Down Returns With New EP on September 18th with Tour Dates

Down

Metal forerunners Down will release Down IV Part I – The Purple EP, their first body of new material in five years, on September 18, 2012 via Down Records/Independent Label Group. RollingStone.com made the exclusive announcement this week with the world-premiere of first single “Witchtripper,” calling it a “typically aggressive Anselmo vocal against a twisting, grinding musical backdrop.” Adding further excitement to news of the upcoming release, Sirius XM Radio’s “Liquid Metal” also premiered the new single “Witchtripper” and “Misfortune Teller” to radio airwaves this week.

The six song EP is the first in a series of four EP’s planned for release over the next year. Down, which includes Philip Anselmo (Pantera) on vocals, Pepper Keenan (C.O.C.) on lead guitars, Kirk Windstein (Crowbar) on guitar, Jimmy Bowery (Eye Hate God) on drums, and Pat Brudners (Crowbar), the newest addition to the line-up, on bass, will kick off a string of tour dates on release day, beginning in Fort Worth, TX, and ending October 2 in Charlotte, NC.

Self-produced and recorded at Nodfertu’s Lair, located at Anselmo’s New Orleans home, Down IV Part I – The Purple EP is undeniably the product of the iconic collective that is Down, whose members origins span from Pantera, Corrosion of Conformity, Crowbar, and Eyehategod. Staggering riffs, thunderous drums, and Anselmo’s inimitable delivery crush and captivate over the course of the collection’s six songs. It’s dark. It’s dangerous. It’s decisive. It’s Down at their best.

“I do believe that we have delivered a record that will be accepted and hopefully enjoyed by the Down horde – if you will,” says Anselmo. “If you’re looking for a Down record, it’s very pure and real.”

Lyrically, the EP goes beyond just personal experiences, and explores themes that include the faith of mankind, the imperfection of mankind and cultural belief systems.

“Down gives me the platform to be poetic and paint imagery with lyrics,” says Anselmo. “That’s the approach I took. They complement the music and create an ominous feeling. Ultimately, when people consume the words, it’s always their interpretation that matters. I could be image-conscious though when I wrote. It’s not so gut level or street. The darker shit is some of my favorite.”

With an album sales history totaling over 725,000, these New Orleans natives are no strangers to success. Their legendary 1995 debut Nola is certified platinum, while Down II: A Bustle In Your Hedgerow (2002) and Down III (2007) remain fan and critical successes.

Down IV Part I – The Purple EP Track Listing:

  1. Levitation
  2. Witchtripper
  3. Open Coffins
  4. The Curse Is A Lie
  5. This Work Is Timeless
  6. Misfortune Teller

Down Tour Dates
9/18 – Fort Worth, TX @ Ridglea Theatre
9/19 – Tulsa, OK @ Cain’s Ballroom
9/21 – Sauget, IL @ Pop’s Nightclub
9/22 – Chicago, IL @ House of Blues
9/23 – Pontiac, MI @ The Crofoot
9/25 – Boston, MA @ House of Blues
9/26 – Philadelphia, PA @ Electric Factory
9/28 – New York, NY @ Best Buy Theatre
9/29 – Sayreville, NJ @ Starland Ballroom
9/30 – Silver Spring, MD @ The Fillmore
10/2 – Charlotte, NC @ Tremont Music Hall

An Interview For The Underdog: In Deep with 12 Stones

Paul McCoy Getting Down with the Crowd

For a decade, 12 Stones has been churning out records and carving out a name for themselves the old-fashioned way: by touring their asses off. This year has been no exception. With the recent release of their fourth studio album, Beneath the Scars, the guys have been out on the road winning over more crowds and proving why, a decade after they hit the scene, 12 Stones has become a must-see act.

We talked with 12 Stones back in April and vocalist/guitarist, Paul McCoy and drummer, Aaron Gainer were gracious enough to take some time to meet with us again to talk about, among other things, songwriting and the trials of being on the road.

Blog Rocking Beat (BRB): The last time we talked, you guys were just getting on the road again. It’s been a couple of months since then. Are all the kinks worked out?

Paul McCoy (PM): Yeah, this is show number nine so far. Once you get that far back into it, you really feel like you’re into it.

Aaron Gainer (AG): Yeah, you really get fine-tuned. All the kinks are worked out. All the dust bunnies are gone. You go through nine shows in nine cities and you really feel like you are back in shape.

BRB: Paul, you recently switched to Michael Kelly Smith guitars. Nine shows into the tour now, how are those working out for you?

PM: Great. I love them. I have names for the them. The black one is called Murderface and the other one is called Betty White, because it looks vintage. But they play great. I love them.

BRB: Let’s talk songs. How do you guys know when a song is “ready”?

PM: In this band, we’ll write a song until the wheels fall off. We’ll write it. Unwrite it. Rewrite it. Share a piece of it into another song. Borrow a piece from another. And you can do this until you finally say, “Enough, that’s how the song is going to be.” But, even after that, it’s never really done, for us. If you let me, I could work on one song for two years.

AG: Then, when you get out on tour and play it hundreds of times, you start to inject things that you maybe didn’t think of when you were first recording it. These are mainly things that don’t change the songs, but add flavor here and there. Like on “Soulfire,” we’ve learned to stretch out the instrumental section and jam out over it and let things happen a little more organically.

PM: That’s important for us. It’s the emotion and the feel of the song. You can add a million different elements to a song. In the end, for us, it’s all about going out there with two guitars, a bass, drums and a voice. Everything we do on top of that is icing.

BRB: I think there is a misperception that because a band has a song on the radio and a tour bus that they are rolling in cash and everything is great, which is far from reality. You guys are out their working really hard to make a living like the rest of the world. Have any of you ever thought, “I just don’t know if it’s worth it anymore”?

PM: Just about every day.

AG: I know I think about it a lot.

PM: It’s not so much “Is it worth it,” though, it’s more about “Can you do it?” For us, it’s always worth it to go out and meet friends and fans. It’s worth it to hear that we wrote a song that means something to them or changed their lives in some way. The way everything goes, though, at the end of the day, it’s hard to survive out here. People may think that we have five cars or multiple houses, but it’s not like that all. It’s nowhere near that. I don’t even have cable at my house right now.

AG: But that’s not that bad; you watch way too much television, Paul.

PM: Hey, I like television!

AG: Back to your question, the other aspect of it, though, is that there is the financial struggle. And there is the fatigue struggle. Then there is the struggle of being away from your family. I thought I was going to be able to see my son in August. I found out two days ago that I won’t. He was extremely excited, but now I have to explain to him why his dad won’t be able to have the trip with him in August. It’s just tough stuff. And it’s a reality every day. You enjoy that time you are on stage, but the rest of the time, you are aware of the challenges. You try to forget the things that hurt and enjoy the things you can.

BRB: Building on that, then, we recently talked with Rick Allen of Def Leppard and asked him what keeps them going after they have accomplished nearly everything a rock band can accomplish. He said, and I’m paraphrasing, “We do this for each other now, because we are friends.” A decade into this, do you ever get that? Do you look at each other and think that 12 Stones keeps going, in part, because it is part of your personal friendships?

AG: I think we had those types of experiences more when we were younger and growing up together while becoming a band and coming of age, especially when it came to things like releasing a record. Now, all of us have been doing this long enough, we all understand what’s a “given.” We know what’s expected. Still, I don’t like a lot of things that happen peripherally in this business, but I love playing drums.

PM: I love when you play drums, too. It really fills out the sound.

BRB: After having done this for about a decade now, what still surprises you?

Paul McCoy on StagePM: Not much. I don’t really get surprised anymore. I’m surprised, and a little excited, that people are coming out to shows as much as they are. It’s been rough out there lately.

AG: It’s been rough for everybody. One thing that surprises me still, is when I meet someone who says, “I started listening to you in junior high school,” and they have their kid right next to them! It’s amazing to me what can happen in a span of 10 years, but it’s awesome that they have stuck with us… and they are bringing their kids.

BRB: If you could talk to the 12 Stones of 10 years ago, what would you say to them?

PM: I’d punch them in the face! I would really punch me square in my face. Seriously, though, I’d tell me to put my money in the bank.

AG: We were told to do that by Cowboy Mouth, the first band we ever went out with, and they weren’t shy about it either. Fred Leblanc and the guys in Cowboy Mouth put a finger right in my chest and said, “Put your money in the bank, you idiot!” They were serious, because they knew. It was a cool thing that they warned us, but, you know, it didn’t happen.

Younger bands ask us for advice and we tell them the same thing, too. We tell them that and I tell them to stay single.

PM: What I tell them is, “Put your money in my bank.”

AG: Yeah, put your money in my bank and stay single. Do you want to be a husband or do you want to be in a band? Maybe we just can’t have it all at the same time. Do one thing for awhile, then do the other. I wish I would have known that.

BRB: Is there anything we haven’t covered that you’d like to?

PM: We run our own social media. We try to be very involved with our fans as much as we can. We’d also like people to just come out to live shows, whatever band it is. It’s doesn’t have to be 12 Stones, although that would be nice, but it would be nice to build the genre and support the bands that are out there. It’s nice to buy the CD and crank it in your car, but so few of those people come out and pay for a ticket and actually interact with guys like us.

AG: I’d like to piggyback on that and say there seems to be this perception that there is this competition between bands. To me, I don’t see that at all. There are people who like music and if you write something that connects with them, they’ll like it. It’s not about who is better than who. We all like each other.

PM: That has always been my thing. You open for a band or tour with a band for three months at a time and you get to know them like your own band at some point.

AG: And when they do well, you’re happy for them. If they get that gold record, you are genuinely happy for them. It’s not like, “Hey, they took our fans!” It’s not like that at all. There’s room for everybody.

12 Stones newest album, Beneath the Scars is in stores and on iTunes. Catch them on tour this summer and support live music.

Zombie, Manson Announce 2012 Twins of Evil Tour

Twins of Evil Tour PosterIt had to happen. Marilyn Manson and Rob Zombie are hitting the road together this fall, co-headlining the “Twins of Evil” tour. Debauchery, theatrics, ghoulish imagery, and a full-on assault of all the senses are what’s in store for fans when the tour kicks off, first in the U.S. and then with a 10-country sweep through Europe.

Kicking off September 28 when both Zombie and Manson co-headline the first day of the Desert Uprising Festival in Phoenix, Arizona, expect defiant rock’n'roll showmanship in the form of these unholy rollers with the first U.S. date wrapping in Dallas on Halloween, October 31. For ticket on-sale and purchasing info, log onto www.marilynmanson.com or www.robzombie.com.

“Finally! Why did the most obvious tour take so long to happen? Who knows? Who cares? It’s happening now,” stated Zombie. “If good taste is the chief enemy of great art, then we should be able to fill the Louvre with this f***ing tour. Be prepared for something wicked this way a-coming.”

“I have sympathy for the Whore of Babylon that gave birth to these twins of evil, and this abomination of a tour,” says Marilyn Manson. “There is no babysitter, and there is no repairing her womb. If Rob Zombie doesn’t f*** you up, than I surely will. Hide all drugs and firearms; I’m coming to town.”

J Devil, the DJ alter ego of KoRn’s frontman Jonathan Davis, will support the Manson/Zombie dates with his chaotic electro-metal. “I like to think of J Devil as the ‘anti-christ’ of EDM,” he said. “To play alongside Zombie and Manson is going to be a f***ing sinister night all around, and an unbelievable theatrical experience. I can’t wait.”

Marilyn Manson’s eighth full-length album, Born Villain, debuted in the Top 10 on the Billboard Top 200 Album Chart, also grabbing the #1 spots on both the Heavy Album Chart and the Independent Album Chart.

For the “Twins of Evil” tour, Zombie and his band of maniacs—John 5/guitar, Piggy D/bass and drummer Ginger Fish—will bring their elaborate, multi-media production, complete with hair-raising theatrics, animatronic robots, oversized LED screens, a non-stop collage of psychotronic monster film clips, a spectacular light show, a gigantic robot with flames shooting out of its body, pyrotechnics, insane guitar riffs and vicious beats. On August 7, prior to the kick off of the “Twins of Evil” tour, Mondo Sex Head, an album featuring new and unique remixes of Rob Zombie classics by some of today’s top DJs, including KoRn’s Jonathan “J Devil” Davis, Photek, the Bloody Beetroots, Kraddy, Drumcorps, and Ki: Theory will be released (Universal Music Enterprises/UMe). Fans can download one of the new songs, “Thunder Kiss ’65 (J-Devil Number of the Beast Remix),” from iTunes.

With more to be announced, dates for the “Twins of Evil” tour are as follows:

Rob Zombie / Marilyn Manson Tour Dates
SEPTEMBER
28 Desert Uprising Festival, Ashley Pavilion, Phoenix, AZ
29 48 Hours Festival, Las Vegas, NV

OCTOBER
1 USANA Amphitheatre, Salt Lake City, UT
2 1st Bank Center, Denver, CO
4 Topeka Expo Center, Topeka, KS
8 Pershing Auditorium, Lincoln, NE
9 Verizon Wireless Center, Mankato, MN
11 Allstate Arena, Chicago, IL
12 DTE Energy Music Theatre, Detroit, MI
13 US Cellular Coliseum, Bloomington, IL
15 Covelli Center, Youngstown, OH
16 The Armory, Rochester, NY
19 Susquehanna Bank Center, Camden, NJ
20 Mohegan Sun Arena, Uncasville, CT
21 Verizon Wireless Arena, Manchester, NH
23 Agganis Arena, Boston, MA
25 Aaron’s Amphitheatre at Lakewood, Atlanta, GA
30 Reliant Arena, Houston, TX
31 Dallas, TX

NOVEMBER
26 London, UK
27 Manchester, UK
28 Glasgow SECC, UK
29 Birmingham, UK

DECEMBER
1 Luxembourg
2 Bochum, Germany
3 Amsterdam, The Netherlands
5 Stockholm, Sweden
6 Copenhagen, Denmark
8 Vienna, Austria
9 Munich, Germany
10 Basel, Switzerland
12 Bologna, Italy

Five Albums That Changed My Life with Nina Diaz from Girl in a Coma

Girl in a Coma

In case you missed it, San Antonio’s Girl in a Coma has been one of the hottest young bands in America during the last year. Their album, Exits & All The Rest has made its way onto more than a few “Best of…” lists and they’ve even put a few awards on their shelf as well. In short, they’ve been creating the biggest buzz on the indie scene since The White Stripes went national.

We were very flattered, then, when vocalist/guitarist, Nina Diaz, took some time from their busy U.S. touring schedule to share with Blog Rocking Beat five albums that changed her life.

Jeff Buckley – Grace: This man gives me strength. His voice goes through every part of my body and makes me wanna smile because, although he’s not on this world anymore, this album exists and will always outlast time and style.

The Velvet Underground & Nico: Whenever I put this album on, it’s almost as if I can see myself living during this era; it’s exciting and sad at the same time.

Bjork – Post: I must have listened to this album a thousand times; just an amazing women, she is.

Silverchair – Neon Ballroom: I use to have the biggest crush on Daniel Johns and would sing along to this album pretending we were singing together. This album made me want to hug him and say, “Hey, everything is fine.”

The Beatles – The White Album: Every time I listen to this album, it makes me want to become a better musician, so that some day I might create something so magical. Plus, it’s not a bad soundtrack to have on while you’re sitting on a porch smoking a cig and drinking a Topo Chico.

There you have it, folks. If you are wondering how these albums come together in the music of Girl in a Coma. Have a listen:

Alien Ant Farm Begins Work On Fourth Album

Alien Ant FarmAlien Ant Farm has entered Groovemaster Studios in Chicago, IL to begin work on their fourth album, which will be released early 2013 on the Executive Music Group label.

The Southern California band’s original line-up of Dryden Mitchell (lead vocals), Mike Cosgrove (drums), Terry Corso (guitar), Tye Zamora (bass) will record new songs together for the first time since 2003. The band will work with with Grammy-nominated producer, Johnny K (Disturbed, Staind, 3 Doors Down), as well as other producers within the next few months. This new approach of using various experts in the field is aimed at enhancing the recording process, capturing Alien Ant Farm’s evolving musical direction, growth and creative style.

“The band is extremely fired up about going into this record,” says singer Dryden Mitchell. “We’ve had the fortune in the past to work with some of the best in the business (Jay Baumgardner, the DeLeo brothers, Jim Wirt, James Murray) in some of the greatest studios (NRG, Conway, Glitter Dungeon). Johnny K is no exception to the batting average, and his studio in Chicago rivals all the greats. We all plan on a ‘newer’ sound for the band, at the same time keeping other Pop-Rock bands in check. This ain’t your Soccer Mom’s band, but she can come backstage for an hour or two.”

Alien Ant Farm started their music career in 2001 with ANThology, which was released on Papa Roach’s New Noize imprint on DreamWorks Records. Thanks to the #1 single, “Smooth Criminal,” the album reached double-Platinum status. In 2003, truANT, produced by Stone Temple Pilots’ Dean and Robert DeLeo, cracked the Top 25 and “Glow” hit #1 on charts outside the U.S. despite the imminent folding of its record label. The band has toured all over the world with Linkin Park, Metallica, 311, and Papa Roach, and has sold over 3.5 million records worldwide.

Review of 3 Pill Morning’s Black Tie Love Affair

3 Pill MorningAs a reviewer, I get tons of music to listen to each week. It’s rare, however, that I get an album that shows a band so clearly in transition. That’s what we get with the new offering from 3 Pill Morning.

I first heard 3 Pill Morning last year on tour with Nonpoint and at a Festival show, both before actually hearing a recording of them. I was impressed with how polished they sounded live. I was let down a little later when the recording didn’t do the band’s live sound justice. In some respects, that also hold true for Black Tie Love Affair.

Let’s get right down to it. These guys have the deck stacked against them. They craft mid-tempo rock songs aimed right at a radio segment that is almost impossible to break into because it is being clogged with bands like Nickelback, Shinedown, Seether, My Darkest Days and the like. And, to be sure, you can hear some of that sound on Black Tie Love Affair, particularly on sings like “Rain”, which sounds much like a cross between Seether’s “Fake It” and Nickelback’s “Burn it to the Ground”. In fact, “We’re burning this place to the ground,” is an actual lyric in “Rain”.

This is the kind of thing that makes it hard for a younger band to breakthrough. Further into the album, however, we start to get elements that are unique to 3 Pill Morning and if they are going to break through, these will be the things that make it possible.

First, Black Tie Love Affair is loaded with songs that are built around big hooks with singable melodies. Jeff Stebbins has a solid voice and great pitch, so this is a no-brainer. Next, the band is moving away from the simple riffing that marked some of its earlier efforts and is beginning to incorporate riffs that combine single-note patterns for more variety. Prime examples are “I Want That For You” and “Drive By Lies,” which are also two of the best tracks on the album.

3 Pill Morning Black Tie Love AffairThe final element that really separates 3 Pill Morning from the pack is the way they play with rhythm. They seamlessly shift into half-time grooves and, more notably, they are becoming adept at integrating the occasional 3/4 time signature, such as in the choruses of “So Good To leave You” and “Daddy’s Little Girl”. This change in and out of standard 4/4 time into other time signatures is a hallmark of more progressive rock bands (i.e., Dream Theater, Periphery, etc.) and alt bands known for their willingness to experiment (i.e., Soundgarden or System of a Down). It’s rare to hear it, however, in a band that is so commercially targeted. That they do it so well that the casual listener is not jarred by it is a testament to their progress as songwriters.

In the end, Black Tie Love Affair will sound very familiar even upon the first listen. Some songs are very similar to current rock radio fare. At times, however, another band starts to show its head. It’s that band—the band 3 Pill Morning is becoming—that is becoming that is much more fun to listen to and will be the one that eventually separates them from a very crowded commercial-rock field.

By Surprise Begin Working on New 7″ EP, Due Out This Fall

By Surprise

South Jersey indie rockers By Surprise have started work on their new EP for Boston indie Topshelf Records. The EP will be produced and engineered by Dave Downham (who was also at the helm of their 2011 Topshelf debut, Mountain Smashers) at Familyre Studios in New Jersey, where such artists as mewithoutYou and Sufjan Stevens have recently recorded.

Safely guarded behind four pairs of glasses and an arsenal of awkward tendencies, the members of By Surprise have spent an equal amount of time combing through the forgotten dust-filled grooves of 7-inch records released during the ’90s indie label boom, as they have with the off-beat and inspirational works of Henry David Thoreau, Jack Kerouac, and Douglas Adams.

Look for the release of the new 7″ this fall.

múm Premieres New Video and Single, Rarities Compilation “Early Birds” Drops 7/17

mum

The experimental Icelandic collective known as múm has released a new video for “Hvernig Á Að Særa Vini Sína” (How to Hurt Your Friends) directed by Máni M. Sigfússon, and new single entitled “0,000Orð.” Premiered with Stereogum, both tracks are taken from Early Birds, a compilation of 15 songs recorded between 1998 and 2000. Out on July 17th through Morr Music, the album comprises long-lost and extremely rare tracks taken from demo tapes and limited edition vinyl releases. Early Birds acts as a pastiche of the band’s formative years, but the soft electronic glitches, incorporation of traditional and unconventional instruments, and múm’s minimalistic melodies remain the common thread.

In the year of 1998 pop music had an “anything goes” mentality: guitars and electro, retro sounds or wicked forays into the digitized future. At this time, founding members Gunnar Örn Tynes and Örvar Þóreyjarson Smárason had been making music together as múm for about a year. The two bandmates were basically nomadic drifters, constantly moving from one basement studio to the next, traveling through Europe, recording anything and everything that came to mind. Whenever they felt like getting some fresh air, they would go out with their DAT recorders to do field recordings – only to return to some unfurnished apartment in Reykjavík, Montpellier or Berlin in order to mix and combine all the recorded material. Early Birds is all about those days. Both the LP and CD version include a booklet that explains how each of the 15 (mostly instrumental) tracks came to be.

My Iron Lung To Drop Grief, Debut 7-Inch, on September 4th

My Iron Lung GriefSan Diego, CA’s My Iron Lung will be releasing their debut 7″ titled Grief on September 4th 2012 on 7″/Digital. Grief was engineered by Sam Pura and Scott Goodrich at The Panda Studios. The band will be on tour throughout the summer and again this fall to support the new record.

Grief Track List

  1. Broken Homes
  2. Clementine
  3. Family Traits
  4. Late Bloomers, Early Caskets
  5. Here’s To The Collaborative Efforts Made By All Things Under The Sun

My Iron Lung Tour Dates
Jul 04 The Carter – Jackson, MS
Jul 05 Crosstown – Memphis, TN
Jul 06 THE VENUE – Terre Haute, IN
Jul 07 Euro Gyros – Kent, OH
Jul 08 Detroit Pub – Clinton Twp, MI
Jul 09 The Temple House – Grand Rapids, MI
Jul 10 The Beat Coffeehouse – Minneapolis, MN
Jul 11 The New Direction – Fargo, ND
Jul 12 The Brick House – Grand Island, NE
Jul 13 The Shelter House – Carrollton, MO

Serj Tankian Full Album Stream, Harakiri Drops July 10th

Serj Tankian

With the release of Serj Tankian’s new album, Harakiri, coming up on Tuesday, July 10th, fans can now stream the entire album on Red Bull’s website. Serj has a busy release week ahead of him in LA. He’s hosting a release event at the WBR Offices in Burbank on Monday, July 9th, performing the outdoor stage at Jimmy Kimmel Live! Weds, July 11th and at KROQ’s Red Bull Sound Space Thurs, July 12th.

Harakiri, the new studio album from singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, poet and political activist Serj Tankian is set to be released July 10th on Reprise Records/Serjical Strike. Harakiri, a Japanese word meaning ritualistic suicide, is the follow up to 2010′s Imperfect Harmonies and the third solo release from the System Of A Down frontman.