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Seminal Guitarist, 4 Others Die in Ohio Shooting
12/10/2004 1:50 AM, Reuters Jim Leckrone
A man charged on stage and
opened fire at a heavy metal band and fans at a crowded bar,
killing four people and wounding two others before being killed
by police, officials said on Thursday.
Among the dead was "Dimebag" Darrell Abbott, guitarist for
the band Damageplan, who witnesses said appeared to have been
singled out by the gunman and shot several times at close
range.
Some witnesses told police the 25-year-old gunman, Nathan
Gale of nearby Marysville, Ohio, shouted, "You broke up
Pantera" before gunning down Abbott and firing at other band
members and the crowd in the Wednesday night shooting.
Pantera was a hot Grammy-nominated 'thrash' metal band in
the mid-1990s that Abbott, 38, and his brother, drummer Vinnie
(Paul) Abbott, formed in the 1980s. The group, from Texas, had
a bitter breakup after their last album in 2000, and the
Abbotts formed Damageplan, which was on tour when the shooting
happened.
"There was no connection between (Gale) and the band, at
least formally. We do not know the motive and maybe never will.
He is dead," Columbus Police spokesman Sgt. Brent Mall told
reporters outside the club, the Alrosa Villa.
Gale fired more than a dozen shots both at the band and the
crowd of roughly 200 patrons, at one point stopping to reload
his handgun with an ammunition clip, police said.
A police officer confronted Gale as he held a hostage in a
headlock and was apparently attempting to flee, Mall said. The
officer, James Niggemeyer, killed Gale as the hostage, who was
not harmed, struggled to get out of the way.
POLICEMAN SAVED LIVES
"We believe he saved other lives" by shooting the gunman,
he said.
Two people who were wounded were taken to a hospital.
The band was playing the first song of its set when the
gunman, wearing a hooded sweatshirt, charged the stage and
began shouting and shooting, witnesses said. Some members of
the audience initially thought the intruder might have been
part of the band's act.
Pantera topped the U.S. album charts with its 1994 release,
"Far Beyond Driven," which also yielded a Grammy nomination.
"Dimebag" Abbott's guitar work made him a "seminal figure
in modern speed metal," one who was influenced by the likes of
Kiss' Ace Frehley and the late Randy Rhoads of Ozzy Osbourne's
band, said Michael Molenda, editor-in-chief at Guitar Player
magazine.
In the early 1980s, speed metal became the most popular
form of heavy metal in the American underground. Crossing the
New Wave of British heavy metal with hardcore U.S. punk, speed
metal was extremely fast, abrasive and technically demanding.
Led by Metallica , Megadeth, Anthrax, and Slayer, this new
wave of metal bands stood in direct contrast with the
pop-oriented "glam" metal that dominated the charts during the
1980s, and they cultivated dedicated followings, according to
the Web site Allmusic.com.
Pantera's songs were played regularly at the arena of the
National Hockey League Dallas Stars during the team's 1999
championship season, and the Abbott brothers were friends with
several team members.
Former hockey player Guy Carbonneau, the Stars assistant
general manager, issued a statement saying: "I was horrified to
hear the news of last night's events and it never ceases to
amaze me how hurtful and violent people can be. My condolences
go out to the family and I wish all of those involved a speedy
recovery."
After Pantera's break-up, the brothers formed Damageplan
with singer Pat Lachman and bassist Bob Zilla. The band's debut
album, "New Found Power" -- hailed for its "violent dissonance"
by Blender magazine -- hit No. 38 on the U.S. charts earlier
this year. (Additional reporting by Michael Conlon in Chicago,
Dean Goodman in Los Angeles and Mark Babineck in Houston)
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