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Dale Henderson | |
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Born | (1966-01-08) January 8, 1966 (age 58) |
Origin | Venice, Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
Genres | Heavy metal Crossover thrash Hardcore punk Thrash metal |
Occupation(s) | Musician, singer, songwriter |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, guitar |
Years active | 1981–present |
Member of | Beowülf |
Dale Henderson (born January 8, 1966) is an American musician. He is best known as the frontman and guitarist of the crossover thrash band Beowülf where he is the only constant member. He composed the music and wrote the lyrics on all of Beowülf's albums.
Biography
Henderson's musical career began in 1980 with his first band Oblivion which also featured bassist Robert Trujillo from Metallica. Dale went on to form the band Black Sheep which would become Beowulf. The band consisted of former Neighborhood Watch guitarist Mike Jensen, Paul Yamada on bass and Roger DeGiacomi on drums (Mike Jensen’s cousin.) The band played many Venice parties and clubs throughout L.A. in 1981–1982 before DeGiacomi became the band manager and was replaced by Michael Alvarado on drums in 1983, changing the name of the band to Beowülf or BWF (The F being inverted) as they wrote it in Venice "graffiti slang".
Beowülf recorded two albums in the 1980s: Beowülf (1986) and Lost My Head... But I'm Back on the Right Track (1988). They had achieved small success with those albums, but difficulty keeping his bandmates together caused them to disband around 1989; it was the first of many splits. Henderson restarted Beowülf some time later with a renewed lineup. The band signed with Restless Records in 1992 to release two more albums, Un-Sentimental (1993) and 2 Cents (1995), before breaking up once again in 1995. After that split, Henderson started Kool-Whip, who played clubs and released two albums The Now (2000), which was nominated for best rock album at the 2002 L.A. Music Awards, and Dirty Movie (2007).
In the early 2000s, Henderson resurrected Beowülf once again and continues to record and perform with them.
References
External links
Beowülf | |
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Studio albums |
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Related bands | |