“The Red Hot Chili Peppers might have based their entire career on it”: Steven Wilson’s 20 favourite British rock albums

Back in 2008 we published Classic Rock’s guide to the 100 Greatest British Rock Albums Ever, consulting a panel of DJs, critics, photographers, musicians and promoters. We asked everyone to compile their Top 20, and these were Steven Wilson’s choices. Ask him again today we’d probably get an entirely different 20, but hey, that’s the nature of things. 

Steven Wilson’s upcoming album, The Overview, will be released aherad of a tour next year

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Pink Floyd – Ummagumma (1969)

“I was 12 years old when I first heard Ummagumma, and it was terrifying. The band were adding a rock context to the techniques of avant-garde classical composers like [Karlheinz] Stockhausen and John Cage. As much as it scared me, Ummagumma got me into tape manipulation and using the studio as an instrument in its own right, which was an important lesson.”


Hawkwind – In Search Of Space (1971)

“It’s an extraordinary whirlpool of cosmic sound, the definitive space-rock statement. I love the album’s repetitive, almost pagan feel. It dispensed with the idea of soloists, and has a real sense of ‘otherness’. Hawkwind were the first band I saw live – on the Levitation tour [1980] – and In Search Of Space just left me wondering how those amazing sounds had been created.”


Black Sabbath – Paranoid (1971) 

“I could’ve picked any of Sabbath’s first six albums, but Paranoid has the classics, and sleepers like Hand Of Doom and Electric Funeral – not tracks people talk about a lot, but they’re great.”


The Who – Quadrophenia (1973)

“Not only a concept album, it’s also the height of Pete Townshend’s writing, with some of his best melodies. It’s harder than people think to make a true concept album, and Townshend was the master at making records that work on several different levels. You can pull out these songs, and they all work in their own right.”

The Who – Love, Reign O’er Me (Lyric Video) – YouTube The Who - Love, Reign O’er Me (Lyric Video) - YouTube

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King Crimson – Red (1974)

King Crimson’s albums were sometimes patchy, but Red is so solid. It was the last album they made before Robert Fripp went into retreat and they split for a few years, and it features one of their classic long pieces: Starless starts off as a ballad and becomes this pummelling, atonal rock workout. The title track is also definitive Fripp.”

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Yes – Tales From Topographic Oceans (1974)

“I know it’s a curve-ball, because this is album is seen as progressive rock getting too big for its boots. But some wonderful follies have resulted when bands think they can do anything. A double album of four side-long pieces based on mystic scrolls, Tales From Topographic Oceans is the definitive rock folly, but it does contain some amazing music. It deserves reappraising.”


Led Zeppelin – Presence (1976)

“Because my mother used to listen to a lot of disco and my father liked arty records like [Mike Oldfield’s] Tubular Bells, I developed a love of sophisticated rock and great grooves. Presence could have been the first funk-rock album; the Red Hot Chili Peppers might have based their entire career on it. It has a wonderful production, and Achilles’ Last Stand is arguably the greatest opening song of any record before or since.”


Van der Graaf Generator – Still Life (1976)

“Although I grew up with a lot of progressive rock, I don’t listen to much of it these days. The bands that inspired me from that scene were the darker ones. Van Der Graaf Generator was almost Wagnerian; it’s very dramatic. Although it was slickly produced, Still Life almost pre-dated the energy of punk that was just around the corner.”


Pink Floyd – Animals (1977)

“Coming as part of a very significant run of Floyd albums from Dark Side Of The Moon [1973] through to The Wall [1979], Animals has always been very underrated. For me it’s definitely their strongest work. There’s some astonishing guitar playing, and also the anger of those later records. Using animals to divide up the human race was a great concept. Floyd were still halfway between being a band and transforming into a Roger Waters solo project.”


Throbbing Gristle – Second Annual Report (1977)

“They invented the whole concept of industrial music, when most people thought punk the most radical thing around. When I was producing Opeth’s Blackwater Park album, Mikael [Åkerfeldt, guitarist/vocalist] and I were discussing the most evil music we knew. He played me a Bathory song, which was genuinely evil. But when I played him Second Annual Report his jaw hit the floor and he said: ‘Fucking hell, that’s sick.’ Even all these years later, it still sends a shiver down my spine.”


XTC – Drums And Wires (1979)

“One of my favourite bands, and this is such a great guitar record. XTC were always among the most musical of the punk-era bands. They used it as a springboard for some early career momentum. Andy Partridge was such a skilled writer, and Drums And Wires was where XTC started to make their mark as a very intelligent, witty, art-pop band.”

XTC – Making Plans For Nigel – YouTube XTC - Making Plans For Nigel - YouTube

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“It’s difficult to explain this one’s appeal. I love very primitive music that’s made by non-musicians. Because they don’t have the baggage that comes with chops, they can work in pure sonic innovation. Metal Box was a double album that was made quite like no other. It had long, repetitive grooves, and John Lydon’s extraordinary voice. On paper it shouldn’t have worked, but there’s something about it that gets under my skin.”


The Cure – Seventeen Seconds (1980)

“Following a fairly conventional punk-style debut [1979’s Three Imaginary Boys], The Cure’s second album was so incredibly dry and parched, you could almost hear the instruments inside your head. The closest comparison I can make was what Joy Division were doing at the same time. I’ve always admired it from a producer’s point of view, because space and silence are very underrated commodities.”


Diamond Head – Lightning To The Nations (1981)

“I bought this via mail order, with a plain white sleeve and no information, and it turned out to be the definitive New Wave Of British Heavy Metal album. I was buying stuff like Maiden and Saxon. In fact, when I was 12 years old I had my own NWOBHM band called Paradox. Unlike many of Diamond Head’s rivals, you could trace their lineage back to Sabbath and Led Zeppelin, as opposed to punk rock. It had a musicality that the others lacked.”


Kate Bush – The Dreaming (1982) / Peter Gabriel – Peter Gabriel (Aka 4 – Security) (1982)

“These two are paired because both albums relied on the Fairlight [pioneering sampling tool] and were by artists at the peak of their creativity. The Kate Bush album is very stripped down and percussive compared to her previous work, which I loved. She just didn’t give a shit what else was going on in the industry – who else would’ve drafted in [later disgraced] Rolf Harris and [bird impressionist] Percy Edwards? 

“Although Peter Gabriel had more commercial success later on, he was at the peak of his powers. Here he was being experimental but still writing great melodies.”


The Smiths – Hatful Of Hollow (1985)

You either love or loathe Morrissey. To me he’s one of the greatest lyricists of the past 20 years. In the space it took Yes to follow up the 90125 album, The Smiths had made six albums, changed the face of music and split up. There’s a song here about teenage pregnancy, called This Night Has Opened My Eyes, that breaks my heart. Although I understand why some people hate it, I love Morrissey’s voice for its distinctiveness.


Talk Talk – Laughing Stock (1991)

In some respects this is closer to a jazz record than a rock one. Its production captured the ambience and not just the individual performances, which was completely against then-fashionable. In that sense, Mark Hollis [vocals/ keyboards] and Tim Friese-Green [producer] were mavericks, making these spacious records when everyone else was listening to grunge or Tears For Fears. There’s a quiet, sensuous beauty about Laughing Stock that hasn’t dated.


Mansun – Six (1999)

Mansun came from the arse-end of Britpop, but Six is a progressive rock record. Its songs are up to 10 minutes long and all interconnected, with narration by people like Tom Baker [Doctor Who]. Nobody who’d championed Mansun until that point quite knew how to take it, and it also failed to connect with a lot of people who’d have liked it.”


Radiohead – Amnesiac (2001)

It contains my favourite song of theirs, the devastatingly beautiful Pyramid Song. I was always sceptical about Radiohead, whom I felt were a superior indie-alternative rock band. Some bands get to a point in their career and fail to exploit the fact that they can do whatever they like. Radiohead had the world’s ear and, to their credit, they chose to confront its expectations. That’s what rock music’s all about and what keeps it evolving.

Radiohead – Pyramid Song – YouTube Radiohead - Pyramid Song - YouTube

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BUTCHER BABIES Reveal Dates For September / October 2024 U.S. Tour

BUTCHER BABIES Reveal Dates For September / October 2024 U.S. Tour

Butcher Babies have announced details of their upcoming “Good Lord! The Butcher’s Ded Tour 2024.”

During the 18-date run across The United States, Butcher Babies will be joined by Ded, Dropout Kings, and Fox Lake; with new music in hand. Confirmed venues are listed below. Tickets go on sale this Friday, August 9th.

September
18 – Palmdale, CA – Transplants Brewing Company
19 – Los Angeles, CA – 1720
20 – Bakersfield, CA – Temblor Brewing Company
21 – Reno, NV – Cypress Reno
23 – Seattle, WA – El Corazon
24 – Portland, OR – Bossanova Ballroom
26 – Salt Lake City, UT – Metro Music Hall
27 – Colorado Springs, CO – Black Sheep
29 – Denver, CO – HQ

October 
1 – Tulsa, OK – The Shrine
2 – Oklahoma City, OK – 89th St
4 – Austin, TX – Come And Take It Live
5 – Dallas, TX – RBC
6 – San Antonio, TX – The Rock Box
7 – El Paso, TX – RockHouse Bar & Grill
8 – Roswell, NM – The Liberty
10 – Tucson, AZ – The Rock
11 – Phoenix, AZ – Pub Rock

Butcher Babies is currently on tour across Europe. Remaining dates are as follows:

August 
6 – Katowice, Poland – P23 (with Cradle Of Filth)
7 – Graz, Austria – PPC (with Cradle Of Filth)
9 – Weinham, Germany – Cafe Central 
10 – Cologne, Germany – Gebaeude 9 (with Soil)
11 – Eindhoven, Netherlands – Effenaar
13 – Bochum, Germany – Matrix (with Cradle Of Filth)
14 – Dresden, Germany – Schlachthof (with Cradle Of Filth)
16 – Sulingen, Germany – Reload Festival 
17 – Jezero Sadska, Czech Republic – Rock Of Sadska

Butcher Babies co-vocalist Carla Harvey was conspicuously absent from the band’s 2023 UK / European tour with Fear Factory and Ignea in order to undergo emergency eye surgery. In separate statements, issued last month, Carla and the band have announced they have officially parted ways.

Carla: “Over the last six months you may have noticed my absence from BB posts.  After 15 years of dedication, I wanted to let you know that I will not be rejoining the band for any future endeavors. I am super proud of my work with Butcher Babies… two EPs, five full length albums, and countless tours with our metal heroes! To all of our incredible BB friends and fans…you have provided me with some of the greatest experiences of my life! I have loved every second of writing and performing all over the world for you!  I have loved meeting you.  WOW. I still can’t believe this kid from Detroit got so lucky. I am not done making music and performing.  I WILL see you soon.”

The band, meanwhile, issued the following statement:

“As you may have already guessed, it is confirmed that Carla Harvey and Butcher Babies have officially parted ways.

Carla has been an integral part of our journey, bringing her unique talent, passion, and energy to the band. We are grateful for the incredible memories we’ve made together and the impact she has had on our music and our fans. We will miss her greatly and we wish her all the best in her future endeavors.

We deeply appreciate your support over the past 15 years. We feel incredibly fortunate to keep making and playing music as our career, and we are excited for this new era of Butcher Babies!

See you on the road.”

METALLICA Covers “Sweet Caroline” By NEIL DIAMOND Live In Concert; Fan-Filmed Video

METALLICA Covers

On Sunday, August 4th, Metallica headlined Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts.

Midway through Metallica’s set, bassist Robert Trujillo and guitarist Kirk Kammett performed one of their famous “doodles.” The pair chooses a song that has a connection to the city in which they are playing. For over 20 years, Neil Diamond’s Top Five 1969 hit “Sweet Caroline” has been a fixture at Boston’s Fenway Park, with fans singing along to the song in the middle of the eighth inning of every Red Sox game,” reports Matthew Wilkening of Loudwire.

Prior to their “Sweet Caroline” jam, Trujillo addressed the audience, saying, “This song is really scary, super heavy and if you start moshing try not to injure yourself, because it is such a scary song. I’m already shaking.” Amateur video can be seen below.

Metallica’s 16-song Gillette Stadium performance was delayed by severe weather which forced the crowd to be evacuated from the stadium prior to the show. Co-opener Ice Nine Kills had their set canceled completely, while co-opener Five Finger Death punch saw their set delayed and shortened. However, the venue’s curfew was extended to allow Metallica to play a full show. Their setlist was as follows:

“Whiplash”
“For Whom The Bell Tolls”
“Ride The Lightning”
“Until It Sleeps”
“Lux Æterna”
“Screaming Suicide”
“Sweet Caroline” (Neil Diamond cover – Rob and Kirk doodle performed in full)
“Welcome Home (Sanitarium)”
“Wherever I May Roam”
“The Call Of Ktulu”
“The Unforgiven”
“Inamorata”
“Blackened”
“Moth Into Flame”
“One”
“Enter Sandman”

To view remaining dates on Metallica’s 2024 tour schedule, visit this location.

(Poster created by Maxx242)

10 Most Underrated Journey Songs

Underrated Journey Songs

Feature Photo: Bruce Alan Bennett / Shutterstock.com

# 10 – “The Way We Used To Be”  – Freedom

We open our list of underrated Journey songs with a very heavy tune called “The Way We Used to Be.” The song was released on the band’s most recent album, Freedom, which came out in 2022. “The Way We Used to Be” was actually the first single released from the album. It starts out with a little piano but quickly explodes into one of the heaviest singles the band has ever released.

At the time of this recording, the band consisted of Neal Schon, the longest-running member of the band, and Jonathan Cain, who has been with the band since the early ’80s. The group’s current lead singer, Arnel Pineda, along with good old American Idol judge Randy Jackson, who was part of Journey for a short time in the ’90s, legendary drummer Narada Michael Walden, and Jason Derlatka on backing vocals, completed the lineup. The sound of the album is great; it was produced by Neal Schon, Jonathan Cain, and Narada Michael Walden, with engineering by the phenomenal Bob Clearmountain.

This is a really good album, but most fans have ignored it, much like many people have overlooked great new music that’s come out over the past few years.

# 9 – To Play Some Music – Journey

Since we opened this list with the first single from the band’s most recent album issued in 2022, we thought it would be fun to go all the way back to the band’s debut album released in 1975 and its debut single. The legacy of this band began almost 50 years ago when Neal Schon, George Tickner, Gregg Rolie, Ross Valory, and Aynsley Dunbar put together a band that they probably never imagined would become so big over the years.

The album’s first single, “To Play Some Music,” is a great rocking tune fueled by the work of Gregg Rolie, who plays keyboards on the track and also sings lead vocals. However, the song didn’t even break into any music charts and went pretty much unnoticed. It’s one of those forgotten songs that lists like this aim to breathe new life into.

# 8 – Higher Place – Arrival

Yeah, that’s Steve singing lead on this track, but not the Steve you think it is. It’s kind of spooky how much Steve Augeri sounds like Steve Perry on this tune. The song “Higher Place” was the opening track on the band’s album Arrival. The album was released in 2001 and was the first Journey album to feature the band’s new lead singer, Steve Augeri, who had replaced Steve Perry. It was also the band’s last studio album released under their longtime label, Columbia Records. The song was written by Jack Blades and Neal Schon. Steve Augeri wasn’t the only new member in the band at the time; Deen Castronovo replaced Steve Smith on drums. Returning members included Neal Schon, Jonathan Cain, and Ross Valory. A new chapter in the band’s history had begun.

# 7 – Positive Touch – Raised On Radio

We wanted to open up this Journey underrated songs list with four straight songs that featured the band’s four different lead vocalists, and of course, we saved the best for last. We are big Steve Perry fans here at the site. We think everyone who has sung in Journey is great—they’re all fabulous singers—but there’s only one Steve Perry. One of my favorite albums, and probably the most underrated Journey album featuring Steve Perry as lead vocalist, is Raised on Radio. The album was released in 1986.

There were a lot of issues with this album because Steve Perry had a very successful solo album released just two years earlier, and it seemed he got a taste of being the boss, which became an issue on this album that he was also tapped to produce. Nonetheless, that’s not what this article is about; it’s about songs, and this is a great one. Five singles were released from this album, and “Positive Touch” was not one of them, making it even more essential to add to this list.

# 6 – For You – Time (Box Set)

In the number six spot on our song list is a really interesting one. This is the only song that Robert Fleischman recorded with the band as their lead singer. After the Next album, Fleischman sang lead on the road but never recorded with the group on any of their albums, as Steve Perry took over the lead vocal position, pushing Fleischman out of the way. However, Fleischman did co-write some of the songs on Infinity. The lone song that Fleischman recorded with Journey was finally released many years later on the Journey box set Time. We thought it would be cool to include this one on our list.

# 5 – She Makes Me (Feel Alright) – Look Into The Future 

Since we’ve completed our showcase of all five lead singers, we’re going to go back to the beginning again, this time with the band’s second studio album, Look into the Future.  The band’s first three albums are really, really good. However, it’s a different band than the one that everyone got to know once Steve Perry joined. I know there are camps that love just the early group before Steve Perry, and then there are camps that love everything that Steve Perry did. I think they are such different groups, two different sounding bands, that you can’t really compare them. It’s like comparing the Roth and Hagar eras of Van Halen—two different bands. Just enjoy what they did in those separate times.

I believe the band’s first three albums are not as recognized on a mass cultural level as they should be, and that’s why we’re going to focus on these three albums for the rest of the way.

# 4 – Mystery Mountain –  Journey

You’re going to want to play some air drums on this one. This dark, psychedelic, metal-sounding progressive rock piece was the final track on the band’s debut album, Journey. Those licks that Neal Schon plays throughout this track are to die for. Listen to that groove in Ross Valory’s bass. This is one of the best tracks on the band’s debut. This should blow your mind if you have never heard it before.

# 3 – Spaceman – Next

In the number three spot on our list is the only single that was released from the band’s third studio album, Next. “Spaceman” was the opening track on the record, written by Aynsley Dunbar and Gregg Rolie. The song was released as a single but didn’t really make a dent in the charts. Even the album itself, Next, only peaked at number 85 on the Billboard Top 200 charts. It was becoming clear that the group needed to do something different if they wanted to reach a bigger audience. Nonetheless, this is a very cool track that, in many ways, serves as a preview of where the band was headed with its mid-tempo, ballad-type rock sound.

# 2 – Look into the Future – Look into the Future

We wonder how many rock fans have heard this song besides old-school Journey fans. This is an epic rock and roll piece that also served as the title track to the band’s second album. The song opened up side two and presented fans with an 8-minute progressive rock and roll journey featuring some phenomenal guitar solos by Neal Schon, as well as incredible musicianship by the rest of the band. There are so many changes in rhythm and different movements throughout this piece that define what progressive rock music is all about. If you’ve never heard this one before, take some time out to give it a listen.

# 1 – Hustler – Next

Oh baby, does this one rock. We close out our underrated Journey songs list with a real scorching tune from the band’s third studio album, Next. We present the opening song on side two, called “Hustler.” Listen to Neal Schon just tear it up in the intro, which is then met by some killer organ playing by Gregg Rolie and off-the-charts bass and drums by Ross Valory and Aynsley Dunbar. This thing just smokes. The song was written by Aynsley Dunbar and Gregg Rolie, with lead vocals also by Gregg Rolie. Journey has not played any of these songs from Next live since the ’70s. This is a very different-sounding band from the one that most people know.

Read More Journey Articles On ClassicRockHistory.com

Top 10 Journey Songs Loved By Fans

Complete List Of All Journey Current And Former Band Members

Complete List Of Journey Albums And Songs

Real Meaning Behind The Lyrics To Journey’s Don’t Stop Believin’

10 Best Journey Album Covers

Top 10 Journey Albums

10 Most Underrated Journey Songs article published on Classic RockHistory.com© 2024

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David Lee Roth Covers Simon & Garfunkel’s Baby Driver

David Lee Roth Covers Simon & Garfunkel's Baby Driver

Feature Photo: Shutterstock

I have to say, I am really enjoying this, and it seems like David Lee Roth is too. Today, on August 5th, 2024, David Lee Roth released a brand new video on his YouTube channel. It’s a fun, rollicking cover version of Simon & Garfunkel’s “Baby Driver.” The song was originally released on Simon & Garfunkel’s legendary album Bridge Over Troubled Water. The album was released on January 26th, 1970. “Baby Driver” often appeared as the B-side to the single “The Boxer.” “Baby Driver” was also used as the title for the recent Edgar Wright film released in 2017, which starred Ansel Elgort and Kevin Spacey. “Baby Driver” is not a well-known song in Simon & Garfunkel’s catalog, which makes it an interesting choice for David Lee Roth to cover. But then again, it’s not surprising that David Lee Roth would choose to cover a song like this.

What he’s up to, well, it seems he’s just trying to have some fun. The video is vintage Roth—dancing all over the place in overalls with floppy blonde hair, having a good time doing all those classic David Lee Roth moves. The camera moves around, he’s smiling, and whoever is filming is clearly enjoying the moment. This is what David Lee Roth is up to, and who can blame him for having fun? Why not? We’re all getting up there in years, so let’s not take everything so seriously anymore.

I hope David Lee Roth keeps doing this, releasing all these fun songs in his own way, in his own style. With hardly any information behind it, it doesn’t really matter.

David Lee Roth Covers Simon & Garfunkel’s Baby Driver article published on Classic RockHistory.com© 2024

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Brian Kachejian was born in Manhattan and raised in the Bronx. He is the founder and Editor in Chief of ClassicRockHistory.com. He has spent thirty years in the music business often working with many of the people who have appeared on this site. Brian Kachejian also holds B.A. and M.A. degrees from Stony Brook University along with New York State Public School Education Certifications in Music and Social Studies. Brian Kachejian is also an active member of the New York Press.

VEONITY – The Final Element Album Out In October Via Scarlet Records

VEONITY – The Final Element Album Out In October Via Scarlet Records

Veonity will release the new album The Final Element on October 18 through Scarlet Records.

As power metal slowly turns softer and synth-based, The Final Element ensures that this trend gets forever broken.

Soaring vocals (courtesy of new frontman Isak Stenvall), twin guitars and mighty choirs – strongly founded on thunderous bass lines and rumbling double bass drums – dominate and define the sixth Veonity’s studio album: the playful, energetic and well-crafted songs of the Swedish band deliver a full throttle energy boost.

“The Elements Of Power chronicles”, a saga of a hero that needs to seal the veil between the Overworld and the Underworld to prevent darkness from gaining control, is finally unraveled, and it couldn’t have been more epic and glorious.

The Final Element – mixed and mastered by Ronny Milianowicz at Studio Seven and majestically illustrated by the Spanish master Alvaro Valverde – will be released in the following formats:

– jewel case CD
– vinyl LP (300 transparent green)
– digital

Cover art by Alvaro Valverde / AV Art Illustracion:

Tracklisting:

“Premonition”
“Chains Of Tyranny”
“Horsemen Of The Dark”
“Carry On”
“Riders Of The Revolution”
“Warriors Code”
“Powerstone”
“Heart Of A Warrior”
“Kings Of Dreamland”
“The Fifth Element”

Veonity:
Isak Stenvall – vocals
Samuel Lundström – guitar
Anders Sköld – guitar
Kristoffer Lidre – bass
Joel Kollberg – drums

(Photo – Mathias Flink / Edit – Thomas Holmstrand)

Canada’s PØLTERGEIST To Release Debut Nachtmusik In October; First Single Streaming

Canada’s PØLTERGEIST To Release Debut Nachtmusik In October; First Single Streaming

Ascending Canadian post-punk sect Pøltergeist will release their debut album Nachtmusik, on October 25 via Bad Omen Records. Recorded in their native Calgary and mixed by Felix Fung (Spell, Spectres) at Little Red Sounds in Vancouver, the record is a dust covered collection of gothic death rock laced with heavy metal grit, which builds on the momentum of the band’s debut 7″ “Fall To Ruin” – a split with label mates Spell.

Nachtmusik is preceded by the single “Children Of The Dark”, perhaps the most perfect distillation of the Pøltergeist style;, a catchy, tempestuous rocker that also functions thematically on a dual level- not only as Kalen reckons “a call to arms for people who share a passion for underground music” but also arriving via a morbid angle to assault the iniquities of the modern labour market; a Stokerist-critique of late-stage capitalism, if you will, but laden with biting hooks.

As Edgar Allan Poe once noted in The Masque Of The Red Death, “there are chords in the hearts of the most reckless which cannot be touched without emotion” – it was exactly these that Kalen Baker reached for – in splendid isolation in Grande Prairie, Alberta – at the very genesis of Pøltergeist, whilst fashioning the sepulchral serenades which would form his new band’s mighty statement of intent ‘Nachtmusik’.

Having played in the traditional metal band Whyte Diamond in Calgary in his teens, Baker moved 450 miles away for work in late 2019. “It was harsh and isolating being away from the Calgary scene, and I didn’t end up meeting many musicians who were into the same stuff as me” he notes. “I started recording demos alone in the room I was renting and put them on Bandcamp. I didn’t expect much from it, I just wanted a way to make music”.

This isolation was exacerbated by the pandemic, and coincided with a period in which Baker’s tastes were broadening from the epic metallic chills he’d grown up on into darker quarters. Having always had a penchant for the mystical metallic strains of Angel Witch, Cauldron and Blue Öyster Cult, he found himself moved by both Vancouver contemporary post-punk act Spectres and the epochal British melancholia of The Chameleons’ ‘Script From The Bridge’, not to mention gothic and post-punk legends like Sisters Of Mercy and The Sound, and paradigms of the ethereal like Cocteau Twins, Slowdive and My Bloody Valentine.

“I consider us first and foremost a Post-Punk band, but heavy metal will always play an important role,” says Kalen, citing the likes of In Solitude, Unto Others and Tribulation as bands who’ve explored the hinterlands between the two worlds. “When I got really into Goth rock, one thing I noticed was that it was just as cold and bleak as black metal but in a different way.”

With this union bolstered by the lyrical influence of spiritual progenitors like Moorcock, Lovecraft, Poe and the David Lynch of Twin Peaks, the sound of Pøltergeist was born – a gritty but magickal realm where crepuscular intensity is joined in psychic battle by metallic fortitude. Whilst the like of the driving “Burning Sword” and “Ethereal Nightmare” may bear the ghoulish atmosphere of deathrock fury past, they’re just as riven with the epic bravura and melodic salvation of the finest NWOBHM vintage, as well as possessing an emotional core that transposes the sound and fury to a contemporary world.

The band is now completed by guitarist Jacob Ponton, former Whyte Diamond bassist Ben Wytham and punk rock-styled drummer Amy Moore (although Al Lester from label mates Spell filled in on the recordings) and this line-up recently fulfilled a dream of supporting their trans-generational kindred spirits The Mission in Calgary – sure to be only the first of manifold triumphs to come.

Nachtmusik is true to Kalen’s vision of ‘a kaleidoscope of emotions, sounds and ideas’. Beguilingly ethereal but riven with steadfast intent, this is a record whose heart may yearn for the spiritual realm of the 1980s but whose feet are firmly treading the twenty-first century here and now. As storm clouds gather overhead, Pøltergeist’s journey into darkness is just beginning.

Tracklisting:

“Einfürung”
“Burning Sword”
“Ethereal Nightmare”
“Cold In September”
“Yesterday Fades”
“Nachtmusik”
“Children Of The Dark”
“Swallowed By The Ocean”
“Will We Ever Live Again”
“Walking Alone”
“Dammerung (Outro)”

“Children Of The Dark” video:

MINDWARS – “Stand Guard At The Gates Of Your Mind” Lyric Video Released

MINDWARS – “Stand Guard At The Gates Of Your Mind” Lyric Video Released

Speed/thrash metal band, MindWars, will release their fifth album, appropriately titled V, on September 9. Lyric video for opening track “Stand Guard At The Gates Of Your Mind” is streaming below.

V is the culmination of 10 years of collaboration and dedication of the band to revitalize old school thrash with the taste and aggression of toady’s music. The band is a three-piece conglomeration of varied influences with a common goal to create music they love and hope you will too.

MindWars was formed at the end of 2013 after Mike Alvord (formerly of Holy Terror) and Roby Vitari (formerly of Headcrasher) reconnected through social media. The two met by chance in 1989 when Holy Terror was touring with Exodus and Nuclear Assault.

Roby brought in a juggernaut of a guitarist Danny “Z” Pizzi to play bass. The three managed to record and produce two solid albums (The Enemy Within – 2014 and Sworn To Secrecy – 2016, which was engineered by the mighty Bill Metoyer). In 2017, Roby decided to relocate to Newport Beach, CA and the band soon found that having Danny still in Italy was impossible for the band to play live shows. In 2019, the band decided to hand over the bass duties to the veteran, Rick Zaccaro.

The band proceeded to write and record their highly acclaimed album The Fourth Turning and Danny taking on the role of second guitar. Due to various circumstances and the fact that Danny still lived in Italy, the band decided to continue on as a three piece and toured Japan in the fall of 2024, which culminated at True Thrash Fest 2024 with a co-headlining spot alongside Cyclone.

The Fourth Turning was released during the dog days of COVID and the band immediately started writing new material. Prior to COVID, the band also had a mini-US tour (opening one show for Raven).

The fifth album, V, was recorded during the first few months of 2024 and is slated to be released in September, just in time for MindWars to support their best album yet on their upcoming European Tour, which will end with a performance at the 2024 Storm Crusher Festival.

MindWars is currently unsigned and is solicitingng label support for distribution of V.

Tracklisting:

“Stand Guard At The Gates Of Your Mind”
“Live To Die”
“Beneath The Trees”
“Crusaders”
“The Road To Madagascar”
“West Of Nowhere”
“Chasing The Wind”
“Source Of Destruction”
“Into The Known”
“Vultures Of The Eighth Wonder”
“The Logical Song”

“Stand Guard At The Gates Of Your Mind” lyric video:

“Heavier Trip” – Music Box’s Doppelgänger Acquires North American Rights To Heavy Metal Comedy

“Heavier Trip” - Music Box’s Doppelgänger Acquires North American Rights To Heavy Metal Comedy

Music Box Films’ genre label Doppelgänger Releasing has acquired North American distribution rights to the rowdy, offbeat Finnish comedy “Heavier Trip” by directors Juuso Laatio and Jukka Vidgren, marking the return of the film’s heavy metal band Impaled Rektum. Charades is handling world sales rights, reports Variety.

“Heavier Trip” is the follow-up to “Heavy Trip,” which was distributed by Doppelgänger Releasing in 2018. The cast and crew reunite to continue the story of the world’s most dangerous (and charming) metal band, including actors Johannes Holopainen (Turo), Samuli Jaskio (Lotvonen), Max Ovaska (Xytrax), and Chike Ohanwe (Oula).

“Heavier Trip’s” world premiere will be announced imminently followed by a theatrical and home entertainment release this November.

“Heavier Trip” summary:

“The most ferocious death metal band in the world, Impaled Rektum, is incarcerated in a Norwegian prison when they discover that the guitarist’s family is facing significant financial trouble. In an effort to assist them, the band breaks out of prison and embarks on a journey through northern Europe to perform at the largest and most iconic metal festival in the world: Wacken. Deceived by a dishonest record label legend and pursued by a murderous prison guard, numerous adventures await them, but their ultimate challenge becomes keeping the band together amid the chaos.”

“If there’s one thing the world needs, it’s feel-good movies about dudes who play symphonic post-apocalyptic reindeer-grinding Christ-abusing extreme war pagan Fennoscandic metal,” stated Laatio and Vidgren. “We’re so excited to bring ‘Heavier Trip’ to audiences in North America and make lots of noise with this sequel’s release!”

“It’s a thrill to see ‘Heavier Trip’ being distributed in the U.S. Music Box Films and Doppelgänger Releasing’s eclectic slate, spanning both demanding arthouse cinema and mainstream comedy, leaves no doubt about their ability to draw audiences to theaters,” Charades CEO Pierre Mazars said. “As a metal fan myself, I couldn’t be happier.”

HOUSE OF LORDS Share New Single “Crowded Room”

HOUSE OF LORDS Share New Single “Crowded Room”

Hard rockers House Of Lords return this summer with a new single entitled “Crowded Room” accompanied by a visualizer, available below.

House Of Lords is helmed by its legendary singer James Christian, the sole remaining member appearing on all the band’s albums. He is joined by guitarist Jimi Bell, who has been with the band since their return with World Upside Down, the charismatic keyboardist and songwriter Mark Mangold (Touch, Michael Bolton, Drive, She Said) along with Swedish drummer Johan Koleberg (Lion’s Share, Ignition, Therion).

This is the same line-up that appeared on the band’s last album Saints And Sinners, and they have gelled into an even more focused and extremely ambitious group full of superb hooks, majestic atmospheres, and monumental guitar riffs reminiscent of their self-titled debut album.

About “Crowded Room”, James Christian succinctly states:

“Too many voices in my head, and I know them all by name.”

House Of Lords debuted in 1989 with the release of their self-titled album, a record that is still regarded as one of the best arena rock releases of the 1980s. The colossal sound, the soaring vocals of Christian, and the instrumental capabilities of the band (which featured ex-Angel and Giuffria keyboardist Gregg Giuffria, along with luminaries Lanny Cordola, Chuck Wright, and Ken Mary), were reminiscent of such frontrunners as Whitesnake, Deep Purple and Van Halen and immediately brought the band to the attention of the mainstream music media and the masses of ’80s hard rock fans.

With their sophomore release, Sahara, House Of Lords had considerable radio and video chart success with their cover of Blind Faith’s “Can’t Find My Way Home.” After a tour with Nelson in 1991, the group disbanded, eventually coming back together with a new lineup (featuring original members Giuffria and Christian) in 1992 with Demon’s Down. With the change in musical climate at the time, House Of Lords hibernated until the original lineup came back together in 2000, releasing the controversial Power And The Myth, an album that featured a sound leaning more towards progressive hard rock with ’70s rock influences.

After a short European tour, Christian decided to go back to the trademark arena rock sound of House Of Lords, putting together a new lineup with the blessing of founding member Giuffria, who opted out right before the release of Power And The Myth. New members Jimi Bell on guitars and B.J. Zampa on drums supplied a true powerhouse sound to the fifth studio album, World Upside Down, a record that caused a real stir in the hard rock and melodic rock scenes. That album was followed up by the equally impressive Come To My Kingdom in 2008, Cartesian Dreams in 2009, Big Money in 2011, Precious Metal in 2014, and Saint Of The Lost Souls in 2017.

House Of Lords have toured relentlessly in Europe and the States in support of their releases and are a true staple of the hard rock scene on both continents.

House Of Lords are:
James Christian – vocals, bass
Jimi Bell – guitars
Mark Mangold – keyboards
Johan Koleberg – drums