OCTOPLOID Release “Coast Of The Drowned Sailors” Lyric Video Feat. AMORPHIS Guitarist TOMI KOIVUSAARI

OCTOPLOID Release

Octoploid – the band founding by Olli-Pekka “Oppu” Laine (bass, keyboards, backing vocals / Amorphis, Barren Earth, Mannhai) – have released a lyric video for “Coast Of The Drowned Sailors”, featuring on the debut album, Beyond The Aeons, released back in July via Reigning Phoenix Music (RPM).

A message reveals, “‘Coast of the Drowned Sailors is a conscious nod to the ’90s, and the only possible interpreter for it was Mister Tomi Koivusaari. The track marries the essence of original melodic death metal with elements of slide and acoustic guitar characteristic of southern rock ballads. Also featured is Jani ”Joãnitor” Muurinen, the legendary vocalist from the band Xysma, who delivers the more hopeful part of the lyrics. Overall, ‘Sailors’ is an unapologetically old-school melodic death metal track executed with a modern touch!”

Beyond The Aeons was crafted at E-Studio in Sipoo, Finland where Petri Majuri (Hanoi Rocks, Michael Monroe) took care of mixing the eight tracks and David Castillo (Katatonia, Leprous, Opeth) mastered the album. Orion Landau (Carcass, YOB, Russian Circles ) completed the magnificent package with dreamy artwork.

Order/stream Beyond The Aeons here

Tracklisting:

“The Dawns In Nothingness” [feat. Mikko Kotamäki] *
“Coast Of The Drowned Sailors” [feat. Tomi Koivusaari & Janitor Muurinen] *
“Human Amoral” [feat. Tomi Joutsen] *
“Shattered Wings” [feat. Petri Eskelinen] #/%
“Beyond The Aeons” #/%
“The Hallowed Flame” [feat. Mikko Kotamäki] *
“Concealed Serenity” [feat. Mikko Kotamäki] %
“A Dusk Of Vex” [feat. Jón Aldará | physical: long version; digital: edit] ^/%
“Monotony” (bonus track – physical only) [feat. Petri Eskelinen] %

* Kim Rantala (keyboards)
# Samu Leminen (additional lead guitar)
^ Ile Laaksomaa (additional lead guitar)
% Kasper Mårtenson (keyboards)

“A Dusk Of Vesk” lyric video:

“The Hallowed Flame” video:

“The Dawns In Nothingness” lyric video:


“I’ve always existed between two cultures.” Meet Lowen, 2024’s breakout prog metal sensation inspired by System Of A Down and Akercocke

Lowen pic 2024

(Image credit: Andy Ford)

“I think a lot of people in heavy metal understand what it’s like to be looking in from the other side,” says Nina Saeidi, vocalist of prog metallers Lowen. “This band is my way of exploring that.” 

The daughter of Iranian exiles and raised in Britain, Nina’s musical journey began when she was a young child, learning how to play various instruments. But despite that, she admits she “grew up in a house where sound was not really allowed”, and the only music was traditional Iranian folk. As a teenager, she made her own discoveries, noting Akercocke’s 2007 album Antichrist and System Of A Down’s Mezmerize/Hypnotize records as formative influences. 

“I was fascinated by how transgressive the Akercocke album was, and how System used Middle Eastern music and metal,” she says. “I was like, ‘Oh, I didn’t know you could do that!’ I didn’t know that there were people doing things like this. It made me think, ‘Maybe there’s a space for me too.’” 

Nina formed Lowen in 2017 with guitarist Shem Lucas. Within a year, they’d released their debut EP, A Crypt In The Stars. Though work on this year’s debut, Do Not Go To War With The Demons Of Mazandaran, was slow, the band were meticulous about crafting a potent and fascinating sound that incorporates both Nina’s Iranian heritage and underground doom and prog metal sensibilities. To that end, Nina even sings in a variety of languages, including Farsi and dead tongues such as Akkadian and Sumerian. 

“Singing in Farsi connects me to my culture,” she explains. “I’ve always existed in this liminal space between two cultures and not really been fully accepted by either of them. Lowen is a space where I can explore this strange exile that I live in and connect to places I can never go.”

 Within Lowen’s sound, there’s a sadness and morbidity that’s palpable: the weight of not belonging and mourning for a life out of reach. Standing above it all, however, is power. Do Not Go To War With The Demons of Mazandaran contains tides of crushing, Meshuggah-like heft; intricate, progressive song structures; demonic doom riffs and historically elaborate themes. Lyrically, it comprises melodic war poems, “ancient diss tracks”, protest anthems and even incantations to raise the dead. 

It’s a reclamation of identity, as well as a union and celebration of culture, funnelled through primal Middle Eastern rhythms and Nina’s multilingual, commanding yet sorrowful voice that often invokes the use of Tahrir, an undulating type of singing that’s an important part of Persian music. Nina freely admits that embracing her Iranian heritage is complex. The Middle Eastern country’s stance on metal bands is no secret, with instances of bands like Confess and Arsames being arrested and fleeing the country well reported. “It’s illegal for women to sing unaccompanied,” Nina says solemnly. “They will kill you.”

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For this reason, journeying to her ancestral home remains an impossibility. “Though it’s not the case for all Iranians in the diaspora, for me personally, it’s just too dangerous to go back,” she says. “I’m doing lots of things that would be considered illegal if I went there.” 

Building upon the Middle Eastern influences of her youth, alongside bands such as Akercocke, Opeth, Queen and Enslaved, the name Lowen itself is derived from this fusion of the East and West. 

“It’s basically a bastardisation of the Germanic word for lion,” Nina explains. “In Mesopotamia, excavations have shown building inscriptions of kings killing lions, because they’re symbols of chaos and power. They’re brutal images. In the West, they’re the symbol of pride. In Lowen, we try to embody this juxtaposition.” 

Lowen – Waging War Against God (Official Music Video) – YouTube Lowen - Waging War Against God (Official Music Video) - YouTube

Watch On


Do Not Go To War With The Demons Of Mazandaran offers a rich tapestry of historical knowledge. Its title is based on a chapter from the Shāhnāmeh, aka the Persian Book of Kings, an epic poem written around 1,000AD. The chapter in question follows the story of the greedy King KayKāvus who, against the better judgement of his advisors, invades a paradisal land inhabited by demons, sorcerers and beautiful women. The arrogant king’s attempts prove fruitless, and the white demon, Div-e Sepid, destroys his army by summoning a storm. Metal stuff, to be sure. 

“I think the past is far enough away that it’s almost like an alien world,” Nina says. “Yet somehow, that distance can be bridged by shared human experiences. There’s a sense of comfort that we’ve always been the same – we’re still fighting about lines on maps. A lot of the conflicts of today are exactly the same as the conflicts of 8,000 years ago.” 

Although Do Not Go To War With The Demons Of Mazandaran is heavily inspired by historical texts, it also draws on contemporary sources. Songs such as Corruption On Earth and Waging War Against God rage against the death sentences placed on women protesting against the Islamic Republic of Iran during the ongoing Woman, Life, Freedom movement. The movement began in 2022 following the death of Mahsa Amini, a young Iranian woman who was reportedly arrested for not wearing the hijab and later died under suspicious circumstances relating to suspected police brutality. 

“They’re still imprisoning people, torturing people, executing people,” Nina seethes. “But I also want to make it clear that I’m not criticising Islam, I’m criticising the regime, because they are using religion – which can be a very beautiful thing – to control, corrupt and kill.”

Do Not Go To War With The Demons Of Manzadaran is out now via Church Road.

Liz works on keeping the Louder sites up to date with the latest news from the world of rock and metal. Prior to joining Louder as a full time staff writer, she completed a Diploma with the National Council for the Training of Journalists and received a First Class Honours Degree in Popular Music Journalism. She enjoys writing about anything from neo-glam rock to stoner, doom and progressive metal, and loves celebrating women in music.

The Story of Led Zeppelin’s Final Single

It’s safe to say Led Zeppelin were not a singles band.

“Fool in the Rain,” which came out in December 1979 in response to the rabid reception spawned by the In Through the Out Door album release a month earlier, was just the 10th and final single the group released from their eight studio albums before John Bonham‘s death and their subsequent breakup in 1980.

“I always thought of the Stones as a pop group who made singles,” singer Robert Plant explained in 2005. “The whole idea of what we did competing with Bobby Goldsboro as they were wasn’t where we were at. What we said was there’s no point of putting out a single when the album is the statement of the band.”

In Through the Out Door found Plant and bassist John Paul Jones taking a larger role in the songwriting than on previous Led Zeppelin albums, with Jones particularly sparked by his experiments with a new type of musical instrument.

Read More: Led Zeppelin Ends With ‘In Through the Out Door’

“See, you had a situation where Jonesy didn’t contribute much to the songwriting of [1976’s] Presence, and that was a strain. Guitarist and producer Jimmy Page explained in the book Light and Shade: Conversations with Jimmy Page. “I wouldn’t preferred having some input at that point. But he bought a new synthesizer [a Yamaha GX-1] and it inspired him to come up with a bunch of things for In Through the Out Door. He also started working closely with Robert, which was something that hadn’t happened before.”

A major sporting event helped inspire one of the album’s standout tracks, the piano-driven lover’s lament “Fool in the Rain,” which featured an extended middle samba break complete with timpani and street whistles.

“‘Fool in the Rain’ is most unusual for us, really, because, well, I don’t think we would have played it had situations been different,” Plant told J.J. Jackson in a 1979 interview. “But with the World Cup in Argentina in ’78 and a lot of this kind of South American thing going around, and it being every time you watched any soccer on television, it was always a South American kind of rhythm thing going along. It’s not an attempt to be Carlos Santana or anything like that. It’s kind of a little bit diversified and straightforward, you know.”

The song was a significant chart hit, reaching No. 21 in February 1980. The band continued not to care about such things: “We just really wanted to write really good music that would hold up on its own,” Page demurred. “Chart music tends to be a little disposable.”

Besides, Page and Bonham weren’t completely thrilled with the results of Plant and Jones’ leadership on In Through the Out Door. “Bonzo and I had already started discussing plans for a hard-driving rock album after that. We both felt In Through the Out Door was a little soft,” Page explained. “In its place it was fine, but I wouldn’t have wanted to pursue that direction in the future.”

Hear Led Zeppelin Perform ‘Fool in the Rain’

Ranking Every Led Zeppelin Live Album

It took a while, but they finally got things right.

Gallery Credit: Nick DeRiso

Reissue Roundup: Fall Sets From the Beatles, Tom Petty and More

Reissue Roundup: Fall Sets From the Beatles, Tom Petty and More

The homestretch of 2024’s reissues and archival projects includes some of the year’s most noteworthy packaged collections.

The box sets, expanded versions, deluxe editions and previously unissued recordings highlighted below are aimed at holiday shoppers, no doubt; however, there’s so much to choose from – whether it’s an unearthed Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young live show from one of their first dates together and Lou Reed‘s pre-Velvet Underground work as a songwriter for hire – that fans and collectors will also find essential albums here.

In addition to the dusted-off CSNY live collection, a concert set from the pre-split ’80s lineup of Fleetwood Mac is here, as is the latest volume in jazz great Miles Davis‘ acclaimed Bootleg Series, this time collecting two complete shows from his second great quintet.

READ MORE: The Best Reissues and Archival Sets From Summer 2024

Box sets devoted to Elvis Costello‘s mid-’80s Americana turn, King of America, Weezer‘s 1994 debut, a New Order mid-’80s classic, the Beatles‘ original mono albums from their American debut year and some of Jimi Hendrix‘s final recordings before his 1970 death are lavishly displayed. So is the latest volume in Joni Mitchell‘s celebrated Archives series.

Less sprawling but no less lovingly curated reissues of key albums from George Harrison, progressive metal heavyweights Mastodon, Tom Petty, the Pogues, XTC and Ray Charles‘ groundbreaking country and western records from the ’60s are here, too. Record companies have been busy the past three months targeting holiday shoppers; the reissues below count among 2024’s best.

Reissue Roundup: Fall Sets From the Beatles, Tom Petty and More

The best box sets, expanded albums and archival editions from the past three months.

Gallery Credit: Michael Gallucci

More From Ultimate Classic Rock

Why Tom Petty’s ‘Long After Dark’ Still Feels Very Current

Tom Petty hosted a fantastic radio show for years called Buried Treasure and we’re learning now as fans, the late singer-songwriter also had plenty of undiscovered gems in his own catalog.

1982’s Long After Dark is in that category, an album which arrived on the heels of the previous year’s Hard Promises. It was arguably the third record in what was ultimately an impressive trilogy of work from Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers between 1979 and 1982.

[Long After Dark] feels very prescient for this moment. It feels like it was written at a very big soulless moment of uncertainty,” Adria Petty tells UCR now. “In a lot of ways, we thought it was fun to dive in here and look at how they were dealing with that moment. Looking at the archives and all of it, it’s like the medicine that Tom left behind for us.

The first chapter in that cycle, 1979’s Damn the Torpedoes, followed a protracted legal battle, which left Petty and the members of the group frustrated and disillusioned. But if anything, the turmoil just strengthened their resolve.

The album’s title fit their general credo in that moment, borrowing from the famous quote, “Damn the torpedoes…full speed ahead!” Two albums later, Long After Dark found Tom and the Heartbreakers still loaded for bear — and the recent expanded reissue of Long After Dark offers ample proof. Tracks like the shimmering “Never Been You” and “Don’t Make Me Walk the Line” are just a couple of highlights on the second disc, which revisits a bevy of previously unavailable material that finally has been sprung from the vault.

It’s a good year to be a Petty fan. In addition to the Long After Dark expansion, fans can now access every episode of the previously mentioned Buried Treasure radio show via Petty’s newly relaunched fan club, which now offers free membership. They’re promising an ongoing wave of exclusive content from the archives as well as advance notice and special surprises. One of those surprises arrived with the announcement of the upcoming Live in Edinburgh 1982 official bootleg, which was released and quickly sold out.

During a recent conversation, Adria Petty and Heartbreakers keyboardist Benmont Tench discussed Long After Dark — and Petty offered a glimpse at what’s ahead for fans to look forward to.

As a starting point, how do you look back on Long After Dark now?
Benmont Tench: Long After Dark, I remember that Ron Blair did his last track with us, “Between Two Worlds,” which was one of my favorite things we ever did. Howie Epstein [joined the band], so I remember having Howie there. I loved Howie from the first second….I loved Ron too, but I loved Howie from the first second. We became very close. We were [also] in a different studio. We weren’t in Sound City, we were at the Record Plant. That changed things up and brought in a slightly different vibe.

All of the records were a really good experience. None of them were not a really good experience. Sometimes, as with the legal interruptions for Damn the Torpedoes, they were frustrating. I don’t remember any such frustrations with Long After Dark. It was traditional back then, they’re going to get rid of Stan [Lynch], he’ll be gone for a week, we’re going to get no tracks, no matter how great the other drummer is they bring in. He’s going to come back and we’re going to get two tracks the day he comes back and everything’s fine. [Laughs] So, that happened on that record too. But apart from that, it was a really happy time.

Adria Petty: Look, to me, Tom Petty’s just my dad. He’s a normal dude. But when you look at [him] and the band as a musical entity that created music for 40 years on their own terms, swimming upstream against culture, holding some sort of the tenant of what was cool and what was important to study and interpret as a band and a group, this to me, is like, the band record. It’s not just them trying to make a hit record with Jimmy Iovine. This is this band that has so much grit. They have so much staying power. They’ve been playing like a locomotive for seven years and they’re just in this flow.

Every record is a revelation. I think in the case of this record, there was more of a revelation there maybe than we thought, in terms of the importance of where the band was at and where the harmonies were going. Where Tom was going acoustically, which I think Cameron really succinctly addresses that in the extras for Heartbreakers Beach Party. This is a period of time where Tom was recording acoustic music — really important acoustic music with “Keeping Me Alive,” “Turning Point” and things like that. Looking at the record, knowing that it had that duality, the other roots, what they were calling a “too country” side to it, it’s interesting.

READ MORE: The Gift Tom Petty Gave to Cameron Crowe

It’s really great hearing the extra material on this new expanded edition of Long After Dark.
Tench: I loved having French TV come in and the performances that they captured. I love that once again, we have Phil Jones playing percussion live with us. Everything that Stan Lynch and Phil Jones [did] as a team together was something really, really special. They’re very special on their own. Jones played drums on Full Moon Fever, but as a percussion drum team, they were so much of a joy to play with.

Tom kept on bringing in really good songs as always. Sometimes, he’d bring in demos, more so than he’d done before. We could play fast and loose with them — except on a few songs, like “A Wasted Life,” where he would have played something specific on the demo. Often, it would be very random and he’d say, “I want you to play this.” I’d be like, “You played that off the top of your head. It’s completely random. How am I going to copy that?” He’d say, “You can do it.” And I did. He would push me out of my comfort zone like that. He brought in so many good songs. That’s why we have so much bonus material. I believe that for him and Jimmy and Mike to figure out what belonged on the record and made it a complete [album], I think it was probably pretty daunting, because some of the songs that didn’t wind up on the record, to me, are some of his best and some of our best.

Petty: Tom was a very disciplined songwriter and he was very disciplined about being a band leader too — rehearsing his band, playing with his band — and they were prolific. I mean, they really were. They were aiming for a very high bar and most of the time they hit it when their lives didn’t get in the way. I think for dad and the band in particular, this is a really nice moment. Because Mike gets to go back and see how great “Finding Out” is, “Between Two Worlds,” “You Got Lucky” and really kind of take some credit for innovating in that way at the time. “Straight Into Darkness” [is another example]. I think it’s such a Benmont record, really, “Never Be You” coming out. Because it’s one of the only singles that I think Benmont really got a lot of credit for. It’s got such a big haunting piano line. “Never Be You,” “Ways to Be Wicked” and just the vibe of feeling disillusioned and dark but knowing that you’re going to make it through it. Being like, “I’m going to sit in this bummer for a second and just own it, I’m going to go straight into darkness.” That album feels very prescient for this moment. It feels like it was written at a very big soulless moment of uncertainty. In a lot of ways, we thought it was fun to dive in here and look at how they were dealing with that moment. Looking at the archives and all of it, it’s like the medicine that Tom left behind for us.

Watch Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers’ Video for ‘Never Be You’

Benmont, what are your memories about “Never Be You” in particular? It’s got some good history.
Tench: Yeah, Rosanne Cash cut it and Maria McKee [also] cut a lovely version for the Streets of Fire soundtrack. Tom sings it differently and I really love the way he sings it. He had the context for that song. I’d written a complete song and recorded a demo of it on a little four track. I think I played it for Jimmy and I think he said, “I love it.” I was really happy. He said, “Take the melody and the lyrics out and send it to Tom.” I was like, “Okay, I thought you loved it!” But he heard something in the instrumental track and I was happy for Tom to do what he would do with it. Tom wrote “Never Be You” and we went in and cut it. It’s such a lovely thing. It means a lot to me. I didn’t lobby for it to be on the record, because I thought, “God, that would be egotistical, because it’s my song. But I love the way it sounds and I’m really glad it’s finally out.

It’s cool seeing the extended footage of the band working on the “You Got Lucky” video in Heartbreakers Beach Party. Benmont, when it comes to the synthesizers on that song, how much did you enjoy messing around with that stuff at the time?
Tench:
I wasn’t a big fan of synths, mostly because I wasn’t in sympathy with them, musically. I didn’t know what to do with them. If they were used, what I thought was well, I thought they were great. Abbey Road, the Beatles used them a fair amount and its gorgeous. But Mike [Campbell] was always interested in technology. He wrote the track [for “You Got Lucky”] on a little Yamaha keyboard. That sound on the Yamaha keyboard, we were trying to emulate with an Oberheim synthesizer and a Prophet-5 synthesizer. It was interesting, because we got a guy in to program it for us. I didn’t know how to program a synth — nobody in our band knew how to do that — so a guy came in with an Oberheim and a Prophet and got the sound for us. Then, Michael had played it on the demo. I said, “Mike, you played it. Why don’t you play it?” He said, “No, I want you to play it.” So I essentially play what Mike wrote and played a few other melody lines over the top. But essentially, that was Mike.

Watch Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers’ Video for ‘You Got Lucky’

Adria, now that this Long After Dark set is out, what’s next on the drawing board? Just off the top of my head, there’s a good amount of video that hasn’t been properly released digitally. Things like the Pack Up the Plantation concert film, the Hard to Handle film with Bob Dylan and so on.
Petty: We don’t know. That’s the honest truth, is we don’t know. I’m so gloriously grateful to the Petty Country artists…

READ MORE: ‘Petty Country’ Earns Acclaim From Mike Campbell

That’s an unbelievable release.
Petty: Thank you so much. I can take very little credit for it. It’s really George [Drakoulias] and Randall [Poster] that put that together. Between Petty Country [and the music that’s been used on the television show] Bad Monkey, there’s like 35 new covers out this year. Which frankly, they weren’t supposed to come out this year. They were supposed to come out previous years or be separated from one another. There’s so much fan material coming out that I don’t want to overwhelm [with too many releases]. For me and also, the young, brilliant team that works with us at Petty Legacy and Red Light [Management], we felt that we really owed the fans a deep, archival dive that was affordable this year, something really cool and Tom-centric. Really from the heart of the band and not an interpreted [kind of thing]. I think I might take a year off next year. Seven years of this has been really intense for me as an experience and very wonderful in terms of getting to know my father better. Just knowing how much I love this music and how important I think this music is [means a lot]. You mentioned Hard to Handle and the Pack up the Plantation concert film?

Yeah and when it comes to Hard to Handle, I think fans are curious if there’s material to put out a box set of recordings from when Tom and Bob went out and did that touring?
Petty: There are great recordings. I don’t know what Bob’s plans are for them, though. We’d have to ask those guys. Tom, believe it or not, has so much more unreleased material that to me, it feels like there’s an importance to look at all of the ’80s music. You know, the band’s anniversary is coming up in 2026. There’s so many options. There’s an incredible Hyde Park concert from the final tour that we filmed. There’s some beautiful music from all of the different eras that we haven’t been able to properly [go through yet]. We have tapes to bake and things to listen to. I prioritize that based on the incredible resource that is the Heartbreakers and all of the engineers and original staff and crew that worked with Dad.

I really treasure having these years with them to dive through this stuff. It’s the way I have to do it, to prioritize their input. Pack Up the Plantation, you know, there’s some cool stuff on there for sure. Bob Dylan, the Australian tours, for sure, are pretty special and cool. But there is a secret record that I haven’t heard, that I’m excited to check out from the ’80s. I’ve heard about it for years now. So I think I might take some downtime to actually do some listening and thinking about what we want to put out next. Because it’s been nonstop. Even when we stop it, it feels like there’s a Record Store Day release or something else. I don’t regret doing that, because I’ll be driving home — even the other day — and be like, “God, I want to hear that song from Angel Dream that we found, ‘One of Life’s Little Mysteries.'” It will be something calling me from what we find that’s just got some warmth to it. I’m really grateful that exists, that we’ve unearthed [things like that]. It feeds me and it makes me feel motivated to keep doing it.

READ MORE: Tom Petty’s ‘Angel Dream’ Reworks ‘She’s the One’ Soundtrack

The Best Song From Every Tom Petty Album

There’s a common thread running through Tom Petty’s catalog, and it’s the Heartbreakers. 

Gallery Credit: Nick DeRiso

Complete List Of Electric Light Orchestra Songs from A to Z

Electric Light Orchestra Songs from A to Z

Feature Photo: Helge Øverås, CC BY-SA 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

About The Author

Brian Kachejian

More from this Author

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.

DWEEZIL ZAPPA – “Beginner Guitar Tips EDWARD VAN HALEN Showed Me” (Video)

December 11, 2024, 52 minutes ago

news dweezil zappa eddie van halen riff notes

DWEEZIL ZAPPA -

Guitarist Dweezil Zappa, the son of music legend Frank Zappa, has shared a new video along with the following message:

“Imagine your first guitar lesson at 12 years old is with Edward Van Halen! Well… it happened to me. These are some of the things he showed me that I still use to this day. I’m happy to pass these beginner tips on to you.”

Featured chapters in the clip below include:

– My First Guitar Lesson
– Tuning with Harmonics
– A Simple Lick with Open Strings
– A Flanger without a Flanger
– My Mother is a Space Cadet
– Gear Used

Zappa previously shared a video of himself playing ‘Eruption’ on the guitar Eddie Van Halen gave to him when he was 12 years old. Check it out below


STEVE VAI On Becoming A Professional Musician – “Start Your Own Publishing Company And Never Compromise Your Intellectual Property”

STEVE VAI On Becoming A Professional Musician -

Guitar legend Steve Vai has checked in with the following message:

“When I was 19 years old, I asked Frank Zappa for some advice on being an independent musician. I expected some lofty answer, but Frank was very practical and he said to me ‘keep your publishing.’ I didn’t know what that meant so he gave me the name of his publishing attorney, Gerry Rosenblatt, who to this day is still my publishing attorney 44 years later.

What I discovered is that a musician’s equity is in their intellectual property, and that if you are a songwriter, starting a publishing company and signing up with a performance rights organization (PRO) is a must, and it’s easy. At that time, 1980, I started my own publishing company for $12.50, and signed up with the highest rated performing rights organization in the biz (ASCAP). Through the years this saved me millions of dollars and to this day, I still own all my publishing.

To date I have over 500 songs registered with ASCAP that are protected, and that I collect income on. Besides all the esoteric and inspirational things I might be able to share about being a musician, the most down-to-earth thing I can tell you is to start your own publishing company, sign up with ASCAP, and never compromise your intellectual property. It worked for me and it’s easy to do.

The fine people at the ASCAP Foundation give back and are now live with a holiday fundraiser, and this photo shows my contribution.

There’s many other fantastic offerings at this fundraiser and you can check them out here.

Happy holidays!”

For the first time in their nearly 50-year musical careers, legendary guitar icons, Joe Satriani and Steve Vai, have united to form The SatchVai Band, with plans to ignite Europe with an electrifying summer tour. Watch Joe & Steve’s announcement video below.

“The SatchVai Band Tour is happening! I’m so looking forward to sharing the stage with Steve again. Every time we play together, it takes me back to when we were teenagers, eating and breathing music every second of the day, pushing, challenging, and helping each other to be the best we could be. I guess we’ve never stopped!” – Joe

“Touring with Joe is always a pleasure and an honor. He is my favorite guitarist to jam with, and now we have another opportunity to take it to the stage. I feel as though we are both at the top of our game, and the show will be a powerful celebration of the coolest instrument in the world, the electric guitar!” – Steve

The Joe Satriani & Steve Vai VIP Package includes (where available):

• One premium reserved seat
• Early entry into the venue
• Intimate pre-show Q&A with Joe Satriani & Steve Vai
• Exclusive group photo in front of the stage with Joe Satriani & Steve Vai
• Collectible tour poster; autographed by Joe Satriani & Steve Vai
• Satriani & Vai commemorative ticket
• Satriani & Vai VIP laminate with lanyard
• VIP On-site host
• Limited availability

For ticket and VIP links, head here.

SatchVai Band shows (more dates to be announced):

June
13 – York, England – Barbican
14 – London, England – Eventim Apollo
17 – Glasgow, Scotland – Glasgow Royal Concert Hall
18 – Wolverhampton, England – Civic Hall
19 – Manchester, England – O2 Apollo
21 – Clisson, France – Hellfest
22 – Paris, France – Palais Des Congres
23, – Antwerp, Belgium – Lotto Arena
24 – Amsterdam, Netherlands – Amsterdam Afas
26 – Copenhagen, Denmark – Amager Bio
29 – Helsinki, Finland – House of Culture
30 – Tampere, Finland – Tampere Hall

July
2 – Uppsala, Sweden – Parksnackan
3 – Oslo, Norway – Sentrum Scene
5 – Warsaw, Poland – orwar
8 – Munich, Germany – Tollwood Festival
10 – Dusseldorf, Germany – Mitsubishi Electric Hall
11 – Frankfurt, Germany – Jahrhunderthalle
12 – Zurich, Switzerland – Volkshaus Zurich
13 – Milan, Italy – Comfort Festival @ Villa Casati Stampa
15, – Pordenone, Italy – Pordenone Blues & Co Festival @ Parco San Valentino
16 – Perugia, Italy – Umbria Jazz Festival
17 – Bologna, Italy – Sequoie Music Park
18 – Saint-Julien, France – Guitare en Scene Festival
20 – Prague, Czech Republic – Forum Karlin
22 – Sofia, Bulgaria – National Palace of Culture


KERRY KING Announces European Tour 2025

KERRY KING Announces European Tour 2025

Slayer guitarist Kerry King and his solo band – drummer Paul Bostaph (Slayer), bassist Kyle Sanders (Hellyeah), guitarist Phil Demmel (Machine Head), and vocalist Mark Osegueda (Death Angel) – have announced their “European Tour 2025”. King and band are touring in support of Kerry’s debut solo album, From Hell I Rise (RPM).

The European dates kick off on July 29 in Frankfurt, Germany, and are currently scheduled to wrap up on August 19 in Krakow, Poland.

European dates:

July
29 – Zoom Saal – Frankfurt, Germany *
30 – Simm City – Wien, Austria *

August
1 – Rockstadt Extreme – Transylvania, Romania *
4 – Komplex 457 – Zürich, Switzerland *
6-9 – Brutal Assault Festival – Jaromer, Czech Republic
7 – FZW – Dortmund, Germany *
8-10 – Alcatraz Festival – Kortrijk, Belgium
12 – Academy 2 – Manchester, UK *
13 – SWX – Bristol, UK *
14-17 – Motocultor Festival – Carhaix, France
17 – Dynamo Festival – Eindhoven, Netherlands
19 – Tauron Arena – Krakow, Poland *#

* Newly announced shows
# Supporting Gojira

King will hit the road for the twenty-eight date “North American Headline Tour 2025”. With Municipal Waste as Special Guest and Alien Weaponry supporting, the tour is set to launch in San Francisco on January 15, and wrap at House of Blues in Las Vegas on February 22. Tickets can be purchased here. The complete itinerary is below.

“Getting back on the road for the first time in five years wasn’t exactly like riding a bike, that’s for sure,” King acknowledged. “I’ve never had that much time off, but the first tours with my new band – in the UK and Europe, and then in America with Lamb of God and Mastodon – were all total blasts. We’ll be headlining on this next tour, so we’re playing a longer set than we did with Lamb of God and Mastodon. We’ve got a little bit of a learning curve, so will start rehearsing the first week of November. And we might put an extra Slayer song into the set and learn a cover song or two.”

North American dates:

January
15 – The Regency Ballroom – San Francisco, CA
17 – Spokane Live Casino – Spokane, WA
18 – Showbox SoDo – Seattle, WA
19 – Roseland Theater – Portland, OR
20 – Commodore Ballroom – Vancouver, BC (Canada)
22 – The Palace Theatre – Calgary, AB (Canada)
23 – Midway Music Hall – Edmonton, AB (Canada)
25 – Burton Cummings Theatre – Winnipeg, MB (Canada)
26 – The Fillmore – Minneapolis, MN
28 – The Rave – Milwaukee, WI
30 – The Majestic Theater – Detroit, MI
31 – House of Blues – Cleveland, OH

February
1 – Danforth Music Hall – Toronto, ON (Canada)
2 – L’Olympia – Montreal, QC (Canada)
4 – Royale – Boston, MA
5 – Theatre of the Living Arts – Philadelphia, PA
7 – Irving Plaza – New York, NY
8 – Baltimore Soundstage – Baltimore, MD
10 – Buckhead Theatre – Atlanta, GA
11 – Jannus Live – St. Petersburg, FL
13 – House of Blues – Houston, TX
14 – Emo’s –  Austin, TX
15 – The Studio at the Factory – Dallas, TX
17 – Ogden Theatre – Denver, CO
18 – Sunshine Theater – Albuquerque, NM
19 – The Nile Theater – Phoenix, AZ
 21 – House of Blues – Las Vegas, NV
 22 – The Fonda Theatre – Los Angeles, CA

(Photo – Jim Louvau)


THE DEAD DAISIES Share 2024 Recap Video, Part 1

December 10, 2024, 21 hours ago

news hard rock the dead daisies

THE DEAD DAISIES Share 2024 Recap Video, Part 1

The Dead Daises have released Part 1 of their 2024 recap video series. Watch below.

Says the band: “We’ve had an incredible 2024 thanks to you guys!🤟🙏🤟 Check out Part 1 where we kicked off in Nashville recording our Light ‘Em Up album then onto rehearsals in NY and our US Tour!🚀😎🚀 Where did the year go, only 15 days to Christmas!! 🎄🎅🎊 Yikes!!”

The Dead Daisies’ new album, Light ‘Em Up, lands at #29 on our BravePicks 2024 Top 30. Follow the countdown here. The release is available to order here.

Light ‘Em Up tracklisting:

“Light ‘Em Up”
“Times Are Changing”
“I Wanna Be Your Bitch”
“I’m Gonna Ride”
“Back To Zero”
“Way Back Home”
“Take A Long Line”
“My Way And The Highway”
“Love That’ll Never Be”
“Take My Soul”

“I’m Gonna Ride” (Revamped) video:

“I Wanna Be Your Bitch” video:

“I’m Gonna Ride” video:

“Light ‘Em Up” video: