First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"For as long as I can remember, the guitar and music itself is the thing that has gotten me through everything. Whatever it is I'm thinking about, or worrying about, or feeling good about -- anything -- the music has just been there. It's sort of like a model for the way things could actually work somehow. The music itself, just being immersed in the melody and the harmony and the rhythm of it, is so extraordinary, but then I think also all the people I've known... As soon as I started to play, it caused this circle of people to be there where everything was cool somehow."
"Drifting in and out, you see the road youāre on It came rolling down the cheek Say just what you need in between, itās never as it seems"
"If you built yourself a myth You'd know just what to give What comes after this Momentary bliss Consequence of what you do to me"
"Canāt keep hanging on To all thatās dead and gone If you built yourself a myth You'd know just what to give Materialize Or let the ashes fly."
"Tender is the night For a broken heart Who will dry your eyes When it falls apart"
"Risks can be really small moments. You know, it's like a small little pivot and there you went. You know, and you just let go. You did the past, you did the things, but you let them go. And putting out a record is that."
"I saw [the album cover for '] and was like, 'oh my -- damn. That has got to piss some people off.' [...] It's one to have people dying in your [albums], well you start messing with children, and people start getting pissed off."
"Iāve never voted in my life. Iāve never registered to vote, and Iām not going to. You know what, I pay my taxes. I work my ass off and I give my money to things that I donāt agree with. [...] OK, then they would say, āYou can change that by voting.ā No, because Iām just one vote. What if I donāt agree with all they do? Iām legally bound to pay taxes, I have to do that, so I do. Thereās my contribution to politics. Other than that, leave me and my family alone, weāre not hurting anybody. Just that simple. I donāt need to be in it. I have my views on things Iāve seen, and if ever I was that compelled by any candidate, maybe I would register to vote and vote. [...] I just want to go and play music and come home to my kids and my wife. I donāt want to sit here and be in the picket line because theyāre being untreated fairly, then you got the other guys on the other side saying, āNo theyāre not.ā Youāve always got the conservative people there, you always have the left-wing people there, and people in the middle, just trying to walk down the street and they canāt, because thereās people blocking the way."
"I guess a [crucial] part of our popularity is that you donāt go in there worrying about listening to me preach that Hillaryās right and Trumpās wrong, or Trumpās right and sheās wrong, because we donāt care about that. As far as our music goes, on stage, weāre just singing about what we sing about. Hopefully everybodyās having a good time, hopefully everybody gets to the show safe, leaves the show safe, and comes back for more. [...] If people can escape with us, then, yeah, you know? And I wouldnāt say donāt listen to bands who are political, like Napalm Death is; thereās definitely those bands, and thatās good. Thatās whatās in his heart, and he should do that. If I would make a band thatās talking about politics, I would do a side band. Thatās not going to be in Cannibal. This whole world should just start thinking, āJust because you stand a little this way, or stand a little that way, that doesnāt mean we canāt all come together and try to compromise.ā Donāt let politics and religion divide you. I donāt want to be conspiracy-esque, but Iām going to say this and itās going to be conspiracy-esque, but [division is] what I think some people want."
"It's art, just look at it as art. Yeah, it's disgusting, but that's never gonna happen. Go to the Vatican and look at some of the artwork there. Woah! That's real, representing something that could happen. Monsters are never gonna come ripping out of your body."
"The musicās brutal and some of the lyrics reflect that, but weāre not trying to make people aware of anything. All you have to do is watch the news if you want to be aware of all the violence in the world."
"Itās a pain in the ass [...] A woman saw someone wearing one of our shirts, I think she is a schoolteacher, and she just caused this big stink about it. So [now] we can't play anything from the first three records. And it really sucks because kids come up and they want us to play all the old songs ā and we would ā but they know the deal. We can't play 'Born in a Casket' but can play 'Dismembered and Molested.' Talk about getting lucky, because I canāt see why they wouldnāt want to ban that."
"I thought Barnes was irreplaceable. I had no idea who could take his place, but occasionally, amid the drama and confusion, Rob Barrett would speak up and say, "Let's bring in George." Rob was the easiest to get on board with the decision. I'll stress this: The decision to remove Barnes was ultimately the band's. Alex and the guys knew I didn't think Barnes's performance was up to par, but kicking out a band member was not my territory. I wasn't thinking about George at the time. I worried about getting the album done and didn't see how we would do it without Barnes. I remember the Cannibal guys saying they didn't care if Metal Blade dropped them. They wanted to make one record where they were as happy with the vocals as the music. It took a lot of courage to make that call."
"Kiss the ass of metal, you fucking jerk-offs!"
"I donāt want people to think Iām the maniac that people think I am, think all of us are. Weāre five guys in a band, touring, living our dreams, playing metal. We could sing about politics, but weād get into way more fights and arguments way more than we do now. We could be a Satanic evil band, you know, or a super religious band, you know, really getting both sides of the coin there. Metalheads donāt give a fuck, we accept everybody."
"I donāt have a problem singing our lyrics with two daughters at home. [...] If one of my daughters went to college and was raped or something, first off, rape songs wouldnāt even be what I was thinking of. Iād be thinking of our other songs. Because Iād be going there to find who did it, and make them pay. But would I then want to play those songs on stage? I donāt know. Iād have to cross that bridge. I can understand how some people would be like, āIf itās happening with you and your daughters, you should feel that uncomfortable with everybody,ā and I donāt have a problem with at least listening to peopleās opinions about it."
"Weāre a death metal band. I got two daughters now, and weāve got songs like āFucked with a Knifeā and āStripped, Raped and Strangled.ā Itās pretty heavy stuff, and I think a lot of people think weāre insensitive to stuff like that, especially in this day and age when youāre supposed to apologize for everything you do because of someoneās feelings. Look, weāre a death metal band; itās horror-movie-type stuff. Itās fiction. Itās not real. Weāre like Stephen King with music. Sometimes people point to some of the things I say, and sometimes Iām a little harsh with the things I say on stage, but I just hope they put it together that I would never condone anything like that. I have two daughters and I would protect them with my life."
"Iām not going to get on Instagram to bitch about politics. In this day and age youāre either with Trump or against Trump, youāre either with Hillary or against her, you canāt be in the middle, itās ridiculous to me. I might like tacos but I donāt like pizza,; maybe I like pizza only with pepperoni but no other kind of pizza, but no, thatās not allowed. In politics it seems like itās like that, and theyāre all so negative anyway. In Cannibal Corpse, most people want to paint us as being negative anyway, and weāre notāweāre just five guys in a band whoāre into horror movie stuff. We donāt sing about politics; we might all have our own views, we probably all have our own religious views as well, but we just donāt let that creep into this band. Itās not about that. itās about horror movie stuff. You wanna talk about it on an individual basis, Iām not that well informed. I donāt think that far into that kind of stuff."
"Iām the Corpsegrinder, bro! I aināt scared of shit. What scares me is old age, ācause there aināt no escapinā that. And you know what scares me? An empty bottle of beer and an empty bottle of whiskey. Thatās scary. Itās the only thing I can say and still be tough."
Young though he was, his radiant energy produced such an impression of absolute reliability that Hedgewar made him the first sarkaryavah, or general secretary, of the RSS.
- Gopal Mukund Huddar
Largely because of the influence of communists in London, Huddar's conversion into an enthusiastic supporter of the fight against fascism was quick and smooth. The ease with which he crossed from one worldview to another betrays the fact that he had not properly understood the world he had grown in.
Huddar would have been 101 now had he been alive. But then centenaries are not celebrated only to register how old so and so would have been and when. They are usually celebrated to explore how much poorer our lives are without them. Maharashtrian public life is poorer without him. It is poorer for not having made the effort to recall an extraordinary life.
I regret I was not there to listen to Balaji Huddar's speech [...] No matter how many times you listen to him, his speeches are so delightful that you feel like listening to them again and again.
By the time he came out of Franco's prison, Huddar had relinquished many of his old ideas. He displayed a worldview completely different from that of the RSS, even though he continued to remain deferential to Hedgewar and maintained a personal relationship with him.