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

Categoría: Grupos

Butch Vig habla sobre el nuevo disco de Foo Fighters

Butch Vig habla sobre el nuevo disco de Foo Fighters

Butch Vig about Foo Figthers’ new album

Sacado de // From –> http://portalternativo.com/http://wxrt.cbslocal.com/

Butch Vig habló con la gente de la 93XRT de su relación con Dave Grohl, frontman de Foo Fighters, y del esperado ‘combo’ serie + nuevo disco de su banda.

Quiero a Dave como un hermano loco. No conozco a nadie que tenga un entusiasmo por la vida y la música… (Los Foos) son capaces de hacer lo que quieran y decidimos hacer el disco en ocho ciudades diferentes. La banda compuso ocho canciones y las grabamos todas en ocho locales diferentes de EEUU.

Parte del documental es sobre la grabación de la canción y mucho (de él) es sobre la historia musical de esa ciudad… Y también trata de lo que significa para los Foos y Dave. Se meten musicalmente en cada ciudad, lo que significa personalmente para ellos. Cada ciudad tuvo su propia experiencia. Una de las cosas guays del álbum es que cada canción tiene hasta cierto punto el sonido de la ciudad y sin duda el ambiente en el que se grabó. Cada canción es completamente única y distinta.

El álbum llegará a las tiendas el 10 de noviembre y la serie se estrenará el 17 de octubre.

IN ENGLISH

In a recent phone interview, renowned producer and musician Butch Vig shared with Marty Lennartz some much awaited details about Foo Fighters‘ eighth studio album, Sonic Highways, due to release November 10th. Vig worked with the Foo’s on their 2011 album, Wasting Light, and was elated to work with Grohl and Co. once more.

“I love Dave like a crazy brother. I don’t know anyone who has such infectious enthusiasm for life and for music…[The Foo’s] are capable of doing what they want to do, and we decided to make this record in eight different cities. The band wrote eight songs and we recorded them all in eight different locales in the U.S.”

Remember when everyone kept having Dave Grohl sighting on the CTA last December?  Well, Chicago was the first stop on the Foo Fighter’s ‘recording tour’ where Vig recalls it being ‘gnarly cold’. They laid down the first track on the album at Steve Albini’s studio Electrical Audio which Vig noted as having an impressive microphone collection and being ‘not posh or super fancy, but really well appointed.’

Other stops on the recording tour did not have such ample accommodations. In New Orleans the army of musicians, crew, engineers, and producers recorded in the notorious Preservation Hall which while being stunning in it’s own right, proved to be more difficult than Chicago.

“[Preservation] is just a small performance room, so we had to roll cable down a side walk, through an alleyway, and borrow the manager of the building’s office to set up some makeshift speakers and a little board to monitor from…so each city truly had it’s own experience.”

To make the Sonic Highway experience even more abundant, in October the Foo Fighters will release a ‘fun and inspiring’ documentary on HBO, in which each song on Sonic Highway and it’s multi-city recording sessions will be an hour long special each.

As Vig recounts, “Part of the documentary is about the recording of the song and a lot of it is about he musical history of that city…And it’s also about what it means to the Foo’s and to Dave. He taps into what each city musically, personally means him.

Each city truly had it’s own experience. One of the cool things about the album is…each song has that city’s sound to a certain extent and definitely the environment we recorded in. Each song is it’s own unique beast.”

The beast of an album that is Sonic Highways is due out November 10, 2014. Documentary series Sonic Highways premieres on HBO October 17th, at 11pm.

Setlist del segundo concierto de Pearl Jam en Amsterdam

Setlist del segundo concierto de Pearl Jam en Amsterdam

Setlist of the second Pearl Jam’s show in Amsterdam

Setlist

Hard to Imagine
Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town
Life Wasted
Mind Your Manners
Last Exit
Do the Evolution
Severed Hand
Getaway
Dissident
Lightning Bolt
Even Flow
Immortality
Marker in the Sand
Rain (The Beatles cover)
Sirens
Let the Records Play
Unthought Known
Better Man (w/ Save It For Later snippet)

Encore // Bis

Just Breathe
All or None
Mother (Pink Floyd cover)
Daughter
(w/ Another Brick In The Wall … more)
My Father’s Son
State of Love and Trust
Alive

Encore 2 // Segundo bis

Black
Blood
Rockin’ in the Free World (Neil Young cover)
Yellow Ledbetter

Chris Cornell recuerda sus problemas con el alcohol

Chris Cornell recuerda sus problemas con el alcohol

Chris Cornell remembers his battle with alcoholism

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

Chris cornell ha hablado con la gente de In The Studio (vía Alternative Nation) de su larga lucha contra la adicción al alcohol y como hoy día, una vez superados, vive una vida mucho más plena y productiva.

Una de las mejores cosas que me han pasado en estos últimos 5 o 6 años de mi vida y carrera es vivir un estilo de vida más sano tanto física como psíquicamente, el haber dejado el alcohol y todos los comportamientos que lleva aparejado. De golpe tenía energía para hacer todas las cosas que quería hacer.

Mi estilo de vida no me permitía hacer (muchas cosas) porque me metía en el estudio por la mañana a trabajar en una canción y me estaba ahí sentado de 2 a 3 horas bebiendo café y luchando contra la resaca.

Como cualquiera que haya tenido estos problemas, tuve que luchar contra ello. Era igual de propenso a pasarme o excederme como cualquiera. En un ambiente en el que eres un vocalista de rock o un tío en una banda de rock, nadie va a echarte si apareces borracho en tu trabajo. Así que fui, durante mucho tiempo, uno de los tíos más “está con todo el mundo” de Seattle que viajaba por el mundo y hacía música. Pero para mi, fue un periodo de espera hacia un duro momento de mi vida. Caí en la bebida para pacificarme e ignoraba los problemas de mi vida. Esa es una manera cobarde de afrontar las cosas. Sinceramente, debía ser la misma manera en que otra gente luchaba con ello, yo me acabé cansando.

Me desperté un día y pensé, “No tengo paciencia por como soy ahora. No hay ninguna razón para vivir como vivo ahora y que mi vida personal sufra o que siquiera tenga relaciones o una vida personal que no debería existir. Mi música está sufriendo y las capacidades que tengo no pueden ser utilizadas al máximo”. Yo siempre trataba de ir más allá y no simplemente cubrir el expediente. Tengo una buena actitud por el hecho de poder vivir de esto, créeme, porque no siempre fui capaz de verlo.

IN ENGLISH

In a new interview on In The Studio, Soundgarden frontman Chris Cornell discussed overcoming his battle with alcoholism and how it has changed his life and career.

“One of the best things for example that’s happened to me in the last 5 or 6 years or so in my life and my career, is just suddenly living a healthier lifestyle physically and mentally, like kicking out alcohol and all of the behavior that goes along with that. Suddenly I had the energy to do all of the things I wanted to do.”

He said that he has energy now to do things like acoustic shows, which is something he always wanted to do but couldn’t.

“My lifestyle just didn’t allow for it, because I would come into my studio in the morning to work on a song, and I’d sit around for 2 or 3 hours drinking coffee and battling a hangover.”

“Just like anybody else that has had those issues, I had to deal with it just like anybody else. I was just as suseptible to overdoing it or excess as anyone. In an environment when you are a rock singer, or a guy in a rock band, no one is going to fire you if you show up for your job drunk. So I was one of the more ‘together’ guys out of Seattle that was running around the world and making music, for a really long time. But for me, it was sort of laying in wait for a rough period in my life personally. I just fell into relying on drinking to just kind of pacify me, and I was ignoring my life’s problems. That’s sort of a cowardly way of dealing with things. Honestly, it was probably the same way that other people decide to wrestle with it, I just got tired of it.”

“I woke up one day and thought: ‘I have absolutely no patience for the way that I am now. There’s no reason why I have to be living like this, and that my personal life should suffer or I should even have relationships, or a personal life that shouldn’t exist. My music’s suffering, and the gifts that I’ve been given not being utilized to their fullest ability.’ I was always trying to push the envelope, not just trying to keep up. I have a good attitude toward the fact that I get to do this for a living, believe me, because I didn’t always get to.”