Popular Metal Band Oceans of Slumber — Its Singer Was on CityBook’s First Cover— Shows Softer Side

Jamie LaCombe
Popular Metal Band Oceans of Slumber — Its Singer Was on CityBook’s First Cover— Shows Softer Side

'TO FEEL THE most fulfilled, I need to do what is right for me,” says Cammie Gilbert, vocalist of the critically acclaimed Houston prog-metal band Oceans of Slumber. “If I’m trying to make space for myself in a space that hasn’t provided for me before, I need to make sure I’m not just fitting into somebody’s preconceived mold of what it means for me to be there.”


Gilbert’s statement of purpose is shared by her bandmates, who have just released Starlight and Ash, their most stylistically diverse album to date. Six years after Gilbert appeared on the cover of the premier issue of CityBook, the group is navigating a more inclusive post-pandemic cultural landscape, in which norms regarding music, gender and skin color have become irrelevant. Its sound has evolved as well.

“We’re increasingly not metal,” explains Gilbert, 34. “We’re in this kind of tricky place of needing to make our own scene.” Nevertheless, the first three singles from Starlight and Ash — including “The Lighthouse,” with its steel guitar fills and lyrics inspired by science-fiction writer Octavia E. Butler — have been rapturously received, with only an armchair metalhead or two griping about the band’s “softer” sound.

Singer Cammie Gilbert of Oceans of Slumber appeared on the cover of CityBook‘s very first issue.

Gilbert joined Oceans of Slumber before she and its drummer and founder Dobber Beverly fell in love, and their relationship has always provided a romantic dimension to their music. They tied the knot New Year’s Eve, in a ceremony beneath a bandshell Beverly constructed with the help of his father, whom he describes as his “biggest driving support” to be a musician. Beverly, 43, is also a devoted dad, with an 8-year-old daughter from a previous marriage.

Despite the praise she’s received since debuting on Oceans of Slumber’s 2015 covers album, Blue, Gilbert says recording her vocals is the hardest part of being in a band. She chokes up when describing her anxiety in the studio. “It’s a mirror and a microscope when I’m in there.”

“The f—ing president could come in and tell her she’s amazing, and it still wouldn’t mean anything,” says Beverly dryly, instantly transforming Gilbert’s sobs into laughter.

As Oceans of Slumber prepares for a summer U.S. tour, with Semir Ozerkan on bass, Jessi Santos and Alexander Lucian on guitar, and new member Kris Grahn on keyboards, Gilbert and Beverly are ready to take Oceans of Slumber to “the next level” with no compromises.

“We’re going to make music first and foremost,” says Gilbert. “And it falls where it does.”

Art + Entertainment
For Realty Pro Sarah Callaway Sulma, ‘Real Estate Is a Relationship Business’

HOW DID YOU get to where you are today? I was raised by a family that had a strong work ethic coupled with high moral standards. I was pretty much given the groundwork - I just had to put it in play!

Keep Reading Show less
People + Places

Lady Stephanie Kimbrell, Cory McGee, and Butler Studio artists, Ani Kushyan, Alissa Goretsky and Elizabeth Hanje (photo by Michelle Watson)

ALL OF THE top performing arts organizations in Houston have now officially opened their 2024-2015 seasons, now that Houston Grand Opera has bowed with a stirring performance of Verdi’s Il trovatore at The Wortham followed by a lavish al fresco dinner in a tent on the plaza out front.The Houston Ballet and the Houston Symphony held their own grand opening night festivities earlier in the fall.

Keep Reading Show less
Art+Culture

Photo by Lynn Lane

HOUSTON GRAND OPERA’S second fall repertoire production is Gioachino Rossini’s Cinderella. The colorful, commedia dell'arte-inspired production opens Friday, Oct. 25, and stars Grammy Award-winning mezzo-soprano Isabel Leonard — a breathtaking brunette beauty, even when doused in soot — in bel canto role of Angelina, known to her mean step-sisters as “Cenerentola.”

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment