GARY HOLT On Whether SLAYER Will Ever Reunite Monday June 8 2020, 7:37 PM
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GARY HOLT On Whether SLAYER Will Ever Reunite

Gary Holt   says that   SLAYER 's November 30, 2019 performance at the Forum in Los Angeles was indeed the band's last-ever concert. "To my knowledge, to what I know, it [was the final show]," the guitarist told   Dean Delray 's   "Let There Be Talk"   podcast (hear audio below). "People say, 'Oh, maybe they'll come back in a few years.' I don't know. If it does, if it ever happens, it has nothing to do with me. Someone else would call and say, 'We wanna [do this].' To my knowledge, it's done. And I think it   should   be that way. The band went out fucking on a bang, went out on   SLAYER 's terms, and how many people get to say they did that?"

He continued: "Everybody's happy doing their own thing. I'm happy as fuck. Not that   SLAYER   made me unhappy — I was treated like family — but I'm back with my first family," referring to San Francisco Bay Area thrash metal legends   EXODUS . "I'm back with not my stepbrothers — I'm back with my   real   brothers. And that's where my heart is, and I missed it, and I was missing it more and more all the time."

In 2011,   Holt   began filling in for   Jeff Hanneman   at   SLAYER   live shows, and became the band's full-time co-guitarist as of 2013, while remaining a member of   EXODUS . When   Delray   suggested that no one else could have replaced   Hanneman   as well as   Holt   did,   Gary   responded: "I think there's other guys. I'm not that narcissistic to think that I'm the only guy. I mean, yeah, I had old-school cred. I don't think they could go and get some young kid. Like, 'Who's this fucking 25-year-old dude?' I think there would have been a huge culture shock within the band. I think that was it more than anything — having to be comfortable and know the guy. I was pretty well accepted in the ranks of   SLAYER   fans. There's always someone, like, 'Ah, he fucking doesn't even play   Jeff 's solos.' No, I don't. And no one in the band ever asked me to. And if the band really wanted that, there's a million guys in tribute bands who are nailing every fucking crazy note that   Jeff   ever played, and they would have been a better fit for that. When I first did it, it was supposed to be a short-term thing, and people were, like, 'Oh, cool. We get to see   Gary   put his stamp on it,' and that's what I did."

Asked how he approached the solos in   SLAYER   and whether he actually sat down and wrote out the leads,   Holt   said: "A couple of times I did. I'd work something out usually improv, and then I'd find something I like and I'd stick to it. And then over the last two years, I worked out a solo in   'Seasons [In The Abyss]'   I liked. I was just winging it. I'd look back at   Warren Lee , my guitar tech, and if I did a really good job, he'd be, like, 'That was hot,' and then I'd try something different that didn't work and he'd look at me, like, 'That sucked.' But I tried to keep the vibe there."

He continued: "A lot of the early, early stuff, like the   'Show No Mercy'   stuff,   Jeff   put out a lot of melody, put a lot of signature lines, and I tried to keep those. If there was a time when he broke from the chaotic fast stuff and put, like, a written melody, I tried to keep that there or something really similar. But the band allowed me to do my own thing, 'cause I can't play like   Jeff ; that shit's crazy.   Jeff   did it naturally, so if somebody wants to play like   Jeff , that's a guy in a tribute band who's   dedicated   himself to learning how to play like   Jeff . I'd have to relearn how to be a guitar player to do that shit. I'm a rock guitar player who plays real fast songs. I grew up on hard rock, and that's what I am. I have an easier time playing the   Angus   [ Young ,   AC/DC ] solos than   Jeff 's 'cause those are my roots."

After   SLAYER   played its final concert,   Ayesha King , wife of   SLAYER   guitarist   Kerry King , said that there is "not a chance in hell" that the thrash metal icons will reunite for more shows following the completion of their farewell tour.

A year and a half earlier,   Tom Araya 's wife said that he had not questioned his decision to embark on one final   SLAYER   tour before the band called it quits.

Sandra Araya , who has been married to the   SLAYER   frontman for more than 20 years, told the   Metal Pulp And Paper   web site that the announcement that the band was pulling the plug on its nearly four-decade-long career didn't come as a surprise to her. "Not to me," she said. "I can't comfortably go into too much detail. I'll just leave it with a no."

Asked if the decision to end   SLAYER   was a difficult one for   Tom   and   Kerry   to make,   Sandra   said: " Tom   never second-guesses any decision he makes. I have no idea about   Kerry ."




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