Monthly Archive for February, 2006

Alice In Chains Reunion

Alice In Chains Reunion

Alice In Chains guitarist Jerry Cantrell’s official web site administrator, who goes by the name of “ceojc”, has confirmed that the band will be reuniting for an appearance at the Nova Rock festival in Austria in mid-June (web site), with “a lot more” concert dates yet to be announced.

“I hate to keep on saying this, but as most of you have heard, Alice In Chains will be performing at Nova Rock in Austria,” “ceojc” writes on Cantrell’s official message board. “This is true. Alice is back.

“Europe is a long way to go for just one show, so I feel that we are going to have a lot more to do.

“Because this is Europe and a big festival, don’t count on any special Alice In Chains tickets but you never know what the future brings.

“Let me explain why things went down the way they went down. It was not the way we wanted it to happen. The festival promoter secured a bunch of really big bands like Metallica, Guns N’ Roses and Alice. The promoter decided to have a big press conference on Monday [Feb. 20]. We had not finished securing the ‘business side’ of the show by the time Monday rolled around. Because Monday was President’s Day, our office was closed and we could not make a decision regarding releasing the info to you guys. Our European agent, because our office was closed, made an executive decision to release the show info. We fully support his choice but could not say anything untill we spoke to him to get the full story and due to the time difference and travel we could not make the announcement untill just now.

“Guys, please remember that nothing is official unless it comes from our office. We like to surprise you but sometimes that is not always possible.

“Jerry, Mike [Inez, bass], Sean [Kinney, drums] and the managment team are doing our best to keep you guys informed. You mean a lot to the guys and they want you to know that.”

Alice In Chains frontman Layne Staley died on April 5, 2002 from a mixture of heroin and cocaine. Staley was found dead two weeks later, surrounded by intravenous drug paraphernalia in his Seattle apartment. The death certificate reads Staley’s death resulted from “an acute intoxication due to the combined effects of opiate (heroin) and cocaine.” The death was classified as “accidental.”

As previously reported, Comes With The Fall vocalist/guitarist and member of Jerry Cantrell’s touring band William DuVall has been tapped to sing lead vocals with Alice In Chains at the taping of an episode of VH1 Classic’s “Decades Rock Live!”, a tribute to Heart that will take place March 10 at the Trump Taj Mahal in Atlantic City. It is not presently clear if DuVall will be joining the group on any of the other dates that are currently being scheduled.

The Classics: AC/DC – Back In Black

The Classics: AC/DC - Back In Black

In June 2005, the Recording Industry Association of America announced that ‘Back In Black’ has sold 21 million copies in the USA alone making it the best selling hard rock album of all time next to Led Zeppelin IV. What is astounding to take into account is that five months before the release of the album, the band’s enigmatic and gloriously boisterous lead singer Bon Scott was found dead in a parked car in London.

Never one to turn down a drink Bon Scott had every reason to be in a celebratory mood on the evening of February 18, 1980. The band were one of the biggest exports out of Australia having cracked the English and European markets and had made it big in the USA with the brilliant 1979 release ‘Highway to Hell’. The recording sessions for that albums successor were just about to begin. In early February, the Young brothers, Angus and Malcolm had met up in a rehearsal studio in London (E-Zee Hire) to begin some pre-production work on the new album. As the duo were churning out new riffs on their guitars, in walked in Bon Scott who asked the duo if he could play drums for them whilst working on the new tunes.

In the ensuing jam session the trio worked on songs that later became ‘Have A Drink on Me’ and ‘Let Me Put My Love Into You’.

At the end of the session, the trio decided to meet back in a week. Bon said it would give him time to come up with lyrics for the songs. Bon Scott said his goodbyes and left the studio. It was the last time Angus and Malcolm Young would ever see him.

A few days later, Bon was dead.

AC/DC's Bon Scott

On the evening of February 18, 1980 Bon Scott went out to catch a few bands and have a few drinks with friend Alistair Kinnear. The pair took Kinnear’s Renault to the Music Machine in Camden Town where they wound up getting completely wasted on Scotch Whiskey with Bon allegedly drinking quadruple shots straight from a tall glass.

At the end of the night Kinnear drove the passed-out singer to his apartment. Bon was completely out cold in the passenger seat and unresponsive to Kinnear’s efforts to wake him. This had happened many, many times before and Kinnear called Scott’s girlfriend Silver Smith for some advice. She told Kinnear to take some blankets down to Scott and leave him sleep it off in the car.

The next morning when Kinnear went down to his car, he found Bon twisted around the gearshift and cold to the touch. Bon Scott was pronounced dead on arrival at Kings College Hospital; the coroner’s final verdict was “Death by misadventure: acute alcohol poisoning.” The coroner also found that he had asphyixiated on his own vomit after his neck twisted in the night. At the time of his death, the international press made false accusations about a drug overdose. Whilst Scott did have previous interludes with narcotics (which included a heroin overdose in 1975), no traces of illicit substances were found in his system by the coroner. Bon was 33 years old.

A few days later, on Wednesday February 20, the news reached Angus, Malcolm and the rest of the band who were stunned and shocked to their collective foundations. The mourning was not only for Bon Scott but also for AC/DC. Many speculated that this was the end of the band as such a blow would see them never to recover after losing such a key member.

Scott’s body was flown to Fremantle, Australia for burial. His father took the Young brothers aside and urged them to continue with AC/DC. “It was Bon’s dad who more or less convinced us to get back into it,” Angus recounts. “He said to me and Malcolm, “Listen, Bon always loved what you two guys did. It was the first time I ever saw him truly happy and loving what he was doing. I’m sure if something had happened to one of you two guys that Bon would have carried on. You guys should get out there and find someone, and just keep going.”

AC/DC's Bon Scott's final resting place
Bon Scott’s grave: Fremantle, Perth, Australia

“Our management at the time, they kept recommending singers, asking if we wanted to see anyone or listen them,” Angus remembers. “But Malcolm kept saying to me, ‘We’ll do it when we feel we’ve got all our music together. The rest can wait!’ We didn’t want to be rushed into anything. We knew we were never gonna find a clone of Bon; we wanted someone who would be their own character.”

Enter… Brian Johnson. Legend has it that an AC/DC fan in Chicago sent AC/DC’s management a tape of Brian singing in his band Geordie. The tape came with a note suggesting that Johnson would be an appropriate replacement for the deceased Scott. Producer Mutt Lange who’d produced ‘Highway To Hell’ heard the tape and agreed.

“We were looking for someone who was just like ourselves,” Angus explains. “Someone who could have a laugh and could tell a joke.”

AC/DC's Brian Johnson

“The first song we did was ‘Whole Lotta Rosie’, because I love that song and I used to do it with Geordie,” Johnson recalls. “I was a huge fan of Bon Scott’s – a real sleazy voice!”

“We’d done a few tracks with Brian in rehearsal and recorded it,” Angus remembers. “When we sat and listened to it later, we knew he had a great voice and could work with the material we had.” On April 8 1980 – just over six weeks from Bon’s death – Brian Johnson was introduced as AC/DC’s new lead singer.

A week later – the Back In Black recording sessions began at Compass Point Studios in the Bahamas.

“We knew we were going to call the album Back In Black even before we began recording,” Angus says. “Malcolm and myself pretty much agreed that we wanted the cover black, as reference to Bon.

And in tribute it stands forevermore…

Source: Classic Rock magazine, Revolver magazine, Wikipedia

Henry Rollins Cited As ‘Possible Threat’ By Australian Government

Henry Rollins

Looks like the Australian Government is beginning to become more and more like our American brothers every day…

According to News.com.au, American punk rock icon and writer Henry Rollins was reported to the National Security hotline during his recent Australian tour because of a book he was reading on a flight to Brisbane.

A furious Rollins was informed he was “nominated as a possible threat” for reading “Jihad: The Rise of Militant Islam In Central Asia”, writes Kathy McCabe.

The incident happened on a flight from Auckland on the recent Big Day Out tour.

Rollins told Australian fans during his tour that he received a letter from a “nice woman” who worked “in one of those government areas that deals with anti-terrorism matters.”

He posted the letter on his web site.

“Please tell your Government and everyone in your office to go fuck themselves. Baghdad’s safer than my hometown and your PM is a sissy,” he wrote.

3Demonic Models

Gene Simmons by Sandy Collora

Head on over to 3Demonic for some of the most amazing models sculptured by some of today’s best 3D modelling talent. Sculpture above is based on a 1976 era Gene Simmons of KISS bust by Sandy Collora. Two words can only describe these models… *fuckn amazing*. Do check ‘em out!



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