Cleopatra Records is sad to hear of the passing of the supremely talented rock guitarist Jeff LaBar at age 58. LaBar’s dexterous and melodic playing helped propel Cinderella’s 1986 debut album Night Songs to the #3 spot on the Billboard album charts and would soon be certified platinum. Being an integral part of Cinderella’s sound, LaBar would continue with the group all the way through to their final recording as a band, the phenomenal 1999 concert album Live At The Key Club, which was released on CD by Cleopatra Records’ metal imprint Deadline Music. LaBar’s talent showed through on that live recording as well as on the impressive video concert document In Concert, which was released as a DVD in 2005 capturing LaBar and the boys on their massive 1991 Heartbreak Station tour. The DVD would be RIAA Certified Gold later that year. LaBar continued to record with other projects like Freak Show featuring Quiet Riot drummer Frankie Banali and the band Naked Beggars and would occasionally re-unite with Tom Keifer and the rest of Cinderella for some spectacular live performances that are certain to live on in fan’s memories for years to come.
Cleopatra Records owner Brian Perera remarked “Jeff LaBar was such an amazing guitarist and a very dear friend. We will miss him and the good times we shared. We extend all our love and deepest sympathies to his family and fans.”
Best known as the singer-songwriter/front man of the legendary Philadelphia band CINDERELLA, Tom Keifer has announced a special one off headline show in London later this year.
Keifer will be appearing at the London O2 Academy Islington on October 22nd for a night of songs from his recently released debut solo record ‘The Way Life Goes’ along with, of course, all the Cinderella classics we know and love including ‘Coming Home’, ‘Gypsy Road’, ‘Heartbreak Station’ and ‘Nobody’s Fool’.
For a taste of what’s to come, check out some highlights from his recent tour:
Whether delivering heart wrenching ballads, such as ‘Don’t Know What You Got ‘til It’s Gone’, channeling the soul of the bluesmen of the past with his slide guitar and lap steel, or blowing sax on rockers like ‘Shelter Me’, Keifer is clearly one of the most unique singers and accomplished musicians in Rock and Roll.
Combine that with his new band, who Keifer refers to as “The biggest bunch of badasses on the planet,” and there is only one possible outcome – A high energy rock show combining all the classic hits of Cinderella with new favourites from ‘The Way Life Goes’ that will only leave you wanting more.
Rock N Growl Promotion has issued that Cinderella members new group Cheap Thrill and Xander Demos to join Faithsedge frontman at Jani Lane Memorial show. The upcoming 2nd annual Jani Lane Memorial will now be taking place at the new “The Rock Factory” in Jani Lanes hometown in Akron Ohio on August 10th.
Giancarlo Floridia of Faithsedge along with shred master Xander Demos will be ripping through over 20 songs going through every album release during his time in Warrant.
Giancarlo Floridia’s & Xander Demo’s radio spot for Skull Fest 2013 can be viewed below:
Tom Keifer, best known as the singer/songwriter/guitarist of the Philadelphia-based blues-rock band CINDERELLA, performed his song “Solid Ground” on last night’s (Tuesday, June 18) edition of CBS‘ “Late Show With David Letterman”. Video footage of his appearance can be seen below.
Keifer‘s debut solo album, “The Way Life Goes”, sold 5,400 copies in the United States in its first week of release to land at position No. 78 on The Billboard 200 chart. The CD was released on April 30 via Merovee Records (through Warner Music Group‘s Independent Label Group).
The collection of 14 new songs ranges from intimate, organic, acoustic tracks to driving hard rock. It embraces the blues, rock and country roots that have always been present in his unique sound that has generated the sale of over 15 million records worldwide for CINDERELLA. Rolling Stone praised Keifer as “a gritty, bluesy (rocker) with enough genuine swagger to draw comparisons to Mick Jagger.”
“This record was a labor of love,” Keifer told TriCities.com. “When I started this record, CINDERELLA was in the middle of a lawsuit with Sony Records. This record is not in any way to be taken as me stepping away from CINDERELLA.”
“I took a lot of time making this record,” he continued. “I made it over 10 years. I wanted to make something I loved. My wife, Savannah (Snow), co-wrote a lot of the songs with me. It was a blessing to me.
“Each song has something to do with life. It’s just life, love, love lost, being crazy, going crazy, being lost. The record, there’s no change, really, in style. It has the peaks and valleys.
“I’ve always approached music, played music that I like. I’ve never chased trends through CINDERELLA and with this album. It reflects what’s in me.”
“The Flower Song”, the album’s first single, was serviced to AAA radio stations nationwide on February 4, while “Solid Ground” was serviced to all rock formats on March 11.
Keifer wrote “The Flower Song” with Jim Peterik, formerly of the bands SURVIVOR and the IDES OF MARCH.
“The Way Life Goes” is a raw, introspective look at the roller coaster ride that has been Keifer‘s life for the past 15 years. From being told that he would never sing again as a result of a partially paralyzed left vocal cord, to the emotional and personal battles that followed, his solo debut is a story of perseverance, a testament to the power of passion and will, when combined with a true love of music.
“It’s pretty scary,” Keifer said of his vocal paralysis. “I’ve had six surgeries to deal with the collateral damage. Performing… has been difficult for me because of the vocal issues I’ve had. I work several hours every day on that. That’s a difficult thing for me every day.”
Maine Music News recently conducted an interview with CINDERELLA frontman Tom Keifer. A couple of excerpts from the chat follow below.
Maine Music News: Was there any fear in going out solo or was there huge excitement in getting to go out and do your own thing?
Keifer: It’s both. Excitement, because it was something we worked on for so long. It’s always exciting and a little bit stressful and scary whenever you are going out on tour with new material. The first reason being that you spend all this time in the studio creating these tracks and making them sound exactly how you want them to sound coming out of the speakers. A lot times, the guitars are stacked and there’s a lot of overdubs and stuff and there is always that, “How are we going to make it sound like this live?” You always find a way. CINDERELLA always managed to. Some of those tracks on the CINDERELLA records on “Long Cold Winter”, some of those we were running three two-inch tape machines in the back of the room with, like, 70 tracks of production and overdubs. But you always find in the mix, there is always these elements that poke out, and they are the ones that you have to learn and take with you. Some of that stuff and other overdubs just sit in the background and aren’t as important. So you grab the important bits, and you figure it out. That’s always the first stressful thing about going out with new material. It’s a little bit of a trick sometimes. Other than that, it’s just fun. We really had a great time on that first leg in February, and we are getting ready to go out and do another one in May.
Maine Music News: What do you want your fans to know about this new album?
Keifer: It was a long time in the making, and it was made purely for the love of making music. It was produced independently of a label. I just didn’t want the pressure of someone telling me when it was finished, or you are on this budget, this time frame, and this deadline. I just wanted to make a record that I really loved at the end of the day, and it was just about the music. Don’t get me wrong — the CINDERELLA records were that way. We always went in and made the best music that we could. That is how we always approached it, and we were able to do that within time constraints and budgets back then. This record, I decided to do it differently, because I didn’t feel that having a label involved at that point in time was going to really allow enough time to do it the way I wanted to. It was made purely for the love of music, not chasing any trends or anything. Probably 5 or 6 different trends came and went during the years we made this record.
Maine Music News: Now that we have over 25 years to look back at the ’80’s, and we have an objective point of view, what was CINDERELLA doing to create that signature sound?
Keifer: I can only speak personally. To me, the elements that I brought as the writer and singer and someone who did a lot of the guitar work, I always tried to stay true to what I grew up on and what I loved as a kid when I first heard rock music. And not only that, but going back and listening to the things that inspired those people, like what inspired the [THE ROLLING] STONES and LED ZEPPELIN. One day I realized, “Wow, it was the blues, and it was country, and it was R&B and gospel and this great American roots music.” I really started digging back and listening to Muddy Waters, Robert Johnson, Elmore James, Johnny Winter, BB King and James Brown. I think it’s a good thing to go beyond the things that initially inspired you and listen to what inspired them. That gives you an opportunity to interpret the music yourself, maybe in your own way. I think maybe what was unique in our sound was that the roots were pretty prevalent. You could hear country roots in “Coming Home” and “One For Rock And Roll” and “Heartbreak Station” You could hear the blues roots in a lot of stuff and could hear the straight up rock roots and harder driving stuff that was inspired by AEROSMITH and DEEP PURPLE. There was just a mix of a lot of different sounds. There was not just one flavor in the soup. I think we stayed true to the music that we grew up on. Everyone in the band grew up on all the great bands of the ’70s, and all those bands had so many different colors and flavors in their soup. I think keeping your ears open, listening to a lot of different kinds of music, and trying to bring those elements into it is usually when you can come up with something unique.
Maine Music News: In thinking back to ’80s metal and comparing it to today’s music, it had a distinct sound. What made that genre what it was?
Keifer: I think it’s the same formula that every decade goes through. When that starts to happen, they all start to sound the same, and the sound becomes stagnant. It wasn’t just the ’80s when that happened or just the 80s rock genre, it happens a lot in the music industry. I think it is twofold — first ,when artists are not digging back beyond what is currently on the charts, and second, labels only wanting to sign people that sound like what is currently on the charts. That is when music can become stagnant. I think that you always need to be true to who you are and what you do. And believe me, we caught flak from our record company when I brought in the song“Long Cold Winter” and “Coming Home”. There were people at the label that thought that was a little bit of a stretch, and there were people that were trying to push us to sound more like everything else that was the hard rock sound of the day. You’ve got to be true to what you love. That is when people create something really unique or different.
Tom Keifer, best known as the singer/songwriter/guitarist of the Philadelphia-based blues-rock band CINDERELLA, recently spoke to Artisan News about being diagnosed with vocal paralysis and his upcoming solo album, “The Way Life Goes”. Check out the report below.
“The Way Life Goes” will be released on April 30 via Merovee Records (through Warner Music Group‘s Independent Label Group).
The collection of 14 new songs ranges from intimate, organic, acoustic tracks to driving hard rock. It embraces the blues, rock and country roots that have always been present in his unique sound that has generated the sale of over 15 million records worldwide for CINDERELLA. Rolling Stone praised Keifer as “a gritty, bluesy (rocker) with enough genuine swagger to draw comparisons to Mick Jagger.”
“This record was a labor of love,” Keifer told TriCities.com. “When I started this record, CINDERELLA was in the middle of a lawsuit with Sony Records. This record is not in any way to be taken as me stepping away from CINDERELLA.”
“I took a lot of time making this record,” he continued. “I made it over 10 years. I wanted to make something I loved. My wife, Savannah (Snow), co-wrote a lot of the songs with me. It was a blessing to me.
“Each song has something to do with life. It’s just life, love, love lost, being crazy, going crazy, being lost. The record, there’s no change, really, in style. It has the peaks and valleys.
“I’ve always approached music, played music that I like. I’ve never chased trends through CINDERELLA and with this album. It reflects what’s in me.”
“The Way Life Goes” track listing:
01. Solid Ground
02. A Different Light
03. It’s Not Enough
04. Cold Day In Hell
05. Thick And Thin
06. Ask Me Yesterday
07. Fools Paradise
08. The Flower Song
09. Mood Elevator
10. Welcome To My Mind
11. You Showed Me
12. Ain’t That A Bitch
13. The Way Life Goes
14. Babylon
“The Flower Song”, the album’s first single, was serviced to AAA radio stations nationwide on February 4, while “Solid Ground” will be serviced to all rock formats on March 11.
Keifer wrote “The Flower Song” with Jim Peterik, formerly of the bands SURVIVOR and the IDES OF MARCH.
“The Way Life Goes” is a raw, introspective look at the roller coaster ride that has been Keifer‘s life for the past 15 years. From being told that he would never sing again as a result of a partially paralyzed left vocal cord, to the emotional and personal battles that followed, his solo debut is a story of perseverance, a testament to the power of passion and will, when combined with a true love of music.
“It’s pretty scary,” Keifer said of his vocal paralysis. “I’ve had six surgeries to deal with the collateral damage. Performing… has been difficult for me because of the vocal issues I’ve had. I work several hours every day on that. That’s a difficult thing for me every day.”
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