Dave Pybus (born 4 June 1970) is an English extreme metal musician, record label executive, and graphic designer, best known for serving as the bassist of the band Cradle of Filth from 2002 to 2012.[1][2] Born in Heckmondwike, West Yorkshire, Pybus has been active in the metal scene since the late 1980s, contributing to multiple bands and projects while also founding the independent label Sixsixsix Records in 2005.[1][3]Pybus's early career began with the formation of Anul Death in 1988, a band that evolved into Darkened by 1991.[4] That same year, he co-founded Dreambreed, taking on roles as vocalist, guitarist, and keyboardist until the group's dissolution in 1998.[5][6] During the 1990s, he gained industry experience working at Peaceville Records from 1990 to 1994 and joined the progressive metal band Anathema as bassist in 1998, performing on their albums Judgement (1999) and A Fine Day to Exit (2001).[7]In 2002, Pybus joined Cradle of Filth, where he provided bass for key releases including the special edition of Nymphetamine (2004) and Thornography (2006), among others during his tenure.[1] He briefly departed in early 2005 to establish Sixsixsix Records, an imprint focused on extreme metal acts, before rejoining Cradle of Filth later that year to handle live and studio duties until his final exit in 2012.[3][8] Beyond Cradle of Filth, Pybus contributed bass to the debut album of the symphonic metal project Angtoria in 2006 and has provided graphic design for acts like Autopsy and My Dying Bride.[4][2]In parallel with his musical pursuits, Pybus maintains a career as a graphic designer and launched the monthly podcastLife is a Hideous Thing in December 2014, discussing metal music and related topics.[1]
Early life
Birth and family background
Dave Pybus was born on 4 June 1970 in Heckmondwike, West Yorkshire, England.[1][9]Heckmondwike, a small industrial town in the Spen Valley region of northern England, was historically centered on textile manufacturing, particularly blankets and wool products, which shaped its working-class community during the mid-20th century. Pybus spent his childhood in this environment, though specific details about his family or schooling remain private.
Introduction to music and early influences
Pybus was introduced to music during his childhood in the mid-1970s primarily through his father's record collection. His father played a pivotal role in fostering his early interest, exposing him to foundational classic rock acts such as the Rolling Stones, David Bowie, The Who, Led Zeppelin, T. Rex, Free, and Black Sabbath. One particularly memorable introduction was Jeff Wayne's rock opera War of the Worlds, which left a strong impression on the young Pybus, albeit one tinged with fear due to its dramatic intensity.[10]Pybus's engagement with live music began in his early teens, accompanying his father to concerts that further ignited his passion for rock and metal. By 1985, he had discovered Metallica, whose thrash metal sound resonated deeply; he attended one of their live shows featuring bassist Cliff Burton in 1986, just two weeks before Burton's tragic death in a tour bus accident. This experience, witnessing Burton's innovative and dynamic bass playing, profoundly influenced Pybus's appreciation for technically adept and aggressive metal performances.[11]Around age 16, approximately 1986, Pybus began playing guitar, marking his entry into active music-making amid the burgeoning punk and metal scenes of West Yorkshire. The region's vibrant local music culture, centered around industrial towns like Leeds and nearby areas, offered exposure to raw, rebellious sounds that blended punk's urgency with metal's heaviness, helping to cultivate his affinity for extreme genres. These foundational encounters with rock's pioneers and the intensity of thrash metal solidified Pybus's mindset toward boundary-pushing music, laying the groundwork for his future pursuits in extreme metal.
Career
Graphic design work at Peaceville Records
Dave Pybus began his professional career in the music industry as a graphic designer at Peaceville Records, a prominent British label specializing in extreme metal, where he was employed from 1990 to 1994.[12] Hired at the age of 19 by label owner Paul "Hammy" Halmshaw after impressing with his teenage fanzine designs, Pybus handled album layouts and artwork during a formative period for the label's roster of death, black, and doom metal acts.[13]His contributions included layout design for Darkthrone's seminal black metal album A Blaze in the Northern Sky (1992), which helped define the genre's raw, atmospheric visual style through stark imagery and minimalist typesetting.[14] Pybus also provided layout for My Dying Bride's EP Symphonaire Infernus et Spera Empyrium (1992), incorporating gothic and melancholic elements that aligned with the band's doom metal aesthetic.[1] Additional credits encompassed Anathema's debut Serenades (1991), where he shaped the brooding, ethereal cover art, and At the Gates' With Fear I Kiss the Burning Darkness (1993), featuring intense, fiery motifs reflective of melodic death metal's aggression.[13][15]Through these works, Pybus bridged his formal graphic design training—earned via a degree from Dewsbury College—with the burgeoning extreme metal scene, creating visuals that emphasized darkness, symbolism, and raw intensity to enhance the music's thematic depth.[12] His role at Peaceville paralleled his early musical pursuits, allowing him to immerse in the local metal community while honing skills that later influenced his performance career.[13]
Early bands including Dreambreed
Dave Pybus's musical career began in 1988 with the formation of Anul Death, a thrash metal band based in Heckmondwike, West Yorkshire, England.[16] In this early group, Pybus served as the guitarist and also designed the band's logo, contributing to its visual identity during its short tenure from 1988 to 1989.[1] The band attracted some interest from record companies due to its provocative name but ultimately changed to Darkened in 1989 to pursue further opportunities.[16]Under the new name Darkened, the band continued as a thrash metal outfit until 1991, with Pybus taking on lead guitar duties.[17] During this period, Darkened remained active in the local scene, and Pybus's efforts to promote the group included launching a fanzine, which helped forge connections in the music industry and led to his graphic design role at Peaceville Records from 1990 to 1994.[13] The band's evolution reflected Pybus's growing involvement in both performance and promotion within the underground metal community.In 1991, following Darkened's dissolution, Pybus founded Dreambreed in Leeds, United Kingdom, where he handled vocals and guitar as core roles through the band's existence until 1998; he also briefly played bass in 1993.[1] Dreambreed shifted toward an alternative rock and metal sound, incorporating elements of doom metal, and emerged directly from the remnants of Darkened.[17] The group released several demos in its early years and marked a significant milestone with the 1995 mini-album Sometime on Coast to Coast Recordings, a six-track effort that showcased Pybus's multi-instrumental contributions and the band's evolving style.[18] This release highlighted Dreambreed's blend of atmospheric and heavier influences, solidifying Pybus's transition from thrash roots to broader alternative metal explorations.
Tenure with Anathema
Dave Pybus joined Anathema as bassist in 1998, replacing Duncan Patterson amid significant lineup changes following the departure of Patterson and drummer Shaun Taylor-Steels earlier that year.[19] His arrival coincided with the band's transition from doom metal roots toward a more atmospheric and progressive rock sound, building on Pybus's prior experience in Dreambreed, where he had collaborated with Patterson.[20] During his tenure, Pybus contributed to Anathema's evolving style, providing a solid rhythmic foundation that supported the Cavanagh brothers' increasingly introspective songwriting.[7]Pybus played a key role in the recording of Judgement (1999), Anathema's fifth studio album, where he handled bass duties and co-wrote music for tracks 1 ("Deep"), 4 ("Destiny Is Dead"), 12 ("Don't Look Too Far"), and 13 ("Emotional Coldness"), in addition to contributing lyrics to tracks 2 ("Pitiless") and 12.[21] These contributions helped shape the album's blend of emotional depth and melodic progression, marking a pivotal point in the band's sonic evolution. He also performed bass on select tracks of the follow-up album A Fine Day to Exit (2001), including tracks 1, 2, 5–9, reinforcing the group's shift toward introspective, alternative rock elements.[1]Pybus departed from Anathema in July 2001, shortly after the completion of A Fine Day to Exit recordings, citing personal reasons and musical differences as the factors behind his exit.[7] His three-year stint helped stabilize the band during a transformative period, allowing Anathema to refine their progressive influences before further lineup adjustments.[19]
Dave Pybus joined Cradle of Filth as bassist in March 2002, adopting the stage name Herr Pubis, after performing session work for the band during their U.S. tour in July 2001 and the Tattoo the Planet tour in September 2001.[22] This followed an initial encounter with the band in 1993 while working as a graphic designer at Peaceville Records.[22] His prior experience as bassist in Anathema provided a strong foundation for integrating into Cradle of Filth's complex rhythm section.[13]Over the next decade, Pybus contributed bass to several albums that defined Cradle of Filth's evolution in gothic extreme metal, including Damnation and a Day (2003), Nymphetamine (2004), Thornography (2006), Godspeed on the Devil's Thunder (2008), and Darkly, Darkly, Venus Aversa (2010).[23] His playing emphasized a powerful low-end presence, enhancing the band's symphonic aggression and atmospheric depth; during the recording of Damnation and a Day, he achieved what he described as his best bass sound to date using an Ampeg SVT-5 Pro head, an 8x10 cabinet, and a SansAmp DI with subwoofer enhancements for added intensity.[24] The Nymphetamine album, featuring Pybus on bass, received a Grammy nomination for Best Metal Performance in 2005, highlighting the lineup's impact during this period.[25] Pybus also supported the band's extensive global touring schedule, delivering consistent live performances that amplified their theatrical gothic aesthetic under his Herr Pubis persona.[26]Pybus temporarily left the band in early 2005 for personal reasons before rejoining in June of that year.[8] He departed again in September 2012 to take a break from band commitments and focus on personal time.[13]
Later band involvements and guest appearances
Following his departure from Cradle of Filth in 2012, Pybus joined American metal band Prong as bassist for their European and U.S. tours celebrating the 25th anniversary of the album Beg to Differ, stepping in after the band's regular bassist was unable to participate.[27] His tenure with Prong highlighted his adaptability in crossover thrash and industrial metal styles, contributing to extended setlists that included the full Beg to Differ album alongside later material.[28]Pybus has maintained an active presence through select guest appearances across diverse extreme metal subgenres. In 2005, he provided bass for the track "Enemy of the State" on Roadrunner United's all-star album The All-Star Sessions, a collaborative project marking the label's 25th anniversary and featuring musicians like Joey Jordison and Steve Vai.[29] Earlier, in 1991, he played guitar in The Hatebreeders, a short-lived Misfits tribute band.[1] For German horror punk outfit The Spook's 2007 album Let There Be Dark, produced by Kreator frontman Mille Petrozza, Pybus contributed bass to several tracks, adding a gothic edge to the band's sound.[30][31]In 2008, Pybus lent his bass skills to electronic and industrial acts, including a guest spot on Autoclav1.1's track "Hell Is the Face of Love" from Love No Longer Lives Here, blending his metal roots with experimental electronica.[32] That same year, he performed live with German multimedia band Samsas Traum for select shows, supporting their eclectic mix of metal, classical, and electronic elements during a European tour.[33] These engagements, along with a 2011 collaboration in the death metal project My Black Omen alongside Massacre vocalist Kam Lee, underscore Pybus's versatility in bridging traditional heavy metal with avant-garde and horror-themed extreme genres.[34]
Other projects
Founding of Sixsixsix Records
In 2005, during a six-month hiatus from his role in Cradle of Filth, Dave Pybus established Sixsixsix Records as an independent label dedicated to promoting extreme metal acts, operating out of Ipswich, United Kingdom.[3] The venture drew on Pybus's extensive experience in the metal industry, particularly his graphic design tenure at Peaceville Records, where he gained insights into nurturing underground talent amid the challenges of distribution and promotion in the genre.[1] This background informed the label's focus on raw, innovative sounds within extreme metal, emphasizing subgenres like black, death, and symphonic elements to support emerging European and international artists.[35]Sixsixsix Records quickly built a roster of promising acts, beginning with a 2005 promotional compilation titled SixSixSix Records Presents, which showcased bands such as Bloody Mary, Draconian Order, DorEterna, Darkening, and Theatres des Vampires—highlighting the label's affinity for gothic and symphonic-infused extreme metal.[36] That same year, the label released DorEterna's debut album Provenience, a blend of death and black metal that exemplified Pybus's commitment to raw, atmospheric underground productions.[37] Pybus's connections from the Cradle of Filth era facilitated early partnerships, enabling the signing of international talent like Italy's Draconian Order and the U.S.-based Wykked Wytch.[35]A notable later release under the label was the 2008 CD edition of Pybus's early band Dreambreed's Misery Sessions, limited to 666 numbered copies and featuring unreleased 1997 recordings that captured the gritty gothic metal essence of his pre-Anathema work.[38] Through these efforts, Sixsixsix Records carved a niche for symphonic and gothic metal within the broader extreme scene, providing a platform for acts that aligned with Pybus's vision of artistic autonomy and genre experimentation, free from major-label constraints.[39]
Life Is a Hideous Thing podcast
In December 2014, Dave Pybus launched his podcast Life Is a Hideous Thing, with the first episode airing on January 10, 2015, and the series running monthly for a total of 16 episodes through January 2016.[40][41] The podcast was produced at Punch Studios in London, with support from engineer Ed Barnes and IO Radio, and hosted episodes were made available on platforms including Libsyn and YouTube.[40]Pybus served as the sole host and interviewer, leveraging his background in the music industry to guide conversations with guests from creative fields.[41] The format consisted of audio interviews, typically 30 to 60 minutes in length, blending structured discussions with casual storytelling to explore niche topics.The podcast centered on extreme metal and related subcultures, featuring personal anecdotes from Pybus's career alongside industry insights from pioneers in the genre.[40] Episodes often delved into the history of extreme metal labels and bands, such as a four-part "Peaceville Days" series commissioned by Peaceville Records, which examined the label's roster including acts like Darkthrone and Autopsy through archival audio and guest commentary. Other installments included interviews with metal authors like Joel McIver on heavy metal literature, artists such as Brom on dark fantasy illustrations, and musicians like Pat Mills on comic influences in music, emphasizing conceptual ties between metal aesthetics and broader pop culture.[41] Later episodes branched into themed specials, such as a two-part discussion on Star Wars and its impact on genre fiction, incorporating Pybus's reflections on sci-fi inspirations in extreme music.
Discography
Dreambreed releases
Dreambreed, an early band fronted by Dave Pybus, emerged in 1991 and explored an alternative metal sound blending punk influences from acts like the Misfits with gothic rock elements.[6] Pybus, serving as the primary vocalist and guitarist, played a central role in the band's songwriting and creative direction during its active years from 1991 to 1998.[1]The band's debut and only official EP during its initial run, Sometime, was released in 1995 as a six-track mini-album on Coast To Coast Recordings.[18] Featuring tracks such as "Sometime," "To Never Know" (with additional vocals by Aaron Stainthorpe of My Dying Bride), and "Novena," the EP showcased Pybus's raw vocal delivery and guitar work amid a gritty, atmospheric production suited to the era's underground metal scene.[18]In 2008, Pybus independently released Misery Sessions through his own label, Sixsixsix Records, as a limited-edition CD (numbered to 666 copies) compiling the band's unreleased final recordings from 1997.[42] This retrospective effort highlighted Pybus's multi-instrumental contributions, including vocals, guitars, and bass, on tracks like "Misery," "Awake," and "A Long Halloween," preserving Dreambreed's heavier, introspective evolution before the band's dissolution.[43]
Anathema contributions
Dave Pybus joined Anathema as bassist in 1998, contributing to their shift toward alternative rock during the late 1990s and early 2000s.[1]On the 1999 album Judgement, Pybus provided bass guitar throughout the record and co-wrote the music for tracks 1 ("Deep"), 4 ("Forgotten Hopes"), 12 ("2000 & Gone"), and 13 ("I Put a Spell on You").[44][21] He also contributed lyrics to tracks 2 ("Pitiless") and 12 ("2000 & Gone").[21]Pybus performed bass on the lead single "Deep," released in 1999 to promote Judgement.[45]For the 2001 album A Fine Day to Exit, Pybus provided bass on tracks 1 ("Pressure"), 2 ("Release"), 5 ("Underworld"), 6 ("Barriers"), 7 ("Panic"), 8 ("A Fine Day to Exit"), 9 ("Temporary Peace"), and 10 ("Harmonium"), with session bassists on tracks 3 ("Looking Outside Inside") and 4 ("Leave No Trace").
Cradle of Filth albums
Dave Pybus served as the bassist for Cradle of Filth from 2002 to 2012, contributing to several studio albums during this period, often credited under his stage name Herr Pubis in liner notes and live performances. His tenure began with the band's orchestral-leaning work and extended through their gothic metal phase, providing prominent bass lines that supported the symphonic and extreme elements of their sound. Pybus's playing emphasized melodic undertones and rhythmic drive, particularly audible in tracks blending black metal aggression with atmospheric arrangements.[46][8]Pybus's primary album credits include Damnation and a Day (2003), where he handled all bass parts following his recruitment to replace Robin Eaglestone, marking the band's ambitious foray into full orchestral production with the Budapest Film Orchestra. He continued on Nymphetamine (2004), credited as Herr Pubis, delivering bass that underpinned the album's dual-disc structure exploring themes of obsession and addiction. After a brief departure in 2005, Pybus rejoined for Thornography (2007), contributing bass and backing vocals on track 15, amid the band's shift toward more accessible extreme metal. His work appears on Godspeed on the Devil's Thunder (2008), a concept album about Gilles de Rais, and Darkly, Darkly, Venus Aversa (2010), the final full-length during his membership, featuring intricate bass arrangements in its mythological narrative. Pybus left the band in 2012.[1][47][48]In addition to full-length albums, Pybus contributed bass to related singles and EPs from this era. Notable releases include the single Babalon A.D. (So Glad for the Madness) (2003), an early promo tied to Damnation and a Day; Devil Woman (2005), a cover single released during his initial stint; Mannequin (Deactivated Scenes from the Leading Theater) (2006), an EP compiling unused Nymphetamine-era material; and Honey and Sulphur (2010), an EP supporting Darkly, Darkly, Venus Aversa with bass on its gothic tracks. These efforts showcased Pybus's versatility in shorter formats, often under the Herr Pubis moniker in promotional contexts.[49][50][8]
Pybus provided bass guitar for Angtoria's debut album God Has a Plan for Us All, released in 2006 on Listenable Records, marking a significant collaboration in the symphonic metal genre.[51] His contributions extended across the full recording, supporting vocalist Sarah Jezebel Deva and the band's orchestral elements.In the collaborative supergroup project Roadrunner United, Pybus played bass on the track "Enemy of the State" from the album The All-Star Sessions (2005), alongside performers including Peter Steele on vocals and Joey Jordison on drums.[52] This appearance highlighted his versatility in a multi-artist heavy metal compilation celebrating Roadrunner Records' anniversary.Pybus offered additional bass work on "Hell Is the Face of Love" from Autoclav1.1's electronic album Love No Longer Lives Here (2008), blending his metal roots with industrial sounds.[32] The track's fusion of genres showcased his adaptability in non-traditional metal contexts.He contributed bass to the song "Summernite Stalker" on German horror punk band The Spook's Let There Be Dark (2007), adding depth to the album's punk-infused energy.[53] This guest spot aligned with Pybus's involvement in underground punk and metal crossovers.On Sarah Jezebel Deva's solo debut A Sign of Sublime (2010), released via Candlelight Records, Pybus handled bass throughout the album, supporting her gothic rock and metal compositions.[54] His performance complemented collaborations with musicians like Martin Powell on keyboards.[55]