Two nights only (Jan 29-30, 2025) at the world famous Place Des Arts Centre (Wilfrid Pelletier Hall), It’s Voivod meets The Montreal Symphony Orchestra for the first time, conducted by Dina Gilbert. It’s Progressive Thrash, meets Class. Today we talk opening night.
Voivod, hailing from Jonquière, Quebec 43 years ago now based in Greater Montreal, with the present line-up consisting of guitarist Daniel “Chewy” Mongrain (2008–present), bassist Dominic “Rocky” Laroche (2014–present) and co-founders vocalist Denis “Snake” Bélanger and, drummer Michel “Away” Langevin. The band found mainstream success in the late 1980s with their fifth studio album Nothingface (1989). However nothing has stopped this band’s upwards global momentum in the past decade and a testament to this are accolades such as the band winning the “Visionary” award at the 2017 Progressive Music Awards. In 2019, Voivod’s fourteenth studio album, The Wake, winning the Juno Award for Metal/Hard Music Album of the Year and in 2023 another Juno for Metal/Hard Music Album Of The Year’ Category For ‘Synchro Anarchy’
The band musically has never stopped evolving, changing and mutating, always putting the band musical challenges first and foremost and their fans joining them on their ride. The constant pivoting of the band also led them premiering their long anticipated documentary last year entitled WE ARE CONNECTED at the Fantasia Festival documenting the band’s journey to the present times. (more to come on that)
So this is where we are today, Voivod taking on yet another musical challenge of fusing their world, with the classical world.
I will be honest when the idea came out that Vovoid would do a symphonic performance I may have paused for a second saying, wha?? But as the idea settled it all seemed so clear, welcoming and exciting. The band’s music may sound punky, alternative and thrashy to the layman but when you peel away the layers of Voivod music the core is intricate, progressive, epic and precise. Which is exactly what Classical music is as well.
The Metal Voice recently spoke to guitarist and solo artist Marty Friedman about his latest studio album DRAMA and upcoming US Tour 2025. Friedman also talked about living in Japan, learning a second language and working with Kiss’ Gene Simmons on a Movie in Japan a few years back.
When asked if knowing a second language makes you more empathetic to people Globally who struggle with another language “Where it fits into my life is, I’m very blessed and lucky to be able to tour the world playing music. And when you do that you run into a lot of people who don’t speak good English, almost all the time. So learning a second language makes you feel very empathetic to people trying to speak another language. For example if you go to Brazil you know people are going to speak a different kind of English that’s not nearly what we grew up with in America. So you try to kind of figure out what it is they’re trying to say when it’s not coming out right. And when you’ve had the experience of learning a second language you know the exact thing they’re trying to say even if they’re totally messing it up. Even if they’re totally on the wrong page on completely wrong grammar, wrong words you pick it up. Then you can get them back into it and they don’t feel intimidated. Sometimes fans will feel intimidated because maybe they’re a fan of mine and they get to meet me. They’re so nervous because they don’t speak English and I hopefully can make them feel kind of calm and less anxious when I can understand them from just a couple little phrases of what they’re saying. And that’s definitely thanks to having the experience of starting from zero and learning a language myself (Japanese). So there’s no shame in trying to speak when you’re not really fluent and actually it’s really manly to do that because that’s the only way you get better at anything. “
When asked about acting/performing with Gene Simmons in the movie Detroit Metal City in Japan a few years back “That’s not very recent though there was a movie called ‘Detroit Metal City’ based on a very famous comic in Japan and the movie was absolutely fantastic. It was a huge hit. I was in the Gene Simmons band in that movie, so it was a dream come true for a Kiss fan like myself. Another great thing was everyone there was Japanese and Gene was the only guy who didn’t speak Japanese and I was the only guy who spoke English. So Gene practically cornered me and we were chatting the entire time. When you’re making a movie it was a three days shoot. It’s all waiting around time really so I was just like my little 15-year-old self. So we’re just talking about everything. Gene is so knowledgeable about my favorite type of music which is 50s music and early 60s and he’s so knowledgeable and just a great intelligent guy to talk to. And as a Kiss fan I was a very captive audience . I remember chatting to him much more than actually filming us jamming together. It’s just one of the biggest bonuses of this profession that we have. I also met Gene in the early 90s and we did a radio program together. It was just me and him and the DJ. I was so impressed because Gene told me he says hey I know your solo album Dragon’s kiss, I’m like you don’t know that and then he says yeah I can tell you the first song called ‘Saturation Point’ the second is ‘Dragon Mistress’ and he listed off the titles of my solo album. I was just so excited. The funniest thing was his voice. You know, like he’s the God of Thunder but his voice was literally my 90-year-old grandfather from Austria. It was just the most typical Jewish grandfather voice with those same pronunciations and the same slangs.(Laughs).”
Guitarist Marty Friedman, has been living and recording music in Japan since 2003. Friedman’s autobiography, “Dreaming Japanese”, arrived on December 3, 2024 via Permuted Press.
MARTY FRIEDMAN has announced 2025 US tour dates supporting his most recent studio album ‘Drama’ out now on Frontiers Music. The tour will kick off on January 25th in Las Vegas and wraps up on February 22nd in Los Angeles. Ticket pre-sales start July 31st at 10 am local time, with general sales beginning August 2nd at 10 am local time. A full list of tour dates is below.
MARTY comments on the tour:
“My three band members from Japan, Chargeeeeee, Wakazaemon, and Naoki have created the ultimate setting to perform music from all stages of my career. If you`ve seen us live before, you know what to expect. If not, you are in for a unique treat. You will remember my band`s performances on this ‘Drama’ tour for a long time. Our last two USA tours have left an unforgettable impact on them. We are all beyond excited to cross the pond and play for my home country again!”
MARTY FRIEDMAN`s presence in the world of music, the world of guitar, and Japanese pop culture is mystifying, bizarre, and nothing short of inspiring. On his new solo album, ‘Drama,’ he only slightly revisits the atmospheric elements of his legendary 1992 release, Scenes, elevating them to a modern and exotic collection of epic, extravagant, and unapologetically emotional mini-symphonies.
Recorded in Verona, Italy, where MARTY had access to a treasure trove of extremely rare vintage guitars along with his modern signature models, he has achieved a sonic depth unlike anything else. ‘Drama’ is a pure, uplifting musical experience.
MARTY FRIEDMAN ‘Live Drama 2025’
Jan 25 – Las Vegas, NV @ Count’s Vamp’d Jan 27 – Denver, CO @ HQ Live Jan 29 – St. Louis, MO @ Off Broadway Jan 30 – St. Charles, IL @ Arcada Theater Jan 31 – Westland, MI @ Token Lounge Feb 1 – Columbus, OH @ The King of Clubs Feb 2 – Cleveland, OH @ The Winchester Feb 4 – New York, NY @ The Loft at City Winery Feb 5 – Boston, MA @ City Winery Feb 6 – Derry, NH @ Tupelo Music Hall Feb 7 – Annapolis, MD @ Ram’s Head on Stage Feb 8 – Pawling, NY @ Daryl’s House Feb 10 – Philadelphia, PA @ City Winery Feb 11 – Leesburg, VA @ Tally Ho Theater Feb 13 – Greenville, SC @ Radio Room Feb 14 – Nashville, TN @ The Basement Feb 16 – Houston, TX @ Bronze Peacock at House of Blues Feb 17 – Austin, TX @ Antone’s Feb 18 – Dallas, TX @ Granada Theater Feb 20 – Albuquerque, NM @ Launch Pad Feb 21 – Phoenix, AZ @ Rhythm Room Feb 22 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Whisky
Jimmy Kay from Canada’s The Metal Voice spoke to Flotsam and Jetsam guitaristMichael Gilbert and Drummer Ken Mary about the bands new album ‘I AM THE WEAPON’ and the trends and changes in the music industry over the years.
When asked to compare today’s US metal scene to the rest of the world “If you look at Europe they’re open, they never stopped loving metal and the weird thing in the United States I feel like metal is actually squashed on social media on things like YouTube. I think they restrict metal. I’m not sure exactly why or what the reasoning is but metal is huge everywhere else in the world (expect USA). Let’s take a band like Arch Enemy for instance, they’ll play huge festivals in Europe. They’ll play in front of half a million people in South America, huge shows in Japan. They come to the United States and Play House of Blues with a thousand people. So you tell me what’s going on? How can a band and how can a genre be huge everywhere else but not in the United States? It seems kind of squashed to me. There’s like a few bands here and there that are doing okay but by and large there’s a whole genre that is not doing well. I think the fans (In USA) aren’t as connected as in Europe. There’s a huge metal scene and everybody is connected and everybody goes to the festivals and everybody loves the music and it really doesn’t matter like, are you thrash metal, are you melodic metal like whatever you are the fans embrace everything. They’re not going like okay I’m only a thrash metal fan so I will only listen to thrash metal. I think that happens maybe a little more in the United States too where somebody goes okay. I like only a specific genre, a very specific area of a genre and I’m not going to listen to anything else. I think that happens maybe a little bit more in the US but I do think in terms of the mechanics of the industry I think that there is an effort in my opinion to elevate things like Rap and Pop and to sort of push metal to the Wayside. Like I said there’s a few bands here and there that kind of buck the trend but for the most part that’s what I’m seeing in the United States.”
Ken Mary continued
“(Metal) it’s huge except for the United States. How is that possible? I think it’s only possible through control and it’s control of the media and control of social media too. I mean there’s a lot of things that get blocked. I Notice this when we share something, let’s say I share something about Flotsam and Jetsam on my Facebook page. I’ll have 20 people share something that I shared and if I click on their share there’s like one person that has looked at what they’ve shared. And you’re thinking to yourself, you’re going okay 20 people shared it so there should be like 10 more people you know sharing it there and it should go viral and it should expand so how is that not happening? I can tell you the algorithm here is definitely in my opinion skewing things and and maybe not just metal but seems like with music they’re very careful. I think to some degree they’re concerned about becoming the next Myspace or something like that. Myspace towards the end just became this social media Network that was all about promoting bands and I think somewhere at Facebook somebody’s very concerned about that and they don’t want to see that happen with Facebook that’s my theory.”
When asked if constant Radio Play would help Flotsam and Jetsam “It absolutely would. You’re talking about getting a song into the public Consciousness. If you have a song that’s being played all the time every day and getting into the public consciousness there’s going to be a large percentage of people that are going to like that song because we do like what we’re familiar with. If we hear something and we become familiar with a song then we tend to like it. I mean that’s why Classic Rock Radio is bigger now than it ever has been. I mean people are listening to Led Zeppelin and Cream and all these 60’s and 70s bands and it’s not stopped. I mean we’re talking 50 years later and people are still listening to this. I don’t think it’s (radio) as important as it used to be in the past but I still think it’s a very important tool.”
When asked if vinyl sales helped bands recover from the lost CD sales in the past years “It helps a little bit. Let’s put it this way the record industry reached its peak in around 2000- 2002 and it used to be about a $50 billion industry every year. Now it’s about a five or six billion dollar industry, so it’s 1/10 the size of what it used to be in terms of an industry from the actual music .The other thing that’s weird is 70% of the revenue right now from music is from Classic Albums that already existed. From the 70s and 80s 60s that’s where 70% of the revenue is from streaming and is a complete travesty in my opinion. I think it’s horrible. I think (streaming) did a horrible thing in terms of the artist and the industry. I think it’s very destabilizing. Basically we don’t see any money from the music as a matter of fact. We even talk about it amongst ourselves we’re like well we’re gonna make an album. Why are we doing it ? We’re basically doing it because we love making music and we want to give our fans something new. We love our fans and we love the process of making music but I don’t know what we saw literally, I’m not going to say nothing from it but for the amount of time that we put into creating a record we pretty much saw nothing from it. So I do think vinyl helped a little bit but if you look at the actual numbers and what we’ve lost in terms of what streaming has done. If you look at the music business on a graph you know it’s like a plane going down. When iTunes took off in around 2005 now all of a sudden instead of selling a CD you would sell one song for .99 cents so instantly your gross margin was cut down by 90%. And then from streaming now everything’s just it’s even worse. if you’re doing this for some other reason like you’re trying to get rich off of it I would suggest you not do it. I would suggest if you’re doing this because you love it and you love your fans and you love the art you know that’s great you know but that that’s why we’re doing it we’re not doing it to get rich. Let’s say you have Spotify for 11 bucks (a Month) you can access every bit of music that exists on the planet. $11 and you can access absolutely everything under the sun. In the past when we used to have to buy records I mean you would work hard you’d save up your money you’d buy a record you’d have a real connection with that record because you you invested into it.”
The Metal Voice House Band Release EXCALIBUR The Song, For some Christmas Cheer.
Singer Giles Lavery (Warlord, Alcatrazz, Jack Starr) teams up with The Metal Voice Podcaster, Editor, Jimmy Kay and producer (Paul Di’anno’s Hell over Waltrop, Jack Starr) multi- instrumentalist Thomas Mergler release the Epic EXCALIBUR song in time for a bit of Christmas cheer.
As a kid I used to write lyrics all the time hoping that one day my words would become an international hit song. So after watching the Excalibur movie sometime in 1981 I ran home and quickly wrote down the Excalibur lyrics. Forty three years later I posted the original lyrics on social media as a cute retro thing. Meanwhile Giles Lavery my close friend saw this post and texted me right away saying this needs to be a song… Lavery contacted producer and friend Thomas Mergler and the rest is history.” Jimmy Kay
Giles Lavery Added, “the concept of the video an homage to the fun of Iron Maiden comical Holy Smoke video. We also thought why not share some Christmas cheer right before the holidays and bring some smiles to everyone’s faces.
The Metal Voice House Band is Giles Lavery, Thomas ‘Rockt’ Mergler and Jimmy Kay
Excalibur Song by Giles Lavery -Vocals, Back Vocals and Melodies Thomas ‘Rockt’ Mergler- Music, Guitars, Bass, Drums & Producer Jimmy Kay- Lyrics and Keyboards
Excalibur Video by Jimmy Kay-Editor Giles Lavery- Camera Nicole Leitzbach- Camera
The Man on the Street Kenny Kessel for The Metal Voice caught up with Artist and Eddie Creator Derek Riggs in an exclusive One on One interview.
In part 2 of the interview Eddie Creator DEREK RIGGS Claims His Life Was In Danger Over this IRON MAIDEN Album Cover
He told The Metal Voice, “I got in a lot of trouble (over Sanctuary single Album cover) Margaret Thatcher took offense to this picture and she tried to have me executed. She had someone introduce a nerve agent into my environment into my apartment bloody stuff killed my cat um nearly killed me I was very ill.
Disclaimer: The views, claims and opinions expressed in this program are those of the guest and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Metal Voice , the journalists or other entities There has been no evidence to prove claims made by guest in this program
The Metal Voice recently interviewed Body Count‘s guitarist, producer Ernie C about the bands new album ‘Merciless’ and he also spoke about his time producing Black Sabbath ‘Forbidden’ album (1995).
When asked about producing Black Sabbath’s ‘Forbidden’ and today’s new remix of the album “Yeah it’s pretty good actually. (Remix) I like it. I like it. BTW I’m on that (cover) my picture is coming out of the grave there with the hat. I’m right there with a hat turned backwards. So the band (Black Sabbath) didn’t bring me in (to produce) Miles Copeland brought me in to do the record. So I went over there when I was between 20- 30 years old or something. I was like I’m going to bring Black Sabbath’s sound up to date, they’re gonna sound like Nirvana. Cozy Powell was the drummer and he came in with four drum sets and he played on each one for an hour. So he did this whole thing and I mixed the drums the way it was going to sound and he came in and he had a stopwatch. He was timing himself with a stopwatch. He said like Ernie I’m off right there. I’m like really? That’s some interesting stuff I had never seen before, I’m from South Central so we didn’t have stopwatches. (Laughs). So anyway we go through the whole thing and he listens to his drums and he hands me a tape and says. (You know I had his drums dried up a little bit and it wasn’t the big massive sound that he had.) He (Cozy) says tomorrow make my drum sound like this, like okay I gotta figure this out now. (laughs) They wanted to change but they didn’t want to change, they wanted to stay far from the course. So I wanted to change it a little more.”
When asked how did he produce a legend like Tony Iommi? “You don’t, you just let him play. You get like Brian May (Queen) and Jeff Beck popping in the studio and you’re saying to yourself why am I here? (laughs). He (Iommi) was a great guy. He was really nice to me and everything like that but the music didn’t work out the way we wanted it to. But it was a good experience. It made me say to myself okay I’m accepted kind of in rock and roll. He was kind of in a place where they were kind of settled in what they were. So what I had the engineer put on the record and I played all through the record every song, I played guitar all the way through it. Then Tony came in the next day and said who played that last night? I said, I did. He said well I’m going to play my parts on it now, so it got him motivated to play more. So I thought that was kind of cool. Also he and Ozzy didn’t get along (back then). I said you know you should do something with Ozzy cuz you guys are what it is. And after that he played OzzFest. Also at the studio (Producing the album) I got a cease and desist letter from Sharon (Osbourne) Tony (Iommi) said don’t worry about that, she does that to everyone, she’s just trying to scare you. I’m like well she’s doing a damn good job. (Laughs).”
When asked about producing Tony Martin’s vocals “Tony was good but you know the thing that Tony had to live with he had to go against Ozzy and Dio and so he had to step into those shoes. So he had a thing. Tony would say well Dio would sung it like that. I’m like why are you gonna say that?
“When asked about his overall thoughts on Forbidden “It was a good record. If it wasn’t Black Sabbath it would have been a great record but because it was Black Sabbath they had high expectations, it wasn’t the record they expected. When people say it was a bad album whatever… I always say how many Black Sabbath records have you produced? “
1997: Black Sabbath reunited with Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi, and Geezer Butler at the Riverport Amphitheatre in Maryland Heights, MO. Original drummer Bill Ward was unable to attend due to prior commitments
Forbidden is the eighteenth studio album by Black Sabbath, released on 5 June 1995. This recording saw the reunion of Black Sabbath’s Tyr-era line-up from 1990, with the return of Neil Murray and Cozy Powell. It was the last album to feature Tony Martin on vocals and Geoff Nicholls on keyboards
The opening track, “The Illusion of Power”, features Body Count member Ice-T delivering a spoken word part during the bridge
On 22 March 2024, the box set Anno Domini 1989–1995 was announced, collecting the four albums recorded with Tony Martin released under IRS Records. The box set, which was released on 31 May 2024, contains a full remix of Forbidden by Tony Iommi.
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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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