Wednesday 20 August 2008

20/08/08



Whoa, bet you (whoever you are, reading this) didn't expect me to update this one! Well guess what, I did. Suckers. My visits to random parts of Europe are sadly over for the year and I'm blogging Kerrang! #1224 despite the fact I should be in bed healing a foot tattoo. Professionalism, dudes. Let's get on with the harshness.

1. WOW, YOU GUYS SOUND LIKE PRICKS TOO (p. 67)

For the past couple of weeks now, I've been opening the pages of Kerrang! to find some painfully wacky advert for a band by the name of My Final Hope. Everytime I see this, I judge the book by its cover - four guys, with ridiculous haircuts and colourful Topshop tshirts, pulling Alien Ant Farm faces while they pose with their instruments. Woah, the bassist is smiling and holding his bass upwards! Woah, that guy's keyboard could fall over! The drummer's hanging through his bassdrum!... you get the idea. Basically, I called it - these guys suck. But you know what? That's not a fair appraisal of My Final Hope's music. So I checked it out today and HOLY SHIT these guys know how to fucking rock!

...actually, no. They're literally as bad as I thought. I will give you know mp3s here by the band but I will give you this picture so you have some idea of what I'm getting at. Christ.

2. SKA-PUNK LUMINARY REPS BOTH L.A. AND CHICAGO (p. 46)

Or so says Vinnie Fiorello from Less Than Jake, who knows both handshakes for the Bloods and the Vice Lords. That's, erm... huh? "They're good to know when you're out and about," says Fiorello, and I'm sure, but when do guys in ska-punk bands find themselves having to throw up sets in gang territory? Seriously? Did he learn the Blood handshake just so he could talk to Snoop Dogg at Projekt Revolution all those years ago? Because, wow, that shit would've backfired.

Three Six Mafia - Gang Signs

3. JUSTIN HAWKINS STILL PLAYS "I BELIEVE IN A THING CALLED LOVE" LIVE (p. 4)

I read this on the letters page and, really, any excuse...

The Darkness - I Believe In A Thing Called Love

4. SOME BANDS ARE DELUSIONAL ABOUT THEIR NAMES (p. 16)

I recently skimmed over an article in the NME about how important it is to pick the right band name so that people will listen to you - that's the reason why Muse aren't called Rocket Baby Dolls and why Negro Wives are now R.E.M. That's pretty true - to be honest, the fact This Week's Kicking Boys My Final Hope are called My Final Hope is one of the reasons I dared to venture nowhere near their music - and it extends to one of this week's Introducing bands, I Hate Kate. Guff name. But wait... courtesy of singer/guitarist Justin Mauriello, there's a STORY BEHIND IT!

"[Kate] was actually a girlfriend of a buddy of mine. This girl had to be the most evil person I'd ever met. Everyone hated her, she was the Devil, she really was. One day I actually said 'Man, I hate Kate', and it sounded like a cool name for a band. I was actually bet $5 that i wouldn't call my band by that name, but I did."

Well then. It is, to be fair, a better name than Negro Wives. (Which is actually growing on me, albeit a good twenty-eight years too late.)

I Hate Kate - Embrace the Curse

5. I CAN TWIST THE RULES OF THIS BLOG BECAUSE I WRITE IT (p. 42)

Yeah, serious! How sweet is that? The reason I say that is because the thing I want to point out isn't actually something I read in Kerrang!, but in Rock Sound. In K!, Corey Taylor talks about how awesome it is to come back to the UK for Reading/Leeds, blah blah blah, but the fact Slipknot are playing inbetween Tenacious D and Metallica psyches him out. That's because Corey Taylor, as I found out, plays in a Tenacious D cover band by the name of Audacious P! NO SHIT. Thank you Rock Sound - a monthly blog is on the way. (No, actually, it sure as hell ain't.)

Audacious P - Scooby Doo, Where Are You? (for the uninitiated, not a song by the D. Shame.)

So, Metallica.

...hey, talking of Metallica!

6. IAN WINWOOD HITS HARD WITH THE DEJA VU (p. 27)

The last time Metallica headlined the Reading/Leeds festival, it was 2003 and Blur were still together. That is a long goddamned time, yet in this week's cover story, Ian Winwood finds a way to end his 2008 article the very same way as the 2003 article, which I remember pretty well: "Be ready." To paraphrase Winwood's pervious article ending:

"Metallica are coming. Be ready."

Compared to this year:

"Death Magnetic will be here next month. Be ready."

Five years and he couldn't think up a different ending line? Is this part of a trilogy? Am I just a weirdo for noticing these things?

Metallica - Cyanide (Live)

7. MORE ROCK STARS MARRIED TO OTHER ROCK STARS (p. 41)

...To use the term lightly, of course. Turns out that Jimmy Urine of Mindless Self Indulgence is married to Chantal Claret, vocalist for New Yorkers Morningwood. Quoth the Urine: "I saw this band play and [Claret] is an amazing performer. In fact, she was so good that I thought she was way better than me at her in-betweens and so much smarter and more comedic and so natural that I ended up marrying her! They are like a monster truck rally combined with fucking a Bond girl. I got totally swept off my feet."

Awwww!!! That's still not as nice as Omar Little and Fran Boyd getting married, but still.

Morningwood - New York Girls

8. DRAGONFORCE KNOW THEY'RE ONE-TRICK PONIES (p. 48-9)

Okay, they're still a fun band, and their many many loyal fans will rush out and buy ULTRA BEATDOWN (the all-caps rule still applies) when it's out on record shelves, but one can't help but shake the feeling that Dragonforce have hit a glass ceiling. This could be as far as it goes with these guys, folks: despite getting a 4-K rating for their newie, Paul Travers basically says that this is the same album as the last one, detailing a hilariously elaborate description of BEATDOWN's sound ("a cross between Queen and the Latvian entry for the Eurovision Song Contest") and then admitting that the "exact same description" fits for any of the band's previous long-players.

In the inlet on the next page, Travers straight up asks guitarist Herman Li whether or not his band are just playing "variations on a theme". Li says that there are "more changes" on ULTRA BEATDOWN rather than just being a 4000mph riffathon in the spirit of Inhuman Rampage. I'll judge when I hear the album in full but, really, isn't there nowhere else these guys could go now? Aside from Guitar Hero IV?

Dragonforce - The Warrior Inside

9. METAL BANDS LIVE IN JOCKISH VIDEO GAMES (p. 10)

Dragonforce are inspired by ridiculous video game music, hence all the Pac Man noises in their music. Now, video game music is FUCKING POPULAR MUSIC. This never gets old to me! (I play a Game Boy Advance and a Sega Saturn, for goodness' sake, this is INSANE.) Now, whoever thought that Trivium's ass-blaster (and that's a compliment) of a song "Into the Mouth of Hell We March" would work with the helmeted action of a John Madden American football game? Certainly not me. And not with the rest of the batshit soundtrack for the game. Airbourne? In Flames? Busta Rhymes? Wale? Kidz In The Hall? Mindless Self Indulgence? How does that make sense in any way?

Trivium - Into the Mouth of Hell We March

10. GALLOWS, THANKFULLY NOT COMPROMISING (p. 45)

I love Gallows. My friends know this very well. They just blast shit left right and centre and somehow became one of the biggest bands in Britain with an album that addressed family collapse, sexual politics (and the crimes that come with it) and oppressive small-town life. Sweet! So it's a joy to hear that while the band are broadening their horizons on their upcoming album, they're still writing what they want, nevermind anybody else. When asked by Tom Bryant on what would happen if the fans hate the new album, vocalist/professional ginge Frank Carter has one thing to say: "I wouldn't give a fuck. Fuck them." I should be insulted, but I'm actually really pleased by all the pre-game talk. Go on, bring on a new record then!

Gallows - Gold Dust

So, erm, my foot hurts. Like, hopping-on-one-leg-hurts. I'm fucking off to bed.

Wednesday 6 August 2008

06/08/08

Goddamn, that shit is small!


Anyhoodles, The Gaslight Anthem are on the cover of K! #1222. This is a good thing and even though I'm having one of those silly moments where the cool band you like is no longer your cool band (don't try and fake like it's never happened to you!), it's great that these guys may be following Against Me! in blowing up bigtime. It'd be sweet too, because then my friends wouldn't have to travel down to somewhere in Birmingdonshire to check them out as they could just play Glasgow venues. Sweet! And on with this week's issue...



1. KERRANG! REALLY CAN BREAK A BAND. RIGHT? (p. 22-26)



Gallows, Dragonforce, Cancer Bats, Madina Lake, Against Me!: something all these bands share in common is that they arguably broke out from their respective scenes into the public consensus via the K! hype machine. Sure, certain bands go on to hate the magazine or some at least make snarky comments about the publication, but Kerrang! and its writers love to show its readers bands they love. And Ian Winwood, the writer of this week's cover story, has pushed for The Gaslight Anthem. Now on the one hand, this is pretty unsurprising stuff, seeing as Winwood has always favoured bands from the US punk scene (e.g. Bad Religion, Converge, the aforementioned Against Me!); yet on the other hand, TGA have never been covered in the pages of the magazine. (Well, that's a lie actually. I saw an ad for them in the Live listings... as if that truly counts).



The piece, despite seeming pretty unremarkable to me, does its job - you get an idea of where the origins of the band came from (vocalist/guitarist Brian Fallon decided to form a band after being rejected from art school), their work ethic ("We're not afraid of struggle") and an idea of what the music's like ("the sound of punk rock rediscovering its own soul", psshh). Introduction sorted. Now, can K! really have the power to make this band popular? It's one of the biggest publications of its kind, still has some kind of influence on its readers, and has pushed bands like the ones mentioned above to a level past mere notoriety. But (putting aside the accessibility of their music for one moment) do you really see The Gaslight Anthem being one of those bands that grows massive? Take a listen if you haven't already and think about it - can this week's inclusion go towards "breaking" TGA? Is it even possible? Or am I thinking there's too many ulterior motives behind the article?



The Gaslight Anthem - The '59 Sound



2. THINGS I'LL NEVER GET TO DO, PART 273 (p. 27)



One time, travelling through Peru with family on a badly air-conditioned bus through really goddamn high roads, we found ourselves stopping off for some paella for lunch. The stuff was too much for my stomach to handle, so I headed for the toilets only to be utterly terrified at what I saw. I won't go into too much detail, but I remember two very dirty footstands being dangerously close to the... hole. Long story short, I didn't go, and that toilet remains the worst I have ever been near. Ever.



So why do I get weird, bordering-on-insane heart pangs when I know that I'll never be able to top this experience by venturing into the toilets at legendary NYC club CBGBs? To quote Alkaline Trio's Matt Skiba: "I've taken a shit in some pretty bad places. I took one in CBGB's and that place is gnarly. There was no door and it was filthy." Dude, I'll never get to walk in that and flinch. 'Tis a sad day.



Alkaline Trio - In Vein



3. JAEGERMEISTER, KINGS OF METAL SPONSORSHIP (p. 47)



Maybe it's because I don't drink, but I'm never going to understand how an obscure 73-year-old German digestif became the metal drink of choice. Seriously, Jägermeister? It's expensive as fuck - like the metal equivalent of Moet - and apparantly utterly rank. But despite all that, I've witnessed too many bands publicising the shit. I actually remember being at Download a few years back and catching virtuoso prog-metallers SikTh whore themselves out for the brand: "We just came to the festival site and thought we should drink down some fucking Jägermeisters!!!" Embarassing. Yet it even ends up being the drink of choice on the Rockstar Energy Mayhem tour ("20 bottles of Jägermeister on ice", sheeeittt). Hell, Rockstar Energy is a soft drink yet they get owned by the elk'n'cross? Something's gotta give.



Hell, what do I know. I'm sticking with a Shirley Temple. Metal!



Absurd - Ein Jaeger Aus Walhall



4. LARS ULRICH FAILS TO MAKE US FEEL SAFE (p. 7)



I know a lot of people don't believe Metallica are dropping a good album this year with Death Magnetic and, to be totally honest, drummer Lars Ulrich doesn't really fill me full with confidence. "I can say that this is the best album Metallica could have made!" Now, it's all in one word: "could". Yes, "could" fills me with a little bit of dread as it makes me think that they knew they are able to do so so so so much better. Maybe. I guess if you look too much into sentences like I do, Ulrich's just setting you up for disappointment. (Maybe not, seeing how I am one of the twelve people in the world who actually kinda liked St. Anger. I know, I know, I'm an idiot. And I'm seeing them next week for the third time, so yeah, I call bullshit on myself.)



Metallica - Don't Tread On Me



5. K! GRUDGINGLY DOES SPIN (p. 8)



"Hinder will releasing the much anticipated fo--" Woah, hold up. Hold up. Seriously? Hinder's new record is eagerly anticipated? Seriously? I'm leaving this one to the good Axl Rosenberg. (Side note: noting the producer of the band's new record, K! put Puddle Of Mudd as Puddle Of The Mudd. Wow, that shows how relevant they stayed.)



Hinder - Use Me



6. GERARD WAY WINS COMIC BOOK AWARD; DESERVES IT (p. 12)



Gerard Way and artist Gabriel Ba won an Eisner award for Best Limited Series for The Umbrella Academy! Sweet. Now, go check out the comic, fucknuts.



Rihanna feat. Jay-Z - Umbrella



7. REALLY? VICTORY? ...SERIOUSLY? (p. 42)



I'm not going to rag too long on Hawthorne Heights, seeing as how most of David McLaughlin's article addresses the tragic death of guitarist/vocalist Casey Calvert last year. But the band are just about to drop their third record, "Fragile Future", on none other than Victory Records, the record label they were embroiled in with a legal brouhahaha since 2006. Huh?



"We said down together and settled our differences," says singer JT Woodruff; "The lawsuit taught us that it is best to handle your problems by talking them out. Filing a lawsuit is just so impersonal. You fight and fight and fight and in the end, nobody wins." Yeah, but going back to Victory Records, notorious for label boss Tony Brummel's hard-headed, aggressive and creepy leadership/marketing/fuckery tactics (as you can read in former Victory employee Ramsey Dean's exposé "The Horror" - well worth reading, by the by)? Erm...



Hawthorne Heights - Silver Bullet



8. UGH (p.1-71)



Seriously, that's all I've got this week. Have some mp3s from Misery Signals's 3-K-rated "Controller", because it truly is the shit.



Misery Signals - Parallels



Misery Signals - Set In Motion



I'm in Belgium next week. Take it east. Yes, east.