Peter Iwers

All posts tagged Peter Iwers

Source: Bravewords.com

IN FLAMES bassist Peter Iwers spoke with The Front Row Report during the band’s recent North American tour in support of their latest album, Sounds Of A Playground Fading. Check out the audio interview below:

As previously reported, in a new video interview with Montreality, In Flames frontman Anders Fridén spoke about the type of student he was, his past jobs, the key to success in the music industry, being a very talented chef, In Flames’ upcoming projects, his legacy and more.

When asked if we can expect an upcoming album from In Flames, Anders responds: “I’m really happy where we are today, and I love doing what we do, so there’s definitely more albums, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5… who knows? We’ll see.”

Watch below:

inflames2012band

Source: Bravewords.com

Peter Iwers, bassist for Swedish bashers IN FLAMES, is featured in a new interview with Erik Aratari on Riff2 Detroit’s Inside The Circle Pit, conducted on December 1st. Check it out below:

In Flames recently announced a US tour, kicking off on February 2nd in Ft. Lauderdale, FL. Support on the dates will come from DEMON HUNTER, ALL SHALL PERISH and BATTLE CROSS.

Confirmed dates include:

February
2 – Revolution – Ft. Lauderdale, FL
3 – The Orange Peel – Asheville, NC
4 – Georgia Theatre – Athens, GA
7 – The Madison Theater – Covington, KY
8 – Mojoes – Joliet, IL
9 – Bourbon Theatre – Lincoln, NE
10 – Boulder Theater – Boulder, CO
12 – Orpheum Theatre – Flagstaff, AZ
13 – House of Blues – San Diego, CA
14 – The Catalyst – Santa Cruz, CA
15 – Majestic Ventura Theatre – Ventura, CA
16 – Knitting Factory – Reno, NV

In Flames complete live itinerary can be found at this location.

InFlamesUStour2013

Source: NBC News

Peter Iwers is the bass player of the hardcore Swedish metal band In Flames. Before joining In Flames, Iwers played with another popular Swedish band called Chameleon. When he isn’t on the road or with his family, you can find Iwers at “2112″ the very successful restaurant in Gothenburg, Sweden that he runs with fellow band member Bjorn Gelotte.

Barncancerfonden is a Swedish charity that fights to end childhood cancer and to ensure that affected children, teens and their families receive the care and support that they need.  The charity was founded in 1982 and since then the organization has contributed more than a billion dollars to childhood cancer research.

ICCCPO (International Confederation of Childhood Cancer Parent Organizations) was founded in 1994 and works as an umbrella organization representing 158 parent organizations in 85 different countries. Barncancerfonden works closely with ICCCPO in the United States. It is ICCCPO’s mission to share all cancer information so children around the world have access to the best possible treatment and care.

InFlames1

Interviewed By: Giacinta Pace

Introduction By: Meg Zrini

Q: What’s your cause all about?

Peter:  It’s a Swedish organization called BarnCancer which is basically [for] kids with Cancer. They collaborate with people here [in the US] from ICCCPO. I support that, we all do, mainly since everyone started families and everyone has kids and it makes you aware of the horrible stuff that can happen with this disease. We’ve done several charity things; we did a charity run last year. I have a restaurant in Gothenburg with Bjorn, our guitar player, we did a charity concert with another band we used to tour with, he played acoustic and instead of having people buy tickets we made them donate money to this organization.

Q: Why do you support this organization?

Peter:  I think it started out when I became a parent. At one point, we were all invited to visit a hospital in Gothenburg where we come from to visit kids who had cancer; I think some of them were big In Flames fans. Of course, we went and I think it affected us more than any of us even realized or imagined it could and since then I regularly try to donate money to it and do what I can. If there is a charity event or something that I can actually do to get money into this cause then I try to do it.

Q: Have you had any moving experiences while working with the charity?

Peter: There’s been a few. This one time we went to the hospital and met a kid, he was a huge In Flames fan and he passed away about a month after we went to visit him. Recently, I got to know this kid who really affected me and he wasn’t a child. He was nineteen years old, still very young. He found [out] he had cancer one day just out of the blue, his whole body was filled with cancer and it regressed and he was told that he was better. He was better for about 6 months and then he went back in and just collapsed and it had spread all over and they told him there’s nothing we can do, you’re going to die. He was a big in Flames fan and as it turned out we had a mutual friend and we were in my summer house with Bjorn our guitar player and our mutual friend and he said, “I know this guy.” We went to visit him, just sat down and talk to him and for 19 years old, he had the wisdom of an old man. He had accepted that he was about to die and he had made peace with it. He told us such stories about the things that he was most pissed about. He said, I’m not afraid to die but I’m so pissed I never got to do this, I never got to do that. We hung out with him that day and then he came down to Gothenburg and we went out to dinner with him and hung out with him and [he] made me realize stuff that you never think about, you take for granted. He had his best friends, his family and me and Bjorn. We just sat there listening to this guy who had the wisdom of a 400 year old and it was so touching to talk to him. At the end of the night he broke down and cried but before that he was so strong and so powerful and that [it] really touched me. He passed away four days later. It was horrible.

Q: Anything else you want to add?

Peter:  People can donate to this organization in Sweden or to any organization that supports kids with cancer to try and help the science behind it and try to reach a solution sometime in the future because it’s horrible.

Read the original article HERE.

EspyRock recently conducted an interview with bassist Peter Iwers of Swedish metallers IN FLAMES. A couple of excerpts from the chat follow below.

EspyRock: How do you find touring these days? Are you seeing anything different these days when on the road?

Peter: I think the problem is, basically, that since people stopped buying records, bands are now touring more and more so there are more tours going on at the same time now and it is hard for people to decide how they will spend their money. We need to work to live, and it’s a shame that we all have to clash but because of how we tour now, you know that it is likely you will see that band back in seven/eight months. I went holiday to the U.S. with my wife a year ago and we went to New York, I was so looking forward to going to Tower Records and HMV, but they weren’t around anymore, they had shut them all down. How is that ever going to help people buy CDs and continue to support music legally if they have no stores? I’m a big fan of the physical product and here in the U.K. it is ok, you still have stores like HMV and some independent stores which keep everything going. It is important that we teach the younger generation that the physical product is a great thing to have and that these stores exist. You get a lot more for your money with the artwork, booklets, lyrics and bonus discs. When I grew up, it was LPs that I bought and for me, it was a magical experience to go home and study the cover from front to back, see all of the details as you sang along to the songs. These days people don’t do that, and it sucks because it means that in the future, ticket prices for gigs are going to be really high and people will then go to less shows. Bands will be touring even more than what we are now and it will just collapse. We’re all just shooting ourselves in the foot because eventually music will stop, there will no money to be made from it therefore there will be no reason for any of us to do it. People can say they do it because they love it, but how can you love and dedicate your time to something that doesn’t pay your bills and doesn’t allow you to eat. So yeah, that is my extra-long, extended answer to that question you asked. [laughs] Keep buying records or music will die.

EspyRock: How do you take the criticism of people stating you’re not the band you once were and you’ve lost your edge from the older material that you had released?

Peter: It’s always going to be the same. People will always find something to criticize you for and while we may lose fans because they don’t like where we are now, we’ve probably gained an equal amount of fans or more just based on the new album alone. Older fans come and go depending on their mood but you shouldn’t pay too much attention to it because eventually you will change the way that you write music and that will be very damaging. We’ve never cared about what people think when it comes to the writing process; we just do it for ourselves and so far so good. Obviously, if someone tells me that my bass playing sucks or the records sucks, then I’m going to ask them why. I’m not going to abuse them or rip them to shreds like people do to bands online, I want constructive criticism that I can take on board and use in the future. If you really think it is that bad, then tell us why, we’ll not forget and we’ll make sure that we take it on board for the future. Maybe. [laughs] At the end of the day, I need to look at myself in the mirror and be able to say that I did this from the best of my ability.

EspyRock: How has [guitarist] Niclas [Engelin] settled into his new full time role within the band?

Peter: He is amazing. He came in with lots of energy and a really positive attitude which we needed after the divorce with Jesper. The stuff he [former IN FLAMES guitarist Jesper Strömblad] went through was horrifying for all of us and to see one of my closest friends have to deal with the nasty disease of alcoholism, it just beat us all down. So when Niclas came in with such a positive attitude, it really lifted us and it really put us back on track again. He fits like a glove and he is an amazing guitar player, I don’t think I’ve ever met someone who loves to play guitar as much as he does. He is very productive, so he is always trying to kick out new ideas. He was writing with [his other band] ENGEL at the time for their new album, so he was taking all of the energy he had for that and putting it into IN FLAMES, which was great. That energy he has took us to the next level and without him being part of the band, I’m not sure how well we would have come back from the slump we were in.

EspyRock: Was the album written and recorded before he came in and was declared the new full-time guitarist?

Peter: He was there during the thinking period because he has joined a little earlier when Jesper couldn’t continue the tours. We asked him if he wanted to join, and he told us that he would have to think about it because it was a big decision to become a full-time musician. While he was thinking about it, we decided that we would go ahead and do the album because we weren’t sure how long it would take him.

EspyRock: It was a big change with Jesper leaving but at the same time you chose to leave Nuclear Blast for Century Media. What happened there?

Peter: A lot of things that I can’t talk about. At the end of the day, we needed to be somewhere that really worked for us and while Nuclear Blast had been that place for many years, it was time for us to move on to something new. Century Media showed us the best plan and they had the best ideas to get the record out there, plus they seemed motivated. There is no bad blood with Nuclear Blast, we weren’t with them for so long for no reason, they did do well for us and we’re still friends with the people there, but things that I can’t really talk about made it time to move on and work with someone new.

Read the entire interview from EspyRock.

Source: Blabbermouth

Chris of the Stormbringer.at webzine conducted an interview with bassist Peter Iwers of Swedish metallers IN FLAMES when the band played at this year’s edition of the Nova Rock festival on June 13, 2011 on the Pannonia Fields in Burgenland, the easternmost federal state of Austria (near Nickelsdorf and the Hungarian and Slovak borders). You can now watch the chat below. Source: Blabbermouth.net

Some of Sweden’s finest heavy metal musicians gathered to pay tribute to Ronnie James Dio during this fall’s edition of the Sweden Rock Cruise, which sailed on October 7, 2010 from Stockholm, Sweden for Åbo, Finland and returned the following day. There was a long tribute concert with a number of guest musicians performing classic songs from Dio’s career with a main band consisting of members of Lion’s Share.

The following artists were scheduled to perform with LION’S SHARE at the event:

Björn Gelotte and Peter Iwers (IN FLAMES), Joacim Cans (HAMMERFALL), Ian Haugland (EUROPE), Mikael Åkerfeldt (OPETH), Jens Johansson (STRATOVARIUS, ex-DIO), Messiah Marcolin (ex-CANDLEMASS), Johan Edlund (TIAMAT), Joakim Berg and Magnus “Adde” Andreasson (HARDCORE SUPERSTAR), Johan Hegg (AMON AMARTH), Mike Wead (BIBLEBLACK, KING DIAMOND, MERCYFUL FATE). The show ended with all artists performing Hear ‘N Aid’s “Stars”.

Fan-filmed video footage of the event can be viewed below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZ1wMKsq43s&feature=player_embedded
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=itocXfZXPu0&feature=player_embedded