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His Name Again Hardcore Henry 4chan

American musician (born 1961)

Henry Rollins

Henry Rollins - Wacken Open Air 2016 02.jpg

Rollins at Wacken Open Air 2016

Born

Henry Lawrence Garfield


(1961-02-13) February 13, 1961 (historic period 61)

Washington, D.C., U.S.

Occupation
  • Vocalist
  • writer
  • actor
  • speaker
  • presenter
  • comedian
  • activist
Years active 1980–present
Musical career
Genres
  • Hardcore punk
  • culling metal
  • spoken discussion
Labels
  • 2.thirteen.61
  • Dischord
  • SST
Formerly of
  • Black Flag
  • Rollins Ring
  • Country of Alert
Website henryrollins.com

Musical artist

Henry Lawrence Garfield (born February 13, 1961), known professionally equally Henry Rollins, is an American musician, writer, spoken word artist, actor, and presenter.[one] [2] He hosts a weekly radio prove on KCRW, is a regular columnist for Rolling Rock Australia, and was a regular columnist for LA Weekly.[3]

Later performing in the short-lived hardcore punk ring State of Alarm in 1980, Rollins fronted the California hardcore band Blackness Flag from 1981 to 1986. Post-obit the band's breakup, he established the tape label and publishing visitor 2.xiii.61 to release his spoken word albums, and formed the Rollins Band, which toured with a number of lineups from 1987 to 2003 (and again in 2006).

Rollins has hosted numerous radio shows, such every bit Harmony in My Head on Indie 103, and television shows such every bit The Henry Rollins Show, 120 Minutes, and Jackass. He had recurring dramatic roles in the second season of Sons of Anarchy as A.J. Weston, in the final 2 seasons of the animated serial The Legend of Korra as Zaheer, and has also had roles in several films. He has campaigned for diverse political causes in the United States, including the promotion of LGBT rights, Globe Hunger Relief, the West Memphis Three, and an end to all state of war.

Early life [edit]

Rollins was born Henry Lawrence Garfield in Washington, D.C., on February 13, 1961, the only child of Iris and Paul Garfield.[4] [5] [vi] [vii] His mother is of Irish descent.[viii] His begetter was of Jewish descent. Rollins' paternal great-grandfather, Henach Luban, fled to the U.S. from Rēzekne, Latvia (then part of the Russian Empire) and changed his kickoff name to Henry.[9] When Rollins was three years old, his parents divorced and he was raised by his female parent in the Washington neighborhood of Glover Park.[4] [10] [11] [12] As a child and teenager, Rollins was sexually assaulted,[thirteen] and he suffered from depression and depression self-esteem.[fourteen] In fourth form, he was diagnosed with hyperactivity and took Ritalin for several years to focus during schoolhouse.[15]

Rollins attended The Bullis School, and then an all-male person preparatory school in Potomac, Maryland.[4] Co-ordinate to Rollins, the school helped him to develop a sense of subject field and a strong work ethic.[14] Information technology was at Bullis that he began writing.[12] After high schoolhouse, he attended American Academy in Washington for one semester, merely dropped out in December 1979.[5] [16] He began working minimum-wage jobs, including a job as a courier for kidney samples at the National Institutes of Health.[17] In 1987, he said that he had not seen his begetter since the historic period of 18,[5] and, in 2019, wrote, "What my begetter thinks of me, or if he is notwithstanding alive, I have no idea."[xviii]

Music career [edit]

Country of Alarm [edit]

Initially into bands like Van Halen[xix] and Ted Nugent[20] Rollins soon developed an interest in punk rock with his friend Ian MacKaye.

"We wanted something that just kicked ass," he says. "Then one of u.s., probably Ian, got the Sex activity Pistols record. I remember hearing that and thinking 'Well, that's something. This guy is pissed off, those guitars are rude.' What a revelation![19]

From 1979 to 1980, Rollins was working as a roadie for D.C. bands, including Teen Idles. When the band's singer Nathan Strejcek failed to appear for practice sessions, Rollins convinced the Teen Idles to permit him sing. Word of Rollins' power spread effectually the punk rock scene in Washington D.C.; Bad Brains singer H.R. would sometimes go Rollins on stage to sing with him.[21] In 1980, the Washington punk band the Extorts lost their frontman Lyle Preslar to Pocket-size Threat. Rollins joined the other members of the ring and formed State of Alert (S.O.A.) and became its frontman and vocalist. He put words to the band'south five songs and wrote several more. Southward.O.A. recorded their sole EP, No Policy, and released information technology in 1981 on MacKaye'due south Dischord Records.[22]

Around April 1981, drummer Simon Jacobsen was replaced past Ivor Hanson. At the fourth dimension, Hanson'southward begetter was a top admiral in the U.S. Navy and his family shared living quarters with the U.S. Vice President in the Naval Observatory. The band held their practices in that location and would have to exist permit in by Hush-hush Service agents.[23]

Due south.O.A. disbanded after a total of a dozen concerts and one EP. Rollins had enjoyed being the band's frontman, and had earned a reputation for fighting in shows. He after said, "I was like nineteen and a young man all full of steam and loved to get in the dust-ups." Past this fourth dimension, Rollins had become the banana director of the Georgetown Häagen-Dazs water ice cream store; his steady employment had helped to finance the S.O.A. EP.[24]

Black Flag [edit]

In 1980, a friend gave Rollins and MacKaye a copy of Black Flag'southward Nervous Breakdown EP. Rollins shortly became a fan of the band, exchanging letters with bassist Chuck Dukowski and later inviting the ring to stay in his parents' habitation when Blackness Flag toured the East Coast in December 1980.[25] When Blackness Flag returned to the Eastward Declension in 1981, Rollins attended as many of their concerts as he could. At an impromptu prove in a New York bar, Black Flag's vocalist Dez Cadena allowed Rollins to sing "Clocked In", a song Rollins had asked the band to play in light of the fact that he had to drive back to Washington, D.C. to brainstorm work.[19]

Unbeknownst to Rollins, Cadena wanted to switch to guitar, and the band was looking for a new vocalist.[19] The band was impressed with Rollins' singing and stage demeanor, and the side by side 24-hour interval, after a semi-formal audience at Tu Casa Studio in New York City, they asked him to go their permanent singer. Despite some doubts, he accepted, in function because of MacKaye's encouragement. His high level of free energy and intense personality suited the band's style, just Rollins' various tastes in music were a key factor in his beingness selected every bit singer; Blackness Flag's founder Greg Ginn was growing restless creatively and wanted a vocalizer who was willing to move beyond simple, three-chord punk.[26]

Afterward joining Black Flag in 1981, Rollins quit his job at Häagen-Dazs, sold his machine, and moved to Los Angeles. Upon arriving in Los Angeles, Rollins got the Black Flag logo tattooed on his left biceps[17] and also on the back of his cervix, chose the stage name of Rollins, a surname he and MacKaye had used equally teenagers.[26] Rollins played his first bear witness with Black Flag on July 25, 1981, at Cuckoo's Nest in Costa Mesa, California.[27] Rollins was in a dissimilar environment in Los Angeles; the police presently realized he was a member of Black Flag, and he was hassled as a result. Rollins later said: "That really scared me. Information technology freaked me out that an adult would do that. ... My lilliputian eyes were opened large fourth dimension."[28]

Before concerts, as the others of the band tuned up, Rollins would footstep near the phase dressed but in a pair of blackness shorts, grinding his teeth; to focus before the prove, he would squeeze a puddle ball.[29] His stage persona impressed several critics; later a 1982 prove in Anacortes, Washington, Sub Popular critic Calvin Johnson wrote: "Henry was incredible. Pacing back and along, lunging, lurching, growling; it was all real, the most intense emotional experiences I accept ever seen."[xxx]

By 1983, Rollins' phase persona was increasingly alienating him from the balance of Black Flag. During a show in England, Rollins assaulted a member of the audience who attacked Ginn; Ginn later scolded Rollins, calling him a "manlike asshole".[31] A legal dispute with Unicorn Records held up further Black Flag releases until 1984, and Ginn was slowing the band's tempo down so that they would remain innovative. In August 1983, guitarist Dez Cadena had left the ring; a stalemate lingered between Dukowski and Ginn, who wanted Dukowski to exit, before Ginn fired Dukowski outright.[32] 1984'due south heavy metal music-influenced My War featured Rollins screaming and wailing throughout many of the songs; the band's members also grew their hair to confuse the band's hardcore punk audition.[33]

Black Flag'south change in musical way and appearance alienated many of their original fans, who focused their displeasure on Rollins by punching him in the rima oris, stabbing him with pens, or scratching him with their nails, among other things. He often fought back, dragging audience members on stage and assaulting them. During a Blackness Flag concert, Rollins repeatedly punched a fan in the face who had continuously reached for his microphone.[34] Rollins became increasingly alienated from the audience; in his bout diary, Rollins wrote "When they spit at me, when they grab at me, they aren't pain me. When I push out and mangle the flesh of some other, it's falling and so brusque of what I really want to do to them."[35] During the Unicorn legal dispute, Rollins had started a weight-lifting program, and past their 1984 tours, he had go visibly well-congenital; announcer Michael Azerrad later commented that "his powerful physique was a metaphor for the impregnable emotional shield he was developing around himself."[33] Rollins has since replied that "no, the preparation was just basically a fashion to push myself."[36]

Rollins Band and solo releases [edit]

Before Blackness Flag disbanded in August 1986, Rollins had already toured as a solo spoken word artist.[37] He released ii solo records in 1987, Hot Creature Machine, a collaboration with guitarist Chris Haskett, and Drive past Shooting, recorded as "Henrietta Collins and the Wifebeating Childhaters";[38] Rollins also released his second spoken word album, Big Ugly Mouth in the same year. Along with Haskett, Rollins soon added Andrew Weiss and Sim Cain, both old members of Ginn'south side-project Gone, and called the new grouping Rollins Band. The band toured relentlessly,[39] and their 1987 debut album, Life Fourth dimension, was apace followed past the outtakes and live collection Do It. The ring connected to bout throughout 1988; in 1989 another Rollins Band album, Difficult Volume was released.[twoscore] Another live album, Turned On, and another spoken word release, Alive at McCabe'south, followed in 1990.

In 1991, the Rollins Band signed a distribution bargain with Imago Records and appeared at the Lollapalooza festival; both improved the band'southward presence. However, in December 1991, Rollins and his best friend Joe Cole were accosted by ii armed robbers outside Rollins' home. Cole was murdered by a gunshot to the caput, Rollins escaped without injury only police suspected him in the murder and detained him for x hours.[41] Although traumatized by Cole's death, equally chronicled in his book Now Lookout man Him Die, Rollins continued to release new material; the spoken-give-and-take album Human Butt appeared in 1992 on his own tape label, two.13.61. The Rollins Band released The End of Silence, Rollins' first charting album.[40]

The following twelvemonth, Rollins released a spoken-word double anthology, The Boxed Life.[42] The Rollins Band embarked upon the End of Silence tour; bassist Weiss was fired toward its stop, and replaced by funk and jazz bassist Melvin Gibbs. Co-ordinate to critic Steve Huey, 1994 was Rollins' "breakout year".[40] The Rollins Band appeared at Woodstock 94 and released Weight, which ranked on the Billboard Top 40. Rollins released Get in the Van: On the Road with Black Flag, a double-disc set of him reading from his Black Flag tour diary of the same name; he won the Grammy for Best Spoken Word Recording equally a result. Rollins was named 1994's "Man of the Yr" past the American men's magazine Details and became a contributing columnist to the magazine. With the increased exposure, Rollins made several appearances on American music channels MTV and VH1 around this time, and made his Hollywood pic debut in 1994 in The Chase playing a police officeholder.[43]

In 1995, the Rollins Band's record label, Imago Records, declared itself bankrupt. Rollins began focusing on his spoken discussion career. He released Everything, a recording of a chapter of his book Eye Scream with free jazz backing, in 1996. He continued to announced in various films, including Oestrus, Johnny Mnemonic and Lost Highway. The Rollins Band signed to Dreamworks Records in 1997 and soon released Come In and Burn, simply it did non receive every bit much critical acclamation as their previous material. Rollins connected to release spoken-give-and-take book readings, releasing Black Coffee Dejection in the aforementioned year. In 1998, Rollins released Think Tank, his first fix of non-book-related spoken fabric in v years.

By 1998, Rollins felt that the relationship with his bankroll band had run its course, and the line-upwardly disbanded. He had produced a Los Angeles hard rock ring called Female parent Superior, and invited them to form a new incarnation of the Rollins Ring. Their offset album, Get Some Go Again, was released 2 years subsequently. The Rollins Band released several more albums, including 2001'southward Nice and 2003's Ascent Above: 24 Black Flag Songs to Benefit the W Memphis Three. After 2003, the band became inactive as Rollins focused on radio and television work. During a 2006 appearance on Tom Dark-green Live!, Rollins stated that he "may never do music again",[44] a feeling which he reiterated in 2011 when talking to Trebuchet magazine.[45] In an interview with Culture Brats, Rollins admitted he had sworn off music for skilful – "... and I must say that I miss it every day. I simply don't know honestly what I could do with it that's unlike."[46]

Rollins holding a microphone

Rollins in 2013, performing spoken word

On the same topic, Rollins more recently said in 2016 "For me, music was a time and a place. I never actually enjoyed beingness in a band. It was in me and it needed to come out, like a 25-year exorcism. 1 day, I woke up, and I didn't have any more lyrics. I just had zippo to contribute to the form, and I was done with band practice and traveling in groups."[47]

Rollins is a invitee star on Damian Cowell'south 2017 album Get Yer Dag On!.

Musical mode [edit]

Every bit a vocalist, Rollins has adopted a number of styles through the years. He was noted in the Washington, D.C. hardcore scene for what journalist Michael Azerrad described every bit a "compelling, raspy howl".[21] With State of Alert, Rollins "spat out the lyrics similar a bellicose auctioneer."[24] He adopted a similar way after joining Black Flag in 1981. Past their album Damaged, however, Black Flag began to comprise a swing beat into their fashion. Rollins then abandoned his State of Alarm "bark" and adopted the band'southward swing.[48] Rollins afterward explained: "What I was doing kind of matched the vibe of the music. The music was intense and, well, I was every bit intense equally you needed."[49]

In both incarnations of the Rollins Band, Rollins combined spoken word with his traditional vocal style in songs such as "Liar" (the song begins with a one-infinitesimal spoken diatribe by Rollins), barked his manner through songs (such as "Tearing" and "Starve"), and employed the loud-tranquility dynamic. Rolling Stone 's Anthony DeCurtis names Rollins a "screeching hate motorcar" and his "hallmark" equally "the sheets-of-audio assault".[50]

With the Rollins Band, his lyrics focused "almost exclusively on issues relating to personal integrity", according to critic Geoffrey Welchman.[51]

As producer [edit]

In the 1980s, Rollins produced an anthology of audio-visual songs for captive Charles Manson titled Completion. The tape was supposed to exist released by SST Records, but the project was canceled because the label received death threats for working with Manson. But five examination presses of Completion were pressed, two of which remain in Rollins' possession.[52]

In 1995, Rollins produced Australian hard rock band the Mark of Cain'southward 3rd full-length anthology Ill at Ease.[53]

Media work [edit]

Television receiver [edit]

As Rollins rose to prominence with the Rollins Band, he began to present and appear on telly. These included Alternative Nation and MTV Sports in 1993 and 1994 respectively. Rollins also co-starred in The Chase with Charlie Sheen. In 1995 Rollins appeared on an episode of Unsolved Mysteries that explored the murder of his all-time friend Joe Cole[54] and nowadays State of the Marriage Undressed on One-act Key. Rollins began to nowadays and narrate VH1 Legends in 1996.[55] Rollins, busy with the Rollins Band, did not nowadays more programs until 2001, only fabricated appearances on a number of other television shows, including Welcome to Paradox in 1998 in the episode "All Our Sins Forgotten", as a therapist who develops a device that can erase the bad memories of his patients. Rollins likewise voiced Mad Stan in Batman Beyond in 1999 and 2000.[56] [57]

Rollins was a host of film review programme Henry'due south Film Corner on the Independent Flick Aqueduct, before presenting the weekly The Henry Rollins Show on the aqueduct. The Henry Rollins Show is now[ when? ] beingness shown weekly on Film24 along with Henry Rollins Uncut. The prove also lead to a promotional tour in Europe that led to Rollins being dubbed a "bad boy goodwill ambassador" by a NY reviewer.[58] He too hosted Fox'south short-lived 2001 horror album Night Visions.[59]

In 2002, Rollins invitee-starred on an episode of the sitcom The Drew Carey Evidence as a human being Oswald found on eBay and paid to come up to his house and "kick his ass". He co-hosted the British idiot box prove Full Metal Claiming, in which teams built vehicles to compete in diverse driving and racing contests, from 2002 to 2003 on Channel four and TLC. He has fabricated a number of cameo appearances in television series such equally MTV'south Jackass and an episode of Californication, where he played himself hosting a radio show.[threescore] In 2006, Rollins appeared in a documentary series by VH1 and The Sundance Channel called The Drug Years.[61]

Rollins appears in FX'south Sons of Anarchy 's 2nd season, which premiered in the autumn of 2009 in the United States. Rollins plays A.J. Weston, a white supremacist gang leader and new antagonist in the show's fictional town of Charming, California, who poses a deadly threat to the Sons of Anarchy Motorcycle Lodge.[62] In 2009, Rollins voiced "Trucker" in American Dad! 'southward fourth flavour (episode eight).[63] Rollins voiced Benjamin Knox/Bonk in the 2000 animated film Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker.[64]

In 2010, Rollins appeared as a guest estimate on flavor 2 episode 6 of RuPaul'south Elevate Race.[65] [66] In 2011, he was interviewed in the National Geographic Explorer episode "Born to Rage", regarding his possible link to the MAOA factor (warrior gene) and violent behavior.[67] In 2012, he hosted the National Geographic Wild series "Animal Underworld", investigating where the real boundaries lie in human-creature relationships.[68] Rollins also appeared in the Hawaii Five-0 episode "Hoʻopio" that aired on May 6, 2013.

In November 2013, Rollins started hosting the show 10 Things You Don't Know About on the History Channel'southward H2.[69] In 2014, he voiced the antagonist Zaheer in the third season of the animated series The Legend of Korra.[70]

Rollins played the office of Lt. Mueller in episodes 1-3 of the 4th season of the TV serial Z Nation, which originally aired on Syfy in 2017.[71]

In 2019, Rollins began appearing as a disillusioned poisons instructor in the Television serial Deadly Course.

Radio and podcast [edit]

On May 19, 2004, Rollins began hosting a weekly radio show, Harmony in My Caput, on Indie 103.1 radio in Los Angeles. The show aired every Monday evening, with Rollins playing music ranging from early stone and spring blues to difficult rock, blues stone, folk rock, punk rock, heavy metallic and rockabilly, and touching on hip hop, jazz, earth music, reggae, classical music and more. Harmony in my Head oftentimes emphasizes B-sides, live bootlegs and other rarities, and about every episode has featured a song either past the Beastie Boys or British grouping The Fall.

Rollins put the show on a short hiatus to undertake a spoken-word tour in early 2005. Rollins posted playlists and commentary on-line; these lists were expanded with more data and published in book course as Fanatic! through two.13.61 in Nov 2005. In late 2005, Rollins appear the show'south render and began the offset episode by playing the show's namesake Buzzcocks song. In 2008, the show was continuing each calendar week despite Rollins' constant touring with new pre-recorded shows betwixt live broadcasts. In 2009, Indie 103.1 went off the air, although information technology continues to broadcast over the Internet.

In 2007, Rollins published Fanatic! Vol. 2 through 2.13.61. Fanatic! Vol. 3 was released in the autumn of 2008. On Feb xviii, 2009, KCRW announced that Rollins would be hosting a alive show on Sat nights starting March vii, 2009,[72] which has since been moved to Sunday nights at 8:00p.m.[73] In 2011 Rollins was interviewed on Episode 121 of American Public Media'south podcast, "The Dinner Party Download", posted on November 3, 2011.[74]

Starting in February 2015, Rollins began recording a semi-regular podcast with his longtime manager Heidi May, titled Henry & Heidi.[75] In describing the bear witness, Rollins stated, "One day Heidi mentioned that I've told her a lot of stories that never made it to the stage and we should do a podcast so I could tell them ... I thought it was a good idea and people seem to like how the two of us get along. Nosotros've been working together for over 20 years and are very good friends."[76] The podcast has received positive reviews from Rolling Stone and The A.V. Club.[76] [77]

Filmography [edit]

Rollins began his film career appearing in several contained films featuring the ring Black Flag. His moving-picture show debut was in 1982's The Slog Picture, about the West Coast punk scene.[78] An appearance in 1985's Blackness Flag Alive followed. Rollins' kickoff motion-picture show appearance without Black Flag was the short film The Right Side of My Encephalon with Lydia Lunch in 1985.[79] Following the band's breakup, Rollins did not appear in any films until 1994's The Chase. Rollins appeared in the 2007 direct-to-DVD sequel to Wrong Plow (2003), Wrong Turn 2: Dead End every bit a retired Marine Corps officeholder who hosts his own show which tests the contestants' volition to survive.[lxxx] Rollins has also appeared in Punk: Attitude, a documentary on the punk scene, and in American Hardcore (2006). In 2012, Rollins appeared in a brusk documentary entitled "Who Shot Rock and Roll" discussing the early on punk scene in Los Angeles every bit well as photographs of himself in Black Flag taken by photographer Edward Colver.[81] Rollins likewise auditioned for playing Negan in The Walking Dead television serial and inspired the character'southward characterization in the comic book serial of the same proper noun, but eventually lost the role to Jeffrey Dean Morgan.[82]

Film [edit]

Some feature-length films Rollins has appeared in include:

  • Kiss Napoleon Goodbye (1990), with Lydia Dejeuner and Don Bajema
  • Jugular Vino: A Vampire Odyssey (1994), with Frank Miller
  • The Chase (1994), with Charlie Sheen
  • Johnny Mnemonic (1995), with Keanu Reeves, Ice-T and Dolph Lundgren
  • Heat (1995), with Al Pacino, Robert De Niro and Val Kilmer
  • Lost Highway (1997), with Nib Pullman and Patricia Arquette; directed by David Lynch
  • Jack Frost (1998), with Michael Keaton
  • Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker (2000) (vocalization), with Will Friedle, Kevin Conroy and Marker Hamill
  • Morgan's Ferry (2001), with Baton Zane and Kelly McGillis
  • Dogtown and Z-Boys (2001 documentary)
  • Scenes of the Criminal offense (2001), with Jeff Bridges
  • The New Guy (2002), with Tommy Lee and DJ Qualls
  • Jackass The Movie (2002) with Johnny Knoxville and Bam Margera
  • Bad Boys Two (2003) with Will Smith and Martin Lawrence
  • A House on a Hill (2003) with Philip Baker Hall and Laura San Giacomo
  • Deathdealer: A Documentary (2004)
  • Feast (2005), with Balthazar Getty and Navi Rawat
  • The Excuse (2006)
  • Incorrect Turn 2: Dead End (2007)
  • The Devil'southward Tomb (2009), with Cuba Gooding Jr. and Ron Perlman
  • H for Hunger (2009 documentary), directed by Neil Hollander
  • William Shatner'southward Gonzo Ballet (2009 documentary)
  • Suck (2009), with Alice Cooper, Iggy Pop and Malcolm McDowell
  • Dark-green Lantern: Emerald Knights (2011) (voice) as Kilowog
  • West of Memphis (2012 documentary)
  • Downloaded (2013 documentary)
  • Salad Days (2014 documentary)
  • He Never Died (2015), with Steven Ogg and Booboo Stewart[83]
  • Gutterdämmerung (2015), with Iggy Popular and Grace Jones, directed by Björn Tagemose[84]
  • The Last Heist (2016)[85]
  • Dreamland (2019)
  • Music (2021)[86]

Tv [edit]

List of vox performances on television
Yr Title Part Notes
1997 Sabbatum Night Live Musical Guest (Rollins Band) ane Episode
1999–2001 Batman Beyond Mad Stan (voice) "Rats"
"Eyewitness"
"Inaugural"
2004 Teen Titans Johnny Rancid (voice) "Fractured"
"Can I Keep Him?"
2006 Shorty McShorts' Shorts Skylar (voice) 3 Episodes
2009 American Dad! Trucker (voice) Episode: "Chimdale"
2009 Sons of Anarchy A.J. Weston 10 Episodes
2010–2016 Gamble Time Bob Rainicorn / Cookie Human (voice) "The Enchiridion!"
"Her Parents"
"Lady Rainicorn of the Crystal Dimension"
2010 Batman: The Brave and the Assuming Robotman (vocalisation) Episode: "The Last Patrol!"
2014 The Legend of Korra Zaheer (phonation) xiii Episodes
Uncle Grandpa Skeletony (vocalization) Episode: "Hibernate and Seek"
2016 Sheriff Callie'due south Wild West Speedy Silverado (voice) Episode: "Toby's First Snow/Blazing Skaters"
2017 Stretch Armstrong and the Flex Fighters Mickey Simmons, Prison Guard (voice) Episode: "The Gangs of Quondam Boondocks"
2018 Mr. Pickles Govt. Agent Commander (voice) Episode: "S.H.O.E.South."
2021 Masters of the Universe: Revelation Tri-Klops (voice)

Books and audiobooks [edit]

Rollins has written a diverseness of books, including Blackness Java Blues, Do I Come Hither Ofttimes?, The Offset 5 (a compilation of High Adventure in the Dandy Outdoors, Pissing in the Gene Puddle, Bang!, Art to Choke Hearts, and One From None), Run across a Grown Human being Cry, Now Watch Him Dice, Grinning, Y'all're Traveling, Get in the Van, Centre Scream, Cleaved Summers, Roomanitarian, and Solipsist.

For the audiobook version of the 2006 novel World War Z Rollins voiced the grapheme of T. Sean Collins, a mercenary hired to protect celebrities during a mass panic caused past an onslaught of the undead. Rollins' other audiobook recordings include iii:10 to Yuma and his own autobiographical book Become in the Van, for which he won a Grammy Award.

Online journalism [edit]

In September 2008, Rollins began contributing to the "Politics & Power" blog at the online version of Vanity Off-white mag.[87] Since March 2009, his posts accept appeared under their ain sub-title, Directly Talk Espresso.[88] His posts consistently criticize conservative politicians and pundits, although he does occasionally target those on the left.[ citation needed ] In August 2010, he began writing a music column for LA Weekly in Los Angeles.[89] In 2012, Rollins began publishing articles with The Huffington Post and alternative news website WordswithMeaning!. In the months leading up to the 2012 United States Presidential ballot, Rollins circulate a YouTube serial called "Capitalism 2012", in which he toured the capital cities of the United states of america states, interviewing people about current issues.[ citation needed ]

Spoken word [edit]

Rollins also has toured all over the earth doing spoken word performances and his shows frequently last for over three hours. His spoken word mode encompasses stand up-upward comedy, accounts of experiences he's had in the world of music and during his extensive travels effectually the globe, self-deprecating stories most his ain shortcomings, introspective recollections from his own life (such as the death of his friend, Joe Cole), commentaries on social club and playful, sometimes vulgar, anecdotes.

Video games [edit]

Rollins was a playable character in both Def Jam: Fight for NY and Def Jam Fight for NY: The Takeover. Rollins is also the voice of Mace Griffin in Mace Griffin: Bounty Hunter.

Campaigning and activism [edit]

Rollins has get an outspoken human rights activist, most vocally for gay rights. In high school, a gay classmate of Rollins' was bullied by classmates to the signal of attempting suicide. Rollins has cited this as the main catalyst of his "anti-homophobia".[90] Rollins frequently speaks out on justice on his spoken word tours and promotes equality, regardless of sexuality.[91] He was the host of the WedRock benefit concert, which raised money for a pro-gay-union organization.

During the Iraq War, he started touring with the United Service Organizations to entertain troops overseas while remaining confronting the war, leading him to in one case cause a stir at a base in Kyrgyzstan when he told the oversupply: "Your commander would never lie to you. That's the vice president's job."[92] Rollins believes it is of import that he performs for the troops so that they have multiple points of contact with other parts of the world, stating that "they can get really cut loose from planet earth."[93] He has fabricated viii tours, including visits to bases in Republic of djibouti, Kuwait, Iraq, Kyrgyz republic, Afghanistan (twice), Egypt, Turkey, Qatar, Honduras, Japan, Korea and the United Arab Emirates.[94]

He has also been active in the entrada to free the "Due west Memphis Three", three young men who were believed past their supporters to take been wrongfully convicted of murder, and who have since been released from prison, but not exonerated. Rollins appears with Public Enemy frontman Chuck D on the Black Flag song "Ascension To a higher place" on the 2002 benefit album Rise Higher up: 24 Black Flag Songs to Benefit the Westward Memphis Iii, the first time Rollins had performed Black Flag'south material since 1986.[95]

Standing his activism on behalf of United states troops and veterans, Rollins joined Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA) in 2008 to launch a public service ad campaign, CommunityofVeterans.org, which helps veterans coming habitation from war reintegrate into their communities. In April 2009, Rollins helped IAVA launch the second phase of the campaign which engages the friends and family of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans at SupportYourVet.org.

On December 3, 2009, Rollins wrote of his support for the victims of the Bhopal disaster in India, in an article for Vanity Fair [96] 25 years–to the solar day–after the methyl isocyanate gas leak from the Matrimony Carbide Corporation's pesticide mill exposed more than half a 1000000 local people to poisonous gas and resulted in the deaths of 17,000 people. He spent time in Bhopal with the people, to listen to their stories. In a later on radio interview in February 2010[97] Rollins summed up his approach to activism, "This is where my anger takes me, to places like this, not into corruption but into proactive, clean motion."[98]

Rollins is an advocate for the legalization of cannabis.[99] Rollins has stated he does non personally consume cannabis[100] but views the issue as an important matter of civil rights,[101] arguing that its illegality is based in "discrimination and racism and financing the prison house–industrial circuitous".[102] Rollins has shared his views on the subject area as keynote speaker at the Oregon Marijuana Business Conference and the International Cannabis Business concern Conference.[103] [104] [105] [106]

In August 2015, Rollins discussed his support for Bernie Sanders every bit a candidate in the 2016 Democratic Party presidential primaries.[107]

Personal life [edit]

Views and relationships [edit]

Rollins has said that he does not have religious or spiritual beliefs, though he also does not consider himself an atheist.[108] He has mostly avoided recreational drugs throughout his life, but experimented a few times with alcohol, cannabis, and LSD during his teens and early 20s.[109] [110] [111]

Rollins is childless by option,[112] and says that he has not been in a romantic relationship since his 20s.[113] He considers himself a alone person, and maintains few deep relationships outside of his professional ones.[114] 1 of his closest personal friends is musician Ian MacKaye, with whom he has been close since they met as children.[113] He also enjoys a friendship with player William Shatner, which developed after he performed on Shatner'due south album Has Been.

In an interview with Jason Tanamor of Zoiks! Online, when asked about a longtime rumor of Rollins being homosexual, the singer said, "Perhaps wishful thinking. If I were gay, believe me, you would know."[115]

Murder of Joe Cole [edit]

In December 1991, Rollins and his best friend Joe Cole were the victims of armed robbery and shooting when they were assaulted past robbers outside their shared habitation in Venice Beach, California. Cole died subsequently existence shot in the face up, only Rollins escaped.[116] The murder remains unsolved. In an April 1992 Los Angeles Times interview, Rollins revealed he kept a plastic container full of soil soaked with Cole'due south blood: "I dug upwardly all the earth where his head fell—he was shot in the face—and I've got all the dirt hither, and then Cole'due south in the house. I say good morning to him every day. I got his phone, too, so I got a direct line to him. Then that feels good."[116]

In a 2001 interview with Howard Stern, Rollins was asked about rumors that he kept Cole's brain in his house. He stated that he has just the soil from the spot where Cole was killed. During the interview, he too speculated that the reason they were targeted may have been because, days prior to the incident, record producer Rick Rubin had requested to hear the newly recorded album The End of Silence and parked his Rolls-Royce exterior their house while carrying a cell telephone. Because of the notoriety of the neighborhood, Rollins suspected that this would bring trouble considering of the implication that in that location was money in the home. He even wrote in his journal the dark of Rubin's visit that his habitation "is going to get popped".[117] [118]

Rollins has included Cole's story in his spoken word performances.[119]

Works [edit]

Musical releases [edit]

With State of Alert [edit]

  • No Policy (1981)
  • Flex Your Caput (1982)

With Blackness Flag [edit]

  • Damaged (1981)
  • My War (1984)
  • Family Man (1984)
  • Skid It In (1984)
  • Alive '84 (1984)
  • Loose Nut (1985)
  • In My Head (1985)
  • Who'southward Got the 10½? (1986)

Solo [edit]

  • Hot Animal Machine (1987)
  • Bulldoze past Shooting (1987)
  • Live (1987) – split anthology with Gore

With Rollins Ring [edit]

  • Life Time (1987, re-release 1999)
  • Hard Volume (1989, re-release 1999)
  • Turned On (1990)
  • The End of Silence (1992, double-CD re-release 2002) #160 United states
  • Weight (1994) #33 U.s., #22 Britain
  • Come In and Burn down (1997) #89 US
  • Insert Ring Hither (1999)
  • A Clockwork Orange Stage (2000)
  • Go Some Go Again (2000) #180 US
  • Dainty (2001) #178 United states
  • A Nicer Shade of Red (2002)
  • End of Silence Demos (2002)
  • The Only Style to Know for Sure: Live in Chicago (2002)
  • Ascension Above: 24 Blackness Flag Songs to Benefit the West Memphis Three (2002)

With Wartime [edit]

  • Fast Food For Idea (1990)

Spoken give-and-take [edit]

  • Short Walk on a Long Pier (1985)
  • Large Ugly Mouth (1987)
  • Sweatbox (1989)
  • Alive at McCabe'southward (1990)
  • Man Barrel (1992)
  • The Boxed Life (1993)
  • Call back Tank (1998)
  • Eric the Pilot (1999)
  • A Rollins in the Wry (2001)
  • Live at the Westbeth Theater (2001)
  • Talk Is Inexpensive: Volume ane (2003)
  • Talk Is Cheap: Volume two (2003)
  • Talk Is Cheap: Volume 3 (2004)
  • Talk Is Inexpensive: Volume four (2004)
  • Provoked (2008)
  • Spoken Word Guy (2010)
  • Spoken Word Guy two (2010)

Spoken word videos [edit]

  • Talking from the Box (1993)
  • Henry Rollins Goes to London (1995)
  • You Saw Me Up There (1998)
  • Upward for It (2001)
  • Alive at Luna Park (2004)
  • Shock & Awe: The Tour (2005)
  • Uncut from NYC (2006)
  • Uncut from Israel (2006)
  • San Francisco 1990 (2007)
  • Live in the Conversation Pit (2008)
  • Provoked: Live From Melbourne (2008)
  • 50 (2012)
  • Keep Talking, Pal (2018)

Sound books [edit]

  • Get in the Van: On the Road with Black Flag (1994)
  • Everything (1996)
  • Blackness Coffee Dejection (1997)
  • Nights Behind the Tree Line (2004)
  • Earth War Z (2007)

Invitee appearances and collaborations [edit]

Henry Rollins discography
Vocal Artist Album Year
Minor Threat's First Demo – provided additional Vocals (credited every bit Henry Garfield) Pocket-size Threat First Demo Tape EP 1981
"Nosotros Are 138" Misfits Evilive 1982
"Kick Out the Jams" Bad Brains Pump Upwardly the Book Soundtrack 1990
"Permit There Be Stone" Difficult-Ons Released as a unmarried 1991
"Bottom" Tool Undertow 1993
"Wild America" Iggy Pop American Caesar 1993
"Sexual Military Dynamics" Mike Watt Ball-Squealer or Tugboat? 1995
"Delicate Tendrils" Les Claypool and the Holy Mackerel Highball with the Devil 1996
"T-iv Strain" Goldie Spawn: The Album 1997
"War" Bone Thugs-north-Harmony, Tom Morello & Flea Minor Soldiers 1998
"Laughing Homo (In the Devil Mask)" Tony Iommi Iommi 2000
"I Can't Get Behind That" William Shatner Has Been 2004
All tracks The Flaming Lips The Flaming Lips and Stardeath and White Dwarfs with Henry Rollins and Peaches Doing the Dark Side of the Moon 2009
"Greyness 11" The Mark of Cain Songs of the Third and Fifth 2012
"Come On Waleed" Damian Cowell'due south Disco Car Get Yer Dag On 2017
"Jingle Bells" William Shatner Shatner Claus 2018
"Jingle Bells (Punk Stone Version)" William Shatner Shatner Claus 2018
"All tracks" Charles Manson Completion Boosted production- Henry Rollins

Essays [edit]

  • I Am an Audiophile, an editorial essay in Stereophile.[120]
  • Iron and the Soul, an editorial essay in Details.[121]

References [edit]

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    Henry Rollins: Never had a cigar. When I was 17, I got drunk a few times. I didn't like it, never have. Don't like the taste, don't like the feeling, don't like throwing up on my sneakers.
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  117. ^ [1] [ dead link ]
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Further reading [edit]

  • Azerrad, Michael. Our Ring Could Be Your Life: Scenes from the American Indie Secret, 1981–1991. Footling Brown and Company, 2001. ISBN 0-316-78753-ane

External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata
  • Henry Rollins discography at Discogs Edit this at Wikidata
  • Henry Rollins at IMDbEdit this at Wikidata
  • Henry Rollins at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Edit this at Wikidata
  • IFC Site for The Henry Rollins Show
  • Interview with Henry Rollins on PMAKid.com
  • "Henry Rollins: 9 Questions with the Legendary Frontman nigh the Mainstream Media, So-called Class Warfare and the Political Necessities facing the 99% Move". Archived from the original on September 22, 2012. Retrieved January ix, 2012. , Dan O'Mahony, "Point 9 9", November 7, 2011
  • Henry Rollins, episode #xiv of By The Way, In Conversation With Jeff Garlin on Earwolf, July xi, 2013
  • "RuPaul Drives Henry Rollins" review of web series Rocker Mag 2013

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Rollins

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