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Danzig with Mr. D? Nah
By Dave Wedge
Friday, February 25, 2005

Despite being at the forefront of the underground black metal movement for 20 years, Glenn Danzig insists he's no devil worshiper.
     ``I don't worship Satan. You know who I worship? Me,'' the brash 49-year-old metal maestro said. ``I don't buy into any of that religion crap. All the religions just want to discount each other. It becomes a business.''
     Former vocalist for seminal punk outfit The Misfits, Danzig, who plays the Roxy in Boston on Monday, has made a career of telling tales from the shadows over power-chord crunch. His brooding, powerful melodies helped pave the way for heavy heroes such as Metallica, Guns 'N Roses and Alice in Chains, while his dark passion and deep vocals have led some to dub him the Jim Morrison of metal.


     ``I don't really see it as dark,'' he said of his music. ``I just see it as life. It's stories.''
     His gloomy style is best described as black poetry. But his goth obsessions have more in common with Black Sabbath and Type O Negative than more theatrical acts such as Marilyn Manson and Slipknot. On ``Black Angel, White Angel,'' from his latest album, ``Circle of Snakes,'' he offers: ``We've lost the light, another night. Kill these days, and make them go away.''
     Other tracks on Danzig's eighth disc are equally bleak, with titles such as ``SkinCarver,'' ``Hellmask,'' ``My Darkness'' and ``When We Were Dead.'' The album's muscular thrash largely is driven by guitarist Tommy Victor, formerly of Prong.
     ``I sing about what I like; if some of it is dark, that's fine,'' Danzig said in a recent phone interview from his home in Los Angeles. ``If people can't get with it, then go away.''
     A self-proclaimed movie buff, he was once considered for the role of Wolverine in the ``X-Men'' movie and is penning a screenplay, tentatively titled ``Gerouge,'' that will explore ``turn-of-the-century New Orleans voodoo.'' The beefy rocker also runs an adult comic book company, Verotik, and writes his own titles including ``Death Dealer,'' ``Satanika'' and ``Jaguar God.''
     ``I wasn't happy with the stuff Marvel or DC (comics) was doing. It wasn't adult enough,'' he said. ``So I started my own company, putting out the craziest, wildest stuff I could find.''
     The Hub gig will be one of only three East Coast dates during which Danzig will reunite with former Misfits compadre Doyle Wolfgang Von Frankenstein for a 30-minute set. The pair played two West Coast dates last year, which marked their first time onstage together in 20 years.
     ``Doyle's a really nice guy. I've always had a good time with him,'' Danzig said. ``When we started rehearsing (Misfits songs), it was definitely a trip back.''
     In the midst of a two-month theater and club tour, Danzig said the recent onstage murder of former Pantera guitarist ``Dimebag'' Darrell Abbott prompted him to take extra security precautions. Abbott, who had toured on bills with Danzig, was gunned down with three others, allegedly by a deranged fan.
     ``Something like this happens, and it's a wake-up call,'' he said. ``I think it was (expletive) that this guy was even allowed to get into the venue with a gun. It's sad.''
     As for catching flak from right-wing conservatives, Danzig takes a laissez faire approach.
     ``This is America,'' he said. ``We believe this; you believe that. Leave me alone.''

( Danzig with Eyes of Fire and Trivium, at Roxy, Monday, 7 p.m. Tickets, $23, at ticketmaster.com. )


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