Me meto un tiro,
¡Pum!
El eco suena,
¡Pum!
O quizás es el corazón,
¡Pum!
Que todavía sueña.

Mes: junio 2014

Mike Byrne está definitivamente fuera de los Smashing Pumpkins

Mike Byrne está definitivamente fuera de los Smashing Pumpkins

Mike Byrne is definitely out of Smashing Pumpkins

http://www.moderndrummer.com/site/wp-content/uploads/Mike-Byrne.jpg

Sacado de // From –> http://portalternativo.com/http://www.moderndrummer.com/

El hecho que Tommy Lee se haya encargado de tocar la batería en el nuevo disco de The Smashing Pumpkins parecía dejar claro que la banda de Billy Corgan había prescindido de los servicios de quien era hasta no hace tanto el encargado de manejar las baquetas, Mike Byrne.

Ahora en declaraciones a Music Radar, Corgan lo explica:

Mmm… Digamos que Mike, como Elvis, ha dejado el edificio.

Byrne, de 19 años, tocó en “Teargarden by Kaleidyscope” y “Oceania”, y salió con la banda en sus distintas giras.

Hablando del que fuese batería del grupo, Jimmy Chamberlin y Tommy Lee, Corgan cuenta:

Los dos músicos más intuitivos con los que he trabajado son Jimmy Chamberlin y Tommy Lee. Te sientas ahí atrás mientras ves como va pasando y piensas, “Hay una razón por la que este tío ha vendido tantos millones de discos” – mientras lo voy viendo todo. Es una cierta sensación, un cierto ‘swing’, un cierto acercamiento a la música y un verdadero amor por la música. Tanto Tommy como Jimmy lo tienen. Saben lo que hacen – no esconden la mano.

IN ENGLISH

Then let’s talk about your decision to use another drummer. Were other names floated around before you set your sights on Tommy?

“No. No, I talked about it on my blog. We were sitting saying, ‘It would be great to get somebody who can play like this,’ and Jeff [Schroeder] said, ‘Why don’t we get the real deal?’ It was that simple.” [Laughs]

What if Tommy weren’t available? He’s got the big tour coming up – did you have any other names?

“You know, we hadn’t even gone down that road. There’s been some beautiful synchronicity with this album; things have just tended to line up. One thing that I need to say… I think the main point to the band – and I put ‘band’ in quotations because obviously there’s been a lot of arguments over the last seven years about what that means – I think the main point to the band in 2014 is, I want to make a certain kind of music. If I want to make that kind of music, then it’s best made under the name ‘Smashing Pumpkins.’ Where Jeff and I are at is, ‘What do we need to do to do that?’

“[It’s about] making rock ‘n’ roll in 2014 in a world that tends to be going away from guitars. Turn on any alternative station – you’re not hearing a lot of riffs. And we’re not a metal band, nor do we try to be, although we love to play that – and we just played with one of the great rock-metal drummers. I reached a point of transparency within myself where I don’t feel the need to explain to anybody else why I’m doing what I’m doing. The real key is, ‘Do I know what I’m doing and why I’m doing it, and am I having a good time doing it?’

“That seems to generate the kind of music that people want. All of the other stuff, all the other political stuff, doesn’t work out that way. So I just shrug my shoulders. If that makes me no different from some of my contemporaries who have a band name but it’s really just one or two dudes, then so be it.”

What was the process of getting Tommy’s drum parts recorded?

“I went out to LA and played him the demos we had – he loved them, got ‘em right away. Then I came back to Chicago and demoed more specifically with the idea of him tracking the drums to them. Then I went back to LA and worked out all the drum parts, which of course further refined some of the arrangements, came back to Chicago and redid the demos again, and then I went to LA to cut the final drums.

“The reason why I did that was because I wasn’t interested in just ‘Hey, isn’t it cool that Tommy Lee is on the album?’ I wanted to work with Tommy as intimately as I could so we could find common ground, so that when you hear the music it sounds like we’re playing together. It’ll sound like he’s in the band, not just the stunt drummer that I called in to dazzle and amaze. The results have been fantastic; the people who’ve heard it are like, ‘Holy shit, I can’t believe how cool this is!’

“It’s so immediate – the songs are so immediate, and the way Tommy plays is so immediate. Everybody seems to get it right away. There’s an immediacy to the music that is more like me circa 1995 than, say, me anything since then.”

Jennifer y Dee de L7 pasando el rato con Zach de Rage Against The Machine

Jennifer y Dee de L7 pasando el rato con Zach de Rage Against The Machine

L7’s Jennifer and Dee hanging out with Zach from Rage Against The Machine

Foto: L7's Jennifer and Dee hanging out with Zach from  Rage Against The Machine,  backstage at Glastonbury Festival (official), UK, 1994
(photo courtesy of Jennifer Precious Finch)

Sacado de // From –> https://www.facebook.com/pages/L7-Official/

Jennifer y Dee de L7 pasando el rato con  Zach de Rage Against The Machine, en el backstage del Glastonbury Festival (official), Reino Unido, 1994
(foto por cortesía de Jennifer Precious Finch)

IN ENGLISH

L7’s Jennifer and Dee hanging out with Zach from Rage Against The Machine, backstage at Glastonbury Festival (official), UK, 1994
(photo courtesy of Jennifer Precious Finch)

Rob Zombie considera que el grunge mató al rock

Rob Zombie considera que el grunge mató al rock

Grunge caused rap takeover says Rob Zombie

Sacado de // From –> http://metalhammer.teamrock.com/http://portalternativo.com/

En una charla con la Metal Hammer, aseguró que el ‘grunge’ provocó la caída del rock en EEUU.

En los 90, cuando el rollo del grunge dio en el clavo, con Nirvana y todo eso, todo el mundo pensó que molaba ser una antiestrella del rock. Pero de algún modo se ‘antirockeraon’ fuera de escena porque la gente del rap llegó y dijo, “A la mierda. Nosotros seremos las estrellas del rock, si vosotros vais a llevar camisas de franela y miraos los pies”. Y en EEUU, sinceramente, la música rock nunca se ha recuperado de eso. Es decir, en (el Reino Unido), es diferente. No podrías hacer un festival como el “Download” en EEUU y atraer a tanta gente con solo música rock. Nunca.

IN ENGLISH

Rob Zombie insists it would be impossible to stage a festival like Download in the US – because the 90s grunge explosion has left a deep wound in the rock scene across the Atlantic.

And he blames the movement that come out of Seattle for opening the door to the mainstream for rap music.

Zombie tells TeamRock Radio: «When the grunge rock thing hit with Nirvana and all that, everybody thought it was cool to be anti-rock star. They sort of anti-rock starred themselves right out the door – because the rap guys came in and said, ‘Fuck it. We’ll be the rock stars if you guys are going to wear flannel shirts and stare at your feet.’

“US rock music has never recovered from that. A whole generation of kids thought, ‘Rock music is boring. Let’s go listen to rap music.'»

That’s one of the reasons he loves coming back to Donington. «Here it’s different,» he states, adding that in the States, «you could never throw a rock festival like this and get this many people. Never – it wouldn’t work.»

Nuevo libro sobre Mudhoney ya disponible en la tienda de Sub Pop

Nuevo libro sobre Mudhoney ya disponible en la tienda de Sub Pop

Mudhoney – The Sound and The Fury From Seattle – (book) now available in Sub Pop

Sacado de // From –> https://megamart.subpop.com/

A la venta April 18, 2014

Número del Item: 5009968

«A pesar de que los rockeros asocian antes a Seattle con Nirvana y Pearl Jam, el tiempo ha demostrado que la banda de grunge más influyente de la ciudad puede haber sido Mudhoney. Todavía están pisando fuerte y esta es su historia. »

IN ENGLISH

On sale date: April 18, 2014

Item No: 5009968

“Though rock fans associate Seattle primarily with Nirvana and Pearl Jam, time has shown that the city’s most influential grunge band may well have been Mudhoney. They’re still going strong and this is their story.”