
Bryan
"Brain"
Mantia...
Drummer Bryan "Brain" Mantia has played with some of rock's more
cult/fringe artists (Praxis, Primus, Tom Waits, Buckethead, Godflesh),
as well as more mainstream/renown ones (Guns N' Roses). Raised in the
South Bay city of Cupertino, CA, Mantia became interested in such
"groove heavy" artists as James Brown, Led Zeppelin, and Jimi Hendrix
early on, but it wasn't until he was 16 years old that Mantia began
playing drums. Shortly thereafter, Mantia acquired the nickname "Brain" while playing in a high school concert band, due to
his obsession with the complex Anthony Cirone book, "Portraits in
Rhythm." Mantia continued to perfect his drumming skills, by studying
at such music schools as the Percussion Institute of Technology in
Hollywood. The mid '80s saw Mantia join the Bay Area
funk-rock band, the Limbomaniacs, who broke up later in the decade, but
reformed to issue a lone full-length in 1990, Stinky Grooves.
From there, Mantia played with a variety of other outfits, including
M.I.R.V. (Cosmodrome, Feeding Time on Monkey Island), MCM and the
Monster (Collective Emotional Problems), and Tom Waits (Bone Machine),
before co-forming the funk/experimental supergroup, Praxis. Included in
the group were Parliament-Funkadelic veterans Bootsy Collins (bass) and
Bernie Worrell (keyboards), as well as masked guitarist Buckethead and
producer Bill Laswell -- resulting in countless releases throughout the
90's (including such standouts as Transmutation (Mutatis Mutandis,
Transmutation Live, and Warzsawa, among countless others). Mantia
continued to work with Buckethead even outside of Praxis -- playing on
such solo Buckethead albums as Giant Robot and Monsters and Robots.
The late 90's saw Mantia appear on releases by Godflesh (Songs of Love
and Hate, Love and Hate in Dub), and longtime friends, Primus (whom
Mantia was briefly a member of in 1989, before a broken foot led to his
exit). His second go-around with Primus proved more fruitful, as Mantia
toured extensively with the trio and played on such albums as The Brown
Album, Rhinoplasty, and Anti-Pop. Already boasting quite an impressive
musical resume, it was about to get even greater, as Axl Rose invited
Mantia to join his overhauled version of Guns N' Roses (at the
insistence of Buckethead, who was brought onboard as Slash's
replacement). Mantia appeared with the group throughout sporadic live
dates in 2001 (the Rock in Rio II Festival) and 2002 (the MTV Video
Music Awards), while continuing to lay down tracks for the oft-delayed
new Guns N' Roses studio release, Chinese Democracy.

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