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Dan Epstein at Rolling Stone Magazine recently cornered several American musicians to discuss the nation’s favourite pastime, baseball. This week, he asked: “What’s the most memorable brawl you’ve ever seen – on the field or in the stands?” ALICE COOPER and ANTHRAX guitarist Scott Ian are two of the artists featured in the article. An excerpt is available below:

Alice Cooper: “I took my son Dash to see the Tigers play the Indians when he was seven years old, his first game. Cecil Fielder hit a grand slam home run early on, and when he came up to bat again he was hit by a pitch, intentionally if I remember correctly. Both benches emptied, and I looked at Dash and said, ‘Well, you just got to see a grand slam and a bench clearing brawl. Let’s go get a hot dog.’ The Tigers won 7-0. The irony there is that the first game MY dad ever took me to was Detroit against Cleveland, where Detroit won 7-0. Synchronicity?”

Scott Ian: “My dad took my brother Jason and me to the 1977 World Series. We went to games one and six at Yankee Stadium, and had great seats just about 25-30 rows behind the dugout. The tickets were only $10!! I can’t imagine what they’d cost now. Game six was the game where Reggie Jackson hit three home runs and the Yankees won their first championship since 1962. When the game ended and the fans rushed the field (as they used to do back in those days) my brother and I headed for the railing just off of third base. We were about to jump on the field when we saw a guy trying to pull third base out of the ground; he was immediately surrounded by nightstick wielding cops who proceeded to pummel him into baseball oblivion. I was 13 and my brother was 10. The innocent kid versions of ourselves looked at each other and silently made the decision to not run on the field. Too bad I didn’t remember that when I got busted in Tampa back in 1997.”

Go to this location for the complete article.

Source: Bravewords.com

Rolling Stone has posted a classic KISS report from the April 7th, 1977 issue of the magazine online. An excerpt is available below:

KISS: The Pagan Beasties of Teenage Rock
By Charles M. Young

“We broke Lawrence Welk’s attendance record in Abilene, Texas. I’m very proud of that,” says Gene Simmons, the KISS bassist, notorious for his grotesquely long tongue and for dressing like a pterodactyl. We sit at a backstage dinner table on the first of three nights they are playing Detroit’s 12,000-seat Cobo Hall – exceptional dates because they are doing mostly secondary markets this tour. “We’re hitting places they’ve never seen a big band, and they’ll remember us forever. The reaction has been amazing. I was watching the local news in Duluth and the announcer said there had been a robbery at the auditorium. I thought, ‘That’s it for the gate receipts,’ but it turned out some kid had gone up to the window and stolen three tickets at gunpoint. I don’t understand it. Tickets are so ethereal. One concert and they’re gone. Now money, that’s real power.”

Money, I object, is as much an illusion as a ticket.
 

(Peter Cade/Central Press/Getty Images)

“Not if everyone believes it,” says Simmons, holding up a fork. “If I say this is a royal scepter and everyone recognizes it as such, then it’s a royal scepter and I’m king. That’s power, not an illusion.”

Before I can insist it’s still a fork, guitarist Paul Stanley – known for the black star over his right eye and for his bright red lips – sits down and stuffs a piece of cake into his mouth. “I’m really sick to my stomach,” he says, licking the fingers of one hand, holding his taut belly with the other, and searching for another slice with the calm eyes of an addict who has enough money to feed his habit. “I got chills and everything. I thought I was going to pass out onstage last night.”

Maybe he would feel better if he stopped eating gunk?

“The best diet for the road,” he says, “is soup for lunch and candy for supper. It keeps the weight off and you’re speeding on all that sugar by show time.”

A roadie announces that it is time for a sound check, and the three of us walk to the $300,000 stage set in the cavernous auditorium. Drummer Peter Criss – who paints his face to resemble a cat – is already at his kit and nearly falling off his seat, laughing at his own ludicrous version of the bang-the-drum-slowly ending of the Chambers Brothers’ hit, “Time Has Come Today.” Guitarist Ace Frehley, who plays the role of a spaceman with two silver stars splashed over his eyes, ignores the folderol and sends occasional blasts of power chords echoing through the hall. None of the members of KISS is wearing the makeup he invariably puts on for public appearances, and, stripped of paint, Stanley comes the closest to handsome, with patrician features that one could imagine, in another age, riding a two-stallion chariot too fast down a crowded Roman street and lashing the backs of slow peasants. Frehley looks like the original 1967 acid casualty, his face as pock-marked as the moon backdrop on his side of the stage. Criss appears several years past his official age of 30, but his eyes are a child’s in their lack of calculation. With his swarthy central-European complexion and flaking black fingernails, Simmons could look filthy stepping out of a shower. Though we are all about 6’2″ in our stocking feet, Frehley, Stanley and Simmons tower over me in their eight-inch platform shoes and I begin to realize the luxury of height. All these years, I’ve been talking down at people. Standing here under Simmons’ unflinching gaze, I am somehow the wimpy one whose opinions don’t matter.

Go to this location for the complete story.

Source: Bravewords.com

The Pulse Of Radio reports that the readers of Rolling Stone magazine have voted “Unchained” as their favorite VAN HALEN song, according to a new poll that asked fans to name their 10 favorite tracks from the legendary band. Eighty percent of the final list of songs came from the David Lee Roth era of the group, while 20 percent voted for tunes featuring singer Sammy Hagar. No tracks from vocalist Gary Cherone‘s brief tenure were selected.

“Unchained” is from VAN HALEN‘s fourth album, 1981′s “Fair Warning”, which is often regarded as the group’s heaviest effort. Rolling Stone said about the track, “It’s not quite as famous as ‘Jump’ or ‘Hot for Teacher’, but ‘Unchained’ has frequently been voted the favorite song of VAN HALEN fans. During the interlude, producer Ted Templeman breaks in and says ‘Come on, Dave, gimme a break!’ Dave responds with, ‘One break, coming up!’ According to legend, Ted felt that Dave was being too over the top and he scolded him. The band liked the moment and kept it in. Recent evidence suggests that the bit was rehearsed, but it’s hard to say for sure. Like most things in the VAN HALEN world, there are two competing narratives of one event.”

A new report at the Rolling Stone web site, incidentally, contends that it was the BEACH BOYS, and not VAN HALEN, who were supposed to make a “reunion” announcement at the Grammy Nominations Concert on Wednesday night (November 30) in Los Angeles.

The mystery “iconic” band failed to show up, with The Recording Academy president Neil Portnow saying that they were not “quite at the point” where they wanted to appear.

Many assumed that it was supposed to be VAN HALEN, since a tweet from the Grammy organization namedropped a couple of the band’s hits as hints about who the act could be. But the tweet was actually directed at speculation from the web site Hitfix, which had guessed VAN HALEN would be the mystery act.

The “reunion” reference was also confusing, since VAN HALEN reunited with Roth four years ago. The band is expected to release a new album early next year.

The 10 favorite VAN HALEN songs according to Rolling Stone readers:

01. Unchained
02. Panama
03. Hot For Teacher
04. Ain’t Talkin’ ‘Bout Love
05. Jump
06. Runnin’ With The Devil
07. Mean Street
08. Eruption
09. Right Now
10. Dreams

Source: Blabbermouth.net