Archive for the 'Music' Category

Bleeding Through - Declaration

Bleeding Through - Declaration

“Tonight… We dine in hell!” Pretty apt. This ubiquitous quote from ‘300′ serves well as the appropriate punctuation to the brief instrumental prelude as well as being the perfect bridge into the aural assault that’s about to be unleashed.

The title track ‘Declaration’ opens the proceedings at a blistering pace and there’s no real let up, aside a few meaty breakdowns, until we reach the magnificent ‘There Was a Flood’. One of my faves on the album, it teases with the ominous and haunting opening as though it’s going to delve into ‘Perfect Circle’ type power ballad, only to fire up and then give minimal respite with a catchy melodic vocal. Fittingly, the first single ‘Death Anxiety’ has the characteristic melodic formula reminiscent of ‘The Truth’, but at the same time it’s heavy riff is a good insight into the direction of this new work. Follow the lyric sheet, and it’s clear there’s some serious anger issues coming to the fore here.

At times, my untrained ears find it hard putting bands and their music into genres and I may well be wrong, but this ‘Bleeding Through’ release seems to be veering the band more and more into the realms of Death Metal. As much as I have loved all their previous efforts, it’s possible that at times maybe I was just tolerating the thrashier parts of the songs waiting for the more melodic vocals to kick in. On ‘Declaration’ though, this emphasis on melodies has been stripped back and while still present, what remains is a brutal album with substantially more aggression and punch.

You have to hand it to Devin Townsend, what on the surface may appear to be an unusual band-producer pairing, has ultimately resulted in an album that after just one listen, will have you thinking your epididymis couldn’t possibly be wound any tighter. Contender for one of the top releases of 2008.

Bleeding Through - Declaration

New Metallica Has Landed

Metallica Death Magnetic

I remember a time where a new Metallica release would have me marking off X’s on a calendar. The anticipation was beyond enormous as the band’s first three albums were classics of the highest order. One by one they landed. ‘Kill ‘Em All’, ‘Ride The Lightning’ and the masterful ‘Master of Puppets’.

They were lauded as the best thing to happen to Metal since the glory years of Judas Priest and Iron Maiden.

Rightfully so. Metallica were a very, very special band.

Having been a fan of the band from even before they had a record deal of any kind - I always held them close to the heart but recently, as with many, I have grown to despise them and that pretentious twat of a godawful drummer - Lars Ulrich.

But… even after the abomination that was ‘St. Anger’ - I remained curious to see what they could possibly deliver next.

So after hearing the first track today, I’m feeling that tingle again. It sounds promising. Real promising.

So, without any further adieu… check it all out below:

Metallica: The Day That Never Comes (Windows Media)
Metallica: The Day That Never Comes (Real Media)
Metallica: The Day That Never Comes (MySpace)

James Hetfield told MTV.com that the clip won’t be making any lofty political statements about the war in Iraq. Instead, it’s a statement on humanity, helmed by acclaimed Danish director Thomas Vinterberg, who, along with Lars von Trier, co-founded the Dogme 95 movement in filmmaking. Hetfield said that when he was writing the song’s lyrics, he never envisioned the video would look anything like this.

“That’s the beauty, I think, of writing vague but powerful lyrics — that someone like a movie director can interpret it in his own way and obviously, someone creative is able to take the metaphors and apply them to whatever he needs in his own life,” the frontman explained to MTV.com. “The main [theme of the video] is the human element of forgiveness and someone doing you wrong, you feeling resentment and you being able to see through that in the next situation that might be similar and not take your rage or resentment out on the next person and basically keep spreading the disease of that through life.”

He added, “The one thing that I wasn’t keen on here was Metallica plugging into a modern war or a current event [that] might be construed as some sort of political statement on our part. There are so many celebrities that soapbox their opinions, and people believe it’s more valid because they’re popular. For us, people are people — you should all have your own opinion. We are hopefully putting the human element in what is an unfortunate part of life. There are people over there dealing with situations like this, and we’re showing the human part of being there.

“It’s the forgiveness part — that is key,” he continued. “Metallica has never plugged into any current event visually, but this one is kind of a hotbed. People have very high opinions about this war, and we’re trying to cut through all of that. The politics and the religion tend to separate people, and what we’re trying to do is bring it together with the common thread of resentment and forgiveness.”

Metallica’s new album, ‘Death Magnetic’, is scheduled for release on September 12.

Slipknot’s Joey Jordinson Breaks Ankle

Slipknot's Joey Jordinson Breaks Ankle

To Our Fans:

It is with huge regret and disappointment that we have been forced to cancel our imminent European festival appearances at Leeds, Reading, 2 Days a Week, Area 4, as well as exclusive performances for MTV Europe and Virgin TV. The other night, Joey Jordison broke his ankle and doctors have advised Joey to stay off his leg for 4-6 weeks to prevent further injury or permanent and more serious damage.

We know you will be hugely disappointed and so are we. Canceling shows is never an easy decision and we apologize to all our fans, friends and family for not being there to throw down with you. We will be back in Europe this November and can’t wait to see you all then.

Stay (sic),
Slipknot

World’s Largest Record Collection is Worth $50 Million; No One Wants it for $3 Million

World’s Largest Record Collection is Worth $50 Million; No One Wants it for $3 Million.

Slipknot Blamed For Teen Murders

Slipknot Blamed For Teen Murders

Slipknot have been blamed for a savage murder and series of stabbings in South Africa yesterday.

A schoolboy, dressed akin to Slipknot drummer Joey Jordison, was high on drugs when he stabbed a fellow pupil to death with a sword in Krugersdorp, South Africa. He then went on to stab two of the schools gardeners at Nic Diederichs technical high school.

“He stabbed one of the schoolkids in the neck and he died. He then went further and stabbed a gardener in the back and another gardener in the face. They were taken to hospital in serious conditions,” said Jacob Raboroko of the Johannesburg police force.

A representative for Slipknot’s record label, Roadrunner Records, has told South Africa’s The Times web site that the band had no comment regarding reports that the schoolboy (18-year-old Morné Harmse) who stabbed a fellow student to death with a sword in Krugersdorp, South Africa Monday morning (August 18) was dressed like Slipknot drummer Joey Jordison.

Declining to provide her name, the woman at Roadrunner Records said: “We’ve had no confirmation that it was, in fact, a Slipknot mask. The band is not going to respond.”

When asked how they had found out about the stabbing, the representative would say only that people had been phoning the label all day.

Local South African metal bands defended the music genre. As Internet forums from across the world buzzed over the incident, commentators said metal music had “always drawn the short end of the stick” in being linked to Satanism and teenage violence.

Hugo Louw of metal band FEARSTRIKE told The Times: “If you are down, then the music [lyrics] will work with your mind. You need to be mentally strong to listen to that kind of music.”

Louw said it was not fair to blame incidents such as the one in Krugersdorp on the music.

“It is not fair to blame it on heavy metal … it tells fans to show people you are strong and to not be afraid.”

Slipknot lead singer Corey Taylor told Blender Magazine: “Obviously, I’m disturbed by the fact that people were hurt and someone died. As far as my responsibility for that goes, it stops there, because I know our message is actually very positive.” He continued,”You have something like this happen, it could have been Marilyn Manson, it could have been any number of people who make art that is startling visually, on the darker side. It could’ve been Pat Boone, for Christ’s sake. At the end of the day, there are always going to be mental disorders and people who cause violence for no other reason than the fact that they’re fucked up and lost. And all we can do is try to learn from it.”

Wes Borland Joins Marilyn Manson

Wes Borland Joins Marilyn Manson

Former Limp Bizkit member Wes Borland has joined Marilyn Manson as the group’s new guitarist. The news was announced by Manson himself at a press conference earlier today ahead of his band’s appearance tomorrow (Friday, August 15) at the ETP Festival in Seoul, Korea.

Manson said, “We have a new guitar player that’s gonna play for the first time tomorrow; it’s the first time we’ll play on stage [together]. His name is Wes Borland and he used to be in a really terrible band that he left because he felt that it was a destructive force in art, and he has his own band, Black Light Burns, but now he is in Marilyn Manson. We don’t know how permanent that is, but starting tomorrow will be the first step. So this will be the most indestructible Marilyn Manson.”

Marilyn Manson is in the middle of recording a new album, which is expected to be released sometime next year. (Let’s hope its a return to form and not the diabolical crap that was the last unlistenable ‘Eat Me, Drink Me’ garbage.

Manson’s longtime bassist, Twiggy Ramirez, toured with Manson earlier this year for the first time since 2002. The two co-wrote ‘Antichrist Superstar’, ‘Mechanical Animals’ and ‘Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death)’ together and Manson told The Salt Lake Tribune this past spring that he couldn’t be happier aboutRamirez returning.

(via)

Trent Reznor’s ‘Year Zero’ Heading To HBO?

Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails has been in talks in with HBO about making a two-season maxi-series out of “Year Zero,” the dark future tale that Reznor has chronicled in his music as well as in a celebrated Alternate Reality Game (ARG) with the same title that was created by 42 Entertainment.

Trent Reznor's 'Year Zero' Heading To HBO?

“It’s the most exciting thing on the horizon, it’s the thing that when I wake up in the morning it makes me say, ‘God it would be cool if that happened,” Reznor told me this week while sitting backstage before a Nails concert in Toronto. “This is my grand ambition. Will it happen? I don’t know. It was fun sitting and telling [the HBO] guys and watching them shake their head and having writers on board and producers that are in to it. It’s been a fun thing.”

“Year Zero” began (as so many things do in the music of NIN) from a place of negative emotion and sonic experimentation. Reznor was increasingly outraged by the geopolitical situation during the Bush years and he wanted to channel that fury into music, but he was loath to drift into the limiting lexicon of protest lyrics.

“How could I express what I was feeling in a way that didn’t sound like bitching about George Bush? I mean, you know, I love Neil Young but I didn’t want to listen to that record, really,” he said, referring to the singer-songwriter’s “Living with War.” “My reaction to that kind of record is, ‘We know this. It’s obvious.’”

“So it started with me trying to write it as a piece of fiction. I was thinking, ‘It could be the worst idea ever in the world but, if it doesn’t work, it doesn’t have to come out.’ I started by writing a kind of world bible about what life would be like around 15 or 20 years from now if things continue on the same path. I spent a few weeks filling it in with the events that could lead to this kind of time and place. Then as an experiment I started writing songs about people in this place and from different points of view.”

The problem was the music was compelling and powerful, but it was more about sensation than story.

“I had a record that would make sense to me but no one else would ever know what it was because there was no narrative. It’s modular, its a collection of snapshots. These were glimpses of a place. Maybe with liner notes I could communicate some of it, but how do you get liner notes in 2007?”

He considered a graphic novel. “That was the route we were going to go with initially. We talked to a different companies about releasing it. But it didn’t feel quite right. We thought about a film, but that has a different timetable and too many people need to say yes. That wouldn’t line up right. then I started thinking about how I could make it really interactive, something you experience rather than something you read.”

Reznor remembered reading about 42 Entertainment and their deeply layered ARG for the Steven Spielberg film “A.I.” He met with them and the result was a truly amazing through-the-looking-glass creation on-line, shaped by the 42 team working closely with the rock star and his art director, Rob Sheridan. “It’s ahrd to explain it,” Reznor said, and he’s right. But the best way to get your head around it is through the nifty (and entertaining) case-study presentation that you can find here.

Reznor was delighted with the result. “It was probably the most fun thing I’ve done.” Now he wants to finish the story he started and do it across a range of media.

“I just pitched it to HBO two weeks ago in L.A. It went great. Ideally, we’re trying to get them to do a two-year limited series. I prefer that over a film. We would have a second ARG tying into the second album and ties into the series and they all happen together with a budget needed to pull that all off. There would be a tour down the road. The record completes the story, the ending that no one knows. I know what happens. I knew when I started it. And it’s not what people think.”

(via)

Oh My God! They’ve Killed Kenny Chef!

Oh My God! They’ve Killed Kenny Chef!
Isaac Hayes, the pioneering US singer, songwriter and musician whose relentless Theme From Shaft won Academy and Grammy awards, has died today at 65.

Scars On Broadway - Self-Titled

Scars On Broadway

It’s always refreshing when a band like System Of A Down come along. It doesn’t happen all too often, but every now and then - a band springs forth which sounds like no other bringing with it a style and identity all there own. System Of A Down were such a band. Marrying their middle-eastern influence with the Metal genre and politicizing a musical genre who’s lyrics usually border on the sublime and ridiculous. The System were smart, uniquely melodic, brutally heavy and a superbly crafted band that dominated the scene over the course of the past ten years.

Having seen the band live a few years ago, I still rank that show as one to take to the grave.

So after 10 years of prolific activity and releasing some classic albums along the way, the band is on an ‘indefinite’ hiatus. (sigh!) Practically splitting into two camps, lead singer Serj Tankian released a so-so solo album last year entitled ‘Elect The Dead’ which also featured System drummer John Dolmayan on several tracks.

Dolmayan now returns as one half of Scars On Broadway with System lead guitarist Daron Malakian. Malakian drives the self-titled album with all the quirkiness and melodic sensitivities that he brought to the System table. Always a prolific song-writer, as can be seen by the Hypnotize and Mezmerize albums that System released a few years ago, Malakian is quoted as saying, “I could release ten solo records tomorrow…”

So here we are. Not quite ten solo records down the track, but the debut Scars On Broadway has hit the streets and as expected, features a slab of catchy as fuck ditties that are as infectious and supreme as some of System’s finest moments. The album zips past at breakneck speed and seems over before it even began, but along the journey there are some amazing tracks on offer.

Granted, I miss the vocal stylings of Tankian and the smooth melodies that he and Malakian would interject throughout the System Of A Down repertoire. But seeing as the band is on this extended break, this really is the next best thing until the planets align once again and the guys can’t get their shit back together. I mean, as good as this album is… it doesn’t hold a candle to the brilliance of System. I hope we’re all in agreeance on that.

Scars On Broadway

The Agony and the Irony of Matt Skiba

The Agony and the Irony of Matt Skiba.
Alkaline Trio front man Matt Skiba is a self-proclaimed, card-carrying, member of the Church of Satan, and he idolizes Anton Lavey.

Donita Sparks & The Stellar Moments - Transmiticate

Donita Sparks & The Stellar Moments - Transmiticate

Having been good friends with one of the gals from L7 for many, many years - I kinda had an inside look at all the happenings behind the scene. Whilst it was a good position to be in, I was deeply saddened when such an amazing band called it a day. There was no official word that the gals had all but split, but for the past 7 years or so, activity in the L7 camp has been null and void. Until now.

Whilst we haven’t been graced with an L7 reunion, lead crooner Donita Sparks and drummer Dee Plakas have put together ‘Donita Sparks & The Stellar Moments’ and the album ‘Transmiticate’. If you were ever a fan of L7, then this one’s for you.

Whilst not as grimey and dirty as L7, ‘Transmiticate’ borrows heavily from the band’s catchier moments. The end result is a post-punk-poppier platter that just oozes with groove, attitude, melodic, catchiness and a veritable feast of great songs! Track after track the album is brimming with greatness. I haven’t stopped listening to this one for a while and I still can’t decide which is my fave tune… there are a few!

Donita Sparks & The Stellar Moments - Transmiticate

Firebird Live @ Route 66

Firebird

Noticed the Route 66 flyer in my inbox this week promoting the fact the Firebird would be doing a freebie at Route 66 HQ today. I hadn’t ever seen Firebird live or was I familiar with their tunes - but on gut instinct, I thought I’d check them out.

Glad I did! They were phenomenally fun. Really enjoyed their energy, vibrance and all round fun Rockabilly music.

A great, great band all round!

View all of today’s pics over at my Flickr page.

Evo of the Devo

Evo of the Devo.
When 1970s art-rock outfit Devo formed as something of a joke, based on their own theory of “de-evolution” (that mankind was regressing “as evidenced by the herd mentality of American society”), its art student founders didn’t foresee themselves performing more than 30 years later.