Saturday, January 14, 2012

The Flaming Lips to work with Bon Iver and Yoko Ono on new album



The Flaming Lips' Wayne Coyne has revealed that the band are working on a new collaborative LP with Bon Iver and Yoko Ono.
Rolling Stone reports that the frontman has also lined up collaborations with artists including Nick Cave, Ke$ha, Lykke Li and Erykah Badu for the LP, which is set to be released in April.
Coyne confirmed that he had already recorded collaborations with Cave and the Plastic Ono Band for the record, while Bon Iver's Justin Vernon had signed on to be part of the project and was set to send the band two tracks he had been working on.
Speaking about the other would-be-collaborators, the singer said: "All these things happen within a couple of days. You set up these [collaborations] in your mind and immediately get to work. Sometimes it just takes a matter of connecting."
Coyne also paid tribute to Ke$ha, who he hopes to recruit for a "weird rap" on the record, by describing her as "a freak". He added: "We knew that she was a fan. There are a lot of these sort of druggy outlets out there that people get connected through."
The frontman had previously made his desire to work with both Ke$ha and Lykke Li public last October, and also spoke of the Flaming Lips' collaboration with Nick Cave, stating: "I think we'll get a good Nick Cave collection of songs with The Flaming Lips. We already have one really good one, so that seems like it'll work out."
Last year, The Flaming Lips released a 24-hour long track to coincide with Halloween. The song, titled '7 Skies H3', was embedded in a hard drive inside 13 actual human skulls topped with chrome drips – and was available to buy for a cool $5,000 (£3,100) a pop.

http://www.uncut.co.uk/the-flaming-lips/the-flaming-lips-to-work-with-bon-iver-and-yoko-ono-on-new-album-news
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Radiohead confirmed to headline Japan's Fuji Rock Festival


Radiohead have announced another summer festival headline appearance, this time at Japan's Fuji Rock festival.
The band will headline the event, which takes place in Niigata from July 27–29, along with The Stone Roses.
Radiohead are also confirmed to headline Portugal's Optimus Alive festival, which is set to take place between July 12–15 in Lisbon, and Spain's Bilbao BBK festival, which takes place between July 12–14.
The band also confirmed earlier this week that they would be headlining this summer's Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in California. They also extended their US tour by a further four dates and added a show at Nanang Exhibition Hall in Taipei, Taiwan on July 25.
Radiohead are expected to confirm UK and more European dates in the coming weeks, but are yet to say when this will be. Guitarist Ed O'Brien has previously hinted that the band will play arena shows in the UK rather than festival dates.

http://www.uncut.co.uk/radiohead/radiohead-confirmed-to-headline-japans-fuji-rock-festival-news
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Elvis Costello & The Imposters - The Return Of The Spectacular Singing Songbook


Elvis Costello wasn’t himself 25 years ago, the musician credits on the two albums he released in 1986 listing him as Little Hands Of Concrete (King Of America) and Napoleon Dynamite (Blood & Chocolate). While the former was a self-mocking reference to his habit of breaking guitar strings, the latter was a more boastful persona who made his stage bow as the mad-eyed master of ceremonies at fairground-like live shows.
Revived earlier this summer on a lengthy series of dates across America (and coming to the UK next May), the Spectacular Spinning Songbook is a novel way for Costello to take requests; a giant multi-coloured wheel, resembling a pie chart containing the names of about 40 songs, dominates the stage, random audience members are plucked from their seats and invited to give the wheel a spin. Wherever it stops determines which number EC and his Imposters will play next.
This elaborate box set comprises a CD and DVD (plus a bonus 10-inch vinyl “encore” disc) of two shows from the Wiltern Theatre in Los Angeles, the location raising questions about how random the selection of audience spinners might be. Can it really be just by chance that (i)Mad Men(i) creator Matthew Wiener and (i)Sideways/Grey’s Anatomy(i) actress Sandra Oh made the journey from stalls to stage the night the cameras were there?
Whoever spins the wheel, though, it still results in unpredictable sequences of songs, never guaranteeing that big hits or long-term live favourites get an airing, Elvis (or rather Napoleon Dynamite, an over-the-top circus barker making the alliterative declarations in keeping with Costello’s guest introductions on his Spectacle TV show) following the raucous garage of “Stella Hurt” from 2008’s Momofuku with the baroque lament “All Grown Up” from 1991’s Mighty Like A Rose. Of course, the song has to be on the wheel in the first place, and there are some intriguing inclusions.
A soulful cover of the Stones’ “Out Of Time” gives The Imposters (and the manically dextrous Steve Nieve in particular) an opportunity to pretend they’re Booker T & The MGs, “Tear Off Your Own Head” enables special guests The Bangles to croon away on the comeback hit Costello wrote for them, but the real surprise is the fatalistic ballad “Earthbound”, one of 10 tracks Elvis allegedly knocked out in a single weekend for a Wendy James album in 1993. “Of all the songs I’ve ever written, I think this is the truest,” he tells us.
As a performing unit, The Imposters take everything thrown at them in their stride, all pomp and majesty on “Man Out Of Time”, lean and hungry on a cover of Nick Lowe’s “Heart Of The City”, and Nieve’s delicate new arrangement of “God Give Me Strength” more than compensates for the lack of lush orchestration from the original Burt Bacharach collaboration. The wheel spins, and the mood swings; in the space of an hour-and-a-half Elvis gets to be the surly aggressor of his youth, the wordy troubadour of the Imperial Bedroom era, or the deep baritone crooner of more recent times.
Before 2011, Costello had been averaging an album of new songs every 12 months since brokering a lucrative deal with Universal five years ago, allowing them to exploit his first decade of releases in any way they see fit, in return for leaving him alone to make records at his own pace and as often as he wanted.
Cynics may suggest that while the Allen Toussaint collaboration The River In Reverse, the aforementioned noisy Momofuku, the bluegrass-tinged Secret, Profane & Sugarcane and last year’s National Ransom hardly had the label’s sales teams popping champagne corks, Elvis staying away from the studio this year and once again gamely pitching his back pages opens the door for further marketing of former glories. Certainly, another re-upholstered My Aim Is True or Punch The Clock may ultimately shift more units than this bespoke offering, a limited edition of 1,500 which, despite the top-notch music, lavish packaging and poster/book/diary/postcard extras, might struggle to justify its £200 price-tag.
Terry Staunton

http://www.uncut.co.uk/elvis-costello-the-imposters-the-return-of-the-spectacular-singing-songbook-review Selengkapnya...

Grimes

Grimes's website



Canada's Grimes is actually Montreal's Claire Boucher. I guess you can call this ethereal atmospheric electronic music, but then you'd probably want to walk away from this profile at best and... well... let's not get into worst case scenarios here.

You and I both know that what I just said to describe Grimes' music means absolutely nothing. After all, Enya (and whatever Enya’s sister or cousin or whoever that relative was who was riding Enya’s coattails for a while there circa 1994) could also be described as ethereal atmospheric electronic music. And Grimes doesn't sound like Enya. You heard that here first. "Ethereal" music like this is hard to describe. That's why people say things are "ethereal." No one questions "ethereal."

Let's start over and try to do a better job of describing Grimes. How about this, "Grimes sounds like a pop triumph!" Oops, that's another thing that doesn't mean anything. How about, "Whatever Grimes is; chillwave and Dub Step this is not." Closer. How about, "Don't walk! I command you to RUN and see Grimes play!" Farther. Ok, final try. "Grimes is good music made with good machines and sung by a good singer who has a good voice." BOOM! (Grimes also sounds like whales jumping out of the sea in slow motion.)

http://www.ohmyrockness.com/bandbio.cfm?bandid=33921 Selengkapnya...

New Build

New Build's website



Super group alert! Super group alert! New Build features members of Hot Chip and LCD Soundsystem (no, Murphy ain't one of 'em... he's too busy checking the charts or something). Now does it really matter what's contained in the rest of this band profile? You're going to want to see New Build because members of Hot Chip and LCD Sounsystem are in this band.

Of course you will. What kind of monster doesn't like Hot Chip and LCD Soundsystem? They're both, like, the least offensive bands of all time... well, Hot Chip is anyway. LCD had some "I'm really alt" issues, but every one of their songs made you dance so... pluses and minuses, bros... pluses and minuses. So what does New Build sound like? Do you really want to know? As we just discussed, you're going to go see them play anyway. (FYI: they sound exactly like you think they're going to sound). So I guess that's about it.

Hmm. We seem to have a few more lines to kill before we can totally put this profile to bed. So... has anyone been to any good new pizza spots lately? I'm sure you have. After all, everybody loves pizza. It's like the least offensive food of all time. So everyone be sure to chime in.

http://www.ohmyrockness.com/bandbio.cfm?bandid=40236 Selengkapnya...

Axl Rose Serves Jury Duty

Singer says it was 'relatively painless'

 

This week, Axl Rose got off the "Nightrain" and did his civic duty by performing four days of jury duty in Santa Monica, California.
The Guns N' Roses frontman spent four days participating in a civic trial, according to People. His service, which ended Tuesday, came on the heels of the band's American tour, which wrapped last month.
"It was relatively painless," said Rose of his jury-duty stint. "I was fortunate that everyone in the courthouse and jurors were all really great, plus I got to see daylight from a different prospect [sic]."
Rose's schedule will resume its typical decadence soon: Guns N' Roses will be inaugurated into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on April 14th at Cleveland's Public Hall. They are rumored to be considering a reunion performance with their original lineup.

 

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Reunited Velvet Revolver, Maroon 5, More Honor John O'Brien


Sold-out show at House of Blues also features Tom Morello, Sheryl Crow, Stephen Stills

When we spoke last week with Velvet Revolver guitarist Dave Kushner about the reason behind the band's one-off reunion, he talked movingly about the impact his late best friend, composer John O'Brien, had on so many in music. That was clear last night when the reunited Velvet Revolver headlined "Love You Madly: A Concert for John O'Brien" at a sold-out House of Blues in Los Angeles.
While most of the focus was on VR's first gig in four years with Scott Weiland, an eclectic and impressive array of talent built up to the headlining set. Among the early highlights were local favorites Fishbone, who gave way to Tom Morello, a.k.a. the Nightwatchman. Backed by his band, Morello brought it in his three songs, from an instrumental version of Rage Against the Machine's "Testify" that had all heads bobbing to his cover of Bruce Springsteen's "The Ghost of Tom Joad," which had the crowd playing air guitar. Before the song, Morello spoke of how O'Brien's spirit was in the room.
During a fan-favorite, three-song set that included "Sunday Morning," Maroon 5 also remembered O'Brien, crediting him as a big part of their success.
Stephen Stills, joining Sheryl Crow for four songs, used his time on stage to honor another group, dedicating his rendition of Buffalo Springfield's "For What It's Worth" to "the 99 percent." Stills also rocked on a sterling "Love the One You're With," while Crow delivered raucous versions of "If It Makes You Happy" and "Everyday Is a Winding Road."
But when Weiland, Slash, Duff McKagan, Kushner and Matt Sorum took the stage together at 11:37, it was clear that the vast majority, if not all, were on hand to see the reunited supergroup. Opening with "Sucker Train Blues," the band sounded in fine form. Weiland thanked the crowd for coming and called the show "sad, but sweet too," as he recalled a show he and Sorum did for Weiland's late brother, Michael.
The singer sent out good wishes to O'Brien's family before the band picked up steam again with "She Builds Quick Machines." They continued the momentum with "Slither," then wrapped up on a quieter note with their cover of Pink Floyd's "Wish You Were Here."
As Kushner told us last week, the idea was just to get through the night, which the band did seamlessly. Though a lot of people this morning noticed a message on the band's website that said "New Velvet Revolver coming," that message has been there for some time. According to band reps, the group has no comment on any further collaboration at this time.
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Slipknot Members Form Film Production Company for 'Psychological' Films

Co-founder Shawn Crahan: 'When 'The Exorcist' came out people got up and left after 15 minutes and that turns us on'

 

Metal band Slipknot have always had a flair for the visual. Now co-founder/percussionist M. Shawn Crahan, also known as Clown, and frontman Corey Taylor are taking it to the next level: The pair are heading to Sundance next week to unveil a film production company, Living Breathing Films. They tell Rolling Stone they plan on making movies befitting Slipknot's music and aesthetic.
"Our movies are going to be psychological. They’re going to affect you. When The Exorcist came out people got up and left after 15 minutes and that turns us on," Crahan says. "If I haven’t got someone to leave in five minutes for at least one of my films then I’m not doing my job."
They're longtime film fans; when the band got its "first bit of scratch," Crahan says, Taylor bought $10,000 worth of DVDs. But, while they reference The Exorcist and Taylor calls director John Carpenter's Halloween one of his favorite movies of all time, they are fans of a variety of movies.
"I just watched Good Will Hunting a week ago and I actually cried three times in the movie," Crahan says. "That’s what Robin Williams can do to me – he can make me laugh as a comedian, but as an actor I completely believe him."
They will bring that eclecticism to Living Breathing Films with a very hands on approach – including, Crahan says, scoring the films. Eventually, Crahan hopes to direct, while Taylor would write and star in their films. For the moment, though, they're taking it slow. "Right now we’ve got a story and we’re getting together a working script," says Taylor. "We’re looking to basically break ground on it this year. We’re obviously going to make sure that it doesn’t conflict with the future Slipknot touring stuff. But it’s important for us to learn first before we just kind of jump in."
Going to Sundance, one of the biggest film festivals in the world, provides a good litmus test for their entry way into movies. "This is basically our handshake to the rest of the industry," Taylor says. "It’s us saying, 'We’re here and the same approach we take to music, we’re going to take to film. We excelled at one and we’ll excel at the other, and we’re going to do it our way.' So Sundance is exciting for me because you just don’t know how these people will take us."
Crahan will be giving them a taste of Slipknot. "We can’t go to Sundance without showing something that we did. So we just made a little film on Sunday and we basically got burlap bags, put them on our heads and then got zip tied and I forced us to walk through thorns," he says. "There was no acting cause when Corey screamed, 'Fuck,' he meant fuck because he was getting a thorn slicing across his chest. And that’s what we are; we live our art, we breathe it. "
They've already put together a short wish list of people they'd like to work with, from Carpenter to Quentin Tarantino, but one is a particularly exciting prospect for music fans. "Obviously I’d love to do something with Rob [Zombie]," Taylor says. "I think that’d be sick for the three of us, being from such a musical background, to put something together that’s just fucking crazy and awesome to watch, but at the same time is a little disturbing."
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Friday, January 13, 2012

The Most Metal Books of 2011

Chris “Howard’s End” Krovatin is the author of two young adult novels, Heavy Metal & You and Venomous. He is currently working on multiple new writing projects, as well as new material with his local New York metal band Flaming Tusk. He is a freelance writer for Revolver and generally comes off as a good-natured pain in everyone’s collective ass.
An idea exists that metalheads don’t like to read, that we’re too busy pounding brewskis and sacrificing housecats to Satan to enjoy a good book, or that our stimuli-raped brains can’t take in media more intelligent than Robocop. Which, of course, is bullshit. Any hesher who has spent a night hunched over some Lovecraft knows that literature is metal as fuck, it’s just that a lot of “highbrow” literature is not terribly exciting, and a lot of it was forced on us in school. (I, for example, will never like E.M. Forster thanks to having to read Howard’s End in high school.) But headbangers shouldn’t despair—there are plenty of options out there. So for the discerning literary metalhead, I present these, my picks for the Most Metal Books of 2011, each one matched up with a song from 2011 that suits its atmosphere.

1. The Last Werewolf  by Glen Duncan The Berliner is dead—Jake Marlowe is now the last werewolf on earth. And even if he’s not being attacked by government-funded monster hunters and vampire illuminati, he still has his ever-present hard-on and nonstop diet of good scotch and smokes to deal with. In this smart, sexy, and darkly grandiose novel, Duncan (who looks like he just survived the goth apocalypse) brings us a charming definitive take on one of horror’s most underappreciated monsters. (Recommended Listening: The Black Dahlia Murder, “Moonlight Equilibrium”).




2. Black Metal Vol. 2 by Rick Spears and Chuck BB In the follow-up to last year’s graphic novel sensation, Spears and BB continue the story of the Brothers Stronghand, twin corpse-painted Hell barons who wield an ancient sword they discovered by playing a black metal record backwards. But now, in their attempts to reclaim the throne of Hell, they are faced with an unexpected foe: Satan himself. This slim volume of cartoon violence and mayhem is a fitting tribute to black metal’s ravishing grimness. (Recommended Listening: Midnight, “You Can’t Stop Steel”).


 


3. Crimes In Southern Indiana by Frank Bill America is not all cheesesteak and NASCAR. In the bubbling ancient cauldron of Heartland USA, terrible things go down—lovers murder each other brutally, meth is sold and consumed by the pound daily, guns go off randomly, human life is weighed cheaply. In this collection of short stories, Bill (gotta love an author with two first names) paints a picture of the dark means of survival that run through the gritty cut-throat underbelly of our own backyard. (Recommended Listening: The Atlas Moth, “Perpetual Generations”).




4. Murder In The Front Row: Shots From The Bay Area Thrash Metal Epicenter by Harald Oimoen and Brian Lew In this photographic diary, Oimoen and Lew chronicle their upbringing at Ground Zero of the thrash-metal movement in California, giving readers an insightful glimpse of a gritty, too-real world of speed and rebellion that created the entire concept of extreme metal. Includes words by Gary Holt and Machine Head’s Rob Flynn, as well as rad pictures of everyone’s favorite headbangers—Holt’s band, Exodus, Slayer, Testament, Anthrax, Vio-Lence, Possessed, Megadeth, and, of course, Metallica. (Recommended Listening: Toxic Holocaust, “Nowhere To Run”).




5. Zone One by Colson Whitehead Spend three days in the life of Mark Spitz, a lone disillusioned marine attempting the clean up of Chinatown in New York—now known as “Zone One”—after the zombie apocalypse. But sometimes it’s not even the walking dead that are the problem, but the infrastructure, the sponsor corporation’s new rules, the gossip between your fellow sweepers (though, in the end, it’s really the walking dead that are the problem). In a bold attempt to make a lowbrow genre literary, Whitehead presents a new kind of horror story, one drowned in great drifts of mediocrity, depression, and inevitable doom. (Recommended Listening: Machine Head, “Locust”).




6. Metalion: The Slayer Mag Diaries by Jon Kristiansen In late-’80s and early-’90s Scandinavia, one zine ruled the scene: Slayer, a thorny DIY mag dedicated to only the darkest of underground metal. Showcasing bands like Mayhem, Emperor, and Napalm Death long before they were big names, Metalion made Slayer a huge sensation among extreme metal’s forerunners; now, these awesome relics of extreme metal’s history can be yours in one fat, badass volume. (Recommended Listening: Ash Borer, “Rest, You Are The Lightning”)



7. Overkill: The Untold Story of Motörhead by Joel McIver McIver, author of books about Slayer, Cliff Burton, Randy Rhoads, and a number of other metallic subjects, here takes on the tale of the original speed-metal band, chronicling their rise to stardom in the ’70s and ’80s and the high-octane life and habits of its frontman, one Lemmy Kilmister. Full of humor and insight, Overkill is an intelligent and well-worded telling of a band’s life outside of the spotlight, accentuating the seamless merge of hilarity and personal drama that too often epitomizes the life of a band. (Recommended Listening: Skeletonwitch, “Of Ash and Torment”)




8. Everybody Loves You When You’re Dead by Neil Strauss The author of Hammer of the Gods and The Dirt takes you on a whirlwind tour of the rock climate, pulling unpublished excerpts from interviews with everyone from Lady Gaga to Slayer’s Tom Araya. Ride dirty with Snoop Dogg, rants mindlessly with Clown from Slipknot, take a white power walkabout through Skullbone, Tennessee, or just kick back and listen to Julian Casablancas from the Strokes give The Worst Interview Ever. It’s all right here, in this hyperactive ransom note of rock’s favorite reporter. (Recommended Listening: Necrocomicon, “Everybody Wants To Rule The World”)




9. We Need to Talk About Kevin by Lionel Shriver In this exciting and saddening family drama, we follow the unfolding story of Eva, a woman trying to get a glimpse into the mind of her son Kevin, who has just committed a brutal school massacre. The book looks into the horror and insecurity of being near, but unable to reach, a sick and terrifying mind, and let’s the reader get a bit more tangible grasp on the inner workings of both a poisoned family and a sociopathic killer. (Recommended Listening: Tombs, “To Cross The Land”)



10. Iron Man: My Journey Through Heaven and Hell With Black Sabbath by Tony Iommi and T.J. Lammers In this tell-all volume, the guitarist who invented heavy metal tells the story of how it all began. Though a little light on the journalistic facts and sometimes maybe too forgiving (Iommi’s cocaine use in the ’80s is often written off as a little bit of fun), Iron Man is a familiar and engaging story about the all-too-human life of one of metal’s gods. (Recommended Listening: Hammers of Misfortune, “The Grain”).


http://www.revolvermag.com/culture/the-most-metal-books-of-2011.html

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Lamb of God’s Randy Blythe Gives His Top Five Tips for Aspiring Rock Stars



As one of the 100 Greatest Living Rock Stars–as featured in Revolover‘s new, 100th issue–Lamb of God frontman Randy Blythe knows a thing or two about what it takes to make it in the brutal music biz. Blythe looks set to continue his reputation as one of metal’s most ferociously captivating frontmen when his band releases its highly anticipated new album, Resolution, on January 24. So we asked Blythe to give us his top five pieces of advice for those about to rock.
1. “Get a college degree.”
2. “Be nice to everyone. Don’t act like an entitled fuck because the people you see on the way up are gonna be the same people you see on the way down. And you never know what’s gonna happen. There are no guarantees in this business. It could all disappear tomorrow and if your career goes down the shitter you might need to call in a few favors. Maybe someone needs a new band member, and if you’ve been nice to them, maybe they’ll think of you, but if you were a dick, that’s all they’ll remember.”
3. “Treat your crew with respect. They’re the reason you aren’t schlepping your own gear anymore.”
4. “Don’t trash the fucking dressing room at the venue, unless the owner of the venue is a complete asshole, because somebody has to come in there and clean it up. It might be someone’s grandma.”
5. “Don’t blow your money on a bunch of stupid shit like drugs and alcohol if you can help it. Save some. Again, there is no guarantee in this business. There’s no pension plan or retirement fund. One day you aren’t going to be the shit anymore and you aren’t gonna have a band. You can’t go on tour and make money. So don’t buy an Escalade, get a goddamn used Honda. I’ve never owned a new car in my life. I bought a nice Toyota truck with not that many miles on it last year. That’s the nicest thing I’ve ever bought.”

http://www.revolvermag.com/lists-2/lamb-of-gods-randy-blythe-gives-his-top-five-tips-for-aspiring-rock-stars.html Selengkapnya...

Jane's Addiction, the Roots Playing Rolling Stone Super Bowl Tailgate Party

Pete Wentz to DJ February 5th event

 

Rolling Stone has put together an all-star talent roster for the Volkswagen Rock & Roll Fan Tailgate Party just before the Super Bowl on February 5th in Indianapolis, with performances by Jane's Addiction and the Roots. Joining them on the bill as guest DJ will be ex-Fall Out Boy and current Black Cards member Pete Wentz.
The Tailgate Party follows the previous night's Rolling Stone concert with LMFAO, Gym Class Heroes, Lupe Fiasco and Cobra Starship.
Beloved for their parties – frontman Perry farrell founded Lollapalooza – their artistic sense and their showmanship, Jane's Addiction have turned their live show into performance art. At the core, though, is a band of exceptional musicianship, as seen on their critically acclaimed release of last year, The Great Escape Artist.
Just as Jane's are hailed in the alternative field, the Roots have been widely regarded for years as arguably the greatest live hip-hop band on the planet. Together, the two bands promise to dazzle Indy.
For further information and tickets go to www.rollingstonerockweekend.com.

 

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Alice in Chains Working on New Album

Jerry Cantrell recovered from shoulder surgery, ready to get in studio

 

Alice in Chains made a hugely successful recording comeback in 2009 with Black Gives Way to Blue. The first album from the band featuring new singer William Duvall, the album debuted in the Top 10 of the Billboard Top 200 and scored multiple Grammy nominations.
Now the band is working on the follow-up, guitarist/vocalist Jerry Cantrell tells Rolling Stone. "We started writing last year," Cantrell told us when we ran into him at the Dimebash tribute in L.A., the annual show in honor late guitarist "Dimebag" Darrell Abbott.
The band plans to head into the studio early this year, according to Cantrell. The break between records wasn't originally intended to be three years, but Cantrell had to deal with some medical ailments: "I had shoulder surgery. I had to get some bone spurs and torn cartilage taken care of, so that put me back a little bit," he says. "But we’ve been writing through the whole process."
Though the title track of Black Gives Way to Blue featured a guest appearance by Elton John, don't expect high-profile guests on the new album. Cantrell remains blown away by John's appearance on the last record. "That’s just the universe lining up right. I had nothing to do with that other than asking," Cantrell says. "What he is, beyond anything else, is a fucking amazing musician. And he’s the guy who inspired me to start playing music, so to have him play on one of our records – especially such a meaningful record, where we’re restarting our musical careers and saying goodbye and honoring our buddy – it’s a tremendous thing."
During interviews around the last album's release, Cantrell spoke about the band moving on after the death of singer Layne Staley. Though the album was a belated goodbye to their fallen singer, released seven years after his death, Cantrell says the band still honors his memory.
"Layne’s mother’s been doing a show for Layne every year, and we give to that," he says. "It’s good to remember your people. Life is very temporary, and we will be joining them shortly. Hopefully it’s not too soon, but it’s good. It’s some amazing people that should be remembered."
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Reunited Van Halen Play Blazing Show at Tiny NYC Club

The group debut new song 'She's The Woman,' originally recorded as a demo in 1976

 


"It's like climbing into a rocket in here," David Lee Roth said as he stepped onto the matchbox-sized stage at New York's 250-capacity Cafe Wha? for Van Halen's first concert in four years. "It's a rocket that comes from way back into the past into what the future's going to look like. Welcome to Occupy Van Halen, ladies and gentlemen!"
With those words Eddie Van Halen kicked into the opening notes of "You Really Got Me" and the crowd –composed almost entirely of journalists and music industry insiders – went absolutely bonkers. Over the next hour, the group played a stunningly tight set of songs from their 1978 debut LP all the way through David Lee Roth's swan song, 1984. It was a show guaranteed to make any crowd go into a collective state of hysteria, but the happiest man in the house could have been Roth himself. Dressed in beige overalls and a Brian Johnson-style newsboy hat, the singer had an ear-to-ear grin on his face all night, especially when he looked over at his 92-year-old uncle Manny – the founder of Cafe Wha? – who was seated in the corner. "Last time I stood on a stage this low I had to have the car back by midnight," Roth joked early in the night. "This is one of our best nights ever."
I stood a good five feet in front of Eddie Van Halen (dressed in ripped jeans and a black t-shirt) and the man played absolutely flawlessly. It was a beautiful sight.  Before the start of a Van Halen tour you never know what Ed you're getting. The 2004 Van Hagar Ed was a drunken, shirtless mess. The 2007/08 reunion Ed was cleaned up and together, and that clearly is the case today. While Roth ordered drinks from the stage and took some shots, Ed restricted himself to bottled water and a couple of Red Bulls.
About half a second after the end of "You Really Got Me," Wolfgang Van Halen played the opening notes of "Running With The Devil." By that point the crazy reality that we were seeing Van Halen in a tiny, sweaty basement club began to kick in. These songs (not to mention the performers) were programmed to rock massive basketball arenas. Seeing that all that energy crammed into a basement club was surreal. It's a shame so few fans outside of the press were able to witness it.
It was clear that Dave's voice isn't quite as strong as it was back in the day, but he more than compensated for that with incredible energy and charisma. It must be said, however, that original bassist Michael Anthony's backing vocals were sorely missed. They need them now more than ever, and as talented a bassist as Wolfgang clearly is (especially for a 20-year-old), it was a real lame move to push Anthony out of the band.
After just two songs, Dave began a long spoken interlude that clearly tested the patience of the Van Halen men. "I could see your naked, steaming eyes," Roth said. "I see a lot of familiar faces. A lot of folks from the media. A lot of folks from the record company. A lot of folks that we grew up with here. How many of you people know Lady Gaga? I was watching her on New Year's Eve with Mayor Bloomberg and it's kind of an interesting story . . ." This went on for a few long minutes, but then Dave screamed out "Somebody Get Me a Doctor!" and all was forgiven.
The return of Roth to the band means that the group's entire history with Sammy Hagar (not to mention Gary Cherone) has essentially been erased. That still leaves them with plenty of great material, and the setlist for the show seemed like the playlist for a classic rock radio station. They also played "Everybody Wants Some!!," "Dance The Night Away," "Hot For Teacher," "Ice Cream Man," "Panama," "Ain't Talkin' 'bout Love" and "Jump." The only song from their upcoming LP was "She's The Woman," but there's a good reason that it sounded so much like a classic Van Halen song: It's a demo from 1976 that's been circulating in the fan community for years. Parts of it were eventually used on "Mean Street." They have since fleshed out the track, but its inclusion on the new album seems to bolster Sammy Hagar's contention that parts of the disc are recycled old bits – not that it really matters. A good song is a good song and they should use the best material they have available to them.
Midway through a blazing "Ain't Talkin' 'bout Love" Roth explained to the crowd that it was impossible to leave the stage for an encore, so we were instructed to pretend that they left and came back. The finale of "Jump" didn't quite take off – partially due to the fact that the piped-in keyboards were largely inaudible –but it hardly mattered. Van Halen had braved a crowd that seemingly contained every music journalist in the city, and proved to all of them they still have the goods. They have yet to grant a single interview, but it's clearly all part of a strategy to build buzz around the new disc and tour – though they didn't play their upcoming single "Tattoo."
A setlist taped next to Alex's drum kit said that "Beautiful Girls" and "Unchained" were supposed to wrap up the show, but after "Jump" the band was ushered out a back door and driven away. A new single and video are going to be released soon, and their tour is going on sale January 10th.
The last 14 years have been rough for Van Halen fans. The last three tours featured three different singers, and for most of that time the band was completely inactive. Let's hope this club show is the dawn of a better, more productive era for the band. It sure seems like that's the case.
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At the Drive-In Announce Reunion in Cryptic Tweet

Hardcore rockers say they will 'break their 11-year silence'

 

Texas post-hardcore rockers At the Drive-In have posted a cryptic tweet that all but announces that they will be reuniting for the first time in 11 years. "¡ ATTENTION ! To whom it may concern: AT THE DRIVE-IN will be breaking their 11 year silence THIS STATION IS …NOW…OPERATIONAL," the band wrote in a tweet earlier this afternoon.

Members of the band have been hinting a possible reunion for a few years now. "We've been making amends with a lot of the members and having some really good talks with them," frontman Cedric Bixler-Zavala told Drowned in Sound in 2009. "We just have to iron out a lot of personal things. A lot of it we've dealt with already and I've apologized for a lot of things I've said and the way it ended. We'll see what happens."

At the Drive-In broke up in 2001 when Bixler-Zavala felt the band was holding him back creatively. He and Omar Rodriguez-Lopez went on to form The Mars Volta, while the remaining three members of the group formed the band Sparta. Bassist Paul Hinojos, who co-founded Sparta, left that group to join The Mars Volta between 2005 and 2009.

At the Drive-In were well known for their intense, aggressively physical live performances. You can watch a video of the band in their prime performing their hit "One-Armed Scissor" in 2000 on Later with Jools Holland in the clip below.
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Bon Iver Confirmed for Flaming Lips Album

Frontman Wayne Coyne hopeful Ke$ha, Erykah Badu will also commit in time for an April release

The Flaming Lips had a jam-packed 2011: The Oklahoma psych-rockers toured behind their Dark Side of the Moon covers album, released music in a gummy skull, and recorded a 24-hour marathon song on Halloween-- all before ending the year with a pair of hometown New Year's shows in Oklahoma City where they were joined by Yoko Ono's Plastic Ono Band, with whom the Lips had already recorded a four-song Christmas EP earlier that month. But 50-year-old frontman Wayne Coyne isn't one for rest:  The Lips' visionary singer already is hard at work on his band's next project.
Coyne tells Rolling Stone that the Lips are putting the finishing touches on a collaborative album that finds them working with a wildly diverse roster of artists, from Bon Iver to Nick Cave and Edward Sharpe to Yoko Ono. The album doesn't have an official release date yet, but Coyne hopes it will see the light of day in April. "All these things happen within a couple of days," Coyne says of the album's remotely managed, oftentimes logistically tricky recording sessions. "You set up these [collaborations] in your mind and immediately get to work."
The album's wide-ranging guestlist of collaborators are a direct reflection of Coyne and the Lips' diverse musical palette. Some collaborations have already been recorded  (Nick Cave, Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, Plastic Ono Band, Neon Indian), while others are still coming together (Bon Iver). And then there are the artists (Ke$ha, Lykke Li, Erykah Badu) whom Coyne is still trying to convince to jump onboard. "Sometimes it just takes a matter of connecting," he says of potential roadblocks in roping artists along for the ride.
According to Coyne, the Bon Iver collaboration is a definite go. He recently talked to Justin Vernon, and the Grammy-nominated Wisconsin musician is sending the Lips two tracks to work on any day now. As for Nick Cave, Coyne sent the cranky Australian a track to work on, and a day later Cave responded, "Fuck it! I did something! Let's see what happens!”
With Ke$ha, nothing is set in stone. (Coyne: "We knew that she was a fan. There are a lot of these sort of druggy outlets out there that people get connected through.") But the two have spoken on a few occasions – the pop star even invited him to her show in Tulsa, but he was unable to attend – and Coyne, who hopes to lay down some sort of "weird rap” with the "Tik Tok” star, sees it as a perfect match. "She's a freak," he says of their similarities.
But the opportunity to work with one collaborator in particular left Coyne in a state of gleeful shock. When Rolling Stone spoke to Coyne in early December, he had just learned that he would be performing two New Year's shows with Yoko Ono and her Plastic Ono Band; Coyne exuded a palpable sense of giddy excitement at the prospect, but he didn't want to be overly optimistic. "I always sort of feel like something could happen,” he said cautiously at the time. "I just worry.”
But the concerts did in fact occur – and Coyne couldn't have been more thrilled with their outcome. "It was better than I could have dreamed of," he said after the fact. "[Ono] was wonderful and gracious.”
The Flaming Lips' pair of New Year's shows, which included spacey renditions of Beatles classics such as  "A Day in The Life," "I Am The Walrus" and "Strawberry Fields Forever" – as well as joint performances of "Happy Xmas (War Is Over) with the Plastic Ono Band on both evenings – were the pinnacle of Coyne's "dream" collaboration. The partnership had gotten its early legs after the Lips toured with Sean Lennon's band, Ghost of the Sabertooth Tiger, last summer. In November, Coyne and the Lips ventured to Lennon's New York studio, where together they would lay down a set of cathartically freaky Christmas tunes that would ultimately comprise a four-song collaborative EP the Lips released with the Plastic Ono Band in December.
It turned out Yoko wasn't at the studio for these sessions; she was traveling at the time of the EP's recording, and was therefore forced to record her parts remotely. But, if you ask Coyne, it was probably for the best. "It would be nerve-wracking to be around as someone as mythologized as a Yoko Ono (in the studio)," he admits. "What would I say? 'Yoko, could you do that one take again?'”
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Nick Cannon in 'Stable Condition' After Kidney Failure

Wife Mariah Carey predicts he'll leave hospital in two days

 

Mariah Carey shared good news on Twitter this afternoon: her husband, Nick Cannon, is in stable condition after his recent episode of mild kidney failure. Carey tweeted, "Nick is in stable condition with a good prognosis, hopefully he'll be discharged within 2 days. As always he's laughing and in good spirits."
Ever the optimist, Carey also posted a photo of herself kissing the America's Got Talent host as he reclined in his hospital bed, surrounded by balloons and flowers.
Yesterday Cannon, 31,was transferred from a medical facility in Aspen, Colorado, to one in the couple's hometown of Los Angeles. He was hospitalized while vacationing with his family for what Carey disclosed as "mild kidney failure," the cause of which has not been disclosed. He took to his own Twitter account to say, "Currently being [transferred] to a hospital in LA. Thank you all for all your love, prayers and concern. You know me . . . I will be a'ight." A few hours later, he was clearly feeling better – he posted a photo of his haircut and also a party plug for his friend (and Tom Cruise's son), DJ Connor Cruise.
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Adele, Coldplay Lead BRIT Award Nominations

Noel Gallagher, Florence and the Machine, Blur also up for prizes

 

Adele, Coldplay and Florence and the Machine are among the top nominated artists for the 2012 BRIT Awards, the British record industry's equivalent to the Grammys. The 32nd annual awards show will be held in London on February 21st.

Adele, who scored the top-selling album in her native U.K. in 2011, is up for Best British Album of the Year for 21, as well as Best British Female Solo Artist and Best British Single of the Year for "Someone Like You." Coldplay's Mylo Xyloto is also nominated in the best album category, and the band is in the running for Best British Group. Noel Gallagher, James Blake, Jessie J, Anna Calvi, Elbow, Arctic Monkeys and Kasabian are also nominated in various categories, and Britpop heroes Blur will be honored with a lifetime achievement award.

Though the BRIT Awards are designed to honor talent from the U.K., a handful of North American acts – including Beyoncé, Lady Gaga, Bruno Mars, Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes, Foo Fighters and Maroon 5 – were nominated in the show's international categories.
The nominations for the 2012 BRIT Awards are as follows:
British Male Solo Artist
Ed Sheeran
James Blake
James Morrison
Noel Gallagher's High Flying Birds
Professor Green

British Female Solo Artist
Adele
Florence and the Machine
Jessie J
Kate Bush
Laura Marling

British Breakthrough Act
Anna Calvi
Ed Sheeran
Emeli Sandé
Jessie J
The Vaccines

British Group
Arctic Monkeys
Chase and Status
Coldplay
Elbow
Kasabian

British Single
Adele, "Someone Like You"
Ed Sheeran, "The A Team"
Example, "Changed The Way You Kissed Me"
Jessie J feat. B.o.B, "Price Tag"
JLS feat. Dev, "She Makes Me Wanna"
Military Wives/Gareth Malone, "Wherever You Are"
Olly Murs feat. Rizzle Kicks, "Heart Skips A Beat"
One Direction, "What Makes You Beautiful"
Pixie Lott, "All About Tonight"
The Wanted, "Glad You Came"

British Album of the Year
Adele - 21
Coldplay - Mylo Xyloto
Ed Sheeran -  +
Florence and the Machine - Ceremonials
PJ Harvey - Let England Shake

International Male Solo Artist

Aloe Blacc
Bon Iver
Bruno Mars
David Guetta
Ryan Adams

International Female Solo Artist
Beyoncé
Bjork
Feist
Lady Gaga
Rihanna

International Group
Fleet Foxes
Foo Fighters
Jay Z and Kanye West
Lady Antebellum
Maroon 5

International Breakthrough Act
Aloe Blacc
Bon Iver
Foster The People
Lana Del Rey
Nicki Minaj

Outstanding Contribution to Music
Blur

Critics' Choice
1st - Emeli Sandé
2nd - Maverick Sabre
3rd - Michael Kiwanuka

British Producer
Paul Epworth
Flood
Ethan Jones
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Fred Durst Documents Juice Fast on Tumblr

Limp Bizkit frontman struggles not to cheat by eating cookies and candy

 

Limp Bizkit frontman Fred Durst is nearly two weeks into blogging a very difficult 60-day juice fast on Tumblr. Though Durst began the project with a great deal of enthusiasm – his first post on January 2nd was an image of his new juicer with the caption "My new best friend!" - he quickly became frustrated and very, very hungry. "This is going slowwwww," Durst wrote on the third day. "Probably because I cheated last night and had some M&M's."

Though Durst has lost some weight, his posts have become increasingly sporadic and distressed. "Another day of juice down. Definitely NOT getting easier. And I cheated tonight with an oatmeal cookie. She was good!!," he wrote on the fourth day. He didn't update for four days in a row until today, when he explained that his silence was due to not seeing "any significant results yet."

"I am about 2 lbs lights and definitely feeling better internally," says Durst. "My thoughts are clear and inspired, but I'm discouraged in some ways. I guess it's my own personal baggage that's lugging around behind me. All comes to the forefront on a diet like this. I'm going to dive into a heavy cardio, sit ups, and weights routine on Monday. I'm sure that's the next level of fulfillment."
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Lil Wayne to Publish Prison Memoir

Project is culled from notes from rapper's 8-month stint on Rikers Island

 


Lil Wayne has signed a deal to publish a prison memoir called Gone Till November. The book will be drawn from notes the rapper made while serving an eight-month sentence at Rikers Island on a weapons possession charge.
The book, to be published by Grand Central Publishing, is repped by Matthew Guma, who also served as Jay-Z's literary agent for the rapper's best-selling book Decoded. According to a press release, Lil Wayne's prison journals will detail "his thoughts and feelings, strange people he met, his plans, his family, his children, his past, present and future."
Lil Wayne has written about his sports interests for ESPN the Magazine, and he recently announced the launch of a new skateboarding clothing line. The rapper's most recent album, Tha Carter IV, debuted last year at Number One on the Billboard album chart with just under one million copies sold in its first week of release.
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