Heavy metal band Disturbed came together through the matching of a band with a singer. Longtime friends Dan Donegan (guitar), Mike Wengren (drums), and Fuzz (bass) played together in Chicago for some time before hooking up with singer David Draiman
around 1997. Draiman had grown up in a religious family against which
he rebelled, being expelled from five boarding schools in his
adolescence. His anger found an outlet in the thrashing sound of
Disturbed, and the band built up a following on Chicago's South Side
before a demo tape led to their signing to Giant Records, which released
their debut album, The Sickness, in March 2000. The band gained more
fans and exposure playing the main stage of the 2001 Ozzfest, then broke
away to do their own self-described "victory lap" around the U.S. that
fall. Also during this period, they managed to record a vicious new
version of wrestler Steve Austin's theme song that was so good it
managed to receive radio play, and they were one of the bands announced
to work on a high-profile Faith No More tribute album.
Disturbed stepped into the studio after stepping off of the road and
began work on a new disc that would reflect their growth as a band.
Feeling experimental, the bandmembers worked with producer Johnny K and
mixer Andy Wallace in order to create an album that could compare to
other classic metal records they admired. Amplifying their fondness for
groups like Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Pantera, and Soundgarden, Believe
was released in the fall of 2002 and was recognized as a heavier, more
varied, and ultimately superior record to their debut, ultimately
reaching the top of the Billboard 200. After completing a tour to
support the album, Fuzz left the band and was replaced by former Union
Underground member John Moyer. The tour document Music as a Weapon II
appeared in 2004, followed by the ambitious studio full-length Ten
Thousand Fists in September 2005 and Indestructible in 2008. In 2010,
Disturbed released their fifth studio album, Asylum.
In July 2011, the bandmembers announced that they would be going on an
indefinite hiatus. The Lost Children, a collection of rarities and
B-sides, arrived in November of that year. During their time apart,
Moyer joined Adrenaline Mob and formed Art of Anarchy (with Scott
Weiland as lead singer), Draiman started an industrial metal band called
Device, and Donegan and Wengren formed Fight or Flight. After a dinner
meeting between Draiman and Donegan in early 2014, the band began
hatching plans to return. The duo wrote songs together in the same room
for the first time since 2001 and recording sessions were soon booked.
Working with producer Kevin Churko in Las Vegas, their next album harked
back to a classic heavy metal sound. Immortalized was released in
August 2015 and became their fifth consecutive studio album to top the
Billboard 200.
William Ruhlmann - All Music Guide