Scott Ian

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Scott Ian
Anthrax, Scott Ian at Wacken Open Air 2013.jpg
Scott Ian performing with Anthrax in 2013
Background information
Birth name Scott Ian Rosenfeld
Born (1963-12-31) December 31, 1963 (age 60)
Queens, New York City, United States
Genres Thrash metal, crossover thrash
Occupation(s) Musician, songwriter
Instruments Guitar, bass, piano, drums, percussion, vocals
Years active 1981–present
Associated acts Anthrax, Stormtroopers of Death, Damnocracy, Pearl, The Damned Things, Motor Sister, Steel Panther
Notable instruments
Jackson 'Scott Ian' Signature Model
Washburn 'Scott Ian' Signature Model

Scott Ian (born Scott Ian Rosenfeld; December 31, 1963) is an American musician, best known as the rhythm guitarist, backing and additional lead vocalist, and the only remaining original founding member for the thrash metal band, Anthrax. He also writes the lyrics on all their albums.[1] Ian is the guitarist and a founding member of the crossover thrash band Stormtroopers of Death. He has hosted The Rock Show on VH1 and has appeared on VH1's I Love the... series, Heavy: The Story of Metal and Supergroup (TV series). Ian is also the rhythm guitarist for the metal band The Damned Things.

Biography

Early life

Born Scott Ian Rosenfeld [2] (name has since been legally changed) to a Jewish family in the Bayside section of the New York City borough of Queens, he has a younger brother named Jason (who was involved briefly with Anthrax) and a half-brother named Sean. Scott attended Bayside High School, with classmates (and future Anthrax bandmates) Dan Lilker and Neil Turbin of the graduating class of 1981.

Witnessing Kiss live at Madison Square Garden in 1977 made a huge impact on Ian, who has been vocal about his love for the band, and appeared on an episode of Gene Simmons Family Jewels, in which he visited Simmons' home and spoke about the impact Kiss had on his life. Ian went on to be influenced by British heavy metal bands such as Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden, Motörhead and Judas Priest, as well as the NYC hardcore music scene. Ian also discovered the Ramones around the age of 12 and knew that he could become a famous hard rock/heavy metal star. The musical style of his playing and songwriting including fast alternate picking was also largely influenced by the German metal band Accept.

Anthrax

Scott Ian at Nova Rock 2014

As a founding member of Anthrax, Ian helped to create thrash metal in the mid-1980s alongside Megadeth, Slayer and Metallica. Ian came up with the idea to collaborate with the rap group Public Enemy in 1991 and record a foundation of the rap/rock genre by covering Public Enemy's song Bring the Noise. In 2005, Ian was invited by Chuck D of Public Enemy to perform "Bring the Noise" with them as part of their induction into VH1's Hip Hop Honors Hall of Fame. Ian also joined Public Enemy on the Rock The Bells tour in 2007.

In 2009, Anthrax completed a run of European festivals including Metallica's Sonisphere festivals in Germany and Knebworth in the U.K. which was highlighted by the return of singer John Bush. Anthrax returned to Japan in October 2009 with Bush to play at the Loud Park festival in Tokyo. Anthrax's next shows were in Australia in February 2010 as a part of the Soundwave Festival. Anthrax was a part of the Sonisphere Festival in Europe in the summer of 2010, where for the first time Metallica, Anthrax, Slayer and Megadeth performed together on the same stage.

Other ventures

Ian got into a television gig with VH1 in 2001 when they asked him to host "Rock Show". During his 48 episodes as host, Ian interviewed guests including Ozzy Osbourne, Rob Halford, Ted Nugent, Stone Temple Pilots, Megadeth, 3 Doors Down, Sevendust, Tenacious D and The Cult. Ian is a regular commentator on various VH1 shows including the "I Love The 70s, 80s, and 90s" series, "100 Most Metal Moments", "Awesomely Bad Number One Songs", "When Metallica Ruled The World", and episodes of VH1's "Behind The Music" featuring Metallica, Pantera and Anthrax. Ian was prominently featured in VH1's "History of Heavy Metal". In June 2006, Ian starred in the VH1 reality series "SuperGroup" with Ted Nugent, Sebastian Bach, Jason Bonham and Evan Seinfeld.

Ian plays guitar in the group Pearl, who just finished two tours with Velvet Revolver and Meat Loaf. The debut album from Pearl was released on January 19, 2010 through Megaforce Records. Ian performed with Pearl on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on January 20, 2010.

In 2008, DC Comics asked Ian to take the character Lobo and write a two-issue prestige format series for that character. Books one and two of Lobo: Highway To Hell were released in November and December 2009.

In 2008, Ian signed with Ultimate Bet, the third largest internet gaming site in the world as one of their online professional players. Ian joined professional poker players Phil Hellmuth Jr. and Annie Duke as one of Ultimate Bets star pros. He won Ultimate Bet's premier Sunday 200K tournament and he cashed in 2010's WSOP main event by finishing 634th out of 6494 players. In 2010 Ian joined the metal supergroup The Damned Things, which released their first album on December 14, 2010. On June 21, 2011 Ian's wife Pearl Aday gave birth to their first child, thus forcing Ian to briefly depart from Anthrax's tour. Andreas Kisser from Sepultura filled in for Scott on guitar during Scott's absence.

Scott Ian planned a spoken word tour entitled Speaking Words starting in May 2013, in the UK.[3]

In 2014 he joined former members of Mother Superior to form Motor Sister. They released their debut album Ride on 9th March 2015.

Personal life

He was married formerly to his high school girlfriend, Majorie Ginsberg, in the 1980s;[2] the marriage ended in divorce.

Ian is married to singer Pearl Aday, daughter of famed singer Meat Loaf. Their first child Revel Young Ian, was born on June 19, 2011.[4] Ian is a New York Yankees fan. He enjoys snowboarding. He plays poker and is an online pro at UltimateBet. He finished 637th in the 2009 World Series of Poker Main Event taking home $21,365.[5] He is a Battlestar Galactica fan, posting numerous blogs about the show and also making an appearance for the red carpet series finale and playing guitar on "The Plan" made-for-DVD film soundtrack.

He is a fan of Doctor Who, the television series, as seen in "The Best of the Doctor" that aired August 13, 2011 on BBC America numbered episode 166. Ian is a fan of hip hop music, particularly Public Enemy. He was known to wear Public Enemy shirts while performing gigs in the late 1980s and also said Run-DMC came out with the same aggression that metal bands played with (that he was listening to). He fell in love with rap and said Run-DMC was the group that put rap on the map.

He co-owns a hard rock bar called Dead Man's Hand in Las Vegas with Jerry Cantrell of Alice in Chains.[6]

Discography

With Anthrax

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With Stormtroopers of Death

Date of release Title Label Chart positions US sales
December 1985 Speak English or Die Megaforce Records
October 24, 1992 Live at Budokan Megaforce Records
May 22, 1999 Bigger than the Devil Nuclear Blast Records
August 21, 2007 Rise of the Infidels Megaforce Records

Stormtroopers of Death videos

Date of release Title Label Chart positions US sales
January 23, 2001 Kill Yourself: The Movie (DVD or VHS) Nuclear Blast Records
September 25, 2001 Speak English or Live (DVD) Nuclear Blast Records
July 26, 2005 20 Years of Dysfunction Nuclear Blast Records

Collaborations

Television

Equipment

Scott Ian uses his signature Jackson guitars and signature Randall MTS Series heads and cabinets. He is known to use Dimebag Darrell tribute Deans and previously endorsed Washburn.[8][9][10] During the mid 1980s, he used ESP guitars for a while, also getting Kirk Hammett his ESP endorsement. Scott uses a DigiTech signature Black 13 distortion pedal, and a DigiTech chorus pedal for his clean sounds.[11] Many of his guitars have been equipped with custom made Seymour Duncan "El Diablo" pickups,[12] but can also be seen using standard Seymour Duncan SH-4's and '59 pickups on several guitars, including his newest signature Jackson. He also recently began endorsing Evertune bridges.[13]

In late 2009, Scott ended his endorsement with Washburn and went back to Jackson guitars. He was seen using custom made Soloist and Randy Rhoads guitars during the 2009 Sonisphere Festival. On March 27, 2010, Scott announced the production of a new signature guitar by Jackson via Twitter and YouTube. He said it would be based on his Soloist from 1987. It has a silverburst finish, a single Seymour Duncan J.B. humbucker, lightning bolt inlays, and a string-thru/tune-o-matic bridge. A dual-humbucker version with a Floyd Rose tremolo will also be released. He stated, "I am so stoked to be back with Jackson." He was seen using this guitar while playing with Brian Posehn at the Revolver Golden Gods Awards and with The Damned Things at the 2011 Download Festival.

Guitars

  • Jackson Scott Ian Signature T-1000 Soloist[14]
  • Jackson custom T-1000 Randy Rhoads
  • Jackson custom "NOT" Soloist
  • Jackson Adrian Smith San Dimas Dinky
  • Gibson Flying V (1982, Used in the studio)
  • Gibson "Thunderhorse" Explorer (Used at Download Festival 2011 with The Damned Things)
  • Jackson JJ1 (USA-made, Seymour Duncan JB And Jazz pickups, Alder or Korina body with maple neck)
  • Jackson JJ2 (USA-Made, Seymour Duncan El-Diablo pickups and a killswitch, alder body with maple neck or mahogany body with mahogany neck)
  • Jackson JJ4 (Lower-end model, Asian-Made, with Duncan Designed pickups and a killswitch)
  • Jackson JJ5 (5-string Baritone)
  • Jackson Custom "NOT" Telecaster
  • Charvel Surfcaster (with Seymour Duncan Humbucker in the Bridge Position and the stock Chandler Lipstick pickup in the angled Neck position: Main guitar for the Sound of White Noise era)
  • Jackson Randy Rhoads (1982)
  • Washburn SI75TI (Used Washburn from 2004–2009)
  • Washburn WV540VASI
  • Washburn WV40VASI
  • Washburn SI60MW
  • Washburn SI61G
  • ESP M-100FM
  • ESP Custom M-II and Telecasters (1985–1989)
  • ESP TE-230SI (Signature model based on Scott Ian's red ESP Telecaster in the mid-to-late 1980s. Japan only)
  • Seymour Duncan J.B. pickups
  • Seymour Duncan El Diablo (Scott Ian custom shop pickups)
  • DR Strings .10-.52
  • DR Strings .18-.56 (for JJ-5)
  • Dunlop Tortex .88mm Picks

Effects

In Rack Case:

On Floor:

  • CAE MC404 Wah[14]
  • DigiTech WH-2 Whammy[14]
  • Boss TU-3 Tuner[14]

Other:

  • BBE 462 Sonic Maximizer
  • DigiTech Black 13 distortion pedal
  • DigiTech XMC chorus pedal
  • TC Electronic Booster+ Line Driver & Distortion
  • Korg DTR-1 Tuner
  • Rocktron HUSH IIC
  • Samson UHF Synth 6 Wireless

Amplifiers

  • Randall/Mike Fortin prototype signature
  • Randall MTS Series RM100SI signature head with signature modules[14]
  • Randall MTS series RM100 and RM100LB heads (With Ultra modules)
  • Randall V2 400 Watt Heads
  • Randall V-Max Heads (Used in 2003 before the V2 and MTS heads)
  • Randall Cyclone Heads (Used from 2001–2003)
  • Randall Warhead Heads (First amp used when Ian transitioned from Marshall to Randall)
  • Randall SI412 signature speaker Cabs
  • Randall NB412 Nuno Bettencourt Signature 4x12 Cabs
  • Randall XL 4x12 Cabs
  • Randall XL 2x12 and 1x15 Cabs
  • Fender/EVH 5150III Heads (Backup, seen at the Loud Park 2009 Festival)
  • Marshall JCM 800 2210 (Early years of Anthrax, and used for leads on "We've Come For You All". Used by Rob Caggiano for recording Worship Music)
  • Peavey 6505+ 120 Watt head
  • Randall RT100 heads (Only used at the 2010 Revolver Golden Gods Awards while performing in Brian Posehn's backing band)
  • Randall RT-412RC Cabs (See above)

References

  1. Songfact Interview with Charlie Benante
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  8. [1] Archived November 20, 2006 at the Wayback Machine
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  11. [2] Archived May 16, 2007 at the Wayback Machine
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External links

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