Eduardo Rivadavia (aka Ed Rivadavia) was born in São Paulo, Brazil, and by his late teens had already toured the world (and elsewhere), learning four languages on three continents. Having also accepted the holy gospel of rock & roll as his lord and savior, Eduardo became infatuated with the New Wave of British Heavy Metal and all things heavy, crude, and obnoxious while living in Milan, Italy, during the mid-1980s. At this time, he also made his journalistic debut as sole writer, editor, publisher, and, some would claim, reader of his high school's heavy metal fanzine, earning the scorn of jocks and nerds alike, but uniting the small hardcore music-loving contingent into a frenzied mob that spent countless hours exchanging tapes, talking shop, and getting beat up at concerts. Upon returning home to Brazil, Eduardo resumed a semi-normal existence, sporadically contributing music articles to local papers and magazines while earning his business degree. Finally, after years of obsessive musical fandom and at peace with his distinct lack of musical talent, Eduardo decided the time had come to infiltrate the music industry by the fire escape. He quit his boring corporate job, relocated to America, earned his master's degree while suffering the iniquities of interning for free (anything for rock & roll!), and eventually began working for various record labels, accumulating mountains of records and (seemingly) useless rock trivia in the process. This eventually led him back to writing, and he has regularly contributed articles to multiple websites since 1999, working with many different rock genres but specializing, as always, in his personal hobby: hard rock and heavy metal. To quote from the insightful 'This Is Spinal Tap': "People should be jealous of me...I'm jealous of me...." Eduardo currently resides in Austin, TX, with his wife, two daughters, and far more records, CDs and MP3s than he'll ever have time to listen to.
Eduardo Rivadavia
40 Years Ago: How Motley Crue Staked Their Claim With ‘Shout at the Devil’
They captured the zeitgeist of a looming commercial hard-rock revolution with the ultimate L.A. glam metal album.
Worst Solo Albums by Superstar Band Members
They really should have stayed in their famous bands instead of making these awful LPs.
15 Years Ago: Metallica Returns to Thrash on ‘Death Magnetic’
This album served as an open apology to long-suffering fans.
45 Years Ago: Boston Rushes Out the Long-Delayed ‘Don’t Look Back’
Tom Scholz was crafting this second LP virtually by himself in a basement studio – so it took a while.
40 Years Ago: AC/DC Hits a Rough Patch With ‘Flick of the Switch’
Ironically, the band was at their commercial peak as recording began on this ninth studio album.
50 Years Ago: Lynyrd Skynyrd’s Debut Sets a Southern-Rock Standard
They weren't not the first – and certainly not the last – Southern rock band, but they are surely the style's quintessential embodiment.
40 Years Ago: Black Sabbath Releases Their Only Album With Ian Gillan
There was reason for excitement, given the band's resurrection behind Ozzy Osbourne's first replacement.
50 Years Ago: Led Zeppelin Robbed of $200,000
It was hardly a crippling loss amidst their multi-million dollar 1973 tour, but more troubles were on the way.
50 Years Ago: ZZ Top Breaks Through With ‘Tres Hombres’
In many ways, this is the LP they'd try to live up to for the rest of their career.
40 Years Ago: Metallica Transforms Metal With ‘Kill ‘Em All’
The band first had to abandon their hometown of Los Angeles.