Bordin and Faith No More (which included keyboardist Roddy Bottum, guitarist Jim Martin, and singer Chuck Mosely) issued a pair of albums, 1985's We Care a Lot and 1987's Introduce Yourself, which created a loud buzz in the underground. But it wasn't until newcomer Mike Patton replaced Mosely as the group's frontman that Faith No More began to infiltrate the mainstream, issuing a string of now classic hard rock releases that have influenced countless other bands in its wake: 1989's The Real Thing, 1992's Angel Dust, 1995's King for a Day, Fool for a Lifetime, and 1997's Album of the Year. Despite rumors throughout FNM's career of friction amongst the bandmembers, the band managed to remain together until 1998. Bordin (who had previously filled in for Bill Ward as part of a reunited Black Sabbath at the 1997 edition of Ozzfest) began playing with other heavy metal acts immediately after FNM's split, including work with Ozzy Osbourne's solo band (with whom Bordin has toured with several times and played on 2001's Down to Earth), Korn (briefly filling in on tour for injured drummer David Silveria), an unreleased effort by former Guns N' Roses bassist Duff McKagan (1999's Beautiful Disease), and former Alice in Chains guitarist Jerry Cantrell's sophomore release. ~ Greg Prato, Rovi
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Los Bastardos |
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Crazy Train |
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Choked |