| Cedric Hints at an At the Drive-In Reunion |
| Written by Matt Medlock |
| Thursday, 11 June 2009 |
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But Cedric Bixler-Zavala told Frederick Blood-Royale (via a feature from Drowned in Sound) that a reunion was possible, which didn’t seem so likely a few years back. Their indefinite hiatus was spurred on by crushing hype, certain "extracurricular" habits inflated during long touring schedules and, most obviously, creative differences. But how many bands that willingly disband at their peaks ever get a chance to answer all those questions of coulda-beens and what-ifs (not counting tour-only reunions)? Hell, I don’t even care. Whatever form it comes in, more At the Drive-In has to be a good thing. When At the Drive-In parted ways in 2001, the blow was softened by two extraordinary new bands being born from the rubble, which really did sound like the band’s personality split between two extremes. On one side, Bixler-Zavala and Omar Rodriguez-Lopez (the two guys with the 'fros) went on to the Mars Volta, a hyper-progressive rock band melding space rock and acid jazz and any other style they felt like flirting with. They specialized in elephantine epics and multi-part suites, ambition that usually yields either brilliance or catastrophe (take your pick). Meanwhile, Jim Ward, Tony Hajjar and Paul Hinojos formed Sparta, which specialized in more straightforward rock n’ roll, stabbed with screamo or emo-core or whatever you want to call it. One was freebasing while the other offered a controlled hit, but both delivered great highs, especially on each of their debuts after the split.
So where would an At the Drive-In reunion rank on the likeliness scale? Probably only about a three-and-a-half as of right now, which isn’t good, but far crazier things have happened. Remember when they said the Police would never do another show together? And that was another band that hung it up at the top of their game. Parallels? Or am I just really reaching? Probably the latter, but who can help it? Read the full interview here. And if for some reason you forget how intense they are live, watch them perform in the typically staid atmosphere of Letterman shortly before their breakup:
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The key word is “hints.” Wipe away the drool, please.

