DVD Review: Lynyrd Skynyrd – Pronounced 'Leh-nerd Skin-nerd' & Second Helping: Live From Jacksonville at the Florida Theatre Eagle Rock Entertainment All Access Rating: B+
Lynyrd Skynyrd - Pronounced
Leh-nerd Skin-nerd & Second Helping:
Live from Jacksonville at the Florida
Theatre 2015
The material is strictly "Old Testament" Lynyrd Skynyrd, timeless scripture from the rowdy Southern-rock rogues' first two albums.
Over two shows earlier this year at the Florida Theatre in the band's hometown of Jacksonville, Fla., the congregation in attendance saw a glorious revival of the band's self-titled debut, subtitled "Pronounced Leh-nerd Sky-nerd," on one evening and its sophomore effort Second Helping the next night– the joyous, engaging performances filmed brilliantly for a new live release available on DVD, Blu-ray and digital formats, as well as a DVD/2 CD set available at Wal-Mart.
Both seminal LPs from the early '70s are played with red-blooded passion and carefree panache by the current version of Lynyrd Skynyrd, led by lone original member Gary Rossington, singer Johnny Van Zant – younger brother of Ronnie Van Zant, who died in a tragic 1977 plane crash that decimated the band – and Rickey Medlocke, the blazing guitarist who co-founded Blackfoot.
From the wistful drawl and affecting melancholy of "Tuesday's Gone" and a nostalgic, affecting "The Ballad of Curtis Loew" to rambunctious hell-raisers "Gimme Three Steps" and "Call Me The Breeze," Skynyrd treats these songs as if they were treasured family heirlooms, dusting them off and making them shine and sparkle in an environment that's warm and vibrant. Smooth flowing camera work draws out the strong, defiant personalties and smirking charm always inherent in Skynyrd, no matter the era. Professionally done, albeit with an adoring admiration for Skynyrd's instrumental fire, shots frame and articulate the searing fret work of Rossington and Medlocke, catch Michael Cartellone in the act as he bashes away on the drums and follow the rollicking piano runs of Peter Keys until the party comes to a crashing end. There is cantankerous defiance and sincerity in "Don't Ask Me No Questions," "Simple Man" and "Sweet Home Alabama," and "Free Bird" sounds as transcendent as ever, while rarely performed tracks like "I Need You," "Mississippi Kid" and "Poison Whiskey" are welcomed like prodigal sons reappearing again after long absences.
If at times it seems as if Skynyrd is not as tight as they should be or they're low on fuel, their energy level noticeably waning, none of that detracts from rock 'n' roll that has a pure heart and that is as intoxicating as moonshine and just as potent.
His youthful infatuation with old horror movies continues unabated to this day, and the kid in him still worships at the clawed, platform-soled feet of KISS, whose Kabuki-inspired make-up and carnivalesque stage theatrics never fail to amaze and delight the ex-Marilyn Manson and Rob Zombie guitarist, known for creating his own creepy facial masks.
In a matter of days, John 5 and his band The Creatures – with Rodger Carter and Ian Ross – will kick off the "Mad Monster Tour" with a special show in Ramona, Calif., on Nov. 4. To get tickets, go to www.john-5.com. Some of the dates will be supported by Doyle, the band led by former Misfits member Doyle Wolfgang Von Frankenstein.
Remarkably versatile, with audacious fluency in a variety of genres – having recorded everything from bluegrass and country to Flamenco music and metal, rock and pop – John 5 is a demon on guitar, an incredibly smooth player whose speed is almost supernatural. Along with scoring the Rob Zombie film "The Lords of Salem," John 5 has collaborated with a wide range of artists, working alongside everyone from Ricky Martin to Rod Stewart, David Lee Roth and Lynyrd Skynyrd, in addition to his more well-known gigs with Manson and Zombie.
Since 2004, John 5's burgeoning solo career has yielded eight diverse studio albums spotlighting his virtuoso skill. On "The Mad Monster Tour," John 5 and company will be promoting an upcoming greatest hits album, paired with a live DVD of John in concert. Three brand-new singles will be released, a series that began this month. Recently, John 5 took time out to talk about the tour, how the new Rob Zombie material is coming along and a career that has taken him further than he ever thought possible. (Tour dates follow the Q&A).
How did the tour with
Doyle and his band come about and what are you looking forward to most about
it?
J5: Well, I
always thought Doyle was like a real-life superhero, and I just really think
he’s amazing. He looks like a real-life superhero, like he could fly over a
building and knock it down. You know, he’s got the guitar and he grabs it, and
he’s a great, great musician. So, I always wanted to do something with him; he was my first choice for someone I wanted to do a tour with. And I just said,
“Hey, are you available around this time?” And he said, “Yes,” so it came
together pretty easy and we start the fourth in Ramona, Calif., which is the
San Diego area. And then it’s the Whisky in L.A. So it’s going to be a blast
running through these shows, because it’s all my crazy instrumental stuff and
it’s crazy and it’s fun, and we’ll just go nuts.
Mad Monster Tour poster
When were you
introduced to the Misfits and what were your initial impressions?
J5: Well, it was, like for everybody, just a natural thing. Everybody loves the
Misfits and punk rock. Everybody was just into them. It was just the thing. It
was just how it was. And I loved the horror-rock thing. I’m so into that as
well. So it’s just the perfect fit and yeah, with Alice Cooper and The Misfits
and Ozzy, I love that stuff. It’s fun. It’s a blast. And KISS, of course. KISS,
yeah. It was like monsters with guitars, and when I was 7 years old, I was just
blown away. This was just the greatest thing ever.
Reading your bio, you talked about where you grew up and being the lone rock kid, but did you
have friends who felt the same way?
J5: Oh sure. I
was always the one that had the stuff. Like, I had the first Van Halen when it
came out, KISS Love Gun … I was that
kid that had the stuff. So I think I showed it to a lot of people, but I
remember someone bringing over Kill ‘Em
All by Metallica. I listened to that, and I go, “Oh, wow!” I remember
having times in my life where friends brought over music, and I remember it. I
remember it so vividly, because it made such an impression on me.
Was there one that
made the biggest impression?
J5: Well,
obviously, KISS and Van Halen, because I remember I got the KISS album in the
early years when I was super young. I think Love
Gun had just come out. And I was shocked because I loved that Monsters of
Filmland magazine. And then I loved The Monkees and “Hee Haw,” but when I saw the
monsters of guitars in KISS, I was blown away. I was just like, “Oh my God.
Here we go.” So it just changed my life, and then I remember my guitar teacher
brought over Van Halen I, and it was
just another epiphany. It just changed my life completely.
Kirk Hammett I know
has a massive horror collection. Do you collect horror movie memorabilia?
J5: No, mostly I
just collect guitars … Telecasters. I’m really into that kind of thing, really
into loving my “Teles,” but there’s so much. I mean I have a lot of horror
stuff, but it’s mostly stuff people have given me. And I like that stuff from the
early- and mid-‘60s and ‘70s, when the monster boom really, really happened. So
I like a lot of that stuff. And you know fans give me stuff, so I have quite a
collection, but nothing, nothing, nothing in the world of Kirk Hammett, of
course.
Have you ever seen
his collection?
J5: I haven’t,
but me and Kirk talk, and he’ll tell me stuff, and I’m like, “Jesus,” you know?
And he always says, “You’ve got to stop over and check it,” and all that stuff.
Hopefully, one day I’ll get there.
I wanted to
talk about other stuff going on with you, and you have a greatest hits album
coming out. Did you ever think you’d have a greatest hits album and what goes
into making one? Is there more to it than people think?
J5: Well, yeah.
What it is really is just a collection of my favorite songs. Not one of them
was a hit, but it’s a collection of my favorite songs that I’ve recorded over
my catalog of doing instrumental stuff and the fans’ favorite songs. So
I put them all together, and then I put a DVD with it, which is so cool. The
DVD’s really great, and I’m going to be selling that at the shows, so people at
the shows will be able to get the CD and DVD. And then after the tour you’ll be
able to buy it on my website, and also it’ll be on iTunes, but you won’t be
able to get the DVD, obviously.
So much has happened
over the span of your life to bring you to this point, but I wanted to ask you,
where does the open-mindedness with music come from? Because you do country,
you do all kinds of things. Does that come from your family?
J5: You know, for
some reason, I’ve always appreciated someone who does something really, really
well. And it could be someone that rides a bike and is a bike expert, or
juggles or … I just always appreciate someone who does something so well,
because I know how much dedication and practice it takes. So when I hear some
Western swing music or bluegrass music or great, great, great, great horns, I’m
like, “Wow! That’s amazing.” So I appreciate all of that stuff. I’m so inspired
by anyone who does something really, really well and who is an expert and at
the pinnacle of what they do. And I totally, totally appreciate that. So that’s
where I think a lot of that interest comes from, that they can actually … you
know, the greats. I just am really influenced by people like that.
Is there a style of
music you haven’t worked with yet that maybe you’d like to?
J5: You know,
jazz is such a huge thing, but I’ve never really studied, studied, studied
jazz. I don’t know why. It just hasn’t bitten me yet, but it will. I will get
into it. I think I really love the really super, super fast, aggressive stuff.
Like the bluegrass stuff is so fast, you know. It’s like Slayer with no
distortion. It’s crazy with bluegrass. And then the same thing with flamenco
music, it’s a Spanish style of music. It’s so fast, you know? It’s like Slayer
on acoustic. It’s that kind of thing, and I really enjoy that stuff, but also
I’d like to get into jazz at some point, I believe.
Could you do a
bluegrass version of “Welcome to the Violence”?
J5: Well, that
might be tough (laughs). Yeah, that’s possible.
What impresses you
most in a guitarist or a live performer?
J5: Someone that
is fluid and clean and no effort. It’s just like drinking a bottle of water.
It’s effortless, and there’s a small amount that are really effortless. If you
ever see a classical violinist or piano player, it’s just effortless, you know? I appreciate that, but I also appreciate any guitar player also getting up
there on the stage and doing a great job, because it’s a lot of work and a lot
of stress and a lot goes into it.
What goes into your
live performances? You’ve got the makeup and everything going on. What’s the
day of a performance like for you?
J5: Well, the whole day is about the performance. The whole
thing is prepping. It’s getting your fingers warmed up, it’s doing
meet-and-greets and meeting people, and making sure everything is right. Sound
checks … the day all leads up to the show. It’s very important. I just want to
give fans the best show we can, so it’s just playing, warming up, making sure
the playing is right, getting ready and giving the best show we can. It’s very important
to us with Rob just getting just a great show together, and then we always talk
about the show after the show – make sure this is right, that is right, how we
could make it better. So, it’s great. It’s a great life. I cannot
complain.
I was reading about
your history and you were robbed in L.A. when you first moved there. Did you
ever come close to giving it up?
J5: No, no …
never did. I was so determined and I was so driven and determined. Just
imagine, you get to L.A. when you’re young. I was so young. I didn’t know
anything, and then the first night I got all my money stolen. I didn’t know
what to do. I was lucky I knew one other person, and anybody else; most people would have just gone home and said, “Let me try this in another couple of
years.” But no, I was so driven.
By the same
token, was there a moment when you felt, “I’ve finally made it”? Or were there
many moments like that?
J5: I mean, yeah.
You know, I’m just happy to be playing guitar and making a living, but I never
wished to be a known guitar player. I just wanted to be a session musician, and
this is all just an incredible, incredible gift, because it was too far away. I
never really thought I’d be able to do this, because it was just so like
wishing you were Superman or something. It just seemed so unbelievable. So I
really appreciate it and love it, because it just happened. I’m so happy it
happened, because it was never my goal, it was never my thing to become a
famous rock guitar player.
What influenced you most as far as stage shows
and how you make up your face? Was it a love of KISS or was it more than that?
J5: I use myself as the audience and what
the audience would like to see. I think the audience wants to see a show, they
want to see a … it’s called entertainment. So they want to be entertained, and
it’s just if you put on a show like that – meaning you’re not going to walk
around the streets like that, but if you’re onstage, you’ve got to give them
something to look at. And when we go into our dressing rooms, we’re in our
normal clothes, there’s a couple of camera flashes and stuff like that, but
when we come out of our dressing rooms, when we’re all made up, you can hardly
see where you’re walking because there are so many flashes, because we’re all
made up. Would you want a picture with Ace Frehley with his make-up off or in
his whole get-up? You’d want it in his whole get-up. So that’s why. It’s just a
couple things I think about to say, “Okay. This is what make sense,” because
some people take a different course about it.
Why does it work so
well between you and Rob?
J5: I don’t know.
It’s hard to explain. I really look up to him a lot, because he does so much.
Now a lot of people can do a lot of things, but to finish them and to make them
really great, that’s the hard thing. And that’s what he does. Whatever he
starts, he finishes, and I really like that. He’ll start something and then
he’ll finish it. And that’s what I really like. He’s always finished it, and I
really respect that. We really enjoy the same things. We love the Universal Monsters. We have such a love for those Universal Monsters, those monster
movies, so that’s a great thing. We both have the same hobbies. We love music
and movies, so it’s just like being in a band with your best friend. It’s
amazing.
In what ways were
your experiences with Marilyn Manson and Rob similar?
J5: Well, they’re
both two different animals, of course. With Manson, it’s different every day
and every night, so you never really know what’s going to happen. With Rob,
everything is scheduled – we’re going to meet here, we’re going to do this and
we’re going to do that, and we’re going to be on the bus and here we go. So,
with Manson, you don’t know if we’re going to be backstage until three in the
morning and if we’ll make it in time for the next show. It was that kind of
thing. You know, both are amazing artists, both are amazing performers, so
that’s how they’re similar.
Did that chaos with
Marilyn translate to the live show and make that a different experience?
J5: Absolutely.
Sometimes, we’d play only three songs and we’d be done. Sometimes you wondered
how long you were going to play.
What was your greatest
moment with Marilyn and then with Rob?
J5: Well, that’s really, really tough. You know, the
greatest moment between those two, there’s some many, great, great, great moments
that have happened with both bands. Getting a No. 1 record with Manson, that was
a great moment. Doing the "MTV Video Music Awards," that was a great moment. That
was my very first gig with Manson. Getting awards and getting to play all these
great places, and then having your friends at these great moments, and getting
to travel the world and playing the greatest venues, having great records that
come out and having these great friendships that will last forever. There are
so many great moments, you can’t just limit it to one, because there are so
many and I’m lucky for that.
Of all the projects
you’ve done, was there ever one you went into thinking, “I don’t know about
this,” and then it turned out to be a better experience than you thought?
J5: Well, no,
because I tend to be pretty careful about what I take on. You know, I’m very, very
careful about the reputation of my name, so it’s not like I’ve ever gotten into
a situation where I'm like, ”How am I going to get out this?” No, I’ve never done
that.
I know so many people
have helped you along the way. Rudy Sarzo played a big role in helping your
career. What do you remember most about meeting him that first night?
J5: Well, meeting
Rudy helped me tremendously. He introduced me to Irving Azoff, who is a master
in the music business, and a manager of record people and taught me this, that
and the other thing about the business ... He let me into his
home. He helped me out, and he’s a wonderful, wonderful talent, and taught me a
lot of things. So I owe a lot to Rudy Sarzo.
And you’ve stuck with
people and worked with them over your entire career, like your producer Bob
Marlette.
J5 : Yes. You
know, it’s funny. Everybody I’ve worked with I’m pretty much still in contact
with. Everyone … because they’re good people, and I never leave anything on a
bad note, where it’s like, “Screw you!” So it’s good, because you see everybody
because it’s such a small, small world, and you don’t think you being in this
world of, “Oh, I’ve seen this person. I’ve seen this person. I’ve seen this
person.” It’s wonderful, and I’m so happy that I don’t have any bad blood.
You’ve worked with
some amazing guitar players, too, including Lita Ford. That must have been a
blast for you.
J5: Yeah, it was a blast. I see her every once in a while and
she’s such a great, great, great talent. And she’s a great songwriter, great
performer and singer … luckily, I had the privilege to play with her and play
some songs with her. I really respect her. She’s great.
Probably underrated
as an artist …
J5: Oh sure, she’s
great. And she’s been doing this forever. I mean, The Runaways? Come on … just
awesome. She’s so great. And then all of her solo stuff – what a career.
How did you get this
band The Creatures together?
J5: Well, I was
recording my instrumental stuff. I had recorded so many records, but I never played
live shows. The drummer that I use said, “You should do some live shows.” And I
said, “Well, it’s tough. The Zombie schedule is so busy,” but I said, “I’d love
to do it. We’re going to have to get somebody. Let’s do it. Let’s do some
shows.” I was really nervous because I’ve never done these kinds of shows. I
didn’t know if people would show up, I didn’t know if people were going to
care, I didn’t know anything about it. But we went out there, and it was such a
huge success, and I was so happy. It just really changed my life, and we just
said, “All right. Let’s do this.” And it’s so much fun. I’m so happy that the
drummer, Rodger Carter, kind of pushed me to do this. And it was wonderful. It
really changed my life.
Does it continue to
evolve, this project you’ve got?
J5: Yeah,
absolutely. We’re doing another tour starting in November … we’re just going to
keep doing it, keep doing it, and whenever I have time away from Zombie, I’ll
be able to do this.
What did you enjoy
most about working on the last record working with Rob? Was it different from
any other records you worked on with Rob? Or did you like the songs better and
do you think he’s underrated as a songwriter?
J5: Well, the record we have coming out with Zombie
now, that will come out next year, it is so good. We went up to his place, and
it is very secluded, and there’s nothing out there. There are no distractions –
really, really a great place to make great music, and you really have the time
to live with it. And that’s what I think is very important, because you have
the time to say, “Oh, let’s change this or make this better, or I can play it
like this.” And I think that’s important, because a lot of bands they do these
records and they have to deliver them at a certain time. We took our time and
this record that’s going to be coming out … I mean, the songs are amazing. It’s
great, it’s heavy and it’s just … you know, I was a Zombie fan before being in
the band and this one’s going to be great that’s coming out.
Do you remember
hearing White Zombie for the first time? What did you think of them?
J5: Well, yeah,
it was seeing the video of “Thunder Kiss ’65” … yeah, that was rad. It was the
look, it was the sound and it was just cool. It was just something that you saw
that made you say, “That’s got something special to it.” So, yeah, it was just
a great, great, great thing.
"The Mad Monster Tour" dates:
Nov. 4 – Ramona, CA @ Ramona Mainstage
Nov. 5 – Los Angeles, CA @ Whiskey A Go Go**
Nov. 6 – Las Vegas, NV @ Count's Vamp'd**
Nov. 7 – Phoenix, AZ @ Marquee Theater**
Nov. 8 – Ventura, CA @ Discovery**
Nov. 10 – San Francisco, CA @ DNA Lounge**
Nov. 12 – Orangevale, CA @ Boardwalk**
Nov. 13 – Fresno, CA @ TBD
Nov. 18 – San Antonio, TX @ Sam's Burger Joint
Nov. 19 – Dallas, TX @ Trees
Nov. 20 – Tyler, TX @ Click's
Nov. 21 – Houston, TX @ Scout Bar
CD Review: Huntress – Static Napalm Records All Access Rating: A-
Huntress - Static 2015
Behind the scenes, Jill Janus is dealing with some pretty serious shit, including a cancer diagnosis and myriad mental health issues. She seems to be gaining strength from that which seems hell-bent on destroying her. An imposing female presence in the dark, mysterious underworld of occult-inspired heavy metal, Janus has emerged from the shadows with her band Huntress with the wrathful Static, a Napalm Records outing that's a lean, riff-hungry animal on the prowl for mean hooks, clearly articulated song structures and sinister, gloomy melodies. Taking full advantage of her four-octave range, Janus sings with fierce, commanding strength through heavy, menacing crawls like the title track, "Brian" and the record's smoldering centerpiece "Mania," while "I Wanna Want to Wake Up" grabs hold and doesn't let go and the fast-paced "Sorrow" loves the thrill of the chase. Graduating from the Tony Iommi school of riff creation with honors, Huntress unloads a truck full of them here, all simple and effective, driving such tracks as the awesomely titled "Harsh Times on Planet Stoked" and "Fire In My Heart" straight through hell without stopping. All hail the Huntress! CD Review: Killing Joke – Pylon Spinefarm Records All Access Rating: A
Killing Joke - Pylon 2015
For some, the recent appearance of the so-called "Blood Moon" brought with it a dark foreboding and dire predictions that the apocalypse was nigh. Maybe they were just sensing that a new Killing Joke record was on the way. The four horsemen of metallic post-punk – including shamanistic front man Jaz Coleman, bassist Youth, guitarist Geordie and drummer Big Paul Ferguson – haven't diluted their ominous, fire-and-brimstone warnings in the slightest. An immersive experience layered with electronica and industrial sonic debris and enveloped in the all-encompassing glow of thousands of burning embers, the thrilling Pylon is angry and spiritual, urgent and expansive with deep, echoing vocals and tribal rhythms establishing a connection between the primitive, the divine and a confused, violent modernity. At times an enormous monster intent on devouring whatever gets in its way, Killing Joke's engrossing 16th studio album urgently stampedes through "Delete" and "Autonomous Zone" with slashing guitars and a rapid, pounding heart rate. The thundering intensity of an engorged "Dawn of the Hive" channels its rage through insistent, pummeling drums, and a giant wall of guitars is furiously erected in an icy "New Cold War" that explodes in a feverish crescendo, the track's starry atmospherics mirroring those of an infectious, racing "Euphoria" and the arresting beauty of the cinematic "Big Buzz." Slick and hypnotic, "War On Freedom" drives on with a relentless will, while "New Jerusalem" sets its hooks with slow deliberation, savoring its heavy riffs and menacing grooves. Repent now, humanity.
CD Review: Grave Digger – Exhumation: The Early Years Napalm Records All Access Rating: B+
Grave Digger - Exhumation: The
Early Years 2015
The past is the past, and there's no sense trying to relive it. That is, unless you're German speed-metal champions Grave Digger, who decided to remake some of their '80s classics for a new collection entitled Exhumation: The Early Years. Unremittingly fast and aggressive, Grave Digger charges almost blindly forward with renewed vim and vigor, unwilling or unable to apply the brakes to a runaway train of razor-sharp riffs, searing guitar solos and rhythmic rampages. Old favorite "Headbanging man" sets a violent tone, thrashing about with white-hot intensity. Following suit, "Fire In Your Eyes" and the teeth-gnashing "Witch Hunter" are fast-moving conflagrations that sweep across the land with destructive power, while galvanizing anthems "Heavy Metal Breakdown" and "Stand Up and Rock" and their shouted choruses take unabashed delight in espousing somewhat tiresome metal cliches. Running on pure adrenaline, marauding charges "Get Away" and "Enola Gay – Drop The Bomb" are just as furious and the galloping "Here I Stand" has all the grit and rawness of early Iron Maiden. Although by this time, even the slightest shift in gears or a melodic interlude would be a welcome relief. Running with a pack of contemporaries such as Helloween, Sinner, Running Wild and Rage has kept Grave Digger from growing complacent, as Exhumation: The Early Years illustrates in convincing fashion.
– Peter Lindblad
CD Review: Emerson, Lake & Palmer – Live at Montreux 1997 Eagle Rock Entertainment All Access Rating: B+
Emerson, Lake & Palmer - Live at
Montreux 1997 2015
Directionless and not at all compelling, Black Moon is hardly memorable, a mere footnote in the remarkable career of progressive-rock supergroup Emerson, Lake & Palmer. And its successor, 1994's In The Hot Seat, was an even bigger farce.
The result of an early '90s reunion, these two albums pale in comparison to the inspired genius and audacious virtuosity of seminal prog works Brain Salad Surgery and their self-titled debut, when they concocted a dynamic blend of heavy riffs and classical influences that defied logic and actually made commercial sense.
It's little wonder then that nothing from Black Moon or In The Hot Seat made the set list for ELP's dazzling and edgy, if utterly self-indulgent and irritatingly dissonant, Montreux performance on July 7, 1997. Eagle Rock Entertainment has seen fit to issue an audio-only release of the show on 2CD and digital formats for the first time as a companion piece to the DVD made available in the past. From a lovely reading of the eternally wistful "Lucky Man" and the soft, melodic – if somewhat off-kilter – drift of "Take A Pebble" to the swirling, exuberant camp of "Karn Evil" and the mad energy, rolling propulsion and arty ambition of a 20:50 "Medley: Tarkus/Pictures At An Exhibition," Live at Montreux 1997 showcases the elegance, the barely controlled chaos and insanely epic showmanship of a trio that always possessed incredible instrumental chops.
Rollicking piano and dancing organ salvos firing from the fingers of Keith Emerson abound, but it's the energetic rarity "Creole Dance" – a piece never available on an Emerson, Lake & Palmer studio release – that's the most stunning here, as his sheer speed furiously builds a beautiful nest of notes. The triumphant synthesizers, building drama and flashes of brilliance of "Fanfare for the Common Man" kick off a rousing closing medley of that work along with " ... Rondo / Carmina Burana / Carl Palmer's Drum Solo / Toccata in D Minor" that brings the house down. Montreux seemed to bring out the best in them.
– Peter Lindblad
CD Review: Sevendust – Kill The Flaw 7Bros. Records All Access Rating: A-
Sevendust - Kill The Flaw 2015
Sevendust was built for the long haul, and so are their ardent admirers. A model of consistency, they cultivated a loyal following most bands would sell their souls for, and there's no reason for the long-running hard-rock quintet to give up the ghost now, especially not after just unleashing what might be their finest work in their 18 years together.
Kill The Flaw is the 11th studio album from a hard-rock quintet that could easily have burned out quickly in the '90s after a string of gold albums and incessant touring. There's something to be said for the kind of longevity Sevendust has achieved. Even more noteworthy is that, after all this time, they're still pushing themselves creatively to grow and mature, without losing their identity – a tricky balancing act some of their peers never managed to pull off.
As floods of expansive, winding melodies that no dam could hope to hold wash over the self-produced Kill The Flaw, wherethick carpets of heavy guitars and surging, sculpted grooves decorate mansions of sound, it's the emotionally powerful vocals of charismatic front man Lajon Witherspoon that give each place its heart and soul. Calming the thunder somewhat, Sevendust allows the complex dynamics of "Forget," "Cease And Desist" and "Not Today" to sink their firm hooks into an audience already reeling from the rapturous, ever-widening epics "Thank You" and "Death Dance." The dark crunch of "Letters" plumbs the layered, atmospheric depths of The Deftones, while "Silly Beast" evokes comparisons to the slick, majestic sonic designs of Muse and "Peace And Destruction" and a gripping title track deliver their sincere messages with fierce urgency and strong riffing from guitarists Clint Lowery and John Connolly. Hearing these songs is like being swallowed by an easy chair and drowning in its plush cushions.
Signs of progressing artistry are found all over Kill The Flaw, but it's the easy flow, the clarity and definition of the songwriting here that raise the bar, making for memorable experiences that should absolutely soar in live environments, where Sevendust really shines. Whatever "flaws" there are here are mostly submerged, and if Kill The Flow doesn't break any new ground, it does suggest that Sevendust isn't willing to compromise its vision. And that is why their fan base sticks around.
– Peter Lindblad
DVD Review: Rage Against The Machine – Live at Finsbury Park Eagle Rock Entertainment All Access Rating: A
Rage Against The Machine -
Live at Finsbury Park 2015
Every so often, good does triumph over evil. "Live at Finsbury Park" is a reminder that occasionally the underdog wins, if it's on the side of the angels. Of course, it helps having a force of nature like Rage Against The Machine driving the grassroots campaign behind it.
For those not familiar with the story, a short history lesson. The presumptive Christmas No. 1 hit in 2009 on the U.K. singles chart was bound to be whatever corporate, lightweight pop drivel Simon Cowell's "X Factor" winner had excreted. Then, along came Jon and Tracy Morter.
Tired of seeing Cowell's patronage result in yet another undeserving holiday season score for his formulaic, pandering hit machine, the English DJ and his wife crafted this modest proposal: How about giving Rage Against The Machine's "Killing In The Name" a chance at No. 1? Their indomitable promotional campaign led to a chart upset that wiped that smirk right off Cowell's smug face. The people had spoken. "Killing In The Name" set records for downloading and claimed that top spot on Christmas despite Cowell's prediction that such a travesty would never occur.
And so, in keeping with a promise RATM vocalist Zach de la Rosa made, Rage played a celebratory free concert in the U.K. to express their gratitude and encourage more rebellion against the forces of commerce and tyranny in general. Available on DVD, Blu-ray and in digital formats via Eagle Rock Entertainment, "Live in Finsbury Park" documents in spectacular fashion that blistering performance with some of the most dynamic and exciting cinematography ever choreographed in a concert DVD. Colorful, clear imagery of the band in full throat, leaping about the stage with reckless abandon and wild-eyed energy and laying down infectious, thick grooves for a massive, writhing throng of people, not only flows together logically, but also effortlessly frames the incendiary action from a variety of angles.
A modern-day MC5, with a passionate rapper/singer in de la Rosa spouting socially conscious lyrics through an incendiary delivery, Rage Against The Machine is riveting onstage, hardly taking a breath as they ferociously attack favorites such as "Bombtrack," "Guerilla Radio," "People of the Sun" and "Bullet in the Head" and stomp all over "Bulls on Parade." The tense build-up of opener "Testify" lays the groundwork for the series of explosions that take place over a concise set that includes a furious cover of The Clash's "White Riot," all of it leading up to the grand finale, an overpowering version of "Killing In The Name" that burns the place to the ground.
From the skittering guitar scratchings and other innovative machinations of Tom Morello to the intense bashing of drummer Brad Wilk and the strong currents of menacing, insurgent bass lines of Tim Commerford, Rage is on fire, basking in the moment and exhorting the multitudes not to give up the fight, even as they themselves splinter off in different directions. A short behind-the-scenes featurette, coupled with an interview with the Morters and a booklet full of rich concert photography round out a package of historical importance. Unfortunately, it's also a tease for those who wish Rage was more active and doing this sort of thing all the time.
– Peter Lindblad
CD Review: With The Dead – With The Dead Rise Above Records All Access Rating: A-
With The Dead - S/T 2015
Don't let the crosses and pastoral garb fool you. The members of eerie, occultist doom-metal misanthropes With The Dead are not exactly a pious lot.
Electric Wizard castoffs Tim Bagshaw (guitarist/bassist) and Mark Greening (drummer) make up two-thirds of With The Dead, joining Cathedral's Lee Dorrian, and once upon a time, as legend has it, the two were arrested for absconding with a crucifix off a church's roof, among other transgressions. Not surprisingly then, the harrowing, disorienting journey deep into the dark unknown that is the trio's punishingly brutal and ominously crusty self-titled debut LP, released by Dorrian's Rise Above Records, certainly does disturb the peace in ways that seem unnatural and extraordinary.
Burrowing down into the horrifically gnarly bowels of the sepulchral With The Dead is not advisable for the faint of heart. The further one goes the more hallucinatory the effects, Dorrian's hoary vocals a distant, echo-laden evil always fearful of being buried alive by monstrously heavy riffing crackling with grimy distortion on "Nephthys" and "Crown of Burning Stars." Occasional bridges of clarity and sinister, spare acoustic designs appear in thick, slow-turning dirges "Living With the Dead" and "I Am Your Virus," as With The Dead haunts wide swaths of ruinous, bombed-out sonic devastation and gets lost in the churning blackness and awful dread of "Screams From My Own Grave." Take a flashlight with you upon entering With The Dead and make sure the batteries are charged.
In danger of succumbing to shapeless monotony, as each song seems more turgid than the last, With The Dead almost grinds to a halt by the end, and yet, the album beckons time and time again, revealing more layers than a cursory listen provides. Each breathtaking track seems to be a universe unto itself, requiring deep exploration, even as mammoth implosions cause a series of massive sonic cave-ins from which there is no escape. Much has been made of the fractious relations between Rise Above Records and the Electric Wizard camp, but with this effort, it's clear that With The Dead are moving on to the next plateau. Maybe they'll settle their differences in the afterlife.
– Peter Lindblad
CD Review: Stryper – Fallen Frontiers Music srl All Access Rating: A-
Styper - Fallen 2015
Placing its faith in heavy, crunching riffs and bold, uplifting melodies enveloped in fire-and-brimstone bluster paid off handsomely for a reinvigorated Stryper on 2013's No More Hell to Pay, an album that drew rave reviews from critics once reluctant to pay them any respect whatsoever.
A Frontiers Music srl release, Fallen continues their glorious crusade back to metal relevancy. Holding nothing back in terms of its growing creative aspirations and staying on message with determined zeal, the yellow-and-black attack is increasingly intense and relentless on the mighty Fallen, where high-minded principles and sentiments sometimes clash with righteous indignation.
All of which is found in the epic opener "Yahweh," as storming thrash-metal anger collides with angelic choirs and rousing, uplifting power-metal drama in a tour-de-force production that's as ambitious as anything the Christian metal stalwarts have ever attempted. Driving furiously through fast-paced, gripping tracks such as the Black Sabbath cover "After Forever" and "Till I Get What I Need," Stryper seems to relish throwing off the shackles of its hair-metal past. And when provoked, they can turn downright vicious, passionately pounding the pulpit with thundering sonic authority while condemning Hollywood for its false portrayal of Christians in "Big Screen Lies."
On Fallen, the band's 11th original album, there is darkness and light, with Oz Fox and Michael Sweet trading various combinations of searing, hot-wired guitar licks that seem to take dead aim at Stryper's detractors and Sweet singing with dynamic force and great conviction, as drummer Robert Sweet and bassist Tim Gaines flex their rhythmic muscles. Brawling, weighty guitars grind through the title track, "Pride" and "Let There Be Light," their gnarled hooks gripping tightly to desperate souls seeking salvation, while "Heaven" smolders, "Love You Like I Do" stings with melodic sweetness and the lovely pop-metal ballad "All Over Again" swoons with sighing harmonies.
Without completely reinventing themselves, Stryper has shown that an old dog of an '80s metal band can learn a few new tricks and not lose its identity in the process. There are times on Fallen where it seems Stryper falls back too easily on what's worked for them in the past and becomes formulaic, but for the faithful who've stuck with them through it all, that's probably a comfort.
– Peter Lindblad
CD Review: Michael Monroe – Blackout States Spinefarm Records All Access Rating: A-
Michael Monroe - Blackout States 2015
If romance wasn't actually dead before the release of Blackout States, Michael Monroe may have finally choked the life right out of it with "This Ain't No Love Song."
Kickstarting Monroe's latest album with incendiary guitars and a healthy dose of punk attitude, the rip-roaring anthem makes no bones about Monroe's cynicism toward relationships. Declaring that "there ain't no first dates, there ain't no soul mates," the pride of Finland is fine with being a loner. It's a lifestyle choice he heartily endorses, and the absence of a soul-draining partner seems to agree with him, as the Spinefarm Records release Blackout States continues a run of strong, high-energy rock 'n' roll records from the former Hanoi Rocks frontman. Who needs love anyway if you could be – forgive the hyperbole – the last rock star on earth?
Cultivating a more melodic sound that's slightly looser than its predecessors, the trashy, irresistible power pop of Blackout States dials back on the big, in-your-face production of his last two swashbuckling records and lets the record's sparkling songwriting speak for itself. The result is a more consistent album, with less peaks and valleys, although Monroe and company have plenty of fire in the belly this time around. Infectious, tough and wistful, "Good Old Bad Days," "Goin' Down With the Ship" and a rumbling "Dead Hearts On Denmark Street" are fiery riots of tight hooks and sing-along choruses awash in nostalgia for wilder times and irresponsible behavior. While "The Bastard's Bash" is all swagger and ballsy bravado and "R.L.F" is fast, ramshackle punk on trucker speed, the self-empowering sentiments of "Keep Your Eye on You" benefit from reduced volume and swooning harmonies, while "Permanent Youth" and "Six Feet in the Ground" offer sweet ear candy with razor blades stuck in them.
With bassist and longtime collaborator Sami Yaffa and drummer Karl Rockfist driving this furious engine, and guitarists Steve Conte and newcomer Rich Jones (formerly of the Ginger Wildheart Band and the Black Halos) delivering hot-wired riffs and blistering leads, Monroe has the backing of a band that matches his youthful enthusiasm and rebellious personality. And while Blackout States mines the same old exhausted veins of glam-punk gold Monroe goes back to time and time again, he somehow still manages to find shiny nuggets of the stuff lodged in there.
– Peter Lindblad
CD Review: Operation: Mindcrime – The Key Frontiers Music srl All Access Rating: C+
Operation: Mindcrime - The Key 2015
The sprawling concept album Operation: Mindcrime was indeed Queensryche's finest hour, a grand puzzle of progressive metal full of grandiose arrangements, sweeping drama and intelligent, socio-political storytelling. Queensryche's former singer is hoping some of the magic of his old band's most iconic work rubs off on his latest mission, which bears the same name.
Not so much a band as a collection of hired guns gathered together to help Tate realize his vision, Operation: Mindcrime borrows the talents of Megadeth's Dave Ellefson, John Moyer (Disturbed, Adrenaline Mob), drummers Simon Wright (AC/DC) and Brian Tichy (Billy Idol, Ozzy Osbourne) and seemingly a cast of thousands on the elegant mess called The Key, said to be part one of an epic musical trilogy from Tate and released by Frontiers Music srl.
An enormous undertaking, The Key is ambitious, thought-provoking and cinematic in scope, and the chord progressions, strings and deep bass grooves establish a dark and stylish environment for a series of scenes addressing the question: What would happen if a key was found that could completely alter our perception of the world? The crunching, surging riffs and building drama of "Burn" and "Re-inventing the Future" that follow in the wake of the soaring, orchestral opener "Choice" all suggest the high expectations for The Key were warranted. This is where the engine stalls.
Quickly losing focus, its jumble of interesting ideas never quite pulling off the jaw-dropping tricks its set of musical magicians promise, The Key devolves and flatlines. "Ready to Fly" meanders about without any real sense of purpose or direction, as if sleepwalking through an empty park in the wee hours of the morning. Just as rudderless, the proggy indulgences of "On Queue" and "An Ambush of Sadness" are set adrift instrumentally without any hope of rescue. And choruses destined for greatness end up ineffectual and formless, as is the case with "Hearing Voices," a chunky, heavy riot of Rage Against The Machine-like stomp that ends up stammering like a petulant child.
Still possessing a powerful, expressive voice and a gift for bold theatrics, Tate has time to fix this, with two more acts yet to play out. Getting all these disparate pieces to fit together logically, allowing for greater flow and fewer stumbles, might be his biggest challenge.
– Peter Lindblad
Ross The Boss looks back on landmark punk LP By Peter Lindblad
The Dictators - The Dictators
Go Girl Crazy
If ever an album was deserving of a midlife crisis, it's The Dictators'Go Girl Crazy! Having just turned 40 this year, it ought to be living the high life, and against all odds, it is.
Rather than racing around in expensive muscle cars, sporting a bad comb over and sidling up to trashy, tattooed strippers, telling them dirty, tasteless jokes over 25-cent tappers in vain attempts to wear down their resistance, Go Girl Crazy! –the Rodney Dangerfield of proto-punk records – is finally getting some respect.
"When it came out, people were laughing at us," said Ross The Boss, a founding member of punk trailblazers The Dictators and guitarist of a band that showed everyone from The Ramones to the Beastie Boys how its done. "People were mocking us, laughing at us. 'Ooo hoo, look at that guy with the wrestling outfit on the front cover and the back. What’s going on with this?' You’re talking about cars, girls, surfing and beer and American culture, and we thought, 'Ohhh, yeah!' But it seems as if 40 years later, Uncut magazine votes it No. 1 greatest American punk rock record of all-time. Uncut magazine … yeah. Uncut magazine … greatest American punk rock record of all-time."
Misunderstood almost from birth, The Dictators' seminal debut LP, released in March 1975, had its own special neanderthal, politically incorrect charm that, over time, has ... well, it's grown on us. It was after simple pleasures, and it was a stone gas, honey – just loud, obnoxious rock 'n' roll laced with grabby hooks, irresistible melodies and sun-kissed harmonies, such as those found in "Weekend," "Teengenerate" and "(I Live For) Cars and Girls," and a penchant for goofy humor. Take for example "Back to Africa" and "Master Race Rock," a precursor to Black Flag's "TV Party." Did I mention the political incorrectness?
Primitive, naive and just out for a good time, this was savage, street-wise garage rock played with surprising skill and a wild, brash attitude. It had an appreciation for bad TV, political incorrectness, indiscriminate sex and youthful hijinks and, according to "Two Tub Man," it had "Jackie Onassis in my pants." Oh, and it hated hippies.
"It was amazing. It was our first time, my first time, in the studio.We had absolutely no idea what we were doing, but we had the songs," said Ross The Boss, who later resurfaced with traditional metal heroes Manowar. "We knew what we wanted, and we recorded that record and it’s hanging in the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame. The first thing you see is [Handsome Dick] Manitoba (The Dictators' indomitable front man) stuff, and the band has never been bigger, never been bigger – working harder than ever."
Soon, Go Girl Crazy! will get what it so rightly deserves, that is a proper reissue from CBS Sony. However, on Black Friday, Sony Legacy will release an appetizer of sorts, a 10-inch EP of five songs from Go Girl Crazy! that's entitled the Next Big Thing EP. A special 40th anniversary reissue of the original album is due to follow. Ross The Boss is enthused.
"Andrew W.K. has remixed three tracks. And he asked us to do it," said Ross The Boss. "We dug up the fucking two-track, excuse me. He remixed three songs … amazing remixes. I never thought I’d hear them remixed, and they are reissuing a double CD with alternate takes, odds and sods, that stuff that they found. And now it’s coming out again 40 years later. So now I’ve lived and the tables have turned. So this is going to be a great fall."
The two releases are separate, as the 40th anniversary CD reissue of Go Girl Crazy! will include the full album, plus alternate takes and different mixes.
As for Ross The Boss, he's got more than a few more irons in the fire. His melodic power metal band Death Dealer just released its sophomore album, Hallowed Ground. And there's new Dictators' material on the way.
"So this is going to be a great fall. [Along with] the new Death Dealer, also we’ve written our first new single, The Dictators, without Andy, with the new lineup," said Ross The Boss. "So we’re moving into new territory. And everything is hitting on all cylinders my friend."
There's no rest for the wicked, or Ross The Boss. And his work ethic is stronger than ever.
"I’m honored, I am honored, but at the same time, I wake up and I work my ass off every single day," said Ross The Boss. "I don’t take a day off. So we work on it all the time. And I would say maybe pass that bit of info on to other musicians. Instead of sitting there on their couches every day, waiting and waiting for their break, you can’t wait for it. It’s not coming. You have to go out and get it."
CD Review: Motorhead – Bad Magic UDR All Access Rating: A-
Motorhead - Bad Magic 2015
Soldiering on despite increasingly alarming health issues, Lemmy Kilmister leads Motorhead on another balls-to-the-wall, rock 'n' roll escapade, this one called Bad Magic. Keenly aware of his own mortality, Lemmy – with a little help from his friends – seems intent on going out in a blaze of glory, releasing one fireball of an album after another.
The formula doesn't change. Taking pride in being gritty, fast and ugly, as they always have, Motorhead again goes straight for the throat, and on the UDR release Bad Magic, Lemmy and cohorts Phil Campbell (guitars) and Mikkey Dee (drums) are addicted to the speed of blazing anthems "Victory or Die," "Thunder & Lightning" and "Electricity." It's as if they feel the Grim Reaper hot on their heels, as they race through a more melodic "Evil Eye" and blacken the earth with a scorching "Teach Them How to Bleed," hardly ever stopping to catch their breath.
While the deteriorating effects of age are creeping into his vocals, Lemmy's vile snarl is still vicious and mean, free of any studio or computerized enhancements that might add a synthetic and dishonest youthfulness that would send any Motorhead follower worth his salt into a disillusioned rage. Focus instead on the dogged grooves and hooks of "Fire Storm Hotel" and "Shoot Out All of Your Light" –the latter a powerful squall of dizzying guitars – and get blown away by the big, high-impact chorus and churning riffs of "The Devil." To top it all off, Motorhead brings their leaner cover of The Rolling Stones' "Sympathy For the Devil" back to the street, a rather faithful version that's even tougher than the original. Aside from a fairly standard and lugubrious, if still smoldering, ballad in "Till The End, there's nary a misstep on Bad Magic, where Campbell's solos and leads are absolutely searing and Dee's beat factory working furiously to keep up with orders. Sticking to what works with determination and editing out the fat, Motorhead still has that old black magic.
– Peter Lindblad
Maybe it'll be their cataclysmic firestorm of a sophomore effort, Hallowed Ground, that kicks open the door for these ferociously rugged, melodic heavy-metal mercenaries, thrown together by fate to wage war against musical charlatans that dishonor everything metal stands for.
It's happened before for the guitarist, a founding member of the testosterone-fueled, epic metal heroes Manowar, as well as The Dictators, whose 1975 debut album The Dictators Go Girl Crazy was recently deemed by Uncut magazine as the "Greatest American Punk LP" of all-time.
"I have a feeling I right now like I had in 1981, like before (Manowar's first LP) Battle Hymns came out," said Ross The Boss. "I mean, I have that kind of a feeling. People don’t know what’s about to hit. And I have that feeling, and I hope it does. It took Manowar a while before everyone realized how original it was, and I have that same feeling. I’m confident about Death Dealer. Otherwise, I wouldn’t be in it. I’m not into a slog. That’s not what I want to do. I’m into doing positive, good work."
Appetites whetted for Hallowed Ground by the powerhouse debut album Warmaster, as well as the fiery video for the song "Break The Silence," seen below, Death Dealer – featuring fellow guitarist Stu Marshall, vocalist Sean Peck, bassist Mike Davis and drummer Mike Bolgnese – has designs on world domination, even if such grandiose dreams seem far-fetched in this day and age. With a force of nature like Ross The Boss in the fold, however, anything seems possible.
Soon, Death Dealer will make landfall after being a part of Motorhead's Motorboat Cruise, which also included Anthrax, Exodus, Suicidal Tendencies, Hatebreed, Slayer and Corrosion of Conformity. Then comes the business of reaching mass audiences with extensive touring.
Made up of veterans from metal acts like Lizzy Borden, Rob Halford and Cage, not to mention Ross The Boss's impressive credentials, Death Dealer is ready for the next level, as Hallowed Ground blends aggressive speed metal, ambitious orchestrations and pulse-pounding bombast in an explosive package. Ross The Boss talks about Death Dealer and the highlights of his career in this interview:
What do you have
going on now that the album is done?
RTB: The album’s
done. It’s coming out Oct. 2 on SMG, Sweden Music Group. Our video dropped last
week. We have 12,000 hits on it, and we’ll just roll along.
How happy are you
with the recording?
RTB: Absolutely
thrilled with it. Once we finished the first record, after Warmaster, our first record three years ago, we started … well
actually before, it was like two and a half years ago. Once we finished with
that, we started writing immediately for the second record. So we’ve been
living with these songs for quite a bit. I mean, we did the Metal All-Stars
arena tour. We opened for that, which I was a part of. I was an All-Star. And
so I was opening for myself. The band really became a true band, played in
front of 80,000 people, so we worked on these songs and we’re so very happy
with it. I mean, our songwriting really matured, I think. It’s the
natural evolution of things, and here we are waiting to release the second
record.
Maybe you already
answered this, but in what ways does Hallowed
Ground build off what you did with Warmaster?
RTB: Well, as I
said, it’s just the natural evolution of music. It’s deeper, it’s … well, you
know, everybody says it’s better, but I think this actually is better. Not to
belittle a really good debut, but the songwriting has more rounded approach.
You obviously haven’t heard it?
No, I have. I love
it. I really like the production of it. I think the production … man, it hits
you.
RTB: It does hit
you. It’s loud. It’s clean. I’ve actually had someone say that it’s too loud.
Really?
RTB: Yeah, I go,
“What?” I mean, you live long enough you’re going to hear everything in this
world. I don’t know. It’s too loud for a heavy metal fan. I mean, people pay
hundreds of thousands of dollars to get it like that. I don’t know. I’m braying
with smoke coming out of my ears, I don’t know (laughs).
Death Dealer - Hallowed Ground 2015
Was it an easier
process this time around, or were there difficulties you encountered?
RTB: No, actually
no. The songwriting … Death Dealer is a song-rich environment. I
mean, when you have actually three guys that can really write songs, and then
Mike and Steve, they’re going to start, I mean we’re dealing from strength
here. These ideas … we have stuff for the third one already. It just
never stops, the process of songwriting for us. It’s an amazing thing because
if I send a riff to Stu, and he’s in Sydney, Australia … if I send a riff to
him, I don’t even have to play it. I show it to him … "Play it like this, right?" And he does like eight bars, 16 bars, and then, all of a sudden, he writes a part
to it, another part. So then we have that part. He does the demo, and we can
have a demo that sounds like that album, Hallowed
Ground. We have that, he masters it, and he has the whole thing. So, we’re
already hearing it like people are hearing our music on our CDs, so that really
rushes up the creative process. And then Sean gets it in a nanosecond and he’s
on it. And everybody stores their stuff. Everybody passes everything along, and
I think it’s an even better process of writing songs than if you’re in the same
room.
I was going to ask
you about that. You obviously like doing it this way, but because everybody
talks about the immediacy of recording live in the studio, and how that sounds, do you get that still with this method?
RTB: Well, we would love to be together all the
time as a band practicing. Would we love to say, “Let’s go practice and knock
shit out?” Of course we want that. Everybody wants that, but in today’s world,
today’s day and age, I mean not many guys live in the same spot, except The
Dictators, who are all from the same city. So bands that live apart, it’s the
only way to go. It’s the only way to do it. And we’ve mastered that. We have it
down to a science where everyone … and Stu’s in Australia, so his time zone is ... forget it. So we manage to do Skype with the whole band, so everybody’s on the
same plane with the songs, everybody’s contributing. Mike and Steve contributed
greatly to the arrangements and all the stuff that has to go down to it.
There’s no “I” in Death Dealer, so … I mean, the proof’s in the pudding.
One of the best songs
on the record is “Break the Silence,” and you did a cool video for it. Talk
about the making of video and the recording of that track …
RTB: We were in
Europe last month on our tour. We had festival shows, promotional stuff. So we
drove up to northern Sweden to our director’s house, Owe Lingvall. And he had
everything set up. It was unbelievable. We got there and it was like, flame
towers, flame throwers, drones … he had drones ready to go. I mean, this was …
those giant lighting things, I mean it was quite a nice production to this
video. And flame everywhere like you wouldn’t believe. He’s one of the finest
directors in the business. I mean, the result is obvious. I think the video is
just incendiary (laughs).
It matches the song.
RTB: Uh huh. No,
really. I mean, we’re really happy with the final product. He puts his name on
something and it’s really great. SMG loves it, everybody
loves it. So far, the 12,000 hits we got love it. We want to make that 12,000
into 120,000. That’s the goal of the band. When we’re at 120,000, this band is
going to be all over the world, and I truly believe that is going to happen.
What guitar parts are
you most proud of on the record? I really like the guitar work on “Total
Devastation” – great power, speed and a variety of leads.
Death Dealer consists of guitarists
Ross The Boss and Stu Marshall,
bassist Mike Davis, singer Sean Peck and
drummer Steve Bolgnese
You’re quoted in the
press materials as saying, “ … this is what metal should sound like.” Between
Death Dealer and Manowar, you’ve been responsible for shaping and influencing
heavy metal. What’s different about the metal you’ve made with Manowar and
Death Dealer, as opposed to the metal of today’s artists? What are they
missing?
RTB: Well, I
think that the accent on songwriting, the accent on divergent, diverse
songwriting. I mean, you could listen to our stuff and we’re really not
repeating ourselves. Some bands have like their songs, their main song, that’s
1A. And then they start going to 1B, 1C, 1D … it’s like the same song. They’re
repeating themselves through the whole CD and the ideas get very tired. I mean,
I’ve heard some really good records, but I don’t think a band can sustain a
record like we have on 13 tracks here.
There’s a real
rawness and power, not to mention great hooks, to songs on Hallowed Ground like “K.I.L.L.,” “The
Anthem” and “Break The Silence,” and a galvanizing energy and spirit to “I Am
The Revolution.” And then there’s the speed of “Plan of Attack.” There’s a lot
of variety to Hallowed Ground, but to
me it’s the aggression and energy that really stand out. How would you
characterize the album?
RTB: Oh, there’s
absolutely an incredible energy level to Hallowed
Ground. People compliment us a lot on our live show saying, “That’s the
highest energy band I’ve ever seen.” And then people are mentioning how high
energy it was. The band is high energy, right from the get-go. We are a high-energy machine. It’s incendiary. That’s what it is. We are that. You can’t deny
it.
How did you guys get
together?
RTB: Well, about three and a half years ago, I get
a message on Facebook from Sean Peck, who I knew. I wasn’t very familiar with
Cage, because I don’t listen to a lot of other bands. I never did. So I get
this call from him and he goes, “Ross, I really admire you and what you’ve
done, and blah, blah, blah, and I’m putting this thing together with this guy
Stu Marshall, who’s this really great guitar player, and we’re interested in
having you play on a couple of songs." And you know, we took it as far as that.
“Okay, all right. Send me some songs then.” Okay, and then the next day, I get
a message from Stu. And it was like, “Oh hi, mate. Battle Hymn is my favorite.
It really changed my life,” and all that. And he goes, “You can’t believe how
influential all that stuff was,” and I go, “Okay. Great.” And he said, “I’m
working with Sean and I think we either want you or K.K. Downing (laughs).” And
I said, “What? Huh?” He said, “You or K.K. Downing.” And I said, “Okay, all
right. I’m very interested.” So later, after about an hour, I get some tracks,
unfinished tracks, and I go, “This is incredible. This is really incredible.” It
took me a day, and I said, “I’m in. I’m in with this. Whatever you guys do, I’m
in.” And so Sean gets back on the thing and says, “Well, we have the name of
the band set, and we have a bass player, we have a drummer, blah, blah, blah …”
Sean is just so flipped on this, and I go, “Wow!” And then we started working
on the songs. It was great, and the rest is history.” And in three years, we’ve
taken the band from idea to completing Warmaster
to opening for the Metal All-Stars on the arena tour, to doing all the other
stuff, getting a label, putting it all together – SMG is putting it out Oct. 2
– to doing three tours to doing the video. In three and a half years, this is
what we’ve done. We self-financed the first record, but not this one, so I
think … it’s good, it’s good.
I know it’s a whole new world out there, but have you found
that you’ve been able to build an audience the same way you used to or are you
having to go to different avenues?
RTB: Well, it’s
not as easy as it once was. I mean, bands … if they want be on a big tour they
have to buy on, which SMG is going to do for us. In one way, you’ve got the
Internet helping, which spreads the word faster, but you really need to get out
there and win over heads and turn heads, which we’re going to do. We’re doing
the Motorhead boat tour Sept. 28, which has a thousand people on it. We’re
excited to do that. The whole plan is just being laid out, but it’s a different
world we live in.
Have you done a boat
tour before?
RTB: Uh, no.
What are you most
looking forward to with it?
RTB: I am looking
forward to it. Hanging with Lemmy. Hanging out with my friends in Anthrax. It’s
going to be great. It’s got to be great. It’s a load of fun.
Yeah, because you worked on Anthrax’s demo,
producing it.
RTB: Yeah, I got
them their first kind of deal and all those Marshall cabinets, and really
helped out.
What did you think of
the band back then?
RTB: I thought
they were great. I mean, I liked their ideas. I thought their energy was … I
could definitely relate to that. I liked their songs, and Neil Turbin and Danny
Lilker, the other guitar player. It was cool.
Did you believe that The Dictators Go Girl Crazy, which turns 40 this year, had a lot of commercial potential at the time?
RTB: Coming out?
Yeah.
RTB:Go Girl Crazy? Yes, I did. You bet. I
thought songs like “Weekend” and “Cars and Girls” definitely could make it on
the radio, but the radio was so screwed up with Boston and Foreigner and all
this other stuff that was coming out then that … I mean, I thought good American
records, good American rock ‘n’ roll would always win out, but CBS couldn’t
figure it out at the time, you know. There were no visionaries there. It was
just, it’s got to come out and sell … typical story, but strange,
though. How many records from back then are still being hailed as great
records? Not many. The Dictators Go Girl
Crazy has just got legs. It’s got a life of itself. It’s got a super cult
following, and people have responded. And finally, people are saying this is the No. 1 greatest American punk rock
record of all-time.
That’s amazing,
considering all the great punk records that came out. You guys really were
influential.
RTB: Yes. I mean,
I would say that, as in Manowar, all the original fans became musicians that had bands and made records, especially with The Dictators. So
many people around the world that got into Go
Girl Crazy when it came out were all musicians, like Radio Birdman, The
Ramones, and all these bands from all over the world. Yeah, so the band was
really influential.
Going back to the
origins of The Dictators, what brought the band together and what were early
rehearsals like?
RTB: Oh, well, we
created the band up at state college in SUNY New Paltz. After high school, we
were all pretty much not going to college (laughs) … going to college, but not
going to college at the same time, like “Animal House.” That was exactly what
it was, and New Paltz was like the No. 2 party school in the country. It was
insane, and it was that kind of environment, and I was in a band called Total
Crud in New Paltz. It wasn’t that good, but it was wild. And Andy Shernoff was
there and going to New Paltz, and he goes, “Listen, do you want to form a band?
Do you want to form a band?” And I go, “Yes.” Yeah, and I said, “Yeah.” And he
was a rock ‘n’ roll journalist, writing rock reviews. And he had his own
fanzine, Teenage Wasteland Gazette. (Laughs) And he said, “Let’s start a band.”
So Andy and I started The Dictators, and we got Scott (Kempner) and we found a drummer up
there and kind of was messing through it – couldn’t play worth shit, except me,
actually. But he had a bunch of songs, and we kind of got the band together.
Manitoba wasn’t the lead singer yet. He was our breakfast chef (laughs). So
Richard Meltzer was Andy’s friend, a rock writer, and Meltzer’s buddy, Sandy
Pearlman, was managing the Blue Oyster Cult. And he got Sandy to come up and
see the band. And Sandy fell in love with us and that was it. We went down to
New York. We recorded a demo and we were signed to CBS.
What was it like
working with Sandy Pearlman and Murray Krugman.
RTB: Well, very
interesting guys, I can tell you that. They have very different production
values than what I was using. I don’t know. They had some very strange things
that they did in the studio, but it seemed to work out. Sandy just had his way
of doing things. I mean, I worked with Sandy on a lot of records, including
Shakin’ Street. Listen, when you’re
working with a producer like that – and he did The Clash – when you’re working
with a producer like that, it’s what he wants. He was good with us in that if I
suggested something to him, he was definitely into it, but he definitely had
his own vision (laughs).
Did that clash with
what you wanted?
RTB: Sometimes,
sometimes … yes – especially working with Mark Mendoza. Oh my God. Oh my God.
Like when we heard Manifest Destiny
in San Francisco, we wanted to kill him. The whole group said, “We hate this. Go fuck
yourself, and we hate you.” You know what that did? Nothing (laughs).
What is your favorite
Dictators record?
RTB: Mine is Blood Brothers – just because the band
was more musically together, and we had a real drummer. I can imagine
if we had Richard Teeter for the first record, I think the band would have been
superstars. Seriously, but that’s the way it is. We were who we were. It is
what is. And it hasn’t died. It lives bigger and better.
What was the New York
City music scene of the early 70s like? Describe some of the places you played
back then.
RTB: What was the
early scene like?
Yeah, was it pretty
gritty? I imagine it was.
RTB: When we got
down to New York in ’74, and there was really nowhere to play. There was a
place here in Queens called The Coventry, where KISS was playing and the Dolls
would play. No Max’s Kansas City yet. No CBGBs yet, but there were other bars
to play at. There was Popeye’s in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn. That’s where
Manitoba sang for the first time – got up on stage and sang “Wild Thing.” It
was like a dead Tuesday night, and the bums were there and we’re playing.
Here’s an interesting story. We’re there, and we’re just playing along. Andy
was the lead singer, and people are going, “Yeah, they’re nice. They’re good …
The Dictators … yada, yada, yada.” You know, it’s like, Manitoba was our
roadie, but he was a terrible roadie, because he was breaking signs and shit.
In the clubs, he was back and just destroying shit. So they couldn’t keep up.
That couldn’t keep up, because we couldn’t afford it, breaking awnings and
stuff. So we go, “Richard, you want to sing a song with us?” Looking up, he’s
drunk and shit. And I go, “Well, what song do you know?” And he goes, “Well, I
know ’Wild Thing.’” Oh, okay. We know “Wild Thing.” So we proceeded to do “Wild
Thing,” and he started singing, and every bum, every person in the club, their
heads perked up. It was like, “What the fuck was that? Who was that? What the
hell?” The reaction he got was shocking. It was shocking that he woke this
whole club up like the place was on fire. And after that, I go, “You know what?
I think we found our lead singer.” So that night, at Popeye’s in Sheep’s Head
Bay, Handsome Dick Manitoba was born. And, you know, a guy from Blondie was
there … the guitar player?
Oh, Chris Stein …
RTB: Yeah, Chris
Stein. Yeah, he was there and Eric Emerson. But now, of course, everybody says
they were there. You know, like Game 6 of the World Series with The Mets.
Everybody was there, and everyone was at Woodstock, too, but it was an amazing
night.
Talk about meeting
Joey DeMaio for the first time. How did the idea of forming Manowar come about?
RTB: Okay. Shakin’ Street was supporting Black
Sabbath on the first Ronnie James Dio tour, and their comeback was playing in
Manchester … one of those cities. And Ronnie Dio comes up to me and goes, “Oh
Ross, I love your guitar playing. I love the history of The Dictators and New
York rock. I love it.” And I go, “Well, thank you.” And I’m like Ronnie Dio … love it! He goes, “Great fan of yours.” And I
say, “Thanks. Thanks, Ronnie.” He goes, “Oh, by the way. You should check out this
guy Joey on our crew. He plays bass. You should check him and check each other
out.” And I go, “Okay.” So the next thing I know, Joey and I are like in Black
Sabbath’s dressing room when they’re on making music and going through ideas
and stuff like that. So, as the days went on, we decided that I was going to
leave Shakin’ Street, issue my replacement and we were going to go off the road
and form [Manowar]. And I already had a guy on EMI that really wanted to
do a project very badly with me, Bob Curry, who was a friend, a personal
friend, and a very great guy. So that was the stage for Manowar.
The music of Manowar
was pretty different than that of the Dictators. What excited you most about
the potential of Manowar and what attracted you to play metal?
RTB: Well, it was
different. Culturally, it came from a different place. It was Norse mythology,
Wagnerian moments, street rock and roll, of course, and me, and it was
different. I don’t think anyone else was doing stuff like that. We were ready
from the beginning. We had the epic songs. “Dark Avenger” that I had written,
and Joey had “Battle Hymn,” so it was different. No doubt about it. It was
different. I mean, Judas Priest and Iron Maiden weren’t writing songs like
that.
What were the early
days of Manowar like? What were the shows like? Were you received well from the
start by audiences, or did it take time for them to get what you were doing?
RTB: Yeah,
wherever we played we were … yeah, because no one else would play with us.
Why was that?
RTB: Because
that’s just the way it was. Whitesnake said, “Well, you can come out with us,
but you can’t wear your clothes. You have to be in jeans." And we said, “No
way.” And it’s like, we kind of did it to ourselves: “We’re the best, we’re the
loudest, we’re the fastest … we’re this, we’re that. ‘Death to false metal.’”
We kind of made it like a members-only club. And as much as it helped the band,
it hurt the band. We had big mouths.
Talk about some of
the Manowar albums, starting with Battle
Hymns. What was recording that like, especially compared to your work with
The Dictators?
RTB: Oh, well. We
were still doing everything in the studio together. We were very, very
well-rehearsed. And you know, Criteria Studios (Miami, Fla.), it was basically the same –
get everything set up, mic everything up and go through takes. It was the same.
It was the same up until Fighting The
World.
But you got Orson
Welles on that record …
RTB: Yeah, Orson
Welles did the first record, right. Our manager … well, Bob Coury from the
label found his manager. He was living in Las Vegas, he was going to be in New
York for a couple of days, and we sent him the lyrics, and he absolutely loved
it. He agreed to do it, it was the coup of a lifetime, and amazing. It was an
amazing thing that happened to me, and it was Orson Welles.
Was Into Glory Ride another step up from that
record?
RTB: Well,
listen. By the time of the Into Glory
Ride period, we’d gotten dropped from EMI. They gave us a buyout, and from
the money we got from the buyout – because EMI and Liberty Records, Kenny Rogers’ label, had
absolutely no idea what we were doing; I mean, they couldn’t relate to us – so
with the money we got from the buyout, we recorded Into Glory Ride, and it was the most hateful, angry we could come
up with. And that was Into Glory Ride, and that’s what it is – another record
that still stands the test of time.
And so does Kings of Metal. Did that really feel
like the pinnacle for you guys?
RTB: Well, it was
the pinnacle recording it. And then, of course, Joey thought it was a good
decision to ask me to leave right before the release of Kings of Metal. So I put that in like the top two of the worst moments in rock ‘n’ roll: Mick Taylor quitting the Rolling Stones and
Ross The Boss leaving Manowar before Kings
of Metal. Like maybe after that tour? You know … it totally put that band
into confusion.
Was there ever a
reason given?
RTB: Yeah, we
weren’t getting along … blah, blah, blah. But there was no reason for that, no
reason for that. We could have worked out our problems, but a certain someone
needed complete control – complete control of the money, complete control of
everything – and he wanted to work with a band of puppets. I wasn’t about to be
a in a band of puppets, so …
What seems to me to
tie Death Dealer, Manowar, and The Dictators is a real sense of integrity and
that really comes through. You’re really making music that’s true to that
genre. Is that kind of the sense you get to?
RTB: Well, that’s what we have to do. Only the
true bands will go through. A band that’s full of shit will be outed easily.
They will be outed. Like an all-star band, like a one-off tour … some of the
songs, light songs. You know what I’m saying. Our music, all that stuff was
from the heart back then, and to this day now. It’s just the way it is. We put a lot of effort and love and work into our music and it shows. It
showed between ’82 and 1988 and it shows now, and it showed on my two solo
records, too.
Outside of those main
two bands, what are some of your other favorite projects?
RTB: The Ross The
Boss band – New Metal Leader and Hailstorm I think are very, very fine
records. We had a band called The Spinatras, and we did a record for CMC, which
no one knows about because they just went to hell, the label just went to hell,
but they gave us a whole bunch of money. The Spinatras were good, my work with
the Brain Surgeons – Albert Bouchard from BOC … there’s a lot of them.
Any of those records
you feel should have gotten more publicity than they did?
RTB: The
Spinatras for sure. There was some real strong songs on that record.
With everything
you’ve got going on, what are your hopes for The Dictators going forward and
Death Dealer?
RTB: Well, The Dictators are getting bigger and bigger. Our
tours are getting more well-attended. The single’s coming out. We’re going to
have it for November. We have 12 shows in New York for November, ending in the
Eindhoven Speed Fest [in The Netherlands]. And you know, as far as Death Dealer, we have
the [Mothorhead] Motorboat cruise, and the day we get off the ship, our album is going to be
released on the second of October, and we’ll take it from there. I mean, I’m
sure it’ll start attracting a lot of heads. I think 2016 is going to be an
incredible year. I mean, if it’s not, something’s really off on this planet,
but I think we’re setting ourselves up – both bands – and I got the Titans of
Metal in Israel on Dec. 17 with Sean Peck and the girl from Nightwish, and Uli
Jon Roth and the two guitar players from Mercyful Fate, and all this. So we’re
going to do that, Tel Aviv and Cyprus on the 17th and 18th
of December. So I’m kind of busy, you know. Things are all really going to be good,
but Death Dealer and The Dictators for 2016, put your money on it.