Dez Cadena was the third in a line of four singers who fronted
Black Flag. The son of renowned producer and A&R man
Ozzie Cadena (who worked with a multitude of jazz artists from the 1940s through 1960s --
Dizzy Gillespie,
Charlie Parker,
Charles Mingus,
Dexter Gordon, etc.),
Dez was first friends with the members of
Black Flag before becoming a member himself. Despite having no previous experience singing, the band convinced
Cadena to give it a try, and in 1980, he became the full-time replacement for the departed
Ron Reyes. It was the
Cadena-led version of
Black Flag that would embark on the group's first tour outside of California, including East Coast dates that made fans out of the likes of
Ian MacKaye and
Henry Rollins. Despite only appearing as
Black Flag's vocalist on a pair of singles (1981's "Louie Louie" and "Six Pack" -- compiled on 1983's
The First Four Years), it was
Cadena's hoarse, screamed singing style that would soon become copied by countless hardcore bands who appeared in
Black Flag's wake. With
Cadena wanting to focus more on guitar playing than singing, he handed the mic over to
Rollins in late 1981 and moved over to rhythm guitar, playing on the group's debut full-length,
Damaged. The quintet version of
Black Flag lasted for a year and a half, with
Cadena's final performance with the band being in the garage of
Suicidal Tendencies'
Mike Muir during April 1983. By now,
Cadena had grown his hair shoulder length and, fittingly, formed a more hard rock (namely,
Black Sabbath) sounding group,
DC3. A trio of studio releases followed -- 1985's
This Is the Dream, plus 1986's
You're Only as Blind as Your Mind Can Be and
The Good Hex -- as well as a live compilation, 1989's
Vida. The '90s saw
Cadena, along with former
Minutemen/
fIREHOSE drummer
George Hurley and bassist
Bill Bowman, form a short-lived group named after
DC3's final release. From 1999 through 2000,
Cadena was the guitarist for former
Guns N' Roses bassist
Duff McKagan's band,
Loaded, but no releases surfaced. The early 21st century saw
Cadena reappear once more, this time with
the Misfits on tour and on the albums
Cuts from the Crypt (2001), which included a remake of
Black Flag's "Rise Above," and
Project 1950 (2003).
–
Greg Prato, Rovi