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David Michael Draiman was born to Jewish parents in the Brooklyn borough of New York City on March 13, 1973. [2] His father, YJ, had worked as a real estate developer and small-business owner before he was arrested for embezzlement and sent to prison when Draiman was 12 years old. [2]
Before David Draiman joined Disturbed, guitarist Dan Donegan, drummer Mike Wengren and bassist Steve "Fuzz" Kmak were in a band called Brawl with vocalist Erich Awalt. . Before changing their name to "Brawl", however, Donegan mentioned in the band's DVD, Decade of Disturbed, that the name was originally going to be "Crawl"; they switched it to "Brawl", because the name was already being used ...
Device was an American industrial metal band started by David Draiman, frontman of the heavy metal group Disturbed, [3] and Geno Lenardo, former guitarist of Filter. [4] They released one album, Device , in 2013.
Device is the only studio album by American industrial metal band Device, a side project featuring David Draiman of Disturbed and former Filter guitarist Geno Lenardo. It was released on April 9, 2013, with their first single, "Vilify", out on digital download on February 19, 2013.
This is the moment a heavy metal singer stops his band's concert after scaring a young girl in the front row. Disturbed singer David Draiman is seen comforting the girl who appears somewhat ...
Disturbed is an American heavy metal band that was formed when guitarist Dan Donegan, drummer Mike Wengren and bassist Steve "Fuzz" Kmak hired vocalist David Draiman in 1996. Over the course of its career, Disturbed has earned three Grammy nominations, one Billboard Music Award nomination and five iHeartRadio Music Awards nominations. Overall ...
The camera then fades out and back in, showing Draiman restrained in a straitjacket, showing that he could not bring himself to commit suicide. The edited version of the music video, which does not feature any suicidal themes whatsoever, simply depicts Disturbed playing the song in a dark room, with the band members occasionally covered in blood.
Singer David Draiman also wished to demonstrate a greater vocal dimension than the intense style he was previously associated with. Nevertheless, he described the content of the album as "pure and unadulterated in every sense of the word 'metal'." [6] As noted by Draiman, Believe contains overt religious