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

Categoría: Entrevistas

Layne Staley rey del humor negro

Layne Staley rey del humor negro

Layne [Staley] was the king of really dark humor. And Jerry will tell you this, too—Layne was the only guy that would take it a step further. Like, you’d come up with a crazy dead baby joke or something and he would always take it to someplace totally darker…. We used to laugh our way around the world.

Layne era el rey del humor negro. y Jerry también te lo puede decir. Layne era el único tio que lo podía llevar un paso más allá (No sé si es así). Como, tú has venido con un chiste de un bebe muerto loco (Tampoco sé sí es así del todo) o algo así y el podría siempre hacerlo más oscuro. Lo usabamos para reirnos a nuestro modo por todo el mundo (No se si es así)

Extracto de una entrevista con Ben Bridwell (Band of Horses)

Extracto de una entrevista con Ben Bridwell (Band of Horses)

Was definitely a fan of Sub Pop Records before being involved with them. When I was in junior high, I guess it was ’91 or ’92, I was an extra in this movie called The Program with James Caan. It’s a terrible movie. They were filming it in South Carolina, and I convinced my parents to let me take three days off of school to be an extra in the football stands. I remember my brother had made me a tape with Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge by Mudhoney on one side and Nirvana’s Bleach and ‘Sliver’ single taped on the other side. I had my headphones on and didn’t have any friends with me, so I just smoked cigarettes and listened to those bands. I must’ve listened to that tape probably 50 times over the course of those three days, and that was basically what made me the alterna-grunger I would later become.

Parte de una entrevista a Mergan Jasper

Parte de una entrevista a Mergan Jasper

I was in the poor man’s version of Dickless. When Kelly Canary left, the other girls didn’t want to stop, so they must have hit a level of desperation and they asked me. The funnest shows were when you could provoke someone in the audience and they would get really upset. My sister had made me this wand, which I called the Herpes Wand—if I touched someone with it, they got the herpes. So at shows, I kept giving people wand herpes. Some people loved it, and some people thought it was the worst thing in the entire world. Mark Arm didn’t seem to mind; Krist Novoselic didn’t seem to mind. The funny thing was, all the girls made a mental note of everyone who bitched about it: Don’t kiss that guy, because you know he just had a herpes outbreak.

Entrevista a Greg Pato (Grunge is Dead)

Entrevista a Greg Pato (Grunge is Dead)

Realizada el 7 de Agosto de 2009

Who was your favorite person to interview for Grunge is Dead?

Probably a 2-way tie between Eddie Vedder and Kim Thayil. I interviewed Mr. Vedder 1x during a mammoth 2-hour phone interview, and Mr. Thayil over a series of mammoth phone interviews. Susan Silver was another cool interview, as was Mark Arm, Duff McKagan, and Blag Dahlia – all had great stories to tell and didn’t hold back!

Who was the most difficult person to get to do an interview for Grunge is Dead?

Probably Mr. Vedder, as I had to go through a lot of red tape to finally get him on the phone. But when I did, he couldn’t have been nicer and more forthcoming w/ great stories/memories (many of which I never read anywhere else before). And I appreciated how much he was willing to discuss Pearl Jam’s early years, which is something he often avoids in interviews nowadays.

Do you think its right for Alice in Chains to continue using the AIC name without Layne Staley?

Many bands have soldiered on after losing integral members (AC/DC, Kiss, the Who, Faith No More, etc.), so it’s certainly not the first time a well-known rock band has opted to carry on. That said, Layne was a HUGE part of AIC for me. But I totally understand and respect AIC’s decision to carry on – it must had been like torture for the other band members not to have continued doing what they love and worked so hard for.

When did the Grunge era officially die in your opinion, when Kurt Cobain killed himself in 1994 or when Soundgarden broke up in 1997?

It hasn’t really truly ever died, as bands like Pearl Jam, Mudhoney, and the Melvins are still rocking n’ rolling to this day (and now AIC is returning). But as a fan, after the 1-2-3 punch of Kurt’s death, Soundgarden’s split, and Layne’s death, it hasn’t truly been the same. But thankfully, we still have all that great music to listen to ’til the end of time.

What are you thoughts on Chris Cornells solo album that came out this year Scream?

I didn’t care for it at all. Mr. Cornell will always be one of my favorite rock singers of all-time, but on ‘Scream,’ the style just wasn’t a good fit for him – it came off sounding like he was trying too hard. I’ve said before in other interviews – if you want to hear a GOOD version of what Mr. Cornell was trying to do on ‘Scream,’ check out Peeping Tom’s self-titled debut from a few years ago (which features Faith No More/Mr. Bungle singer Mike Patton). That album hit the mark.

I saw you talking about a possible Soundgarden reunion in a recent interview you did with explodingwithsound.com, do you actually think Soundgarden will realistically reunite anytime soon? I think its stupid that they broke up in the first place after reading about why they broke up in Grunge is Dead.

It wasn’t me who was talking about the reunion, it was Soundgarden guitarist Kim Thayil (who I interviewed for Rolling Stone.com). As long as all of Soundgarden’s 4 members are alive, there is always a possibility for a reunion. If Van Halen and the Police can reunite, that proves that just about any other band can as well. I’ll keep my fingers crossed.

What Grunge bands did you see live back in the 90s?

Soundgarden (5x), Chris Cornell solo (2x), Alice in Chains, Pearl Jam, Tad, Brad, Satchel, the Melvins – most of them. But sadly, not Nirvana

What are your three favorite Grunge albums?

My favorite Soundgarden album fluctuates between ‘Badmotorfinger’ and ‘Superunknown,’ so 1 of those, as well as the obvious ones, Nirvana’s ‘Nevermind,’ and Pearl Jam’s ‘Ten.’ And hovering just outside this 3-pick list would be Mudhoney’s ‘Superfuzz Bigmuff,’ Alice in Chains’ ‘Dirt,’ the Melvins’ ‘Houdini,’ Truly’s ‘Fast Stories from Kid Coma,’ and quite a few others.

What do you think about Pearl Jams new song The Fixer and Alice in Chains A Looking In View?

I enjoy hearing new music from any of the first wave grunge bands, so I’d say I enjoy them both. I’m not saying they pack the same wallop as “Evenflow” or “God Smack” did way back when, but still, they are both pleasing to the ear, and makes your toes tap.

Who are some of your favorite modern rock bands out there today?

Queens of the Stone Age, Eagles of Death Metal, whatever project Mike Patton is involved in at moment, and I recently heard the solo debut from Faith No More’s original singer, Chuck Mosley, titled ‘Will Rap Over Hard Rock for Food,’ which I found rather intriguing.

Any lesser known rock bands out there right now that are impressing you?

I always get a kick out of Eagles of Death Metal – they’re an old fashioned rocking good time. Their latest album came out last year, titled ‘Heart On.’

Scott Stapp. Great singer, or greatest singer?

Greatest stinker.

Palabras de Chris Cornell sobre Soundgarden

Palabras de Chris Cornell sobre Soundgarden

Ya sabéis… en esta época era un vago y no traducía nada, pero ahora lo traduzco todo xD

While the solo jaunt is allowing Cornell to pick and choose songs from the breadth of his career, he flashed back to the days of ’90s grunge and alt-rock when Soundgarden reformed last year.

The band had split in 1997. Now aged in their 40s and 50s, the quartet have a newfound sense of direction and are working on a new album.

“It’s like we didn’t break pace,” Cornell says. “It’s like we took a short break because it doesn’t feel like 13 or 14 years at all. The only difference I’ve noticed, I suppose, is everyone has a lot more ideas. There’s more confidence and I feel that from everyone.

“For some bands it can be ‘Oh my God, can we still do this?’ But it’s not that – it’s the same band, but everyone has 13 years’ more experience.”

Cornell fronted Soundgarden for more than a decade, then went solo before joining members of Rage Against the Machine (Tom Morello, Tim Commerford and Brad Wilk) to form Audioslave.

But you get the sense he feels at home again, working with his oldest musical friends.

“Working in different bands, they’re all their own different beasts or different environment,” he says.

“With Soundgarden I’ve always been so engrossed and involved with doing it. Also, it’s always been a band that I can compare to The Beatles in a way because everyone writes songs on guitar – no matter what instrument they play. There’s so much diversity.”

Entrevista a Chad Channing

Entrevista a Chad Channing

Realizada el 18 de agosto

La dejo en inglés porque es muy larga como para traducirla (Tranquilos… ahora soy menos vago que antes e intento traducir todo xD)

Talk about Before Cars , your new band which originally started as a solo project before you brought in the other members to the band. Did you ever see yourself becoming a songwriter in the early days of your career with Nirvana? Who are some of your songwriting influences?

Well I’ve always been a song writer. And I wrote songs for every band I’ve ever played in with exception of Nirvana. I always wanted to write with Nirvana and see if it might have worked or not. Just never got the opportunity. I spent a lot of time in other bands. But things never seemed to work out. I guess that’s what finally lead me to start my own project.

One day I took a bunch of songs to my friends Andy Miller and Paul Burback and we 4-tracked 11-12 songs than chose 5 of them to make a demo. We hit the studio along with Paul’s wife Justine Jeanotte who plays violin and recorded the demo. During that time I came up with the name “Before Cars”. A lot of my influences are early 70′s-80′s stuff like David Bowie & Elvis Costello, just to name a few.

I was listening to some tracks off of Walk Back and I love how it really sounds like it could come out of any decade, the production and music has the type of sound that most overproduced bands today lack, it has a classic sound to it. “That’s My Guess” and “Juniper” both have a very alternative vibe to them, they would have definitely fit in the Nirvana catalog if you had a chance to write to write with Nirvana. “Bunnies” has a classic 70s rock vibe to it, while “Doll in Time” has a timeless ballad feel. The vocals add a pop sensibility to the songs. Do you see yourself continuing with writing songs like this on your next record or do you want to experiment with some different genres?

This record has allot of pop/rock stuff going on with some exceptions like “Doll In Time” and “Old Chair”. These for-mentioned songs are more in line to where Before Cars is headed far as the next record goes. It will have allot more acoustic stuff going on. And probably some experimentation with some keyboard stuff as well as more stuff for the violin. I may even mess around with some electronic beats and stuff. Not really sure at this point. And who knows what a 3rd record might end up like at this point, heheh.

If a major band asked you to become their new drummer, would you join? I’m talking good bands here, not Fall Out Boy or My Chemical Romance.

If I had nothing going on at all I might consider it. But since I’ve got Before Cars. I wouldn’t drop it for anything

As everybody knows Nirvana’s first album Bleach, featuring you as the drummer, is being re-released. What are your thoughts on the rerelease and the popularity Bleach has gained in recent years?

I must admit it’s kinda cool that record still holds interest to some people. Back in 89, I wouldn’t have guessed that record would still be selling today. And I’m actually very curious about the re-release. I’m guessing there will be extra tracks. Not sure what they might be though.

When you were making Bleach did you ever think Nirvana would become the huge band it became?

I thought that we would garner some decent underground attention or whatever with that record. And I always knew Nirvana had the potential. But didn’t expect things to get as big as they did.

What is your favorite song on Bleach?

For me “Swap Meet” has always been one of my favorites of that record.

Who are some of your favorite modern bands out there today?

Favorite bands today are Portishead, GO!GO!7188, Amon Amarth & M.I.A…just to name a few

What are some of your favorite hobbies?

I love to golf! Though I’m not very good. Never shot better than a 99. And have no idea what my handicap is, heh. Big fan of anime as well. Though it’s been a slow process converting my favorites from VHS to DVD

Do you keep in touch with Krist Novoselic?

Not on a regular basses but we do see each other once in awhile. Mostly when he’s in town playing.

You played in a couple of bands with Soundgarden bassist Ben Shepherd in the 80s, how was it playing with Ben?

Playing with Ben was cool. Always a crazy time Our first band was Mind Circus. Pretty heavy stuff. Then he later sang for The Magnet Men which then became know as Tic-Dolly-Row when he joined.

What are some of your goals to accomplish in the music industry before you retire?

I will always be a song writer. And I’d like to see how far Before Cars can go. Know idea what will happen, but it’s sure fun to try! It would also be nice to eventually just be a song writer and see other groups playing stuff I wrote. I think I’d get a kick outta that!

When Nirvana get inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame someday would you consider going up on stage and playing one of the songs from Bleach with Krist and somebody else, or do you think that it would be disrespectful to Kurt?

I don’t think we could do a Nirvana song with out Kurt. Just wouldn’t feel the same. Not all that sure they’d invite me for the stage presentation anyways, lol.

Thank you to Chad Channing