A crucial figure in the Southern branch of the extreme metal community,
Dax Riggs was born in Evansville, IN, on October 15, 1973, where he lived with his mother after the divorce of his parents. As
Riggs edged into adolescence, he began to question his mother's devotion to the faith of the Jehovah's Witnesses, and he moved to Houma, LA, to live with his father. While initially
Riggs didn't care for life down south, in his teens he developed a passion for rock & roll, and after singing with a pair of short-lived local bands,
Riggs became the lead vocalist with the pioneering sludge metal band
Acid Bath, featuring guitarists
Sammy Duet and
Mike Sanchez, bassist
Audie Pitre, and drummer
Jimmy Kyle. While
Acid Bath's punishing but trippy, groove-laden sound would prove to be deeply influential, the group's audience was frustratingly small during its existence, and the band called it quits in 1997 after the death of
Audie Pitre in an auto accident. After fronting a short-lived group called
Daisyhead & the Mooncrickets,
Riggs re-emerged on the music scene with
Agents of Oblivion, which also included
Acid Bath guitarist
Mike Sanchez as well as
Alex Bergeron on bass,
Jeff McCarty on drums, and
Chuck Pitre on keyboards.
Agents of Oblivion's sound was as doomstruck as
Acid Bath, but the approach was more subdued, showing the influence of traditional hard rock and blues in its slower tempos and smoother melodies.
Agents of Oblivion released one album in 2000, but broke up not long after completing a tour to support it. After the collapse of
Agents of Oblivion,
Riggs formed a new band,
Deadboy & the Elephantmen, which sported a stripped-down, blues-based sound and featured
Riggs playing guitar as well as singing. The group's first album, 2002's If This Is Hell, Then I'm Lucky, was a full-band affair, with
Riggs joined by
Jason Dupre on guitar,
Chris Gautreaux on bass, and
Jeff Lecompte on drums, but he pared the group back to a duo for 2005's
We Are Night Sky, with
Riggs joined by drummer
Tess Brunet. In late 2006,
Brunet quit the band, and as
Riggs was recording
Deadboy & the Elephantmen's third album with a rotating crew of musicians, he opted to abandon the group moniker and release the music under the name
Dax Riggs. Featuring some of
Riggs' most powerful and emotionally incisive music to date,
We Sing of Only Blood or Love was released in the summer of 2007. ~ Mark Deming, All Music Guide