Coming off a very successful U.S. tour and the release of its first studio album in ten years,
"Black Dawn", the time has come for founding member and world-renowned drummer
Carmine Appice to re-energize and rebuild
CACTUS, the band once heralded by critics as America's answer to
LED ZEPPELIN.
Appice has announced two new members to the legendary band's lineup: bassist
Jim Caputo and guitarist
Paul Warren.
Caputo replaces bassist
Pete Bremy, who has left
CACTUS to pursue other projects.
Warren, best known as lead guitarist for
Rod Stewart,
Tina Turner and
Joe Cocker, will be the band's new guitarist for touring, taking over for founding member
Jim McCarty.
McCarty, who remains a writing and recording member of
CACTUS, is unable to tour with the band due to health reasons. Lead vocalist extraordinare
Jimmy Kunes and harmonica wizard
Randy Pratt, both of whom joined when the band re-grouped in 2006, remain in the lineup. "Nearly five decades after I formed this band, the time has come to reinvent
CACTUS once again," says
Appice, who also still drums for
VANILLA FUDGE,
THE APPICE BROTHERS and
THE PLATINUM ROCK ALL STARS. Adds
Appice: "The music remains the same;
CACTUS is still 'hot and sweaty,' and the quality of the band's musicianship is as strong as ever." "I saw the original
CACTUS live a few times, and they absolutely killed it," says
Warren. "That was one of the great bands of the era, and they are still a great band, today. I am excited, and honored, to playwith such a historic band!”
Warren, who has his own successful solo band, is a native of Detroit who considers
Jim McCarty one of his biggest musical influences. "Filling in for
Jim McCarty will be a challenge. Not only is he a founding member, he is a brilliant guitarist — one of the best to ever come out of Detroit.
Jimmy could never be replaced. I plan to honor, and pay homage to his work with
CACTUS while still bringing some of my own 'Detroit attitude' to the legendary music of this band."
Caputo has worked in a myriad of national touring acts, including the
Appice brothers'
"Drum Wars" show, which includes both
Carmine and his brother,
Vinny. After a few years of complete inactivity,
CACTUS returned in 2016 with
"Black Dawn", a new studio album and its first in almost seven years. Featuring the blistering riff-rock that the band built its reputation on,
"Black Dawn" is classic
CACTUS with a fresh new energy that the band has not had since its heyday in the early 1970s.
CACTUS has had a long and turbulent history. Formed in 1970 from the ashes of
VANILLA FUDGE by
Carmine Appice and
Tim Bogert, the initial lineup also featured
McCarty and vocalist
Rusty Day. (
Appice and
Bogert had originally planned a new band with
Jeff Beck which was put off until 1973, because of
Beck's near-fatal car crash in 1969.)
Jim McCarty had come from
MITCH RYDER & THE DETROIT WHEELS and was playing with
THE BUDDY MILES EXPRESS.
Tim and
Carmine also found vocalist
Day in
THE AMBOY DUKES with
Ted Nugent. Together, the four musicians formed
CACTUS, named after the peyote cactus, which provided a key ingredient in mind-altering drugs. While
CACTUS saw success from the start and soon built a loyal fan base, by early 1973, the band had collapsed mainly due to lack of real support from its label, and the fact that
Beck was now ready play with
Carmine and
Tim. It would not be until 2006, three decades after the tragic death of
Rusty Day, that the group reformed with
Pratt and
Kunes. When
Tim Bogert was forced into retirement after a serious motorcycle accident,
Pete Bremy jumped in both in
CACTUS and
VANILLA FUDGE. Photo courtesy of
CACTUS Facebook page
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