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But Coheed and Cambria are hardly newcomers to the game. In fact they're its hands-down winners. Forget concept albums — they're a concept band, and they've been at it in their current incarnation since 2001. Their latest opus, October's No World for Tomorrow, adds another 13 tracks to their haunting, epic musical lore.
For the uninitiated: Although the majority of the band's current lineup began playing together in 1995 under the name Shabutie, six years later came a dramatic shift, at the behest of frontman Claudio Sanchez. As a hobby, he wrote baroque science-fiction tales, and began using them as songwriting fodder. These early vignettes formed part of a larger saga now known as The Amory Wars, and the band was renamed for its two protagonists. Their story has continued since Coheed and Cambria's first album, The Second Stage Turbine Blade, released in 2002.
In a nutshell, Coheed Kilgannon, also sometimes referred to as "the Beast," harbors a virus that could somehow trigger the destruction of the universe. Through his wife, Cambria, he might have passed it on to his children. (The story gets way, way more complicated than that — involving theoretical constructs of good and evil with names like "the Keywork" and "Heaven's Fence.") It's heady, essentially geeky stuff. Sanchez released a series of graphic novels (also under the rubric The Amory Wars) to further explain his cosmology.
It's a little surprising, then, to discover that not everyone in the band was a sci-fi fanatic at its inception. "I mean, I liked it to a certain extent, as much as any boy does — Star Wars, Dune," says bassist Michael Todd. "None of us really grew up playing Dungeons and Dragons or anything."
In fact much of the band's early germination is unexpected. Coheed and Cambria broke out on a national level after a stint on the 2002 punky Warped Tour, and their debut album featured an appearance by Dr. Know of Eighties punk legends the Bad Brains. But Todd contends that punk and hardcore were only minor influences while the bandmates were growing up in Rockland County, New York, near Woodstock. There, he says, the scene was dominated by adults who valued musicianship above all else.
"There were kids' bands, but they were all kids of musicians," Todd recalls. "It was adults playing for adults, not kids playing for kids, and the kids would come and try to hang with the adults. So we've always been known as a band for musicians, because there's always been a lot more expected of us because of where we grew up. I wasn't trying to impress the girls at school; I was trying to hang with the big dogs."
As such, teenage Todd listened to jazz, blues, the Police, and even Ani DiFranco. And, of course, Led Zeppelin, whose mysticism and pure riff power turn up in Coheed and Cambria's sound. And Coheed's occasional logo, comprising a triangle and variously sized circles known as "the Keywork," owes more than a little to Led Zep's Zoso symbols.
But also growing in popularity around the time of the band's first album were the groups that would take charging, emotive rock close to the mainstream. Coheed and Cambria's earliest high-profile touring mates included the Used, Thursday, Thrice, and AFI. With these acts, the band shares bruising, twisted minor chords, soaring melodies, and a distinct aura of fatalism.
But Coheed and Cambria still defy easy categorization. There are their excursions into live improvisation, and their prizing of flawless technical execution. Then there is Sanchez's singing voice, an eerily powerful falsetto that requires instant suspension of disbelief to recognize its terrifying range and expressive power. Add to this a musical climate in nearby New York City that, at the time, favored nouveau garage and dance-rock, and it's little wonder the band was often flying solo.