Tuesday, December 31, 2013

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Monday, December 30, 2013

Megadeth Album Could Have Gone Down Better


Megadeth bassist David Ellefson believes fans might have responded better to recent album Super Collider if they’d heard Kingmaker before hearing the title track (compare and contrast below).

He admits the band are aware of the criticisms levelled at their 14th studio outing – and he believes things will be different on the next one.

Discussing how Super Collider has been compared to their poorly-received 1999 release Risk, Ellefson tells MetalTitans: “We’re aware of the comments for sure, because they’re on our own website or our Facebook page.

“I’ve learned not to criticise our own work – every record has significance to different people. Having said that, the first thing people heard from the record was Super Collider, which is a very mainstream, commercial song. I think had they heard Kingmake” first, for instance, the reaction would have been much different. The first impression is more often than not the most lasting impression.

“When you hear a song that sounds like Megadeth right out the gate, you say, ‘Awesome, man!’ When you hear a song that you have to listen to several times, analyse it and get your mind around it, the first impression may not make you want to dig right in.”

He continues: “I get that. I’m a fan. I used to buy Kiss and Cheap Trick and there were records where I’d say, ‘What the heck is this?’ It wasn’t what I was expecting. Some records take one listen, other take three or four listens other more. I think for me, Super Collider is one of those records.”

The band are gearing up to start work on album number 15. Mainman Dave Mustaine will, of course, have the casting vote, but Ellefson – who recently suggested many fans would rather not hear new Megadeth music – says: “My personal thought is that the next record will be much different. We go through these phases.”

And he insists there’s a place for every release in the thrash giants’ legacy. “We have more than just one style in our cache,” he states. “Fans have discovered us at various times throughout our journey – there are fans who became fans when they heard Risk. That’s when they go into rock’n'roll and they bought that record, and to them that is their debut Megadeth record.”

The band will play Bloodstock in August next year.

Friday, December 27, 2013

Nirvana Day to Be Celebrated in Hoquiam, Washington


Hoquiam, Washington will celebrate its first-ever Nirvana Day on April 10th, 2014, paying tribute to the band whose frontman, Kurt Cobain, was born and raised just four miles away in Aberdeen.

Though the small town of Hoquiam isn't necessarily associated with Nirvana or Cobain – the frontman did live there for a brief period of time – Mayor Jack Durney told radio station KXRO, "They bring great honor . . . to our entire community. And I think that it’s good Kurt Cobain lived in Hoquiam for a little while, but he and Krist Novoselic are part of our community, and I think it’s good to honor our sons and their great accomplishments."

April 10th will be a day filled with accolades for Nirvana, as the band is also set to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame alongside Kiss, Peter Gabriel, Hall and Oates, Cat Stevens and Linda Ronstadt. "This is a great honor," Noveselic said after this year's honorees were announced. "Thank you to the people who nominated and voted for us. Thank you most of all to Kurt Cobain. And to everyone who's kept rock music going strong for 60 years and counting."

Nirvana drummer Dave Grohl added in a statement: "I'd like to thank the committee not only for this induction, but also for recognizing Nirvana for what we were: pure rock & roll. Most of all, thank you to all of the fans that have supported rock & roll throughout the years, and to Kurt and Krist, without whom I would not be here today."

Back in December 2012, Nirvana returned to the stage, sort of, for the first time since Cobain's suicide in 1994,when Grohl and Noveselic joined Paul McCartney at Madison Square Garden for the "12-12-12" hurricane Sandy benefit concert. The supergroup – which also included the Foo Fighters' Pat Smear, who played live with Nirvana – came together again for a performance of their original song "Cut Me Some Slack" in July when McCartney's Out There tour stopped in the band's hometown of Seattle.

RollingStone

Monday, December 23, 2013

Joe Strummer died 11 years ago. Look back at our tribute to the Clash frontman


Joe Strummer, frontman for the groundbreaking punk band the Clash, died at his farmhouse in southern England on December 22nd. He was fifty. According to Trisha Simonon, the wife of Clash bassist Paul Simonon, the cause of death was a defective artery near his heart. "The coroner says it's something he would have been born with," she told Rolling Stone. "This could have happened at any point in his life. He walked his dog, sat on his sofa and that was that."

It was an unlikely end for an artist who thrived on the energy of insurrection and worked throughout his life to smash musical and cultural boundaries. The Clash, which he helped form in 1976 with Simonon, guitarist Mick Jones and drummer Terry Chimes, channeled England's working-class rage into a roaring, purifying noise. The band embraced hip-hop in the early Eighties, when most of the rock world was either ignorant or contemptuous of it, and reggae was always a potent element in the group's sound.

"The Clash was the greatest rock band," Bono told British reporters after Strummer's death. "They wrote the rule book for U2." Says folk-rock provocateur Billy Bragg, "The Clash brought something to punk beyond a sneer and a pair of bondage trousers. They brought a radical agenda. And that agenda was brought by Joe Strummer." The original members of the Clash — along with Topper Headon, who replaced Chimes — are set to be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in March.

Strummer was born John Graham Mellor in Turkey on August 21st, 1952, the son of an English diplomat. He lived in Mexico, West Germany and Egypt during his childhood, attended an English boarding school and later enrolled in art school in London. But he dropped out and earned his stage name performing folk songs with an acoustic guitar on the street. He was fronting a pub band called the 1o1ers when he met Jones, who had already hooked up with Simonon. "I was just lookin' to meet my match," Strummer recalled. "Just lookin' to stir things up."

However adventurous the Clash's music was on albums such as London Calling (which Rolling Stone named the Best Album of the Eighties) and Sandinista!, the core of their sound was a fierce guitar attack and Strummer's guttural, declamatory vocals. Songs such as "White Riot," "London's Burning" and "Garageland" electrified the English punk scene and made a powerful impact in the U.S., in no small part due to the group's tumultuous stage shows. "They were ferocious live," says Kosmo Vinyl, who comanaged the band for many years. "Joe put out like a soul singer — it was like an exorcism up there." Ultimately, the group had difficulty squaring its political beliefs with its commercial ambitions. Pressures from its record label, the media and punk purists didn't help.

Still, dramatizing the strain of such contradictions seemed at the heart of what the band was about. As Bragg says, "That's why they were called the Clash."

"The trouble with this interview is that you're interviewing me as though I'm a success, and I feel I'm a failure," Strummer said in 1982. "I only see the disappointments. We're angry because everything we do turns to ash."

Ironically, Combat Rock, the 1982 album that brought the Clash its biggest success with songs including "Rock the Casbah" and "Should I Stay or Should I Go," essentially broke the band up. Around the time of its release, Strummer disappeared for a month just as the group was about to go on tour. He eventually turned up in Paris, saying, "I felt that freedom, you know, like in a Hank Williams song." Upon Strummer's return, Headon was kicked out of the band for using heroin. Strummer and Simonon gave Jones the boot a year later. The Clash soldiered on with new members and put out an album called Cut the Crap in 1985. They split for good that same year.

Four years later, Strummer made a solo album, Earthquake Weather, that largely went unnoticed. He formed a band called Latino Rockabilly War, wrote music for and appeared in a number of films, hosted a radio show for the BBC World Service and briefly replaced Shane MacGowan as lead singer of the Pogues. His 1999 release of Rock Art and the X-Ray Style with his band the Mescaleros provided a joyful, eccentric new direction for him. Global a Go-Go, Strummer's most recent album with the Mescaleros, was released in 2001.

Though Strummer never particularly enjoyed talking about the Clash — "Who cares about the past?" he said in 2001 — the band has undergone something of a recent revival, and the group's catalog was remastered and reissued in 2000. Strummer and Jones even played Clash songs at a November 15th benefit for striking firefighters in London — their first time playing together since the breakup. There was talk of a reunion for the Hall of Fame induction.

"It's not just going to be people of my generation thinking of Joe," says Bragg, "but anybody who's ever picked up a guitar with the urge to change the world. We never go away. But something has gone now. A shining light has been snuffed out."

Strummer is survived by his wife, Lucinda, two daughters and a stepdaughter.

This is a story from the January 23rd, 2003 issue of Rolling Stone.

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Iron Maiden and Metallica will play toguether


Iron Maiden and Metallica have been unveiled as the big name headliners of Sonisphere 2014!

The metal giants’ historic sets next July mark the first time they’ve ever shared a British bill and will be the only UK concerts either band will play in 2014.

The big name announcement is a huge statement of intent for Sonisphere organisers after two years away from British soil. The event was cancelled in 2012 and did not return this year.

Making the event even more momentous, next summer will be the 40th anniversary of rock events held in the hallowed grounds of Knebworth House.

After the inaugural 1974 event with Van Morrison and the Allman Brothers, the likes of Led Zeppelin, The Rolling Stones, Genesis, The Who and Pink Floyd have all graced Knebworth in the ensuing years.

Sonisphere debuted at Knebworth in 2009 and over its initial three year run boasted spectacular sets from Slipknot, Rammstein, Biffy Clyro and Linkin Park.

Enthusing about securing Iron Maiden and Metallica, Team Sonisphere said in a statement: "During our two year absence we’ve continued to believe in and work hard on Sonisphere.

“We said in 2013 that if we had the right line up then we would be back, and that’s exactly what we’ve got in 2014.

“The omens were obviously on our side when we secured the two biggest metal acts of all time in the year that also brings the 40th anniversary of the first concert at Knebworth.

“Our excitement at being able to offer Iron Maiden and Metallica on the same bill for the first time ever has been hard to contain.

“To do so in a year of great celebration for the iconic venue is very satisfying. Sonisphere 2014 is going to be a legendary year!"

Sonisphere takes place from Friday 4th to Sunday 6th July 2014.

Saturday, December 21, 2013

The Rolling Stones announce 14 On Fire tour


The Rolling Stones' 14 ON FIRE tour will begin with a very special one-off show in Abu Dhabi on 21 February 2014, before heading out on the road across the Far East and Asia to play three shows in Tokyo and a one-off show in Macau. The Stones will then travel to Australia and New Zealand for one-off shows in Perth, Adelaide, Sydney, Melbourne, Hanging Rock, Brisbane and Auckland. A further two big concerts in Asia will be announced soon.

Mick Taylor will once again be appearing as a special guest on the tour, alongside Jagger, Richards, Watts and Wood.

The stage design for the indoor concerts is based on the band’s ubiquitous tongue and lips logo, which extends out into the crowd, allowing the Stones to interact directly with their audience. The exclusive ‘Tongue Pit’ GA Standing area inside the stage will give fans in this area an "incomparable 360 degree concert experience".

Rolling Stones 14 ON FIRE dates:

Abu Dhabi - du Arena (Yas Island) - 21 February 2014

Tokyo - Tokyo Dome - 26 February 2014

Tokyo - Tokyo Dome - 4 March 2014

Tokyo - Tokyo Dome - 6 March 2014

Macau - Cotai Arena - 9 March 2014

Perth - Perth Arena - 19 March 2014

Adelaide - Adelaide Oval - 22 March 2014

Sydney - Allphones Arena - 25 March 2014

Melbourne -  Rod Laver Arena - 28 March 2014

Macedon - Hanging Rock - 30 March 2014

Brisbane - Entertainment Centre - 2 April 2014

Auckland - Mt Smart Stadium - 5 April 2014

Friday, December 20, 2013

Foo Fighters, the Roots, Imagine Dragons Set for Super Bowl Concerts



The Foo Fighters, Imagine Dragons and the Roots will lead the Bud Light Hotel's stacked Super Bowl weekend concert lineup, set to take place in New York City across the street from the hotel's unique location, a cruise ship docked on the Hudson River.

The recently reassembled Foo Fighters will play February 1st, the night before the big game, along with the Zac Brown Band, whose new record was produced by Foo frontman Dave Grohl. The gig should be a big one for Grohl and Co. who played their first concerts since 2012 earlier this month in Mexico City (plus a surprise gig in a Los Angeles-area pizza joint). While Grohl said the Foo Fighters would be taking a break just a year ago, the band is already at work on a new album: "We’re writing the album in a way that I don’t think has been done before," Grohl told Rolling Stone.

The Bud Light Hotel's festivities are slated to kick off January 30th with the Roots curating and headlining a tribute to New York hip-hop, with the group performing alongside Run-D.M.C., Busta Rhymes and other rap luminaries.

Imagine Dragons will play the following night as part of the Pandora Presents party. On February 2nd, the Bud Light Hotel will close up shop with a pre-Super Bowl concert headlined by Fall Out Boy and country star Jake Owen.

The concerts – along with the Bud Light Hotel Lounge, plus day-of and after-parties – will all take place at the revamped Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum, which will temporarily house the Bud Light Hotel Amphitheater, a heated, two-story, 1,500 person venue.

Also on February 1st, the Red Hot Chili Peppers will headline WFAN's pre-Super Bowl bash, "Big Hello to Brooklyn" at the Barclays Center, with additional performances from New Politics, MS MR, J Roddy Walston and the Business and Basic Vacation. And as for the Super Bowl's own big concert, the halftime show will be headlined by Bruno Mars. The game is set to take place at the MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey on February 2nd.

RollingStone

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Kings of Leon Announce Second Leg of 'Mechanical Bull' Tour


Kings of Leon have announced the second leg of their 2014 tour. The Southern alt-rockers – who released their sixth studio album, Mechanical Bull, in September – will now stay on the road until April.

The second leg, which features indie-rockers Local Natives as an opening act, will kick off on March 19th with a show at the Ak-Chin Pavilion in Phoenix, Arizona. The tour will run through the U.S. and Canada (including stops in Saskatoon, Edmonton and Calgary) before winding down with a gig at New Orleans Arena in New Orleans, Louisiana on April 11th. Tickets for most shows will go on sale starting Friday, December 13th at the Live Nation website. Additional dates will be announced.

Kings of Leon will also hit the TV promotional circuit later this month. On December 14th, they'll serve as musical guests on Saturday Night Live, and they'll appear on Ellen on December 16th.

The band has been in a healthy state this year, reenergized after a break following their infamous meltdown in 2011. "It was how we sounded when we started playing as a band, excited to plug in," drummer Nathan Followill told Rolling Stone of their latest LP.

Kings of Leon's new tour dates:

3/19 Phoenix, AZ – Ak-Chin Pavilion
3/21 21 Los Angeles, CA – The Forum Presented by Chase
3/25 San Jose, CA – SAP Center
3/27 Portland, OR – Moda Center
3/30 Vancouver, BC – Pepsi Live at Rogers Arena
4/01 Calgary, AB – Scotiabank Saddledome
4/02 Edmonton, AB – Rexall Place
4/04 Saskatoon, SK – Credit Union Centre
4/08 Tulsa, OK – BOK Center
4/10 Houston, TX – Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion
4/11 New Orleans, LA – New Orleans Arena

RollingStone

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Bon Jovi sings whit Prince William

Jon Bon Jovi was joined on stage by the pair for a surprise performance of 'Living On A Prayer' at a charity gala in Kensington Palace yesterday.

The Duke of Cambridge attended the Winter Whites Gala to support homeless charity Centrepoint.

If you're feeling brave, you can watch the video below:


Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Morrissey, Jake Bugg Added to Nobel Peace Prize Concert


Morrissey and Jake Bugg are among a new batch of artists scheduled to perform at the Nobel Peace Prize Concert happening December 11th in Oslo, Norway. Syrian musician Omar Souleyman and Swedish rapper Timbuktu will also take part in the 20th annual event, joining previously announced performers Mary J. Blige, James Blunt, Swedish singer Zara Larsson and Norwegian hip-hop duo Envy. Claire Danes will host the concert.

The concert will come as part of a ceremony honoring this year's Nobel Peace Prize recipient, the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, for the Netherlands-based group's efforts to eliminate chemical weapons – an especially resonant issue this year, in light of evidence that forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad have used chemical weapons in the ongoing conflict there.

Morrissey will sing three songs at the concert, according to a notice on the fan site True to You. It's been a busy year for the singer, who has canceled other concerts over recurring health problems. He also recently published an autobiography, which will be read by Walking Dead star David Morrissey in audio-book form.

Bugg, the 19-year-old English singer and songwriter, recently released his second album this year, Shangri La, which he recorded with Rick Rubin. "Might as well keep up the momentum, you know?" Bugg told Rolling Stone over the summer. "In this time that I've been touring and traveling the world I had a lot of new experiences and opportunity. Why not write about it?"

The Nobel Peace Prize Concert will air in the U.S. on AXS TV on December 11th from 8-9:30 p.m. EST.

RollingStone

Muse Get Dramatic on 'Live at Rome Olympic Stadium'



Muse's new live album/concert film, Live at Rome Olympic Stadium, was recorded on July 6th of this year and finds the band in highly polished form, yet also demonstrates impressive range. "Resistance," taken from The Resistance, starts with front man Matthew Bellamy yelling, "Let me hear you scream!" and ends with him storming across the stage while holding his guitar in the air like a scepter. By contrast, "Explorers," off last year’s The 2nd Law starts with just Bellamy sitting in front of the keys —immediately the entire stadium goes from full roar to absolute silence, fixated on the slow burning song.

Listening to the concert is one thing, but watching it reveals the band's thoughts on modern-day capitalism, in dramatic ways. A high powered investor stomps onto the stage, screaming and throwing money at the audience, only to have a heart attack amongst a literal explosion of money and at another turn, an oil executive struts out on stage and willingly douses herself with gasoline before she dies of self-inflicted poisoning.

Although Muse played some big shows in 2013, next year they'll likely slow the live show down to work on their next album. Live at Rome Olympic Stadium will be released on CD/DVD and Blu-ray formats on December 2nd.

RollingStone

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Foster the People: Second Album 'Not the Record People Will Expect'


After breaking out in 2011 with "Pumped Up Kicks," Foster the People slowed down considerably this year. They played just one show, and Mark Foster became a self-described "studio rat," where he started working on the band's follow-up to Torches, as well as scoring his first feature film. But 2014 should see a resurgence of Foster the People, starting this January, if all goes well. Rolling Stone recently spoke backstage with Foster at the HARD Day of the Dead Festival in L.A., where he teased some details about the new album, his film score and more.

What was your experience scoring a film for the first time like?
It's called Little Boy. It's going to come out this next year. It's a period piece and the first feature film I've scored. This guy Alejandro Monteverde – he directed a film called Bella that won the Toronto Film Festival, and this is his next film. It's Tom Wilkinson and Emily Watson, some really good actors. It's a good movie, but a ton of music. I think there's only nine minutes in the film that didn't have music, so it was, like, five months of work. But it was cool – I went to Prague and recorded the orchestra there for all the classical stuff. It was definitely an experience, but I'm really excited about the new Foster the People record. It's guitar-driven. I haven't played this much guitar in a long time, so it's going to be really fun to play live, because it's much more organic and more in the vein of the Pixies and Clash and stuff.

Did scoring Little Boy influence the Foster record?
For me, they live in different worlds. I think scoring the film is going to influence our third record because it kind of brought me back around to classical music, which is what I grew up on. I've been thinking a lot about the third record, even though our second record is not out yet, which is really funny to say out loud. For that record, I think it's going to be much more orchestral, and definitely working on the film and going to Prague and recording the orchestra, which I'd never done before – I'd never written a piece and then watched 50 musicians bring it to life – it's one of the most powerful things I've ever been a part of, to see an orchestra construct an original piece of music. I want to do that again. It was fun.

Is there a timeline for when the album comes out?
Beginning of next year. We're going to have a song at radio in January.

Is there a first single?
I shouldn't say that. This is the first interview I've even done about the next record so I've spilled a lot. I've spilled the beans.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Top 10: Never-Before-Seen Beatles Photos

Take a look at never-before-seen photos of The Beatles with intimate snapshots spanning the band's U.S. arrival, the filming of 'Help' and more key moments from the Sixties:

The Beatles arriving at JFK airport in New York in 1964. 
John Lennon during the filming of Help! in the Bahamas in 1965.

Ringo Starr during the filming of Help! in the Bahamas in 1965. 


Ringo Starr during the filming of Help! in the Bahamas in 1965. 


George Harrison and John Lennon on the set of Help! in the Bahamas in 1965.


George Harrison and John Lennon on the set of Help! in the Bahamas in 1965. 

 
The Beatles on the set of Help! in the Bahamas in 1965.


John Lennon during the filming of Help! in the Swiss Alps in 1965.

 
George Harrison during the filming of Help! in the Bahamas in 1965. 

Paul McCartney on the set of ‘Help!’ in the Swiss Alps in 1965.


RollingStones





Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Black Sabbath Adds 2014 Tour Dates


Reunited metal legends Black Sabbath aren’t done touring yet, as the band has announced a new string of concert dates that extend into the new year… but only two of those are stateside.

While a majority of the North American shows will take place in Canada, the dates on this continent start and end right here in the United States, with Sabbath set to perform at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center on March 31, then hit Los Angeles’ Hollywood Bowl on April 26.

The tour will also take the band all around the world, with shows scheduled across Europe and Russia.

This new tour leg is in continued support of the most recent Black Sabbath album, 13, their first with original frontman Ozzy Osbourne since 1978′s Never Say Die! 

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Bob Dylan Goes Interactive in 'Like a Rolling Stone' Clip


Bob Dylan's 1965 classic "Like a Rolling Stone," which Rolling Stone named the greatest song of all time, finally has an official video. Created by the digital agency Interlude, the video is interactive, allowing viewers to flip through 16 television channels as a variety of television personalities lip-sync the lyrics. Check it out below.

"I'm using the medium of television to look back right at us," director Vania Heymann told Mashable. "You're flipping yourself to death with switching channels [in real life]." Adds Interlude CEO Yoni Bloch: "You'll always miss something because you can't watch everything at the same time."

The stations you can flip through include a cooking show, The Price Is Right, Pawn Stars, local news, a tennis match, a children's cartoon, BBC News and a live video of Dylan and the Hawks playing "Like a Rolling Stone" in 1966.

Dylan is currently in the middle of an extensive European tour, which wraps up later this month with a three-night stand at the Royal Albert Hall in London. It will be his first time at the historic venue since the final show of his 1966 tour, which marked his last performance before the motorcycle crash that ultimately kept him off the road for eight years.

He recently released the massive box set The Complete Album Collection Volume 1. It contains his 35 official albums, including 14 that weren't previously remastered. There are also six live albums and two CDs of rare material.

RollingStone

Queens of the Stone Age Go Macabre in New Interactive Video


Queens of the Stone Age take a surreal approach in their new video for "The Vampyre of Time and Memory." The project is more an art installation than a traditional music video, allowing fans to navigate through an interactive website full of macabre visuals, disorienting graphics and a slow-motion performance of the band's psychedelic ballad.

The unconventional video (co-directed by Kii Arens and Jason Trucco) was created and developed by Darknet in collaboration with the Creators Project. In a press release, the two directors commented on the project, calling it the "ultimate artistic joyide."

"Joshua Homme and company gave us the creative keys to the car from word 'go,'" they said. "And Josh has a badass car. . . On the technology side, Darknet was the perfect forward-thinking company to push the boundaries of music video presentation. All art is technology, technology that shares an experience or an idea. 'Vampyre' uses all the tools available to us today to share a meaningful common experience."

Queens of the Stone released their sixth studio album, ...Like Clockwork, back in June, and they've remained very active since. The band is currently in the middle of their largest tour to date (which was recently extended into 2014), and last month, they joined bands like Arcade Fire and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young to perform at the 2013 Bridge School Benefit.

Tomorrow, the band will release the Spotify-exclusive ...Like Cologne EP, which features three live tracks recorded on September 4th in Cologne, Germany. On November 29th, as part of Record Store Day's Black Friday event, they're releasing a limited edition vinyl pressing of their latest LP.

RollingStone

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Musician Pulled Trigger in Brooklyn Murder-Suicide


An Iranian musician allegedly killed two members of the dance-punk group the Yellow Dogs, a third man and himself early Monday morning in what the police are calling a murder-suicide in the East Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, The New York Times reports.

The assailant, identified by the The Wall Street Journal as 29-year-old Ali Akbar Mohammadi Raffie, reportedly used a semi-automatic rifle to fatally shoot brothers Soroush Farazmand, a guitarist, and Arash Farazmand, a drummer, as well as a friend of theirs, Ali Eskandarian, according to Yellow Dogs' manager, Ali Salehezadeh. Another man, Sasan Sadeghpourosko, was wounded in the shooting and treated and released from a local hospital.

Although the alleged shooter was initially reported to have been a disgruntled ex-member of the Yellow Dogs, the band's manager said Ahkbar was in fact an acquaintance who had played in another group. While members of the two bands once had a relationhip, Salehezadeh said the camps had a falling out in 2012. The Yellow Dogs had emigrated from Tehran, the Iranian capital, to the U.S. in 2011.

Two other members of the Yellow Dogs, guitarist Siavash Karampour and bassist Koory Mirz, were not injured.

"They were always together and they were always friendly," Martin Greenman, who lives a few doors down from where the shooting happened, told The Times. He added, "They looked like rockers."

The group appeared in the 2009 movie No One Knows About Persian Cats, which won a prize at the Cannes Film Festival. The band's song "New Century" appeared on its soundtrack. The group was also featured in a CNN piece on artists in the Middle East. "They think I'm an anarchist," guitarist Karampour told the interviewer. Later he said, "They're like my brothers. They're more close than my brothers." The report said that musicians who play rock music, which is deemed "un-Islamic" in the country, could be jailed and beaten.

In a tweet-length review of the band's gig at SXSW in 2010, Rolling Stone wrote, " Iranian post-punkers ride spidery bass lines, galloping hi-hats & garage-fucked guitar. Small crowd, great sound."

RollingStone

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Five Things PBS Could Teach You About Jimi Hendrix


Guitar god Jimi Hendrix got the PBS treatment last night in the American Masters broadcast of the two-hour documentary Jimi Hendrix – Hear My Train a Comin'. In other words: a thorough, serious-minded consideration of his career that soft-pedals some aspects of his personal life, such as his drug use. While the high priests of Hendrixology will be familiar with most of it, the film has some previously unseen treasures, such as his performance at the 1968 Miami Pop Festival, and smart commentary from the likes of Rolling Stone's David Fricke. Even viewers moderately familiar with Hendrix's legend could enrich their understanding of his life. Five examples:

Hendrix looked good in a uniform.
Although he later became famous for peacock fashion – hats with feathers, aquamarine chemises – Hendrix looked sharp in a uniform. The documentary has a great vintage photo of him in the military (his unit was the 101st Airborne, and he lasted as a paratrooper until he got an honorable discharge). And although he may have chafed at the musical limitations of backing up Wilson Pickett and the Isley Brothers at the beginning of his career, he could look arresting in a matching leopard-print jacket.

Hendrix had his guitar with him at all times.
Although Hendrix was blessed with abundant musical talent, he honed it by playing the guitar pretty much every waking moment, which meant that he always had an instrument with him wherever he went. (It also served the purpose of deflecting conversation – offstage, he was rather shy.) Various friends and girlfriends testify to how he always carried a six-string: for example, in the morning, he'd strap it on before walking into the kitchen for breakfast.

Moving to London in 1966 was even better for Hendrix than he could have hoped for.
When he got to town, under the wing of manager and producer Chas Chandler (formerly of the Animals), he needed a place to stay. In the early days, that place was Ringo Starr's apartment.

Hendrix didn't think much of his singing voice.
While his vocals obviously aren't as virtuosic as his guitar playing, they're more than capable – but Hendrix was intensely self-conscious about them. "We had a constant row in the studio," Chandler remembers, about "where his voice should be in the mix. He always wanted to have his voice buried and I always wanted to bring it forward. He was saying, 'I've got a terrible voice, I've got a terrible voice.' I'd say, 'You may have a terrible voice, but you've got great rhythm in your voice.'"

The Jimi Hendrix Experience got their career-altering Monterey Pop appearance on the recommendation of Paul McCartney.
The Beatle saw Hendrix at an early London gig and became huge supporters. You may have heard about Hendrix kicking off a 1967 show with the title track to Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, only days after the album came out – but this film has great footage of McCartney, in Pepper garb, rocking out at the show. When McCartney was asked if the Beatles would play the Monterey International Pop Music Festival, he declined, but suggested Hendrix instead. Given the opportunity, Hendrix blew the crowd away, lit his guitar on fire and launched his American career.

RollingStone

Thursday, October 31, 2013

U2 Ready Two New Songs for 'Back to Black Friday'


U2 will release two new songs, "Ordinary Love" and a new version of "Breathe," on 10-inch vinyl as part of Record Store Day's "Back to Black Friday" event on November 29th, according to Billboard. The cover of the 10-inch features a painting of Nelson Mandela because the group wrote and recorded "Ordinary Love" for the biopic Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom, which is based on the South African president's autobiography and comes out the same day. "Breathe," which originally came out on U2's 2009 album No Line on the Horizon, is listed on the Record Store Day website as the "Mandela Version." The vinyl is limited to 10,000 copies.

The band members befriended Mandela years ago and, according to their website, they were inspired to write the songs after seeing early cuts of the film. The movie stars Idris Elba (The Wire, Luther) and Naomie Harris (Skyfall, 28 Days Later . . .) and was directed by Justin Chadwick (The Other Boleyn Girl). The song appears in the trailer for the film.

U2 are also working on the follow-up to No Line on the Horizon. "I think it's a bit of a return to U2 of old, but with the maturity, if you like, of the U2 of the last 10 years," bassist Adam Clayton recently recently said. "It's a combination of those two things and it's a really interesting hybrid." He added, "We're in the studio. We're trying to get these 12 songs absolutely right and get them finished by the end of November, and then we can kind of enjoy Christmas."

RollingStone

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Top 10: Thrilling Facts About Michael Jackson's 'Thriller' Video

Michael Jackson's video for "Thriller" was released nearly 30 years ago, on December 2nd, 1983. Director John Landis (The Blues Brothers, An American Werewolf in London) extended the track — the seventh and final single released from the Thriller album — into a nearly 14-minute-long musical horror film, letting Michael indulge his monster-movie fantasies. It got saturation play on MTV and has been seen more than 149 million times on YouTube. Just in time for Halloween, here's 12 things you might not have realized the first time, or the 200th time, you watched it:



1. All "Thriller," Some Filler
The video cost half-a-million dollars; at the time, it was the most expensive video ever made. But CBS Records wouldn't pay for a third video from Thriller, and MTV had a policy of never paying for clips. Jackson and Landis funded their budget by getting MTV and Showtime to pay $250,000 each for the rights to show the 45-minute The Making of "Thriller." (MTV reasoned that if they were paying for a movie, they were circumventing their own policy.) Landis nicknamed the stretched-out documentary The Making of Filler.

2. Before songwriter Rod Temperton came up with "Thriller," Michael Jackson's working title for the album was Starlight.

3. Michael Jackson's faith seeped in.
The opening title card ("Due to my strong personal convictions, I wish to stress that this film in no way endorses a belief in the occult") was inserted due to Jackson's Jehovah's Witness faith. Another manifestation of his piety, according to producer Quincy Jones: During the recording of Thriller, in a studio in the Westlake district of Los Angeles, "a healthy California girl walked by the front window of the studio, which was a one-way mirror facing the street, and pulled her dress up over her head. She was wearing absolutely nothing underneath." Jones stared, as did Temperton — but Jackson hid behind the mixing console so he couldn't catch a peek.

4. "Thriller" is a coming-of-age story.
"In adolescence, youngsters begin to grow hair in unexpected places and parts of their anatomy swell and grow," director John Landis explained, regading the role of the werewolf metaphor in cinematic history. "Everyone experiences these physical transformations in their bodies and new, unfamiliar, sexual thoughts in their minds. No wonder we readily accept the concept of a literal metamorphosis." In other words, undergoing a lycanthropic transformation was a safe way for Michael Jackson to experiment with puberty.

5. "Thriller" had a Playmate.
Jackson's "Thriller" costar, former Playboy Playmate Ola Ray, also appeared on Cheers and in Beverly Hills Cop II, but her only other notable music video was "Give Me the Night" by George Benson (a single also written by Rod Temperton and produced by Quincy Jones!), on a date with Benson that involves hot dogs and champagne. That video's biggest special effect: Benson playing guitar on rollerskates.

6. Fred Astaire could've been a "Thriller" extra.
Hollywood legend Fred Astaire, a fan of Jackson's dancing (Jackson personally taught him to moonwalk), attended a "Thriller" rehearsal. Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, who edited Jackson's Moonwalk autobiography, logged some serious hours: When they were filming at 3 A.M. in a bad neighborhood in east Los Angeles, she was hanging out in Jackson's Winnebago.

7. The "Thiller" chroeographer was a "Beat It" gang member.
Choreographer Michael Peters also did the epic dance sequences in Pat Benatar's "Love Is a Battlefield" and in Jackson's "Beat It" video (where he played one of the gang leaders — the one dressed in white, with sunglasses and a mustache). He won a Tony for his work on Dreamgirls and died of AIDS in 1994, at just 46 years old.

8. The appeal of zombie-dancing is global.
The largest number of people doing the "Thriller" zombie-dance routine, according to the Guinness Book of World Records: "13,597 participants in an event organised by the Instituto de la Juventud del Gobierno del Distrito Federal at the Monumento a la Revolucion, Mexico City, Mexico, on 29 Aug 2009."

9. There should not be business classes based on "Thriller."
John Landis on the motivations behind making "Thriller" and its huge financial impact: "The reality is, it was a vanity video. Everything that happened on 'Thriller' happened because Michael wanted to turn into a monster. None of it was planned. I want to make that clear, because there was a course taught at the Harvard Business School on 'Thriller,' and it was complete bullshit."

10. "Thriller" may have the ability to possess you.
As a nine-year-old child, Cee Lo Green was so scared of "Thriller," he would flee the room whenever the video came on TV: "If he could be possessed, then I damn sure could be possessed, because Michael was so much stronger than I."

RollingStone

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Muse Set Release Date for 'Live at Rome Olympic Stadium'


Muse will release Live at Rome Olympic Stadium, a CD-DVD and Blu-ray package, on December 2nd. The trio played a 20-song concert for an audience of more than 60,000 in the Eternal City in July and captured it in ultra-high definition for these releases. The band posted a trailer for the film edition two weeks ago.

"Over the summer, we played this massive gig in Rome Olympic Stadium, that was probably the best gig of the year," frontman Matt Bellamy told Rolling Stone in September. "It's gonna come out in 4K, which is the highest resolution concert ever shot. It's four times more powerful than HD, so it’s like ridiculous detail. When you see the concert being filmed, you can see all the crowd, you can see their faces being filmed."

The film will get theatrical screenings in 20 cities worldwide, including New York and Los Angeles, on November 5th. The next day, the movie will be screened in 40 other territories for one night only. Because not all theaters can support 4K resolution, some screenings will be in 2K.

"We're really excited to be able to release [Live at Rome Olympic Stadium] as the first ever ultra-high definition concert film," the band said in a statement. "It captures an extraordinary amount of detail and not just everything we're doing – the fans, even those at the back, the set, the actors and the incredible atmosphere on a very special night in Rome. We can promise our fans, whether they managed to come to the live shows or not, an entirely new Muse concert experience."

As for the band's future plans, Bellamy told Rolling Stone that they're planning on 2014 being a relatively quiet year for them in terms of touring. "Next year, we may do one festival or two," he said, "but we’re probably going to concentrate on getting into a new album."

RollingStone

Sunday, October 27, 2013

How To Dress Like Slash For Halloween

Want to shred guitar like Slash from Guns N’ Roses? Well, we can’t help you there. But you can definitely look like him for Halloween. Here’s everything you’ll need to take everyone down to Paradise City as Slash this Halloween.

1. The Hat and The Hair

The standard rock star hats found at Halloween stores tend to be modeled almost exactly after Slash’s signature hat. Pair that, or just a regular old top hat, with a long, black, curly wig. There’s even a Slash wig and hat combothat would work perfectly.


2. Leather and Denim

Any kind of leather/denim combination works fine for Slash, as long as you have the tough biker look going. Toss in a silver chain or two.


3. Sunglasses…

Slash’s eyes are seldom seen in public. He almost always has big, dark sunglasses covering them, and so should you at your Halloween party.


4. …And Cigarette

A cigarette is optional for just about any rock star costume. For Slash, however, it’s mandatory at all times.


5. Guitar

You obviously don’t need to walk around with a real guitar all day. A fake inflatable guitar would work fine, but if you’re going for accuracy and totally committing, you’ll need a Gibson Les Paul (try it in sunburst).


– Matt Dolloff, 100.7 WZLX; all photos by Getty Images

Friday, October 25, 2013

Arctic Monkeys Get Farm Fresh in 'One for the Road' - VIDEO


In the Arctic Monkeys' latest video, for "One for the Road" off their fifth album AM, the group finds themselves in a place that's neither arctic, nor native environs for primates: a farm. Guitarist Jamie Cook drive tractors (in three-piece suits), the quartet strike poses in a cornfield to show off frontman Alex Turner's quasi-pompadour and, later, Cook trades his tractor for a flatbed semi. It's like if American Graffiti were though tractor-focused, with a tailgate party featuring models and fireworks, as is the Monkeys' wont.

The video's stark black-and-white sheen, captured by director Focus Creeps (Garbage, John Cale), is a fitting complement to the British group's cool, pop-rocky track about drinking before driving and "some out of tune guitar, soundtrack to disaster," as Turner sings in the bridge.

The group will release a single of "One for the Road" on December 10th in advance of a short North American tour of the Midwest and West Coast. A seven-inch edition will come backed with an exclusive new B side, "You're So Dark."

Earlier this month, the group stopped by Jimmy Kimmel Live, where they played the AM cuts "Do I Wanna Know?" and "R U Mine." They also found themselves playing with friend and "One for the Road" guest Josh Homme, of Queens of the Stone Age, at their L.A. gig at the Wiltern. And most recently, the Monkeys sat down with Rolling Stone to talk about just how they reinvented their sound.



Rare Kurt Cobain Interview Gets Animated


Kurt Cobain discussed a variety of topics, ranging from condemning sexism to wondering if he was gay, in an interview with British journalist Jon Savage for a profile that ran in The Observer in 1993. Now, over two decades after that feature ran, PBS has hilariously animated a portion of that interview for its Blank on Blank series, which has given a similar treatment to artists like Beastie Boys, Janis Joplin and Ray Charles.

The clip begins with Cobain talking about how awkward he felt in high school and then moves into family life, as he admits that he didn't know his family name was Irish until after he had already played in the city his surname hailed from. Quizzically, he said he'd even resorted to calling "Coburns" in phonebooks throughout America. The rest of the video finds Cobain discussing his stomach issues, his disappointment in the lyrics of Aerosmith and Led Zeppelin and how he found some spiritual solace after marrying and having a child with Courtney Love, among other subjects. Throughout the video, snippets of Nirvana songs play stitch together the narrative.

This year, Nirvana are eligible to be nominated for induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Like last year, fans can vote on the nominees. This year also marks the 20th anniversary of Nirvana's final album, In Utero, which the group reissued in various formats packed with rarities. "There is a lot of baggage that comes with it," bassist Krist Novoselic told Rolling Stone about revisiting In Utero. "It brings back a lot of memories – good memories, painful memories. But it's good music – good rock music."



RollingStone

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Brian May on Reviving Freddie Mercury: “I Don’t Want to be Touring with a Hologram”


Legendary Queen guitarist Brian May is a busy man these days. His hugely successful Queen musical We Will Rock You comes to Boston in November, celebrating its 11th year in production with over 15 million people having seen the show. May joined Chuck Nowlin live on the air to discuss the play and other future plans regarding Queen.

The musical, built of course around the music and “spirit” of Queen, tells a satirical tale on music and the influence of new digital technology on rock and roll as it takes place in a dystopian future where everything is programmed and nothing sounds human anymore.

Even though it’s purely fictional, the satirical approach of the show, which comes to the Boston Opera House on Nov.5, paints a picture of what many cynics might see as the path rock music is taking.

“It’s a fantasy, but it’s based on the history of rock and roll where you are, and the future of rock and roll,” he said.

May also spoke at length about the idea of another Queen tour featuring a hologram of Freddie Mercury, who would “perform” right along with the band. May doesn’t like the idea, mainly because it would make him, Roger Taylor and the others feel more like an exhibit at the Museum of Science than a rock concert.

Friday, October 18, 2013

Arctic Monkeys Crank Up Guitars on 'Kimmel'


After Arctic Monkeys were apparently bumped from Jimmy Kimmel Live last week when Kimmel cleared up a beef with Kanye West, the host made it up to the British rockers last night when they took over the outdoor stage for a pair of songs from their new album AM.

The foursome opened with "Do I Wanna Know," with singer Alex Turner's vocals snaking their way through the taut unison guitar riff that anchors the song. Arctic Monkeys ratcheted up the energy even further on the next song, "R U Mine," a terse rocker with brawny guitars that evoked early Black Sabbath – who Turner has cited as an influence on AM, along with Nineties hip-hop acts like Dr. Dre and Outkast.

"It's like a chemical reaction," Turner told Rolling Stone this summer. "If you get the wrong amount of one element, smoke comes out of the test tube. There was a lot of demo'ing and dead ends."

RollingStone

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Nirvana's 'In Utero' 2013 Mix Headed to Vinyl


Nirvana's final album, In Utero, was recently celebrated in a deluxe 20th anniversary reissue. Original producer Steve Albini revisited the album – with full blessings from bandmembers Dave Grohl and Krist Novoselic – for a "2013 Mix." Audiophiles can get their hands on this reworking November 29th, when the modern mix is released as a 45 RPM, 180-gram limited edition double vinyl on Black Friday for November's Record Store Day. The record was mastered at Abbey Road Studios with alternative artwork specific to the release.

Last months, Grohl reflected on the album's recording process with Rolling Stone's David Fricke. "Recording with Steve [Albini] – he would hit 'record,' we'd do a take, and he'd go [claps hands], 'Okay, what's next?' Wait, is it okay?" Grohl said. "We blazed through In Utero. I was done after three days. I had another 10 fucking days to sit in the snow, on my ass with nothing to do."


RollingStones

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Pearl Jam Talk Crazy Stage Moments With Judd Apatow


Filmmaker Danny Clinch has played a big part in the rollout for Pearl Jam's upcoming LP Lightning Bolt, directing two videos (for "Sirens" and "Mind Your Manners") as well as a documentary about the making of the record. In that previously released short, Clinch corralled a handful of people – including rocker/Portlandia star Carrie Brownstein and director Judd Apatow – to help interview the band, and now you can take an exclusive first look at an extended clip of Apatow's chat with Pearl Jam.

Listen to Pearl Jam's one of its more succsessfull albums!

Frontman Eddie Vedder talks about attending a formative concert by the punk band X; he snuck into the venue with a fake ID, held frontwoman Exene Cervenka's beer while she performed and watched guitarist Billy Zoom balance a pack of Marlboro Reds on his foot throughout the entire set.

The musicians also talk about creating similar unforgettable moments onstage for their own fans, though guitarist Mike McCready says it's never something they consciously consider. Adds Vedder, "You're trying to create something that you're not sure where it's gonna go. You can try with the setlist, you can try to make something different, but what's gonna happen that night – you kinda don't know what's gonna happen."

RollingStone

Friday, October 4, 2013

Janis Joplin was found dead on this day in 1970


Janis Joplin was found dead on this day in 1970, victim of a drug overdose. Ironically, she was to record her vocals for what song the next day?

On this day in 1970, Janis Joplin was found dead at the Landmark Hotel in Hollywood, California with fresh needle marks in her arm – it was ruled an overdose on heroin.

On this day too:

In 1980, Fleetwood Mac presented a platinum disc to the USC marching band for their help on “Tusk” – recorded with 260 musicians playing during the halftime intermission of a game at Dodger Stadium in the fall of 1979.

In 1996, Van Halen announced that Gary Cherone, former lead singer of the Boston band Extreme, would replace Sammy Hagar as the Van Halen’s vocalist.

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Greatest Rock Bands of the 70's


The 70s is by far my favorite decade of rock music. Some of the finest progressive, blues rock, and hard rock bands emerged during this time. 

I am using the term rock pretty loosely meaning I may include some borderline rock artists and as well as funk, but I won't be putting any classical, pure jazz, soul, or blues without rock influence on here. That would just make this list a lot harder to rank.

Here we have a Top 20: check it out and choose your favorite songs!


1. Born To Be Wild (Steppen Wolf)

2. Light My Fire (The Doors)

3. Radar Love (Golden Earring)

4. Living After Midnight (Judas Priest)

5. Somebody To Love (Jefferson Airplane)

6. Honky Tonk Women (The Rolling Stones)

7. Sympathy For The Devil (The Rolling Stones)

8. Cry Baby (Janis Joplin)

9. Hand Of Doom (Black Sabbath)

10. It's A Long Way To The Top If You Wanna Rock and Roll (AC/DC)

11. Sweete Jane (The Velvet Underground)

12. Lola (The Kinks)

13. I'm Eighteen (Alice Cooper)

14. Child In Time (Deep Purple)

15. Hats Of to (Roy Harper)

16. American Woman (Bachman Turner Overdrive)

17. Midnight Rambler (The Rolling Stones)

18. My Sweet Lord (George Harrison)

19. Instant Karma (John Lennon)

20. Roadhouse Blues (Blue Oyster Club)


Don't agree with the list? Vote for an existing item you think should be ranked higher or logged in at: TheRockCorner.com, and add new songs for others to vote on or create your own Playlist!

Monday, September 30, 2013

We Launched The Best Rock Music Webpage


Yeah, we've released the best rock music webpage in english. TheRockCorner.com is the place you always wanted: music, trivias, playlist, video, news and everything you ever wanted to have the reach of a click.

Now you know, enjoy the experience of browsing through one of the most complete pages of rock and roll, and everything for free!

From TheRockCorner.com you can enjoy all the content online for free and if you want to go for more login and create your own lists of music and every time you you access you will have only the music that is your preference.

You expect, join the legion of rockers worldwide, only good music for people who really know the value of a song.

Welcome and long live rock and roll!

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Nine Inch Nails Unveil New Touring Lineup


Trent Reznor's revamped Nine Inch Nails lost bassist Eric Avery and guitarist Adrian Belew earlier this year. So with the "Tension 2013" tour launching this Saturday in St. Paul, Minnesota, Reznor has unveiled a new lineup. Alessandro Cortini, Josh Eustis, Robin Finck, Lisa Fischer, Sharlotte Gibson, Pino Palladino and Ilan Rubin will join the Nine Inch Nails mastermind as he heads out behind his latest album, Hesitation Marks.

Cortini is no stranger to Reznor and Nine Inch Nails, having toured with the band from 2005 to 2008. The keyboardist leads the band SONOIO and also records as blindoldfreak. Fellow keyboardist Eustis is the co-founder of the electronic duo Telefon Tel Aviv and he's also worked with Tool frontman Maynard James Keenan in Puscifer.

The new lineup will also benefit from two veteran vocalists. Fischer, who won a Grammy in the early Nineties with her single "How Can I Ease the Pain," has sung backup for Tina Turner and Luther Vandross. She's also been a regular onstage with the Rolling Stones, recently appearing on their "50 and Counting" anniversary tour. Gibson has served as a backup singer on American Idol and has also sung on the show Duets.