Due to strong demand, The Mondo Generator have added a Perth date to their upcoming Australian tour. Nick Oliveri and his band mates look forward to bringing their insane brand of rock to the west coast of Australia with Nick simply suggesting 'Perth is bad ass! let's do it' when the opportunity to play in the west arose. The Perth show which is happening at the Amplifier Bar on Wednesday August 20th is in addition to already announced shows in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane.
After spending the early nineties as bass player in Kyuss and the early years of this decade alongside Josh Homme in Queens Of The Stone Age, Nick Oliveri is finally bringing his own band The Mondo Generator to Australia for the first time to play four shows in August.
Originally formed by Oliveri and former Kyuss band mates Brant Bjork and Josh Homme in 1997, The Mondo Generator was initially intended to be a side project. The groups classic 'Cocaine Rodeo' album was recorded that same year, but shelved until its unique brand of criminal insanity was released to widespread acclaim in 2000. The Mondo Generator returned with 'A Drug Problem That Never Existed' in 2003 and then last year unleased their third full length 'Dead Planet'.
Following mainstream success with Queens of the Stone Age that included top ten albums and a Triple J Hottest 100 number one position here in Australia, Oliveri split with his Queens Of The Stone Age collaborator Josh Homme after an Australian tour in 2004. Since leaving, Nick has both toured and appeared on-stage with Brant Bjork, Motörhead, Winnebago Deal, Masters of Reality, The Dwarves, Mark Lanegan and Turbonegro.
On the eve of the release of 'Dead Planet' Oliveri declared "Mondo Generator is not a side-project anymore, I used to do Mondo every now and then on spare time and now it's my first choice. All other bands I play in have become my side-project, so in other words my mistress has now become my wife.
Recorded by producer Nick Raskulinecz (Foo Fighters, Velvet Revolver, System Of A Down) at Dave Grohls Studio 606, 'Dead Planet' has was praised by critics across the world and left no doubt in many of their minds where the danger in the sounds of earlier Queens Of The Stone Age albums had gone. Speaking on the album Oliveri states "It's a rock n' roll record played by a rock n' roll band."
Australia now gets the chance to experience that rock n roll band live for the first time when Nick Oliveri brings The Mondo Generator to Australia :