Sebastian Bach firmly denied Halestorm singer Lzzy Hale’s recent onstage claims about his feelings toward his former Skid Row bandmates. The former frontman stated it is impossible for him to actively “hate” people with whom he has not been in the same room since 1996. “It’s not possible for me to ‘hate’ anyone that I have not been in a room with since the year 1996,” Bach said.
Hale had previously described Bach as “always sweet” to her. However, she recounted an anecdote about him allegedly expressing disdain for his former bandmates while speaking with Dimebag Darrell’s wife, Rita Haney. According to Hale’s account, Bach told Haney, “Man, I hate those guys, but she’s f*cking awesome,” in reference to Lzzy’s performances with Skid Row. Hale framed the comment as a compliment wrapped in criticism, suggesting Bach’s feelings toward his former bandmates were more complicated than simple animosity.
The exchange highlights the enduring tension surrounding one of rock and metal’s most infamous band breakups. Bach’s departure from Skid Row in 1996 marked the end of an era for the glam metal outfit. The circumstances surrounding the split have remained a subject of speculation and conflicting narratives for three decades.
Bach was fired from Skid Row in 1996 after months of escalating tension within the band. The immediate catalyst centered on a dispute over whether Skid Row should open for Kiss. Bach reportedly wanted to accept the opportunity, while the other band members felt the group had grown too large for an opening slot. This disagreement was merely the surface manifestation of deeper issues that had been festering for years.
Creative disagreements over songwriting direction and control plagued the band’s dynamic. Significant ego clashes created an increasingly hostile environment that made collaboration nearly impossible. Infighting and personal friction between Bach and his bandmates had become the norm rather than the exception. Members later described the relationship as severely strained, with bass player Rachel Bolan characterizing the connection as purely professional. They were “bandmates” rather than friends, underscoring just how fractured the personal relationships had become by the time of the split.
Bach has long maintained that the popular narrative surrounding his departure misses the mark. He argues that miscommunication and deeper band dynamics played a far more significant role in the rift than his personality or behavior alone. This perspective suggests the breakdown was not the result of one person’s failings. Rather, it was a complex interplay of creative ambitions, personal incompatibilities, and unresolved conflicts that made the band’s continuation untenable.
Nearly thirty years after the split, Bach’s denial of active hatred toward his former bandmates reflects a more measured stance than the inflammatory rhetoric that has occasionally surfaced over the decades. His assertion that one cannot genuinely hate people with whom one has had no contact for three decades carries a certain logical weight. It sidesteps the broader question of whether the animosity ever truly existed in the first place.
