San Francisco's Death Angel are a product of the bustling Bay Area thrash metal scene of
the '80s. Combining serious guitar crunch and speed with technical expertise, they create
complex thrash filled with time changes and tricky arrangements, and are considered to be
one of the "big eight" of the genre, alongside Metallica, Megadeth, Slayer, Anthrax, Testament, Exodus, and Overkill.
Emerging in 1982, the group found underground success with their first two albums --
1987's The Ultra-Violence and 1988's Frolic Through the Park -- before dipping their feet
into the mainstream with their 1989 major-label debut Act III.
Death Angel aren’t just a band, they are a family. Formed in the early '80s by cousins Mark
Osegueda (vocals), Rob Cavestany (lead guitar), Gus Pepa (rhythm guitar), Dennis
Pepa (bass), and Andy Galeon (drums), the group was also precocious; the band
members recorded their 1986 Kirk Hammett-produced "Kill as One" demo while still in
their teens. In fact, drummer Galeon was only 14 when Death Angel issued their first
album, 1987's astoundingly mature The Ultra-Violence on Enigma Records. The following
year's sophomore Frolic Through the Park offered a few slight refinements, most notably
in the uncharacteristically humorous and accessible single "Bored."
Signing with the Geffen Records hit factory the following year seemed like the next step
toward certain stardom, and Death Angel left nothing to chance with their third album,
1990's superlative career highlight Act III
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