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Icepick's Danny Diablo Joins Necro Tour
12/31/2007

From: Suburban Noize Records
The innovator of "Thugcore," Danny Diablo has been confirmed for Necro's upcoming North
American headlining tour. The tour, which will also feature
Psycho Realm and The R.O.C, will kick off in across Canada on January 8th, 2008 and hit
select markets in the US.
"I am really happy that I will be touring with Necro, Psycho Realm and Riviera Regime. I
consider these hardcore rap groups to be family and it is an honor to bless the stage with
them," says Diablo. "I'm gonna bring it N.Y.H.C. style to these shows. I can't wait to play the
Canadian shows cause I have been getting mad love from my Canadian fans over the years.
So get ready for Danny Diablo and his Thugcore music to bring down the house."
Danny Diablo is currently supporting his Suburban Noize debut, Thugcore 4
Life. The album is a combination of New York style hardcore and hip-hop mixed
together. The album features guest appearances by some of music's biggest names Daddy X
(Kottonmouth Kings), the Sub Hoodz Stress and Harley Havok, DJ Lethal (House of Pain), Slain,
Danny Boy and La Coka Nostra's Big Left and Ceekay.
Diablo rose through the ranks of the New York hardcore scene during the mid-'90s as the
frontman of the legendary Skarhead. After touring the world several times over and
influencing a slew of new age hardcore bands, Diablo joined forces with Hatebreed frontman
Jamey Jasta in Icepick. The duo's side-project, which took hardcore back to its roots, released
their debut album Violent Epiphany in 2006 via Jasta's own Stillborn Records.
Currently Diablo is working with producer Tim Armstrong (Rancid) recording his upcoming
album, International Hardcore Superstar, for release in 2008.
"It's the same thing," Diablo says commenting on what brought this hardcore veteran to
hip-hop. "I'm from the same neighborhood. I'm from Jackson Heights, Queens. Growing up, I
was in an area of Queens that always had rappers walking around like Kool G Rap (and) Eric B.
I grew up in rap. I listened to rap before I listened to metal. Then I got to metal and then I got
to hardcore. But it's the same thing, hardcore and rap. In the '80s, they were talking about
the same thing struggles...."
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