Kansas City's Load Point Pull came together in November of 1997 when
frontman Frank Campobasso and bassist, Doug Kenworthy met through mutual
friends. Finding a common bond with their mutual love of heavy music, the
pair quickly developed a friendship and working relationship that would
take them on a decade long (and counting) ride."We set out to build a band that would create a fresh sound and fill what
was missing in the music industry, ' says Campobasso. "Those were the
days when music was completely dismal and everything was up in the air in
the industry. Okay, well, the start of all of that anyway." The duo
began working on what would be their first demo at Redhouse Studios in
Lawrence, KS with Ed Rose (Puddle Of Mudd, Motion City Soundtrack, Senses
Fail) and shortly thereafter picked up drummer Bobby Hoskins and
guitarist, John Pyne.Early 1998 saw the release of Load Point Pull's debut effort, 'We've Come
To Take What's Ours' - a bombastic mix of melodic hard rock, metal and in
your face aggression, the band made a solid impact on the Midwestern heavy
music scene. Simply put, They Had Arrived. The band's first gig was with
Puddle Of Mudd and they spent the rest of the next two years going out
with acts such as Creed, Stabbing Westward, Vince Neil and Anthrax among
others. In short order Load Point Pull had become the band to watch.The band spent the next few years on the road touring with anyone that
would share a stage with them all the while writing material for what was
to be their second album. After years of nonstop touring and eventual band
members changes the members of Load Point Pull decided to end the band's
run a few years into the new century.. "Our friendships were much more
important to us than all the stress and inner turmoil that we had building
up, "relates Campobasso. "It was better to get out at the right time and
keep the things that meant the most to us intact rather than letting
everything boil over and losing it all."The guys spent the next few years hanging out and playing in cover bands
to pass the time and keep their chops up. "We started hanging out
together more and more and we had friends and fans telling us that we
needed to get back together again," says bassist Kenworthy. "And before
long that hunger was building again so we knew that we had to finish what
we started. In mid 2005 the duo got ahold of guitarist Pyne and drummer
Tommy St. John, who had spent a little time in Load Point Pull during the
band's first run. They also added guitarist Ryan Westward to the fold and
began work on their second album, 'Down In Flames.' Before the album's
completion, Pyne and St. John found themselves on the street and replaced
by new guitarist Denny Sipes and original stickman Bobby Hoskins.
Recording at Doug Kenworthy's own facility, The Digital Edge, the band
could work at their own leisure and spent time going over old ideas and
adding a new twist to them as well as writing all new material. The band
recorded everything and slimmed the album down to their 11 strongest
songs.With 'Down In Flames' what you get is a lethal mix of industrial fused
modern metal delivered with the subtlety of a sledgehammer to the skull.
Opener "Alive" is an explosive melodic metal masterpiece that lays the
groundwork for what's to come and in doing so slams straight into the
album's first single and video "Shatter'd World", which details a loner's
battle with society and his surroundings. "The Cause Of It All" is a
grinding, ugly scream for help from the viewpoint of someone who can't
deal with life's tragedy while "Out Of Reach" instructs the listener to
never give up on your dreams. In "The Good Life", singer Campobasso
delivers his verses with a tongue twisting ferocity while in total
contrast the chorus is highly infectious and memorable while "SSDD" is the
stadium anthem for the new age. "Change" starts life as a beautifully
haunting ballad but segues into a heart pounding rocker before ending in a
melancholic round and the album's closer, "Family" leaves you with a stern
warning - don't fuck with the family, you haven't earned the right.Load Point Pull has currently added Toby Foulk on drums from the Kansas City Metal band “Swillâ€. Toby recorded the drums on the new “Element “ EP that will be released the summer of 2008. Toby seems to be the missing link we’ve been searching for, he’s a monster drummer and a great human being, ‘ says Campobasso.Load Point Pull has seen the top of the mountain and they've come close to
the brass ring. It looks like the second time around will be the charm
for this bunch of Midwestern metalheads.
Heavy rock and metal never died, and it never will if local thundergods Load Point Pull have anything to say about it. The band's self-made debut, We've Come to Take What's Ours, recalls the heavy days of the early '80s before immense egos and sinful amounts of hairspray came to define the genre. And yet the band also pulls out some modern tricks from the hard rock world within its 11 massive songs. Imagine Sebastian Bach of Skid Row fronting a supergroup comprised of various members of Mötley Crüe, Dokken and several latter day Ozzy sidemen and you might get close to Load Point Pull's pummeling sounds. Standouts include the slow burner "Rain," the beefy "Lifetime" and the over-the-top theatrics of "Sentimental Genocide." Load Point Pull just might be poised for the return of hard rock's next wave. --As reviewed in PitchWeekly by Jeff Brown. Reprinted with permission of the author.
Load Point Pull-We've Come To Take What's Ours Rating: 91/100
Load Point Pull (L.P.P.) have only been together since January of '98 and are already causing quite a stir in the hard rock world and for good reason. Their brand of metal is very infectious yet still have a heavy ballsy sound that reminds of Skid Row and LA Guns. Sentimental Genocide is being touted as the single off this release and has received rotation on various radio stations from Salt Lake City to Kansas City. Actually that's not even the best song ( in my opinion of course) on this CD. Monkey, Rush, Stray Bullet, Prick or Lifetime are just as worthy tunes. Rain is another song getting some rotation and is good also. The real gem on this CD though is the bonus track which is a medley of the Go-Go's hits. I'm sure they've taken some good natured ribbing for doing that but what the hell, it works. What really makes L.P.P. stand out in my opinion is Frank Campobasso's stellar vocals. He's got a very powerful voice that really carries well. Excellent sound on this CD doesn't hurt either. L.P.P is one of the top unsigned bands I've heard in a while and I'd definitely recommend this to all fans of hard rock.
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