Archive for October, 2012

Black Sabbath Announce April 2013 Release for New Album + Unveil Australian Tour Dates

Tim Whitby, Getty Images Black Sabbath  have announced that their as-yet-untitled new album will be released in April 2013. In addition, the band has unveiled dates for their first tour of Australia since 1974. Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi and Geezer Butler have been working on their first new studio album together since 1978′s ‘Never Say Die.’ Rick Rubin is producing, Ozzy is currently recording vocals, and Butler is writing all the lyrics. Iommi has already finished his guitar tracks. One song title has been confirmed – ‘God Is Dead.’ If their set lists at 2012′s Download and Lollapalooza are any indication, Australian fans can expect to hear classic Sabbath songs like ‘Paranoid,’ ‘War Pigs,’ ‘Iron Man,’ ‘Snowblind’ and many more. And since the  album will be out by then, a whole batch of new songs will probably be played live as well. The press release doesn’t say who will be playing drums on the Australian tour or on the album, as original Bill Ward has parted ways with the band over contract disputes. Ozzy’s drummer Tommy Clufetos has been playing with Sabbath, and it would make sense he would continue in that role. Tickets for the Australian shows will go on sale Thursday Nov, 8. My Live Nation members will have an exclusive pre-sale starting Friday, Nov. 2. Black Sabbath 2013 Australian Tour Dates 4/25/13 — Entertainment Centre, Brisbane 4/27/13 — Allphones Arena, Sydney 5/1/13 — Rod Laver, Melbourne 5/4/13 — Perth Arena, Perth [button href=”http://loudwire.com/black-sabbath-horror-movies-that-inspired-band-names/” title=”Next: ‘Black Sabbath’ – Horror Movies That Inspired Band Names” align=”center”]

Adelitas Way vs. Deftones – Cage Match

Virgin Records / Reprise Records Adelitas Way ‘s current favorite, ‘Alive,’ is going through its fifth and final Cage Match round which will determine whether or not the song makes its way into the Hall of Fame, but first the group has to get through today’s heavy hitter. Deftones take the matchup by storm with their brand new single ‘Tempest’ off of their seventh studio record ‘Koi No Yokan,’ due out Nov. 13 via Reprise Records. The band is currently on an international tour. For a full list of tour dates, go here . So will Deftones create an uproar with ‘Tempest’ by beating out the reigning champs or will Adelitas Way continue to stay ‘Alive’ for one more win and enter Loudwire’s Cage Match Hall of Fame? Get in on the action, listen to both tracks and cast your vote in the poll below! (This Cage Match will run until Friday, Nov. 2, at 8AM ET. Fans can vote once per hour! So come back and vote often to make sure your favorite song wins!) Listen to Adelitas Way, ‘Alive’ Listen to Deftones, ‘Tempest’ Sorry, you need to have javascript running to see this poll. Email Me When Cage Match Winners Are Announced Enter your email address below to receive the Loudwire newsletter, which will include notification of the daily winner of the Cage Match, as well as our top stories of the day. Email Rules of Cage Match: Fans can vote once per hour for their favorite song. If a song remains the reigning champ for five straight cage matches, it is retired to the Loudwire Cage Match Hall of Fame. With so many great songs out there, we have to give other bands a chance!

Cradle of Filth’s Dani Filth Talks ‘Manticore’ Album, 2013 Tour, Bizarre Gifts From Fans + More

Photo Credit: James Sharrock Speaking with musicians such as Cradle of Filth vocalist Dani Filth is one of the true pleasures of music journalism. Although kind and soft-spoken, Filth always has some brilliantly deranged stories up his sleeve. Earlier, we posted a story where the vocalist was stalked by a woman who claimed to be the reincarnation of serial killer Elizabeth Bathory, along with Dani being trapped in a car with her estranged boyfriend in an unbelievable case of coincidence. Now, we bring you the full interview with Dani Filth, which is filled with additional gems from the extreme metal mastermind. Along with talking about Cradle of Filth’s newest album, ‘The Manticore and Other Horrors,’ Dani Filth told us about his Halloween plans for this year, an upcoming 2013 North American tour, bizarre gifts from people including a leg bone from a fan’s dead grandmother + much more. Please enjoy our exclusive and in-depth interview with Dani Filth … if you dare. So last time we spoke, we talked a little about Bad Religion and how great that band is, and when I listened to your new record, ‘The Manticore and Other Horrors,’ I felt like it had a bit of a punk edge to it. Is that fair to say? Yeah, it’s certainly got this agro sort of hardcore element to some of the riffs, but I also think, aside from the traditional Cradle of Filth sound, I think there’s a little bit of new wave British heavy metal in there as well; a distinctive British vibe, and I wouldn’t say any of this is contrived. I think the punk element came from the fact that our guitarist Paul [Allender] wanted to revisit some of the ideas or the riffs that we had on stuff like ‘The Principle of Evil Made Flesh’ and more of our earlier works. When you compare the ‘Manticore’ record to your previous works, do you feel like this one is a little more accessible to people who might shy away from the more gothic elements of metal music? I suppose you could say that. The album itself is splattered with a selection of different ingredients, I suppose. They all add up to a slightly different bigger picture and I think the idea sort of moved away from the last record. It was very different, very capsulated, but there was a real emphasis on keeping the songs different from one another, but essentially listenable. It’s obviously a Cradle of Filth record, but I wanted people to hear why I’m singing more. I think we as a band got to that point where we wanted to do something that’s very memorable; heavy, because we are an extreme metal band after all and always have been, but we wanted people to go, “Wow that song’s killer. I can hear it. I can listen to the words, etc.” Was this your drummer Marthus’ first album that he solely did the orchestration on? Yes, yes it was. We kept everything very, very in-house. We recorded the album essentially as a three-piece and we drafted in a different bass player to play on the record because we parted company with our previous bass player, Dave. We used someone who worked at one of the studios; we used two studios simultaneously because we demoed everything. It cut the length of the actual recording down, essentially folding it in half. Recording-wise, there were four of us, but writing-wise, three. Carolyn (backing vocals), our new bass player Daniel, and our other guitarist, [James McIlroy] are involved in other bands and they all have other jobs, so for the band, it just felt it would be more completed, but the nucleus was writing and it was really relaxed because of that. That makes sense, because I was wondering why there was just the three of you in your latest photo shoot. It just made sense, you know? I think when you get to your tenth album, we suddenly realized we’ve been around long enough, we’ve got a big enough fan base to be able to do what we want to do and to other bands it might seem like a radical decision to show three as opposed to six, but it was one of those things where we just thought, “F— it.” I mean, at this point, we’re dragging in people who weren’t involved in the record. It also gave a new perspective on the imagery and what have you. Our new video we just shot for ‘Frost on Her Pillow’ is available on our website and has now gone to various outlets to be played, but that features six musicians on it, so we haven’t totally shied away from it. On the next one we’re about to shoot, which is just prior to going on our forthcoming European tour, I don’t even know if its even going to have the band in it at all. It’s just going to be a bit of a horror fest. It’s two sides of the coin, really. Speaking of the ‘Frost on Her Pillow’ video, it’s very quintessential Cradle of Filth and the imagery is fantastic. Can you tell us a little about the concept of that video? Well, it was just something that was reminiscent of what’s happening in the lyrics. It’s very dark in a sexual way, I suppose, and we couldn’t transcribe it exactly. It’s the director Stuart Birchall’s interpretation of the lyrics. Essentially, it’s about a bride that’s died and her lover, who is a cruel lover and ‘Dracula’-esque, condemns her for leaving him and he haunts her by using voodoo. She’s haunted in such a way that she’s stalked by a succubus. So you know, videos don’t really need to have a story. I think everybody looks at us lyrically-wise and thematic-wise, especially on the cinematic side of things; they always look and ask, “What’s the story this time? What’s happening?” Whereas a lot of bands don’t go so much into the story. Obviously we’ve done quite a few concept records in the past, and people to inspect everything we do, storyboard it, and have it from A to Z, whereas other bands may just say, “Well, that’s just random imagery, that’s a video, that’s what happens.” [Laughs] But we can get lambasted by some people saying, “What do you mean there’s no combination to this imagery?! Why is there not a story?!” I think it’s so with videos, since you have such a short window to project them, you can be a bit liberal and you can leave it to the listener’s discretion as to how they interpret the video. Leave something to the imagination, absolutely. You’re going on a European tour very shortly. Is there going to be a US or North American tour anytime soon? There is, and the dates are now being penciled in by our booking agent. It looks more than likely that we’ll be headlining with Decapitated , the Faceless , and the Agonist as support, which I think is a really strong lineup. We’re headlining a package tour here, which is not too much our tour; it’s something a promoter has put together and we’ve got some very strange dates. We’ve got one date in France, but five in Spain; Eastern countries like Belarus, and then in Finland and all around Scandinavia. It’s a very sort of meandering, topsy-turvy tour, but we have Godseed, which is former members of Gorgoroth and Rotting Christ, and then there’s a couple of bands that kind of flip-flop. They do some dates but not the others but it promises to be a very cool tour, and with the American tour, were penciled in to go down to Mexico first and it’s going to start mid-February around Valentine’s Day-ish. With your particular singing style, you have a tremendous range, and I think a lot of people have debated about how many octaves you can cover. How many octaves is your range? Oh, I’ve got no idea. High’s, low’s and in between; that’s how I see it. The thing is, and it happens a lot amongst our fans as well; especially with this record I think because it’s grounded, it’s heavy, and it’s screamy and rough and that, but it’s very singy as well and I think there’s a few people that say, “Oh, I want him to scream all the time, I want him to do this, I want him to do that,” and they immediately assume you’ve lost your voice when you don’t do it. They don’t seem to sit back and think, “Maybe he just doesn’t want to do it all the time. Perhaps the songs benefit from having this new style.” That’s how it was written, that’s how it was addressed, so you kind of dig your own grave. That terminology makes me think, because you’ve done the very high stuff and done the very low stuff, people start, “Well, I want more of this, I want more of that,” but no, I couldn’t tell you about the octave range. I just say high and low. Well, anyone who listens to the record will know that you’re still hitting those tea kettle-like high notes without any issue. Yeah, with this album, it’s an evidently Cradle of Filth affair. There’s no mistaking that, I just think the songwriting is just a bit stronger and a little bit different. Because we recorded in two studios, it gave us a little but longer. We weren’t curtailed by having a definitive, “You’ve only got two weeks left,” because it sort of folded in on itself, rather than me following the guitars and drums in that extended time period, I was doing it at the same time in a separate studio not very far away from Springvale Studios, the one where we rehearsed and demoed in, and Grindstone Studios, where we finished the mixing after the guitars and drums and everything was done. It just gave us that comfort zone where we knew that we weren’t under loads of pressure, so it made the mix a lot more relaxed and a lot more fun and let us experiment with a few things. We weren’t pressed to the nines. It was one of the first times where we haven’t been. I remember a pretty long time ago seeing a tour of your house on television. I remember very distinctly you having a skeleton in the floor of your kitchen, and I wanted to know if there are any new interesting additions you’ve added throughout the years. [Laughs] Well, we were actually moving at one point, and then the move kind of fell through because the old gentlemen that we were buying the house off of suddenly had second thoughts after about a year of us waiting. I can’t really think of what’s new. I’ve got a Dalek from ‘Doctor Who,’ which I bought from the BBC a few years ago. I don’t know if you’ve ever watched ‘Dr. Who,’ but it’s an enemy of the doctor, it’s like this robot thing, like six foot tall, black, with swiveling guns and everything. It’s pretty cool, and he speaks. He’s got an infrared thing, so you can do it anywhere in the house. It shouts out and screams, “Exterminate!” It’s no secret that you’re a big fan of Halloween. I read online that you were married on Halloween and of course ‘Manticore’ is coming out the day before Halloween. Do you have any special plans for this year? Yeah, me and my wife are staying up in London and we’re going to this thing called the ‘London Bridge Experience.’ It’s called ‘The Crypts’ and it’s like a live horror thing. You’re sort of stranded inside in the dark with lots of actors and things like that. Then we’re going on a London ghost bus. We go around to very famous sights and they tell you the history, and on the way back they have an impromptu seance with special effects and sounds. It’s going to be cool and we’ve got a cool hotel and that, but yeah, like you pointed out, there’s a lot happening around then. There’s a launch party and then we’re shooting a second video before we head out on tour, and that’s going to start late in the afternoon and film all through the night. The final sequence is going to be shot in the dawn; hopefully it doesn’t piss with rain, and then we have rehearsals up to the point when we go on tour. You do have to make an effort for Halloween. Being a father, how has it been being able to share Halloween with your daughter as she’s growing up? Of course it’s been important and she loves it as well. I mean, it’s like all holidays for kids, isn’t it? It’s great. It’s an exciting part of the year, because in England, literally a week afterwards, we have Guy Fawkes Night, so you have Halloween and then you have this week of everybody lighting fireworks off and burning effigies and stuff, and then you have the run-up to Christmas, so the winter is pretty magical period for children. Well, f— children, it’s a magical period for the whole lot of us. It’s been good to enjoy that. You obviously have very dedicated and loving fans. What has been the strangest fan interaction you’ve encountered throughout your career? I always get, which I really like, I always get odd presents. In Texas we got a rattlesnake and another time we got a necklace made out of chicken’s feet; very ‘Texas Chainsaw Massacre,’ I know. I’ve actually got them in my office, in front of me. And then a leg bone from someone’s grandma that they dug up. [Laughs] They dug it up and gave it to you? Yeah, it was pretty unique; I’ll put it that way. And then dolls and paintings and stuff like that which is all really cool, I love it. Is it difficult to get a human leg bone through customs? Well, obviously not. [Laughs] But they probably thought it was something else. I bought a bat; a vampire bat I bought in Philadelphia once at ‘Armed & Dangerous.’ It literally went through the [x-ray] scanner, and it was a bat, there was no mistaking it, and they still asked what it was. It was ridiculous; really ridiculous. It was like, “What else could it be?” Cradle of Filth’s newest album, ‘The Manticore and Other Horrors,’ is now available wherever music is sold. To buy a copy of the album, click here . [button href=”http://loudwire.com/cradle-of-filth-frost-on-her-pillow-video/” title=”Next: Watch Cradle of Filth’s ‘Frost on Her Pillow’ Music Video” align=”center”]

Disturbed, Chevelle, Anthrax Members + More Deliver Halloween Messages

Tim Mosenfelder / Ethan Miller / Kevin Winter, Getty Images Happy Halloween everyone! It’s a day for fun as all of the future rockers of the world get a lesson in stage costuming by dressing up as ghouls and goblins for the spookiest of days. It wasn’t that long that some of our favorite rockers were youngsters enjoying dressing up (and some still do) and going door-to-door trick or treating for some Halloween treats. With Halloween now here, a number of top rockers headed online to share their thoughts on the day, offering well-wishes, costume ideas, and even an interesting idea for a drumhead. Members of Disturbed , Chevelle , Anthrax , Motley Crue , and more have chimed in via Twitter. Check out their tweets below: I WANT TO WISH A VERY HAPPY HALLOWEEN TO ALL. SCARE SOMEONE TODAY. — DAVID DRAIMAN (@DAVIDMDRAIMAN) October 31, 2012 Happy Halloween, here’s a spooky drumhead. Levitation twitter.com/ChevelleInc/st… — Chevelle (@ChevelleInc) October 31, 2012 Happy Halloween Everybody! Trick or Treat ‘Til You Can’t! fb.me/2uHXzfxkS — Anthrax (Band) (@Anthrax) October 31, 2012 Double, double toil and trouble; fire burn and cauldron bubbleEye of newt, and toe of frog,Wool of bat, and (cont) tl.gd/jrfcot — TOMMY LEE (@MrTommyLand) October 31, 2012 Happy Halloween! VOTE ZOMBIE! loudwire.com/lemmy-kilmiste… — Rob Zombie (@RWZombie) October 31, 2012 Happy halloween from Nonpoint to all of Nonpoint Nation!!!!! — Nonpoint (@nonpoint) October 31, 2012 Happy Halloween everyone! we got our costumes ready, Any guesses? — adelitasway (@adelitasway) October 31, 2012 Happy Halloween Everyone from MDD !!!!What are you gonna Be this year kiddies.???? fb.me/1Kydcba2x — My Darkest Days (@MyDarkestDays) October 31, 2012 Happy Samhain! What’s on your play list for today? Maybe a little Manticore and Other Horrors? — Cradle of Filth (@OfficialCoF) October 31, 2012 From those of us at Loudwire, we want to wish you a fun and enjoyable Halloween, and let us know what you’re going as this year in the comments section below. [button href=”http://loudwire.com/anthrax-scott-ian-gets-his-head-split-in-two-by-a-chainsaw/” title=”Next: Scott Ian’s Head Split Open by a Chainsaw” align=”center”]

Nirvana’s ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’ Video Smashed Bass Hits the Auction Block

YouTube Nirvana ’s memorable music video for ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’ served as the battle cry for a whole new revolution for rock music, and now, a little piece of musical history from the clip is up for grabs. However, you better have deep pockets if you’re hoping to score the rock ‘n’ roll remnant. Most fans will recall the end of the iconic video when Kurt Cobain picks up a guitar and beats the heck out of it, smashing it to rubble. Now, more than two decades later, what’s left of the iconic bass smash is being auctioned off for big bucks. Christie’s of London has it going on the block Nov. 29 and they expect it to sell in the 25-40 thousand dollar range. The history of the bass has come to light as well, with ArtDaily reporting that bassist Krist Novoselic bought the 1960s Japanese Zen-On sunburst finish bass guitar at a pawn shop, while looking for something cheap that he knew would eventually be destroyed in the video shoot. According to musical lore, the remnants of the bass went home with a teenager who signed up to be an extra in the video. That’s not a bad parting gift. The bass joins other musical memorabilia for sale to the highest bidder including a high school yearbook signed by one Bob Dylan when he was a mere 17 years old. Head here for all of the auction item details. Watch Kurt Cobain Smash the Bass to Bits in the ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’ Video [button href=”http://loudwire.com/unique-smells-like-teen-spirit-covers/” title=”Next: 10 Unique Covers of ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’” align=”center”]

Refused Reflect on 2012 Reunion + Announce Hometown Finale

Refused – Official Site When we reflect on 2012, one of the better reunions to take place will have been that of Swedish hardcore punk outfit Refused . However, the band has revealed that the time has come for the reunion to wind down, and they’ve decided that the best place to do it would be their hometown in Umea, Sweden at the Exel Arena on Dec. 15. The group made the most of their time back together, hitting just about every major festival you can imagine. Their touring took them to such festivals as  Coachella , Rock am Ring, Roskilde, Groezrock, Download, Primavera Sound, Fuji Rock, and Pukkelpop among others. Plus, they made a rare television appearance on ‘ Late Night with Jimmy Fallon .’ As the band prepare to say farewell, they decided to put their thoughts into words and offered this note of reflection on their Facebook page: So there were those years right after school, when you were 15 and pissed off and everyone thought you were a loser and you ran around with the other weirdos, generating weirdness and little else. And there were those years when what set you apart from the others become a fixation and a lifestyle and you had a band and people talked about what you did but you were so used to being weird you just lumped them in with the rest of the slanderers. Then there were those years when the ideas you’d clung to through late adolescence were beginning to ring hollow and you got more and more confused and destructive and the band broke up and you had rent to pay. That was among the tougher years. And then slowly, over a span of time, you began to sort yourself out and your friends started making sensible decisions in their lives and it suddenly began to seem like most of you were gonna be ok. And then there was the year when you stopped being a petulent kid and you got your favorite musicians together in a room again and decided that you were gonna accept the love of thousands of listeners, accept the success that was waiting there to be had and just in general enjoy being appreciated for the exact same qualities that made you a freak to your contemporaries in your teens. This was one of the better years. And now it is coming to a close. It’s been kind to us. And that old punkrock golem “The shape of punk to come” has done good. The hatchet is buried, 1998 is not such a terrible memory for us anymore. We’re going home. And we’re doing it in style. With old friends and new acquaintances in tow we’re gonna take over our old hometown Umeå for one more night, just because we can. On the 15th of december at the Exel arena we’ll be sharing the stage with these magnificent comrades: Randy, a band of punkrock bandidos from the north who we befriended years before we even were Refused, Two White Horses, an excellent sister/brother-duo from Sävar, both of whom we’ve individually collaborated with in different musical projects through the years, and Råd Kjetil Senza Testa, a new and exciting musical collective consisting of old Umeå pop and hardcore scenesters, among them the guy who produced the very first version of New noise for a local hardcore compilation in early 1997. We unconditionally endorse these bands. Great music, good crude fun, what more do you need? It’s going to be one of those nights. Thank you for populating the pit in 2012. Over and out. [button href=”http://loudwire.com/refused-bring-the-new-noise-to-brooklyn-ny-concert-review-photo-gallery/” title=”Next: Refused’s Brooklyn Show Review + Photo Gallery” align=”center”]

Norma Jean to Begin Recording Their New Album in December

Razor & Tie Georgian metalcore band Norma Jean have announced that they will begin recording their sixth studio album in December. Labeled after the birth name of iconic actress Marilyn Monroe, Norma Jean have been pumping out American metalcore for 15 years. Having released their breakthrough record, ‘Bless the Martyr and Kiss the Child,’ back in 2002, the band has kept a really strong fan base ever since the strong metalcore serge in the early 2000s. Frontman Cory Brandan recently posted the news on Norma Jean’s Facebook page: We will begin our last block of writing in 7 days, and will enter the studio in December. Norma Jean will be recording our next record with Joshua Barber out of Kansas City and will be in the studio all of December and January, save for the holidays. We’ve already met with Josh to go over ideas and have been keeping in contact with him regularly. He came down and sat in on our last writing session in September. We worked really well together and had tons of ideas. I’ll leave a link in the comments of something he’s done if anyone wants to check out some music. Thanks to all of you that have supported Norma Jean over the years. We still have a lot of momentum and can’t wait for you guys to hear these new songs. – Cory Former Norma Jean vocalist Josh Scogin recently released an awesome album with his current band, The Chariot . Check out our exclusive video interview with Scogin by clicking the button below. [button href=”http://loudwire.com/the-chariot-josh-scogin-new-album-one-wing-former-band-norma-jean/” title=”Next: The Chariot’s Josh Scogin Talks to Loudwire” align=”center”]