Kerry King

Musician

Birthday June 3, 1964

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Los Angeles, California, U.S.

Age 59 years old

Nationality Los Angeles, California

#5643 Most Popular

1964

Kerry Ray King (born June 3, 1964) is an American musician, best known for being the co-lead guitarist and songwriter of thrash metal band Slayer.

1981

He co-founded the band with Jeff Hanneman in 1981 and was one of two members to stay with the band for its 38-year existence, along with Tom Araya.

In 1981, King was at an audition for a southern rock band which Jeff Hanneman was also auditioning for.

King heard Hanneman playing guitar near the reception desk and approached him, soon learning that they liked a lot of the same music, and they decided to jam together.

The pair enjoyed playing together and decided to start their own band with Araya and a neighborhood drummer named Dave Lombardo, which would soon evolve into Slayer.

King, along with Araya, remained in Slayer for the entire length of the band's career, from 1981 to 2019.

The video for "No Sleep till Brooklyn", whose title was a spoof on Motörhead's 1981 live album No Sleep 'til Hammersmith, was originally intended to feature King being knocked offstage by a gorilla, although King refused.

King replied, "If there's gonna be anyone knocking anyone offstage, it'll be me knocking the gorilla", which was what subsequently happened.

On Licensed to Ill, King also played the guitar solo on the song "Fight For Your Right (To Party)".

1984

In 1984, King was invited by former Metallica guitarist Dave Mustaine to join his new band Megadeth.

Slayer's future was briefly in doubt as King played several shows with Megadeth, though he ultimately did not join full-time due to his commitment to Slayer.

He still lived with his parents and has said that the desire to not spend time at home with his family caused him to spend more time rehearsing with the band, which helped his musicianship improve tremendously.

King says at that time their music was viewed simply as heavy metal and the term "thrash" emerged later.

He was becoming heavily influenced by the band Venom, which helped shape Slayer's dark image.

King says that after releasing Haunting The Chapel and Hell Awaits and seeing the band's audience grow steadily, he knew Slayer would be his career.

1986

The controversy surrounding Slayer's 1986 song "Angel Of Death" fueled King to dedicate himself to songwriting.

"I think, on the whole, that mankind is full of fucking idiots. In a nutshell, our lyrics just say 'think'. That's it", he said of the unwanted "Angel of Death" attention.

While lending production to 1986's Reign in Blood, Rick Rubin was also helping with the production of the Beastie Boys' debut album Licensed to Ill.

Rubin felt the track "No Sleep till Brooklyn" needed a guitar solo, so he called in King to lay down the part.

King has since commented that his playing ability "certainly wasn't that of a virtuoso".

1990

Slayer fared better than most bands after heavy metal's dramatic decline in the 1990s, which King describes as "the fuckin' Limp Bizkit era".

King almost stopped writing music entirely due to how offensive he believed the music scene had become at that time.

"I couldn't understand why anybody would make music like that, let alone like it. That was definitely my darkest time as a musician, and that definitely showed up on Diabolus in Musica... through my lack of involvement", he has said.

2019

After Slayer's disbandment in 2019, King went on to pursue a solo career, with his debut album From Hell I Rise due in May 2024.

The youngest of three children, King was born and raised in Los Angeles, California.

His father was an aircraft parts inspector, and his mother worked for a telephone company.

He started learning guitar at the age of thirteen at his father's urging, saying "...my dad was trying to get me out of the wrong circles and give me a hobby."

King attended three different high schools and had very good grades, even winning an award as his school's top math student in junior high.

As the youngest child in the family, King says he was "spoilt" growing up.

He learned guitar on his father's Gibson ES-175 and later had a Fender Stratocaster which he traded for a BC Rich Mockingbird, beginning a long relationship with BC Rich guitars.

The first song he ever learned was Ted Nugent's "Cat Scratch Fever" and he soon became a major fan of Van Halen and Judas Priest, which had a major impact on his guitar playing.

King formed his first band with another guitarist who had been teaching him lessons, and this guitarist introduced him to Tom Araya.

He discovered that he and Araya lived only a block away from each other, and they agreed to start jamming together.

"Everything began from that point", King has said of Slayer's origins.

2020

In March 2020, when interviewed by Guitar World about his endorsement with Dean Guitars, King hinted that he would be working on new material for his first project since Slayer's disbandment, simply saying, "Dean didn't sign me for nothing!"

King stated in an August 2020 interview on the Dean Guitars YouTube channel that he had "more than two records' worth of music".

It was later confirmed that he and former Slayer bandmate Paul Bostaph were working on a new project that would "sound like Slayer without it being Slayer — but not intentionally so."

In November 2023, King hinted that he was going to release the debut album by his new project in 2024; this project was later revealed to be his solo debut album, From Hell I Rise, due for release on May 17, 2024.

The lineup on the album includes King, Bostaph, Death Angel vocalist Mark Osegueda, Hellyeah bassist Kyle Sanders, and Vio-lence and former Machine Head guitarist Phil Demmel.

In addition to appearing on Slayer's albums, he has also made several guest appearances for other artists.