WORLD FIRE BRIGADE, the new band featuring Brett Scallions (frontman of FUEL, as well as lead vocalist with Ray Manzarek and Robby Krieger of THE DOORS), Sean Danielsen (lead singer/guitarist of SMILE EMPTY SOUL) and Eddie Wohl (producer/mixer for ANTHRAX, ILL NINO, SMILE EMPTY SOUL, JESSE MALIN, 36 CRAZYFISTS and more), has inked a deal with FrostByte Media. The group’s debut album, “Spreading My Wings”, will be released on August 28.
Of “Spreading My Wings”, Scallions commented, “This is a record filled with all emotions, songs that fall back and forth from major to minor. I love that it’s a heavy record with sing-a-long melodies. You don’t hear that too much in this style of music.”
Originally conceived as a songwriting vehicle for delivering world-class hard rock songs to other artists, WORLD FIRE BRIGADE evolved into its own group when it became clear that their powerful material was meant to be performed by Scallions, Danielsen and Wohl themselves. Ken Schalk (FUEL, CANDIRIA) provides all the drums on “Spreading My Wings” and the album also features guest appearances by PEARL JAM‘s Mike McCready, ANTHRAX‘s Rob Caggiano, and Andy Andersson (FUEL, BLACK ROBOT).
WORLD FIRE BRIGADE is: Brett Scallions (vocals), Sean Danielsen (vocals/lead guitar) and Eddie Wohl (keyboards).
“Spreading My Wings” track listing:
01. The End Of Silence
02. Spreading My Wings
03. All You Know
04. Weight Of The World
05. Shell Of Me (featuring Mike McCready)
06. Fly
07. Don’t Walk Away
08. Take Me Away (featuring Rob Caggiano)
09. Shot Down
10. All My Demands
11. The Beginning Of Madness
12. Never Saw The Wall (featuring Rob Caggiano)
13. Free And Sane (featuring Andy Andersson)
14. One
Josh Hart of GuitarWorld.com recently conducted an interview with guitarist/vocalist Mille Petrozza of German thrash metal veterans KREATOR. A couple of excerpts from the chat follow below.
GuitarWorld.com: On [2009’s] “Hordes Of Chaos”, you took a very old-school approach to recording. Did you approach the new album [“Phantom Antichrist”] similarly?
Mille: We did a lot of analog stuff on the new record and a lot of vintage equipment. Jens Bogren, our producer, has a lot of goodies in his studio and we definitely used a lot of ancient, very cool-sounding equipment. And also, it was very important that we recorded the album in one room as a band, just like on “Hordes Of Chaos”. It was the same kind of recording procedure, but instead of using all of the basic tracks — including guitars — we only ended up using the bass and the drums tracks, and then went on to do overdubs for the lead and rhythm guitars, which he hadn’t done on “Hordes Of Chaos”. On that album you hear all the rhythm guitars record live and this time we recorded the bass and drums live, all in one room recording. It definitely had the same vibe to it.
GuitarWorld.com: All of the signature KREATOR lyrical themes are present on this album, but one has to ask: What is a “phantom antichrist”?
Mille: The title came from a radio program I was listening to in Germany where they were talking about how Osama Bin Laden got killed and then thrown into the ocean — for religious religions. And there is no such thing as a sea burial in the Muslim religion, as far as I know. And that’s where I got the inspiration for the title from. But the song itself isn’t really a political thing. It’s more about a force that comes to earth, destroys all life and a new beginning starts with a new consciousness. The thing could be really anything. It’s a metaphor for a very, very brutal force that could be destructive but creative too. Basically, what it’s about — and what this album is about — is mass media manipulation. There’s a lot of lyrical variety on the album. You, of course, get the KREATOR treatment where I talk about politics — sometimes — but not in the sense of preaching politics, because I’m not a fan of that. I write songs that are more inspired by political issues rather than talking about my opinion, because politics are boring in my opinion. But there’s a lot of injustice and a lot of oppression, which is being supported by certain politicians and governments. That’s something KREATOR has been writing about forever and it’s always going to be a part of our lyrical themes. You can find anything from fiction to personal stuff to more social issues … like I said, the full KREATOR treatment.
GuitarWorld.com: I know “progressive” can sometimes be a dirty word, but I can’t help but notice that the new album pushes into some new territory for KREATOR. Would you agree there are some progressive elements present?
Mille: Not in the sense of DREAM THEATER progressive. [laughs] Progressive in the sense of longer songs, yes. Progressive for the sake of being progressive, no. Because that’s what I don’t like about a lot of bands. I’m a big RUSH fan, but I think RUSH songs — especially the early albums — definitely has a soul to it. It’s progressive music, but it’s a good song. If anything we’ve been influenced by band like RUSH more than bands like DREAM THEATER, with only the technical stuff. The album definitely has some progressive moments, but not in any technically, showing-off way. More of adding to the song.
GuitarWorld.com: For the B-side to the single version of “Phantom Antichrist” you included a cover of IRON MAIDEN‘s “The Number of the Beast”. How did you go about putting your own stamp on such a classic song?
Mille: We got asked to do a cover version for a magazine. They were doing a tribute to “The Number Of The Beast” and asked if we would like to do the title track. I don’t know what happened to that, it kind of fell apart, I think. At least we never heard back from them. We were very concerned, because there are some songs that you should not cover, that you shouldn’t try to put your own stamp on. Let me put it this way: It’s really not necessary to cover a song sometimes. In my opinion, the IRON MAIDEN version of “The Number Of The Beast” Is perfect how it is, and it’s very hard to make a perfect song more perfect. Like you said, the trick is to put your own stamp on it and make it … not your own song, but make it sound like KREATOR playing it. I think we managed to do that. I can you definitely hear that it’s KREATOR playing IRON MAIDEN instead of KREATOR trying to be IRON MAIDEN, if you know what I mean.
EAGLE BOOKING LIVE PROMOTION, GO DOWN RECORDS, HARD STAFF, HEAVHELLINN, SM_BOOKING proudly present:
Friday, June 15th is a date to pin up on the calendar, it marks the return to Italian soil of one of the bands that have changed the course of heavy metal world, the legendary PENTAGRAM. The band, led by Bobby Liebling, will be the protagonist in one-off show at BIG BARRE’ in Pievesistina (Cesena). The task of opening act will be up to RAIN from Bologna; historical heavy metal band on tour to celebrate their 30th anniversary, on stage will be seen also SHININ SHADE and AVANT-GARDENER from Parma and SLOW ORDER from Bologna.
Friday 15 june 2012 at 7 pm
at BIG BARRE’
Via Fossalta n. 2621
Pievesistina, Cesena Italy
Professionally filmed video footage of LAMB OF GOD‘s June 1 performance at the Rock Am Ringfestival in Nürburgring, Germany can be seen below.
Hal Leonard has released the official, note-for-note matching guitar tab book for “Resolution”, the latest album from Richmond, Virginia metallers LAMB OF GOD. It is now available for purchase from MusicDispatch.com.
“Resolution” sold around 52,000 copies in the United States in its first week of release to land at position No. 3 on The Billboard 200 chart. The band’s previous CD, “Wrath”, opened with around 68,000 units back in March 2009 to enter the chart at No. 2. This figure was roughly in line with the first-week tally registered by 2006’s “Sacrament”, which shifted around 63,000 units to debut at No. 8. It also represented almost double the amount of records sold by its predecessor, “Ashes Of The Wake”, which premiered with 35,000 copies in September 2004.
“Resolution” was released in the U.S. via Epic and internationally through Roadrunner Records. The CD was recorded at various studios in Virginia and New York with producer Josh Wilbur, who worked on the band’s last effort, 2009’s “Wrath”.
“Resolution” features 14 songs and comes in a digipack with artwork by longtime art director Ken Adams.
“Resolution” has sold 115,000 copies in the United States since its February release.
French indie rock band V13 has inked a deal with label Deadlight Entertainment (LOS DISIDENTES DEL SUCIO MOTEL, NEW RISING SON, SYNICAL) for their new album, following debut album « Overlook Hotel » released in 2009.
New album is called “Traqueurs” and was recorded and mixed at Electrical Audio Studio (Chicago) by Steve Albini (NIRVANA, THE PIXIES) and mastered at Chicago Mastering Services Studio by Bob Weston (SEBADOH, KEPONE). Release date is set up for October.
Track “Personne m’attend” is available for streaming on Deadlight Entertainment site at www.deadlight.fr
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.”
Kimmo Kuusniemi’s ASA unveil the long-overdue release of "Collective Failure" + first music video for title-track! Check it out and stay tuned for more news! Click image to watch the video
Kimmo Kuusniemi’s SARCOFAGUS return with a Historic 2010 Concert Video Premiere on YouTube! Click image to watch the video
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Visionary artist KIMMO KUUSNIEMI's ANCIENT STREAMING ASSEMBLY (ASA) have released “Aurora Nuclearis”, a powerful 12-minute audiovisual experience, dedicated to the Late Keyboardist Esa Kotilainen. - Click image to watch the video