Sepultura are at the moment within the midst of their farewell tour, an ongoing fortieth anniversary celebration of the Brazilian band that’s anticipated to increase into 2026.
The thrash vets are pulling all of the stops for his or her last tour, recording an accompanying stay album that may cull 40 completely different songs from 40 completely different cities — a formidable feat contemplating the group went by way of a drummer change with Eloy Casagrande leaving for Slipknot simply earlier than the trek.
Longtime guitarist Andreas Kisser mentioned the tour in a brand new interview, revealing plans for a last Sepultura in São Paulo, Brazil, someday in 2026. He additionally prolonged an invitation to founding members, the brothers Max and Igor Cavalera, to affix the band onstage throughout that particular farewell present.
“We like to ask all of the ex-members, together with the brothers, Cavalera brothers,” Kisser advised YouTube channel Moshpit Ardour. “Let’s see what occurs. We’re working in the direction of that, to have a giant celebration for the followers.”
The guitarist continued, acknowledging the acrimony that led to the Cavalera brothers initially splintering off from Sepultura years in the past: “We don’t care who is correct or unsuitable. We’re by no means gonna get to that time. [Laughs] We have now completely different level of views and completely different views about identical historic occasions and stuff. So let’s jam, let’s have a superb time for the followers, for us, for ourselves, and actually shut this superb 43 years or 44, no matter it’s gonna be on the time, in peace with ourselves…”
Max exited the band in 1996, occurring to kind Soulfly, whereas Igor left Sepultura in 2006 because the brothers shaped their Cavalera Conspiracy mission.
Whereas the brothers and Sepultura went their separate methods, Max and Igor are nonetheless celebrating the musical legacy of the band they shaped again in 1984, touring traditional Sepultura materials and re-imagining the band’s early albums with newly recorded variations.
Watch the interview with Andreas Kisser beneath.