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Interviews

36 Crazyfists Interview

With the release of new album ‘The Tide And Its Takers‘ on Ferret Records, 36 Crazyfists hit the road in the UK this summer in support of their new album. Aaron Coe caught up with frontman turned tour manager Brock Lindow at The Junction in Cambridge following the closure of the Barfly only a few days previous over a quick beer to discuss Jackie Chan and Download Festival amongst all those other important things.

Tonight is the last night of the UK tour, has has everything been on the road?

Excellent, It’s been great, we always love playing the UK so it has been a lot of fun.

As this is 36 Crazyfist’s first time in Cambridge, have you had a chance to check out the town, have a wander around?

Yeah, but not not too much. Had a wander over the bridge, got something to eat in the little courtyard thing round the corner, but not really too much. All I know is it’s a big college town. I don’t even know which way the town is.

After tonight your off to Europe for a while and back in the States touring till the end of the summer, what are the plans after this? Are you going to take a break, get back into the studio, what’s the plan?

Well really, we’re on tour all the way till next summer, even past that. It will probably be well over a year of touring. The record came out. Were in the States till Christmas and we have Christmas and New Year off, then we’re back over here to do some headline shows, then Europe, Australia, Japan, and South East Asia.

Wow, South East Asia. Not many bands get the chance to play to that part of the world?

Yeah but I’ll be stoked when we get to go there. I have no idea what the rock/metal scene is like there, but hey.

What happened with Roadrunner Records? There have been a few bands who have been quite vocal about Roadrunner after they’ve left the label…

I think as the years went on we got lost in the shuffle on the US side of things. It’s a big business and if your not generating X amount of record sales you kind of fall to the wayside and that’s the unfortunate side of the business, but I get it and became aware of it as the years went on so no harm no foul. They let us go graciously and helped us get onto Ferret; they’re still friends of ours. It’s just a little better place to be at Ferret where it’s a little more low key – a bit more hands on – people who actually work the label are also in bands; there aren’t any suits looking for radio airplay. I’m not bad mouthing Roadrunner by any means but Ferret is just a better fit for us.

So your happy and everything is stable to stay with Ferret for the foreseeable future?

Yeah, we couldn’t be happier to be there. It’s the best place we could be for sure. That is unless someone offers us $1 million or something!

What was the decision making behind letting Steve be the full time producer on the new record, although he has co-produced a lot of your records?

Well as you know he has co-produced the last 2 records. He’s always done the pre-production, and does some producing with local bands where he lives. I guess Roadrunner never paid enough attention to him, maybe they didn’t have complete faith in him to do a good job; although we always did. So when we got to Ferret we said “Hey Steve is recording the new record” and they simply nodded and said “ride on“.

What was it like when you first started the band? How difficult was it getting shows in Alaska as it seems so isolated from the mainland US?

It’s definitely removed from the rest of the lower 48, I guess the world too. We’re kinda like the big fish in a small pond up there; we’re friends with a lot of people putting on shows so its easy to get shows. There’s an awesome music scene up there – really good.

A lot of the time you can be seen sporting an Alaska t-shirt. Do you all still live in Alaska or have you relocated due to the band?

I’m the only one that really lives there right now. The drummer is in the process of moving back and the bass player and guitar player live in Portland, Oregon.

Have you heard much press or feedback about the album yet?

Not too much to be honest with you, besides our MySpace page, which has been really positive, but I haven’t seen any reviews or anything like that.

How has the new material been going down live, Is it mixing well into the live show?

It’s been excellent, they’ve been going down real well. I think MySpace is a nice tool for getting songs known. The record come out only a few weeks ago but a lot of people have been listening to the new music for a while on MySpace. So yeah they’ve been doing really great.

Why did you opt to bring an EP so close to the album release?

That’s another one of the really cool things Ferret did which I know Roadrunner wouldn’t have done. When the album release date had to be pushed back again they came to us and said “We’ll put out a 3 song EP and get people hyped up about the record”. We were just so happy they were willing to do that so that was the reason behind it.

How was playing the Download Festival this year as you’ve been there a few times?

Yeah, it was our third time playing there. If you think about the grand scheme of things, how many bands there are in the world to get asked to play such a prestigious event; we felt honoured, it’s killer. It was our second time playing the main stage, so that was pretty crazy in itself. There’s a lot of people there. This was our best year, the previous time we played I was shitty, was sick, everything was messed up, so it wasn’t as good but this time….I had vengeance.

The band name comes from the Jackie Chan film of the same name, are there any other Jackie Chan films you guys still bring on tour?

I did go through a big Jackie phase in the early days of the band, I haven’t been following him that much lately but I love the Rush Hour films, The Big Brawl, Drunken Master, Fist Of Fury. To be honest, I was a really big Bruce Lee fan before the band started, so I knew all about Bruce Lee and didn’t even know who Jackie Chan was when we named the band. The guitarist did but back in like 94 Jackie wasn’t a household name yet. On this tour we’ve signed a couple of dvd’s of the film, ‘The Crazyfists‘ which is really cool. It’s nice to see that people have gone out and seen the film just because of us.

The Tide and Its Takers is available now from Ferret Records.

Categories
Music News

Metallica release album on a Friday

Metallica will be releasing their new album on a Friday.

Death Magnetic, the follow up to 2003’s St. Anger, will hit the shops on September 12th. The band also added on their website that the video for the lead snigle The Day That Never Comes, was completed after being shot outside Los Angeles.

www.metallica.com

Categories
Live Reviews

Gallows – Live

Kingston Peel
06.08.08

9th August 2006: A hot summer’s day is currently ending in a suitably mock-gory fashion with a Send More Paramedics gig at the Kingston Peel. Leeds finest zombie-core crew have brought along a Watford band called Gallows on support duties; they’re a pretty hard-rockin’ bunch, and the singer has some spectacular tattoos on his chest. I received a promo of their debut album (‘Orchestra Of Wolves’) earlier today – it sounded very promising on first listen, but bands as raw and unpolished as this lot never seem to get the recognition they deserve. Not until years after they’ve split up, anyway. Still, they play well, and the crowd seem to enjoy them…

21st January 2007: Hmmn, I’m rarely this happy to be eating humble pie. Since their last visit to the Peel, Gallows have become quite the talk of the town – not least due to that debut album (which has a habit of taking my stereo hostage for days at a time) and some utterly explosive live shows. Tonight’s gig is sold out, everyone knows all the words to all the songs, and as the closing ‘Casanova’ degenerates into a mass of tangled cables and flailing limbs, we can’t help but feel like we’re witnessing the start of something very fucking special…

6th August 2008: Turns out we were right. Over the last year, Gallows have gone from strength to strength, with a slot on the 2007 US Warped Tour and a sold-out London Astoria under their belts. No surprise, then, that the Peel is utterly rammed tonight; with both the temperature and atmosphere at fever pitch.

‘Orchestra Of Wolves‘ may be two years old now, but its creators haven’t lost their potential for surprise as they kick off with ‘Casanova‘, sparking mayhem in the crowd. The Gallows of 2008 are a tighter, but no less chaotic beast; as proved by guitarist Laurent Barnard hurling both himself and instrument into crowd during ‘Come Friendly Bombs‘ and Frank Carter spending most of the gig either in or on top of the pit. New songs are aired, including a minute-long hardcore belter and some beautifully twisted riff action. It’s just as well for Frank, really, because the crowd makes his vocal duties pretty much redundant on the ‘oldies’.

But tonight’s biggest surprise is saved for the end, as The Watford Five launch into a frenzied cover of Andrew WK’s ‘Party Hard‘. It’s proof enough that underneath the band’s trademark rage and musical vitriol lurks a bunch of party animals, and ensures that they’ll be missed whilst they take a break to record their second album. On tonight’s evidence, it’ll be well worth the wait.

Alex Gosman

Categories
Buzz Chart

Capricorns

True story. I was nearly the drummer in Capricorns. When guitarist Kevin was initially putting together the band he talked about me drumming in it. And when their first drummer Chris couldn’t play a couple of gigs, he asked me to fill in. Thank fuck I didn’t. If I’d been playing drums, Capricorns might not have been the epic progressive-metal monster they became and instead a chaotic hardcore punk mess!

River, Bear Your Bones‘ is the band’s second album and also, sadly, looks to be their last. Recorded over a long period of time when the band were starting to become fractured, it was a real test of their commitment to get the album finished. Thankfully, the end results were worth every bit of blood, sweat and stress. Opening track ‘Broken Coffin Of The Venerable King‘ encapsulates everything that is special about this album. Although largely instrumental, the endless shifting nature of the music and it’s inability to sit still for even a second more than makes up for the lack of vocal hooks. But back to the opening track. Within it’s nine minutes ‘Broken Coffin‘ covers more ground than most band’s entire back catalogues. There’s angular Shellac-style riffs, blast beats, soft guitar picking Slint-moments followed by skull-cracking intensity and heaviness. And that’s Capricorns all over. And now it’s all over. Well, kinda. The band have all now splintered all over the glove and are in a state of hiatus, resting, waiting, picking the next time to come back and strike. Just not with me on drums.

James Sherry

Categories
Music News

United Nations set for release

Superground, United Nations have revealed the track listing for their debut album. The album is due on September 9th on Eyeball Records. The project features Geoff Rickly from Thursday, Daryl Palumbo of Glassjaw/Head Automatica, Chree from the Number 12 Looks Like You and Kiss It Goodbye’s Eric Cooper.

The tracklisting is as follows:

01 The Spinning Heart of the Yo-Yo Lobby
02 No Sympathy For A Sinking Ship
03 Resolution #9
04 Model UN
05 The Shape of Punk That Never Came
06 My Cold War
07 Filmed In Front of A Live Studio Audience
08 Revolutions In Graphic Design
09 I Keep Living The Same Day
10 Subliminal Testing
11 Say Goodbye to General Figment of the USS Imagination

www.eyeballrecords.com/artists/unitednations

Categories
Music News

Neon Neon announce UK Tour

The Mercury Prize nominated band, Neon Neon are to embark upon a tour of the UK following their appearences at festivals over the summer.

Here are the dates.

29th October Koko London
1st November Brudenell Social Club Leeds
7th November The Sage 2 Gateshead
9th November Ruby Lounge Manchester
10th November Glee Club Birmingham

www.myspace.com/neonx2

Categories
Music News

Wolfmother split up

After numerous rumours, the Australian three-piece Wolfmother have confirmed that they are to split.

In a statement to the band’s record label, it was claimed that the split was mostly due to “longstanding frictions“. Bass played and keyboardist of the band, Chris Ross added that his reason for leaving was because of “irreconcilable personal and musical differences.

Frontman, Andrew Stockdale, has said that he will continue under the Wolfmother moniker, and is looking for new musicians to replace Chris and Myles.

www.wolfmother.com

Categories
Music News

Iron Maiden guitar stolen

Adrian Smith’s Jackson Stratocaster was stolen after a gig in Athens on the 2nd August.

The guitar, carrying the guitarists signature was described on the band’s website as extremely hard to get rid of as it’s the only one in the world.

Iron Maiden are offering a signed tour jacket and a letter of thanks from Smith as a reward.

www.ironmaiden.com

Categories
Music News

Dr Dre gets his drink on

Don’t let the name of his upcoming album, ‘Detox‘, fool you. Dr Dre will be getting his intox’ on with the release of his own branded alcoholic drinks within the next 2 months.

The acclaimed rapper/producer will be launching an Aftermath Cognac and an 80-proof flavoured sparkling vodka in the US.

Detox‘ is reported to be getting a release in either November or December following the launch of this beverages. Here’s hoping.

www.dr-dre.com

Categories
Music News

Scars On Broadway announce UK dates

Scars On Broadway are soon to embark upon their first UK Tour.

The band, whose members include Daron Malakian and John Dolmayan of System Of A Down fame will be playing four dates in September.

Their self-titled debut was released on July 28th. Here are the dates.

Birmingham Academy17th September
London Astoria18th September
Glasgow ABC20th September
Manchester Academy21st September

www.scarsonbroadway.com