What’s my age again? Riot Fest is turning the big 2-0, and to celebrate, it’s throwing the biggest party yet, headlined by Green Day, Blink-182, Weezer, Jack White, and a total of over 90 bands performing throughout the festival weekend. “I just wanted to put a show together with all of my favorite bands”, festival founder Michael Petryshyn reminisced before the inaugural Riot Fest back in 2005. Throughout the next 20 years, the festival has grown to become one of the biggest independent festivals in the country, known for eclectic lineups, high-profile band reunions, full album plays, and even a butter sculpture tribute to John Stamos. Along with headliners Green Day, Blink-182, Weezer, and Jack White, the festival will also include performances by the and Steve Jones, Paul Cook, Glen Matlock), Idles, “Weird Al” Yankovic, Alkaline Trio, All Time Low, Knocked Loose, Rilo Kiley, The Beach Boys, Jawbreaker, Dropkick Murphys, Bad Religion, The Pogues, The Hold Steady, The Academy Is…, Cobra Starship, Gym Class Heroes, Texas is the Reason, Dance Hall Crashers, The Front Bottoms, Knuckle Puck, The Wonder Years, James, and many many more.
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PODCAST: Glacially Musical 226 – Metallica’s “ReLoad” Unboxed and Revisited with Don De Leaumont
Nik and Keefy welcome back in Don of Talking The Talk with Don to cover Metallica’s “ReLoad” – because if we have to suffer through this, so does he!Continue reading
InAeona – Force Rise the Sun
Boston-based InAeona are new to Prosthetic Records, but are not new to the heavy music scene. It is their well-honed sound that makes them sound confident on their latest album, Force Rise the Sun. Their first major label release puts them between post-modern metal and modern Pink Floyd style psychedelic sounds.
Album opener ‘Bright Black’ makes one feel as if they are watching the opening scene of a movie similar somewhere between Tron and Star Wars. The music director or composer for The Force Awakens should take note. Like its title, ‘A Ways Away’ is an instrumental that is simultaneously hollow and brimming with forlorn emotion. It too might go well with a pivotal movie scene.
Vocalist Bridge shines on the sublime ‘Ghosts’ while she wails with her guitar. Bassist Dave and drummer James provide the explosive support to her voice. Bridge also does wonders on ‘Soldier’. This is where she shows the most of her range and pours her emotion into the song. The end result is as fierce as Bridge appears. ‘Soldier’ is also the song most likely to get stuck in a person’s head; fitting for the end of the album. With this the band proves they can write tunes that are catchy and do not sacrifice their core sound.
InAeona are serious about making music true to their signature sound. However, they are not so serious that the album suffers in any way. With Force Rise the Sun they have created an album that may someday be looked upon as an early classic when the beginnings of post-modern metal are a part of history. One is left with an interest as to what they may put together next, but there is plenty to be sonically explored with this album until then.
8.5/10
MELISSA CAMPBELL