Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Graveyard back in the studio for album no.5

After reforming earlier this year, Graveyard confirm that they’re back in the studio working on what will be their 5th album. 



















The Swedish outfit announced their split in September 2016 due to differences within the band. However, guitarist and vocalist Joakim Nilsson, guitarist Jonatan Larocca-Ramm and bassist Truls Morck decided to move forward again at the end of January without drummer Axel Sjoberg. He was replaced by Oskar Bergenheim.
Now their working on their new as-yet-untitled album which will be the follow-up to 2015’s Innocence & Decadence.
The band say in a statement: “It’s great to be back in the studio and laying down the basic tracks has been nothing but sheer joy.
“This time around we’ve got more than enough songs to fill up an album, and as always the really fun and thrilling part will be to see how the recording will treat each song from rehearsals to the finished mix.
“With that said, the obvious goal is to continue our walk down Graveyard’s left-hand album path with yet another album filled with all killers and no fillers.”
They add: “We’re up for a promising start here in the studio and we can’t wait to let all of you be the judge of how you think we did. That’s all for now… back to recording!”
The album is being recorded at Park Studios in Stockholm with producer Chips Kiesbye and engineer Stefan Boman and is expected to be released in late spring/early summer 2018 via Nuclear Blast.

Sunday, December 10, 2017

New Jimi Hendrix album announced featuring 10 previously unreleased songs

A new Jimi Hendrix record boasting 13 studio recordings made between 1968 and 1970 will be released next spring.
Following 2010’s ‘Valleys of Neptune’ and 2013’s ‘People, Hell and Angels’, the new album ‘Both Sides of the Sky’ is the third and final release in a trilogy of albums that present the best and most significant unissued studio recordings remaining in Jimi’s distinguished back catalogue.
Available to buy on CD, digital and normal 180-gram audiophile vinyl 2LP formats on Friday 9th March 2018, ten of the 13 songs on the record have never been released before.
John McDermott, one of the album’s co-producers, together with long-term Hendrix collaborator Eddie Kramer and Jimi’s step sister Janie Hendrix, says: “Since Experience Hendrix began its restoration of the Jimi Hendrix music catalogue in 1997, our goal has been to present these important recordings to Jimi’s fans in the best possible quality.
“We are excited about achieving that. We’ve also been intent on generating album releases which present this amazing music in its proper context.”


Opening with a cover of Muddy Waters’ ‘Mannish Boy’, much of the album was recored by the trio that would eventually dub themselves Band of Gypsys; Jimi on guitar and vocals, Billy Cox on bass and Buddy Miles on drums.
Previously unheard versions of Hear ‘My Train A Comin’’, ‘Stepping Stone’, ‘Jungle’, ‘Cherokee Mist’ (featuring Hendrix on both electric guitar and sitar) as well as the January 1968 recording of ‘Sweet Angel’ also feature.
Guest performers on album tracks include Stephen Stills, Johnny Winter and Lonnie Youngblood.
Janie Hendrix, President and CEO of Experience Hendrix, L.L.C, says: “We have a growing commitment to preserve the legacy of Jimi and also to continue to give the worldwide family of Jimi fans quality releases. That’s what ‘Both Sides of The Sky’ reflects…our ongoing commitment. In a deeper sense, it’s the keeping of a promise.
“Jimi and I once made a promise to each other. He said he would take care of me and I told him I would take care him. Through his music and our preservation of his work, my brother and I honour one another. We are now in our third decade of watching over Jimi’s creative works and our resolve to maintain the integrity of what he left us has only grown stronger with time.”
Eddie Kramer says: “Jimi’s true home was the studio, that’s where the music and the magic happened. He loved everything about recording and it’s been my distinct pleasure and an honour to play a part in that process both then and now.”
The ‘Both Sides of the Sky’ track-listing is as follows:
1. Mannish Boy*
2. Lover Man*
3. Hear My Train A Comin’*
4. Stepping Stone*
5. $20 Fine* (ft. Stephen Stills)
6.  Power Of Soul
7. Jungle*
8. Things I Used to Do (ft. Johnny Winter)
9. Georgia Blues (ft. Lonnie Youngblood)
10. Sweet Angel*
11. Woodstock* (ft. Stephen Stills)
12. Send My Love To Linda*
13. Cherokee Mist*
* previously unreleased

Saturday, December 2, 2017

Suicidal Tendencies completes work on new EP

Suicidal Tendencies has completed work on its new EP for a tentative early 2018 release. The effort was helmed by British producer Paul Northfield, who first worked with the band back in 1992 when he was the engineer for "The Art Of Rebellion" album. He has since collaborated with Suicidal Tendencies on many other releases, including last year's "World Gone Mad" full-length.

SUICIDAL TENDENCIES Completes Work On New EP 
  
Suicidal Tendencies frontman Mike Muir told Finland's Kaaos TV this past summer that the band's upcoming EP would be "a little more specifically a statement of the time" and an effort that "could be interpreted as political."
"World Gone Mad" was released in September 2016. The follow-up to 2013's "13" disc was Suicidal Tendencies' first to feature former Slayer drummer Dave Lombardo and guitarist Jeff Pogan, who replaced Nico Santora in May 2016.
In an interview with Metal Wani earlier this year, Lombardo said that he really hoped there would be more Suicidal Tendencies records. "I feel like that guy [Mike Muir] has a lot more creativity in him and a lot more energy than to throw in the towel," he said. "I feel Mike is on top of his game, and he's got a great band and great history with this band and I think that we should keep going, and I hope he does. And I'm not gonna stop asking him to record. I'm going to make sure that I keep bugging him: 'Man, we've gotta record. Let's do some recording. C'mon, let's record another album. Why not?' I try to motivate the musicians I'm with because there's no reason to stop. You've gotta keep recording, you've gotta keep creating. It's what we do for a living."

Sunday, November 26, 2017

Metallica’s Lars Ulrich and Kirk Hammett remember Cliff Burton’s final show

Kirk Hammett and Lars Ulrich have spoken in-depth about Cliff Burton’s last show with Metallica before his untimely death.
Promoting their expansive box set reissue of ‘Master of Puppets’, which is out today, the guitarist and drummer were asked by Rolling Stone if it was emotional listening back to Cliff’s last ever gig at Solnahallen in Stockholm, Sweden on 26th September 1986 - one day before the bassist's death. 
A fan recording of the show features in the box set on cassette format, which also includes a digital download card.
Lars said of the gig: “Obviously, we're 31 years past (the show taking place). So you pause, you reflect, you think, you appreciate, you're humbled. I move so fast through a lot of the stuff that I never slow down long enough to reflect.
“And occasionally, when you sit with some of the stuff at 2 o'clock in the morning, you go, ‘Wow.’ When you sit there and listen to the last two songs or look at the pictures from the last show with him, it stops you in your tracks as you deal with it.”


Cliff, Kirk, Lars and James in 1986

Asked what they specifically remember about the show, Lars responded: “We'd finished playing all the Odeons in England, which are these old, 3,000-seat movie theatres and we got to Scandinavia where they were more like ice-hockey holes – smaller, colder, darker. It was a different vibe.
“We played the show in Stockholm, and it went incredibly well. I think it may have been a rare case where we actually played an additional song that wasn't on the set list, because the show was so good. That's not something we did a lot then or now. So, there was a good vibe.”
Kirk added: “It was significant because it was the first show where James played guitar again (James had broken his wrist in a skateboarding accident several months previous).
“He strapped on a guitar and was able to play the encore; I think it was "Blitzkrieg" or something. But I remember the five of us, including John Marshall (Kirk’s guitar tech and stand-in for James), being really stoked James was back and playing and looking like was gonna make a pretty healthy recovery.
“I distinctly remember that show being good, and the feeling when we got offstage was really great and positive and forward-looking. Like, ‘Great, James is back in and it won't be long 'til we're back to our old selves again.’
“It was that kind of mood after the show and then the accident happened and it literally felt like we were going from a hopeful sort of circumstance to one where we found ourselves in into a deep, black pit.”


 Cliff and James in 1984

Lars continued: “We did a lot of press that day, and we did a photo shoot for a Swedish magazine called OK, which was almost like a teenybopper magazine. We were sitting on the bus afterwards, talking about how cool it was, and Cliff and I were hanging out, having a beer. It's a little fuzzy now but it was a good day.”
“I remember right when we were about to leave in the bus, the fans started running towards us,” says Kirk. “Cliff said, ‘Look at them. They look like zombies!’ He was way into zombies. We were all just kind of laughing. Then we started playing cards. And we had a long, long drive. And everyone knows the rest of it.”

Tuesday, November 21, 2017

The Genius Of AC/DC’s Malcolm Young And The Lost Art Of Rock And Roll Rhythm Guitar

On Saturday, AC/DC guitarist and co-founder Malcolm Young died at age 64. For the past three years, he had been retired from the road after being diagnosed with dementia. In his absence, the venerable Australian band released its sixteenth album, 2016’s Rock Or Bust, and embarked on a world tour that was almost derailed by the departure of singer Brian Johnson, who was ordered by doctors to quit the road lest he go permanently deaf. AC/DC subsequently tapped Axl Rose as a replacement, and the tour went on to gross more than $220 million. In true AC/DC fashion, the show went on, even without most of AC/DC.
 
With his brother Angus, Malcolm was AC/DC’s general — his no-nonsense leadership kept the band steadfastly pointed in the same direction for nearly 40 years, away from passing trends and toward foundational, meat-and-potatoes rock and roll. If you love AC/DC and feel grateful that the band never delved into ’80s power-balladry, ’90s rap-rock, or ’00s dance music, then send a prayer of thanks to Malcolm. While Angus was AC/DC’s duck-walking, schoolboy outfit-clad mascot, Malcolm was the band’s gritty soul. (Or, in the parlance of AC/DC, the balls.)
Someone unfamiliar with AC/DC’s history might question Angus’ apparent coldness in carrying on without Malcolm — their nephew Stevie was tasked with playing his uncle’s parts on the Rock Or Busttour — and later Brian. But surely this was what Malcolm wanted. When the band’s original lead singer Bon Scott died tragically in 1980 at 33, Malcolm corralled Angus and finished off what became the most popular hard-rock album of all-time, Back In Black. The Young brothers mourned Scott, but they integrated that grief into their work. Not working simply was not an option for rock’s quintessential blue-collar band.
Was this a display of ruthlessness or just the sort of toughness and fortitude one must have in order to build and sustain a band as mighty as AC/DC? A bit of both, perhaps, though AC/DC never shied away from rock’s un-sentimental side in its music. “I tell you folks, it’s harder than it looks,” Scott mewls conspiratorially in “It’s A Long Way To The Top (If You Want To Rock And Roll),” the ultimate “life on the road” anthem from the band’s 1976 debut, High Voltage. And yet Malcolm and Angus, for many years, did make sustaining the reliable, stubborn, reassuring sameness of AC/DC seem as easy as pounding a case of beer to Highway To Hell.
Looking back, the obvious question music historians will ask about AC/DC is: How did this band sell more than 200 million albums worldwide, and make hundreds of millions (if not billions) on the road? AC/DC is utterly anathema to any common-knowledge definition of pop music. AC/DC is not trendy. AC/DC is not cute. AC/DC is not pleasant or easy-listening. AC/DC never conformed to radio formats or made flashy music videos. AC/DC, in fact, always seemed to hold all of those things — trendiness, cuteness, pleasantness, conformity — in contempt.

Friday, November 17, 2017

Guns N’ Roses add 2018 European tour dates

After being confirmed for the UK's Download festival earlier this month, Guns N’ Roses announce extra 2018 European tour dates for next summer

Guns N’ Roses have announced live dates across Europe and Russia for next year on the latest leg of their Not In This Lifetime tour.
Αποτέλεσμα εικόνας για GUNS N ROSES

Axl Rose and co were recently confirmed as headliners for Download 2018 in the UK – and they’ve now added a further 14 shows which will kick off at Berlin’s Olympiastadion on June 3 and wrap up with a performance at Gothenburg’s Ullevi Stadium on July 21.
Among the new dates are appearances at the Download festivals in France and Spain.
Tickets for the new shows are now available along with VIP packages from the band’s website.
Earlier this year, GNR guitarist Richard Fortus said the band were “tighter and more focused than ever” since fellow guitarist Slash and bassist Duff McKagan rejoined the lineup.
He said: “This tour has exceeded anything that I’ve previously been a part of. The band is tighter than it’s ever been and everyone is extremely focused. It’s been an honour to be a part of it and something that I will always be very proud of."
He added: “Slash and Duff have the same approach that I do. You play for the song, first and foremost – it’s about working together as a band.
“I don’t think this band has ever sounded better than it does right now. Axl has never sounded better and we’re tighter and more focused than ever.”
Earlier this week, Foo Fighters vocalist and guitarist Dave Grohl joined Guns N’ Roses onstage to perform Paradise City in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Find a list of Guns N’ Roses 2018 tour dates below.

Guns N’ Roses 2018 Not In This Lifetime tour dates

Jun 03: Berlin Olympiastadion, Germany
Jun 06: Odense Dyrskueplausen, Denmark
Jun 09: Donington Download Festival, UK
Jun 12: Gelsenkirchen Veltins-Arena, Germany
Jun 18: Paris Download Festival, France
Jun 25: Mannheim Maimarktgelane, Germany
Jun 26: Bordeaux Matmut Stadium, France
Jun 29: Madrid Download Festival, Spain
Jul 05: Nijmegen Goffertpark, Netherlands
Jul 07: Leipzig Festwiese, Germany
Jul 09: Chorzoq Stadion Slaski, Poland
Jul 13: Moscow Spartak Otkritie, Russia
Jul 16: Tallinn Song Festival Grounds, Estonia
Jul 19: Oslo Valle Hovin, Norway
Jul 21: Gothenburg Ullevi Stadium, Sweden

Sunday, November 12, 2017

Scorpions have released the first single from their upcoming collection, Born to Touch Your Feelings: Best of Rock Ballads.

Scorpions have released the first single from their upcoming collection, Born to Touch Your Feelings: Best of Rock Ballads.

A newly recorded 2017 version of "Follow Your Heart" is one of three new recordings featured on the album, which will be released on Nov. 24. "Nowadays, ballads are the pinnacle of rock music,” said Scorpions frontman Klaus Meine. "If they’re well-written, they will go straight to the hearts of the fans."
"The meaning of a ballad always goes deep," Meine said. "It’s not surprising that a song like [1990's] ‘Wind of Change’ is received euphorically in the U.S. these days. The fans don’t connect the song to the fall of the Berlin Wall and the iron curtain but rather to their current situation, the desire for change and the hope for a world without nuclear threats and civil wars as well as the longing for peace.”
Guitarist Rudolf Schenker pointed out that the band's ballads have always been heavy influenced by popular as well as classical music. "Growing up, we didn’t really listen to Mozart or Haydn, but rather to Elvis, the Rolling Stones or Little Richard," he noted. "But still, the more serious kind of music is what we were influenced by starting at a very young age. There’s no denying that."
In addition to "Follow Your Heart," the career-spanning Born to Touch Your Feelings includes the new tracks "Always Be With You," written by Schenker after the birth of his youngest son, and guitarist Matthias Jabs' ode to the Los Angeles strip, "Melrose Avenue." There's also a new acoustic recording of "Send Me an Angel."
Last month, Scorpions had to cancel their remaining North American tour dates after Meine got laryngitis, but the band promised to return to the U.S. in the near future. You can pre-order the upcoming collection on the band's website now.

Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Ozzy Osbourne Announces Farewell World Tour

Ozzy Osbourne announced Monday that he will embark on his "farewell world tour" starting in 2018, a trek that will take the Black Sabbath singer around the world through 2020.

ozzy osbourne last word

Even though the farewell tour will mark Osbourne's retirement as a touring artist, the heavy metal legend plans to continuing performing live at select shows following the global jaunt.

"People keep asking me when I’m retiring," Osbourne said in a statement. "This will be my final world tour, but I can’t say I won’t do some shows here and there."

The announcement of Osbourne's final world tour comes nine months after Black Sabbath bid farewell to fans with their own The End trek, which concluded in February in Birmingham, England.
Osbourne's farewell tour kicks off with a May 2018 leg that will pass through Mexico, Chile, Argentina and four dates in Brazil. Following a pair of early June dates in Russia, Osbourne sets off on a month-long European leg where the singer will perform at music festivals across the continent.
Details of the North American leg of Osbourne's final tour will be announced in 2018. For the tour, guitarist Zakk Wylde, bassist Blasko, drummer Tommy Clufetos and keyboardist Adam Wakeman will serve as Osbourne's backing band.

Saturday, November 4, 2017

ICED EARTH To Tour Europe With FREEDOM CALL, METAPRISM

ICED EARTH will embark on a European tour in January with support from FREEDOM CALL and METAPRISM.
ICED EARTH To Tour Europe With FREEDOM CALL, METAPRISM
ICED EARTH guitarist Jon Schaffer stated: "Brothers and sisters, the time is drawing near! We're happy to announce FREEDOM CALL and METAPRISM as support for our upcoming January dates in Europe. Lots of 'Incorruptible' and lots of classics headed your way! Metal will flow!!"
The dates are as follows:
Jan. 09 - Saarbrücken, Germany - Garage
Jan. 10 - Berlin, Germany - Festsaal
Jan. 11 - Hannover, Germany - Capitol
Jan. 12 - Geiselwind, Germany - Musichall
Jan. 13 - Leipzig, Germany - Hause Auesee
Jan. 14 - Osnabrück, Germany - Hyde Park
Jan. 16 - Hamburg, Germany - Markthalle
Jan. 17 - Wiesbaden, Germany - Schlachthof
Jan. 18 - Bochum, Germany - Zeche
Jan. 19 - Regendsburg, Germany - Airport Obertraubling
Jan. 20 - Memmingen, Germany - Kaminwerk
Jan. 21 - Pratteln, Switzerland - Z7
Jan. 23 - Thessaloniki, Greece - Principal Club *
Jan. 24 - Athens, Greece - Fuzz Club *
* ICED EARTH only

ICED EARTH's latest album, "Incorruptible", was released on June 16 via Century Media. The cover artwork for the disc (as well as additional illustrations to every song) was created by David Newman-Stump from Skeleton Crew Tattoo (pencil illustrations) and Roy Young (colors).
Regarding how "Incorruptible" compares to previous ICED EARTH albums, Schaffer told Metal Wani: "They're all kind of their own thing, but I have a very strong gut feeling about this, and so does everybody in the band, that this is one of the really special ones. So I put it up there with 'The Dark Saga' [1996], 'Something Wicked This Way Comes' [1998], 'Dystopia' [2011] — it's in that league of records — so it's really gonna be something special, man. I know musicians always say that, but there is something going on here, so it's cool. We're all very excited about it."
Asked if he is the leader of ICED EARTH and everyone else in the band takes cues from him or if they make joint decisions as a group about how to approach things, Schaffer said: "I am the leader of the band and [I've been] the driving force of the band since the very beginning. [But] that does not mean that I don't take in the input of the guys on anything, you know what I mean? But as far as starting a cycle… I'm the chief songwriter, so… What I did, for instance, on ['Incorruptible'], I talked to Stu [Block, ICED EARTH singer], and said, 'Hey, you've gotta give me some lyrical themes of where you wanna go, titles, subject matter, whatever,' because it's my job to create the soundscape for that. And I knew where I was gonna go with the direction of the songs I was gonna write lyrically. And so he sent me some titles, and then whatever resonates with me, I've gotta be inspired by it in order to create that landscape that really is sort of like the soundtrack of a movie — it's very, very important. And then the other guys will send me riff ideas, and if it's fitting in and if it's a cool part… Luke [Appleton, bass] wrote the majority of a song called 'Defiance' on this record. So it depends on the song and what the parts are doing, if they're inspiring me and I run with it and go somewhere else or whatever — it can happen in all different ways — but definitely it starts here and I drive it the whole way through."
ICED EARTH took a break from touring in 2015, primarily due to Schaffer's second cervical fusion surgery.

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Bruce Dickinson Recalls Fights With Steve Harris Onstage


Iron Maiden frontman Bruce Dickinson has released another excerpt from his memoir, What Does This Button Do? 
Dickinson discusses the whirlwind around the band's 1982 monster hit album, Number of the Beast, and the onstage friction that soon developed between himself and bassist Steve Harris. 
The singer, who is renown for his onstage energy and acrobatic vocal style, didn't appreciate his bass player's mobility, reports Ultimate Classic Rock. 

 
 "These were two-hour shows, and the vocals were not the world’s easiest," Dickinson writes. "The onstage set-up caused friction immediately. I was quite traditional about basic stagecraft, like, 'Hey, if I’m singing, I stand at the front. If you’re playing the solo, you stand at the front. That sort of thing.'"
But Harris wanted to be up front as well.
"I wasn’t going to sing to the back of the bass player’s head."
So when Maiden would soundcheck, Dickinson would move the wedge monitors to the front of the stage to suit his ego. Harris would complain so the roadies would move them back. Dickinson would move them back where he like them and so on, until the two began expressing their frustration onstage. 
"When I was singing, half a bass guitar was being stuck up my nose, because clearly there was some demarcation zone I had infringed. I countered by putting ludicrously long legs on my mic stand. The base of it now resembled a TV aerial, and in my peripheral vision I could see Steve careering toward me, so I positioned it as a sort of anti-bass-player tank trap. I have quite a few chips in my teeth as he would still run into it full tilt."
It all came to a head the day of the music video shoot for "Number of the Beast." 
The band was awoken at "ridiculous o'clock in the morning," so they could shoot the video at the venue before the evening's concert. 
As a result the show started late, Dickinson said he and Harris were particularly ruthless with one another during the show and afterwards their manager Rod Smallwood had to separate them backstage.   
Harris yelled "He's got to f***ing go!" Dickinson remembers.
"Well, I didn’t f---ing go," Dickinson writes. "Can’t say I didn’t warn you, guys – this will be a little different. Get used to it."
He says the two came to a compromise on the location of the microphones and monitors and "it set us on a path to a new level of theatricality and presentation."

Sunday, October 29, 2017

Paul McCartney Recalls Meeting 'Great Rock 'n' Roll Pianist and Singer' Fats Domino

Paul McCartney released a statement on Thursday (Oct. 26) honoring the late Fats Domino, a rock ’n’ roll pioneer who had a huge influence on the Beatles’ early sound.
Paul on Fats Domino  




















“Rest in peace Fats Domino, the great rock ’n’ roll pianist and singer who thrilled us in our early days in Liverpool,” McCartney wrote about the rock legend, who died on Tuesday (Oct. 24) of natural causes at the age of 89. The former Beatle recalled meeting the rocker in Domino's hometown of New Orleans, where “he was wearing a huge star spangled diamond encrusted watch which was our first encounter with bling!”
Domino’s influence on the Beatles goes back to their teen years. According to Ultimate Classic Rock, Domino’s “I’m in Love” was the first rock song George Harrison ever heard, while his 1955 hit “Ain’t That a Shame” was the first song John Lennon learned to play.
McCartney ended his tribute with an amusing tidbit about Domino’s family life. “He himself was named Antoine. His kids were named Antoine III, Anatole, Andre, Antonio, Antoinette, Andrea, Anola and Adonica. Now that is pure Fats!" 


Saturday, October 28, 2017

Queen share alternative version of All Dead, All Dead featuring Freddie Mercury

Queen's original News Of The World track featured guitarist Brian May on vocals.

Queen have released an animated lyric video for an alternative take on their 1977 track All Dead, All Dead.
The original album version featured lead vocals from guitarist Brian May – but the newly released song, which appears on the 40th anniversary edition of News Of The World – has Freddie Mercury on vocal duties.

October 28 will mark the 40th anniversary of News Of The World, with the deluxe box set arriving on November 17.
Speaking about the track with Guitar Magazine in 1983, May said: “That's one of my favourites. That was one of the ones which I thought came off best, and I was really pleased with the sound.
“It always gives me a surprise when I listen to it because it was meant to really bring tears to your eyes. It almost does it to me.”
The video concept was created by Unanico Studios’ Jason Jameson, Robert Milne and Paul Laikin and tells the story of Pixie the cat, who is lost in a kingdom of cogs and pipes, wires and circuit boards.
May and the studio drew inspiration from Bruno Bozzetto’s animated opus Allegro Non Troppo, the 1976 film itself featuring a wandering feline as one of its protagonists.
Laikin says: “Jason, Robert and I are honoured to have worked with Brian to create a visual world for this fresh and emotional version of All Dead, All Dead.
“The cat in the video is inspired by photos Brian showed us of his childhood pet, and we hope it is also a fitting tribute to Freddie Mercury, who was devoted to his own cats.”
Find the contents of the News Of The World box set below.

Queen News Of The World 40th Anniversary Edition

Original album – new pure analogue cut vinyl

Side One

  1. We Will Rock You
  2. We Are The Champions
  3. Sheer Heart Attack
  4. All Dead, All Dead
  5. Spread Your Wings
  6. Fight From The Inside

Side Two

  1. Get Down, Make Love
  2. Sleeping On The Sidewalk
  3. Who Needs You
  4. It's Late
  5. My Melancholy Blues

CD 1: The Original Album – Bob Ludwig 2011 master

  1. We Will Rock You
  2. We Are The Champions
  3. Sheer Heart Attack
  4. All Dead, All Dead
  5. Spread Your Wings
  6. Fight From The Inside
  7. Get Down, Make Love
  8. Sleeping On The Sidewalk
  9. Who Needs You
  10. It's Late
  11. My Melancholy Blues

CD 2: Raw Sessions

  1. We Will Rock You (Alternative Version)
  2. We Are The Champions (Alternative Version)
  3. Sheer Heart Attack (Original Rough Mix)
  4. All Dead, All Dead (Original Rough Mix)
  5. Spread Your Wings (Alternative Take)
  6. Fight From The Inside (Demo Vocal Version)
  7. Get Down, Make Love (Early Take)
  8. Sleeping On The Sidewalk (Live in the USA, 1977)
  9. Who Needs You (Acoustic Take)
  10. It's Late (Alternative Version)
  11. My Melancholy Blues (Original Rough Mix)

CD3: Bonus tracks

  1. Feelings Feelings (Take 10, July 1977)
  2. We Will Rock You (BBC Session)
  3. We Will Rock You (Fast) (BBC Session)
  4. Spread Your Wings (BBC Session)
  5. It's Late (BBC Session)
  6. My Melancholy Blues (BBC Session)
  7. We Will Rock You (Backing Track)
  8. We Are The Champions (Backing Track)
  9. Spread Your Wings (Instrumental)
  10. Fight From The Inside (Instrumental)
  11. Get Down, Make Love (Instrumental)
  12. It's Late (USA Radio Edit 1978)
  13. Sheer Heart Attack (Live in Paris 1979)
  14. We Will Rock You (Live in Tokyo 1982)
  15. My Melancholy Blues (Live in Houston 1977)
  16. Get Down, Make Love (Live in Montreal 1981)
  17. Spread Your Wings (Live in Europe 1979)
  18. We Will Rock You (Live at the MK Bowl 1982)
  19. We Are The Champions (Live at the MK Bowl 1982)

DVD: Queen: The American Dream

Tuesday, October 24, 2017

Judas Priest Confirm Title of New ‘Firepower’ LP, Announce Tour

Judas Priest are calling their upcoming 18th studio album Firepower. They've also announced a series of supporting shows for next year.
 
The appropriately titled Firepower 2018 Tour is set to begin in March. A complete list of dates, cities and venues is below. Pre-sales will begin on Wednesday at 10AM local time; check with venues for additional information.
Firepower, due in early 2018, follows 2014's Top 10 Billboard hit Redeemer of Souls. This new project was co-produced by Andy Sneap and Tom Allom. An engineer on Black Sabbath's first three albums, Allom has a history with Judas Priest going back to the '70s. Their work together includes British Steel, Screaming for Vengeance and Defenders of the Faith.
Allom's most recent project with Judas Priest was the 2009 concert recording A Touch of Evil. Sneap has worked as a mixer and engineer for Megadeth, Slayer and Saxon, among others.
Judas Priest Firepower 2018 Tour Dates
3/13 - Wilkes Barre, PA, Mohegan Sun Arena at Casey Plaza
3/15 - Youngstown, OH, Covelli Centre
3/17 - Uniondale, NY, Nassau Coliseum
3/18 - Washington, DC, The Anthem
3/20 - Newark, NJ, Prudential Center
3/22 - Uncasville, CT, Mohegan Sun Arena
3/25 - Ottawa, ON, The Arena at TD Place
3/27 - London, ON, Budweiser Gardens
3/28 - Oshawa, ON, Tribute Communities Centre
3/30 - Orillia, ON, Casino Rama
3/31 - Detroit, MI, Detroit Masonic Temple
4/3 - Milwaukee, WI, Riverside Theater
4/5 - Green Bay, WI, Resch Center
4/8 - Bloomington, IL, Grossinger Motors Arena
4/10 - Casper, WY, Casper Events Center
4/11 - Loveland, CO, Budweiser Events Center
4/15 - Kent, WA, ShoWare Center
4/17 - Portland, OR, Veterans Memorial Coliseum
4/19 - San Francisco, CA, The Warfield
4/22 - Los Angeles, CA, Microsoft Theater
4/24 - Phoenix, AZ, Comerica Theatre
4/26 - Tulsa, OK, BOK Center
4/28 - Dallas, TX, The Bomb Factory
4/29 - Sugarland, TX, Smart Financial Centre
5/1 - San Antonio, TX, Freeman Coliseum

Sunday, October 22, 2017

Metallica, Ziggo Dome, gig review: Luminaries of metal still manage to inspire with a magnificent spectacle

The most influential band in heavy metal history commence the European leg of their WorldWired tour.

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It’s been over 35 years since a quartet of young, volatile, new wave of British heavy metal fanatics (NWOBHM for short) played their first ever show supporting denim and leather traditionalists Saxon at the Whiskey A Go Go in Hollywood. The four youthful, perma-drunk reprobates were paid a mere $16 for that first show and it’s fair to say that the pay cheque is not the only thing to have changed considerably in the intervening years. From modest beginnings, Metallica went on to conquer the world, achieving bona-fide status as the quintessential household heavy metal band (at time of writing, their 1991 self-titled fifth album, affectionately known as The Black Album, has sold almost 34 million copies worldwide, with sales achieving a healthy plateau of approximately 10,000 a week).
Despite the 21st century being home to the majority of the band’s missteps (the Napster debacle, the Lou Reed collaboration, the 3D concert film) the power of Metallica as a live entity has remained consistently strong over time. Earlier this year, the band revealed their intention to slow down as they near the twilight of their career and play fewer shows, so any opportunity to see them live, particularly in an arena, should be grasped fervently with both hands. Tonight is the third night of the first leg of their European tour in support of last year's long-awaited tenth studio album, Hardwired... To Self-Destruct.
On this run, Norwegian black n’ rollers Kvelertak have the unenviable task of opening up for the elder statesmen of thrash. The initial surprise that came from the sextet’s revelatory mix of black metal, punk and classic rock is beginning to fade with familiarity, although when they pull out the likes of “Mjod”, “Blodtorst” and “Manelyst”, it’s a formula that still proves to be intoxicating. They are inventive and experimental too; “1985”, the lead single from last year’s Nattesferd album, sounds like fellow nordmenn Satyricon covering Ritchie Blackmore’s Rainbow. Whether the world needs such an amalgam is up for debate, but it’s certainly an unusual and innovative blend.
Unfortunately a sound mix that’s muddier than the grounds of your average British music festival waters down the adroit concoction of 1970s rock pomp and metallic blast beats that make the band stand out amongst their contemporaries and as a result, their idiosyncrasies are lost on the majority of this audience. It really is a shame; Kvelertak, more than most, deserve to be given this platform but when hindered with sound as poor as this, nobody new to the band would be able to distinguish them from the reams of identikit bands that pollute daytime rock radio on a daily basis.
To the initiated, it’s clear Kvelertak deserve more than this but credit where it’s due, they perform with incredible relish and vitality, barely pausing for breath between songs; if sound gremlins are bothering the band, they show no sign of it whatsoever. The fact that a band as uncompromising and atypical as Kvelertak are able to support a behemoth like Metallica is something to celebrate. If you want to see them at full power however, go to one of the many headline dates that they have sandwiched in between these shows.
There’s nothing quite as invigorating as hearing the roar that erupts when Ennio Morricone’s The Ecstasy of Gold ushers in the beginning of a Metallica show. The composition, part of the Italian composer’s score for epic spaghetti western The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, has been used as the band’s intro music since 1983. As the lights dim and hairs stand on end, the four horseman file onto the central stage and thunder straight into the title track from last year’s Hardwired... To Self-Destruct, a no-nonsense, three-minute, white-knuckle-tight barnstormer that sounds much more ferocious live than its studio counterpart.
“Atlas, Rise!” follows, with its dual guitar motifs that give the track a distinctly Iron Maiden-esque flavour, but it’s third song “Seek & Destroy”, an old-school riff-spectacular traditionally held back until the end of Metallica’s sets, that makes the entire audience collectively crap their pants with unmitigated joy. Heads continue to bang as the band pile drive into the lumbering, mid-paced and seldom-played “Leper Messiah”, the first of three cuts this evening from their undisputed classic 1986 album Master of Puppets. Despite the fact that the record is 31-years old and roughly two-thirds the age of heavy metal itself, the songs from it sound as if they could have been written yesterday.
There are several things that impress about Metallica’s stage show on this tour. First, and most obvious, is the central staging, whereby the band performs on a raised stage situated on the arena floor with the audience arranged in a 360-degree configuration around them. Arena rock behemoths such as U2, Prince and Muse have all used the in-the-round approach in recent years, but fans of those acts may be surprised to learn that Metallica have been using such a setup since the early 1990s. (Within live music, Def Leppard are generally considered the first band to use an in the round setup for a full tour). Such staging affords everybody in this vast 17,000 capacity arena a decent view and one can’t help thinking that such a setup should one day become the norm as opposed to the exception.
Pyromaniacs may be despondent at the lack of fire and explosions compared to Metallica concerts of the past but they still make appearances during key moments (“Fuel”, “Enter Sandman”) and it doesn’t affect the quality of the show in a drastically negative way. In fact, it’s the subtler moments that prove most successful, including a truly dazzling and hypnotising display that utilises drones during “Moth into Flame”. The group drumming that’s been shoehorned into “Now That We’re Dead” looks more like one of Phil Towle’s unorthodox approaches to psychotherapy than the percussive Stomp-style spectacular one suspects the band are attempting to emulate, but at least it gives the metal legends some room to have fun with something previously unseen at a Metallica show.
Overall, gripes are minimal, but it would be remiss not to air them; describing the material from last year’s Hardwired... To Self-Destruct as poor would be a huge disservice but you would have to be a very generous Metallica fan to sincerely hope that the likes of “Confusion” or “Halo on Fire” will replace set staples such as “Creeping Death” or “Battery” in the long term. That said, there is a balance to be struck; for a band who have railed consistently against becoming a nostalgia act, their set list has seen few major changes in the past 15 years or so. Certain fans will scoff, but it would be nice to hear more cuts from the oft-maligned “hard rock, cropped hair” era. Songs such as “Bleeding Me”, “Hero of the Day”, “The Unforgiven II”, “No Leaf Clover” and “The Outlaw Torn” barely get a look in, despite being vital parts of the Metallica story.
Despite those niggles, Metallica in 2017 are still one of the most thrilling heavy metal spectacles in the world. That the band still manages to perform with extraordinary passion and zeal whilst all approaching their mid-fifties is truly inspiring. Internet trolls who bemoan the fact that they don’t perform with the ferocity or accuracy of their former selves are missing the point; you can’t argue with a band who are able to toss out a holy triage of metal as damn near perfect as “One”, “Master of Puppets” and “Damage Inc” in quick succession (as they do tonight over 21 glorious minutes). Realistically, Metallica will remain a touring unit for the next 10, maybe 15 years maximum. Based on tonight’s performance, people should be grasping every available opportunity to see them before they are no more.