Showing posts with label Rock Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rock Music. Show all posts

Thursday, March 26, 2020

Fender, Gibson offer online resources for guitar lovers in quarantine


As more than one billion people have been asked to stay home in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, the music community is coming together to entertain and support self-isolated fans.

In an effort to keep aspiring musicians busy at home, Fender is now offering three months of free guitar, bass and ukulele lessons through its Fender Play platform.



“With everything happening in the world, music has the power to connect us. We want to do our part to see you through, the way we know how. We’re all going to be spending more time inside, so we might as well make some noise,” the guitarist brand wrote on its Twitter announcement.

The new three-month offer is available to the first 100,000 new subscribers to Fender Play, where music lovers of all levels can discover easy-to-follow video tutorials from “world-class instructors.”

Normally priced at $9.99 (around P506) a month, the Fender Play app also includes how-to videos for hundreds of chart-topping songs by the likes of Led Zeppelin, Green Day, Shawn Mendes, Ed Sheeran and more.

Meanwhile, Gibson has just launched his own “HomeMade Sessions” initiative, where the instrument brand will offer exclusive to at-home performances and interviews from the world’s best guitarists.

“As world leaders in music, we are stepping in and bringing both legendary and new artists, music brands and industry partners together across the globe to launch ‘Gibson HomeMade’; a worldwide program to unite music lovers everywhere and spread hope through tough times,” Cesar Gueikian, chief merchant officer of Gibson, said in a press statement.

The initiative, available on Gibson TV, will include full-length performances and original content from Gibson, Epiphone and Kramer artists such as ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons, Slash and Warren Haynes.

“When times are tough and uncertain, music provides a comfort and dependability we all need. Music unites us all, even when we are apart and ‘socially distanced,'” Haynes said of “Gibson HomeMade Sessions” in a statement.


While Fender and Gibson have announced their own music initiatives, a handful of artists have created their own tutorials from home.

Among them are Queen’s guitarist Brian May, who launched his “Micro Concerts” series by teaching fans how to master the iconic guitar solo from the band’s 1975 hit, “Bohemian Rhapsody”.


“This is my contribution to the Common Good tonight. A raw cheer-up outburst. Living Room Rock! IG-ROCK! Is this the future? To all you folks out there feeling as disorientated as I do – let’s isolate together!!! And keep rockin’ together !! OK? With love. Yours truly – your friendly neighborhood chap who clearly imagines he’s in Hawaii!!!” said the legendary guitarist. JB

source: pop.inquirer.net

Sunday, February 3, 2019

Pepe da Hepe


Joey “Pepe” Smith will be laid to rest at 3 p.m. today, Feb. 3, after a five-day wake at Loyola Memorial Park in Parañaque.

When the 71-year-old King of Pinoy Rock died of cardiac arrest Jan. 28, members of three families he left behind were initially worried about funeral and burial costs.


Smith was not financially secure at the time of his death, but, just like in his roller-coaster ride of a career, help came shortly.

A fundraising campaign was launched on the website gogetfunding.com, and it didn’t take long before the target amount of P300,000 was completed. Red Horse Beer, the brand Smith had endorsed for years, pitched in.

Wally Gonzalez, who with Mike Hanopol and Smith, comprised the pioneering Pinoy Rock trio Juan dela Cruz Band, estimated Smith must’ve earned at least P30 million from his past Red Horse sponsorship deal. But apparently he didn’t save some of it, or worse, he didn’t see all the money.


He was too generous, “masyadong mabait,” Wally said.

If it’s an insinuation that Smith was a spendthrift at the peak of his successful comeback, after struggling to regain his rock-star status following his release from jail in 1994, there’s also proof that people felt responsible, if not obliged, to make life easy for him.

Smith had been a working musician since his teens. By 1966, he was famous as the drummer and, later, frontman of The Downbeats.

Almost down and out

But in 1994, he was almost down and out, having spent 19 months in jail on drug charges. He could’ve rotted in the slammer, were it not for auspicious timing—the owners of the then newly opened ’70s Bistro wanted him for a big concert at Luneta.

I was asked to visit him in jail and to get an update on his case, which he said had a good chance of being dismissed, but unfortunately his lawyer from the Public Attorney’s Office died.

One of his well-meaning friends, Apa Ongpin, exerted efforts to have him freed, but it took lawyer Wijohn Reyes of ’70s Bistro to take over and argue Smith’s case, which led to his acquittal.

As it happened, I was also designated to fetch Smith from jail and bring him later in the evening to ’70s Bistro for a celebration. While treating him to merienda of Pancit Malabon in my sister’s eatery, I found myself telling Smith, then 47, that he was not getting younger; however, he could still make music, and that I would help by working as his manager (with Arthur Pimentel).

Those were damn difficult years, although Smith’s first comeback gig, held at Club Dredd, drew a full-house crowd that earned him and his band a princely sum.

Managing Smith meant abono, drawing cash from my own pocket or accumulating a listahan ng utang from my sis’ restaurant, where his kids would get their meals.

But many friends attended to Smith’s needs—dentists, surgeons, eye doctors, and a former manager who facilitated a one-time cash sponsorship of P500,000.

After my stint, Smith had around five more managers, the most financially rewarding being the one who handled the Red Horse Beer endorsement, which Gonzalez said lasted 10 years.

But even as Smith suffered painful setbacks in the last few months of his life, he was happy that his children had grown up fine and found gainful employment, some abroad.

The eldest, Queenie, Smith’s daughter from a past relationship with Gigi Laguyan, flew in from Myanmar where she’s a special education teacher.

Delta and Desiderata, two daughters Smith had with Rose Acuña, and now both living in Australia, also came home for the wake.

Curiously, Smith had sired another daughter, a Japanese, who’s now a scientist, said one of Smith’s musician friends.



Legacy

In the late ’70s, Ricky de Ungria, then writing for Jingle music magazine, asked Smith what he wished to be remembered for. “Basta ni-rakenrol ko ang Pilipinas,” he quipped.

Last week, fans and friends flooded Facebook with recollections and affirmations of Smith’s lasting legacy. Many of them had fond memories of chance encounters and good times with him, accompanied by photos of each of them with Smith.



But while most fans measure Smith’s musical influence via three Juan dela Cruz studio albums (1973’s “Himig Natin,” 1974’s “Maskara” and 1981’s “Kahit Anong Mangyari”) and two solo songs (“Summer Wind” and “Sa ’Yo”), they should also listen to his last recorded work, “Idiosyncracies,” a 12-track CD he did with longtime collaborator, guitarist Jun Lopito and bassist Dondi Ledesma, who also produced the sessions in his then home studio in Pasay.

The album encountered problems with the record label that released it, but is available via streaming on Spotify.

source: lifestyle.inquirer.net

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Rock elders AC/DC back on road in 2016


NEW YORK—AC/DC will open their latest tour on February 2 in Tacoma, Washington playing 20 dates across the United States, ending with an April 4 show at New York’s Madison Square Garden.

The rockers will then head to Europe, starting on May 7 in Lisbon and culminating on June 12 at a 46,000-capacity park in Aarhus, Denmark.

The tour follows a busy 2015 that featured 53 shows around the world including a headlining appearance at Coachella in California, one of the world’s pre-eminent music festivals.




The band capped the year on Tuesday with a show before more than 30,000 fans in Auckland, New Zealand.


AC/DC, who also released an album last year following a six-year gap, returned without founding member Malcolm Young, who has retired due to dementia.


The band has also parted ways with drummer Phil Rudd, who was convicted in New Zealand of threatening to kill an employee.

Young’s brother Angus remains the lead guitarist — known, even at age 60, for sporting his signature schoolboy outfit.

Lead singer Brian Johnson, 68, said in an interview in September that AC/DC members were “constantly surprised and amazed at how we keep the success going.”

“A good footballer, a good ice hockey player, they don’t want to retire, but unfortunately sometimes there’s a time when you have to call it quits,” he told the Morning Sun newspaper in Michigan.

“So it’s an ongoing thing with us; we never say no, and we never say never.”

source: entertainment.inquirer.net

Monday, October 28, 2013

Celebrities react on Twitter to Lou Reed’s death


LOS ANGELES – With just one Top 20 hit in a 40-year career, Lou Reed was still one of the most influential rock ‘n’ roll artists of all time when judged by the impact he had on other musicians and entertainers.

Reaction on Twitter was swift on Sunday when news broke that the 71-year-old died of an ailment following a liver transplant this year. Here’s a sampling of celebrity tweets:

— “Mr. LOU REED had himself a dream: Velvet the underground & change the music scene. Now he’s up & gone away. #RIP Lou Reed, an un-Perfect Day.” – Filmmaker Kevin Smith.

— “New York lost one of our greatest gifts today.”  - Def Jam co-founder Russell Simmons.

— “A musician, artist and trailblazer who played by his own rules.” – Paul Stanley of KISS.

— “One of the greatest artists of our time.” – Comedian Ricky Gervais.

— “RIP Lou Reed. Thank you for your beautiful/dark lyrics/music and stance on life. You inspired me from my teenage years right up till today.” –  Nikki Sixx of Motley Crue.

— “Rest in peace. Music lives forever.” –  Rapper LL Cool J.

— “R.I.P Lou Reed – VU was a big influence when weezer was being formed.” –  Weezer’s official Twitter page.

— “Cool cat. Hey babe take a walk on the wild side. Encouraging words for a young Virginia.” – Actress Virginia Madsen.

— “‘Where was I when I heard Lou Reed died? A pumpkin patch in Moorpark. A pumpkin patch. In Moorpark.’ – me, to my grandchildren” – Actor-comedian Patton Oswalt.

— “I met Lou Reed and told him he gave me tinnitus at a concert in 1989 that never went away and it was worth it. Dirty Blvd. Love to Lou.” – Filmmaker Judd Apatow.

— “The great & amazing Lou Reed has died my condolences 2 his wife Laurie Anderson.Lou was1of a kind & this colored girl still says dededede…” –  Actress Whoopi Goldberg.

— “Very sad to hear the news of Lou Reed’s passing. Another rocknroll legend has left us mere mortals behind. Thanks for the inspiration, Lou.” –  ”Glee” star Darren Criss.

— “My intro to Lou Reed/Velvet Underground was Janes Addiction cover of ‘Rock n Roll’. He was a singular, unique talent. RIP Lou and thanks.” –  Tom Morello of Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave.

— “One of a kind magic street soul,who created a future and history. I’m sad.” –  Actress/musician Juliette Lewis.

— “Lou Reed, my friend, a genius who transcended Rock. My condolences to his family. A poet 1st, he performed like a hit-man on a mission.” –  Comedian Richard Lewis.

— “R.I.P. Lou Reed. Just met at the GQ Awards. The music of my generation. Still Relevant!” — Actor Samuel L. Jackson.

— “Lou Reed RIP – always inspired by him – terrible news – only knew him through his art -a great – a singular poet -” – Actor John Cusack.

source: entertainment.inquirer.net

Friday, February 8, 2013

The Who: Quadrophenia & More


The Who embarks on a major North American arena tour performing their iconic 1973 double album Quadrophenia in its entirety, along with a selection of their other classics. Vintage Trouble opens the show.

When: Friday, Feb. 8, 8:30 p.m. to 11 p.m.

Where: The Joint, 4455 Paradise Road, Las Vegas

Cost: $71 - $321

Age limit: All ages

source: lasvegassun.com

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Lynyrd Skynyrd had a Good Teacher


Lynyrd Skynyrd have released a lyric video for Good Teacher, taken from recent album Last Of A Dyin’ Breed. View it below.


The band – who played an exclusive 30-minute set to invited guests at Classic Rock’s eighth annual Roll Of Honour awards night last month – got their name from a teacher called Leonard Skinner.

But given the lyrics in the song: “He showed me the ropes, good whisky and smoke, and how to tell a dirty joke” they’re probably not talking about Mr Skinner.

source: classicrockmagazine.com

Friday, December 7, 2012

Wolfgang Philippines 2012 - Sandata Lyrics


Ako ang bunga ng bagong siglo
Anak ng hirap, luha at abo
Ang inyong mithiin ang nabigay buhay sa akin

Sa bawat sulok may bagong kalaban
Sa bawat sandali may bagong hadlang
'Di sumusuko, hindi matatapakan
'Di luluhod at walang iiwasan

Ako ang simula ng pagbabago
Ako ang susi sa pangarap mo
Parusa, pasanin mabigat sa damdamin
Kahit inosente pinipilit umamin
Walang mapuntahan, walang mataguan
Isang himagsikan yan ang kailangan
Ako ang simula ng pagbabago
Ako ang susi sa pangarap mo




Kasangga mong wagas ngayon hanggang bukas
Kaalyado mong tunay sa tuwid na landas
Matibay ang lubid, kagitingang likas
Ako ang katarungan ng sandata mo

Larawan na walang mukhang galit at luha
Pinilit kang itapon
Sa paglipas ng mga panahon
Gumising ka't bumangon
Oras mo'y padating ngayon

Masdan mo ang pagyanig ng lupa
Pagsubok sayo ng lahat ng bathala
Sa iyong kamay, lahat nakasalalay
Itaas mo sa langit tanglaw ng tagumpay

Ako ang simula ng pagbabago
Ako ang susi sa pangarap mo
Kasangga mong wagas ngayon hanggang bukas
Kaalyado mong tunay sa tuwid na landas
Matibay ang lubid, kagitingang likas
Ako ang katarungan ng sandata mo




Live Performance Recordings

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Alice in Chains complete fifth album


Alice in Chains have completed their fifth album, guitarist Jerry Cantrell has confirmed.

While no release date has been set, it’s thought the second record featuring frontman William DuVall will be out next year.

The band hired DuVall in 2006 after the death of Lane Staley four years previously. They released Black Gives Way To Blue to great acclaim in 2009.

Cantrell recently explained they’d started work on new material last year – but the pressure to deliver made them feel like they were “having to deal with the sophomore jinx for the second time in our career.”

The guitarist was sidelined for some time after undergoing surgery to deal with a damaged shoulder.


Now he tells Guitar World: “In my opinion, Black Gives Way To Blue stood up to anything else we’ve put out – and this new one is right up there as well.”

Alice in Chains will appear at the Download Festival in June 2013, and also at Rock in Rio in Brazil in September.

source: classicrockmagazine.com

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Aerosmith Pen NFL Version Of Legendary Child


They've reworked the lyrics for their NFL team

Aerosmith have reworked the lyrics to their song 'Legendary Child' in honour of the New England Patriots.

The 'Legendary Child - Patriots Anthem' now includes lines such '"The muskets roar, another score, that’s how we get it done/Raise your fist and shout it out, the Pats are number one.”


The song was originally written in 1991 for the Get A Grip album but it was never finished off. However, the band took another run at the track this year and it appears on their brand new studio album, Music From Another Dimension.

They are giving away the new version of the song over at Pepsi Anthems, which has seen a number of rock and pop stars record songs for their favourite NFL teams.

"This is a program the band and I were excited to get behind as it is a true representation of our allegiance to the New England Patriots and the city of Boston,” said Steven Tyler.

"Hearing our song being played as the soundtrack at all the tailgate parties to every touchdown is a testament to all the diehard Aerosmith fans in New England... GO PATS!”

You can download the song HERE

source: planetrock.com

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Creed coming to Manila


One of the most prominent post-grunge acts that have sold no less than 53 million albums worldwide is Manila-bound to rock out their loyal disciples and make believers of the rest: Creed.

On Nov. 11, 2012 at Smart Araneta Coliseum, lead vocalist Scott Stapp, bassist Brian Marshall, drummer Scott Phillips and guitarist/vocalist Mark Tremonti collectively known as Creed will perform live their well-loved songs that have endeared them to fans regardless of shifting trends in the worldwide music industry.  Some of the most anticipated hits they racked up in their more than a decade of dominance are “With Arms Wide Open,” “My Sacrifice,” “Higher,” “What If,” “What’s This Life For,” and “Are You Ready.” Note that Creed has its own Greatest Hits compilation album—one of the few from among their contemporaries.

Of their hits, “Wide Arms Wide Open” has proved to be their biggest so far with the song eventually ending up as Best Rock Song in the 2011 Grammy Awards. The song about fatherhood that many believe has spiritual undertones, pushed the album to sell more than 10 million copies worldwide.

It was also nominated in the Grammys under the Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal.

The voice of Stapp is considered by many as one of the most compelling ones in the genre. In a review of one of their earliest performances, Stapp’s gravely but powerful voice was said to have the ability to energize a room as soon he steps up to the mic and it can fill up every available space!

And though Creed has been involved in several controversies through the years—including going into hiatus only to return stronger than before— they have remarkably weathered all these through the sheer force of their musical artistry. By the time 2011 had come, the quartet has been hailed by Billboard magazine as the 18th best artist of the last decade. One of their albums that moved 40 million units worldwide also ended up as the ninth best-selling artist of the 2000s.

But it’s not all nostalgia going for the concert in Manila. It is said that the band has started recording new material for their fifth album so it won’t be unlikely if they decide to sample some of these during the show, perhaps, even exclusively for their Filipino fans.

Here’s interesting trivia about Creed: Though regarded by many as a Christian rock band due to some of their best songs focusing on themes such as eternity and faith, the band has never claimed to be one and, in fact, was never signed to a contemporary Christian music label.  It’s just that unlike many other rock bands, Creed chooses to deal with such topics as sexual abuse, hostility and lucid dreaming “in a substantial, mature manner,” said a reviewer.

In an interview, Stapp pointed out the difference between spiritual and religious lyrics: “Religion was about ‘what not to do.’ Spirituality opens you up, sets you free.”

Tickets to The Creed Live In Manila are available in Ticketnet outlets with the following ticket prices:

* PATRON A STANDING 5,850

* PATRON B STANDING 4,500

* LOWER BOX CENTER 4,500

* LOWER BOX SIDE 3,500

* UPPER BOX A 2,500

* UPPER BOX B 1,500

* GEN AD 800

source: entertainment.inquirer.net

Friday, October 5, 2012

Why Deep Purple and Thin Lizzy supergroup didn’t take off


Deep Purple and Thin Lizzy supergroup Baby Face went nowhere because Phil Lynott wasn’t a good enough bass player, says drummer Ian Paice.

He and Lynott formed the band with Ritchie Blackmore in 1972 and got as far as a brief rehearsal session before the idea was abandoned.


Paice and Purple tour manager Colin Hart tell the story in Classic Rock Magazine No.176, on sale now.



Blackmore and Paice approached Lynott with the idea of forming a band that would let them flex their muscles outside their increasingly strained confines of Deep Purple. Lynott had come to the guitarist‘s attention after he heared Lizzy’s self-titled 1971 debut album.

“Ritchie used to love his singing,” says Hart. “Kind of like a young rod Stewart or Paul Rodgers.”

With Thin Lizzy yet to make a breakthrough, Lynott took Blackmore and Paice up on their offer. Settling on the name Baby Face, the guitarist instructed Hart to arrange an impromptu session.

“They did a couple of covers,” says Hart, who was in the studio with them. “It was only a short session, two or three songs, then it was out with the equipment and off home. I don’t think they did anything original. It did sound great together, the three of them.”

Paice recalls: “It was meant to be a free-flowing kind of thing. It never got off the ground mainly because Phil wasn’t really a good enough bassist yet.

“He had the voice, but learning to play bass well takes time. And for a thing like that to work, all three players need to be at a certain level. Phil just wasn’t there yet.”

The name Baby Face would end up being used as a title on Lizzy’s next album, and the Irish band would record a Deep Purple tribute album in 1972 under the name Funky Junction, with vocals provided by Benny White of Irish group Elmer Fudd.

But, for a brief moment, the prospect of an early-70s supergroup was tantalisingly close.

“Phil was bowled over by Blackmore,” Lizzy drummer Brian Downey later said. “That was the first time I’d ever seen him hesitate about anything.”

Deep Purple’s classic 1972 album Machine Head is set for a 40th anniversary re-release in five-disc deluxe format. Meanwhile, bands including Metallica and Iron Maiden have contributed tracks to Re-Machined, the band’s official tribute album. It’s available with exclusive bonus track in a Classic Rock Fan Pack. Read the full Deep Purple feature in Classic Rock 176, on sale now. Get it on your iPad and iPhone here: http://goo.gl/z4Yhu (in the UK) or here http://goo.gl/YUnR9 (for the US).

source: classicrockmagazine.com

Monday, October 1, 2012

Foo Fighters To Take A Break


Dave Grohl confirms their show in New York will be their last for a while

In August Dave Grohl revealed that the Foos were playing their "last show for a very long time" and in New York over the weekend he seemed to suggest that the band intended to take a break.

Prior to playing 'Learn To Fly' at the Global Citizen Festival in New York's Central Park Grohl said "Without making a big deal out of it, we don't have any shows after this. This is it, man. Honestly I don't know when we're gonna do it again...and this is the perfect place to do it."

Grohl has been working to finish off his Sound City movie and everyone is expecting to see that released in 2013.

The film looks at the Sound City studios in LA where, amongst others, Neil Young, Tom Petty, Fleetwood Mac and Nirvana have recorded.

The movie features interviews with many of the people who have recorded there over the past 40 years.
 

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Lord’s swan song set for release


Jon Lord‘s final studio work, a new version of his Concerto For Group and Orchestra, will be released on September 25. It was recorded in Abbey Road Studios and features the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic orchestra plus Bruce Dickinson of Iron Maiden, Joe Bonamassa and Deep Purple guitarist Steve Morse. Lord, who died last month at 71, said of the album: “Over the years since leaving Deep Purple I’ve played it over 30 times, and in 2000 I did it well over 30 times with Purple on tour. I’ve been honing the piece. It’s a marvellous and exciting prospect to have the definitive recording of the definitive score.”

Meanwhile, Deep Purple have confirmed Re-Machined: A Tribute to Machine Head will be released in the US, also on September 25. The album includes Metallica, Maiden, Chickenfoot and many others delivering their interpretations of the tracks from Purple’s iconic 1972 record. It first sees light of day in a Classic Rock Fan Pack, complete with 124-page magazine which includes one of the last interviews with Lord. More information and pre-order.

News broadcaster CNN has issued an unconvincing apology to Hatebreed after including them in a list of fascist bands. Their name was listed alongside a number of “white power” groups amid coverage of a racist massacre in Wisconsin, US. The man accused of the killings performs with two fascist bands, leading to the publication of CNN’s article. Hatebreed tweeted: “First they ignore the Free Randy Blythe story, now they slander us. We demand a retraction and an apology.” The broadcaster removed the band’s name from their list but at first did not apologise. Later they said: “CNN regrets the error.”

Primus mainman Les Claypool is auctioning one of his favourite basses to help raise funds for the welfare of his baby nephew Matthew, who is suffering a rare form of infant cancer. The eBay auction has attracted nearly 60 bids with the price currently approaching $19,000.

A book featuring collected interviews with Jimmy Page will be published on October 23. Light & Shade: Conversations With Jimmy Page consists of material gathered over 20 years by author Brad Tolinksi, who writes for Guitar World magazine. The title is describes as “the most complete picture of the media-shy guitarist ever published” and it’s endorsed by Slash, Kirk Hammett and Billy Gibbons.

Godsmack singer Sully Erna has returned to full health after cancelling a series of shows with throat problems. Drummer Shannon Larkin says: “We did a couple of shows last week and he sang great.” Labelling the call-offs as “the biggest bummer of the decade,” the drummer explains: “We’re not spring chickens any more. We were afraid it could damage his cords where his voice would change or he wouldn’t be able to hit notes.” [Pulse of Radio]

Johnny Winter is aiming to recruit a number of guests for the follow-up to his 2011 covers album Roots. He says: “I haven’t picked the songs yet, but I’d like to have Billy Gibbons, Dr John, Mark Knopfler, Clapton, BB King and Buddy Guy.” [Billboard]

Michael Nesmith has returned to the Monkees and will appear on their upcoming tour – the first since the death of Davy Jones earlier this year. Nesmith says: “We reconnected at a private memorial for David. Getting together with old friends can be very stimulating, and even inspiring to me. We did some good work together and I am always interested in the right time and the right place to reconnect and play.” [Rolling Stone]

Riot guitarist Mark Reale’s headstone will be laid over his grave in a public ceremony on Saturday. Reale died aged 56 in January after a lifelong fight against Crohn’s disease, which had left him unable to complete his parts on Riot’s album Immortal Soul, and forced him to abandon plans for a number of live shows. The ceremony takes place at Holy Cross Cemetery, San Antonio, Texas, at 10am.

Producers of a new documentary about the heavy metal music industry, Behind The Suit And Tie, have released a trailer for the film they say “pulls no punches and features prime movers.”

source: classicrockmagazine.com

Friday, July 27, 2012

Sabbath don’t have guts for problems


Former Black Sabbath singer Tony Martin believes the band don’t have the guts to face up to internal disputes.

He’s revealed the first time he knew about Tony Iommi’s criticisms of his near ten-year stint with the metal pioneers was when he was told about comments the guitarist made in his book.


But he remains proud of his time as replacement for Ozzy Osbourne and Ronnie James Dio – and remembers how his 1987 audition came as a surprise to him.
In his biography Iron Man, Iommi slates Martin for being “unprofessional” and having “no stage presence.”
The singer tells Uber Rock: “They never said anything to me. We could have fixed it. I said to them endlessly that if there was anything they wanted changed, done differently, just to say – and we could fix it.
“They didn’t. They hadn’t got the guts to, obviously.
“Surely if you’ve got a problem, the first person you should say something to is the person in the band? You don’t wait ten years. To write it in a book afterwards seems a bit daft.
“It sounds like a really stupid thing to say as they didn’t say anything to my face. More fool them for not saying anything. We could have fixed it.”
Returned frontman Osbourne recently admitted that none of Black Sabbath had personally spoken to drummer Bill Ward about the contractual issues that led him to refuse a role in their reunion and new album. Martin has said he thinks the disagreement could be a publicity stunt.
Meanwhile, he isn’t bitter about his time with the band – and still remembers how he landed the role.
“My manager at the time was their tour manager during the seventies,” he recalls. “He gave me a call one day and said, ‘Oi, kid, I want you to meet me, we’re going to talk and drive.’
“We drove for a while and ended up at this big house. He rang the doorbell – and Iommi answered the door. I was like, ‘Bloody hell, you could have warned me!’
“But in I went, nervous as hell, played him a few things and next thing I had an audition in London. That was it. I was in.”
source: classicrockmagazine.com

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Appetite almost wrote itself – Slash


Slash insists Guns n’Roses debut album Appetite For Destruction is not one of his favourite records.


But looking back on the band’s iconic release on its 25th anniversary, he recalls how the songs almost wrote themselves, and they often found themselves performing tracks just hours after they’d been written.


Hailed as one of the greatest first albums by any band in history, the 1987 release has gone on to sell over 30 million copies.

Blabbermouth reports Slash saying: “Appetite is not what you’d call a favourite record. It’s a good record, but, to me, it’s still that record we made at the time what all that shit was happening.

“When we recorded those songs it was just what we were doing. I still look at it that way – I don’t see it as the big record other people see. I’m too close to it.”

Despite that, the guitarist believes its longevity is a result of its honesty. “It’s a snapshot of life from 1984 to 1987,” he reflects. “It was talking about stuff that nobody really talked about at the time. It was delivered with an attitude so sincere that a lot of people really related.

“We said things that people would have felt uncomfortable about saying, but felt those same things. We were living on the edge and singing about it, and people were like, ‘Wow, that’s pretty brutal.’”

Slash says the material came together incredibly quickly. “They almost wrote themselves. With Axl, I know he was very conscientious with the lyrics, and might have spent more time with them. But the arrangements and the music would come together within an hour.

“We might have fine-tuned some stuff later on, but we’d be playing a new song in a club after only having worked on it for a couple of hours.”

Meanwhile, former Nazareth guitarist and producer Manny Charlton has recalled how he was invited to man the desk for Appetite For Destruction – but couldn’t make the schedule work.

He tells Legendary Rock Interviews: “Axl Rose said to his label, ‘Get me the guy who produced Hair of the Dog by Nazareth. What Axl wants, Axl gets.

“I went to LA to meet them and we went into the studio where we recorded their whole live set. They were great. We left it saying if we could get our schedules together, then great. But I was in the middle of recording Cinema with Nazareth and it didn’t happen.

“I found out later they’d auditioned a dozen or so other people for the gig.”

source: classicrockmagazine.com


Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Newsbites: Dio planned retirement call


Ronnie James Dio would have decided whether to retire yesterday had he not died of cancer in 2010, says bandmate Geezer Butler. Speaking on what would have been the singer’s 70th birthday, the bassist said: “Ronnie should have been celebrating and probably would have been if he’d had his health checked regularly. I once asked him if he’s ever thought about retiring. He said he would make that decision on his 70th birthday. That is why today is so poignant. I think I know what his decision would have been.”


The new Thin Lizzy album will not follow Phil Lynott’s last music footsteps, says guitarist Damon Johnson. He reports: “Towards the original end they made Thunder and Lightning. That album was so heavy – it seemed Phil wanted to go down a heavy metal route for a while. That’s not what the new album will be. There are some big, fat classic riffs. We all know it’s going to be under the microscope. We know there will be pundits who criticise it, but pundits aren’t necessarily fans.” Of frontman Ricky Warwick Johnson says: “The guy is a class songwriter, and that’s what Scott Gorham and Brian Downey needed to make another Thin Lizzy record.” [Gibson]

Troubled comedy actor Charlie Sheen made fun of Guns n’Roses frontman Axl Rose when he unveiled guitarist Slash’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame yesterday. Sheen said: “It’s quite fitting the Slash is getting a star on the very street Axl will one day be sleeping on. This star is going to be stepped on more than the coke we did in the eighties.” [Rolling Stone]

Iron Maiden guitarist Adrian Smith is considering the release of an instrumental album he recorded a few years ago. Smith says: “It’s still in the can, as they say, but that was interesting. A lot of fun to do. I like so many different types of music. I’m probably going to do something with it in the future.” [BraveWords]

Green Day will launch two documentaries to coincide with their upcoming three-part album releases. The first movie covers the making of discs Uno, Dos and Tre, which appear in September, November and January respectively. The second film features the band’s early days. Frontman Billie Joe Armstrong says: “It’s not going to be the sitting down, headshot of going, ‘We started out blah blah blah.’ We wanted to get into lifestyles of rock’n'roll, and letting the story tell itself rather than be revisionist.”

Serj Tankian doesn’t believe some of the anti-consumerist material on new solo album Harakiri was created on his iPad. “If you’re looking for irony you can find it anywhere,” he says. “Utilising an iPad to write a song is no different from using acoustic guitar or piano. As a songwriter you always want to change and progress. While I’m not endorsing the Apple corporation in any way, it is a useful tool. Consumerism is part of our life – there’s blind consumerism and then there’s consumer awareness. They are very different things.” [Noisecreep]

Stone Gossard’s attitude to Pearl Jam‘s live setlists has changed over the years. The guitarist explains: “When we started out I wold have been one of those people that thought, ‘Let’s just play the hits – why play anything other?’ But as you get more songs we work them in. It’s given us so much more room because the fans now expect something different each night. Even if you fuck something up, the fact that you’re trying songs you haven’t played before… it’s good to have that challenge.” [MusicRadar]

Radiohead paid tribute to tragic drum tech Scott Johnson, who died when the band’s stage collapsed in Canada last month. At the end of their concert in Nimes, the first since the accident which is still under investigation, they performed their track Reckoner as a third encore. Frontman Thom Yorke dedicated it to “our friend Scott” and a picture of Johnson was displayed on video screens.

Courtney Love‘s former assistant Jessica LaBrie has filed a lawsuit against the Hole singer in Los Angeles. The PA says Love tried to make her forge legal documents and hire a computer hacker, then withheld wages because she refused to “commit fraudulent, unlawful and unethical acts”. LaBrie says she had to quit after 13 months because she was not receiving her salary. [TMZ]

source: classicrockmagazine.com

Monday, July 2, 2012

Jimi Hendrix: "I Don't Want to Be a Clown Anymore"



This story is from the November 15th, 1969 issue of Rolling Stone.

Records, film, press and gossip are collectively ambitious in creating the image of a rock superstar. With Jimi Hendrix – as with Janis Joplin, Mick Jagger and Jim Morrison – mythology is particularly lavish.

Unfortunately, it is also often irreversible–even when it's ill-founded or after the performer himself has gone through changes.

Several weeks ago, Life magazine described Jimi as "a rock demigod" and devoted several color pages to kaleidoscopic projection of his face. Well, why not? The fisheye lens shot on his first album cover shows him in arrogant distortion: on the second album, he becomes Buddha. Lest anyone forget, Leacock-Pennebaker's Monterey Pop has immortalized his pyromaniacal affair with the guitar. Rock-media bedroom talk makes him King Stud of the groupies. Stories circulate that he is rude to audiences, stands up writers, hangs up photographers, that he doesn't talk.

What Jimi's really all about – and where his music is going – is an altogether different thing.

For most of the summer and early fall, Jimi rented a big Georgian-style home in Liberty, New York – one of Woodstock's verdant "suburbs" – for the purpose of housing an eclectic family of musicians: Black Memphis blues guitarists; "new music" and jazz avantgardists; "Experience" member Mitch Mitchell; and – closest to Jimi and most influential – Juma Lewis, a multi-talented ex-progressive jazzman who is now the leader of Woodstock's Aboriginal Music Society.

The hilltop compound – replete with wooded acreage and two horses – was intended for a peaceful, productive musical growth period. But hassles did come, sometimes sending Jimi off on sanity-preserving vacations in Algeria and Morocco: local police were anxious to nab "big-time hippies" on anything from dope to speeding; the house was often hectic with hangers-on; pressure mounted from Jimi's commercial reps to stay within the well-hyped image and not go too far afield experimentally.

But with it all, growth, exchange and – finally – unity was achieved among Jimi and the musicians, whose work-in-progress was evidenced in occasional public appearances in the New York area (at the Woodstock/Bethel Festival, Harlem's Apollo Theater, Greenwich Village's Salvation discotheque, and ABC's Dick Cavett show) and has been recorded for Reprise on an LP which will be released in January. The name of the album, Gypsies, Suns and Rainbows, epitomizes the new Hendrix feeling.

With close friends of Jimi, I drove up to Liberty on a quiet September weekend. The melange of musicians and girls had departed. In a few weeks, Jimi himself was to give up the house, woods and horses for less idyllic prospects: a Manhattan loft and a November hearing on the narcotics-possession charge he was slapped with in Toronto, May 3rd.

Photographs have a funny way of betraying his essentially fragile face and body. He is lean. Almost slight. Eating chocolate chip cookies on the living room couch in this big house – furnished straight and comfortable – he seems boyish and vulnerable.

He offers questions with an unjustified fear of his own articulateness that is charming – but occasionally painful. "Do you, uh – where do you live in the city?" "What kind of music do you li— would you care to listen to?" He is self-effacing almost to a fault: "Do you ever go to the Fillmore? No? – that was a silly question, sorry." "I'm sorry, am I mumbling? Tell me when I'm mumbling. Damn ... I always mumble."

It becomes uncomfortable, so one says: "Jimi, don't keep putting yourself down. There's everybody else to do that for you." He attaches to that statement, repeats it slowly, whips out the embossed Moroccan notebook in which he jots lyrics at all hours of day and night, and scribbles something down.

Fingering through his record collection (extensive and catholic; e.g., Marlene Dietrich, David Peel and the Lower East Side, Schoenberg, Wes Montgomery), he pulls out Blind Faith; Crosby, Stills and Nash; and John Wesley Harding. The Dylan plays first. Jimi's face lights: "I love Dylan. I only met him once, about three years ago, back at the Kettle of Fish [a folk-rock era hangout] on MacDougal Street. That was before I went to England. I think both of us were pretty drunk at the time, so he probably doesn't remember it."

In the middle of a track, Jimi gets up, plugs in his guitar, and – with eyes closed and his supple body curved gently over the instrument – pick up on "Frankie Lee and Judas Priest," riding the rest of the song home with a near-religious intensity.

He talks intently to Juma and his girl. He cherishes real friends and will do anything for them. They, in turn, feel protective toward him. "Poor Jimi," one says. "Everyone's trying to hold him up for something. Those busts ... Even the highway patrol exploits him. They know his car: they stop him on the road between New York and Woodstock and harass him. Then they have something to gloat about for the rest of the day. Once a cop stopped me on the highway and started bragging: 'Hey, I just stopped Jimi Hendrix for the second time today.'"

On the bookcase is a photograph of a Fifties Coasters-type R&B group: processed hair, metallic-threaded silk-lapel suits, shiny shoes. The thin kid on the far left in a high-conked pompadour, grinning over an electric guitar: is it – ? "That's okay," Jimi smiles at the impending laughter. "I don't try to cover up the past; I'm not ashamed of it." But he is genuinely humble about the present. For example, he'd been wanting for some time to jam with jazz and "new music" avantgardists, but worried that such musicians didn't take him seriously enough to ever consider playing with him. "Tell me, honestly," he asked a friend, "what do those guys think of me? Do they think I'm jiving?"

We are listening now to the tape of such a session, the previous night's jam: Jimi on electric guitar, avantgarde pianist Michael Ephron on clavichord, Juma on congas and flute. A beautiful fusion of disparate elements, disjunct and unified at alternating seconds. Now chaotic, now coming together. "Cosmic music," they call it. Ego-free music. Not the sort of stuff the waxlords make many bucks off. Not the kind of sound guaranteed to extend the popularity of a rock superstar.

"I don't want to be a clown anymore. I don't want to be a 'rock and roll star,'" Jimi says, emphatically. The forces of contention are never addressed but their pervasiveness has taken its toll on Jimi's stamina and peace of mind. Trying to remain a growing artist when a business empire has nuzzled you to its bosom takes a toughness, a shrewdness. For those who have a hardness of conviction but not of temperament it isn't a question of selling out but of dying, artistically and spiritually. Refusing to die yet ill-equipped to fight dirty, many sensitive but commercially-lionized artists withdrew. I watch Jimi quietly digging the pictures of faraway people and places in a book, The Epic of Man ("South America ... wow, that's a whole different world. Have you ever been there?") and I wonder just where he will be and what he will be doing five years from now.

We crowd into Jimi's metal-fleck silver Stingray ("I want to paint it over – maybe black") for a sunrise drive to the waterfalls. ("I wish I could bring my guitar – and plug it in down there.") The talk is of puppies, daybreak, other innocentia. We climb down the rocks to the icy brook, then suddenly discover the car keys are missing. Everyone shuffles through shoulder pouches and wallets. "Hey, don't worry," Jimi says. "They'll turn up. No use being hassled about it now." Jimi's taking pictures and writing poetry. "I want to write songs about tranquility, about beautiful things," he says.

Back at the house, he pads around, emptying ashtrays, putting things in order. "I'm like a clucking old grandmother," he smiles. "I've just gotta straighten things out a little." It's 7 a.m. and he has to be at the recording studio in Manhattan at 4 in the afternoon. Everyone's exhausted.

After a few hours of sleep, Jimi floats into the kitchen looking like a fuzzy lamb unmercifully awakened and underfed. He passes up the spread of eggs, pork chops, crescent rolls and tea; breakfast, instead, is a Theragran and a swig of tequila in milk. "Jimi, you never eat ..." Juma's girl worries aloud.

We pile into the car for the two-hour drive into Manhattan. Passing two Afro-haired guys in an Aston-Martin, Jimi turns and flashes a broad grin, extending his fingers in a peace salute. We turn up the radio on Stevie Wonder's "My Cherie Amour"; groove on Neil Diamond, Jackie deShannon, the Turtles. Everything is everything: We're playing with a puppy, grateful for clear skies, clear road, clear AM station. What more could a carload of travelers in an inconspicuous blue Avis ask?

We pull into a roadside stop. No giggly bell-bottomed young girls in sight, Jimi gets out and brings back chocolate milk and ice cream for everyone. Truckers pay no attention. Middle-aged couples glare disdainfully.

The talk is of the session. They'll record at a studio on West 44th Street, then go somewhere else to mix it – maybe Bell Sound of A&R – because Jimi says the recording studio they're going to "has bad equipment ... likes to take advantage of so-called longhair musicians."

Downtown traffic on the West Side highway is light at rush hour. The fortresses of upper Riverside Drive are handsome in the sun, but the air has lost its freshness. Getting off the highway at 45th Street, it's 4:45. The session, costing $200 an hour, was booked to begin at 4:00. But delay couldn't be helped; no hassle. A carful of teenagers alongside us has the radio turned up loud on "If Six Was Nine" – the cut being used as part of advertisment for Easy Rider. I ask Jimi if he's seen the film; he doesn't answer.

Turning around, I find him stretched out on the back seat, legs curled up embryonically, hands clasped under his cheek. Sleeping soundly.

article source: rollingstone.com

Friday, June 29, 2012

Shinedown Release New Music Video, “Unity”


Shinedown, whose latest album, Amaryllis, debuted at No. 1 on the album-sales charts, have released a new music video, for the track “Unity” off the record. Check it out below, and check out Shinedown live on the Rockstar Energy Drink Uproar Festival later this summer.

source: revolvermag.com

Aerosmith Push Album Release Back to November


Aerosmith have moved the release date for Music From Another Dimension, their first album in 11 years, back from August 28th to November 6th, frontman Steven Tyler revealed during a call to Cleveland radio station 100.7 WMMS.

"It's pushed back because too many people are releasing those weeks, and we don't want to step on their release dates," said Tyler. "So we said, 'You know what, we got the goods, ain't no doubt about [it], we'll wait a couple months.'"

Music From Another Dimension will be the band's first LP since 2001's Just Push Play. The group debuted the record's first single, "Legendary Child," during the season finale of American Idol last month, but the song has failed to gain traction on both the Billboard and iTunes charts.

Tyler also mentioned on-air that Sony will release two more singles before the album drops in November. One of those tracks could be the blues-tinged rocker "Oh Yeah," which the band debuted last week at the Minneapolis kick-off of their Global Warming tour, which finds them rekking across North America alongside Cheap Trick throughout the summer.

"We accomplished what we set out to do, which was write some stuff so we could represent who we were in the old days," Tyler told WMMS. "After all these years, you can become something other than you started out to be – and I'm not saying that's a bad thing – but we kinda love our rock and I love the diversity of this band ... I thought that was one of the secrets that Aerosmith had that other bands didn't – a little bit of this, a little bit of that."

source: rollingstone.com

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Staind to Release Live From Mohegan Sun Next Month


Staind have announced the release of their first-ever official live album, Live From Mohegan Sun.

The album was recorded last November at the famous Mohegan Sun Casino in Montville, Connecticut, and is scheduled for a July 10 release through Eagle Rock Entertainment. A DVD and Blu-Ray release will follow in August.

Staind will be hitting the road later this year as part of the Rockstar Energy Uproar festival, joining Godsmack, Shinedown, Papa Roach and more for the 30-city trek.



Live From Mohegan Sun Track Listing:

01. Eyes Wide Open
02. Falling
03. Right Here
04. Throw It All Away
05. Spleen
06. Fade
07. Failing
08. So Far Away
09. Crawl
10. For You
11. Paper Wings
12. Outside
13. Not Again
14. It’s Been Awhile
15. Mudshovel
16. Something To Remind You

source: http://www.revolvermag.com/news/staind-to-release-live-from-mohegan-sun-next-month.html