Dave Farrell

David Michael Farrell, better known by his stage name Phoenix (born February 8, 1977) is an American musician, best known as the bassist and backing vocalist of the rock band Linkin Park.[2] He was also a member of Tasty Snax, a pop punk band.

Dave Farrell
Farrell performing with Linkin Park in 2011
Background information
Birth nameDavid Michael Farrell
Also known asPhoenix
Born (1977-02-08) February 8, 1977[1]
Plymouth, Massachusetts, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)Musician
InstrumentsBass
Years active1995–present
Associated acts
Websitelinkinpark.com

Early life

Farrell was taught how to play guitar by his mother when he was in high school.[3] He grew up in Plymouth but later moved to Mission Viejo, California at the age of 5.

Tasty Snax

While attending high school, Farrell joined a Christian Ska-Punk rock band named 'Tasty Snax', who would later rename themselves to 'The Snax'.[4] Phoenix transitioned from the electric guitar to bass to accommodate The Snax. The band included Farrell's longtime college friend Mark Fiore, who was also associated in making of various video albums for Linkin Park.[4] The band recorded two studio albums and one compilation album, signed to Screaming Giant Records.[5] Farrell left the band in 2000.

Linkin Park

Dave Farrell playing with Linkin Park at The Globe Arena in Stockholm.

Farrell joined Xero, the earliest incarnation of Linkin Park, after meeting Brad Delson at UCLA.[6] He contributed to the band's self-titled demo tape in 1997, but left the project to tour with Tasty Snax.[7] Farrell's void was temporally filled by Delson, Ian Hornbeck, and Scott Koziol, who all contributed to Hybrid Theory, Linkin Park's debut album.[7] Farrell returned to Linkin Park in 2000 after a year-long absence.[8] Linkin Park's future has been uncertain since the death of lead vocalist Chester Bennington on July 20, 2017.[9] After nearly a three-year hiatus, Farrell revealed that Linkin Park is working on new music.[10]

Discography

With Linkin Park

With Tasty Snax

  • Run Joseph Run (1998)
  • Snax (2000)
gollark: It trickled into higher-level languages, which now arbitrarily BREAK EQUALITY.
gollark: Oh, you know what else bad? IEEE 754 NaN handling.
gollark: Oh, and more bees: IMPLICIT STRING CONCATENATION?`"a" "b" "c"` → `"abc"` (string literals only).
gollark: Wow, this new material was a great idea, thanks <@!293066066605768714>.
gollark: But lists are mutable, so it appended to the list fine, but `+=` tries to mutate the tuple, which python does not like, so it errors AFTER that.

References

  1. Biography
  2. "Dave Farrell". Last.FM. Retrieved 27 January 2018.
  3. "Dave "Phoenix" Farrell". lpzistas.com. Retrieved 26 January 2018.
  4. "Dave Farrell (Phoenix)". Spirit of Metal. Retrieved 27 January 2018.
  5. "Tasty Snax Discography". AllMusic.com. Retrieved 27 January 2018.
  6. Kendall, Rebecca (2014-03-25). "Congressman, entertainment luminaries honored at UCLA environment gala". UCLA Newsroom. Retrieved 2019-09-01.
  7. Childers, Chad (2016-10-24). "18 Years Ago: Linkin Park Unleashed Hybrid Theory". KBAT. Retrieved 2019-09-01.
  8. Lptimes.com, Band History Archived July 23, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved September 1, 2019
  9. Sharp, Tyler (2018-07-19). "Linkin Park Bassist Dave Farrell Writes Open Letter to Chester Bennington Read More: Linkin Park Bassist Writes Open Letter to Chester Bennington". Loudwire. Retrieved 2019-09-01.
  10. "Linkin Park Have Been Working On New Music". Kerrang!. 2020-04-28. Retrieved 2020-08-07.
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