, Chaos went back into the studio with Amen to begin recording a new album with Ross Robinson with Dave Lombardo on drums.[23] Due to former commitments the album recording was not completed with Ross Robinson and Amen went on to perform at Knotfest in support of Slipknot.[24] In late 2019 Chaos went back into the studio to continue work on the latest Amen album in the UK before Corona Virus put a hold on the recording.

Since 2002

Chaos collaborated with Twiggy Ramirez and members of Queens of the Stone Age on a project called Headband, who recorded music but never released it.[25] Chaos was also a founding member of the band Scars on Broadway.

Chaos produced an EP for The Kinison,[26] working with the band off the back of a demo they passed Chaos when he was touring with Amen.

Chaos then founded the band Scum, with black metal icons Samoth and Cosmocrator from Zyklon, Bård Faust from Emperor, and Happy Tom from Turbonegro. Scum eventually released an album, 2005's Gospels for the Sick,[27] which was nominated in the metal category at Norway's 2006 Alarm Awards.

In 2005, Chaos recorded a song for No End In Sight, an album by the band This Is Menace.[28] Amen was then meant to tour with the band, but all dates were canceled when Chaos had to undergo emergency surgery to repair 'multiple ruptured hernias'. When he got out of hospital, Amen joined the band Sick of It All to fulfill its European tour commitment.

In 2006, Casey Chaos received a Grammy Award certificate in recognition of his participation "as a songwriter on the Grammy Award-winning recording "B.Y.O.B."[29]

Chaos was part of the supergroup Ross Robinson assembled to write the soundtrack for the House of Shock documentary. The documentary is yet to be released.[30]

Discography

Albums

With Disorderly Conduct:

With Amen:

Solo:

With Scum:

EPs (with Amen)

Singles (with Amen)

Soundtrack credits

Compilation inclusions

Guest appearances

DVDs

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: October 9, 2018 . Facebook . live . https://archive.today/20230512182853/https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10214566611933690&set=a.10200294633263143 . 2023-05-12 . 2023-05-12 . . "Thank You All For The Amazing Birthday Wishes ! From The Ole' Bill.".
  2. Web site: Stingley . Mick . June 2, 2004 . KNAC.COM - Features - Interview With Amen Vocalist C . 2023-05-06 . www.knac.com.
  3. Web site: Chaos . Casey . Socks . Matt . 2015-03-28 . How Black Flag Changed My Life – by Casey Chaos . 2023-05-31 . louder . en.
  4. Web site: Interview with Metalhammer . Wayback Machine, caseychaosofficial . https://web.archive.org/web/20140601093959/http://www.officialcaseychaos.com/press/2004/MH_05.2004/06.jpg . February 17, 2022. June 1, 2014 .
  5. Book: Suren . Bob . Crate Digger: An Obsession with Punk Records, pg 49 . May 15, 2015 . Microcosm . 978-1-62106-194-6 . February 17, 2022.
  6. Web site: Various – There's A Method To Our Madness . discogs.com . October 31, 1986 . Discogs . February 18, 2022.
  7. Web site: Various – I'm Buck Naked! . discogs.com . June 1984 . Discogs . February 18, 2022.
  8. Web site: Various – Flipside Vinyl Fanzine Vol 2 . discogs.com . October 31, 1985 . Discogs . February 17, 2022.
  9. Web site: Disorderly Conduct – Amen . discogs.com . October 31, 1986 . Discogs . February 17, 2022.
  10. Web site: Christian Death* – Sleepless Nights – Live 1990 . discogs.com . Discogs . February 20, 2022.
  11. Web site: Rikk Agnew Turtle . allmusic.com . AllMusic . February 20, 2022.
  12. Web site: Christian Death – Iconologia . discogs.com . October 31, 1993 . Discogs . February 18, 2022.
  13. Web site: Amen – Slave . discogs.com . October 31, 1994 . Discogs . February 18, 2022.
  14. Web site: Misfits / Amen – Frontline Volume 3 – The Singles Club . discogs.com . October 31, 1999 . Discogs . February 18, 2022.
  15. Web site: Amen – Coma America . discogs.com . October 31, 1999 . Discogs . February 18, 2022.
  16. Web site: Amen – Amen . discogs.com . October 31, 1999 . Discogs . February 18, 2022.
  17. Web site: Amen's Concert History . concertarchives.org . Concert Archives . February 18, 2022.
  18. Web site: Amen – We Have Come For Your Parents . discogs.com . Discogs . February 18, 2022.
  19. Web site: AMEN Officially Part With Virgin Records, March 2002 . blabbermouth.net . March 4, 2002 . Blabbermouth . February 18, 2022.
  20. Web site: EMI TO SLASH 1,800 JOBS, March 2002 . nme.com. March 20, 2002 . NME. June 22, 2022.
  21. Web site: Amen – Death Before Musick . discogs.com . Discogs . February 18, 2022.
  22. Web site: Casey Chaos – Pisstory, A Catalogue of Accidents/A Lifetime of Mistakes . discogs.com . Discogs . February 18, 2022.
  23. Web site: Former SLAYER Drummer DAVE LOMBARDO Joins AMEN, June 2014 . blabbermouth.net . June 11, 2014 . Blabbermouth . February 19, 2022.
  24. Web site: AMEN Performs New Song At KNOTFEST . blabbermouth.net . Blabbermouth . February 19, 2022.
  25. Web site: Casey Chaos Interview, Nov 2003 . basetendencies.com . Base Tendencies (Jeordie White) . February 18, 2022.
  26. Web site: The Kinison – Mortgage Is Bank . discogs.com . Discogs . February 18, 2022.
  27. Web site: Scum (7) – Gospels For The Sick . discogs.com . Discogs . February 18, 2022.
  28. Web site: This Is Menace – No End In Sight . discogs.com . April 25, 2005 . Discogs . February 20, 2022.
  29. Web site: Grammy Certificate, image . Wayback Machine, Officialcaseychaos . February 19, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140605053154/http://www.officialcaseychaos.com/press/ChaosGrammy.jpg . June 5, 2014 . dead.
  30. Web site: Hartmann . Graham . Members of Slayer, Exodus + More Collaborate...Jan. 2013 . Loudwire . January 3, 2013 . loudwire.com . February 19, 2022.
  31. Web site: Hartmann . Graham . Members of Slayer, Exodus + More Collaborate...Jan. 2013 . Loudwire . January 3, 2013 . loudwire.com . February 19, 2022.
  32. Web site: Various – LAUNCH . discogs.com . Discogs . February 18, 2022.
  33. Web site: Ministry / Paul Barker – Fix . discogs.com . April 10, 2012 . Discogs . February 20, 2022.
  34. Web site: Christian Death Featuring: Rozz Williams* – Live . discogs.com . Discogs . February 20, 2022.