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Remembering Arlington Native Vinnie Paul And The Legacy Of Pantera

Owen Sweeney/Invision/AP
Vinnie Paul, formerly of the band Pantera, performs in concert with Hellyeah at the Giant Center on Thursday, May 8, 2014, in Hershey, Pa.

Pantera was often overlooked by critics and rarely played on radio, but the Arlington band’s driving heavy metal sold more than nine million albums and won fans worldwide.

In June, Pantera’s drummer, Vincent Abbott, better known as Vinnie Paul, died of a heart attack in Las Vegas. He was 54. He co-founded Pantera, and later, the band Damageplan, with his brother, late guitarist Darrell Abbott.

Music writer Thor Christensen reflects on the brothers' legacy from their "somewhat frightening" shows to their wild house parties, including one where the Dallas Stars' 1999 Stanley Cup ended up in the pool.

There have been many famous acts out of North Texas. Where do Pantera and Damageplan fit in?

A lot of people don’t realize what an impact they had on worldwide music. Pantera was a Dallas band that sold millions and millions of records and really changed hard rock. To this day there are plenty of bands that are still incredibly influenced by Pantera and Vinnie Paul’s drumming.

What was special about his drumming?

The great thing about Vinnie Paul is, even though he was a super-heavy, hard-rock player, he had a jazz background. In Arlington, in high school, he was in the jazz band. And if you listen to Pantera’s music and the music of Damageplan and Hellyeah, you can hear these sort of intricate stop-and-start rhythms and odd time signatures.

There’s a great song by Pantera called “Walk” that they still play at the Texas Rangers’ games anytime the Rangers get a walk and it’s got this sort of crunching, staccato, massive, weird, psycho jazz, metal sound, and that’s evidence of Vinnie Paul’s sort of inventiveness. He was not satisfied with sort of a normal one-two-three beat. He always added something a little bit intense.

And who was their audience? Because they were hugely popular.

Pantera shows could be somewhat frightening if you were not well-prepared for what you were going to see. And what you saw was an intense display of just people going crazy — mostly men, mostly bare-chested. It didn’t matter if it was winter or summer, guys would take off their shirts and light them on fire and twirl them around and throw them in the air. And the band egged them on. It was quite a display to see.

Pantera eventually split up and Vinnie and his brother Darrell went on to form another band in Arlington called Damageplan, but that band was pretty short-lived and came to a really tragic end. 

Yes. Sadly in 2004, Damageplan was playing a concert in Ohio when a gunman stormed in and shot and killed four people, including lead guitarist Dimebag Darrell. And that spelled the end to a really promising career.

Where did that leave Vinnie?

Vinnie — he eventually regrouped and formed another band in 2006 called Hellyeah, who were an excellent band and continued playing up until his death. They carried on the tradition of Damageplan and Pantera playing super heavy music and not compromising and not trying to have radio hits.

 You interviewed both Vinnie Paul and Dimebag Darrell. What were they like? 

They were really fun-loving guys. I mean, everyone described them as the life of the party. Vinnie was infamous for some of his parties, including one after the Dallas Stars won their Stanley Cup in the late ‘90s. He hosted a huge party at his house in Arlington and what happened to the Stanley Cup? Well, it somehow managed to fly off a balcony and into Vinnie Paul’s swimming pool. So, that is one of the many legendary stories about Vinnie Paul and his love of life and his life of partying.

They were definitely living the rock and roll lifestyle. 

They were. And in interviews, he often complained that rock and roll was getting too boring.

It’s interesting to me that these two brothers formed this band. What can you tell me about how they grew up?

The Abbotts grew up in a musical household. Their dad, Jerry Abbott, was a country songwriter who had some measure of fame in Nashville. Early on, their dad actually managed and helped produced their early records. These are boys who grew up in a household where music was cherished.

Pantera started almost 30 years ago. Do you think they’ll be remembered in another 30 years?

I think they will. I think Pantera is a band that flew under the radar of the critics and of mainstream culture, but for people who appreciate real rock and roll and hard rock and heavy metal, Pantera are one of the true innovators of metal. They really took punk rock and metal and collided it. Vinnie Paul was a huge part of that.

Interview responses have been lightly edited for clarity and length.

Anne Bothwell is Vice President, Arts at KERA, the public radio and television station for North Texas. She oversees local arts, music and culture content on a variety of station platforms, including KERA FM, KERA TV, artandseek.org, kxt.org and keranews.org. KERA’s arts journalists have won numerous awards for their work, including a national Edward R. Murrow award for video. The television series Frame of Mind spotlights Texas’ independent filmmakers. The Art&Seek calendar connects you with arts events. And the State of the Arts conversation series in Dallas, Fort Worth and Denton uses arts and culture as lens to frame community issues. Anne got her start as an arts editor in newspapers, with stints at The Dallas Morning News and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. She has a journalism degree from Northwestern University.