Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Interview with Sam Crawford, Guitarist of Once Forgotten

Sam Crawford is the guitarist of currently unsigned Progressive Hardcore band "Once Forgotten" from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

What made you pick up the guitar?
- I was a Freshman in highschool and I would walk by this kind of big music shop called Cinitoli's alot of famous people have walked through them doors but, there would always be this Fender sign lit up in the window and I would always just stare at it. So one day I bought a cheesy guitar from Sam Ash...and what made me intially learn guitar was listening to Metallica. They were my biggest influence.

Your favorite guitarist?
Right now Matt Heafy from trivium.

Most influential guitar album?
Shogun by Trivium...but if it was 5 years ago, ...And Justice For All.

What made you join/start a band?
Well one day I was asked by a friend of mine to join and I said what the hell why not. We were a cover band wrote two originals, then after that we went separate ways and im now in a newer more serious band.

What do you hope to achieve?
I hope to bring music to people's lives and make them feel moved by it. I want them to evoke some kind of emotion that is beneficial to them and the people around them.

Favorite bands?
Metallica, Trivium, Aveneged Sevenfold, Guns 'n' Roses..alot more.

Favorite albums?
Shogun by Trivium, All Metallica Albums

What is your favorite guitar?
Dean, I play gibson now.

What is your dream guitar?
a 7 string Dean guitar.


Follow Once Forgotten at:

http://www.myspace.com/onceforgotten18
and
http://twitter.com/onceforgotten

Sunday, April 26, 2009

The Oh Noes Album Review, April Edition

A hearty good day to all three of you reading this (Hi Mom!). I hope your last few weeks have been less hectic than mine. But enough sidetracking, let's get down to business (to defeat the Huns)...

Band: 3OH!3
Album: Want

The boundries between genres of popular music are becoming increasingly blurry with time. Rap is coming to sound a lot like R&B which is eerily similar to rock which sounds an awful lot like punk, and no one but the most devoted of metalheads could keep the thousand and one genres of metal seperate. It's in these murky depths the Colorado-based 3OH!3 exists in, somewhere down the block from rap, across the street from electronica, and in the neighborhood of rock. The result is a unique and unmistakable sound, though perhaps not totally accessible.

3OH!3 (named after the area code of Boulder, Colorado) has its origins as far back as 2004, but didn't really start making an impact until 2007 with the release of their self-titled album. The following year, the band signed with Photo Finish Records and released Want.

A disclaimer before we go any further: I am not a particular fan of rap. Most of the vocals on this album are rapped, and significant portions of the album show strong rap influences. I will attempt to be as impartial as I can, but my personal taste will show through in this review. You may very well disagree, and I encourage you to go out and listen for yourself before passing judgement. 

The album opens with Tapp, a minute-long instrumental introduction. It's essentially a protracted synth solo and serves as a decent primer on what the rest of the album will sound like. Punkbitch is the first actual song, and serves as an excellent microcosm for the entire album. Of particular note: the heavy elctronica-influenced backing, the alternation of rapping and more traditional singing, and the two contrasting section structure. Most of the rest of the songs on the album follow the pattern established by this song, both musically and lyrically.

Two other songs I want to highlight: The first is Don't Trust Me. This is the first song by 3OH!3 I had ever heard, and it's probably my favorite from the album. The other is Colorado Sunrise, which contrasts lyrically with the rest of the album but still uses the same energetic musical style.

Bottom line time: 3OH!3 is a decent band, but not for everyone. Rap fans will like it, as will electronica fans. Most other people should listen before they drop money on it, because the style is not universally appealing. Personally, I do like them, but in small doses. The album clocks in at just under 40 minutes, but it can get a bit repetitive if you just sit and listen to it. Put in a well-shuffled playlist 3OH!3 gives nice contrast, however. 

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Trivium guitarist Matt Heafy says pirate our music!!

Trivium guitarist Matt Heafy said yesterday that all Trivium fans should burn a copy of a Trivium CD with ten of their best songs, copy it many times, give to friends and coworkers. Tell them to copy, burn, and repeat it and spread it to their friends.


Music Nation fully endorses this and thinks that all fans should do this.

-- Blitz

Monday, April 20, 2009

Katy Perry(This won't be long)

So I'll be the first to person to admit I am a metal fan; Through and through. I love Katy Perry. Something about the music, the beats, her voice, the lyrics, and just the overall presentation of the songs makes it a real joy to listen to. She is definitely one of the best female singers in music today. "I Kissed a Girl" and "Hot N Cold" are awesome songs.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

"Shogun" By Trivium

Shogun: Trivium's Defining Album?

Their are many bands that have come out since the turn of the century that I like. But only one can I trully say that I love. That band my friends is the mighty TRIVIUM from Orlando, Florida on Roadrunner Records.

Trivium is:

Matt Heafy - Guitar/Vocals
Corey Bealiu - Lead Guitar
Paolo Gregoletto - Bass
Travis Smith - Drums

Skip ahead to there current album, 2008's "Shogun." Trivium really is a band that you either totally love or absolutely hate. I've let so many people listen to them and those two answers were always the ones I got. Who knows? This album has so many twists and turns and so many different styles that even the people that hate them would like it.

On the last album, "The Crusade", Trivium took a turn that many people thought was for the worse. The album consisted of more thrashy guitar riffs treading the waters of early Metallica. Singer Matt Heafy's use of James Hetfield-esque vocals didn't help that common perception either. That album did garner many, many more fans for Trivium, it also lost a lot of fans.

On Shogun Trivium took elements of all their previous albums, Ember to Inferno, Ascendency, and The Crusade and morphed those albums into one album. Combining them to make the strongest album from the young band to date. From the opening Samurai-based "Kirisute Gomen"(pronounced Kitty-Stay Go-Main), to the fist pumping "Down From The Sky" all the way down to the twelve minute long epic title track, "Shogun." The album from beginning to end is sonically a great album with blazing guitar riffs, technical and fast guitar solos, tremendous drumming from drummer Travis Smith, and bass work from Paolo Gregoletto not seen in a thrash metal band since maybe even Cliff Burton. Matt Heafy does a good job of mixing his clean vocals, harsh vocals, throaty screams, and even the newest technique he uses, guttoral growls.

If you are a fan of Trivium, a metal fan looking for something new, or just a casual fan, you should give Shogun a try. It's not an overpowering album so that nobody can get into it. It's a sonic album that showcases good musical ability within all parties involved. Give Shogun a try, like many people out their you will either like Trivium or hate Trivium. This is definetly a defining album for them.

Do you want to contribute?

Please if you wish to contribute send me an email AT: mjkuritz1989@hotmail.com

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Taking Dawn

Taking Dawn(7th Son)


I would like to introduce myself. My name is Matthew, I am 20 years old, a college student, and a huge fan of heavy metal/hard rock. Don’t be scared I listen to just about everything including those genres metal hates!! IE: Rap and Country! I love music, listening and playing it. I play guitar and I do vocals. I’m not very good at either but I am learning and hey that’s all that matters, right?

I want to introduce you to a band I found on Myspace a few years ago. Back then they were called 7th Son. They recently signed a record contract with Roadrunner Records (USA). They went on their first tour with Trivium.

Taking Dawn is:

Christopher Babbitt
Lead Singer/Lead Guitar

Mikey Cross
Lead Guitar /Backup Singer

Alan Doucette
Drummer/Backup Singer

Andrew Cushing
Bassist/Backup Singer

The guitar work of Babbit and Cross is what really got me interested in Taking Dawn. Total fucking shredders. Some of the best guitar work from an underground band I have heard in years! I was blown away when I heard Babbits vocal ability then I heard the melodic guitar solos ala Iron Maiden I was hooked. The thunderous bass work of Alan Doucette is amazing. Taking Dawn is one of those bands that I could see getting on the radio but still being metal.

They’re a nice combination of modern hard rock but combining the throwback elements of soaring chorus’s, galloping riffs, melodic solos, and anthemic songs.

If you like Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, KISS, or even modern bands like Trivium and Avenged Sevenfold then you should at least give Taking Dawn a try!

Whoamg, an album review!

My name is Chris and I love music. My tastes are pretty wide-ranging and somewhat eclectic, so you may not like everything I write about. On the other hand, you might also discover something new that you really end up enjoying. I will endeavor to put up one album review a month, and anything beyond that is gravy.

And that's just about enough introductory crap. Let's get on to one of my favorite records from one of my favorite bands...

Band: Streetlight Manifesto
Album: Somewhere In The Between

Ska has never been huge in the U.S., certainly not on the level of say hip-hop or metal. It experienced a slight revival in the mid 1990s. People of my generation (the 90s kids) will probably remember Sublime and the earlier works of No Doubt. Some may even recall Reel Big Fish (who, amazingly, are still recording and touring seventeeen years after their founding). 

Streetlight Manifesto, however, emerged in 2002 from several former members of New Jersey ska bands Catch 22 and One Cool Guy. The original band only produced their debut album Everything Goes Numb (2003) before the first of many lineup changes occurred. Streetlight embarked on a series of ambitious tours for the next few years. Their next release would be a remake of Catch 22's Keasbey Nights (long story, Wikipedia it if you're interested) in 2006. 

So by 2007, it had been four years since Streetlight had released any new music. They had a legion of loyal fans who still came out to every show and sang along with every song through their constant touring, though. Rumors began percolating as early as January of that year about the new album (which turned out to be Somewhere In The Between), which after several teases and stop and starts would eventually drop in November. 

Streetlight has a very distinctive sound, even for the rather heterogeneous genre of ska. Purists would point out that the band is technically ska-punk; most people would not care about the distinction. Streetlight's seven man cast gives them a wide range of sounds, from electric bass to trumpet to baritone saxophone, all united as tools under the creative direction of Tomas Kalnoky, the band's songwriter and frontman. Kalnoky is a talented guitarist and one of my favorite songwriters, and while he might not be the greatest singer in the world his voice is perfectly suited to the music he writes. Streetlight was oriented as a live band from the get-go, and this is very apparent in the songwriting. The music is impossible to listen to sitting still; at the very least, your toe will constantly be tapping, and at the very most you'll wish you had a mosh pit around you. Another aspect of their music oriented towards live performance is how downright singable the songs are. During live shows, the band will often step away from their microphones and let the crowd sing the choruses. Streetlight is incredible live, and I strongly encourage you to go see them if they ever happen to be playing near you.

So, what about the album? Musically, it's quite complex - Kalnoky's songwriting tends towards rapid chord changes and long, horn-driven melodic segments. Practically every instrument has its moment in the sun throughout the ten tracks, and they all fit together wonderfully while still sounding distinct. Lyrically, the songs are quite deep, dealing with such complex ideas as religion (Down, Down, Down To Mephisto's Cafe and Forty Days) to life and death (One Foor On The Gas, One Foot In The Grave and Somewhere In The Between) and war (Watch It Crash and What A Wicked Gang Are We). Of course, this being ska-punk, a good old-fashioned "fuck the Man" song is also on there (The Blonde Lead The Blind). I'd like to draw your attention to two songs off the record in particular.

The first is, appropriately enough, the first song on the album. Entitled "We Will Fall Together", it was also the subject of the band's first music video (which was unfortunatly pulled off YouTube for rather silly reasons). The song can be heard here, and I strongly suggest you listen. Go on, I'll wait.

Done? Good, now let me talk about it. The first thing you should have noticed is the minute-long horn-driven introduction. This is quintessentially Streetlight and as bold a declaration of who they are as I can imagine. The vocals, when they enter, are distinct - love it or hate it, you cannot confuse Tomas Kalnoky's voice for anyone else. Note also the uses of backing vocals, gang vocals, and back-and-forth singing. All are common techniques the band uses, and all create powerful effects that emphasize important lyrics. And finally, if you managed to sit still through all of that and not sing along on any of the choruses, you have far more self-control than me.

The other song I would like you to hear is "The Recieving End Of It All". According to the album's liner notes, it's "Arguably everyone in the band's favorite track on the record," which I can believe seeing as it's my favorite too. (As an aside, whenever you have the choice of formats in which to buy an album Tomas Kalnoky is involved in, get the physical album. The liner notes are informative and amusing, plus the lyric sheets help to figure out exactly what words he's screaming at a million syllables per second.) I won't comment further on this except to say I've been listening to it for two years and still don't know what the lyrics are about, really.

From start to finish, Somewhere In The Between is flat-out good music. It had a lot to live up to (Everything Goes Numb is widely considered to be one of the best third-wave ska albums ever made) and it came damn close to living up to all of that. I highly reccomend it, even if you don't typically enjoy ska. 

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Fire.Fm, Firefox Add-On

So tonight I tried out an add-on for Firefox called "Fire.Fm." You have to have a Last.fm account to use it.

Basically what it does is add a toolbar to Firefox that adds Last.Fm controls. You can play your own radio station, your recommendations, or you can play a station based upon bands similar to your favorite bands.

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/7684

Welcome one and all metal fans!!

!!WELCOME EVERYBODY TO THE MUSIC BLOG!!

I have a huge passion for reading reviews on music. I used to have a huge passion for journalism. Really I am just a young kid in college trying to share my love with music and I would absolutely love to garner some followers and contributors!

BTW: When I post, I will put what song I am listening to in the Artist - "Song" - Album format.

NP: Sonic Syndicate - "Only Inhuman" - Only Human