CHRIS CAFFERY Says 'There's A Possibility' SAVATAGE Will Do 'Something More' After WACKEN Performance
Published: December 21, 2014
Classic American metal band
SAVATAGE, which was active from 1978 until 2002, will reunite for an exclusive European appearance at next year's edition of the
Wacken Open Air festival, set to take place July 30 - August 1, 2015 in Wacken, Germany.
Asked in a brand new interview with
Vanyaland if
SAVATAGE has any plans for beyond
Wacken for either live shows or new material,
SAVATAGE guitarist
Chris Caffery said: "I'm gonna put it this way: for 12 years, 13 years, I've been waiting for my band to play again. We're playing again. I don't know what's going to happen after that [
laughs], but there were people that were putting a fork in it, and we're getting up and not just running a marathon, were running in the Olympics with this festival being what it is. I'm not going to make any predictions, but let's just say there's a possibility that something more will happen after
Wacken — that's all I can say. And nothing would make me happier."
SAVATAGE's last album release,
"Poets And Madmen", in 2001 was highlighted by
Jon Oliva's return as lead vocalist, replacing
Zak Stevens, who left the band citing family reasons, and the departure of
Al Pitrelli, who accepted an offer to join
MEGADETH in 2000.
Pitrelli did record solos for some songs prior to his departure. Another very limited U.S. tour followed, supported by
FATES WARNING in the early shows, and then
NEVERMORE for the remainder. Around this time,
Jon chose
Zak's replacement in the form of
Damond Jiniya (
DIET OF WORMS).
Damond performed
Zak's parts on tour, with
Jon having an increased vocal role in proceedings.
Asked in a 2013 interview why he thinks that
TRANS-SIBERIAN ORCHESTRA has reached such a huge audience but
SAVATAGE in the '80s didn't,
Oliva told
Songfacts: "Well, I think what happened with that mainly is that the name
SAVATAGE, we ran the course with it. And because of some bad mistakes that we made business-wise in our younger days before
Paul O'Neill, we never could quite recover from that and get into the bigger level. I mean, we did well. We did really good in Europe. But we never got
SAVATAGE to that level, and after 20-some odd years and then losing
Criss [
Oliva, guitar] in the middle of that, we just weren't ready to continue. The fatal thing that happened was with the song '12/24' off the
'Dead Winter Dead' album [1995]. We sent the song out around Christmastime, and a station down in Florida started playing it, and it became a hit down here.
Atlantic Records sent that CD to every radio station in America and nobody would play it. They said, 'Why didn't you play the song?' It's like, 'Well,
SAVATAGE, that's a heavy metal band from the '80s. We don't play that shit.' They never even listened to it. You know how we know? Because the next year we sent the exact same song and put a Christmas tree on the cover and an angel and called it '
TRANS-SIBERIAN ORCHESTRA,' and it was #1 on 500 radio stations. So that just goes to show you that what was holding
SAVATAGE back was
SAVATAGE. It wasn't the songwriting. It was the same,
Paul and I, and before that,
Criss,
Paul, and I. You know, the proof was in the pudding.
'12/24', which is technically a
SAVATAGE song from the album
"Dead Winter Dead", has sold millions of records. I've got them hanging on my wall. But when it was released as
SAVATAGE, it sold 30,000. So what does that tell you? It tells you that the name's turning people off for some reason, and that's what it was. Now look at what's happened.
TSO is one of the biggest bands in the world, it's unbelievable."
He continued: "It's funny to me, because it's
SAVATAGE. [
laughs] I get a kick out of this. I'm like, 'It's
SAVATAGE with tuxedos and a bunch of other people from all around the world.' We bring in people from all around the world, which makes us kind of international, which I think is cool. But the thing that sells it is the music,
Paul's stories, and
Paul's poetry and the lyrics, and the way that
Paul and I work together when we write. There's a chemistry there."