Dave Catching
David Catching (born June 7, 1961) is an American musician, producer, and recording studio co-owner from Memphis, Tennessee, recognized for his pivotal role in the stoner and desert rock movements.[1][2]
As a founding member of the stoner rock band earthlings? since 1993 alongside Fred Drake and Pete Stahl, Catching contributed to the genre's raw, psychedelic sound rooted in Southern California's Palm Desert Scene.[3][4] He joined Queens of the Stone Age as an original member from 1996 to 2000, providing guitar and drumming on early recordings and tours that helped define the band's heavy, riff-driven style.[5][6]
Catching serves as the guitarist for Eagles of Death Metal, a garage rock project led by Josh Homme, where his slide guitar and energetic performances have been central to albums and live shows since the band's inception.[7][8] In 1993, he co-founded Rancho De La Luna, a remote Joshua Tree studio with Drake, which became a creative hub for desert rock; following Drake's 2002 death, Catching maintained it as a site for influential recordings by artists such as Queens of the Stone Age, Foo Fighters, Iggy Pop, and Arctic Monkeys.[9][6][5] His production work there emphasizes analog warmth and spontaneous collaboration, yielding a legacy of genre-shaping sessions without reliance on mainstream hype.[3][6]
Early life
Upbringing and initial influences
David Catching was born on June 7, 1961, in Memphis, Tennessee.[10] He grew up in a musical family environment where his older brother Jack and uncle David, both accomplished musicians, played a pivotal role in fostering his interest in music from a young age.[7] This exposure was supplemented by the sounds of 1960s and 1970s radio broadcasts in the Memphis area, which introduced him to a range of rock styles prevalent at the time.[7] Catching received his first guitar at age 15, learning basic chords from his brother Jack and a friend named Price, which marked the beginning of his hands-on musical development without formal training.[7] He quickly expanded his skills to include drums, bass, and keyboards through self-directed practice, drawing inspiration from 1970s glam rock acts like T. Rex, as well as foundational rock figures such as Chuck Berry and the Rolling Stones.[11] Emerging punk and psychedelic elements also influenced his early listening, reflecting the raw, experimental ethos of the era's underground scenes accessible via records and local airwaves.[6] By his late teens, Catching prioritized practical experimentation over structured education, forming bands with friends to cover songs before transitioning to original compositions and live performances, such as gigs with the Red Sharks in 1978.[7] This DIY approach, rooted in Memphis's vibrant music culture, laid the foundation for his multi-instrumental versatility and independent creative mindset.[8]Career beginnings
Relocation and punk scene involvement
In the early 1980s, following formative experiences in Memphis's nascent punk scene with bands such as Red Sharks and Modifiers—where he began performing live shows in 1978—Catching relocated to Los Angeles to access broader opportunities in the post-punk and alternative music landscapes.[7] This move, occurring around 1984 or early 1985 after a successful 1983 gig opening for The Gun Club in LA, positioned him amid the city's vibrant club circuit, characterized by raw energy and DIY ethos amid economic and cultural shifts.[7][11] Upon arrival, Catching engaged in initial gigs and session work within punk-influenced outfits, including contributions to Tex & the Horseheads, a band emblematic of LA's early-1980s punk subculture known for its cowpunk edge and underground resilience.[12] These endeavors demanded multi-instrumental versatility—primarily on guitar but extending to practical adaptability—and instilled a road-hardened pragmatism through frequent, low-stakes performances in gritty venues.[13] The West Coast's demanding environment, marked by relentless touring and self-reliant hustling in an era of fragmented indie circuits, reinforced Catching's view of musicianship as a pragmatic survival mechanism rather than idealized pursuit, fostering endurance amid inconsistent payoffs and scene volatility.[3][7]Formation of early projects
In the late 1970s, Catching began his musical endeavors in Memphis, Tennessee, forming the punk band Red Sharks and performing locally with other groups, marking his initial foray into raw, high-energy rock experimentation.[7] By the early 1980s, he joined The Modifiers, a seminal Memphis punk outfit known for its aggressive, DIY ethos, where he contributed guitar amid a scene emphasizing unpolished live shows over studio refinement. These efforts highlighted punk's causal influence on his style—short, intense songs that prioritized empirical trial through repeated performances, often failing commercially but honing a merit-driven approach to composition amid competition from established acts.[14] After relocating to Los Angeles around 1982, Catching extended his punk roots into hybrid projects blending genre edges.[15] In 1987, he played guitar in Texorcist, a short-lived collaboration with vocalist Pleasant Gehman rooted in cowpunk aesthetics—fusing punk velocity with twangy, psychedelic undertones that foreshadowed desert rock's atmospheric grit. Local gigs underscored a realism about music's demands, as these ventures yielded minimal recordings but refined his riff-based songwriting through iterative failures against polished industry standards.[16] By 1990, Catching participated in The Ringling Sisters (releasing as 60 Watt Reality), a project that produced a self-titled album on A&M/Ode Records under producer Lou Adler, incorporating glam-inflected psychedelia with punk's drive in demo-like sessions emphasizing raw texture over commercial sheen.[16] These early independent efforts, centered on informal recordings and Southern California venue performances, causally built his foundation in sound experimentation—prioritizing sonic density and live authenticity, which exposed the limitations of unrefined demos while fostering adaptive techniques for denser, riff-heavy structures ahead of broader stoner influences.[17]Major band affiliations
earthlings?
Dave Catching co-founded the stoner rock band earthlings? in 1993 with Fred Drake and Pete Stahl, establishing it as a core outlet for his songwriting and multi-instrumental contributions on guitar and drums.[18][3] The project originated amid the emerging desert rock scene in Joshua Tree, California, where Catching also co-established the Rancho De La Luna studio the same year, enabling self-produced recordings that captured unrefined, atmospheric grit reflective of regional isolation and raw experimentation.[6] The band's aesthetic emphasizes lo-fi production techniques, favoring analog warmth and minimal overdubs to preserve compositional integrity over sanitized mainstream appeal, resulting in a sound adjacent to stoner rock's hazy, riff-driven ethos without contrived excess. Catching's production role ensured fidelity to these desert-vibe sessions, as heard on the self-titled debut album released July 1, 1998, via Crippled Dick Hot Wax!, which includes tracks like "Nothing" and "Reaper (Don't Fear This Child)" spanning psychedelic and experimental rock elements.[19][20] earthlings? maintained sporadic but consistent output, underscoring longevity through tangible releases rather than transient hype, with Catching overseeing compilations such as the Human Beans Box Set Digital Dave issued March 5, 2021, aggregating earlier material and affirming the band's enduring, niche persistence into the 2020s.[21] This track record highlights Catching's commitment to the group's foundational sound amid his broader career, prioritizing empirical creative continuity over external validation.[7]Queens of the Stone Age
Dave Catching joined Queens of the Stone Age in 1996 as a multi-instrumentalist during the band's formation, contributing to its early desert rock sound rooted in the Palm Desert scene's collaborative, high-energy ethos.[6] His involvement helped shape the group's initial output, emphasizing raw, unpolished recordings that prioritized musical experimentation over rigid structures.[6] This period aligned with the band's emergence from informal jam sessions and tied into broader regional projects, fostering an environment of fluid personnel changes typical of underground rock acts.[22] On the debut self-titled album released September 8, 1998, Catching provided percussion, enhancing the record's sparse, riff-driven aesthetic recorded partly at Rancho De La Luna.[23] For the follow-up Rated R, issued June 6, 2000, he played guitar (including twelve-string), lap steel guitar, and electric piano across tracks, adding textural layers to songs like "The Lost Art of Keeping a Secret" and supporting the album's eclectic hard rock edge.[24] These contributions occurred amid early recording sessions at his Joshua Tree studio, reflecting the band's reliance on local resources for quick, iterative production.[6][25] Catching participated in Queens of the Stone Age's early tours, including a 1999 European run as guitarist, which solidified the live iteration of material from the debut amid evolving lineups.[6] His tenure ended around 2000 following Rated R's release, as the band underwent personnel shifts common in rock ensembles navigating growing demands, with no single loyalty-driven narrative overriding practical adjustments.[6] This exit underscored the scene's pragmatic approach, where members pursued parallel projects without formalized permanence.[7]Eagles of Death Metal
Dave Catching has been the primary guitarist for Eagles of Death Metal since the band's formation in the late 1990s, contributing to their raw garage rock sound characterized by high-energy riffs and playful Elvis Presley influences.[26] The group released its debut album Peace, Love, Death Metal on March 23, 2004, followed by Death by Sexy on April 25, 2006, and Heart On on October 28, 2008, with Catching's guitar work featured prominently across these recordings. Their music emphasizes fun-oriented delivery, contrasting with more somber trends in contemporary rock by prioritizing energetic live performances over introspective narratives.[27] On November 13, 2015, during an Eagles of Death Metal concert at Paris's Bataclan theatre, Islamist terrorists affiliated with ISIS attacked, killing 89 people in the venue amid a total of 130 deaths across coordinated strikes in the city.[28] Catching and other band members survived by fleeing backstage as gunfire erupted, with the assault involving automatic weapons and suicide bombings.[29] In the aftermath, the band canceled remaining European tour dates but resumed activities, releasing Zipper Down on September 18, 2015—shortly before the incident—and returning to perform in Paris on February 16, 2016, at the Bataclan for attack survivors and families, underscoring a commitment to musical continuation rather than prolonged hiatus.[30][29] Catching's role persisted through subsequent tours and recordings, maintaining the band's resilient touring schedule with performances at festivals like Nova Rock in June 2015, where high-energy sets reinforced their unyielding rock ethos despite external adversities.[27] As of 2024, he continues as a core touring and recording member, contributing to Eagles of Death Metal's ongoing output focused on visceral, enjoyment-driven rock.[7]Collaborative projects and Desert Sessions
Key collaborations
Catching has made notable guest appearances on bass and drums for several acts during the 1990s and 2000s, demonstrating his multi-instrumental adaptability in desert rock and stoner scenes. With Masters of Reality, he toured and recorded multiple times, contributing guitar and production elements alongside frontman Chris Goss, including sessions that informed later collaborative works.[7][31] In the Mojave Lords project, co-founded with Bingo Richey around the early 2000s, Catching handled guitar duties and helped recruit stoner rock affiliates like drummer Joey Castillo and bassist Barrett Martin, yielding tracks such as "Overdrive" that blended raw desert grooves.[32][33] His involvement extended to live performances and recordings emphasizing improvisational chemistry among rotating personnel.[3] Catching also guested with the Gnarltones, providing guitar and bass on select recordings and shows in the 2000s, aligning with his affinity for gritty, unpolished rock ensembles tied to Rancho de la Luna sessions.[34][35] More recently, in 2025, Catching co-produced tracks for stoner rock outfit VOLUME's EP Joy of Navigation, facilitating their coast-to-coast "Heads Explode Tour" starting May 16 in Las Vegas, where his studio input shaped the band's revived desert sound ahead of 20 dates through June.[36][37] This effort underscores his ongoing role in nurturing peripheral projects via production and endorsement, without formal touring commitment.[38]Role in Desert Sessions
Dave Catching contributed as a guitarist and collaborator to the Desert Sessions from their founding in 1997 by Josh Homme, participating in improvisational jam sessions at Rancho De La Luna, the Joshua Tree studio he co-owned. These gatherings emphasized spontaneous, one-take recordings in a relaxed living room environment, often spanning intensive multi-day periods with rotating guest musicians from the desert rock scene.[6][39] In Volumes 1 and 2, recorded shortly after the project's start, Catching provided guitar parts that intertwined with Homme's on tracks such as the psychedelic "Cowards Way Out," capturing the raw, unpolished ethos of early sessions.[40] Later, for Volumes 9 and 10—released in 2003 after three days of activity at Rancho De La Luna—he played guitar, engineered, and co-produced songs including "Powdered Wig Machine" and "There Will Never Be A Better Time," highlighting the project's vibe-driven approach over high-fidelity polish.[6][41] Catching's production role extended to engineering Volumes 11 and 12, released in 2019, where he was the only performer from previous sessions, maintaining continuity amid fresh collaborators like Billy Gibbons and Matt Berry. This involvement underscored the sessions' evolution into a hub for unscripted creativity, yielding diverse tracks without rigid structures.[6][42]Production and studio work
Founding of Rancho De La Luna
Rancho de la Luna was founded in 1993 by Dave Catching and Fred Drake in Joshua Tree, California, as a modest recording studio amid the remote high desert landscape.[9][6] The venture began with Drake relocating to the area around 1991 or 1992, initially equipping the space with basic analog gear acquired affordably, including a 24-track Tascam machine and a mixing board sourced from musician Hugh Harris.[6] This setup emphasized practicality over extravagance, reflecting a bootstrapped approach where Catching and Drake invested minimal capital—such as a $1,000 down payment and $100 monthly payments for core equipment—to create a functional environment for capturing raw, unpolished sounds.[6] The studio's early operations relied on salvaged and second-hand components, like Shure SM57 and SM58 microphones alongside a Soundcraft console and 16-track tape machine, fostering an organic, low-overhead model that prioritized collaborative improvisation over high-production polish.[6] This resource-constrained methodology, sustained through word-of-mouth referrals rather than aggressive promotion, positioned Rancho de la Luna as a haven for musicians seeking respite from urban recording norms.[6] The isolation of the Joshua Tree locale, with its stark natural surroundings, demonstrably encouraged creative breakthroughs by minimizing distractions and promoting extended, unstructured sessions among artists.[27][6] Following Drake's death in 2002, Catching assumed sole stewardship, incrementally enhancing the facility with additions like vintage Neve consoles while preserving its self-reliant ethos.[9][6] By enabling sessions for desert rock affiliates such as Queens of the Stone Age and Eagles of Death Metal, the studio evolved into a nexus for genre-defining work, its endurance through 2025 underscoring the viability of independent, musician-led operations detached from major label infrastructure.[3][27] The persistent draw of its unpretentious setup and environmental seclusion has validated the causal role of such seclusion in spurring innovative output, as evidenced by the studio's quarter-century track record of hosting influential recordings.[6][3]Notable production contributions
Catching's production work at Rancho De La Luna emphasizes hands-on engineering with analog gear to achieve a raw, warm sonic character, often recording single tracks sequentially in non-traditional spaces like porches or bathrooms to preserve natural performances without excessive effects or overdubs.[6] This method, rooted in early setups using Soundcraft consoles and 1/2-inch Tascam tape machines, prioritizes capturing instrumental authenticity over polished, effects-heavy trends, as detailed in his 2004 Tape Op discussion of desert rock sessions.[6] Key contributions include engineering portions of Arctic Monkeys' third album Humbug (2009), where the band tracked material at Rancho De La Luna under Catching's guidance, contributing to its psychedelic shift.[43] [44] He also oversaw production for The Duke Spirit's Neptune (2008), an indie rock album fully recorded at the studio, leveraging its analog environment for textured guitar-driven tracks.[45] In indie circles, Catching engineered sessions for Russian Circles, including demos and tracks like those previewing their 2020 album Gnosis, utilizing the studio's vintage amps and minimal chain for post-metal dynamics.[46] His reputation for merit-based results, highlighted in 2024 interviews, extends to collaborations with artists like Kurt Vile and PJ Harvey, where tape warmth and sparse processing defined outputs up to recent vault releases.[7] [3]Musical style and equipment
Influences and playing techniques
Dave Catching's musical influences encompass a wide array of genres from his formative years. As a child, he absorbed The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, country music, and 1960s top 40 radio.[47] During his teenage years, these expanded to include Roxy Music, Brian Eno, Jimi Hendrix, English punk rock, rockabilly, blues, Led Zeppelin, Kiss, Aerosmith, and soul music, reflecting a broad palette that permeated his soul, as he described.[47] His roots further trace to punk, glam, and psychedelic rock, shaped by relentless touring and immersion in raw, road-hardened sounds.[3] These influences fostered Catching's adaptive multi-instrumentalism, evident in his contributions across guitar, keyboards, and other roles in projects like Queens of the Stone Age and Eagles of Death Metal. His style draws from stoner rock pioneers through deep ties to the desert scene, emphasizing groove-oriented foundations over flashy solos. Techniques prioritize rhythmic drive via fuzz-drenched riffs and textural layers through atmospheric weaving, verified in live performances and recordings where space and human connection supersede ego-driven display.[48] Catching's approach rejects virtuosic showmanship in favor of functional play that serves the ensemble and song, aligning with punk's rawness and psychedelic exploration while delivering loose, soulful execution. This method, honed since starting guitar at age 15 under family guidance, underscores causal factors in band cohesion and output success, as seen in his emphasis on unfiltered, ego-free sound.[47][3][48]Preferred gear and setup
Dave Catching primarily employs Gibson guitars in his setups, including a 1968 Les Paul double cutaway and 1970s Flying V models.[7] [49] He supplements these with Fender instruments such as a 1958 Stratocaster and custom Echopark Flying Vs for varied tonal options.[7] [26] For amplification, Catching relies on vintage Fender black-panel amps like the Super Reverb and Princeton, alongside Orange OR50s as his main live heads, with backups including Zinky Mofo and Supro units.[7] [26] This selection emphasizes clean, responsive tones suitable for desert rock applications.[7] Catching incorporates Yamaha basses into his multi-instrumental rig, favoring models like the vintage 1960s FG75 and modern Revstar RSP20 for their playability and reliability in studio and touring contexts.[7] [50] His effects usage remains minimal, featuring essentials such as Dunlop Cry Baby wah, Rotovibe, and select overdrives to preserve core amp characteristics without heavy processing.[26] [7] Catching's gear evolution reflects a shift toward vetted vintage and custom pieces accumulated at Rancho de la Luna, prioritizing empirical sound quality and roadworthiness over experimental novelty.[26] [7]Recent activities and personal life
Hiatus and 2025 resurgence
Following a prolonged hiatus from live performances, Dave Catching reemerged in June 2025 with a birthday extravaganza at Pappy & Harriet's Pioneertown Palace. The event, held on June 7, featured an indoor/outdoor format with eight bands across multiple stages, emphasizing collaborative sets among desert rock affiliates.[51][52] Performances included a Kyuss reunion lineup with vocalist John Garcia, drummer Gene Troutman, and Catching on guitar, playing tracks such as "One Inch Man" and "Fatso Jetson." Additional acts encompassed earthlings?, Fatso Jetson, and Alain Johannes, underscoring a familial assembly of longtime collaborators from the Joshua Tree music community.[53][54][55] The shows represented Catching's first major public appearances after the hiatus, drawing local coverage for reviving his role in high-desert gatherings without announced broader touring commitments as of mid-2025.[3][51]Residence and family background
David Catching hails from Memphis, Tennessee, where he was raised in a musical environment; his older brother Jack and uncle David, both accomplished musicians, provided early inspiration for his pursuit of music by demonstrating guitar techniques and encouraging band involvement.[7][56] Since the early 1990s, Catching has made his home in Joshua Tree, California, operating from the remote desert setting that doubles as his residence and the Rancho De La Luna recording studio, co-founded in 1993.[6][9] This isolated location has supported his self-reliant lifestyle, enabling focused creative work insulated from major urban centers while integrating daily living with professional recording activities.[3] Public details on Catching's immediate family, including any spouse or children, remain scarce, as he prioritizes personal privacy over media exposure, consistent with his low-key approach to non-professional matters. No verified reports of family-related controversies exist, underscoring a stable personal foundation that parallels his enduring presence in the desert music community.[6]Legacy and impact
Contributions to desert rock genre
Dave Catching advanced the desert rock genre through his foundational work with earthlings?, established in 1994 with vocalist Pete Stahl and collaborator Fred Drake, where the band's recordings captured the raw, heavy riffs and psychedelic improvisation emblematic of the style's emergence from California's high desert.[6][56] This project drew on the informal, power-constrained jam sessions of the Palm Desert scene, translating their unpolished energy into structured outputs via desert-based experimentation with limited gear.[6] Co-founding Rancho De La Luna in 1993 with Drake created a persistent hub for genre-defining sessions, employing analog low-fidelity methods such as 24-track Tascam recording, single-track layering, and basic microphones to yield the gritty, organic drum and guitar tones central to desert rock's identity.[6] The studio's Joshua Tree location facilitated isolation from major-label infrastructure, enabling extended, vibe-driven collaborations that prioritized sonic experimentation over commercial polish.[6][56] These efforts exerted a causal influence by democratizing access to creative recording in a remote setting, circumventing urban studios' high costs and time pressures, which allowed for iterative refinement of the genre's location-tethered sound—characterized by expansive, fuzz-laden textures evoking desert vastness.[6] As a founding instrumentalist in Queens of the Stone Age starting in 1996, Catching integrated these techniques into the band's nascent framework, embedding desert rock's riff-centric foundations into outputs that amplified the style's reach.[56] Rancho's model supported a measurable expansion of desert-influenced acts in the late 1990s onward, as its sessions hosted collaborations yielding prototypes for the raw aesthetic later adopted by regional bands like Parosella and broader stoner rock practitioners, sustaining the genre's proliferation beyond initial Palm Desert origins.[56][57]Recognition and influence on peers
Catching's production acumen has garnered esteem from contemporaries, as evidenced by repeated invitations to collaborate on high-profile projects. Josh Homme, frontman of Queens of the Stone Age, has integrated Catching into core sessions since the early 2000s, including contributions to albums Rated R (2000) and Songs for the Deaf (2002), as well as later Desert Sessions volumes, reflecting trust in his multi-instrumental and engineering capabilities.[27] This regard extends to shared recording environments at Rancho de la Luna, where Catching's involvement influenced emerging desert rock acts through direct mentorship and session work. For instance, Nebula's early albums like Charged (2001) were tracked at the studio under his oversight, fostering stylistic parallels in raw, fuzz-driven guitar tones and improvisational structures that echo in subsequent band outputs.[6] Catching's sustained merit among peers is underscored by ongoing engagements, such as co-producing 2024 tracks for Volume—a supergroup featuring ex-Nebula drummer Mike Amster and Monster Magnet guitarist Eddie Mundell—where he handled synth and mixing duties.[58] His role as guitarist for Eagles of Death Metal's 2025–2026 tours further demonstrates enduring demand over transient trends.[59]Discography
Albums with earthlings?
Dave Catching co-founded the Joshua Tree-based stoner rock band Earthlings? in 1994 alongside drummer Fred Drake and vocalist Pete Stahl, contributing guitar, bass, and keyboards across their output.[60] The band's debut full-length album, the self-titled Earthlings?, emerged in 1998 via Man's Ruin Records and Crippled Dick Hot Wax, with Catching handling guitar and bass duties on tracks including "Reaper (Don't Fear This Child)," "Cavalry," and "Happiest Day of My Life."[61][62] Following Drake's death in 2002, Earthlings? maintained sporadic activity, underscoring Catching's commitment to the project through archival and new material. In 2021, the Human Beans Box Set Digital Dave was issued digitally, compiling earlier recordings with Catching's multi-instrumental input emphasized in this edition dedicated to his role.[21] This release, part of a series honoring band members, reflects the persistence of the band's desert rock ethos despite lineup changes and gaps in output.[63]Contributions to Queens of the Stone Age
Dave Catching provided percussion on the Queens of the Stone Age's self-titled debut album, released on September 22, 1998, appearing specifically on the track "I Was a Teenage Hand Model."[64] On the band's second album, Rated R, released June 6, 2000, Catching contributed twelve-string guitar to the track "Lightning Song."[65] Catching joined Queens of the Stone Age as a full-time member following the recording of the debut album, touring with the band from approximately 1997 to 2000 in support of both the self-titled release and Rated R, where he performed on guitar, keyboards, and lap steel guitar.[11][7] He did not appear on any full Queens of the Stone Age studio albums after departing the band in 2000.[11]Work with Eagles of Death Metal
Dave Catching has served as the lead guitarist for Eagles of Death Metal since the band's 2004 debut album Peace, Love & Death Metal, delivering the raw, aggressive guitar riffs central to their garage rock sound.[66] On this Antics Records release, issued June 22, 2004, Catching's contributions included rhythm and lead guitar parts that underscored tracks like "Kiss the Devil," establishing the band's high-energy aesthetic.[67] He continued providing guitar across follow-up efforts, including the 2006 album Death by Sexy... and the 2008 Ipecac release Heart On, where he handled rhythm guitar on multiple tracks and delivered lead lines, such as on "Now I'm a Fool."[68][69] Catching's tenure extended to the band's third full-length, Zipper Down, released September 18, 2015, on Flawed Ammunition/Downtown Records, featuring his signature slide and rhythm guitar work amid the group's evolving punk-infused style.[49] The album's promotion coincided with a period of tragedy, as Catching was present during the November 13, 2015, Bataclan theater attack in Paris, where he survived by retreating to a backstage bathroom before evacuation.[27] Despite the trauma, which claimed 90 lives at the venue, Catching maintained his role in live performances, contributing to the band's resilience through subsequent tours and memorial events.[26] Post-attack, Eagles of Death Metal regrouped with Catching for key appearances, including a 2017 surprise performance in Paris marking the two-year anniversary of the incident, where he joined frontman Jesse Hughes to honor victims and affirm the group's commitment to live shows.[70] His consistent guitar presence extended to festival sets, such as Nova Rock 2015, and ongoing touring lineups, solidifying his foundational status without new studio material since Zipper Down.[7] Catching's work emphasizes studio precision and stage reliability, focusing on riff-heavy support rather than lead vocals or production leads in this context.[49]Production credits and other releases
Catching's production work extends beyond his performing roles, primarily leveraging his Rancho de la Luna studio in Joshua Tree, California, where he has engineered and produced recordings emphasizing raw, desert-infused rock aesthetics.[6] Early engineering contributions include assisting on sessions for Wool and earthlings? projects post-1993, utilizing vintage gear to capture organic tones.[6] Verified production credits include:- Dinola – Up High (produced at Rancho de la Luna, emphasizing Joshua Tree's sonic environment).[71]
- Dave Catching – Bought and Sold (2017, self-produced instrumental album drawing from 1960s psychedelic influences, released via Dine Alone Records).[72][73]
- Dave Catching – Shared Hallucinations Pt. 1: Sonic Salutations From the Venerable Vaults of Rancho de la Luna 1972-1984 (2017, curated and produced compilation of archival recordings from the studio's vaults).[74]