EXODUS Rejoined By ROB DUKES, RICK HUNOLT, PAUL BOSTAPH At San Francisco Concert (Video)

July 9, 2017

Thrash metal legends EXODUS were rejoined by their former singer Rob Dukes on stage during their July 8 concert in San Francisco, California. Dukes sang several songs with the band during the second of EXODUS's two-night stint at The Chapel in what marked the group's first headlining Bay Area club shows since late 2013. Also appearing with the band at Saturday's gig were former EXODUS guitarist Rick Hunolt as well as ex-EXODUS drummer Paul Bostaph (now in SLAYER).

Video footage of the concert can be seen below (courtesy of Walter Morgan).

Setlist:

01. The Last Act Of Defiance
02. Exodus
03. Piranha
04. Blacklist
05. Pleasures Of The Flesh
06. Bonded By Blood
07. Cajun Hell (with Rick Hunolt on guitar)
08. War Is My Shepherd (with Rick Hunolt and Kragen Lum)
09. Metal Command (with Rick Hunolt)
10. Only Death Decides (with Rick Hunolt)
11. Body Harvest (with Kragen Lum)
12. The Ballad Of Leonard And Charles (with Rob Dukes)
13. Children Of A Worthless God (with Rob Dukes)
14. Iconoclasm (with Rob Dukes)
15. Deliver Us To Evil (with Rob Dukes)
16. Deathamphetamine (with Paul Bostaph and Rob Dukes)
17. Shovel Headed Kill Machine (with Paul Bostaph and Rob Dukes)
18. The Toxic Waltz (everyone)
19. Strike Of The Beast (everyone)

Earlier in the week, EXODUS guitarist and main songwriter Gary Holt spoke to CBS SF about this weekend's dates. He said: "The first night is going to be [current singer] Steve Souza's first headlining show with EXODUS back in the Bay. We're going to put together a pretty varied setlist and try to pull out a couple of deep tracks. It's going to be really killer. The second night, we've got a few special guests lined up. It's going to be awesome. We have Rob Dukes coming up to sing some songs. I'm super stoked about that. Rick Hunolt is going to play a few songs and [HEATHEN guitarist] Kragen [Lum], who has been standing in for me [while I have been on tour with SLAYER], is going to play some songs. It's going to be a night to remember."

He continued: "Most of those songs are second nature to those who played on them. It's just a matter of getting it together. Hell, I need to call him, but I think we've even got Paul Bostaph coming up to play drums on a song. It's going to be a really cool night."

During an appearance on the latest episode of the "Talking Metal" podcast, Dukes was asked how he reconnected with his bandmates three years after his departure from the group.

"I'm gonna say it was about eight or nine months ago, Gary and I spoke," Rob revealed. "We reached out and we talked. It was the first time we talked in years. And it was nice, it was awkward. I hung up the phone with the feeling of… kind of like… just regret that we hadn't spoken sooner. Actually, a mutual friend had kind of put us in the realm of talking. [Our friend] had somehow convinced us that we should bury the bad blood and kind of just move on."

Dukes added that a famous rock group's internal dispute inspired him to make amends with his former bandmates. He explained: "I had read this little story… I don't remember where I read it, but Sammy Hagar had sent Eddie Van Halen a tweet saying, 'Happy birthday, dude. I hope all is well.' And then they asked him why he did that. He said, 'I don't wanna die with that stuff. I don't wanna go through my life with this nagging anger and resentment.' 'Cause when things end, nothing really ends good. Most things end badly; really rarely [do you say], 'Hey, this is so awesome. Let's just part ways.' That rarely ever happens. Usually things are amiss and things are not [as they should be]. And that's kind of how it was. I mean, I was at fault, I think they were at fault. I think we all kind of agreed that we all kind of have a part to play in this, and that's true. And I do too. And it took some [time] to see that. At first, it was anger and then resentment. Dude, I was losing five friendships, my job, my security that I had… my life I had grown accustomed to. So all that had played a part."

According to Dukes, he felt a sense of "relief" when he first spoke with Holt. "It was kind of what Sammy talked about — that [feeling of], 'Yeah, man, it's nice to not hold on to that,'" he said. "So it just kind of all went away; it really did. And I had spoken with Lee [Altus, EXODUS guitarist] a few times.

"Since I spoke with Gary, we pretty much stayed in contact pretty regularly," he continued. "And here's the thing: we've never talked music, we've never talked EXODUS, we've never talked… We didn't really hash out the past. We just both said, 'Look, I'm sorry for my part in all this.' And it was kind of nice. And Lee was the same way. So we talked for months. [Then] Tom [Hunting, EXODUS drummer] had called me a couple of months ago for the first time. We spoke. He was getting married and wanted me to come, but I couldn't make it. But, anyway, we just settled a lot of bad blood."

Dukes joined EXODUS in January 2005 and appeared on four of the band's studio albums — "Shovel Headed Kill Machine" (2005),"The Atrocity Exhibition... Exhibit A" (2007),"Let There Be Blood" (2008, a re-recording of EXODUS' classic 1985 LP, "Bonded By Blood") and "Exhibit B: The Human Condition" (2010).

EXODUS in June 2014 announced the departure of Dukes and the return of Steve "Zetro" Souza, who previously fronted EXODUS from 1986 to 1993 and from 2002 to 2004.

In some of the first interviews after his split from EXODUS, Dukes slammed his former bandmates, claiming that he "didn't like the new music they were writing" and saying that "there was just no passion in it."

Rob addressed some of his negative comments during the "Talking Metal" interview, saying "it was like a divorce. It was an ugly divorce that no one was really happy walking away from. And as some divorces happen, later on you become okay with the people. And I didn't wanna go through my life with that resentment."

He continued: "Look, I lived with those guys for ten fucking years. We've been through a bunch of shit. Especially with Lee — me and Lee were really close. I was close with his family — not only his parents, but his brother. So the family side of it was hard to walk away from without… One, you feel disappointed, you feel bad, which can sometimes turn to anger and resentment, and then you talk shit when you don't really want to, 'cause you're just hurt. And when you are hurt, sometimes you lash out. And I know that I did that from time to time. I tried to take the high road, and I tried to just be grateful for the experience and move on with my life. And then there were times when I would just get overwhelmed with the emotions of, 'Fuck them!' Even though most of the time I didn't walk around like that. I just tried to live my life and tried to move on to something else and focus on where I was at. And I missed some of the times we had."

Dukes said that he was looking forward to spending time and performing with his former bandmates again.

"I am flying [to San Francisco] Thursday [July 6] and we're gonna rehearse and then I'm gonna join them on stage Saturday with Rick Hunolt too, which I'm so stoked to see that me and him are gonna be in the same hotel," he said. "Rick is one of the funniest people ever and so much fun to hang out with. So it'll be nice to be at the same hotel with Rick and a couple of other guys that are gonna be there. And it'll be fun, man. It's gonna be fun. I'm gonna go out there, settle some bad blood, go out there, have some laughs, play some songs. I'm sure it'll be a love fest, it'll be all good. And hopefully it won't be too weird. You know what I mean?"

Regarding how he expected Saturday's concert to play out, Dukes said: "I'm gonna go out by myself with the band and sing the songs that I wrote. That's basically what's gonna happen. There's songs that I wrote — I wrote 'The Ballad Of Leonard And Charles', I wrote 'Children Of A Worthless God'… there's a couple of others. And so I'm basically gonna go do those. And then they're gonna do their show [with Zetro] or whatever, and then, at the end, probably everyone will come up and sing 'Toxic [Waltz]' or something like that. I don't know exactly how it's gonna go, but in my imagination, that's kind of how I see it going… And hopefully when I go back there, it'll be just kind of like a soothing process of all that, of, 'Yeah, man. That was fun, and it's all good. I wish you the best. And let's move forward.' So that's it."

Photos courtesy of Rob Dukes and Kragen Lum

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