My friend Stevil Helmer from Die Hard Til Death told me about these guys. While still new to my ears this guys are certainly welcome in my ears. Thanks Stevil! Let’s look at the video for “Gun To My Head”:
I received a message the other from Ade Riches telling me about this band. “PEEPSHOW’s 2nd album release, ‘Brand New Breed’ last week won the Scottish New Music Award for Loud/Metal Recording of the Year 2012 at the musician and industry awards ceremony in Glasgow. The band have also received praise of their LP ‘Brand New Breed’ across the music press in magazines including Fireworks Magazine, Rocksound Magazine, Powerplay Rock and Metal Magazine, and Big Cheese Magazine” -Ade. How could I NOT check them out? Great job Peepshow! I look forward to more from you! Here’s “Let Go” :
Dream Theater, Skid Row, Disturbed, Dio, Queensryche, and Halcyon Way. Yup I love the way that sounds. Halcyon Way is Atlanta’s premier heavy metal band. They are known for their explosive live shows, instantly catchy melodies, precise vocal harmonies, incendiary guitar work, intricate yet pounding drums, and showmanship hearkening back to the glory days of arena rock. Here is the promo for their release “IndoctriNation”:
SOULBLEED is and always has been a band that has stuck to their Heavy Metal roots. No matter what they are doing, be it writing, recording, or performing live, the members hold themselves to a high standard and work hard to create music that stands out. The band is dedicated to making music that is brutal, raw, melodic at times yet always metal. Drawing from a wide range of influences has helped the band shape their sound and find a voice that is unique to them. Thanks to the guys in Dronika for pointing them out to me! New album promo:
I was fortunate to have recently seen Coldspell play live. I was also lucky to have been able to interview and hang out with these guys. Warm, and down to earth people, yet they will not hesitate to kick your ass on stage. It was a pleasure to see a band that “had it together”. DO NOT MISS THEM if they hit a town near you! Here is “Time”:
Whiskey Six — Landed on my radar a couple of years When I accidentally caught their show at a Tattoo convention. Their Heavy southern laden sound had me hooked from the start. Check em out! Vid—” Your Disease”
Anti-Mortem A killer young Metal band out of OKC. This in my eyes (or ears) is what metal is all about. With this band you can hear the passion and honesty in the music. I sadly have not seen them live… yet, but if you ask around, it’s unanimous…They will destroy you! Vid—Truck Stop Special:
Wildstreet You want a band with the perfect mix of that “80’s feel” and incredible modern sound? This IS the band. You WILL sing along to every song. Every song WILL get stuck in your head. Trust me, that’s a good thing.It’s not just an image with these guys. They are living their sound all out. One of the best live shows going. They know what they’re doing in and out of the studio. Vid–Poison Kiss:
Black Tora I will put this 3 piece up against ANY 4,5,6 etc.. out there. I was blown away at how much sound these 3 are capable of producing. Bombastic drums, outstanding vocals, and “are you kidding me” guitar playing.In my opinion this is one of the most underrated bands out there. Unbelievable. Vid—Never Enough:
Warner Drive For a long time I had other bands and friends telling me to check this band out. WHY DID I WAIT SO LONG?!?! Big mistake on my part.Thankfully I own their C.D.s now and their tunes are all over my phone and iPod, so I don’t have to be without them anymore. Live show you ask. GO as soon as possible!!! Vid– The scarecrow:
Ten more bands worth checking out! Thanks to my good friend and co-host on Bleach Bangs Radio ( http://www.bleachbangs.com/) Charlie Owens for guest appearing with his picks!
I remember in 1983 a friend of mine told me about a band he had seen called Pantera. He said the guitarist “Diamond Darrell” was “out of this world”. I remembered the name but never heard anything more about the band at the time.
1990- I turned on the radio one day and heard a song that blasted through and hit me like a ton of bricks. “Cowboys From Hell” totally crushed me! I found out the name of the band was Pantera. Hmmm??? Could this be the same band I heard about several years ago? It was, and I understood what my friend had meant. “Diamond Darrell” and Pantera became one of my new favorite bands. I bought “Cowboys From Hell and played it over and over. Cherishing each brutal song as they burned into me.
1992 – “Vulgar Display Of Power” continued the onslaught, I was telling everyone and anyone about Pantera! The songs remained true to the name of the record and “Diamond Darrell” was burning up the strings.
1994 – Pantera continued to evolve as did “Diamond Darrell”. I do not know the circumstances but he had morphed into “Dimebag Darrell” with the release of “Far Beyond Driven”. The aggression continued and the guitar work became even more amazing (yes it did!) I was sure that Pantera was going to change the face of Rock N’ Roll and I championed their cause.
1996 – “The Great Southern Trendkill” gave me my favorite Pantera song to date. “Floods” (in my opinon) was Dimebag’s best work EVER! If there are any doubts check it out here and get back to me and we can discuss it:
2000 – “Reinventing the Steel” gave me more ammunition to carry on the fight! This band was going straight into the halls of Metal Icons from my past. I knew that I would forever sing the praises of Dimebag’s playing. And then…..Pantera was no more. I was crushed.
2003- Damageplan! Well alright! Dime was back! My guitar hero was back! I eagerly listened to this album and was happy! “Reborn” (featuring Zakk Wylde!!!) was never a truer song!
2004- December 9th – I was at work, it was early in the morning. I had stepped outside to receive some materials when I received a text message from my then fourteen year old son. “Dad, did Dimebag get killed?” WHAT?!?!?! I had heard nothing at this point. I made some phone calls and it was true. I was horrified at the thought. Another of my favorite musicians had been taken from us. When I heard the details of his murder I was sickened. WHY?!?! I will ALWAYS wonder why?
2012- I still listen and try to turn people on the music Dime created and left for us. He remains now and forever one of my favorite guitarists. Thank you Dime for the music and for giving all you had.
Dime and his brother Vinnie did a cover of one of my favorite Ace Frehley songs “Fractured Mirror”. You can just feel the emotion in this fitting tribute to one of Dimebag’s heroes.
the Hellion
P.S. this post is dedicated to a young music lover who has parents who care enough to share the healing power of music with him – “Matt The Cat” this is for you!
In our effort to continually grow and bring you new and exciting content we bring to you today an “EXCLUSIVE” interview with George Lynch.
My good friend Glen Krause a veteran around the music scene was fortunate to have spoken at length with George and captured this wonderful and enlightening interview. Sit down, relax, and enjoy this one of a kind reading. Here’s Glen and George:
George Lynch, “Mr. Scary” Guitarist extraordinaire, iconic artist instrumentalist and composer. This would be the typical opening line to a story about this man. But it really only scratches the surface. George Lynch is a thoughtful, intelligent, educated and outspoken environmentalist who has a deep concern for the future of the human condition. He has many thoughts about how we as a society or as individuals can change the destination of this train that we are on. I recently had a long and fascinating conversation with George, covering a myriad of subjects, most of which were surprising
to me and, most likely, will be surprising to you as well. It was a typical balmy L.A. autumn late morning in the Los Angeles area, and by the time we were done two hours later, I found that I have many new perspectives on music and on the people and the world around me. I hope this article/interview/conversation has the same effect on you.
Tuesday Sept. 4th 10:45 am pst
gk
Good morning George I know you’re super busy but Is this a good time to talk? GL I just woke up here and I’m getting my coffee on but yeah absolutely.
k
Okay perfect so … GL Do you want to talk about talk about your short-lived stint in Lynch mob, or no, was it… what band did you play in with us? (laughs)
gk
Shadow train GL Yeah shadow train. Definitely we want to talk about that, how you were in shadow train for about 45 minutes, Will definitely have to get some more pictures! There is you with XYZ here’s one with you and Shadow Train… Just put your picture with all the famous bands you’ve played with on your blog! (laughs) That was fun I cantremember what song we played I think it was Trail of Tears?
gk
Yeah yeah we were tracking Trail of tears. I was really not necessarily expecting to do that that day. That was wonderful and amazing and that fact really fits in with how I want to approach this interview, That character about you that is so welcoming and comfortably open, Walking into Sound Mountain studios just felt like walking into an old friend’s house and you saying “Hey, Great to meet you I’ve heard a lot about you, grab a bass, sit down and jump in”. It was a very friendly session compared to most I’ve been in.
GL (laughing) yeah wellthat’s what it is about basically, We’ll take all the help we can get.
gk
Exactly as it should be GL That’s the most beautiful thing about music when it is at that level you know? I mean why does it have to be anything but that? You know otherwise it gets corporate and then money gets involved and then contracts come out and then man! everything just gets… ugly.
gk
It does and interferes with the spontaneity of the music right? GL Yeah and that song I kind of forgot about. I have been involved with so many other things lately. After that session on that song I recorded the voice of John Trudell, who wrote this beautiful poetic piece over it, a spoken word piece and we went into Henson studios and recorded it and videotaped it. It’s very moving. And we added strings and did like a big Gilmore-esque guitar solo at the and and we’ve got the native drums in there now and it’s got these Paiute Indian chants in it. It’s it’s beautiful and really, it’s absolutely the cornerstone of the record now at this point. I got to send it to you so you can hear what it ended up sounding like.
gk
Yeah yeah please do I’d love to hear it. And that album is such an intriguing and amazing project. Ya know, growing up in Albuquerque and with Gregg Analla singing in SeventhSign, we have a large fan base and friend base of Native Americans and Pueblo Indians. And through that experience and many other experiences growing up in New Mexico I’ve definitely found that, similar to going over to your studio, I can walk into friends living room and feel somewhat like a stranger yet I can go to a Pueblo ceremony or dance or feast and walk into a total strangers house at the Pueblo or reservation and feel welcome like close family right off the bat like a guest of honor, it’s always an amazing experience to be part of that humble hospitality. GL Yeah that’s beautiful! And that’s how it was. I mean it’s kind of a strange way to do a record. We had access to the studio as you know, called Sound Mountain and it’s basically just two-story house up in the hills that a friend of mine owns and we sort of built the studio there or added to it and kind of lived there for a week. We really had no songs to speak of and so we kind of just went in and created everything on the spot. Just kind of shooting from the hip and improvising. Not that it really affects the end results in any way, maybe for better, maybe for worse who knows, just knowing that we did it that way is so gratifying from the creative standpoint. It made it very special and endearing to know that we did it that way as opposed to the way most people traditionally do records, which is obviously, I you know a very long and involved process. I come from jam, improvisational background. When I was growing up playing guitar in the 60s and early and mid 70s it was basically what I did. The bands that I was in improvised, that’s what we did most of the time. I’m so comfortable with that and I think that it’s somewhat of a lost art in the rock genre. I mean even the jam bands that I listen to are not purely improvisational in the truest sense, I don’t think. I’m sure there’s exceptions but from what I’ve heard from everything from String Cheese (Incident), Government Mule to Fish to Moe and Umphrey’s McGee. I mean their are arrangements that are rehearsed in that music. And there’s nothing wrong with that. They’re beautiful. Umphrey’s McGee being my favorite but they’re not improvisational bands in the true sense that say, jazz bands are, or rather were. It’s a matter of CAPTURING the creative moment rather than CREATING the creative moment, two completely different things.
gk
Exactly! And I think the success of that genre of music in the 90s started attracting the attention of the industry which invited and ultimately imposed preproduction and label approval and those sorts of things on those bands before they could even start to “improvise” which is a sort of contradiction of form I suppose. GL Definitely! I agree,
gk
So shifting gears again, the new LYNCH MOB -Sound Mountain Sessions EP, which was recorded at the same place obviously as shadow train. It’s a collection of songs brilliantly structured and composed. The messages were pleasantly surprising to me it seems as though there are some social messages there. Particularly in the song CITY OF FREEDOM. You’re back in the Los Angeles area now and you can feel that atmosphere in the references to living under bridges and cardboard boxes and feelings of hopelessness and struggle and yet there’s kind of overwhelming feeling in the chorus
that there are undefined and perhaps undiscovered possibilities for change. Not your average message coming from a hard rock band. GL Yeah well I think it’s a utopian-esque message that is maybe taken two ways, one literally, and one, sort of, you know, the “utopia in the mind” like new age sense where people could potentially evolve to a better place spiritually and mentally and then the physical would follow. I wrote those words, it’s not one of the highlighted songs on the EP, it’s not the one getting the attention, right now slow drag is, but my job I feel in the band is, among other things, to hopefully create a deeper sense of message so that the band has depth rather than just music, not that music isn’t valid enough reason, it exists, but I come from an era again in the 60s and 70s where music was a product of revolution and uprising and social consciousness, the civil rights movement, Vietnam War, all those sorts things. Bands then, and their messages evolved out of the rage that was occurring around the world. I thought that was beautiful and I think that’s largely gone away which is very very sad. I have very strong beliefs about things, so I feel it’s my duty and obligation to use my tiny soapbox to have a little bit of a voice in the wilderness about what’s right and wrong. I don’t know if it will ever have any effect or not but you still have to try. The thing with lynch mob is that those views aren’t necessarily shared by the entire group (laughs) so that’s where we’re different from a band say like Crosby stills and Nash and Phil Oaks, of course Dylan and the Beatles (when they were going through a certain period in their career), in that each had a very consolidated worldview and would rally around their message. And I struggle with that because I’m not the singer obviously and not really the lyricist, although I’ve had a few stabs at it. In the case of Sound Mountain Sessions, I did write the lyrics on City Of Freedom and it was, if nothing else, cathartic to be able to express that. I really felt it was important, now whether that gets heard or recognized or resonates a chord with anyone, of course I have no control over that but, you know, at least I got it out there.
gk
In the modern soundscape of love songs and hate songs it sounds like you feel it’s important to be able to use music as either a soap box or therapists couch so you can put your beliefs and your conflicts and your own, or someone else’s inner struggles into some sort of context that hopefully someone else can relate to and expand on within themselves. GL Yeah, you know and I think that larger messages like that, that deal with issues rather than feelings are not very sexy, you know what I mean?(laughs) I’m known for my 80s era of music which was not a place for taking political stance or having any spiritual message or anything like that. It was silly superficial, one-dimensional lyrics about sex drugs and rock ‘n roll, so it’s even doubly hard for people to take me seriously in that context; “wait a minute aren’t you Mr. Scary from Dokken? You had that that song called ‘I just got lucky’ and ‘it’s not love’” or whatever gay song that we were known for at that time? And well ,you know, people grow up. And I’ve always had these interests and these beliefs but I’ve sort of always tucked them away and kept them personal you know? And my parents are politically active and intelligent people and we were always talking about these things when I was growing up. We’re all well read and educated and I’m the one person in the family who does have a tiny soapbox, and they’ve expressed this on many occasions to me that “you know you have people that do listen to you and that’s a very powerful tool potentially”. In a sense ashamed of me that I haven’t utilized that to have some sort of beneficial effect on the larger world, beyond my lifetime. And now I would think that my main reason for wanting to have the music that I am involved in be heard is not to be a millionaire or be a rock star or famous but to write music that’s valid and powerful musically and also has an equally valid and powerful message. And have people recognize and hear it and possibly effect change. That is so much more inspirational from a musician standpoint, which I’m sure you can relate to, and also doubly hard to do especially if it’s not in the context of a band that shares your opinions necessarily. I am fighting this struggleboth externally and internally.
gk
Well and it’s quite obvious I hope, to the people who listen to Sound Mountain Sessions and Shadow Train that you’ve utilized your past experiences and opportunities and taken your knocks, and that you have to build a soapbox before you can stand on it. and over time you have done that very effectively and now you are reaping the benefits of getting that attention that you can now use for good instead of evil (chucking) GL Very well said and again I didn’t intentionally build that soapbox for that reason.
gk
Well, I kind of believe that many times are we aren’t always consciously aware of our intentions until we reach a certain level of maturity and understand fully what our true motivations are based on where we come from. listening to where you came from in terms of your family background, I can kind of see where the seed for those intentions were perhaps planted, however long it took for them to germinate. GL Or well like when a happy accident happens and you turn around and say “I meant to do that”
gk
Well I say that because I recently made a homemade video out of boredom. Because of hand injury I can’t really write music or record right now so I thought I’d make a homemade video and I thought it was just something to spend the afternoon doing. and as people saw it they began to describe to me things and messages that they saw in it that I never consciously meant to express, but looking back they somehow that crept in
there anyway. When I first looked back at it I saw a very lazily made video and messy apartment. Intentions gone awry. I myself wasn’t very happy with it But to my surprise people really picked up on the emotion that was connected to the song which is about the unconditional love I have for my family and my children. So I guess a different kind of happy accidents GL Interesting. Can I see that? I’d like to see that.
gk
Absolutely I’ll send you a link. A creative conciseness driven, happy accident, caught on iPad camera with a dusty lens. I meant to do that! (both laugh)
GL The unconditional love subject brings up a whole other bunch of questions too, you know? What’s built into ancient genes. What is ultraism? Ultraism can be confused with selfishness, they’re actually parallel and very similar I think, and a very kind of prehistoric way. What is the best tool for survival of the organism through time? Which ultimately under romanticizes it, Disney wouldn’t like that (chuckles). It is an interesting question though.
gk
Well the way that I look at it is, even if it seems either cathartic or altruistic I’ve come to find that when you’re able to express these really personal, self-healing self identifying expressions, people realize that they have the same tone to their life and there is an effect of change on the listener. Whether that was the conscious intent or not, it is really rewarding to discover as an artist, that people pick up on that. I think having the ability to deliver a message, or a position or convey a feeling in a musical vessel that touches people and catches their attention for other reasons such as the beauty of the music or
the talent of the musicians, that’s a gift that we were given. If you can attach a message to it then you are thereby enhancing the gift and passing it along to others GL Well you bring up a great point, actually you bring up a lot of great points, and as I listen to you I keep thinking of different paths of thought I could take on everything that you’re bringing it up. but let’s say in a larger sense, music is the last free educational medium where the military industrial media complex, the media being the fourth arm of that monster, is highly controlled and biased and subjective. But music is sort of a wilderness and an open landscape and it’s a world of ideas and emotions that are hard to define which makes it beautiful because it’s mysterious. And I think in that sense listeners, humans, people have something that is very vital to us like food and air and water. Life without it would be colorless and somewhat pointless. I mean how many times has someone come up to you and told you that your music or somebody else’s music has meant so much to them because it marks time and personal history and they’ve identified through association with the words or feelings that our music conveys? I mean all these things are SO powerful and in a way trump everything else in our lives to a certain extent. And I’m really glad that we can’t codify what it really is. We can’t break it down in a particle accelerator or examine it under a microscope in a laboratory. It can’t be picked apart through reductionism or anything else, it’s just this mysterious blend of what it means to be human and animal. I’m very glad will never be able to harness that or break it down into its individual components.
gk
I absolutely agree I’ve come to find that technically music is just a series of vibrations and frequencies and is really just an organic element of nature. GL You’re absolutely right and whether it’s generated by a computer or an acoustic instrument is irelevent. Music of the spheres!
gk
So how would you describe how all of these philosophical notions of music and message manifest on the Sound Mountain Sessions? GL Well speaking on the balance of the record, we all set around collectively and really worked on all these messages, some of which I was involved in some of which I wasn’t. “Sucka” was originally called Thunderbird Dust and I’m sure you remember when you were up at the studio there was that old light blue Thunderbird, all rusty out in the desert there, and I love that thing and I thought it it embodied so much and conjured up so many images. My idea was kind of this vigilante for justice, driving through the desert in this Mad Max like post-apocalyptic world bringing messages of hope and redemption. That got canned and the singer wasn’t really comfortable with it and rewrote the lyrics and came up with “Sucka”, which I like. you know, it’s an interesting thing when you write, and I’m sure it’s the same with any artist in any medium, there’s an element of ego involved when you write, which I believe you have to constantly check yourself on. Because your ego can get very attached to what you think you’ve created, but when you start thinking of it as the collective and you’re all working together fora common cause and we’re not really creating anything we’re just kind of conduits and these things are coming through us somehow. We’re tapped into something or whatever, who knows, we shouldn’t be so self aggrandized as artists that we’re believing that we’re actually truly creating anything. And when you think that way it’s easier to let go of stuff that you feel so attached to and can release yourself from the desire and attachment and except the impermanence of things. So I found I was very attached to the message originally of what instead became “Sucka” and I had to check myself and let it go. I think that’s why people in bands become solo artists. (Laughs) I am of the opinion that the group is stronger than the individual and does better work when we work together, which is what we all need to do. I don’t really believe in the rugged individualistic notion of an artist who picks himself up by his bootstraps and does it all and lets everybody else fall by the wayside and doesn’t give a shit about them and kicks them off into the ditchand then moves onto to his private airstrip and his G5 Gulfstream and flies off to his Crystal Palace, leaving the rest of us picking up crumbs. When I write something that doesn’t fly, I have to sort of check myself and realize that’s my ego talking. there are other valid ideas out there, not just my own.
gk
Absolutely. I like how you throw “doesn’t fly” in there to in reference to the G5 (George laughs) GL Yeah bands are funny things as you know. there’re like microcosms and experiments in human nature. Like a laboratory study of how people can interact in the best possible way or the worst possible way.
gk
And you’ve had great experience in that historically speaking. GL I’ve had experience in the worst possible way. also some in the best possible way but…
gk
So then tell me a little bit of what you’ve learned about human nature and various band experiences that you’ve had including in that, the Dokken experience as well as bands that a lot of people are still interested such as Souls of We and Kill all Control and so on. GL Well I think in the final analysis, for me anyways, at this point in my life as I think about and my experiences with microcosms of human interaction called musical groups over the years is that maybe there’s two ways to negotiate your way through life. because it affects the way you treat other people and how you operate. One way is you work together. The other you work for one. And you work alone for the benefit of yourself you look at everything as how is this going to benefit you? Individually and your short-term risk to benefit ratio till the day you die. You know? fuck my heirs, fuck my kids, fuck my family, fuck my community and fuck my friends because this is all about me. And that’s the extreme example. On the other end is the compassionate, empathetic individual that, even if it hurts him or herself, would extend themselves to help others and is worried about the larger community and the circle outside of themselves. now that sounds very nice and endearing and you would think that the latter example would be the one that we would all want to emulate ideally. But we don’t, Because we’re all selfish needy creatures. You know? and I don’t really know the answer to that. I mean I’m really a very progressive person, liberal in my politics and my worldview but, I mean, I haven’t I guess settled the question yet in my own mind as to what the right way to be is, in other words when it comes down to Basic survival and what our genes are telling us to do as the mind inside the cell, through millions of years of evolution, I’ve got a feeling that the former example is probably the one that serves SURVIVAL the best. I don’t know I’m not a scientist. I’m not a behavioral scientist I’m not a biologist, I’m just kind of observing as I’m passing through life here. So I don’t really know. And at the same time I’m probably one of the biggest hypocrites on the planet because I am a lifelong environmentalist and I’m very left in my politics and yet I think the most powerful way to express your views are not only in the way you vote and in what you say but in the way you live. I live in a cookie-cutter tract home in a subdivision and I drive an SUV that guzzles gas. I’ve invested in the stock market in the past, you know? something I feel I shouldn’t be doing, These are things that I am diametrically opposed to, yet I don’t live by example and I have to face that. If i’m going to talk the talk I have to walk the walk so in my mind I believe in these things, but when the rubber hits the road, do I really practice them enough? So then what does a person do? Do you go live in a cave in the mountains with the solar panel and a sleeping bag and live this pure kind of existence? It brings up the example of when Al Gore was on the campaign with his movie to enlighten the world about global warming, the right attacked him for having this massive house which consumed a lot of electricity and energy, and I thought well that’s a very fallacious argument because, yes he is, but he is a product of the modern world and he uses the modern world and the tools at his disposal to express this message. Doing that requires energy! It’s a very silly argument because it’s a tiny drop in the bucket compared to the damage that’s really being done out there by the 800 pound gorillas and policy and all that kind of stuff, including warfare and the military industrial complex and so forth, raping and pillaging the natural world. Which is actually what he’s fighting. So that was a silly argument. But stupid people buy it. So that’s maybe the way I justify what I do, and I was brought up in postwar America where the country was coming along and growing and good things were happening with the economy and so forth. I was a product of the nuclear age and a nuclear family and it’s difficult for me to break out of that mold. And I’m surrounded by a dominant culture that I’m a slave to because I’m a product of this. I was raised in it and it’s all I really know. I know ultimately that there’s a better way butit is definitely an internal conflict for me. I guess the way I justify it is I need to do my work. And part of my work is the message. And really how I personally live doesn’t really make one iota of difference. Not that I live this grandiose lifestyle anyway. I still struggle with that. But I do have an exit plan. My exit plan is New Mexico. and it’s living in an Earthship or something like that and making simple music with my friends and living in a beautiful place that I love and can’t wait to get to. That dream keeps me putting one foot in front of the other every single day. I’ve got my big map of New Mexico on my wall that my mom gave me about 16 years ago, with all my pins on it and my plans and I go there every time I get a chance. I think most people have a sense of place, where they feel attracted to and it resonates with them and they feel they were born to be there. And I feel that way about New Mexico. I keep that in my head it keeps me energize and I have something to work forward to
gk
I can relate to that being born and raised in New Mexico. GL You’re lucky
gk
I think so too, I think about it often, more and more often as time goes by, but again like you, I have to do my work and right now, that seems to be where I am currently. So maybe I am just doing the work that I can do here but cannot do there, and building my little soapbox. GL Well Gregg Analla is great example of that conflict. As I talked to Gregg who you played with in Seventhsign and I played with in shadow train, and he is a great friend of both of ours, and he was talking about that recently when I was in Albuquerque about how he was in LA and he had to make a decision like we all have to make at one point in time in our lives as musicians. Do we live in the land of darkness and greed and materialism and sell our souls for this pipe dream? or do we go home? And Greg decided to go home. I didn’t (laughs).
gk
Yet, you have to throw a yet in there. I’m a big believer in yet. GL It is tough! It’s funny how life puts you in some of these kind of on answerable dilemmas where you’re screwed both ways no matter which way you turn (laughs). It’s like I’ll lose 50% of something if I go right and I’ll lose 50% of something if I go left.
gk
Yeah it’s interesting how we come to terms with these types of issues, I’ve learned in my more recent attempts at self discovery that we are born with these instincts to survive and to seek food and warmth and safety with our mother or father and do whatever it takes to survive from an infant to an adult and as we grow older those become less and less useful to us and in fact in many ways begin hinder us. It seems these instincts that were ingrained in our DNA as we began to walk upright as a species haven’t really caught up to the fact that we now live well past the age of 30, and drive cars and so on,
and these ancient traits don’t take that into account. It’s almost like once we reach our 20s or 30s are instincts assume we are already dead so they just kind of go rogue on us. GL Right and our nervous systems are ancient things. All of our cells are talking and they have all of this ancient history, and the modern world has only come into existence very very recently. I don’t think our nervous system has adapted to that you know? the pace of life, the amount of information we now have to process and so we have all these pharmaceuticals to deal with things and therapy and self-help books and most importantly, now we have unhappiness. I see so much unhappiness everywhere I go. And I’ve found it generally the most genuine happiness dwells with the simplest, poorest people in the world. I mean they have problems but they are not so monumental, they have problems within the context of their own lives but they’re simple. I think the nervous system can’t deal with the complexity of the modern world, as you said, it hasn’t evolved and caught up to how complicated life is which is why I think we all yearn for a simplerplace and a simpler time, but how do you satisfy that urge for 7 billion people on a finite planet with finite resources with an infinite and exponential society overtaking this small blue/green planet. It’s very disturbing when you think about it in the larger context, but I think people should be aware of that and children should be taught that. It’s a very fundamental thing and simple to understand. You know, when advertising and the pressures of capitalism has brainwashed everyone into thinking they can all be rich and beautiful and that that would bring happiness. you know? That’s CONTRARY to happiness and THAT message needs to be drilled into our heads. But the capitalistic economic system that we slave under it is not gonna allow that. And that’s maybe where music can come in and shine a little bit of light on the truth.
gk
Absolutely and it certainly seems that that is really the idea behind the Shadow Train Project in many ways. GL Absolutely! It is being filmed in the setting of Native American reservations because they are semi sovereign nations, if they can be described that way, amongst a culture that in it’s history is much closer to the natural world. which gives us an opportunity to explore ideologies and ideas that may work for human beings in a context that is different than the dominant culture which is based on an economic system that is very unjust and unfair. So the movie is more about human nature than anything else, and how once you figure that out, then that affects everything else. How we deal with each other and understanding ourselves affects how we can create a fair economic system. I mean what is a fair economic system? How should it work? How should the exchange of energy occur? And is it right for so few to have so much and so many have so little? If a laborer works at Peabody mine and doesn’t belong to a union, he has no healthcare and he has no pension and he works in an environment that he knows is going to make him sick and his family will not be able to depend on him to support them. He (or she) has a dangerous job pulling resources out of the earth that enrich a very very few at a huge cost to the rest of us and our health to produce inefficient energy. That is just insanity, you know? Is it fair for that person to sacrifice amount of energy, to make so little, to benefit this elite few at the top that everything trickles up to, who fly around and live in glass castles insulated from the minions? That is disgusting and wrong and I think there are only two things that keep the people from eating the rich at this point, fear being one and secondly greed. I mean let people believe that they can live behind those gilded guarded gates someday and leave their neighbors behind. They win that lottery ticket or have a good business idea and things take off, but that isn’t going to happen for just about everybody. Because for the system to work, and for that elite to be supported, there has to be an exponentially larger amount of people under that elite. There’s no such thing as an inverted pyramid. It would crumble under its own weight, everything has to trickle up. And it’s the system that has to be changed. It’s actually very very simple if you explain it to people that way. And what CAN’T be said is that that’s an opinion. Knowing and believing are two totally different things. You can choose to believe what you want to believe, but you shouldn’t choose to believe in something that’s contrary to what’s true. There’s only one truth. And that’s what the Shadow Train movie is about.
gk
That’s such a great and important truth to pass along. I know that in the process of making the film, you also passed along some other things, I know you and Vincent DeCastro (Shadow Train’s Director) went out to native American communities and shared your music and musical knowledge, But you also shared musical recourses with the help of the Music Is Medicine Foundation. Instruments and inspiration that might carry a great service to the youth of those communities, providing them tools to perhaps express angst, anger and frustration (or anything for that matter) in a constructive way. Very important as these were not areas typically with a guitar mega mart around the corner. Yet you chose not to turn that action into a publicity event. In fact it was so low key, I think only a hand full of people outside of the project are aware that you guys even did this. GL Yeah I think you have to be careful with touchy-feely, feel good stuff too, because sometimes I think that can become a distraction from what’s really important and that’s changing policy. Affecting change in things that affects people’s lives and changes the system. That comes from education and understanding how the wheels turn and what makes the wheels turn, how the system works and why it is unfair and what you have to do to change it. That’s why I have this wonderful affinity for what happened at Alcatraz, and what happened at wounded knee with the occupation and the 70s with the American indian movement that went to war against the government. The National Guard came out with the tanks and the goons to separate the conformists (who were in it for the money and more aligned with the corporatocracy) against the traditionalists. and then jumping bull I think it was where the FBI agents were killed and Leonard Peltier was sentenced to prison for the rest of his life, that was the culmination of many years of terrorism. That’s why people need to understand that the genocide that occurred with our indigenous people, the only true Americans in this country, has happened all over the world throughout history and continues to happen, and it begs the question are the conquerors and the victors really just wrong? I mean it seems to be the history and the story of humanity is just conquest. And whether you win or lose there are predators and there is prey, there’s winners and losers, and in that sense, Native Americans are defeated people in their own country and Homeland. That’s really the bottom line. And we like to say in the movie, in fact we expressed this line at one point, when the Europeans came over here with a cross in one hand and a gun in the other (and a few ticks up their sleeves) they got everything! Through treachery and trickery and force and what ever. But they did NOT get what was essentially the most important thing and that is the point. People are unhappy, materialism does not satisfy the spiritual needs and emotional needs. It really doesn’t satisfy anything up to a certain point. Obviously for security needs and to stay healthy and safe and alive we need certain things but beyond that an overabundance of stuff just creates unhappiness by just complicating your life and creating more problems and also corrupts your soul because for you to have more, many others have to do with less. So I think a realignment of priorities would be a healthy thing. This is not saying that people by nature are bad, it’s just saying that the system is wrong and skewed and exaggerated to the point of being so unfair and so unjust that it’s created so much pain and so much suffering for so many people, It has become blatantly and glaringly obvious that it needs to change. you know maybe a gentle change with a slight arch towards justice and equality, or maybe a drastic and dramatic change. Most things seem to occur in this sense, very dramatically. It’s just like an earthquake. When the pressure builds up on a fracture in the earth to the point where it is either released incrementally over time with small little adjustments or pressure builds up to the point of inevitable catastrophe, if you want to explain it as catastrophe. Painful for short period of time and then there is an adjustment and the pressure is off and you’re betterfor a while. Until the next one (laughs).
gk
And it seems that one of the things that the concept of the Shadow Train Project brings up is that a lot of Americans don’t even realize that we have this amazing and rich culture that is struggling to endure amongst us that was here obviously very long before us. And we are still slowly trying to pave over this culture and turn it into fashion trends and decorating motifs, completely missing what it truly is that we’re admiring or we think we are admiring. GL Yes! you know? Not all Indians live in teepees, it’s like the Disneyfication of everything. Unfortunately that’s where our kids get the idea of what everything is like. The happiest place on earth? Disneyland? Are you kidding me? It’s the ultimate distraction from what we are unhappy about. I watched this show recently while I was on tour, and it really angered me, I was sitting in my hotel room and one of my friends sent me a link to this show about where this crew would come in from one of the networks or whatever, and they would build these people and new home. Some home makeover show, and they would do it for certain people, Poor people, disenfranchised people, and they had an episode on the Navajo reservation, and they picked this family that was living in a double wide trailer with no heat and one tiny solar panel that the son was trying to hook up so they would have a little bit of electricity and they were shitting in a bucket outside in the winter and living off government cheese and and all the other assistance that they could get. And it was a grandmother and the father was out of the picture and there were kidswho were having kids, You know, poor people with poor people problems. and these people came in, must’ve been a 100 person crew and giant million dollar toolboxes and construction equipment, and they took the family this Native American family to Disneyland for the week. Of course they had a remote camera with the family in Disneyland and they were elated and they were happy/distracted, I mean what else are they going to do when you’ve taken everything from them? everything that they’re about, their spirituality their culture their land. We’ve defeated them, taken away their identity, their education, their resources… Okay now we are going to send you to Disneyland! That’s the consolation prize! And this family is going to take anything they can get at this point “yay, were in Disneyland”! And while they’re in Disneyland the show builds this house, and it was this $3 million fake Hogan, and you know it was beautiful, certainly not in a simple way, but it was a showpiece you know? It was like a designer home. And then they brought the family back from Disneyland and held the unveiling, and the whole community was there. Naturaly the recipients of this gift were very appreciative, they were in tears the whole time and they couldn’t believe it… But I thought about it and I wondered what’s gonna happen afterwards. Because natives are much closer to the idea of the collective and taking care of each other and sharing and so you give just one family this $3 million house in one of the poorest places in the country, you know where the original Americans are second-class citizens, there uneducated, they’re poor, they have the highest mortality rates lowest life expectancy average, highest infant mortality diabetes with a modern shitty sugar and carb diet that McDonald’s forces down their throats, and we steal other resources and they have no kind of way to have any kind of enterprise on their own land (because of the way the deals are designed, their land is held in trust by the United States government, they are wards of the state essentially, not capable of managing themselves, and that’s done so that the BIA can interface with them and make sure that resources are extracted for the benefit of the dominant culture and economy, not them and they get crumbs). And so this network comes in and builds them this $300 home. So now how did they feel about the community and how does the community feel about them? What they have done now is just explode the sense of greed and entitlement, and it’s all about me not about you. It’s sort of like that movie The Gods Must be Crazy where in Africa this small village finds a Coke bottle that was thrown out of a plane by a pilot and these villagers think that it is a gift from God, I can be used for all these wonderful things such as starting fires and used as a tool and then it starts creating jealousy and greed and everyone wants their turn at the Coke bottle, and eventually one of the bushman observes this and decides to tell everybody that this thing is nothing but evil is going to get rid of it and he keeps trying to throw it away because they were once so happy and now they are so miserable. And I felt the same way about this house that they built because the other neighbors are going to still be living their simple life, with no heat and no power and living hand to mouth. And basically the message almost seems to be, you can become a second-class citizen in this dominant culture or you can die. You can assimilate or you can die. It was very very disturbing to watch. It enraged me to watch this. I was saying to myself, “Is anybody not seeing this?” It’s like why couldn’t they take the $3 million and Sears and the resources and the sponsors and go and do something good for everyone, and that’s not necessarily GIVING them something, it’s DOING something on a deeper level, maybe give them something back so they can decide who they are. For example one of the big problems I’ve found is that in this economic system the banks are at the heart of everything and when you go into Native American reservation you see Wells Fargo, you see Chase and you see Bank of America. The devil. Why are there not sovereign banks on reservations? Why don’t they keep their money invested in their own communities? because all that money gets off shored, invested in interest raising endeavors for the dominant culture, and it does nothing for them. because investment on a reservation is not safe for outside interests. Because they cant guarantee a return on their investment. But thats the way it’s designed! intentionally! to create a dissonance from investing on a reservation. Which increases the pressure to go along with selling your recourses for a penny on the dollar. The Navajo reservation is going through tis right now with the water rites of the Colorado river. Per the treaty of, I believe, 1907 the Navajo reservation owns, in BLACK AND WHITE, half the water in the Colorado river. It’s an extremely arid part of the world. Water is life! If they were actually able to use that water, had a way to deliver it and use it would literally transform their lives. The state of Arizona and the Federal Government are doing everything they can to not allow that to happen. and so there is a split on the reservation as far as what to do. And this just came down. The president of the Navajo reservation is going against his peoples wishes and has voted to decide with the two senators from Arizona; Kyl and McCain and sign over the water rights to the state of Arizona. So there was a recall. The recall election commission which is under the umbrella of this Presidents government, decided to kick out the recall. The fox watching the hen house. Thats all going on right now. Thats an example of the tragedy that occurs politically here. The Peabody mine, uranium mining ,uranium dumping, Uranium waste where does it go? the giant land fills that are on the reservation. Its a good thing we left them some places in our country, places where we can mine that uranium (to make bombs to support the expansion of our empire so we can steal resources throughout the world). And places where we can dump our garbage And it’s tragic. and it’s wrong. and people don’t know about it. And really people don’t care. They don’t care because they’re trying to smooth up the socio-economic ladder, you know, I have a Ford now but maybe I want a BMW or I want a house with the pool or I want to move to the the housing development behind a gated community instead of regular subdivision and shop at Neiman Marcus instead of Walmart.
gk
Or move from the Doublewide into the deluxe faux Hogan. GL Yeah. I think when people want to start to go back towards the other way and not live in mansions and learn to live simpler, if everyone did that collectively there’d be a lot less pressure on the planet and a lot less pressure on our psyches and our nervous systems. We would’nt need to rely on the pharmaceutical trap, we wouldn’t need drugs to make us feel human. You know we have pills to help us go to sleep to help us have sex to help keep us from going crazy or becoming depressed… there was a time when we didn’t need to do that. We are just robots in society today. Just here to be productive, and that word, “productive” in our society has positive connotation where I don’t think it should. Because what idoes productivity mean? That just means you’re working harder to support somebody else. Pull resources out faster or produce more crap that we don’t need, from birth till death. To be born into debt and to die in debt. And that’s the plan set for all of us except for the people up at the top who will be benefiting from us being more productive. There’s more to life than just being a productive machine that turns something simple and basic into something more complex to benefit somebody that we will never know, who doesn’t want to have anything to do with us.
gk
Wow, that’s a lot to think about, we just covered an incredible amount of ground there! GL Yeah what idoes any of this have to do with music, (laughs) that’s a problem with me once you get me started…
gk
I think it’s great I’m actually glad that we’ve veered down these various paths. It actually makes me feel even more excited about passing this message along. You are definitely doing a good job of doing that and the fact that you support these things and identify these things and are willing to speak on about them speaks volumes about your character and that after all is what I wanted to capture and share with others. I think people don’t understand that artists and celebrities are so much more than the “product” that they are known for. And I think it’s only fitting that the majority of this conversation is devoted to really important things that are more a part of what you are then what most people see you are or think you are. And I hope people will read this and learn much more than how you play the solo to wicked sensation (George laughs) GL Well that’s the bait (laughing) I can say how I played that one thing in Mr. Scary and then, by the way… We’ve got to change the world (chuckles).
gk
Actually I meant to bring that up. You and I share many mutual friends and I’ve talked to many with the exception of one or two that have nothing but wonderful things to say about you and definitely don’t conjure up the image of someone who could be described as ‘Mr. scary” GL Well you didn’t know me in the 80s (laughs) really it’s more of a joke than anything and things weren’t really that bad but, you know, things were different back then ,you know, I guess “Mr. Scary” is a product of the heyday of the hairbands you know, sex drugs and rock ‘n roll and I was just doing my job! (chuckles)
gk
So now as this more mature and developed and aware human being does it doesn’t bug the crap out of you to be referred to as Mr. Scary on a constant basis? GL Oh I don’t care. You know like I tell people when people ask me for my autograph and pictures anyhow is asking me so politely “is it okay”, well wait a minute, I just appreciate the fact that you WANT my autograph and my picture. I actually ENJOY that, I mean how hard is it just sign my name and stand next to someone and take a picture? Some people have to get up at three or four in the morning and go to work at the mines. I get to play guitar and sign my name… that’s my job. I’m not complaining about it, the cult of personality, it’s ironic that I sort of would like to work to defy that, but that’s what keeps my lights on and pays my rent so anyway I’m still kind of working against myself.
gk
Since we are moving onto lighter subjects and getting back to music, you’re juggling a whole bunch of different things right now and you’re keeping really busy and definitely exerting yourself to great lengths with your talents and your efforts and your presence musically speaking and now spiritually and politically as well. Is it difficult for you to have three active projects right now and three albums potentially dropping in the space of a year or so, with completely different lineups and messages? GL Well it’s hard for me to sometimes remember the names of the guys in the band. (both laugh) I’m actually sort of kidding. but seriously I’ve written so much material so quickly, sometimes the lines get blurred from project to project. One example I was working on the song with Jeff Pilsen (from Dokken) for lynch mob last year when he was part of that. and the band at that time did not feel that that was the right direction for them so Jeff and I decided to do this T&N project and so that particular song ended up being on the T&N record which is coming out this October but it’s also on the new full-length Lynch mob album that’s coming out early next year, and I got my wires crossed and forgot that I had written it for both bands and somehow it ended up on both bands records and it’s almost the same song
gk
Well that’s okay like cross pollination I suppose GL I never thought of it that way, I guess cross pollination is a good thing right?
gk
I think it is definitely. it’s a frequent occurrence during the creative process whether you are cross collaborating or not. GL Well the way I see it is you know probably I could sue myself and whether I win or lose it’s a draw. (laughs)
gk
And either way you know you won’t be litigating against an asshole.(both chuckle) GL But seriously it is a different song, because it has a different singer and different words, but it’s kind of interesting I think. If you go back and you look at another artist that you like and you go wow he was in the stand in this band and you can kind of tell that it was the same song but it got changed, kind of behind-the-scenes insight like, you know, “oops”! I don’t think it’s a bad thing though. I mean AC/DC has been writing the same tune for the last 30 years and I don’t think anyone has any problem with that so… But as far as keeping all these things going and moving forward, you know ideally I would like to have just one band that has nominal success in the sense that were able to support ourselves and stay busy and have enough output creativity to satisfy everybody and just keep life a little simpler, but lynch mob does not work fast enough for me, and I’m not saying that’s a good thing or a bad thing, for them or me. It’s just kind of the way I am and I like many different kinds of music and especially as I am older, I sort of broaden my focus a little bit so these passions aren’t necessarily shared with bands I play with, so there is the creative necessity for something like Shadow Train. And then Tooth and Nail by the way is also a very politically infused record. The name of the record is “Slave To The Empire” and Jeff (Pilson) and I share common thoughts about the way things are and the way things could be. That is what the whole record is about as the name implies, so that’s very gratifying and satisfying to be doing that project, and also working with Jeff, you know, we’ve been working on and off together for the last 25 or 30 years whatever it is, and we wrote a majority of those Dokken songs together, and we live very close to each other. He is a fantastic engineer and we’ve always had this fantastic chemistry and he has said to me and I have said to him “you know in the perfect world we would just like to play together for the rest of our lives and make music together” and we want to do that someday. that’s why we started with baby steps with this T&N project. And we finished two records actually the record Slave To The Empire which will come out in October will be followed up are you later with a second record which is pretty much done already. We recorded both albums over the period of about a year and a half. Then there’s the lynch mob EP which we did very quickly and came out great and were following that up with a full-length record coming out early next year. Were actually going back into the studio in a few weeks to finish up the last six songs. In recent months Ihave also released an instrumental EP that’s called Legacy.
gk
What motivated you to throw that into the already rich mix of projects? GL I’ve just never done a guitar record where I want to just play for fun, play what I want purely from a guitar perspective, just have it be balls out and pyrotechnic and just do whatever I want, no excuses, and so I got that out of my system. And that was very fun and easy to do,. I didn’t have to worry about songs in the larger context and a band to deal with and expensive recording studios and all that crap. I was just able to do it in my home studio with an engineer add a couple of friends (Rev Jones: Bass and Michael Frowen: Drums) we just banged it out.
gk
Very nice that sounds like fun. and then looking to the future? GL Well I‘ve got another project I’m working on with, that we haven’t started yet, but we hope to this year with Doug Pinnick from of course, Kings X on bass and vocals and Ray Luzier on drums from Korn. Whoah! awesome lineup to say the least! What a lineup! Yeah we want to do this power trio thing it’s really heavy and obviously trippy at the same time, maybe put a little Dubstep in there I don’t know, that’s kind of a Korn thing but then again it’s a completely different kind of project, totally apart from lynch mob, T&N and shadow train, you know? it’s kind of like the old supergroup thing which doesn’t doesn’t happen anymore. I kind of miss those days.
gk
Well yeah Doug Pinnick was a huge influence on me and definitely an influence on Seventh Sign and Ray Luzier I’ve met on quite a few occasions and he’s a really great guy and an amazing player as well. GL And it’s so great to play with people like that you know?, in this business you run into quite a few dickheads that are just egotistical pariahs, Energy suckers, and it’s so much work and requires so much energy to try to deal with those kind of people and it sucks up energy that you need to be putting into what you’re trying to do. I have tried very hard to just kind of distance myself from those kind of people and I’ve done pretty good job of it with very few exceptions in the last few years. And as I say, Ray and Doug, beautiful people Salt of the earth ,wear their heart on the sleeves and hard workers and I like that work ethic. They’re there because they want to be there. If we just do it for the right reasons everything else will follow you know? People will come, people will listen.
gk
I am sure that will be epic, this is the first time Ive heard about that project. GL Yeah that one’s been pretty much under the radar until now I guess. The biggest problem is not the music, because people will gravitate towards this, we know that. The problem is just finding the time with everything that I’m doing obviously and everything that Ray is doing, they’re very busy! They’re going to Russia and Indonesia and then they’re going to go to Japan and they come back and start another record and now it’s just kind of trying to find a pocket of time. The one pocket of time he has this year is in November and that’s when I’m going out on the road with T&N so that’s going to be to the challenge. it will either happen or not happen sooner or later depending on when wecan find a time to do it.
There you have it, an insight into the mind of George Lynch. Thank you George and thank you Glen for sharing this wonderful conversation with us. We’re gonna leave you with a little LYNCH MOB “SLOW DRAG”
On this 09/11 I want to stop and take a moment to stop and reflect a moment. I am grateful I live in a country that affords me the freedom write this blog and share it with the world. I am grateful to all of those around the world who have sacrificed in every imaginable way for the benefit of others. I am grateful to all of the people who have given us music throughout all of man’s history. I am grateful for all of you who have come here to read my words, thoughts and ideas on the Rock genre of music. From my very soul thank you ALL!
I’m afraid the sordid history is something the public isn’t ready for. The Reader’s Digest version, minus the very, very sordid parts, is this:We played together from ’89-’91 as Flash Bastard. Reunited in late 2009, played a couple of reunion shows in 2010 and decided we had more we wanted to do. So we came up with a new name, recorded an album and started playing as the Hard Ponys.
I notice the unusual spelling of Ponys. Any particular reason for that?
Purely visual. Danny came up with the logo and the name sort of simultaneously and the proper spelling didn’t look right. We argued about the spelling amongst ourselves, and even though I usually don’t go for misspelled names, I argued for it in this case. The right way looked…wrong.
To me Rock N’ Roll is just that, I don’t need to put any more labels on it. No neoclassicpostthrashgrungedeathblackgothspeeddoomstoner here, your thoughts?
It’s gotten a bit ridiculous. Seems like every new band you hear has their own genre or sub-genre. If that’s the case, why not just let the band name double as the genre. “Oh, who are you?” “We’re the Screaming Skulls.” “What kind of music do you play?” “Screaming Skull.” I mean, I see the point of differentiating up to a point. Blues and polka aren’t the same thing. Even within Rock N’ Roll, I can see drawing a distinction between, say, metal and punk or prog-rock and rockabilly, but where does it end?
What era of Rock does it for you?
I’ll try to answer for the band as a whole here, even though we’ve got our own opinions, individually. As a band, I think it’s mostly ’70’s and ’80’s rock that we’re drawn to the most.
I really enjoy the CD tell us about the experience of making it?
It was great, apart from having to pull everybody else’s weight, even though they didn’t appreciate anything I did. You’d think they’d be grateful for me sneaking in and re-recording their parts for them after they screwed everything up. No, it was actually kind of a dream. Some of the songs are new but several are not, songs we’d played live ages ago and were very proud of, and it was great to finally get them down so that people can hear them. You know, in case anybody wants to.
Does any of you have any formal musical education?
No, not really. Well, you’ve heard the CD, right? Seriously, though, none of us have had any serious formal training. Well, that I know of. Not sure in Jim’s case, he may have had some proper drum lessons in his woodshedding days. The rest of us, though, are mostly self-taught. I took one vocal lesson which actually helped a lot because I kept the practice tape of vocal exercises even though I never went for another lesson. Rob and I started a classical guitar class together, but he dropped out after a few classes. since he was my ride, I dropped out, too.
What is the most memorable moment in a performance for the band?
When we can go two songs without me smashing into Rob or Danny and knocking them out of tune. Actually, the part where I DO smash into them is better for me.
What music new/old are you listening to that would surprise us?
Well, people are pretty aware of my obsession with Barry Manilow, Olivia Newton-John and ’70’s Easy Listening in general, so probably not that. I actually like some Nicki Minaj songs, and some Ke$ha songs. That might be a bit of a shocker.Rob posted a link to a Jack Johnson song on his Facebook the other day, and that surprised the piss out of me.
What piece of advice would you give the young musician?
Sell out straightaway. See if you can get a song in a car commercial. Change any lyrics the record company wants you to, wear what they tell you to wear. Don’t concern yourself with musical integrity, just go for the fastest payout. Oh, and do all the blow and hookers you can get your hands on.
This has been a long fought debate among rock fans. I think that keyboards are an integral part of rock music. Keyboards have been around from the birth of rock, to its current evolution. Like everything else keyboards can be (in my opinion) misused in rock music. Again everything in this post is just my opinion and is open for (and welcomed) discussion. Let’s get crackin’:
Some early rock songs had a prominent piano sound in them that was integral to the sound. Let’s look at a video from Jerry Lee Lewis for 1957:
Jerry Lee Lewis made this song come alive with the piano. The song was rockin’ for it’s time and it would not be the same without the piano.
The Doors brought forth some great keyboard laden music on the late 60’s. Ray Manzarek took keyboards and made them cooler. The distinct sound of Ray’s playing gave the Doors their signature sound.
Foreigner in its early incarnation brought some great songs. Who doesn’t recognize the intro by Al Greenwood to “Cold As Ice”? This song was rocking us back in ’77. Although I was personally unhappy with the direction Foreigner took later on, these early songs remain dear to me.
Up until the release of Van Halen’s “1984” keyboards were not a part of the band. “Jump” took me by surprise, it was even a cool keyboard riff. What was happening to my hard rocking band???? But, it was Van Halen so most of us forgave them….maybe.
In the 90’s Guns N’ Roses gave us “November Rain”. Axl Rose and Dizzy Reed provided the keyboard/piano work for this epic song. People liked the song but I felt it was the beginning of the end for that hard charging five pieve (originally) band. Good song though.
“Du Hast” is one of those songs where the keyboard has no place in my opinion. Christian “Flake” Lorenz is adept as playing but the “keyboard riff” just confuses me in this song.
Those are but a few of “keyboard” heavy songs that come to mind. Here are some keyboard players worth noting and you should definitely check out their work:
Billy Preston
Mike Garson (David Bowie, Smashing Pumpkins)
Jon Lord (Deep Purple)
Keith Emerson (ELP)
Stevie Wonder
Warren Zevon
Joe Jackson
Fats Domino
Paul Carrack
Rufus Wainwright
Donald Fagan (Steely Dan)
Roy Bittan (Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band)
Benmont Tench (Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers)
Gary Wright
Jackson Browne
Richard Manuel (The Band)
Bill Payne (Little Feat)
Gregg Allman (The Allman Brothers Band)
Chuck Leavell (Session player, Rolling Stones, Eric Clapton, The Black Crowes)
I am going to leave you with one of my favorite keyboard heavy songs:
“Bohemian Rhapsody”, Freddie Mercury’s piano playing on this is a beautiful thing. The song is timeless and is an art form to be cherished forever.
Thanks Freddie you will always live in our hearts and our ears.
L to R: Charlie Owens (Bleach Bangs Radio/Rock U-Night), Micke ColdSpell (ColdSpell guitars/vocals), the Hellion (Bleach Bangs Radio/ Rock U-Night/ the Hellion Rocks!), and Perra Johansson (ColdSpell drums)
Was lucky enough to catch these guys last night in NM. If you get a chance make sure you see them. Here is their video for “Heroes”:
There is nothing like a well-engineered song through a pair of great headphones. Over the years there have been many songs that just blow you away when listened through headphones, in a dark room, lying on the floor. Let’s look at two this week.
BILLY THORPE – “CHILDREN OF THE SUN” (1979)
When this song hit in ’79 it amazed me. The composition combined with the engineering blew my mind. If you put this on, clear your ind and listen, you can imagine the spaceships flying throughout your head and whirling around you. Sadly, Billy passed away in 2007 but he will never be forgotten with his timeless music to fill our ears. Check out “Children of the Sun”:
THE MOODY BLUES – “NIGHTS IN WHITE SATIN/LATE LAMENT” (1967)
For being recorded in 1967 there’s a lot going on in this song. Make sure you check out the full release not the radio edit. If you tune out the world and just listen you can hear many layered instruments and vocalizations that are not readily apparent through regular speakers. This was one of many songs my mother (may she Rest In Peace) brought to my attention. LISTEN to it:
I will be updating this topic regularly ENJOY! (and get some good headphones)
Sometimes you see a band that just sticks with you. I mean pretty soon they are eating your food, ordering pay-per-view, making long distance phone calls, on and on and on… Beelzebubba is one of those bands. Seriously though, on a recent trip to Hollywood I caught their performance at the Whisky A Go-Go. Prior to the show several people had asked me if I had ever seen Beelzebubba before. To be honest I hadn’t, nor had I ever heard of them before. I was quite taken aback when they took the stage dressed as people right out of my worst nightmares. Cowboy hats, western shirts, and pointy boots OH MY! I thought I was at a rock show?!?! As soon as they started playing though….everything was gonna be ok, or was it?
I caught up with Adrian Jackson Dunham (A),and Zachary Maxwell Dunham (Z) and tried to figure out the question, What in the HELL is Beelzebubba?
Z: I’m not really sure how to define it…
A: A really fun band, the inception of which is from our heads… We dress like Texans who are trying to look sharp for the ladies… We do songs you might not expect to come out of a ten-gallon hat… We are a country band.
How did this unholy union come to be?
A: Zach and I always liked to play music together. Beelzebubba is a vein we hit and ran with. We have always been fascinated with outsider art, primarily music and concept albums of this genre. Thor’s “An-Thor-Logy”, AKA “Ride of the Chariots”, The Shaggs “Philosophy of the World”, and anything by The Kids of Whidney High are my greatest influences. I feel that these all reflect the way the world really is.
Z: Me too. My brother and I have been playing music together since 1998. Our stuff has always been just for us, trying to make each other laugh. We grew up in a small town where we’d get snowed in a lot, so we needed to entertain ourselves. It started as really silly rock (we sang songs of praise about the wrestler Goldberg and Yassir Arafat). Then we got really into NES video game music – covering classics and making our own. In 2005 we formed our first band called Hokma Gandhi. We sucked, playing at one or two total shit hole bars, and believing all the time that we were geniuses; and we didn’t have to work hard because we were going to be discovered and magically whisked away to the realm of stardom. We did that for two years, until Hokma Gandhi blessedly dissolved. Then Adrian and I sort of went our separate ways – I moved to NYC and he stayed in LA. Do you want to add anything about Hokma Gandhi?
A: No. You said it, that’s fine.
Z: We reunited in 2009 when I moved back for work. One day in the summer of that year, we were driving around listening to a mix Adrian had made. The only song that wouldn’t skip was “Cop Killer” by Body Count. We love that song, always have ever since we were kids. Adrian said, “How awesome would this be as a country song?” I said, “Fucking awesome. In fact, this should’ve been a country song.” Adrian said, “Let’s record it – like a slow country shuffle,” and I replied, “No, let’s do it as a moderately peppy two-step.” We then immediately set up the laptop and recorded it in his kitchen in about a half hour. That was the first track we did. Adrian and I reinvented the song as a country song, almost an exact rendition except for the chord progression in the chorus – Adrian makes very careful, considerate musical liberties with every cover we do. We showed “Cop Killer” to some people and they all laughed their asses off. Then we sort of left it alone, and did other stuff to make each other laugh, like traditional Jewish Power Metal…
A: Hineih Ma Tov is still one of my favorite things we’ve ever done…
Z: A few weeks later, Adrian came to me and said we should start a band. But what kind of band? Our tastes are so varied and eclectic? He suggested that we just do like we’ve always done and just do whatever we want – kind of like Mr. Bungle or Ween or Frank Zappa. But I came back and said that Cop Killer is really something to be proud of and we can take our secret formula of comedic song writing and do an entire album of country-fried punk, heavy metal or gangster rap songs. Now we had a country band with a Satanic through line. Adrian came up with the name by combining an ancient pseudonym for Satan (Beelzebub – Lord of the Flies) and Bubba, a pretty standard redneck name…
A: Which coincidentally is also the name of a Dead Milkmen album.
Z: And that is the birth of Beelzebubba. I’m the manager of the band – getting gigs, scheduling rehearsal, etc – and I also have a lot of creative input. I came up with the flag and the costumes, for instance. But the feel, the overall artistic vision, is Adrian’s. He designed the website, he orchestrated every song.
Tell me about the magical alchemy of players that comprise Beelzebubba.
Z: I’m the lead singer. My background, all of my training and stuff, comes from musical theatre. Freddy Mercury, Mike Patton, Stevie Wonder, Rob Halford and Ozzy Osbourne are my favorite singers.
A: I’m the lead guitarist and I sing backing vocals. I went to music school, studied experimental music. My favorite musical style of all is Judas Priest. I met John in school – he’s our drummer. He’s good at just about everything from blast beats to Bach. And he’s really good at World music, like African ensemble drummer and Indian tablas.
Z: Aaron, the bassist, is one of my buddies. He’s got a sick sense of humor and he loves outlaw country music above all other things in life. Although this is his first band, he’s been playing guitar and bass for years with his brother, who is a drummer. And James, the pianist, is someone I met through doing choral work. He’s a veteran, highly proficient in both guitar and piano, and also music composition. He’s written several musicals and teaches regularly.
What does the future hold for the band?
Z: The future holds a lot of fun and a lot of work. We hope that this can be our full-time job. We want to play all over the US and the world. We’re very confident that we reach a wide audience, and what we represent and what we’re saying really hits a nerve in our current sociopolitical climate. We’re definitely interested in fame and fortune, but we abhor complacency. We want to rock. We want to disturb, challenge, infuriate and horrify. This could be the best job ever.
I know that you started out doing covers, but I have heard rumors of some original tunes coming our way, is this true?
A: Yes. We’ve got two new ones, “Get Away, You Fuckers”, which is about being stuck in Los Angeles traffic, and “Maybe Sandusky”, which is about Jerry Sandusky being President and other characters who in the public eye. We’ve also got a couple more in the works.
(“Out of State Fuckers” comes to mind – the Hellion)
Z: A little over a month ago, I told Adrian we have to start making our own songs. People keep saying “Amazing covers! Do you have any originals?” We’re really good. People are watching. But if we don’t say what’s in our hearts and solely stick to these covers, people will stopwatching.
A: Our approach to playing other peoples’ songs… I mean, listen to our version of “Bitches”, then listen to Insane Clown Posse’s and tell me it’s not original. That being said, I totally agree that if we only do our covers we’ll only get so far. If we want to break out we have to take a risk and put down what we’ve got.
Z: At first we were scared: How do we incorporate who we are and what’s going on with us into the formula, created originally for transforming pre-existing songs. We weren’t sure, and we didn’t want to force it. Then one day I was walking down the street, talking to Adrian on the phone, and this cute Green Peace girl standing in front of a local restaurant, trying to get people’s signatures for something, started mocking me. She put her hand up to her mouth and mimicked me walking and talking on the phone – I assume in an effort to get my attention so I’d sign whatever petition she had. I kept talking, but as I got close I had this irresistible urge to scream, “FUCK YOU, YOU FUCKING CUNT” as loud as possible. I didn’t, of course. I went home and explored that urge and realized both my brother and I have a tremendous amount of rage. Rage, I believe, is what separates lasting comedy from comedy that is cute and transient. Comedy in music runs the risk of being cute, which is detestable to Adrian and me. It must be fueled with rage, or else you’ll get stuff like Andy Samberg, Jimmy Fallon and Dimitri Martin…
A: Or that guy… What’s his name… I don’t know, it doesn’t matter.
Z: After we figured out the rage ingredient, we sat down and wrote three songs in one day, all of which we’re really proud and excited for.
A: Yeah, “Maybe Sandusky” took only twenty minutes. We took a quick break, which is when I came up with “Get Away, You Fuckers” while I was taking a shit. I showed it to Zach and he said, “Perfect.” – meaning the song, not my dump.
Z: We proved to ourselves that our formula works, and we’ve sort of hit our stride. Our goal is to get at least 12 tracks by the end of the year. Then we cut an album.
A: And when we cut an album, that doesn’t mean we won’t do “Cop Killer” or “Ain’t Talkin’ ‘Bout Love”, et cetera.
I was lucky enough to catch a live show, can you describe a performance to the readers?
Z: It’s a full show, sixty minutes, with no explanation or dialogue, but a definite emotional arch and direction. It’s very theatrical in this sense. It’s challenging for the audience. We set it up as a sort of demented sing along – these covers are popular songs many people know, but presented clean and yet entirely pissed off. So the audience finds themselves indulging in lyrics, screaming lyrics that could probably get you arrested in the real world. However, it leaves the audience with a feeling of completing a fun, crazy and unpredictable journey.
A: Yeah, a lot of it is about a band getting up there and rocking. No excuses, no fucking around, no whining!
Z: Stand flat-footed, facing the audience. No self-indulgent jamming with our backs to the audience, which for some reason is a tasteless trend in most live music.
A: It would be funny if we all turned around during every solo… The drummer, too.
Are there any of today’s artists that give you inspiration?
Z: Not that many popular artists. I’d say a lot of Mike Patton’s projects. All the bands we play with inspire me, however. Young people trying to find their voices against a shit load of obstacles. I’ve been there, and I’m always reinvigorated and inspired by people who have the courage to try to express themselves in a public forum. Pussy Riot inspires me. Aaron, Adrian and I saw Glenn Campbell’s final performance at the Hollywood Bowl. That was incredible.
A: I’ve named a few earlier in the interview. I’m inspired by, the now defunct, Afrirampo, Pussy Riot, Secret Chiefs 3, and I like that song by Selena Gomez, “I Love You Like a Love Song”, baby.
What advice would you give to a group a young people trying to start their musical careers?
Z: I have three things to say. First, always be true to yourself, no matter how crazy or unpopular or unmarketable you think your music might be. All of the greatest bands in history did what they wanted to do. Do whatever your instincts dictate, regardless of failure. And when you do inevitably fail, relish it, for it will lead you to what cannot fail. After a decade of not having a totally awesome product, we’re finally doing it, and it’s turning out to be one of the most exciting and rewarding experiences of my life. Second, set a noble goal. Mine is to make a really fun product from scratch with my brother. We’re not rich and famous, but we’re making our own totally original thing, and we’re laughing our asses off doing it. This means I’m living in my goal and I feel fucking successful and grateful; it keeps me working hard in rehearsal, finding gigs, playing shows, and all the other tough necessary things a band’s gotta do. And third, don’t buy into your own publicity or image. It’s a show, and at the end of the day you have to wash your dishes and do your laundry.
A: I’d say when you play a gig be sure to stay and watch the other acts. It’s courteous to stay and it’s a good opportunity to network and study live performance. I’ve seen it for years where bands just play and bounce. And the other piece of advice is, I’m paraphrasing Lemmy Kilmister, but he said something to the tune of, “Don’t try to write something great, that’s not how great music is done. Writing music is about putting down what you got.”
What do you guys think of the music scene today?
Z: It depends on what scene you’re talking about. If you mean American Idol or the Grammy’s, I’m sickeningly reminded of the Nazis – how they systematically exterminated the Jewish artists and intelligentsia; and then introduced their own artists, saying, “Ah, now this is how art is supposed to be.” I always like seeing live music. My brother and I saw Primus at the Wiltern last October. That was incredible. We saw Dio twice before he passed, Iron Maiden and Judas Priest with Rob Halford… All of these shows were so wonderful and memorable. I also like seeing unsigned, no name bands because I never know what I’m going to get. Sometimes it sucks, sometimes it’s magnificent – either way, it’s always a learning experience. So I guess I think of today’s music scene as school, looking for what works and what doesn’t so I can make the best product possible.
A: Yeah, the coolestscene I ever saw was at Metal Masters in San Bernardino in 2008 – that’s when we saw Motörhead, Heaven and Hell and Judas Priest. You could talk to everyone. Everyone was super friendly and had nothing to prove. Everyone was exactly where they wanted to be.
Are we ever gonna see Beelzebubba spread their music throughout the world on tour?