BLABBERMOUTH.NET
Former
PANTERA bassist
Rex Brown has told
Antihero in a new interview that he just got out of the studio with a good friend of his whom he described as "one of the best guitar players in the business that you would know." Asked if the recordings are going to be used for another
Rex Brown solo album or if it is more of a band project,
Rex said: "[It's] more for another kind of deal. And I don't want to really talk about it… But the tracks are fucking badass."
After
Rex asked the interviewer
Mark Dean where he lives,
Dean responded "just outside Manchester in the U.K.," to which
Brown said: "Then you would know this guy very, very well. He moved to Nashville and became a very, very good friend of mine. And we just cut six just blazing fucking tracks. Un-goddam-real."
Although
Brown didn't name his new collaborator, he has been friendly on social media in recent months with
JUDAS PRIEST's British-born guitarist
Richie Faulkner, who moved to Nashville in 2019.
Rex, who is currently promoting the 20th-anniversary reissue of
PANTERA's final opus,
"Reinventing The Steel", has completed work on a "a really introspective" follow-up to his debut solo album,
"Smoke On This…", which was released in July 2017 via
Entertainment One (
eOne). The effort marked the first time in
Brown's career where he served as both lead vocalist and guitarist in a band.
In a 2019 interview with
Loudwire,
Rex stated about his upcoming second solo album: "I went through a totally different songwriting process on this one and yes, it's very introspective, but at the same time it's kind of dark… It's a darker record for me, but it's one of those things where you've just got to let it out when it comes out… I'd say it's still bluesy, but the songs are more well rounded. We just wanted to get my feet wet the first time. But this one's got its rockers on there and some doomy kind of [
PINK]
FLOYD stuff on it — that kind of vibe. I wanted to use the studio kind of more as a palette for what I was doing rather than the other way around… It's a trippy record."