Explore about the Famous Metal Singer Tommy Vext, who was born in United States on April 15, 1982. Analyze Tommy Vext’s net worth, age, bio, birthday, dating, height-weight, wiki. Investigate who is Tommy Vext dating now? Look into this article to know how old is Tommy Vext?
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Tommy Vext Biography
Lead vocalist for the bands Bad Wolves, Snot, Divine Heresy and Westfield Massacre who has also filled in for the multi-platinum selling heavy metal band Five Finger Death Punch.
He sang in local hardcore bands in New York. He also performed in freestyle rap battles. He formed a band called Vext in 1996.
He and Bad Wolves reached platinum status for their cover song of The Cranberries‘ “Zombie” in 2018. They were the first rock band to do so that year.
His real name is Thomas Cummings. He was born in New York City.
He filled in for Ivan L. Moody of Five Finger Death Punch during their European Arena tour in 2017 after Moody checked into a medical facility.
Thomas Cummings (born April 15, 1982), better known under the stage name Tommy Vext, is an American heavy metal singer and songwriter known for being the lead vocalist of Bad Wolves, Snot, Divine Heresy and Westfield Massacre. He was also the fill-in vocalist for the multi-platinum selling heavy metal band Five Finger Death Punch during their European Arena tour in 2017 when Ivan L. Moody left the tour to check into rehab.
Snot is an American metal band from Santa Barbara, California. Formed in 1995, the band released their debut studio album Get Some with founding vocalist Lynn Strait in 1997 and disbanded after his death in 1998. In 2008, the band reformed, with Vext on vocals. Snot has played a number of shows fronted by Vext, including a fall 2008 tour in the United States, supporting DevilDriver. When later original guitarist Sonny Mayo left the band, Snot went on hiatus again.
Vext began his music career in Brooklyn, New York as a teenager singing in local hardcore bands and engaging in freestyle rap battles with the neighborhood’s preeminent hopefuls. Being too young, he had to sneak into clubs even for his own shows. In 1996, he formed the band Maniacal Disciple with friends Jim Donovan, Steve Perlmutter and Mike Kontaras, eventually changing their name to “Vext” (a word he found in Wu-Tang Clan’s lyrics), which eventually became his nickname after he started to be known as “Tommy Vext” in the New York hardcore scene. Vext was a local buzz band, playing shows at CBGB, The Continental, and Lamours. They also opened for Biohazard, Candiria and many others. In 2005, at the Roadrunner Records 25th-anniversary show, Vext was invited to sing with Corey Taylor of Slipknot.
In 2006, Vext was recruited by Dino Cazares of Fear Factory to front his new band Divine Heresy. Their debut studio album Bleed the Fifth was released in the United States on August 28, 2007 by Century Media Records. The album was produced by former Machine Head and Soulfly guitarist, Logan Mader.
Due to unresolvable differences with Dino Cazares, Vext parted with Divine Heresy in 2008. The highly publicised split left both the fans and the press confused. In an exclusive “Metal Injection” interview, Vext explained the real reasons behind his departure from the band:
In 2011 Tommy Vext reformed Vext with members of Mutiny Within, (Bill Fore, and Andrew Jacobs); along with guitar virtuoso Angel Vivaldi. They released the EP titled Impermanence. in 2012. By 2013 Vivaldi and Jacobs had left the project, with Billy DiNapoli taking over on guitars. They released an EP Broke is the New Black.
Tommy then had gone on tour with Mayhem Festival ‘2013 as a cook, and moved to Los Angeles after the tour.
On February 11, 2014, Snot reunited the second time at the Whisky a Go Go in Hollywood. This second reunion line-up once again featured Vext, Mayo, Doling, Fahnestock and Miller. They went on to play three more shows in the Southern California area before once again going quiet.
Later bassist Joe Payne and drummer Tim Yeung both broke ties with Dino and on July 27, 2015, in an interview with MetalSucks, Cazares confirmed that he was the only remaining member of Divine Heresy.
After his stint with Snot, Vext moved on and formed a new band known as “Westfield Massacre”. The band released their self-titled debut album on Urban Yeti Records 2016. In 2017, Vext began working on a side project with former DevilDriver drummer John Boecklin Vext left Westfield while he was on tour with Five Finger Death Punch.
In 2016, Vext formed a new band, known as “Bad Wolves” with former DevilDriver drummer John Boecklin. Guitarists Doc Coyle (Vagus Nerve, God Forbid) and Chris Cain (Bury Your Dead), and later, bassist Kyle Konkiel formerly of In This Moment were recruited for the project. During the summer of 2016, they entered AudioHammer Studios with longtime collaborator Mark Lewis (Trivium, All That Remains) and tracked what would become the group’s debut studio album. On May 2, 2017, Bad Wolves independently premiered a song titled “Learn to Live” accompanied by a music video The video was streamed over 600,000 times. In November 2017, it was announced that Bad Wolves signed with Eleven Seven Music and Zoltan Bathory, the founding guitarist of Five Finger Death Punch, took them under his wings as the band’s manager.
Bad Wolves became the first rock band in 2018 to reach platinum status for their cover song, “Zombie”.
The band toured with Five Finger Death Punch, Shinedown, Breaking Benjamin, and Starset for the first half of 2018.
The album reached number 23 on the US Billboard 200. In May 2017, Bad Wolves released their debut single, “Learn to Live”. In November 2017, Bad Wolves released their second single, “Toast to the Ghost”. On January 18, 2018, they released a third single, which was a cover of “Zombie” (originally by The Cranberries), which charted on multiple Billboard charts. The night of her death, Dolores O’Riordan left a voice message to her friend, record label executive Dan Waite, where she offered to “sing on it” on the cover that Waite had previously given O’Riordan to listen to and accredit. TMZ published this voice message on April 5, 2018. A music video was released on February 22. The song topped the US Billboard Mainstream Rock Songs chart, while the music video was viewed more than 170 million times. The single is certified platinum in Canada and the United States and gold in Germany.
The band released their debut studio album, Disobey on May 11, 2018 through Eleven Seven Music.
What's Tommy Vext Net Worth 2024
Net Worth (2024) | $1 Million (Approx.) |
Net Worth (2023) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2022) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2021) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2020) | Under Review |
Tommy Vext Family
Father's Name | Not Available |
Mother's Name | Not Available |
Siblings | Not Available |
Spouse | Not Available |
Childrens | Not Available |