I don’t know these guys, but this email made me smile, and I had to repost. I don’t smoke, but, unlike so many other Americans, I don’t think it’s the pestilential stink of the devil, either.
So, Dany Laj, glad to know you’re living life on your own terms. Best to you.
Hey Brad,
I’m like Guy Lafleur – I do everything the hard way. And I smoke. My band and I have spent the better part of the last six years bringing our high-energy, power-pop mayhem to crowds across the continent. Our brand new single, “Left Right To One,” found us branching out from the recording studios we’ve frequented in our homeland of Canada, and in Rockford, Illinois. Produced at Midwest Sound by Dan McMahon (Bun E. Carlos, Miles Nielsen and the Rusted Hearts), and engineered by Jeremy Koester, “Left Right To One” gives a glimpse into the longstanding, rock ‘n roll partnership between bassist Jeanette Dowling and myself.
There aren’t many bands that have recorded 12 albums with all the original members contributing equally to the songwriting. With their brand new album, 12, Toronto-based Sloan have achieved something that not even the Beatles – arguably the greatest musical democrats ever – managed in their time. Sure, the Fab Four may have averaged two albums per year they existed, but they could only hack it for a decade. Sloan, on the other hand, have survived 27 years together, which might just be the most impressive feat of all.
Jerry Ewing, the fearless and beloved leader of the world of prog, has just announced that what was TeamRock has become Louder. The rebranding comes as the various members of TeamRock fear that labels such as prog and metal have become too exclusive and narrowing for a younger generation of listeners.
To read the full explanation, go here. Regardless, we wish Ewing all the best, as always.
With vocalist Ralf Scheepers out the band, hell bent on joining Judas Priest, Gamma Ray guitarist (and former Helloween guitarist/lead vocalist) Kai Hansen decided to make a surprise, and welcome, return to the mic. The re-jigged German band found a renewed energy and spirit and their fourth album, 1995’s Land Of The Free, proved to […]
A review The Flower Kings, UNFOLD THE FUTURE (2002; remastered and reissued, 2017). Tracks: The Truth Will Set You Free; Monkey Business; Black and White; Christianopel; Silent Inferno; The Navigator; Vox Humana; Genie in a Bottle; Fast Lane; Grand Old World; Soul Vortex; Rollin’ the Dice; The Devil’s Schooldance; Man Overboard; Solitary Shell; Devil’s Playground; and Too Late for Tomatos
UNFOLD THE FUTURE, 2002–remastered in 2017. InsideOut Music.
As noted last week on progarchy.com, the Flower Kings released its first boxset, A KINGDOM OF COLOURS (Insideout Music), in very late 2017. Granted, we’re more than a bit late coming to the news, and I (Brad) only realized that the boxset had come out when seeing an advertisement for the forthcoming second boxset.
This set—a gorgeously packaged one at that—is part 1 of 2, re-releasing the band’s first official seven studio albums. Missing are any b-sides, extra tracks, live releases, and the album that started it all, Stolt’s 1994 solo album, THE FLOWER KING. But, these absences are certainly fine, as the boxset is what it is. The next set, according to Insideout, will have three full disks of new or previously unreleased material. Additionally and spectacularly, of those original albums re-released for A KINGDOM OF COLOURS, the final one, 2002’s UNFOLD THE FUTURE, has been completely remastered by the Flower King himself, Mr. Roine Stolt.
Claude Debussy’s “Afternoon of a Faun” delivers volumes of sensation. Languor, sensuality, euphoria, curiosity, an awareness of the exotic. You are flung back to your own childhood, your adolescence, all awash in new experiences, colors, sensations. 3,005 more words
Dream Theater keyboardist Jordan Rudess shared an update regarding the follow-up to 2016′s The Astonishing, telling Metal Wani: “I think that we’re interested to just put our heads together and find something that we feel is really representative of who we are. I think maybe a little bit on the heavier side, certainly nothing like…
When psychedelia and blues came together in Cream’s quickfire trio of studio albums in the late 1960s, it created a blueprint for blues-respecting bottom-heavy rock that would rule the airwaves for at least a decade. In their roots and early trajectories, the Winter brothers, emerging out of the heartland of Beaumont, Texas, were not unlike north Florida’s Allman brothers, both heavily influenced by Cream’s fluid use of blues, and yet Johnny and Edgar never attained the pioneer status afforded Duane and Gregg. Johnny’s traditionalism would keep him defined (and confined) as a blues revival hotshot guitarist, which in America was radical but also too far ahead of its time (it would be Stevie Ray Vaughan who would reap those rewards further on up the road). Edgar, a rock’n’roll survivor, still touring as of this writing, was always a crowd-pleaser with a ton of chops on keys and sax, but never really pushed beyond his pair of early 70s funky, AM-friendly, rock/pop/jazz fusion hits, “Free Ride” and “Frankenstein.” Maybe he didn’t need to.
“Frankenstein” started out in the tradition of Cream’s “Toad” and Led Zeppelin‘s “Moby Dick,” pieces with giant riffs whose sole purpose was to surround drum solos. It even began life entitled “Double Drum Song,” ending up with its final title (after also being called “Synthesizer Song”) as the result of the intense tape cutting that reduced its time to a length that made it palatable for radio. It was a huge success, an inventive and striking instrumental representative of American good time rock in the early 70s.