Prong Releasing Songs From The Black Hole Covers EP in March


Prong. Photo By Tim Tronckoe.

Prong is releasing an all cover EP titled Songs From The Black Hole on March 31, 2015 in the US via eOne Music. The release will be in tandem with SPV/Steamhammer, special CD and LP edition available in Scandinavia on March 25, in Germany on March 27, and the rest of Europe on March 30.

Tommy Victor of Prong

Tommy Victor of Prong

TRACK LISTING:

1. Doomsday (DISCHARGE)
2. Vision Thing (SISTERS OF MERCY)
3. Goofy`s Concern (BUTTHOLE SURFERS)
4. Kids Of The Black Hole (ADOLESCENTS)
5. Bars (BLACK FLAG)
6. Seeing Red (KILLING JOKE)
7. Don`t Want To Know If You Are Lonely (HÜSKER DÜ)
8. Give Me The Cure (FUGAZI)
9. Banned in DC (BAD BRAINS)
10. Cortez The Killer (NEIL YOUNG)

prong songs from the black hole

Prong on Facebook
Prong on Twitter


Interview: Crowbar – Touring On My Terms


crowbar 3

Crowbar has spent much of 2014 touring behind their tenth full length record titled Symmetry In Black (out now via EOne Music). Already headlining a tour with Revocation, Havok, Fit For An Autopsy and Armed For Apocalypse; the Symmetry In Winter tour with Unearth and Black Crown Initiate, and appearing at Maryland Death Fest and the Scion AV Rockfest, they have kept themselves busy and also celebrating 25 years of the band in the meantime.

Photo By Keith Chachkes

Photo By Keith Chachkes

One thing frontman and guitarist Kirk Windstein did was bow out of his long time “other” band Down in 2013, which the decision helped with him focus on Crowbar instead of balancing multiple bands.

He admits that leaving Down allowed him to put all of his time into Crowbar without juggling schedules. “I do have a clearer vision but it’s not that I have another band to worry about. It’s just that Down is a democracy and so is Crowbar. The difference is, and when I told Phillip [Anselmo], he understood me. ‘You’ve always been in charge of your career. You did what you wanted to do. If you wanted to stop doing Down and do Superjoint [Ritual], you did it. If you wanted to stop that and concentrate on a record label, you did it. Stop that and do a solo record, you did it.’ He was very cool about it, of course. He is my brother. I love him until the day I die. He was very cool about everything.”

“The situation for me in my life had changed to simplify my life was the smartest thing I’ve ever done. Now I’m in control. Now as in an arrogant asshole – I’m in control of when I tour, where I tour, how long I tour. My wife does merchandise. To us, Crowbar is a family business. So if we’re not on the road doing Crowbar, we’re at home being a family. To me, it was a logical, perfect step for us as a family. You saw what you saw and this band kicks ass. I put us against anybody. I ain’t scared of nobody. We don’t need bells and whistles, explosions, dragons, demons, light shows or none of that bullshit. I’m proud of what we do and I believe in what we do. That’s why I’m doing it.”

He said he likes how things are moving along with Crowbar and has regained control of his career. “Now I call my own shots. At my age…not to sound like a dick but I deserve to be in control of my own life and my career. With Crowbar, I do that.”

Interview By Rei Nishimoto


Interview: Crowbar – 25 Years Of Sludging Out The Metal


crowbar

25 years is a milestone for any musical venture, and with Crowbar, they have crafted their own style around a slowed down tempo, riff oriented metallic rock sound that is often emulated but rarely topped.

You may recall some of their music videos appeared on a then popular MTV show called Beavis & Butthead, where viewers got a taste of two moronic animated youths cackling along and giving oddly scripted critiques to music videos of the time. They were chosen as one of those bands.

“We sent Mike Judge a package with a video, a t-shirt….’hey, here’s a couple videos of our band Crowbar. Have fun…make fun of us.’ Sure enough…we’re on Beavis and Butthead! What?! We thought it was great.”

“Occasionally…ok maybe once a year, somebody will say something and we’ll watch it. It’s great and it’s an honor to be on the program. It’s a great show,” recalls Crowbar frontman and guitarist Kirk Windstein, about those early years and the exposure they got from the iconic television series.

They released their tenth album earlier in 2014 titled Symmetry In Black (eOne), which reaches a new milestone in the band’s career. Sticking to a sound that they as much as their hardcore fans know very well, they created a record that hits as hard as they sound.

They began writing the record following Windstein’s departure from Down, the iconic riff rock outfit he was part of until 2013. From that point he made his focal point to be Crowbar and it began with the writing of the new album.
“I didn’t even start writing until September [2013],” explained Windstein. “We entered the studio in December. It was pretty close. Our mindset was good is not acceptable. It has to be great. I told that to the engineer. I produced. I think we accomplished our goals and everything else we set out for the record.

“I co-produced with Duane Simoneaux. He’s an engineer, but he adds a lot. He helps me with guitar harmonies and rhythms like guitar, piano, bass, drums, whatever. He’s a jack of all trades. He understands everything. He did so much work on this one that it’s co produced.”

One of the changes that came with his departure from Down was parting ways with bassist Pat Bruders, who until recently was doing double duty with both bands. Having to make a choice, Bruders stuck with Down and Windstein having to replace him with former Thy Will Be Done bassist Jeff Golden.

“I kind of gave him an ultimatum. I said I’m only doing Crowbar. If you want to stay in Down I understand that. But I said you can’t be in both. I’m happy and that’s all that counts. We have Jeff [Golden]. He’s a great guy and he’s one of my best friends now and he rocks with the band with us now.”

Making that decision did not always sit well with his peers as well as critics alike, but Windstein was never one to do things but his own way. “You have some people who said I should have stuck around with Down. People think I’m nuts, but I’m not. I believe in Crowbar. Even though Down’s a bigger band…you know who our crew is? My wife. She works for free. As much money as I made with Down…I work a lot harder. I carry my own guitars and set up my own shit. I don’t give a fuck. That’s the way I started out and that’s the way I am. It’s humbling.”

Photo By Meg Loyal Photography

Photos By Meg Loyal Photography

Windstein spoke about reaching this golden moment in his career, and whether it comes with any real surprise that he reached it at all.

“Yes and no. I mean the young dude in me was determined to do it. But to think the band has ten records and 25 years in, while a lot of bands have one or two records and fall off the face of the Earth. To be doing the same band 25 years in, it’s pretty amazing.”

He is proud of the sound he helped shape, but is a modest guy who appears more about the music than anything else. He became part of a musical movement within New Orleans who loved heavy music with a distinctive sound that sounded like no other. What came after that took a life of its own.
“I’m not surprised that it did and I’m not surprised because we did something that nobody else had heard or a genre to put us in. They made a genre called sludge. To me it’s just heavy music. They made it for bands like Crowbar and Eyehategod. Ok it’s close enough! Sounds good…”

“We didn’t know what to make of it. The public didn’t know what to make of it. To me it’s the highest honor to hear all these great bands call us an influence. We appreciate that very much.”

Photo By Kaley Nelson

Photo By Kaley Nelson

Crowbar has had a history of members coming and going, and some returning at various times. But despite their shuffling of lineups, Windstein has maintained good relations with many of them over the years.

“I keep in touch on and off with Craig Nunenbacher, obviously Jimmy Bower, Todd Strange a little bit, Matt Thomas emailed me out of the blue. I haven’t talked to him in years. It’s kind of weird. The guys who played on the records pretty much. I see Sammy [Duet] around New Orleans all the time.”

“Me and him [Jimmy Bower] kind of started it together, to be honest. ‘I wanna play guitar in a band’ – so he started Eyehategod. I would teach him stuff over the telephone on guitar – fret five, do this…back then we had nothing to do. It was cool. We kind of started around the same time as Eyehategod. It was our vision to do what Crowbar does”.

Photo by Meg Loyal Photography

Photo by Meg Loyal Photography

One thing that is undeniable is how Crowbar’s sound has grown over the years with their ‘less is more’ approach, and crafting a powerful sound that fans have grown to love.

“It’s because WE get better. The odd thing is, I’m 49 years old but I’m still the 13 year old kid with the tennis racket playing air guitar to KISS. The passion is stronger than ever. It’s stronger than it’s ever been to do Crowbar. It’s 25 years. I spent half my life doing it.”

As for Crowbar’s impact on music, he says he has not changed much but experience has groomed him into what he is today. “I’m the same guy I was but it’s me. I’m the same man, kid, punk mother fucker, but at 49 years of age. I did my time on stage and that’s where I belong and I do my thing. I do it stronger and harder and my heart is in it.”

Interview: Rei Nishimoto


High On Fire Announce East Coast Dates, Recording New Album With Kurt Ballou


high on fire

High On Fire has announced a string of upcoming East Coast dates. The band will begin work on their next record at GodCity Studios in Salem, MA with producer Kurt Ballou, with an early 2015 release date via eOne Music.

Drummer Des Kensel commented on the new songs:

“Everyone is asking what the new High on Fire music sounds like. Chew on some mescaline and listen to side B of Sabbath’s “Master of Reality” backwards at 78 RPM and it might give you an idea.”

HIGH ON FIRE tour dates:

Jan 06: Zydeco – Birmingham, AL
Jan 07: New Brookland Tavern – West Columbia, SC
Jan 08: The Broadberry – Richmond, VA
Jan 09: Saint Vitus Bar – Brooklyn, NY
Jan 10: Webster Underground – Hartford, CT
Jan 11: Port City Music Hall – Portland, ME
Jan 13: The Loft at The Chance Theatre – Poughkeepsie, NY
Jan 14: Simon’s 677 – Providence, RI

High On Fire on Twitter
High On Fire on Facebook


Crowbar Announce Upcoming European Tour Dates


crowbar

Crowbar will be touring Europe in February and March. They are currently supporting their latest album Symmetry In Black, out now via EOne Music. The following are confirmed dates:

Feb 13: O13 – Tilburg, NET
Feb 14: Ieperfest – Ieper, BEL
Feb 20: Rocking Chair – Vevey, SWI
Feb 21: Kiff – Aarau, SWI
Feb 22: Club Vaudville – Lindau, GER
Feb 24: Fabryka – Krakow, POL
Feb 25: Ucho – Gdynia, POL
Feb 26: SO36 – Berlin, GER
Feb 27: 007 – Prague, CZE
Feb 28: Melodka – Brno, CZE
Mar 03: Roncs Bar – Debreden, HUN
Mar 04: Fabrica – Bucharest, ROM
Mar 05: Mixtape 5 – Sofia, BUL
Mar 07: Vintage Industrial Bar – Zagreb, CRO
Mar 08: Kranhalle – Munchen, GER


’68 Streaming “Track 5” Video, Tour With Stick To Your Guns


68

68 2

68 3

’68 is streaming their latest video for “Track 5” here, off their latest album In Humor And Sadness, out now via EOne Music. The band will be on tour supporting Stick To Your Guns, which dates are posted below.

Feb 13: Ace of Spades – Sacramento, CA
Feb 14: In the Venue – Salt Lake City, UT
Feb 15: Marquis Theatre – Denver, CO
Feb 17: The Bottom Lounge – Chicago, IL
Feb 18: Magic Stick – Detroit, MI
Feb 19: Mod Club – Toronto, ON
Feb 20: Paradox Theatre – Montreal, QC
Feb 21: The Palladium – Worcester, MA
Feb 22: Gramercy Theatre – New York, NY
Feb 23: Bogie’s – Albany, NY
Feb 24: TLA – Philadelphia, PA
Feb 25: Cone Denim Center – Greensboro, NC
Feb 26: The Masquerade – Atlanta, GA
Feb 27: The Orpheum – Tampa, FL
Feb 28: Underbelly – Jacksonville, FL
Mar 02: Korova – San Antonio, TX
Mar 03: Walter’s – Houston, TX
Mar 04: The Door – Dallas, TX
Mar 05: Launchpad – Albuquerque, NM
Mar 06: Nile Theatre – Phoenix, AZ
Mar 08: Soma – San Diego, CA


Black Crown Initiate Release “The Fractured One” Video, Tour Dates


black crown initiate

Black Crown Initiate have released their Jess Orsburn (Toaster in the Tub Studios) video for “The Fractured One,” off their The Wreckage Of Stars album, out now via EOne. Watch it here. Watch the video for “Withering Waves” here.

black crown initiate 2black crown initiate 3

The Wreckage of Stars Track Listing
1. Great Mistake
2. The Fractured One
3. Malignant
4. The Human Lie Manifest
5. Withering Waves
6. To The Eye That Leads You
7. The Wreckage of Stars
8. Shapes Collapse
9. Purge
10. Linear

wrcekage of stars

The band are set to support Crowbar and Unearth in December, followed by a tour with Napalm Death, Voivod, Exhumed and Iron Reagan. Tour dates are below.

With Crowbar and Unearth:

Nov 30: Vinyl Music Hall – Pensacola, FL
Dec 01: State Theater – St. Petersburg, FL
Dec 03: Pug’s Live – Tallahassee, FL
Dec 04: Ziggy’s By The Sea – Wilmington, NC
Dec 05: The International – Knoxville, TN
Dec 06: Reverb – Reading, PA
Dec 07: Empire – Springfield, VA
Dec 08: Saint Vitus – Brooklyn, NY
Dec 09: Webster Underground – Hartford, CT
Dec 10: Bogies – Albany, NY
Dec 12: The Foundry – Lakewood, OH
Dec 13: Harpos – Detroit, MI (no Unearth)
Dec 14: Diamond Pub – Louisville, KY (no Unearth)

With Napalm Death, Voivod, Exhumed, and Iron Reagan
and special guests (on select dates) Ringworm, Dayglo Abortions, Theories and Phobia

Jan 27: Grand Central – Miami, FL (w/RINGWORM)
Jan 28: State Theater – St Petersburg, FL (w/RINGWORM)
Jan 29: Masquerade – Atlanta, GA (w/ RINGWORM)
Jan 30: Ziggy’s – Winston-Salem, NC (w/RINGWORM)
Jan 31: Soundstage – Baltimore, MD (w/RINGWORM)
Feb 02: Gramercy Theater – New York, NY (w/RINGWORM)
Feb 03: Union Transfer – Philadelphia, PA (w/RINGWORM)
Feb 04: Opera House – Toronto, ON
Feb 05: Maverick’s – Ottawa, ON
Feb 06: Club Soda – Montreal, QC
Feb 07: Palladium – Worcester, MA (w/RINGWORM)
Feb 08: The Chance Theater – Poughkeepsie, NY (w/RINGWORM)
Feb 09: Agora Ballroom – Cleveland, OH (w/ RINGWORM)
Feb 10: Reggie’s – Chicago, IL (w/ RINGWORM)
Feb 11: Amsterdam – Minneapolis, MN (w/ RINGWORM)
Feb 12: The Zoo – Winnipeg, MB
Feb 13: The Exchange – Regina, SK
Feb 14: Republik – Calgary, AB
Feb 15: Starlite Room – Edmonton, AB
Feb 17: Rickshaw Theater – Vancouver, BC (w/ Dayglo Abortions)
Feb 18: Studio 7 – Seattle, WA (w/ Theories)
Feb 19: Hawthorne Theater – Portland, OR
Feb 20: Metro – Oakland, CA (w/Phobia)
Feb 21: Strummers – Fresno, CA (w/ Phobia)
Feb 22: House Of Blues -Los Angeles, CA
Feb 23: Club Red -Tempe, AZ (w/ Phobia)
Feb 24: Sunshine Theater -Albuquerque, NM (w/ Phobia)
Feb 25: Summit Music Hall -Denver, CO (w/ Phobia)
Feb 26: Granada Theater -Lawrence, KS (w/ Phobia)
Feb 27: Gas Monkey -Dallas, TX (w/ Phobia)
Feb 28: Fitzgerald’s – Houston, TX (w/ Phobia

37f6d3d3-f89e-467d-bf6f-889cad18d64c.jpeg 940fbac3-dba1-4809-9ab4-c4f0fb8adfe7

Black Crown Initiate on Facebook
Black Crown Initiate on Twitter
Black Crown Initiate on YouTube
Black Crown Initiate on Instagram


Ace Frehley – Space Invaders


ace-frehley-space-invader-inside

When Ace Frehley declared on his Frehley’s Comet track ‘Rock Soldiers’, that The Devil said “Hey Frehley, Frehley, let’s not be silly, There’s a life out there to steal” he maybe didn’t perhaps mean that the Space Ace would be stealing from his own past life. On his latest release, Space Invader (eOne Music), Frehley is re-treading his work from Kiss, his early ‘Kiss’ solo album, and Frehley’s Comet, but that’s not always a bad thing. However, too often on this album the retro-feel misses a mark that could be hit by adding some more contemporary touches.

The first four tracks from Space Invader offer a promising taste of what the Space Ace can achieve. Title track, ‘Space Invader’ ‘Gimme a Feelin’, ‘I Wanna Hold You’, and ‘Change’ all nod to the past, while at the same time have Frehley’s flourishes. ‘I Wanna Hold You’ in particular has a garage band feel, while the mid-paced ‘Change’ has subtleties buried within, nodding to Frehley’s Comet days. But the rest of the release is patchy, with ‘Immortal Pleasures’ not containing the pleasures promised by this slowed down track. Equally ‘Inside the Vortex’ flops around without the direction and arrangement that could have boosted its sound. By contrast the next track ‘What Every Girl Wants’ has the right balance of cheesiness and catchy choruses and chest-out verses.

Just as Kiss occasionally dabbled in cover versions, Frehley turns in a nice version of Steve Miller’s ‘The Joker’, a relief after his voice struggles on ‘Past The Milky Way’ and ‘Reckless’ bores its way to boredom. The saving grace throughout the album is Frehley’s ability on his beloved six-string, no better exemplified than on closing instrumental ‘Starship’.

Throughout there is a feeling that Ace could have done with an ‘Ace’ collaborator. He wrote almost all of the tracks, played guitar and bass on most tracks (Matt Starr and Anton Fig are on drums and Chris Wyse takes a turn on ‘What Every Girl Wants’ and ‘Starship’). The single-mindedness of Frehley’s vision on Space Invader is both its saving grace and its downfall. The guitar work is superb throughout, with minimal use or effects, and a clear tone. But the patchy nature of the album suggests that it could have done with an iron hand in writing and production to get the Space Ace into orbit on Space Invader.

6.0/10.0

Ace Frehley on Facebook

 

JONATHAN TRAYNOR


Black Label Society – Catacombs of the Black Vatican


black_label_society_catacombs_of_the_black_vatican-portada

 

 

Whether you love him, hate him, want his babies or feel the need to kick him in the nether regions, there’s no denying that Zakk Wylde is a talented and formidable artist. From stints with Ozzy to his own solo work, Wylde has been in the industry longer than many, 15 of those years spent fronting his baby, Black Label Society. With more people coming and going than the London Underground, the band has seen a wealth of musicians, including Mr Trujillo, leave its ranks and yet Wylde has continued to pioneer the band throughout.

 

Back with their 9th studio album, Catacombs of the Black Vatican (eOne/Roadrunner), this latest addition to the BLS discography is the first to feature now departed drummer Chad Szeliga, and it is one that sees the band toying once again with a more mellow sound. Setting the standards bar to soaring, ‘Fields of Unforgiveness’ begins proceedings, bringing with it some ear-gasmic southern metal groove. Taking on an Ozzy like property to the high notes, Wylde’s vocals are in impeccable form here, making this the first and best track of the album. After this things stay mostly on this path of awesomeness, songs such as ‘Believe’ and ‘Heart of Darkness’ piling on the guitar pounds and rhythmic licks.

 

Damn The Flood,’ another album highlight treats us to an impressive Zakk Wylde solo lesson, while ‘I’ve Gone Away’ provides some of the more slowly worked but fantastically aggressive tones of the LP. However, for all that is undeniably great about ‘Catacombs of the Black Vatican’, there are three songs here that may divide opinion. ‘Angel of Mercy,’ ‘Scars’ and ‘Shades of Gray’ are all sombre, muted affairs that showcase our lead singers lyrical and vocal talents brilliantly but still they will not be to everyone’s taste, including this reviewers. Longer than the rest, these tracks bring down the energy levels, stemming the heavy groove–laden goodness that the rest of the album consistently provides.

 

For fans of the earlier BLS days, ‘Catacombs of the Black Vatican’ will probably not quench your aggressively energetic thirst, but it is a brilliant album that fits well in the more mature timeline of the band. Wylde is on top form here, as are Szeliga and DeSevio but there will be some moments on BLS’s 9th outing that don’t call to everyone. Regardless of whether you’re a fan of these more sullen Wylde flashes, ‘Catacombs of the Black Vatican’ is still an excellent listen and it is one that welcomes the band back into the world of musical releases, after four long and anticipated years.

 

7.5 / 10

Black Label Society on Facebook

EMMA QUINLAN