Saturday, May 15, 2010

Rush: Interviewed On CNN


CNN's Andrea Mineo conducted an interview with Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson of the legendary Canadian rock trio RUSH about "Rush: Beyond The Lighted Stage", the long-awaited documentary produced by Scot McFadyen and Sam Dunn of Toronto, Ontario, Canada's Banger Films Inc.. Watch the segment below.

"Rush: Beyond The Lighted Stage" will be screened in Austria, Finland, Germany, Netherlands and U.K. on Monday, June 7.

For a list of cinemas that will be showing the film, go to this location.

Attendees of the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival, which ran from April 29 to May 9 in Toronto, Ontario, selected "Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage" as one of the Top 10 audience favorites as determined by audience vote.

The entire Top 10 (with "Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage" coming in at No. 6) can be found at this location.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, Tribeca Film Festival attendees selected "Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage" for the fest's 2010 Heineken Audience Award.

Scot McFadyen and Sam Dunn's Canadian feature received the $25,000 award on May 1 at the TFF Wrap Party in Chelsea's Altman Building. The film chronicles the 42-year history of the band, which is currently working on its 20th studio album with producer Nick Raskulinecz (co-producer of RUSH's 2007 CD, "Snakes & Arrows") in Nashville. Interviews with fans such as Gene Simmons, Billy Corgan and Jack Black are featured alongside profiles of RUSH bandmates Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson and Neil Peart.

"Rush: Beyond The Lighted Stage" will make its television debut on June 26 on VH1 and VH1 Classic.

Ace Frehley's New Fiancée Has Revived His 'Spirit' In Every Way


Original KISS guitarist Ace Frehley has posted the following message on his MySpace page:

"I am now residing with and engaged to a lovely girl named Rachael Gordon [MySpace page; pictured below with Ace]. My inspiration and end all. She is the best thing that's ever happened to me and we constantly inspire each other.

"If you haven't found your true love in life yet... when you do, it is truly a new awakening!

"She has revived my spirit in every way and made me live again."

Ace, 59, was previously married to Jeanette, with whom he has a 29-year-old daughter, Monique.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Trivium Frontman: 'If It Weren't For James Hetrfield, I Literally Wouldn't Be Here'


Roadrunner Records has posted a new interview with guitarist/vocalist Matt Heafy of Florida metallers TRIVIUM as part of the label's "Gear Nerd" series, where Roadrunner talks to its artists about their instrument of choice and what fuels their passion, influences their sound and all about the specific instruments they use.

An excerpt from the chat follows.

Roadrunner: So who would you say has inspired you the most; who were you looking up to the most when you first started out

Heafy: If it weren't for James Hetfield (METALLICA) I literally wouldn't be here. I mean, I know that there are a lot of other musicians, in that band as well, especially from the "Black Album" era, but it was Hetfield who really brought me into metal. To see their live shows and see what a commanding presence he was, and to see how good of a guitar player he is. So, he got me into everything, then I bridged out from there.

Roadrunner: What other music do you think have influenced your playing

Heafy: So many. The first big chunk I got into, when I got into real metal was like, obviously METALLICA, PANTERA, MEGADETH, TESTAMENT, SLAYER, IRON MAIDEN, BLACK SABBATH, JUDAS PRIEST... Those were all the bands I got into first. Then I got really heavily into melodic death metal, bands like IN FLAMES and CHILDREN OF BODOM, ARCH ENEMY, DARK TRANQUILITY... the list goes on and on through like OPETH... (thinks) What else? There's like so many melodic death metal bands, pretty much all of them like DUSKFALL, MERCENARY even though they are a Danish band... just all over the Scandinavian area. Erm, got a little into death metal, never too much into death metal. The band that influenced my playing the most was KRISIUN, which is this ridiculously heavy death metal band from Brazil, but I got my tremelo picking from them, which is like really fast picking, I got that from that band. Um, got into black metal then after that through bands like EMPEROR and DIMMU BORGIR and MÖRK GRYNING, a Swedish band, DARK FUNERAL and ANOREXIA NERVOSA is this French black metal band — "New Obscurantis Order" is one of my favorite black metal albums. I joined a black metal band when I was like 16 or so in Florida wearing corpse paint, spiked armor, all that shit. Um, they kicked me out 'cause I was still in TRIVIUM and I wouldn't leave TRIVIUM. And I joined CAPHARNAUM, which is a technical death metal band, at like 16, 17 with [producer] Jason Suecof. So I went through all the extreme metal things, towards my senior year, I guess I must have been 17 or so, when I started getting into hardcore, that era's hardcore, bands like POISON THE WELL and HATEBREED. "Tear From The Red" (by POISON THE WELL) was really influential on me and HATEBREED's "Perseverance". I got into stuff like UNDEROATH's "They're Only Chasing Safety" and BELOVED's "Failure On". Oddly enough, after being into satanic black metal I got into a lot of Christian metalcore and hardcore bands, a lot of Christian emo bands and I was into, still am into, bands like FURTHER SEEMS FOREVER and DASHBOARD CONFESSIONAL, little things I never really talked about but were actually really big subtle influences on my sound, incorporated with huge bands like DEATH and IN FLAMES and KILLSWITCH (ENGAGE) that all rolled into one I guess and helped craft some of my style and some of the interesting things that happened on "Ascendency" and "Ember..." So I was in and out of those things for a little while, not as long as black metal or melodic death metal or anything.

Roadrunner: Anything outside of the metal genre that you think have influenced your playing style?

Heafy: I think for me it's more like bands like FURTHER SEEMS FOREVER and DASHBOARD... maybe even like MY CHEMICAL ROMANCE... things that took the guitar... I mean, if you look at FURTHER SEEMS FOREVER mostly, every single chorus had a different guitar melody than a rhythm guitar part, same thing like MAIDEN, so still it's things that came from metal and probably came from metal bands that maybe they liked. I remember when we did "The Crusade", I got very heavily into QUEEN and that's pretty much all I would listen to and a little bit of KELLY CLARKSON and some pop stuff and when we were doing "Shogun" really just into THE BEATLES. Lately, I've been into the entire DEPECHE MODE catalogue, pretty much exclusively DEPECHE MODE and classical music. Classical music has been the best thing I've listened to, it's helped my playing out so much — not in a Yngwie Malmsteen way, like shreddy ridiculous arpeggios and stuff, even though I could do some of those stuff, not as much as I used to, I leave that to guys like DRAGONFORCE. You know, dudes like Malmsteen took classical in a lead-guitar-playing sense where I've been taking classical in a song writing sense. I just listen to it, I don't know it formally, but when people hear our new stuff they'll know that it's been a subtle influence in there and even and even the "Shattering..." chorus, the rhythm guitar part I'm playing is very classically involved using three not chords, three separate note chords versus the standard power chord, which be like the same note, octave and the fifth, so I know a little bit about music but not too much. I've been getting into bands that are going really well with the graphic novels I've been reading, like DEPECHE MODE's "Sounds of the Universe" goes incredibly with "V for Vendetta" by Alan Moore. The new KINGS OF LEON album actually goes well with "Preacher", which is the greatest story ever, it's the greatest thing across any medium I've ever read, seen, played, anything, ever — "Preacher" by Garth Ennis. NINE INCH NAILS' "Year Zero" goes incredibly with "Sin City" by Frank Miller and "Black Celebration" by DEPECHE MODE goes incredibly well with anything that involves Batman. So, graphic novels and just getting into anything, any kind of music is really helpful. The last couple of things I got was "Wavering Radiant", the new ISIS album, and "Panopticon", so yeah, everything from symphonic black metal to avant-garde, I also have this CD that's all sort of Brazilian music which is really interesting, anything form jazz to flamenco music. Yeah, all music is good music to me as long as it's good. I just got the new PINK album too, I just wanted to see what it was like because I just heard she just did three sold-out months of Australia, which is like as much as AC/DC. With me, it's all about the song and it's all about bringing something to the table. I'll like it if I like it. I don't think I'll ever like pop-country, I think pop-country is terrible. I do like some folk bands like THE DEVIL MAKES THREE, this incredibly guitar trio band that has no drummer, and ULVER is one of my favorite bands, used to be a black metal band that recorded out in the forest then went to make this thing that was the soundtrack for this movie that never came out, then had this album that they read passage from William Blake in."

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Anthrax's Ian On Reunion With Belladonna: 'None Of Us Wants This To Be Just A Nostalgia Trip'


ANTHRAX guitarist Scott Ian spoke to U.K.'s Classic Rock magazine about the band's reunion with vocalist Joey Belladonna.

"We had a meeting with John [Bush, the ARMORED SAINT frontman who sang with ANTHRAX during 1992-2005 and again for the past nine months], at which he was honest enough to tell us that he really couldn't make the commitment to the band that he knew we needed," Ian says. "It was all very friendly, but ended with us feeling we had to find someone else.

"Nobody wanted to go down the route of finding an unknown. So, it left one option: calling Joey. He was really into the idea of coming back.

"The five of us [Ian, Belladonna, guitarist Rob Caggiano, bassist Frank Bello and drummer Charlie Benante] met in New York, when I did a show with Pearl [Aday, Ian's wife], and we got along really well, and that sealed the deal. It was that easy."

According to Ian, the reunion with Belladonna will include the recording of a new studio album. "That's something we all felt was crucial," the guitarist says. "None of us, especially Joey, wants this to be just a nostalgia trip. The album'll probably have a few songs from 'Worship Music' [the unreleased record the band did with Dan Nelson on vocals], plus some we'll co-write with Joey. It'll be out next year."

Mutiny Within Video: Days of Gray Tour Diary 2010 With Sonata Arctica


Having just finished up an early spring US run with Sonata Arctica and Powerglove, road warriors Mutiny Within filmed some killer live footage from each show along the way for your viewing enjoyment.

Watch a montage of the band's various performances, insane crowd shots and hilarious interludes of at-show antics to see what to expect from Mutiny Within live!

Continuing on the road in support of their self-titled debut, these Jersey-based young guns played a special show with labelmates Korn just last week in New York City before embarking on tour with Dark Tranquility (which kicked off last night!)

Nevermore: Cult Pre-Nevermore Metal Act Sanctuary To Reunite For New Studio Album


NEVERMORE frontman Warrel Dane has announced that his late '80s cult metal outfit SANCTUARY will reunite to record a new studio album. "[I've] been talking with Lenny [Rutledge, former SANCTUARY guitarist]," Dane explains. "We are really good friends again and it feels good." He adds, "I missed my relationship with him for many years."

Regarding how the SANCTUARY reunion will affect NEVERMORE, which has a new studio album ("The Obsidian Conspiracy") coming out next month, Dane says, "NEVEMORE is never going away, so don't start any more rumors!"

Brian May and Friends Campaign Against Blood Sports


Queen guitarist Brian May and an array of his showbiz pals have filmed a tongue-in-cheek video to highlight the issue of fox-hunting and blood sports in the run-up to next week’s general election. Come inside to watch it – and be sure to check out the star turns from Patrick Moore and Coleen Nolan!

In the video May pokes fun at the three political party leaders’ failure to get to grips with the economy and calls on the public to use their vote to support the fox-hunting ban.

The video also features the likes of Francis Rossi, Joe Elliott, Tony Iommi and Taylor Hawkins.

It forms part of May’s ‘Save Me’ campaign to prevent the return of legalised blood sports in the British countryside.

May says: “This video is meant to be fun, but of course there is a serious message behind it.

“It’s incredible how many people have no idea that [Conservative leader] David Cameron and his gang stand for the brutality of hunting with dogs, and are intent on repealing the Hunting Act ‘as a priority’ if they are elected.

“Fox-hunting and other blood sports have no place in today’s society and, in the ‘Save Me’ campaign, we’re asking people to make their vote count to keep it this way.”

Go here for more info about Brian May’s ‘Save Me’ campaign: www.save-me.org.uk

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

The Steve Miller Band To Tour In Support of New Album 'Bingo!'


Legendary rock icon Steve Miller Band will kick off a highly anticipated North American tour May 21st in Las Vegas in a new show designed by acclaimed Broadway director Rob Roth. The tour will support his new album BINGO!, which lands in stores June 15th on Miller’s Space Cowboy Records in partnership with Roadrunner/Loud & Proud Records. Having sold more than 30 million records, The Steve Miller Band's trademark sound is a mainstay of rock radio. His yearly summer tour extravaganza has become an anticipated annual event for millions of rock fans.



Co-produced by Miller and engineer Andy Johns (Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, Jimi Hendrix), BINGO! is the first of two albums recorded at George Lucas’ Skywalker Ranch. The sessions introduced new band member Sonny Charles a veteran vocalist of the Checkmates who will also be on the road this summer with Miller. These were the final sessions by harmonica player and vocalist Norton Buffalo, Miller’s “partner in harmony” for 33 years, who died of cancer in October 2009.



While the tour will feature his classic rock anthems “Fly Like an Eagle,” “The Joker,” “Rock ‘n Me,” “Take the Money and Run,” and “Abracadabra,” among others, Miller will also perform selected tracks from BINGO! which echoes his early days on the Chicago scene. On Bingo! Miller has spiced some of the tracks with the Latin percussion battery of conga player Michael Carabello, founding member of Santana, and timbales ace Adrian Areas, son of Carabello’s partner from the original group, Jose “Chepito” Areas. Guitarist Joe Satriani traded solos on ‘Rock Me Baby’ and ‘Sweet Soul Vibe’ with Miller, whose brilliant guitar playing was a major feature of the sessions.



BINGO! will be released in 2 formats: a 10-track digipack CD and a special edition with 4 bonus tracks and expanded artwork. The album’s artwork is a creation of legendary Storm Thorgerson whose album packages for Led Zepplin and Pink Floyd are the gold standard in artistic design. The album is a fully realized mature work of a master craftsman, in a sense, “BINGO!” is the album Steve Miller has been waiting all his life to make.



The Steve Miller Band is a centerpiece attraction of the summer rock concert season playing sixty or more shows every year. He is the Gangster of Love. Some people call him Maurice, the Midnight Toker or the Space Cowboy. And with BINGO!, a masterpiece album by one of the greats, Steve Miller shows he still speaks of the pompitus of love. Get a sneak peak of what's in store by listening to "Hey Yeah" from Bingo! right here, and see all upcoming tour dates below!

Stone Sour In the Studio: Hear What's To Come From 'Audio Secrecy'


Stone Sour are underway on the recording of their 3rd studio album and follow-up to 2006's Come What(ever) May, and this week they're giving us a special sneak peak at a NEW SONG!!

Offering regular video updates on what's going down in Blackbird Studios with producer Nick Raskulinecz, so far we've caught a glimpse of the Nashville house the band has inhabited, some vocals they've committed to tape, some drum tracks they've laid down, and some silly questions the guys answered for their fans.

But now bassist Shawn Economaki is giving us the grand tour of the "Bordello"-like studio, which includes a stop at the soundboards to hear the playback of an as-yet-untitled new track off the upcoming album!!!

Loudness: 'King Of Pain' Artwork Revealed


Japanese metal veterans LOUDNESS will release a new album, "King Of Pain", in Japan on May 19 via Tokuma Japan Communications. The CD will include a 32-page booklet, a LOUDNESS original pick, and application card (valid only in Japan).

"King Of Pain" track listing:

01. Requiem
02. The King Of Pain
03. Power Of Death
04. Death Machine
05. Doodlebug
06. Rule The World
07. Straight Out Of Our Soul
08. Where Am I Going?
09. Emma
10. Naraka
11. Doctor From Hell
12. Hell Fire
13. #666
14. Never Comes

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

StryperTo Release 'The Covering' In The Fall


Christian hard rockers STRYPER have set "The Covering" as the title of their new album of covers, to be released in the fall. The CD will feature the band's original lineup of Michael Sweet on vocals, Robert Sweet on drums, Oz Fox on guitar and Timothy Gaines on bass.

"The Covering" will include STRYPER's renditions of the following classics:

* JUDAS PRIEST - "Breaking The Law"
* IRON MAIDEN - "The Trooper"
* SCORPIONS - "Blackout"
* OZZY OSBOURNE - "Over The Mountain"
* SWEET - "Set Me Free"
* VAN HALEN - "On Fire"
* DEEP PURPLE - "Highway Star"
* BLACK SABBATH - "Heaven And Hell"
* UFO - "Lights Out"
* KANSAS - "Carry On Wayward Son"
* KISS - "Shout It Out Loud"

STRYPER guitarist/vocalist Michael Sweet recently explaiend the band's decision to pay tribute to its influences on the new album:

"We grew up listening to many different styles of music and there is a list of bands that influenced us throughout our musical education. Bands like JUDAS PRIEST, IRON MAIDEN, SCORPIONS, VAN HALEN, UFO, DEEP PURPLE, LED ZEPPELIN, QUEEN, KANSAS and many others, helped to shape our sound and make us who we are today, musically speaking.

"We grew up on the streets of L.A. playing every club in town from Gazzari's to The Whisky to The Troubadour to you name it. We played covers from all the bands mentioned above and we shaped our own sound from listening and performing songs from these classic bands.

"We wanted to step outside the box and record a record that shows you, the fans, where we come from — our historical, musical roots so to speak. It's a side to STRYPER that no one has really seen or heard before, or at least quite like this.

"We performed 'On Fire' by VAN HALEN on a few tours and we also performed 'Breaking The Law' by PRIEST on this last tour. The response was far beyond our expectations each time we performed these songs. People seemed genuinely surprised to hear STRYPER cover these songs and even more surprised to hear STRYPER perform these songs relatively well.

"This will be an opportunity for Robert [Sweet, drums], Oz [Fox, guitar], Tim [Gaines, bass] and myself to loosen up and have some fun.

"For those of you who may think that we're walking away from our faith — you're wrong. We've never been more serious about our faith at any point in our lives. It is, however, important to enjoy what you do and lighten up from time to time. That's what we plan to do.

"This will be a fun record to make and we hope that this comes through, as well as the chance to showcase the abilities that we've been blessed with."

Fan-filmed video footage of STRYPER performing a cover version of the JUDAS PRIEST classic "Breaking The Law" on January 23, 2010 at Tivoli in Utrecht, The Netherlands can be viewed below.

Megadeth and Slayer team up


Slayer and Megadeth's long-awaited and much-ballyhooed Canadian Carnage tour -- currently rolling through the west -- might live up to its violent billing onstage, but don't expect any hostilities behind the scenes.

While the pioneering thrash-metal outfits have had their share of feuds and traded their share of insults over the years -- and haven't toured together in almost two decades since their aptly named Clash of the Titans trek in the early '90s -- any bad blood has long since dried up and all the hatchets have been buried.

At least, that's what Megadeth majordomo Dave Mustaine and Slayer drummer Dave Lombardo told us in separate interviews from their Southern California homes recently. Despite dealing with some niggly personal annoyances -- notoriously cantankerous 47-year-old singer-guitarist Mustaine was battling the flu, while the understated 44-year-old Lombardo was dividing his time between us, a truck windshield repair, another phone and his dog -- both of the old pros were nothing less than gentlemanly toward each other. And toward us.

Here's some of what the Daves had to say about joining forces on their co-headlining tour, their rabid fans and their upcoming CDs -- Megadeth's Endgame and Slayer's 10th studio set, which may be titled World Painted Blood, if you believe the Internet.

On touring together again after so many years

Mustaine: "This tour's going to be outrageous. It has been quite some time. Because we played when we were so young, it seems like it was just yesterday. I think the fans are going to be excited because it's two very powerful bands."

Lombardo: "Obviously, we go back to the '80s. We did Clash of the Titans back in '91. And this has been a long hiatus. So I guess it intrigues everybody in one way or the other. But for me personally, it's just another gig. It doesn't mean anything. I haven't seen Dave in many, many years. We've never crossed each other's paths in any way, shape or form."

On whether there's any friendly competition between them

Mustaine: "No. There really isn't any room in my psyche, my id, to think, 'Well, this guy can play better than I can, so I better get out there and shake my ass.' Dude, it's music. I just go out there to have fun and to play. I've been playing a long time. I'm a legendary guitar player. I've got what I want in life. I'm very confident and very content. If every time I go up onstage, I get caught up in trying to steal back my thunder from the guy who was onstage before me, then I never really had any thunder in the first place."

Lombardo: "Competition? No. Nooooo. There's no competition. It's never crossed our minds. At least, not for me. Whether it's us playing with Megadeth or us playing with anyone else, it's not going to change our performance. We're still going to kick ass. There's only one thing on our mind, and that's to deliver the best possible music and the best performances."

On their new albums

Mustaine: "I've made the record of my career. It's as aggressive as anything I've played in years. It's faster than anything that I've heard in a long time. The record is the best Megadeth record I've ever done by far. It's my favourite record. I've been playing songs to people and everybody goes -- 'Whoo!' or 'F--- yeah!' That's been the consensus -- a lot of whoo-hoos, hugs and f--- yeahs." (Laughs)

Lombardo: "It's not done. There's no title. We haven't done artwork. They're only about 3/4 done mixing. But I have to say that it compares to the classics -- Reign in Blood, South of Heaven and Seasons (in the Abyss). And I wouldn't say that if I didn't mean it. (Singer-bassist Tom Araya's) vocal melody and singing approach is very listener-friendly -- not in a way where people are going to say, 'Dude, they went commercial.' No way. It's just more melodic. People are scared of the word melody because maybe it sounds like a happy word. But you can have very dark, extreme music with melody. It's not something to be afraid of. There's only good music and bad music -- and good music has hooks and something to carry you through and entertain you."

On playing new material live

Mustaine: "We're gonna play one of the songs from the new album -- a song called Headcrusher. It's about a medieval torture device. That's by far the most appropriate song for us to play for this audience. It's straightforward, no-nonsense Megadeth thrash metal."

Lombardo: "We might do one or two new things -- maybe Psychopathy Red. That's the newest one. But aside from that, it'll be the classics at full-force energy -- just pure energy out there."

On their fans and haters

Mustaine: "I've been through a lot of stuff. I've been pretty open with my fans about it -- all that 'a burden shared is a burden lessened' bulls---, I believe in that. Our fans know that they can count on me to be honest with them. I talk to them a lot on my LiveLine website. I think sometimes that I should talk to them a little bit more about stuff that's a little bit more meaty -- like political stuff and social issues. But I know if I do that, there's gonna be somebody who's going to take exception with me and make it their life's ambition to tell me I'm wrong. And I've got a couple of stalkers, which is very unfortunate. There's one girl that's following me around saying she's my stepsister and demanding my older sister take a blood-test. It's really disappointing. I'm accessible to the fans ... but dude, my job is not as fun as it used to be."

Lombardo: "Our music brings out an animalistic instinct in human beings. It's animalistic music. It's driving, it's very extreme. It's just like a caveman, you know? But people that take it too seriously, I think personally they're too tightly wound. We can't forget that it's just art, self-expression, pushing the envelope of controversy and the envelope of offence. But you don't see us killing or shooting people."

Twisted Sister refuse to tour


Twisted Sister rocker Jay Jay French has vowed never to tour with the group again - because he's convinced he will "lose money" if they hit the road.

The We're Not Gonna Take It hitmakers are bombarded with offers to schedule a tour, but guitarist French insists the group is worth more if they only agree to play one-off concerts.

French tells NoiseCreep.com, "It will never ever happen. I would just assume things would maybe happen, but we will never tour (again). I look at the mathematics of it every year, the mathematics makes no sense. None. Every year people ask me, every year I revisit the math. Every year it completely makes no sense to tour. It's just an incredibly money-losing proposition. I don't like losing money.

"I know what these (other) bands make, I know their lifestyle, I know what they do. I can't function that way. I don't believe it's viable for them. I believe they (tour) because they really have no other options on this planet. And by going out on the road constantly, they devalue themselves because they're out there all the time.

"We work in a completely separate business model. If I don't play, guess what? My value increases, doesn't it? So the less I play, the more valuable I become. So I work completely opposite. I'll bet you I make more money playing 12 shows than most (other) bands make playing 50 shows."

Warrant: Jani Lane arrested for DUI


Glam rocker Jani Lane is in trouble with the law again - he was reportedly arrested in California on suspicion of driving under the influence (DUI).

The former Warrant frontman was pulled over by officers while driving in the Woodland Hills area of California on Sunday evening and has been booked on suspicion of DUI, according to TMZ.com.

Last year Lane pleaded no contest to a charge of DUI and was sentenced to two days in jail and 36 months probation, as well as alcohol education classes and community service. A warrant for his arrest was allegedly issued in February after he failed to appear at a progress hearing. His lawyer later insisted he was in hospital recovering from an unspecified ailment at the time of the court date.

Slash: Reunion Of Classic Guns 'n' Roses Lineup Is 'Just Not Logistically Going To Happen' - May 9, 2010


Australia's CourierMail.com.au recently conducted an interview with legendary guitarist Slash (VELVET REVOLVER, GUNS N' ROSES). A few excerpts from the chat follow below.

CourierMail.com.au: Your new solo album, "Slash", features Fergie as a guest vocalist. How did that go down with your rock fans?

Slash: It certainly raised some eyebrows. She's pretty badass. She's a rock singer who has made it as a pop singer. She has great rock chops. When the rumors went around Fergie was on my record everyone thought I was going to go pop. I knew what I was doing. I'd heard her sing rock before, no one else had, so I kept my mouth shut and waited until it came out. This is the first rock recording she's done.

CourierMail.com.au: There's a cover of GUNS N' ROSES' "Paradise City" she's singing on. Discuss.

Slash: Ha. That got an interesting response. Some people loved it; all the purists were fucking devastated I'd covered it. It was just a fun thing I did. I'd been playing that song with CYPRESS HILL for years, I always wanted to record it. Fergie was around, she's a huge Axl (Rose) fan, she came and sang it. I didn't put it on the album because I didn't want to make it look like it was really serious. So I put it on a Japanese B-side, and of course it trickled down. But it's actually a really cool version.

CourierMail.com.au: What did you have in common with Fergie?

Slash: It turns out we have a lot of similar war stories from the past. We both come from a chequered past, let's just say.

CourierMail.com.au: You're clean and sober now, but everyone always talks about your drink and drug hell — which you didn't really touch on in your autobiography.

Slash: I didn't want to focus on all that stuff in the book. I'm over it. The main focus on the book was to get out some of the reality about GUNS N' ROSES and the reunion.

CourierMail.com.au: Have you had offers to turn it into a movie?

Slash: People asked me if I wanted to license it for a movie. It doesn't really interest me. It's just a book I wrote to get some shit off my chest. I couldn't imagine someone playing me in a movie.

CourierMail.com.au: Has the book at least stopped people asking if you are going to reunite with Axl Rose in GUNS N' ROSES?

Slash: It slowed down considerably when I put the book out, yes. It really does spell it out. You'd have to be an idiot to not get it, but there's still obnoxious people who insist on perpetuating that myth. All things considered, I'm really flattered the band has this stigma, this ongoing mystique attached. I try not to get too agitated. There's this newer generation of GUNS N' ROSES fans who never saw the band — it'd almost be nice to get it together to do some shows for them, but it's just not logistically going to happen.

CourierMail.com.au: What did you think of "Chinese Democracy", the first GUNS N' ROSES album without you?

Slash: It's great. It's the perfect Axl record.

CourierMail.com.au: That's very diplomatic.

Slash: No, it is. Axl's brilliant. I look at it differently than your average fan, I look at it more from what he's about and what it represents and our relationship. I think it's a great record. It's very much the record I would have expected him to do.

CourierMail.com.au: So what's the status of VELVET REVOLVER — dormant?

Slash: It's just in a state of limbo until we bunker down and figure out who the (new) singer's going to be.

CourierMail.com.au: What's your favorite GUNS N' ROSES video?

Slash: The only one I like is "Paradise City" because it's live.

CourierMail.com.au: What about "November Rain"? Your guitar solo on a mountain is a great rock video moment.

Slash: I haven't seen that in years. "November Rain" is still one of the most expensive videos ever made. I hate videos. So that's right up at the top — the epitome of the kind of thing I cannot stand.

Ratt Guitarist Warren DeMartini: "'Best Of Me' Was One of Those Magic Moments"


Writes music blog Attention Deficit Delirium, "Twenty-six years after Out Of The Cellar became a multi-platinum hit and made them rock superstars, original [b]Ratt[/b] members Stephen Pearcy (vocals), Warren DeMartini (guitars) and Bobby Blotzer (drums), along with long-time bassist Robbie Crane and guitarist/ex-Quiet Riot member Carlos Cavazo, have released one of the strongest musical statements of their career, Infestation. It’s their first new album in 11 years, and despite hitting middle age, the band has not lost its edge and produced a multifaceted collection of catchy hard rock tunes. It also showcases stellar six-string playing from DeMartini, whom many fans consider to be an underrated rock guitarist."

Read an excerpt from the extensive interview below, go here for the full feature, and get your copy of the return to Ratt n' Roll form Infestation NOW!

I’m enjoying the new album.
Me, too. Right now I’m going back and listening to stuff that I wrote, at least for my parts. Some stuff you come up with and record on the spot, and you don’t play it again unless it gets into the live set. Sometimes you go, “How did I do that?”

Infestation reminds me of the first EP and Out Of The Cellar with elements of Detonator present as well.
I always thought it was too bad that Detonator didn’t come out between Dancing Undercover and Reach For The Sky because I think it would’ve been a different thing. But by the time Detonator came out, the scene had really changed.

Do you think that the time off may have helped you to come back with something fresh?
I don’t know. Not really. The time off was unavoidable, and I feel if we had continued on from 1999, this record could’ve come out much earlier. But it takes some time and miles to break in a band to do something on a record. It’s a weird thing. It was good preparation for us to get together and do a couple of tours before we did this record, because it brings in a continuity that you just can’t get any other way. At least that’s the way it is for Ratt.

What are your favorite songs on the album?
There’s a song in the album called “Take A Big Bite,” and the opening reminds me of a moment during the first rehearsal, when Stephen came back to the band, and we were rehearsing “Lack Of Communication”. Live we would come up with different endings [because the song fades on album]. We came up with an ending for “Lack of Communication” that was more of a segue with a completely different riff to it. We rehearsed the song, and by the end of it Stephen was blown away. He said we should make a song out of that, and it was at that moment I realized that creatively our friendship was still intact, even after all the tumultuous years that had gone by. The riff to “Big Bite” opens up with the riff that used to be the outro to “Lack of Communication”. “Best Of Me” was one of those magic moments where Carlos played the opening riffs when we were rehearsing the material for Infestation, and it just went on to be a favorite of mine. “Last Call” is one of my favorite things I’ve done in a while. It was a riff that we worked out for the self-titled 1999 album that came out in Columbia, but it didn’t make it onto that record, which ended up being a good thing because I mixed that riff and the other parts with some ideas that Carlos had. We ended up co-writing the music that one, and then Stephen came up with the words. That’s a really fun riff to play.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Slash 'not interested' in biopic


Former Guns N' Roses rocker Slash refuses to adapt his autobiography for the big screen, insisting a movie about his turbulent life doesn't "interest" him.

The guitar legend released the self-titled tell-all in 2007, revealing details about his struggle to stay sober, and his infamous fallout with Guns N' Roses frontman Axl Rose, which led to him leaving the band in the mid-1990s.

Slash has dismissed the prospect of a reunion with Rose, who continues to tour with a new line-up, and the rocker insists he doesn't want to resurrect their tumultuous history for a film.

He tells CourierMail.com.au: "The main focus on the book was to get out some of the reality about Guns N' Roses and the reunion.

"People asked me if I wanted to license it for a movie. It doesn't really interest me. It's just a book I wrote to get some s**t off my chest. I couldn't imagine someone playing me in a movie."

U2: Last week for Artificial Horizon triple vinyl


Artificial Horizon is a limited edition triple vinyl remix set curated by the band. Running to 60 minutes, this Collectors Edition release, on purple vinyl, features 13 tracks remixed by some of the world's leading DJs and producers.

Ratt: Returns to the Sunset Strip 2


To document Ratt's record release show on the Sunset Strip and talk to the band about what went into the making of their killer, 11-track return-to-ratt-n-roll-form album Infestation, we had cameras on hand shooting the guys backstage, onstage, behind the scenes and much more.

Queen: Guitar Rhapsodies Sheet Music


The sheet music and guitar tab is now available for each of the four the solo pieces from Queen Guitar Rhapsodies by Carlos Bonell.

The pieces can be downloaded at www.musicradar.com under the “guitar tab” section.Each piece is available in full classical guitar notation and comes with or without tab.

Love of My Life and Who Wants to Live Forever are in fact in the current best sellers list on www.musicradar.com along with Blur and Kasabian!

The four pieces available are: Love of My Life, Who Wants to Live Forever, Lily of the Valley and Nevermore.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Meat Loaf back from brink of retirement


TORONTO — After his last foray into “Hell,” Meat Loaf pretty much felt like his lengthy career had lost its wings.

His 2006 release, “Bat Out of Hell 3,” was borne from tumultuous sessions during which the Dallas singer felt that he was being manipulated by his producer and record label. The record was also the subject of a nasty legal dispute between Meat Loaf and his longtime collaborator Jim Steinman.

While it opened in the Top 10 on the charts, the record didn’t stay there long. Even worse, Meat Loaf didn’t necessarily believe in the tunes with the same zeal he applied to much of his catalogue.

He had health issues. He was unhappy. And, in 2007, he famously announced his retirement while onstage in Newcastle.

At the time, he meant it.

“I thought it was over,” the 62-year-old told The Canadian Press during a recent interview at a Toronto hotel.

“It was awful, it was awful. It was the worst period in my career.”

After three-plus decades and worldwide album sales well into the eight digits, Meat Loaf says he felt ready to leave music behind.

The first idea the despondent singer had for the next phase of his life almost sounds like a punchline now.

“I was getting ready to sell my house and move (to California) so I could open up a Jimmy John’s,” he explained, referring to the American fast-food sandwich chain.

“I was going to try to get a whole regional section, but I was going to start with one, and that was going to be what I was going to do: I was going to open up Jimmy John’s.

“But I was so depressed, after a while, even my Jimmy John’s thing, I couldn’t get the energy to do anything with that. And then, all of a sudden, I just got up and went . . . this,” said the animated singer, using an explicit four-letter word and repeating the phrase.

“I’ll show ‘em.”

Four years after the third “Bat” and Meat Loaf is back with “Hang Cool Teddy Bear,” a collection of typically over-the-top theatrical rock tunes.

The nearly seven-minute opening track, “Peace on Earth,” introduces all the elements Meat Loaf aimed for this time out: a flurry of pounding guitars, impossibly overblown vocals and thunderous drums.

Fans of Meat’s tender side will have to look elsewhere.

“If you liked (my other albums) because you wanted to hear all the ballads, forget it,” he blustered. “If you liked the rockier side of me — which I think most people do — then you’re going to absolutely fall in love with this.”

Meat Loaf certainly has. He calls his new record “the most important” of his career. He’s careful not to say it’s the “best,” out of respect, he says, for the first megasuccessful “Bat Out of Hell.”

But he says the two records are “in the same ballpark.”

“Maybe ‘Hang Cool Teddy Bear’ is in the bullpen and ‘Bat Out of Hell’ is on the pitcher’s mound, waving.”

He says “Bat Out of Hell 3” failed largely because the characters he inhabited on the record’s lyrics were undefined (“it was a bad script,” he says). He credits producer Rob Cavallo (the Warner executive responsible for signing and producing Green Day) with sharpening his focus this time out.

The record’s central character is a dying soldier whose life flashes forward instead of backwards as he takes his final breaths.

He intentionally didn’t tell the record’s slate of guest writers (including Canadian Raine Maida, Jon Bon Jovi and “American Idol“ judge Kara DioGuardi) about the overarching theme because he didn’t want “a bunch of dead soldier stories.”

Perhaps as a result, the high-minded concept isn’t completely obvious in listening to the record’s freewheeling tunes.

First single “Los Angeloser” begins with a DJ scratching a record and Meat Loaf hollering “I’m just a white boy/ I play the guitar” over a strummed acoustic, while the chorus of “California Isn’t Big Enough” finds the singer howling about his groin with an irrepressible conviction.

If the off-colour reference offends his fans? Too bad, he says.

“I read something on Amazon: ‘No Meat Loaf record has ever reverted to swear words before, I can’t believe that he would actually do that,”’ he said. “I just went: ‘Lady, I love ya, but you’re stuck in a time warp.’ What we say on this record, compared to what you could find on any movie channel or any movie, we’re in kindergarten over here. We haven’t even got to the fifth grade yet.

“We’re on that cartoon MTV used to have, ‘Beavis and Butthead.’ That’s where we are.”

Well, Meat Loaf is certainly animated. Directing a conversation with him is as impossible as predicting which tangential rabbit hole he might venture down next.

His salt-and-pepper hair cropped close, he dresses in all black, with jewellery jingling around his neck and each of his wrists. He looks slimmed down but grows concerned when he thinks a photographer has taken his picture while he’s seated in a cushy armchair.

“I look like a lumpy little frog when I’m sitting down,” he worries.

Indeed, it doesn’t seem as though he likes to sit still for long. It’s part of why he’s so bothered that labels have tried tirelessly to recreate the success of the first “Bat” record.

“Whenever I’ve tried to turn the corner or change, record companies always come back in going ‘no, no,”’ he said. “They always want to call it ‘Bat Out of Hell.’

“This album would have been ‘Bat Out of Hell 11’ if a record company had their way. I would have more of these than the ‘Police Academy’ (movies).”

But he thinks “Hang Cool Teddy Bear” does, in fact, represent a turning point.

“The record has legs,” he said. “That’s the thing about this record. Where other records I’ve made didn’t have legs — in fact, ’Bat Out of Hell 2’ didn’t have the legs that ‘Bat 1’ did.

“Word of mouth on this record is really unbelievable. I really think this could have longer legs.”