EDGUY frontman Tobias Sammet‘s all-star project, AVANTASIA will release their new rock opera, The Mystery Of Time, on CD and vinyl in March.
The Mystery Of Time marks a conceptual story again, and the tracklist reads as follows:
‘Spectres’
‘The Watchmakers’ Dream’
‘Black Orchid’
‘Where Clock Hands Freeze’
‘Sleepwalking’
‘Savior In The Clockwork’
‘Invoke The Machine’
‘What’s Left Of Me’
‘Dweller In A Dream’
‘The Great Mystery’
In other news, another guest star has been revealed: legendary former DEEP PURPLE, RAINBOW and YNGWIE MALMSTEEN vocalist Joe Lynn Turner will appear.
Turner joins a big list of guest stars such as: Arjen Lucassen (AYREON), Biff Byford (SAXON), Michael Kiske (UNISONIC, ex-HELLOWEEN), Bruce Kulick (ex-KISS, ex-MEAT LOAF), Russell Gilbrook (URIAH HEEP), Ronnie Atkins (PRETTY MAIDS), Eric Martin (MR. BIG) the German Film Orchestra Babelsberg. More musicians will be announced soon! In April an all-star ensemble will set off on a world tour, playing three-hour indoor shows on their own plus a few chosen festivals.
Shows in Amsterdam (details here) and Spain have been scheduled for May and June. Avantasia’s complete routing is available at this location.
Source: Bravewords.com
The first festival screening for Street Of Dreams, the documentary from Gammaglimt AS Studio, in which we follow Jan Erling from Norway as he gets his first real chance of a major breakthrough on tour with his childhood hero, JOE LYNN TURNER, will be held at the prestigious Trondheim Dokumentarfestival on November 29th.
The documentary follows Jan Erling on his ups and downs to see if his dream of becoming a rockstar will be realized or if he has to go back to his former job and a anonymous life in his wooden house by the fjord.
Complete details on the Trondheim Dokumentarfestival can be found here.. More info on Street Of Dreams here.
According to MelodicRock.com, legendary singer Joe Lynn Turner (pictured below; RAINBOW, DEEP PURPLE, YNGWIE MALMSTEEN) is rumored to be putting together a new supergroup. This time he is apparently hooking up with drummer Carmine Appice (KING KOBRA, VANILLA FUDGE, OZZY OSBOURNE, BLUE MURDER) and bassist Michael Anthony (CHICKENFOOT, VAN HALEN), with a guitarist yet to be announced. The group plans to write and record new music in the vein of classic ’70s rock artists such as FREE, BAD COMPANY, LED ZEPPELIN and DEEP PURPLE.
Obi-Dan from Geeks Of Doom spoke with legendary singer JOE LYNN TURNER recently about a number of topics. A few excerpts from the chat follow:
Geeks of Doom: A lot of people have talked about their troubled relationship with Ritchie Blackmore, but how did you get on with him?
Joe Lynn Turner: “The only difficulty we had once was we were going to have a punch out and we threw everybody out of the dressing room and we were staring at each other, glass of scotch in hand, yelling, ‘Fuck you!’ All of this kind of stuff. I said, ‘You want to hit me? Go ahead but you better take your best shot because I’m coming back (at you).’ It just kind of ended into a drinking session and talking it out and everybody was against the door kind of listening, I’ll never forget that; it was like a comedy and we ended up laughing hysterically about the whole thing and because of what jerks we were and how foolish we were about things! We thought about it: what’s the problem here? You’re the singer, you’re the guitar player. There’s no problem here, you’re doing a different job than I am. We got along great, I can honestly say Ritchie and I had a very frank, honest relationship. He had said to me, ‘I don’t like to get too close to people’ and we’re drinking again and I said, ‘I know that this will come to an end at some point.’ …but I think there were evil forces at work beneath this. I was surprised (at) the Stranger In Your Ass album or whatever it is (laughs – referring to the final Rainbow album Stranger In Us All) because he had promised me to do a third Rainbow album and I thought it would have been brilliant just three, done. Except for the EPs and all that other crap and that would have sort of rounded out the trilogy, that would have been great. I was a little surprised but in getting friendly with Doogie (White, lead vocals on Stranger…) …Doogie kept telling me that he kept saying, ‘Sing it like Joe Lynn Turner, sing it like Joe Lynn Turner would sing it!’ (laughs)”
Joe Lynn Turner
Geeks of Doom: From Rainbow you worked with Yngwie Malmsteen, who is another ‘character’…
Joe Lynn Turner: “Oh isn’t he?! I love him to death, though. He’s so crazy. I’ll tell you in one simple way we made up tour shirts that on the front said ‘you can’t intimidate me’ and on the back said ‘I toured with Yngwie’! (laughs) He puts you through the ringer. He put everybody through the ringer and as Nietzsche says ‘what does not destroy me makes me stronger’ and I think that’s how we all came out: much stronger individuals, much more knowledgeable. Psychotic, but knowledgeable! Look, Yngwie’s a brilliant guitarist, I’m not going to take that away from him. He’s got the gift. He said he saw the schematics of everything in his mind before he even did it. I think I brought him out quite a bit, I think we had the best album of his career, probably one of the best of mine. I mean we really had some magic going on and I was just disappointed that we didn’t do at least a second one, I thought that could have been even more brilliant. But he’s a tough guy to get along with and he seems to feel that he has to control everything and I think by witness of the Odyssey album that he doesn’t have to control it…and it’s just a cornerstone album that I think many people still have in their libraries because how do you get much better than that? The combination between his style, playing, song content, commercial content for Christ’s sake; it’s not a dirty word…it used to be a dirty word and I still can’t understand why. The same thing with Purple, the whole idea with that was to make Purple a bit more commercial but yet still retain Purple and I think we did that (on the) Slaves and Masters album.”
Geeks of Doom: When you joined Yngwie and Purple and Rainbow you were joining well established bands. You not only seemed to fit in well, but your arrival often triggered their most successful period.
Joe Lynn Turner: “Well how about that! Thank you, I’ll take that as a compliment…I took enough shit for it, you know, in the press and I had to prove myself. I remember somebody saying once ‘You know you’ve got some big shoes to fill’ and I said ‘I’m going to make my own footprints.’ I was arrogant about it because in those days you had to be because if you weren’t arrogant about it and strong and had that fire of desire to do this thing you were going to be crushed, just crushed. I think that I had to have that, I think that also sharpened my skills and also gave me a bit more of a pointed direction because I had so much coming down on me. When you’re on the pitch if it’s not a pressure game you could relax…you always try your best but when you’re under pressure and it’s in the finals you really got to show your stuff. It was the fact that I was always in the finals with these bands because they were well established, legendary or whatever, even Yngwie he was this gifted guitar player. Somebody had to come up and it was me…Yngwie he was jealous in my opinion of that, he really felt put out which I can’t understand because again just like Ritchie and I figured out: you’re the guitar player, I’m the singer. It’s Plant and Page, it’s Mick and Keith; it’s what rock and roll was always made of.”