The legendary Savatage (Johnny Lee Middleton – bass, Chris Caffery – guitars, Al Pitrelli – guitars, Jeff Plate – drums, and Zak Stevens – vocals) have announced tour dates across Europe for summer 2025, with a mix of festival appearances and headline shows.
Says Zak Stevens: “As you can imagine, there are so many special things about these shows that are racing through my mind. We get to play a series of headline shows for the first time in over twenty years that will put us right back in front of all of the unbelievable fans who have given us so many unforgettable memories over the last three decades. Here’s our chance to directly give back to everyone who’s been there supporting us all these years! All the great festival shows are going to be off-the-charts amazing. It’s even hard to imagine the scale of excitement that’s going to take place with those shows.”
Savatage mastermind Jon Oliva expressed his disappointment at not being able to join the band for the shows, but shared his excitement, stating: “I am very excited for the guys to be doing some shows. Unfortunately, due to health issues, I will not be able to join the guys for this run. Hopefully, this is just temporary. I will continue working in the studio on new music for the future. These shows will be awesome and I will be working with them to get it all ready for you. I know everyone is going to love it!!! Me and the guys are very excited and ready to kick ass! So from me, thank you all for the support for all these years and we can’t wait to rock you!”
For further details, including ticket/festival links, head to savatage.com. Find a video trailer below.
South American dates:
April 19 – São Paulo, Brazil – Monsters Of Rock 21 – São Paulo, Brazil – Espaço Unimed (Headline Date) 23 – Santiago, Chile – Masters Of Rock
European dates:
June 13 – Leeuwarden, Netherlands – Into The Grave 14 – Oberhausen, Germany – Turbinenhalle (Headline Date) 16 – London, UK – Shepherds Bush Empire (Headline Date) 18 – Zurich, Switzerland – Komplex 457 (Headline Date) 19 – Munich, Germany – Tonhalle (Headline Date) 22 – Dessel, Belgium – Grapop Metal Meeting 24 – Milan, Italy – Alcatraz (Headline Date) 26 – Barcelona, Spain – Rock Fest 28 – Thessaloniki, Greece – Rockwave
“I grew up around rock stars. My dad’s mates were Mark Knopfler and Thin Lizzy… and Christopher Biggins was a mainstay in our house!”: the indie-pop superstar who had a slightly different upbringing than your average frontman
(Image credit: Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives/John Phillips/Getty Images for The Eve Appeal/Michael Putland/Getty Images)
For most singers in bands, their dreams are forged staring at the posters on their walls and by the music blaring out of their speakers. But not for The 1975’s leader Matty Healy. Nope, the charismatic and controversial Matty had an upbringing that was not like yours or mine, unless yours includes having a parent who starred in one of the biggest TV hits of the 80s and juggled having his rock star pals over with the tradie mates he’d made in the pub. Speaking to this writer back in 2014 about his famous parents (his dad is actor Tim Healy and his mother is Loose Women and Coronation Street star Denise Welch), Healy looked back on his childhood home with a little incredulity.
“I grew up around rock stars,” he recalled. “In the 80s, when my dad was in Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, it was like a political figurehead for a movement in Thatcher Britain, the whole going overseas to get work. At that time my dad was a political presence and he was cool and he was from the north-east and his mates were Mark Knopfler and Thin Lizzy, I was a kid and they were my dad’s mates.”
His dad, Healy explained, never had any airs or graces and never forgot his roots. “My dad is very salt of the earth,” he explained. “Everything I’ve ever got, I’ve worked for. My dad’s given me bed and board but he’s rags to riches, I’m not the son of Angelina Jolie, I’ve not had it on a plate.”
The people who stopped off at the family home, he said, were from totally different sides of the spectrum. “I always had this amazing juxtaposition of having a life in the media but surrounded by my dad’s mates, his welder mates. All my extended family are common as muck and awesome, working class. It was a wonderful juxtaposition. The only famous people my dad knows are people he’s worked with: everyone else are people from the pub, people that he met at the darts. I’d be sat at home and all I used to do was watch videos of Michael Jackson, Prince and Otis Redding on repeat. I remember watching a Michael Jackson video and my dad’s mates would be expressing how when they watched it, how unrelatable he was and how much of an alien he is. I remember thinking, aged six, ‘Well I’m a lot more like him than I am like you!’”
Somehow, all those varying influences sunk into Healy, the motormouth singer whose world was spinning on a different axis from the very start. And there was still one more crucial element to add into the mix, Healy saving the best for last. “Christopher Biggins was a mainstay in our house!” he declared, finally lifting the lid on where The 1975 frontman got his taste for theatrical bombast from.
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Niall Doherty is a writer and editor whose work can be found in Classic Rock, The Guardian, Music Week, FourFourTwo, on Apple Music and more. Formerly the Deputy Editor of Q magazine, he co-runs the music Substack letter The New Cue with fellow former Q colleagues Ted Kessler and Chris Catchpole. He is also Reviews Editor at Record Collector. Over the years, he’s interviewed some of the world’s biggest stars, including Elton John, Coldplay, Arctic Monkeys, Muse, Pearl Jam, Radiohead, Depeche Mode, Robert Plant and more. Radiohead was only for eight minutes but he still counts it.
“Don’t blame me for glam metal. Most of those bands played their hairspray cans better than their instruments”: The wild story of Hanoi Rocks’ Back To Mystery City, the glam-punk classic that helped invent Guns N’ Roses
(Image credit: Mike Prior/Redferns)
Early 80s glam-punk peacocks Hanoi Rocks were one of Finland’s biggest musical exports. The five studio albums they released between their formation in 1979 and their split in 1985 were an influence on Guns N’ Roses, Poison and even Alice In Chains. But it’s their fourth album, 1983’s Back To Mystery City, that captured them at their best. In 2013, singer Mike Monroe and guitarist Andy McCoy looked back on the making of a cult classic.
Led by blond bombshell Mike Monroe and his guitar-slinging partner in crime Andy McCoy, Hanoi Rocks were skinny motherfuckers from Helsinki who slithered out of the London gloom and saved rock’n’roll with an album that was equal parts Shangri-Las, Johnny Thunders and the MC5.
Irresistible, chiming, good-vibe anthems like Mental Beat and Malibu Beach Nightmare promised ice cream, endless summers and a million pretty girls, and everything, quite suddenly, was gonna be thoroughly alright. Back To Mystery City was both warm and familiar and shiny and new all at once, a glittering diamond in a sea of scuzz.
If you’re too young or have suffered too many wasted years to remember 1983, here’s a recap: it was grim. Post-punk and pre-party metal, if it wasn’t on Top Of The Pops in ’83, it was down on the streets with the skinheads and the goths, a joyless division of bored youth and rabble-rousers.
At that point, Hanoi Rocks had already been together for four years and had released two albums to various degrees of success, mostly at home in Finland and Sweden. But Hanoi Rocks wanted the world. And the world, in 1983, started in London.
“I’d already basically made it to multi-platinum status by the age of 18 in Finland,” drawls a sleepy Andy McCoy from his kitchen in Helsinki. A teenage McCoy had joined Finnish punk band Pelle Miljoona Oy during their most successful period, and had reaped the rewards. “So of course, you realise you’re restricted by the borders of one country. So the first thing for us was to get out of Helsinki and go to Stockholm, where I grew up.”
“We wanted to get as far away as possible because we were afraid we were going to get stuck in Finland,” adds Mike Monroe, also in Helsinki. “We used to play these weekend shows here where people would just get completely shitfaced, so it was useless to rehearse new material because people couldn’t even tell if you sounded like shit or if the song was good or bad. Half the time they didn’t even know what band was playing.
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“When me and Andy started the whole idea of Hanoi Rocks, basically the idea was to get the hell out of Helsinki. Helsinki in the late 70s, it was dangerous to walk around… we just wanted to get the fuck out of there.”
Since McCoy had already lived in Stockholm, it was up to him to set the band up in their new city. He left and called the band to meet him a couple of weeks later. Monroe, bass player Sami Yaffa and guitarist Nasty Suicide all met up with McCoy outside a subway station.
“McCoy says, ‘Well, this is it,’” Monroe recalls, “And we’re like, ‘This is it?’ We were at a fuckin’ subway station. He said, ‘We can practise inside the station and we can live on the street.’ Well, okay. I mean, how much did we need, really? We just started panhandling for money.”
McCoy had it a little easier. He had a girlfriend in Stockholm and was living comfortably. The rest of the band survived on shoplifting chickens and sleeping on couches during weekend-long parties.
“I remember at one point Nasty had no socks,” Monroe laughs. “He had creepers with no laces, so he was walking like he was skiing, just to keep them on. But in a way, it was probably the happiest, coolest time of my life, because I had nothing to lose. No one could take anything away from me because I didn’t have anything. All I had was a suitcase, a cardboard box and a great rock’n’roll band. That was all I needed. I was sure I was going to make a million dollars, and if I get a roof over my head, hell, that’d be a luxury.”
Things were looking bleak, but help was on the way. Back in Finland, the band had met a fledgling manager/promoter named Zeppo. He was interested in working with the band but vanished to Turkey for six months, vowing to catch up with them later.
“So he came to see us in Stockholm six months later when we were living in the streets,” Monroe says, “and he booked us some gigs in Finland, and that’s how we first starting making some income. He went to London because he was looking for a partner or something, and he ended up becoming partners with this guy over there named Richard Bishop, and he started getting us shows in London.”
Of course, some serious lifestyle adjustments had to be made. Hanoi were famous back home. In London? Not so much. “It was hard, starting all over again,” McCoy says. “I remember the first club gig we did in London, I think we had three paying customers. A few other people got in for free, and I’ll never forget it, there was this three-legged, half-blind dog walking around.”
“At first we’d play a few shows in London and then we’d go back to Stockholm,” says Monroe. “But we got more gigs, so we started staying in seedy hotels in London, and eventually we got a flat. Our first shows when we came back, we did three shows opening for Wishbone Ash, of all people. The first show was about two or three thousand people, and I don’t think they knew we were the opening band. We came out and everybody started cheering, and then they turned the lights on and it was total silence. Just silence.”
“But hey, things started turning for the better pretty fast,” says McCoy.
Indeed they did. But first, the band needed to write and record a new album, one that would shake London to the rafters and make rock’n’roll safe for gypsies, tramps and thieves once more. And that’s exactly what happened. But before that, there was some ugliness to endure. The still-broke band set up camp in natty London suburb Tooting Bec. Immortalised on Back To Mystery City in the iconic Tooting Bec Rec, the Hanoi band house was a cesspool of angry neighbours and snapping vermin.
“God, that’s a shit town,” McCoy laughs. “It was a dreadful, dreary place to live. We moved out when the rats moved in. London in the early 80s, it was rainy, gloomy, bleak. That song is very introspective, lyrically. That’s how it felt living in a shithole like Tooting Bec and not having much money.”
Still, the band carried on. Back To Mystery City was recorded in early 1983. The songs were written, mostly, by McCoy.
“Yeah, I wrote about 95 per cent of the album,” he remembers. “Mike co-wrote Beating Gets Faster. The rest of them, best as I recall, are mine. Lyrically, that whole record is like a diary of my life at that time.”
“Stiv Bators [Dead Boys/Lords Of The New Church singer] would give me a lot of pointers for song arranging when we were making that album,” Monroe says. “Like on Until I Get You, he told me that I should think about it until I’m in tears, and then sing it. So at the end of that song, I really am in tears, crying. I was bawling my eyes out. I had a situation in my life, I had a relationship that went bad, and I was really heartbroken, so it was for real. I hadn’t really started writing yet. I hadn’t come into my own as a songwriter back then, because Andy really wrote most of the stuff and it was good, and if I had an idea, he’d usually go, ‘Yeah, that’s good, but I’ve got something better,’ so eventually I’d give up.”
Occasionally, however, Monroe’s influence would pop up on the record.
“Like Malibu Beach Nightmare,” he says. “The original version was a joke song, it was sung like Ian Dury, and the back-up vocals were like the Chipmunks, just a joke. And then one day, we were on the tour bus and I said to Andy, ‘How about we play it like the Ramones?’ So we gave it a rock’n’roll arrangement, and we started playing it live, and that became our first single on the album.”
Interestingly, given the band’s penchant for the perils of rock’n’roll decadence, there’s a wide-eyed innocence to the songs on Back To Mystery City. Squint a little, and it almost feels like a 50s doo-wop record.
“I was always a big fan of that shit,” says McCoy. “I’ve always loved 50s and early 60s rock’n’roll, the girl groups and so forth. So that was in there.”
The album was produced by Dale Griffin and Paul ‘Overend’ Watts, better known as Mott the Hoople’s founding rhythm section.
“We always loved Mott The Hoople as a band,” McCoy explains. “We wanted to sound like us, without anyone screwing it up. Overend and Dale started hanging out with us, they checked out a few gigs, and they were just the right choice. They really dug the band in a genuine way and we got along like a house on fire, so it came together pretty easily.”
There was another important new element to Hanoi during the Mystery sessions: their new drummer, Nicholas ‘Razzle’ Dingley, a gangly, happy-go-lucky charmer known, if at all, for his go-nowhere metal band The Dark, or a couple of buzzy punk singles with Demon Preacher, a band he formed with future Alien Sex Fiend, Nik Fiend. Razzle was recruited after the band were forced to fire their long-time drummer Gyp Casino, who was struggling with drug addiction at the time.
“There were moments when he would just stop playing in the middle of a song and walk out of the studio and go walk around the block to cool down or whatever,” Monroe remembers. “Once, in the middle of a show in Finland, Andy started yelling at a roadie about something, and Gyp jumps up from his drumset, walks across the stage and punches Andy in the face. In the middle of the fuckin’ show. Talk about timing. I mean, if you wanna kick the guy’s ass, wait until the show is over, at least. Or after we get paid, even better. But by that time, it had become obvious that Gyp wasn’t really part of the band any more.”
“He was being fired to protect himself from himself,” says McCoy. “Nowadays he’s got himself together and he’s really a wonderful guy and a wonderful friend, but it got pretty bad there at the end. It was a hard, hard thing to fire a good friend, but it had to be done for the band to continue.”
Luckily for the band, Razzle fitted right in.
“I met Razzle at a Johnny Thunders show at the Marquee, but I was in such a state at the time that I didn’t remember,” laughs Monroe. “I met him again at the Zig Zag Club and he was like, ‘Don’t you remember me? We talked in the bathroom at the Thunders show,’ and I was like, ‘Uh, yeah, sure.’ And he said, ‘I told you, I’m your drummer. Your band is great, and you gotta pick me as your drummer. Your drummer sucks, where is he? Cuz I’m gonna break his fuckin’ legs…’ So we’re thinking about drummers, and Andy says to me, ‘There’s this guy that’s been harassing me about being our drummer.’ Turns out it was the same guy. So we gave him an audition. Technically, he wasn’t the greatest drummer, but he had such cool style. I mean, he wore platform shoes to the audition. That’s not ideal for playing drums.”
“He was a funny guy, he got the humour back in the band,” McCoy remembers. “We had toured pretty constantly since we started, and I think the sense of humour went out the window for a while. Razzle brought it back. He was a barrel of laughs.”
The album was recorded at a residential studio. They were in and out in three weeks. The end result was perhaps Hanoi’s finest hour, and their most well-liked album – for most people.
“Our next record, Two Steps From The Move, that was the first Hanoi record I could listen to without squirming,” Monroe says, “Without going, ‘Man, I wish Andy had sung that part instead of me,’ you know, because of whatever corny thing he was doing. I mean, Lick Summer Love? It’s supposed to be cool and sleazy, but it’s really not. This album, it was fun to make, but it didn’t really sound like the best we could do. I’m glad people think so highly of it, though.”
Hanoi Rocks – Until I Get You @ Marquee 1983 HQ – YouTube
Back To Mystery City was released in May 1983. It reached 87 on the UK charts, which is nothing, really, but the damage was done. The entire landscape of the London rock scene changed soon after. Glamour was back. As was authentic, good-time rock’n’roll.
“When we first arrived, you had your Oi! scene, which was just coming up around then,” McCoy says. “Punk was just dying out, and I suppose there really wasn’t anything new happening at the time, except us. Because of Hanoi, a whole wave of new bands started coming up.”
Of course, by that point, even London was too small for Hanoi. “It got really busy,” McCoy says. “We did a lot of live shows, and that’s when it really started to take off. We played everywhere.”
“We were really the darlings of the press at that time,” Monroe says. “Everybody loved Hanoi Rocks in the music papers, but we were getting sent to the weirdest countries to play. You’d think they’d send us to Europe to play for fans in places like France or Italy or Spain, but that’s not where we went – we went to fuckin’ far east India. We went to Bombay and New Delhi, and then we went to Hong Kong, and we ended up doing a whole week in Tel Aviv. We stayed there a whole week and played every night at a club that was around the corner from the hotel, and we barely got out of the country. We had to pay a huge fine for damages, and there was a headline in the paper about us: ‘Havoc in the Holy Land!’”
“That’s around the time we started to notice people were noticing us,” McCoy says. “You reach a point where you’re like, ‘Shit, I can’t hang out where I used to because people won’t leave me alone.’”
You know the rest of the story. By the end of 1983, Hanoi Rocks were huge in Japan and big everywhere else. Turns out there really were a million girls waiting for ’em, so they chased them around the world for a year, until Razzle’s untimely death in December of ’84 essentially ended the band. By that time, Hollywood had stolen Hanoi’s dimmest bits and used them to create the monster known as glam metal.
“People were calling me The King Of Glam,” laughs Monroe. “I always just said we were a rock’n’roll band. I don’t want to be responsible for glam. I don’t think people should dress like me. Most people would look silly dressed like me. People should just try and be themselves. People wanted to blame me for the glam movement in LA. Don’t blame me for that shit. Most of those bands played their hairspray cans better than their instruments.”
The fellas in the band formed offshoots, released solo records, went to rehab. They even got back together for a few years. “Yeah, we had a rebirth, or a ‘regurge’, more accurately,” laughs Monroe. “Me and Andy had met each other after I moved back to Finland after living for 10 years in Manhattan. This was around 1996 or something, and over the next couple of years, we kinda got reacquainted.
“We got to know each other in a different way, and he had gained a lot of respect for my solo career. By that time, my solo career had been longer than Hanoi’s career. We were getting along and I thought, ‘Let’s see what we can accomplish at this point in our lives.’ We ended up doing three albums, but it ran its course and it really wasn’t fun any more, so we decided to end without any arguments or falling outs. We did a farewell tour, and that was it.”
For Monroe, his solo career remains high profile and high intensity. As for McCoy, he spent some time as a reality TV star before returning to his first love, painting. He has since tried to keep rock’n’roll at bay. It’s not working. It stands to reason that the surviving members of Hanoi Rocks might be tempted to relive the former glories of Back To Mystery City. But Mike Monroe is decisive on this matter.
“No,” he says, emphatically. “I can’t see us getting together to do anything, never mind Mystery City. The original Hanoi Rocks is the only Hanoi Rocks worth mentioning in the rock’n’roll history books. Hanoi Rocks will never get back together.”
McCoy is slightly more receptive to the idea. “It might be OK for a couple gigs, but after that, I mean, why? That’d be the big question,” he shrugs. “I’d rather play new stuff. “
Probably, I suggest, because lots of people want to revisit 1983.
“Well, they still haven’t invented a time machine,” chuckles McCoy, “so I don’t see the point. Call me when they do.”
Originally published in Classic Rock issue 187, July 2013
What do you get the man who has everything? It is a question that the members of Metallica probably ask each other every time it’s one of their birthdays. “He’s in Metallica,” they probably say, “what more could he possibly want?” And then they go and devise some plan that only influential and famous hard rock stars can, and arrange for a rock legend to pie their unsuspecting bandmate in the face with a birthday cake. That’ll do.
Metallica’s Robert Trujillo can verify this, for it was the bassist whose face was on the receiving end of a wad of sponge and icing back in 2016. Metallica were appearing at Neil Young’s annual charity bash the Bridge School Benefit in 2016, playing on October 23, Trujillo’s birthday. They ended their short, nine-song set performing a cover of Buffalo Springfield’s Mr. Soul with Young himself, and it was at the song’s end that the Rockin’ In The Free World icon decided to give Trujillo his birthday present.
“The most surreal moment of my life was when Neil Young pied me,” Trujillo told this writer last year. “I didn’t think I was gonna get pied that night. We were doing the song with Neil and who pies me first? Neil does, like, ‘Happy birthday!’. I was like, ‘This is really crazy.’”
The pieing occurred on the last note of the set, Trujillo recalled. “I’m looking at Neil and it’s almost like in slow motion,” he laughed. “I just see a pie hit me in the grill.”
The bassist said it was one of many memories he’d always treasure. “All those kinds of experiences have been really special,” he said. “Sometimes you’ve got to pinch yourself and realise this is the reality and it’s pretty special. I don’t think things for granted, I always understand what it takes to get here and how fortunate we are.”
Luckily, the event is not just stored inside Trujillo’s memory as it was captured on camera too. Witness the Young/Metallica team-up and consequent cake attack below:
Metallica: Mr. Soul (Bridge School Benefit, Mountain View, CA – October 23, 2016) – YouTube
In 2016 Prog marked the incredible career of Greg Lake by selecting 10 essential songs that illustrate his extraordinary musical journey.
In the solo live shows of his last years, Greg Lake enjoyed reminiscing over his colourful career. His eyewitness anecdotes of hanging out with The Beatles, Hendrix, The Who et al were illuminating and irreverent.
But it was a youthful visit to an Elvis gig which gave him humility. He found it both elating and depressing because, he said, “I realised I’d never be that good. But you just have to accept who you are and make the best of it.” He paused. “It didn’t turn out so bad.”
Lake’s was an extraordinary musical journey, from the pioneering sounds of King Crimson through Emerson, Lake & Palmer’s period of world domination and on to a solo career mastheaded by that Christmas song.
Shy Limbs – Love (1969)
Psychedelic keyboard-laden wig-outs inspired by A Whiter Shade Of Pale were common in loved-up late 60s England, and Dorset was not immune. Lake sang and played multiple instruments in this youthful learning-curve outfit, and while their single’s A-side Reputation is the trippier treat, Lake’s the singer on the b-side, Love, which displays his awareness of Chris Squire’s sky-high bass stylings. The band managed two singles before fame came calling for one member…
King Crimson – The Court Of The Crimson King (1969)
A schoolmate of Robert Fripp, Lake was primarily a guitarist when persuaded by Fripp to join King Crimson as bassist after Giles, Giles and Fripp imploded. They soon realised he could carry a tune too, and tasked him with singing on the debut album, In The Court Of The Crimson King, a monolithic landmark released a few months after Crimson’s first gig – supporting the Stones in front of half a million people at Hyde Park. For many, this neurotic nine-minute innovation was the dawning of prog.
King Crimson – The Court Of The Crimson King – YouTube
That debut album’s opener – “an uncanny masterpiece”, said The Who’s Pete Townshend – remains its most recognised calling card, and Lake’s treated, distorted vocals, singing Pete Sinfield’s lyrics about evil politicians, napalm and funeral pyres, evoke levels of fear and loathing which took rock into uncharted territory. “If it sounded popular”, declared Sinfield, “it was out”. Its nervy, counter-intuitive power transcended genre: some have said it foreshadowed grunge, while in 2010 even Kanye West sampled it.
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Emerson, Lake & Palmer – Lucky Man (1970)
The big kahuna of supergroups, ELP brought together the trio of ex-The Nice keyboard wizard Keith Emerson, ex-Atomic Rooster drummer Carl Palmer and Lake, who’d agreed to sing on the second Crimson album in exchange for their PA equipment. This ELP instantly put to good use, playing the Isle Of Wight Festival and winning an Atlantic deal. Their debut album saw classics and pomp, but Lake’s gentle folk ballad closed it. When Emerson returned from the pub, he whacked that insane Moog solo over the end.
Emerson, Lake & Palmer – Lucky Man (Live) – YouTube
Emerson, Lake & Palmer – Still… You Turn Me On (1973)
Lake would joke in later years that his softer ballads offered something for the ladies among all the nerd-friendly toccata and trickery of ELP’s indisputably complex, probably excessive, noodlings. The epic Brain Salad Surgery album kick-started their biggest world tour yet and took its title – Someone Get Me A Ladder – from this number. Those random bursts of wah-wah guitar remind us that you can never confidently predict where an ELP track might go next.
Emerson, Lake & Palmer – Still…You Turn Me On (Official Audio) – YouTube
Emerson, Lake & Palmer – Karn Evil 9: 1st Impression, Part 2 (1973)
The sort of thing which got prog a bad name but which now seems increasingly bold and ambitious in our age of beige conservatism. Karn Evil 9 is half an hour long in total but its best section is this, offering up their catchphrase “Welcome back my friends to the show that never ends…” A nebulous concept about computers scheming against unwitting humans – topical much? – it showcases the trio’s musicianship to riotous, ridiculous effect.
Emerson, Lake & Palmer – Karn Evil 9 1st Impression Part 2 (Official Audio) – YouTube
Not content with being in one of the world’s biggest, loudest bands, Lake almost accidentally released what’s become a Christmas evergreen pop single. Thwarted from reaching the Number 1 spot only by Bohemian Rhapsody, it was co-written with fellow Crimson alumnus Sinfield, and the pair have given differing views on whether it’s pro- or anti- religion. Certainly it has a straight-faced gravitas – and a dash of Prokofiev – which has kept it beloved for four decades plus.
Greg Lake – I Believe In Father Christmas (Official Video) – YouTube
The fifth ELP studio album, a double, saw the band taking charge of a side each and luckily landing on Fanfare For The Common Man on Side Four, thus enjoying their biggest hit single right at the peak of punk. So much for logic. Lake wrote Side Two with Pete Sinfield, indulging his acoustic ballad side. Its autumnal, almost Gallic melancholy is a long way from Robert Fripp and even further from the Bucks Fizz lyrics Sinfield was to move on to. As always, Lake sings with sweet sincerity.
Emerson, Lake & Powell – Touch And Go (1986)
With Palmer having moved on to Asia (Lake had a brief spell with them too), Emerson and Lake elected to reform, after seven years apart, with a new drummer. In Cozy Powell they found the ideal choice as they didn’t even have to change their acronym. Their solitary album found, perhaps oddly, a huge cult following among fans of Japanese wrestling, in which world their track The Score is an anthem. Touch And Go, based on an old folk song, is retooled into 80s AOR with a glossy sheen and a gutsy underbelly.
Greg Lake – Nuclear Attack (1981)
Lake’s debut solo album saw him teaming up with guitarist Gary Moore, who wrote this opening salvo (E Street Band sax hero Clarence Clemons was also on the album’s guest list). It’s closer to Moore’s hard-rocking Thin Lizzy days than almost anything else in Lake’s output, though the album also took detours through Dylan and Smokey Robinson songs. The pair powered through another album, Manoeuvres, two years later. Back-to-roots stuff from the teenage Johnny Kidd fan.
Chris Roberts has written about music, films, and art for innumerable outlets. His new book The Velvet Underground is out April 4. He has also published books on Lou Reed, Elton John, the Gothic arts, Talk Talk, Kate Moss, Scarlett Johansson, Abba, Tom Jones and others. Among his interviewees over the years have been David Bowie, Iggy Pop, Patti Smith, Debbie Harry, Bryan Ferry, Al Green, Tom Waits & Lou Reed. Born in North Wales, he lives in London.
Following his recent tour with Pop Evil and Bad Wolves and a steady stream of alternative metal bangers this year, Canadian metal visionary Oni will kick off 2025 with a new EP, Genesis, due out January 24.
Today, founding mastermind Jake Oni has revealed a new single and lyric video called “Realign,” which was co-produced by him and Josh Gilbert (Spiritbox). For his latest track, Oni is leaving the lyrical interpretation to listeners, stating, “I want the fans to decide what this song means to them, this is a personal song to me.”
Oni’s EP follow-up to 2023’s acclaimed record The Silver Line will feature 5 tracks including the new single “Realign,” recent tracks “Deja Vu,” “Walk Away, and “Control” plus the unreleased song “Erase.”
Fantoons launch their special Rush Christmas bundle with the following message:
“Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays, dear friends! We’re dropping the ultimate gift this Christmas, putting Santa and his workshop to shame. In your face, old man (Sorry, we’re still not over receiving a Stretch Armstrong that didn’t stretch backin ‘76.)
“Introducing our Rush Special Christmas Bundle! This epic bundle includes many of our Rush greatest hits: Signals Enamel Mug, Flakes Under Pressure Decorative Cereal Box, Postcards Pack, Moving Pictures Christmas Cards, Where’s Geddy, Alex, And Neil?, and the Major Lee Bassball Enamel Pin!
“This bundle is limited to the holiday season, so grab yours now and give some progressively rockin’ joy this Christmas!”
My Dying Bride are thrilled to announce their return to the stage in 2025. After a small “hiatus”, live shows are set to recommence, featuring a very special guest on vocals – Mikko Kotamäki from Swallow The Sun.
A message states: “We warmly welcome Mikko, who has graciously joined the MDB live setup, enabling us to bring both new and classic songs back to the stage. With this year’s monumental album A Mortal Binding now well into establishing itself as a doom metal success, the band are at last ready to promote it live along with seasoned classics of course.”
The band is excited to announce one show already with more to come: July 3 at Rockmaraton Festival in Dunaújváros, Hungary. Stay tuned for further announcements.
The band’s latest album, A Mortal Binding, can be streamed/ordered here.
Axe Heaven are offering a 20% discount on their Rush Ornaments Set of 3 (Bass, Guitar, and Starman Crimson Red Mini Drum) through Monday, December 9. Use code RUSH3 at checkout (or click any link to activate 20% discount). Order here.
Rush Ornament set of 3 includes, Geddy Lee Bass, Alex Lifeson Gibson Guitar, and Neil’s Starman Crimson Red Mini 3.5″ Bass Drum Ornaments – handcrafted with all the details just like the real instruments! Hang this ornament from your Christmas tree, rearview mirror, amp, or even a real drum kit!
– 1 x FJ-90061 – 6″ Fender® Geddy Lee Black Jazz Bass Ornament – 1 x GG-859AH – 6″ Gibson Alex Lifeson Signature ES-355 Alpine White Mini Guitar Ornament – 1 x NP-035 – Rush Starman Crimson Red Mini 3.5″ Bass Drum Ornament
Axe Heaven has created handcrafted Rush miniature guitars, basses, and drums to commemorate the bands iconic instruments. All guitars are officially licensed by Rush.
Axe Heaven has created officially licensed Rush one-of-a-kind miniature replica models to commemorate their iconic instruments. Each Axe Heaven ornament replica is individually handcrafted from solid wood, with metal parts.
Each Axe Heaven replica guitar / bass is 6″ in height and the drum approximately 3.5″ in width and comes complete with a Axe Heaven gift box stamped with gold foil. Axe Heaven Miniature Replicas look great, but are not playable.
Metallica have issued the following update in regards to their Helping Hands Concert & Auction, taking place in Los Angeles on December 13:
“Helping Hands 2024 is just one short week away. We’re psyched to announce that our friends Sammy Hagar, Michael Anthony, Joe Satriani, and Kenny Aronoff will take the stage in support of All Within My Hands this year! Also lending their incredible talent to the event is SistaStrings, the sisters turned classically-trained duo named 2023’s “best instrumentalist” by the Americana Music Association!
“If you’re coming to the show, you won’t want to miss a minute, so don’t be late. The show starts at 6 PM, PT SHARP. See you next Friday at YouTube Theater.”
Metallica adds: “AWMH’s latest sweepstakes with our friends at Fandiem will give one winner a trip to Los Angeles and priority tickets to a taping of Jimmy Kimmel Live! Also included is green room access, a behind-the-scenes tour of the set, a meet-and-greet with Jimmy, and a chance to sit at his desk on stage. You won’t need to worry about travel or lodging; the prize includes round-trip travel and a two-night hotel stay for two. The lucky winner will also receive a five-piece luggage package by BÉIS, the ultimate travel gear and accessories for the modern traveler!
“Donation options start as low as $10, plus a free entry method. All donations support AWMH’s mission to create sustainable communities by supporting workforce education, the fight against hunger, and other critical local services.
“Sweepstakes ends Friday, December 20, at 11:59 PM, PT. Open to legal residents of the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, and Mexico only. Must be 18 or older to win.”