Posts Tagged ‘person’

Tom Morello Joins LL Cool J, Chuck D + Travis Barker for 2013 Grammy Performance

Kevork Djansezian, Getty Images It was a busy weekend for Rage Against the Machine guitarist  Tom Morello , who joined Bruce Springsteen and friends at the MusiCares Person of the Year ceremony on Friday (Feb. 8) and then took part in the final performance of the 2013 Grammy Awards Sunday night (Feb. 10). Morello was part of an all-star collaboration fronted by Grammy host LL Cool J and Public Enemy’s Chuck D. on a song called ‘Whaddup’ off LL Cool J’s new album. Rounding out the five-piece was some nifty scratching from DJ Z-Trip and some dexterous beats from Blink-182 ‘s Travis Barker . Though Morello was mostly in the background on the track, he did come to the forefront for some serious shredding midway into the song. The new track was an interesting song, offering bits of throwbacks throughout from Chuck D.’s repetitious “Hear the drummer get wicked” to Z-Trip spinning a sample of LL Cool J’s ‘Rock the Bells.’ In addition, LL Cool J through in a nod to the late Adam Yauch , shouting “MCA forever” before running off a few lines of the  Beastie Boys ‘ ‘No Sleep ‘Til Brooklyn.’ However, in a lame move, the end of the song was cut off by sponsorship mentions and a quick cutaway, presumably to keep the length of the show on time. The performance concluded a night which also featured stellar performances from the Black Keys , Jack White , fun. , and tributes to late musicians Bob Marley and Levon Helm . [button href=”http://loudwire.com/category/grammys/” title=”Full Grammy Coverage Here” align=”center”]

Wendy Dio and More Talk Ronnie James Dio Stand Up and Shout Guitar Auction

Chad Childers, Loudwire The Ronnie James Dio Stand Up and Shout Cancer Fund continues to find impressive ways to raise funds for cancer education and research, and is among the charities that will benefit from the ‘ Icons & Idols — Rock ‘n’ Roll Auction ‘ scheduled for Saturday, Dec. 1, at Julien’s Auctions in Beverly Hills, Calif. The extensive auction features guitars from Metallica , Foo Fighters , Pearl Jam and many more. In anticipation of the auction, Ronnie James Dio’s widow and manager, Wendy Dio, and Stand Up and Shout Cancer Fund chairperson Gloria Butler ( Geezer Butler ‘s wife), spoke to us about the impressive contributions from the rock community to the guitar auction, as well as Stand Up and Shout’s continued efforts. Also, guitarist Bob Kulick, who performed with Dio and who also contributed one of the guitars in the auction, shared his thoughts on Ronnie James Dio and the guitar he most wanted to see in the auction. Below are two separate interviews. The first is with Wendy Dio and Gloria Butler, followed by a Q&A with Bruce Kulick. Wendy and Gloria, thanks for the time. Can you tell us what was the impetus for putting this great guitar collection together? Gloria Butler: I think we were kind of brainstorming ways to raise money for the fund and we knew that Ronnie had so many not acquaintances, but really true dear friends in the business, that we knew everybody would step up, which they did. Wendy Dio: They did, it was amazing. We’ve got right across the board from Bon Jovi to Robert Pattinson to…. GB: No Doubt ! WD: We’ve got Gwen Stefani, we’ve got Metallica, we’ve got Iron Maiden . GB: Probably a quarter of these called us and said, ‘Do you want our guitar?’ It just kind of snowballed. WD: It’s been fabulous. The  Cult [donated one], all these people. The Foo Fighters… GB: They just turned up, and the cool thing is we were actually going to do this like three months after we started and we had like 20 guitars or something and they kept coming. It was like ‘Stop.’ It was like if we don’t do it now, we’re never going to do it. It’s amazing. You mentioned a lot of the people that have contributed their guitars for this and just looking at some of them — the craft and skill that went into them is amazing. For each of you, if you want to talk about a favorite guitar that’s in the collection and why it stands out? WD: Well the Swarovski’s crystal one is fabulous. It was done with love and it took 40 hours for them to make it, which I thought was amazing. That’s the one with the hand [Dio’s devil horns] [laughs]. The carved one that they did of Ronnie’s face, that’s fabulous too. Every one of them was sent with love, and we appreciate it so much, cause it allows us to raise money. We’ve raised a lot of money so far and the metal community has been amazing. We raised over $600,000 and what’s really good about that is that we gave $117,000 of it to MD Anderson for stomach cancer. They had no grants at all for stomach cancer cause it was not the favorite cancer to have, and so with that $117,000, they were able to get 800,000 grants, which then turned into an $100 million grant, so we’re very, very happy about that. One of the ones out there that was really interesting — and I believe there are three of them on display — is the elephant painted guitars. What’s the story behind that? GB: That was very special. We went to Thailand and went to an elephant sanctuary and they had elephants that painted. They weren’t made to paint, there was no … um, we’re very animal friendly here, very animal correct, and everything was just natural. You’d hand the elephant the paintbrush and they would all of a sudden start painting, and someone would put up a picture of a flower and the elephant painted the flower. It was just unbelievable. Almost as unbelievable as the baby one almost knocking me and Wendy over. [laugh] WD: Cause they were like 200 pounds charging us and chasing me with a hose. They took the hose that I was washing them [with] and ran off with it. But we actually got three guitars from there, which are great and 50 percent of the proceeds goes to our cancer fund and 50 percent goes to preservation of the elephants. GB: So that’s obviously only those three guitars, but everything else goes straight to [Stand Up and Shout]. I’m just wowed by the amount that you’ve collected. Have you already started seeing a response? WD: A lot of the guitars are ready. People are bidding online already, and they’ve already exceeded what they said the maximum bid would be. GB: It’s exciting, it’s really, really exciting. And obviously, Stand Up and Shout has been great about raising funds for cancer research over the last few years. WD: And education. That’s the important thing. GB: It’s important to know too with this particular charity, not one penny goes on overhead. Not one penny goes anyplace except to the allocated like a TJ Martell or MD Anderson research centers. WD: We have 14 board members that are fantastic. They work their butts off. We have lawyers that give their time for free. We have accountants that do all our books for free. We have staging people. We have trucking people. We have all kinds of people and they’re all incredibly dedicated, incredibly dedicated. We don’t even charge backup postage. [Laugh] GB: So that’s what makes this so special is that it really is one of the few charities that I know of these days that really do put the money where it’s supposed to go. WD: That’s why put the charity and we give it to other people and we know where the money goes, we ask where the money goes. The money that went to TJ Martell went to Vanderbilt, and we actually went there and met with the researchers. So that’s really good and you can know where the money is going and making sure that if you give $10, it’s going to go where it’s supposed to go, and it’s not going in some fat cat’s pocket. Definitely wanted to ask as well about the label. ‘Very Beast of Dio, Vol. 2′ was released this past year … what’s on the horizon at this point? WD: Next year, I wanna do the full singles box and also on vinyl, and then there’s a bunch of stuff that’s been laying around that we might just put out. But talking about that, we have another thing for the cancer fund. We have our tribute record that will be coming out next year. Metallica has already finished theirs, Anthrax has finished theirs, Glenn Hughes has finished theirs, Rob Halford is getting ready to give it to us, and Alice Cooper , Iron Maiden — Bruce Dickinson , Deep Purple , Scorpions … GB: And this will be another, like the guitar auction, where a few will come in and all of a sudden there’s more and more and it’s like, ‘OK. It’s coming out and we’ve got to stop now.’ WD: Well we thought let’s have all the classic rock bands for the CD, but we were hoping to have a double CD and have some of the younger bands that Ronnie was their idol. But we have things planned all the way through to, well, we want to raise $10 million. When we raise it, we want another $10 million. We need to find a cure for this horrible disease, we really really do. In a separate interview, guitarist and longtime Ronnie James Dio friend, Bob Kulick, also spoke about his involvement with the Ronnie James Dio Stand Up and Shout Cancer Fund’s guitar auction. The Q&A with Kulick follows: How did you get involved with getting one of these guitars up? Bob Kulick: Well, Ronnie was a dear friend of mine, and I’m still grieving his loss. He was a man short in height but gigantic in stature and this charity, you know, I had my own cancer scare this year, and fortunately I didn’t have it and was okay, but other people that have this, they deserve all the help that they can get. So my brother and I decided that we would donate this guitar through SP, which is our endorser. I love their guitars and it’s a really great guitar, and I hope it raises money to help people, as that’s the aim of this charity. You mentioned you had your own scare earlier this year, and Wendy Dio has stressed the importance of early detection… BK: Yeah, you know sadly, I guess Ronnie waited too long. He recorded that last song, that song ‘Electra’ that he did. I remember now that he’d just leave his food in the refrigerator and he was barely eating and all that, and then after seeing what happened, even with the best of doctors, you know how insidious this disease is and now you can put a man on the moon and do all the things we can do with our cell phones and iPads and all this stuff, but there’s gotta be a way right now how to stop this. You mentioned Ronnie’s last recording. Did you have any idea at the time the significance of what was going on? BK: No one had any idea that anything was really wrong, but I can tell you this. I’m not a person that is easily intimidated, and somebody looks up my track record of the gigantic stars that I worked with, and I was very lucky that one of the last tours that Ronnie did, with Heaven and Hell , that Tony Iommi didn’t want to rehearse and was still in the U.K. and Ronnie wanted to warm up and Wendy called me and said Ronnie wants you to play guitar for the rehearsal, just so he can warm up. I just didn’t feel comfortable. I was like, ‘Where’s Craig Goldy? Where’s Doug Aldrich?’ She said, ‘They’re not around, and he’s asking for you.’ Well, it was an honor for me and I can tell you when I got up there and stood next to Ronnie Dio, I was intimidated. And when he started to sing, he didn’t need any warm-up at all. And I can tell you when we did this Christmas record, with 50 people — Dave Grohl , Lemmy … He was nice enough to give the money to charity. I’ve done a lot of compilation records, and I’ve never seen anyone give their money to charity, but he did, and I’ll never forget that. A lot of great guitars out there, and just looking around, I was wondering aside from the one you donated, do you have a favorite in the bunch? BK: I’m gonna head back there in a minute and check out that Brian May guitar. That’s one that you’ll rarely if ever see. I’ve worked with Brian May once, and that’s another person who is a totally unique wonderful person who just happened to have a gift beyond … almost like the Beatles’ gift. He was that talented, and maybe that’s sacrilegious to say, but Brian May is really, really, really an amazing musician and composer. So that prototype guitar he’s got there, I’m looking forward to picking that up for a minute. The ‘Icons & Idols — Rock ‘n’ Roll’ auction will take place at 2PM PT Dec. 1 at Julien’s Auctions in Beverly Hills. For further info, check here . Guitar Wall Chad Childers, Loudwire Ronnie James Dio crystal guitar Chad Childers, Loudwire Ronnie James Dio carved guitar Chad Childers, Loudwire.com Metallica guitar Chad Childers, Loudwire Foo Fighters guitar Chad Childers, Loudwire Pearl Jam guitar Chad Childers, Loudwire Elephant-painted guitar Chad Childers, Loudwire [button href=”http://loudwire.com/wendy-dio-early-detection-helping-tony-iommi-cancer-recovery/” title=”Next: Wendy Dio Discusses Tony Iommi’s Cancer Battle” align=”center”]

Win a Pig Destroyer Autographed Drum Cymbal!

Assuming Pig Destroyer ‘s new album ‘Book Burner’ hasn’t pummeled your brains into a useless paste, we’ve got an incredible contest to bring you. This unique prize is a one-of-a-kind item from the band, and is only available to win here on Loudwire. To celebrate the creative success of ‘Book Burner’ and the band cracking into the Billboard Top 200 albums chart with a pure grindcore album, Pig Destroyer are giving away an autographed cymbal, signed by the entire band. Pig Destroyer recently recruited Misery Index drummer Adam Jarvis, who has given the band a much nastier sound with the inclusion of his remarkable talents. “We’ve got another person in the band who’s pushing us forward,” Pig Destroyer guitarist Scott Hull told us in a recent interview , “driving us and not to mention the fact that he has a different particular set of skills that we can capitalize on and move forward in areas that we haven’t been able to in the past.” Be sure to grab a copy of ‘Book Burner,’ which we recently gave a near-perfect review . To enter to win the Pig Destroyer autographed cymbal, follow @Loudwire and @PigDestroyer on Twitter and ReTweet this announcement of the giveway. This contest will end on Thursday, Dec. 6. Good luck! [button href=”http://loudwire.com/pig-destroyer-piss-angel-top-21st-century-metal-songs/” title=”Pig Destroyer – Top 21st Century Metal Songs” align=”center”]

Lamb of God’s Chris Adler Talks U.S. Tour, Randy Blythe’s Incarceration, Dimebag Darrell + More

Mary Ouellette, SheWillShootYou.com It’s been a roller-coaster year for Lamb of God , who released their latest album, ‘Resolution,’ in January, but spent much of the summer dealing with the very serious allegations against frontman Randy Blythe . The vocalist spent five weeks in prison after being accused of manslaughter stemming from an alleged incident at a 2010 show in the Czech Republic. While that case is not over yet, as Blythe will likely have to go back to face trial, Lamb of God are back on the road headlining a U.S. tour with support from In Flames, Hatebreed and Sylosis. We recently caught up with Lamb of God drummer Chris Adler, who discussed a wide range of topics concerning the band. In part 1 of our interview, Adler talks about the band’s current U.S. trek, their experience in the Czech Republic and Europe in the days following Blythe’s arrest and how the situation compared to the Dimebag Darrell tragedy of 2004. You’re headlining a U.S. tour with In Flames, Hatebreed and Sylosis, which is an impressive bill. Can you talk about your relationships and experiences with those bands? With Hatebreed and In Flames, we’ve toured the world with those guys two or three times and become good friends and there’s poker buddies among us. We really have become on good terms with a lot of those guys so it’s a lot of fun to catch up with them again, and Sylosis is a band from England that got off in 2008 and they’re such a huge band. I think they are a good band that’s kind of modern day thrash and I thought they’d be a great add-on to the bill. Lamb of God played Knotfest shortly after Randy Blythe’s release from a Czech prison, but after all the band and Randy went through this past summer, do you think this headlining tour serves as a cathartic experience of sorts? Knotfest was almost therapeutic in a way. There was so much frustration and just general questions about what was going to happen for so long, so it made us all certainly anxious. At least for me, I felt very energized and awakened to the idea that what we do is very fragile and it could be gone very, very quickly, and every night that we play onstage, where we do the thing that we love to do, is special. Sometimes when you do these kind of things for a long time, you just get caught up in the day job aspect of it and while it’s a great job, it becomes a job. To have something happen like what happened with Randy to derail us so violently; it was a wake-up call for me to really get back to that energy that brought us together to begin with, and that definitely came out at Knotfest from the band and the crowd. It was crazy to hear the crowd chanting, “Randy is free, Randy is free, Randy is free,” over and over again. That energy mixed with the kind of renewed sense of, I don’t want to call it ‘innocence,’ but the idea that we somehow bring out that initial motivation and that initial drive that makes us do this, and we had the opportunity to do it. Going forward, I’m looking at every night on [this] tour as a very special night. We’ve heard a lot about Randy’s experiences during the five weeks he was incarcerated, but what was that time like for you and the other band members? It was frustrating. I’d think that would be the closest descriptive term. We were of course primarily concerned about our friend and our bandmate’s well being and getting him out of there, and we all believed that kind of sense would prevail and he would be out any second. We just couldn’t believe what was going on and on and on. We weren’t allowed to speak with him, more or less see him, so it was only though his lawyers that we found out that he was doing well and he told them specifically to tell us not to worry. We did what we could to help and so we knew that he was doing well. Of course, then the question is, “Is this guy, who’s 41 years old … when he gets out of prison is he going to want to get back onstage and be in a band even if they don’t convict him for this?” And he definitely let us know that he wants to keep going and he wants to be back onstage soon as possible. And then of course we kept jumping through hoops to do our best to respect their system and to come through with their requests. It seemed like every time we jumped through a hoop, there was another delay and another hoop in front of us so it was very frustrating to try and piece together how this could have happened and what it could lead to, especially because there was no reserved time as to when he could get out. It’s still a very difficult situation; he’s slated to go back in January for the trial. It’s not over and it’s still very scary as to how this all happened and I think back here we were just trying to pool our resources and make sure we had the best people we could working on the case and trying to do what we could to get him out. The day that he got out we had no idea; we were told the day before he got out that it was going to at least be another week because his paperwork had to get through his guy or something like that, which is what we were told for four weeks straight. But the day that he got out, it was a surprise call saying they let him out. So even though it was good news, it was unexpected. What was your personal experience like in the Czech Republic during the initial hours of the detainment? Confusing. We got off the plane and we were corralled together. Our band and crew were taken into a side room off of the jet way and told that what was about to happen would scare the shit out of the other passengers on the plane. They put us in a room basically with a SWAT team. I mean guys with machine guns, knives, full out body armor. It was like these guys were ready for the apocalypse and right away we knew something was very, very wrong. At that point, I didn’t know it had anything to do with us. I thought we were going to be questioned for something or somebody that did something wrong. We knew somebody did something wrong and we’ve found out about all these spectacles that were done in Europe and maybe they are questioning everybody, maybe they saw something. We weren’t even sure about what happened and then they gave us this piece of paper that explains what the charge was and where it came from and they explained to us that they were keeping us all for questioning and that they needed to go through the entire crew and the entire band. They were taking Randy to jail immediately and it was just shocking. Two things were kind of added to the mindset. One was that it was the first time that we heard that someone was brutally injured at one of our shows, so there was immediately a sense of sympathy for that person’s family. It was a very depressing feeling comes over you; “Oh my god, I can’t believe this happened; it’s the very last thing we would ever want to happen at one of our shows.” We play in this band because we love doing it and the people that come and see us, hopefully they have a good time and they have a good story to tell when they leave. This is the last thing we would ever want to have happen, so we’re kind of caught up with that and then to add to that, they’re arresting Randy now, so of course we’re forced to be somewhat defensive and say, “Hell no, how could you possibly arrest our friend and how can you stop our business? How can you do this? This doesn’t make any sense!” And so, those two things don’t really mix well together; sympathy and being defensive about it at the same time. We were heartbroken about the situation so it was very confusing. The following day was an entire day of interrogation with the police, which took hours. We had a band and crew of about 12 people, so it took the entire day and that to me felt somewhat routine and you know, this person’s doing a job that needs to be done and I’m sure we’re all going to get out of here and they are going to let Randy go after they piece things together, but this was obviously a random accident and they didn’t let him go. Then the next morning, they didn’t let him go and we started getting a message from our legal representative there in the U.S. saying, “It might be smart for you guys to cross a border, just in case the situation gets worse or extends to other members of the band.” We drove to the German border and stayed there for two days thinking that they’ve got to come to their senses soon and let him out and we could come back and pick him up. We had tour dates planned but at that point we were just confused on how they could be holding him for this, especially after the testimony everybody had given. I think most of us thought we would continue the next couple of shows only, and it got to be the second day in Munich when we were sitting in Germany where we heard it was going to be a week, if not more before anything was going to happen. There was going to be no official statement about anything and they had complete capability of keeping him at least until any sort of charge or orders. So at that point, we were just hemorrhaging money to sit there for a week, so we sent everybody home early and from there and just tried to pull our resources and get him out of there. We interviewed Vinnie Paul from Hellyeah and Pantera, and a lot of people liken this situation the Dimebag situation. This is what Vinnie Paul told us: “After this happened to my brother, none of us thought there was an evil bone in that guy’s skin when he came up onstage. He looked like a security guard or a cop, and 10 seconds later, four people are dead. You don’t know whether it’s going to be a high five or a loose cannon with a knife.” And he went on to say, “If Randy did anything to protect himself, he had the right to as far as I’m concerned.” Obviously you guys didn’t know what happened until this summer, even though the alleged event occurred two years ago. But now that you’ve heard about the incident, can it be compared to the Dimebag Darrell case? I think a lot of things changed that day [that Dimebag was slain]. I think that the way performers now look at the stage itself and the idea of people coming on it has changed because of that date. Since I was a kid, I don’t remember ever going to show, you know my very first shows, as a kid, where I didn’t see people jumping on and jumping off. It’s just such a normal part of the hard rock culture to have that involved. For us as a band, what happened to Dimebag certainly made us take a step back and take note that maybe, it obviously doesn’t reign as a thing that happens, but it certainly is a wake up call that it could happen and that you need to be careful of. The rules we have are in place just to protect ourselves. I think for the most part, it wasn’t that bands were deciding, “Okay if you’re going to be onstage you’re going to be attacked,” or something like that. So at this particular [2010 Lamb of God] show, and I’m only speaking for myself, I don’t remember that specific show. I’ve seen videos of that night and I’ve seen kids jumping off the stage and that is totally not unusual of any other Lamb of God show in the last 16 years that I’ve been the drummer for the band. So there was nothing at all that stuck out that night that was unusual, so it’s kind of the other way around, but to have any sort of altercations or fights or some sort of threat; that would have stuck out. I would have remembered an act of violence whether it was a kid or Randy or something and it’s just people doing what people normally doing at our rock show and it was just such random series of events that I don’t think that we would have had a 10-foot high barricade or chicken wire on the stage or a rule that’s in place that nobody was allowed on. I don’t think there was anything we could have done to change this scenario and it was just so random. It wasn’t something that we came there to do, obviously. We’re trying to have fun so I don’t know what we could have done differently. Is the band taking any special security measures on this current tour? Well, everything that we had in the past is staying in tact, which is that in all of our contracts and all of the paperwork that goes out for management and booking agents, to the clubs, and to the promoters and it calls for security that ensures the safety of all those in attendance. There’s not much more we can do. I don’t know that if we made everybody sign a wavier when they walked in the door, or put the band in bubble suits … I don’t know if that would have saved anybody’s life. I really think this was a random set of circumstances. Of course, you won’t want this to happen again and we’re certainly going to be working with the crew and having security maybe every night at the venues. Certain things are not allowed, and that kind of thing that we’ve always done, but I don’t think people should be more or less concerned whether certain things are enforced. They can do whatever they want to have fun. Stay tuned for Part 2 of our Chris Adler interview, in which the Lamb of God drummer discusses the album ‘Resolution,’ the band’s plans for a follow-up disc, his favorite all-time drummers and more. [button href=”http://loudwire.com/lamb-of-god-philadelphia-show-to-be-broadcast-live-on-axs-tv/” title=”Next: Lamb of God Concert to Be Broadcast Live” align=”center”] ?

Pig Destroyer Talk ‘Book Burner,’ Nihilism, New Agoraphobic Nosebleed Music + More

Relapse Pig Destroyer are one of the most celebrated grindcore acts in modern metal. Having released definitive masterpieces of the 21st Century such as ‘Prowler in the Yard’ and ‘Terrifyer,’ fans salivated over a new Pig Destroyer album for over five years before ‘Book Burner’ dropped in Oct. 2012. Pig Destroyer also leave fans rabid for live performances, as the band almost never takes the stage for a concert, but thanks to MetalSucks, Metal Injection and 1000 Knives, the band turned up for an incredible performance in Brooklyn, N.Y. on Oct. 18. We got a chance to speak to the entirety of Pig Destroyer for a rare interview, where we discussed ‘Book Burner,’ the label of ‘nihilism’ following the band throughout their career, upcoming music from guitarist Scott Hull’s other project Agoraphobic Nosebleed + much more. Check out our exclusive interview with the grind-masters of Pig Destroyer! ‘Book Burner’ seems like a very different type of album title for Pig Destroyer. How did you end up choosing that for the title? J.R. Hayes: I had a song called ‘Book Burner’ on the record and there was a couple of references to that in the story that I wrote for the record. We went through a million titles trying to find the right one, and that was one we felt good about and we just went with it, probably mostly because we were sick of trying to come up with other titles. Scott Hull: It’s difficult to try and agree on titles. We go back and forth about that or what the artwork is going to be. You just sort of relent and go, “Yeah that’s good!” and if we have one better, “No that’s it,” but it doesn’t have any particular significance other than it shows up in his story. J.R.: There’s a couple of different ways to tie it in. You guys don’t tour all that much. What is it about tonight, here in New York, that brought you all the way here? Blake Harrison: We wanted to do a couple of shows for our record when it came out. I mean, it’s been over five years since we put a record out and MetalSucks, we really love the website; they asked us and it coincided with the time the record was going to come out. So we’re also doing this in Baltimore. J.R.: And it’s New York! Right up the street. Last time you were in New York, you guys played on a boat. What was that like? J.R.: That was one of my favorite shows of all time, actually. You get to get on a boat with Eyehategod and Goatwhore and a bunch of crazy fans and drink and just be merry. It was just a really rainy, nasty night too, so the fact that everybody managed to have such a good time I thought was really impressive. Harrison: I think that was one of our better shows as far as crowd energy and wildness goes, but I get horribly f—ing seasick. J.R.: Talk about having a captive audience though. [Laughs] We had them quarantined. The production for ‘Book Burner’ is interesting because again, with your other records, no two albums sound alike in its production. How did you choose this style of production for this record? Hull: For me, I wanted something that was very, very natural sounding. Not unproduced, but just very, very natural, sort of like the early Black Flag records or the early Melvins records; something that was just very honest and you can hear what the drummer’s doing, you can hear what the guitar player’s doing, and not oversaturate it with a huge wall of guitars. I just kind of wanted it to be rather ‘bare bones’ and let the music speak for itself in the performances as well. I wanted it to sound good and clean, somewhat, but I also didn’t want to overproduce it by putting in a bunch of triggers and stuff like that. There are no drum triggers?! Hull: There are some drum triggers in the kick to make them a little steady sounding rather than being overly dynamic, but no, there’s no triggers on anything else. It’s all this dude (Adam Jarvis) right here. The kick has a little bit of trigger mixed in but other than that it’s as we played it in the studio. With Pig Destroyer, the drumming has always been so focused. There’s always been a big spotlight on the drumming. Is it difficult to fill the void of Brian Harvey’s departure? Adam Jarvis: Yeah, learning all the new material plus learning all the old material … because when I first joined, we basically just started jamming on all of the new stuff immediately, but then we had to play a couple of shows so then I had to start learning all of the old stuff and just intermittently go back to the new stuff, so it was definitely a challenge. J.R.: We wouldn’t been doing it if it wasn’t a challenge. What has Adam brought to the band? Harrison: I think a nastier energy, man. It’s almost like a new band in my eyes. It seems like with the crowd reaction, they feel that way too. Hull: We’ve got another person in the band who’s pushing us forward, driving us and not to mention the fact that he has a different particular set of skills that we can capitalize on and move forward in areas that we haven’t been able to in the past. Jarvis: Scott was like, “So how fast can you blast?” I was like, “Uhhh … fast?” And he’s like, “Check out this song, it’s only at 300 beats per minute.” [Laughs] You had some of the Agoraphobic Nosebleed members come and do guest vocals on the record. Why was this the right time to experiment with those other vocalists? J.R.: I really wanted to have some people when we did ‘Phantom Limb,’ but that just didn’t happen so I ended up being the only vocalist on that record. So for this record, I wanted to bring in some other people just for fun. Just to try and mix it up a little bit because I don’t have the biggest range in the vocal world, so just to give it some dynamic and just to have some friends in the studio, you know? They’re all very close friends of ours so it was more of a family affair. Kat Katz is on the record and I’m a big fan of hers from Salome and Agoraphobic Nosebleed. I interviewed her a while ago, right before ‘Agorapocalypse’ came out, and she told me that in the studio she makes a “war face,” but she wouldn’t tell me what it looked like. Hull: [Laughs] Yeah, we push her. We just did a track for the Christmas flexi for Decibel. We did it last year and we’re doing it this year as well, and she came in and did vocals for that, and yeah, she brought her war face. So what exactly does the war face look like? Hull: When she’s gotten to that stage, when she’s ripping it, when you see her in the studio, she means it. You can definitely tell that somebody stepped on her d–k and she’s definitely not happy about it. J.R.: We try to get her to think about the B she got in Chemistry. That got her all worked up. [Laughs] Oh, right, she’s in college now. She got a B in Chemistry? J.R.: Yeah, that’s not acceptable for her. [Laughs] One term that has followed Pig Destroyer throughout your entire career is the term ‘nihilist.’ The term ‘nihilism’ has definitely followed you. What do you think about being associated with that term? Do you find yourself to adhere to that philosophy in any way? Harrison: Thumbs up! [Laughs] Wouldn’t a true nihilist have hated that? J.R.: I feel like I’m more of a cynic than a nihilist, but I don’t think those two things are really all that different sometimes. Hull: All the intellectual property of the band is definitely coming through him (J.R.) and the visuals and all that, so he tends to channel a rather dark side and that comes out as the face of the band. It’s an interesting and unique aesthetic and I think that fits us pretty well. I wanted to ask about the use of samples in your music. It seems like the samples are perfectly placed. There are so many metal bands that use samples and I think you do it really well. Is there ever a point where you are watching a film or you hear something and you think, “I need to use that line.”? Hull: Sometimes. Sometimes I hear other bands that use samples and I hear the sample and recognize the movie it came from. You would never have thought to take that thing out of that context because when you’re watching a film, you’re kind of engrossed in the story. So you have to step back from the movie a little bit and be looking out for stuff. But yeah, there are times when things pop out and I go “Oh, that’s pretty interesting.” J.R.: We try not to use anything that’s too obvious. You don’t want to drag all the other baggage that comes along, like if you put in a ‘Taxi Driver’ sample, you know what I mean? We want to use things that are a little more obscure that we can kind of appropriate. Harrison: A lot of it to me is that I like to listen to overdub stuff because the way the dialogue is delivered, it’s more stilted a lot of times. I try to take the piece of what it is and take it out of context. So like, I’m not using a James Earl Jones quote because you’re going to know it’s James Earl Jones and think, “Oh I love ‘Conan the Barbarian!” It adds a tacky layer to it. Hull: You remove the layer; the suspension of disbelief. You pull it out of the movie as it were, so a lot of the talky samples we really don’t get from movies so much as things like preachers and sermons that we find online, books on tape; things that come from different sources. What about the ‘Jennifer’ samples? Hull: That was a story he (J.R.) had written and I was trying to figure out a unique way to deliver that on the record and the way we figured out we were going to do that was to put it through a text-to-speech utility for people who are blind and want to use computers; they can just pump the text into this thing. So I just dialed in the right voice and that’s it. Harrison: I think it adds to the tension too. When we do that live, as boring as that is for us to sit through for the 800th time, it gets the kids f—ing wild; its crazy. It’s always good to see that explosion right after that happens; its killer. Are we going to get any new Agoraphobic Nosebleed stuff anytime soon? Hull: Yeah, that’s the next thing I’m going to work on. We got a little bit of relief from the flexis we had to do for Pig Destroyer, so I’m going to go back and start working on the ANb stuff. The next Agoraphobic thing isn’t going to be a single full-length CD, it’s going to be four separate EPs, each one based on a different theme from each member. One is going to be a Black Flag-type of hardcore record, one is going to be a Godflesh-type of industrial record, one is going to be a doomy record and I think the fourth one is going to be a proggy jazzy thing. So they each reflect the different aspects of each of the members. It sounds like a bit of an alarm at first, but I think that’ll sound good. Are you going to be releasing any more of those ‘Audiofilm’ three-inch CDs? I really liked that. Hull: Oh cool, thank you. I don’t know. I want to do more stuff like that, but it just depends on whether I have time. I have to juggle a few bands, a family and a job and stuff. I want to because I very much like that but we’ll see. When you guys released ‘Natasha’ it was definitely very different for you guys. It was real sludgy and I was kind of expecting that to be a bridge to ‘Book Burner.’ Was that ever something that was on the table? Hull: That was actually released with ‘Terrifyer,’ that was a bonus disk with ‘Terrifyer,’ but it was in a quirky, weird format so nobody really listened to it. The label figured we were going to take a long time with the next record, so they wanted to go ahead and release ‘Natasha’ on its own, so that was really kind of a bonus experiment-type thing. We do have some more material like that; that we’ve recorded that we’re actually going to put out at some point. We just don’t know when. [button href=”http://loudwire.com/pig-destroyer-piss-angel-top-21st-century-metal-songs/” title=”Pig Destroyer – Top 21st Century Metal Songs” align=”center”]

Anthrax Bassist Frank Bello Discusses His Role in the Film ‘Greetings From Tim Buckley’

Liz Ramanand, Loudwire Anthrax fans know Frank Bello as a talented and charismatic bassist onstage, but what they may not know is that he recently delved into one of his other passions, acting. Bello made an appearance at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival to support and promote the movie ‘Greetings From Tim Buckley,’ in which he portrays punk icon Richard Hell. We had the pleasure of interviewing Bello following the film’s premiere at the festival, and he expressed his enthusiasm about the film, stepping into the shoes of Richard Hell, his experience in Toronto and his acting aspirations. Check out our Q&A with Frank Bello below: Talk about your experience at Toronto International Film Festival? The time I had at the Toronto film festival, I’m still buzzing by it, it was so incredible, just amazing. It was funny and kind of whirldwind-ish from when I got there and checked in all that stuff. The producers of the ‘Buckley’ film, they’re all really great people. They really took me under their wing and so I hung out with them and it really opened a lot of doors for me and introduced me to a lot of great, big time people. For me, I’m the rock guy who studied theater and all that stuff,  just coming into this world. That night I was at the biggest party, the CAA party, I’m not a guy for parties but I met a lot of crazy, big people there. While on this huge red carpet, did you happen to run into any celebrities who happen to be Anthrax fans? No, but I’m starting to get a lot of people who are closeted Anthrax fans that were coming up to me at the party. Even at the CAA party there were all these closeted Anthrax fans and it was just crazy, you have celebrity actors and it’s always nice to hear a compliment that they respect what I did and that they like the fact that I’m expanding myself to this field. Let’s face it the fame game is all bulls—, I’ve been a little bit famous in my life and I find that it’s just there. I rather dig into the character I think that’s more fun instead of chasing the fame. To me that’s hilarious – chasing the fame, come on. What did playing punk icon Richard Hell mean to you? For me it was a lot of fun. I treat songwriting and characters kind of the same way. I equate putting a song, a verse, a part, a bridge, you pull and take things into a character – without sounding too actorish – it’s the process that I love, you become somebody else. You write a song, it starts off from nothing and it becomes this thing you live so that’s the one thing I’ve loved about the art of acting, it’s just fun to live that and be somebody else. Richard Hell, the background on him from asking people and looking him up immediately when I got that role, it’s that attitude and he did what wanted to do and I identify with that in a big way. He was himself. Did you do anything in particular to prepare yourself for this role? Yeah, I kind of just put myself there. I completely put on the attitude thing and I kind of just lived as the person for a couple of days. I’d go shopping, I’d go to a bar, I wouldn’t tell anybody, I’d just do what I did in that character. I always find that fun to see how they would act as opposed to how I would act. How did this opportunity of being part of ‘Greetings from Tim Buckley’ come about? Easy enough. I have a friend Penny Luedtke who I’ve known forever email me about this role, I was off a couple of weeks from Anthrax and she said, “This role is right for you.” So I went in there and gave it a hundred percent as much as I can. It worked out thankfully. I understand this isn’t your first acting role. You were on an episode of ‘Law & Order.’ Yeah, I was, that was great. I did that whole initial scene, it was pretty funny – I found the murder victim and stuff. I’ve done some theater in New York, I’m a New York guy. I’ve studied at the William Esper studios in New York and it’s just something I like doing. It’s just another part of me. What was the biggest difference for you between of filming a television show versus film. The television thing was more immediate especially the ‘Law & Order’ thing, there was more down time being on a film. We had early calls and they would shoot 14 and 16 hour days but I enjoy the process – just to be in somebody else’s world and live in that character and just to be somebody else for a while, it’s a different life that I love. Can we expect any future film roles we can expect from you? My whole thing with this Toronto Film Festival was to go there, get some press, I’d like to get some sort of real representation and just read for more. Anthrax will probably be writing the next record next year so there will be some down time where I would love to dig in and I would love to do more. ‘ Greetings From Tim Buckley ‘ tells the story of late singer-songwriter Jeff Buckley dealing with the legacy of his father, folk singer Tim Buckley. Frank Bello plays Richard Hell of the bands Television and Richard Hell & The Voidoids. The movie premiered on Sept. 9 at the Toronto International Film Festival. Stay tuned for part 2 of our interview with Frank Bello, focusing on Anthrax, Metal Masters and more. [button href=”http://loudwire.com/anthrax-frank-bello-exodus-gary-holt-bassist-billy-sheehan-talk-metal-masters-4/” title=”Next: Watch Our Video Interview With Frank Bello + More at Metal Masters” align=”center”]

Randy Blythe Portrayed as Violent and Aggressive by Czech Tabloids, According to Local Journalist

Although the legal process has been a slow and frustrating one for Lamb of God‘s Randy Blythe, things may be starting to look up for the vocalist. According to Czech journalist Jonathan Crane, the Czech media has been biased against Blythe from the beginning and he adds that the person shown being tossed offstage in various YouTube videos may not be the deceased fan. He also states that Blythe’s defense team