GOJIRA Drummer's Art Piece To Benefit Ocean Preservation

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On August 2, GOJIRA drummer Mario Duplantier will unveil his fine-art debut collection, "Vers le Cosmos". Completed with art team SceneFour, the release, which is crafted from the new medium of rhythm-on-canvas, took more than a year to complete. One of the works in the collection, however, is earmarked for the ambitious work of the aquatic philanthropy The Ocean Cleanup, an organization that develops advanced technologies to rid the world's oceans of plastic. For more information, visit www.marioduplantierart.com. Duplantier has joined an extraordinary group of drummers working with art team SceneFour in the medium, including Bill Ward (BLACK SABBATH), Dave Lombardo (SLAYER), Rick Allen (DEF LEPPARD), Mike Mangini (DREAM THEATER), Chad Smith (RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS), Mikkey Dee (MOTÖRHEAD, SCORPIONS), Nick Menza (MEGADETH) and Gene Hoglan (TESTAMENT, DETHKLOK, STRAPPING YOUNG LAD, DARK ANGEL, DEATH). Asked by Music Radar in a 2017 interview how he discovered drums, Mario said: "My brother [GOJIRA frontman Joseph Duplantier] started playing guitar with a friend at school; he had his own band. I was just 11 or 12 years old. He is five years older than me. Because I was very close with him, I was always hanging out in his bedroom and just watching him playing guitar and being really into it. One day, when I really fell in love with METALLICA, I took some chopsticks and started to beat everywhere on the table in my room. My mother came in and said, 'Are you interested in drums?' We jumped in the car to the first music store in the village and we bought a kit." Regarding why he thinks his drumming has resonated with so many people, Mario said: "I try to put so much of my soul in my way of playing, just pure fire. We have a song called 'Liquid Fire', and sometimes when I'm playing it, I feel like I'm liquid fire. I'm not thinking about anything else anymore; I'm in a pure, present moment. When I play drums, I feel free, like I'm flying. I don't have to pay attention to my face, how I'm talking to people. It's no longer a social thing; it's just pure creativity. In our family, we've always been encouraged to be creative and to be ourselves. When I'm playing drums, I'm 100 percent connected to raw energy, really connected to myself. It's just about me existing and expressing something. I feel so good when I play, almost like an animal, and I think people feel this. I put a lot of emotion into what I play too. Sometimes I cry. I put in all my joy, all my anger. Playing drums is a real therapy. It's almost existential."

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