Chris Cornell brings acoustic tour to the UK in June

Chris Cornell’s 2011 release ‘Songbook’ saw the sometime Soundgarden vocalist revisit works from across his career in an acoustic format.  The release was supported by a selection of live dates across the US.

This summer, Europe and the UK will get their first taste of these acoustic shows when Cornell performs in various European locations.

The confirmed dates for the European leg of Cornell’s ‘Songbook’ tour are as follows:

June 16 – Manchester, UK – Lowry
June 18 – London, UK – Palladium
June 19 – Birmingham, UK – Symphony Hall
June 20 – Newcastle, UK – City Hall
July 04 – Putte, Sweden – Parkern Festival

Cornell also appears with his reformed band, Soundgarden, this summer.  Soundgarden will be in the special guests slot at the 2012 Download Festival on Sunday before the reformed Black Sabbath are set to take the stage.

GREYBOY ALLSTARS – What Happened To Television?

This third studio set from The Greyboy Allstars is a gem.  DJ Greyboy and his collective give you eleven slabs of acid jazz and funk of a timeless quality.  Meshing the late sixties chic of James Brown, with a dash of seventies attitude and the nineties revivalism of Brand New Heavies and Galliano, ‘What Happened To Television?’ is an album that’s near impossible to dislike.

The title cut demonstrates everything that’s great about Greyboy and his all-star crew, hitting a groove which feels like classic late 60s funk, but beneath that, often has a playfulness evoking the quirks of 1970s incidental music from Sesame Street.  While the drum lays a more than pleasing easy shuffle incut with busy fills, and the Grant Green inspired guitar leads carry most of the tune, Robert Walter’s organ contributions shouldn’t be overlooked.  Beneath the more obvious elements, he’s there almost permanently beneath everything laying down some solid foundations with his Hammond. ‘Left Coast Boogaloo’ is equally tight.  A jazzy guitar groove from Elgin Park paves the way for some excellent interplay between Walter and Karl Denson on sax.  It’s a little softer all round than ‘Whatever Happened To TV?’, though still far too busy to ever be lumped in with any lounge jazz, despite the fluid smoothness of the brass elements.  The over-riding feel is that of a fantastic acid jazz band.  The guitars lean towards more muted chords and wah-wah pedals, but the brass and organ more than fill the arrangement, never faltering.  That’s not to say the piece doesn’t give Park much to do – his featured solo is just as superb as his playing had been on the title cut.

‘Still Waiting’ really hits the mark, and with its use of Marva Whitney/James Brown styled beats, it’s a number which refuses to let the listener go from the outset.  Here, with tight rhythms, courtesy of drummer Zak Najor and bassist Chris Stillwell – coupled with more excellent Hammond B-3 work – that The Allstars really hit their stride.  The addition of a vocal gives The Allstars an extra dimension, but it’s not essential; this hard-edged tune could have provided as many thrills as an instrumental workout.  Better still is the fantastically busy ‘Old School Cylons’ which marries hard beats and a little DJ scratching with classic sounding acid jazz flutes and funk drumming to create something which could have been lifted from Jamiroquai’s ‘Return of The Space Cowboy’ release.  If you’re into either the more jam-oriented side of acid jams or have a passing fancy for those Beastie Boys funk instrumentals, chances are you’ll love this.  Topped off with a busy flute solo, it’s one of the album’s real winners.

For harder old-school funk, ‘Knowledge Room’ has fewer smooth edges.  Its hard drumming brings some very off kilter rhythms against which Walter channels jazz organ greats of the sixties.  Once again, Denson’s flutes take a somewhat dominant role, managing to blend their soft, effortless patterns against drumming which can, at times, be pretty intrusive.  These hard edges – at times bording on a jazz rock freakout – naturally work better once the sax steps into the spotlight.  The brass wanders a fine line between improvisation and pre-planned playing, lending an atmosphere reminiscent of Herbie Hancock’s 1967 jazz-fusion masterpiece ‘Fat Albert Rotunda’.    Similarly in the old-school, the bones of ‘V Neck Sweater’ showcase a love for James Brown, featuring a sassy organ line, some very rhythmic guitars and a rousing voice which calls to the crowd.  Throw in some parpy baritone saxes – and a rather parpier solo – and you have a track that’s lots of fun and always expertly delivered, even if it doesn’t always equal the Allstars at their compositional best.

Although throughout most of this disc Elgin Park’s guitar work moves between Grant Green-esque softness and just plain understated, for ‘Back In The Game’ he gets a little more time in the spotlight and turns in a very commendable guitar solo, slightly more angular than his playing elsewhere.  Despite this, it’s both Walter and Denson which appear to drive the piece, exchanging riffs which are simple, but totally right for the mood.  Across five minutes, this track rarely breaks from its initial groove, but the organ flourishes and occasional flute loops maintain listener interest with such ease.  While there’s a huge array of talent on show within Greyboy’s chosen Allstars, in many ways both Walter and Denson are the real stars of this album.

Midway through the disc, the band launch into a cover of jazz vocalist Nancy Wilson’s ‘How Glad I Am’ featuring three-part harmony vocals supplied by Eleni Mandell, Inara George [of The Bird and The Bee] and Becky George [of Lavender Diamond].  The older style jazz doesn’t appear to blend in with the other chosen tunes on first listening, but subsequent spins prove this to have plenty of charm.  The harmonies aren’t always as smooth as they could have been, largely due to Mandell having such a distinctive tone – one which doesn’t blend well with others – but despite this, it’s still fun.  Musically, the band appears more than up to the task, with Zak Najor’s drums taking the lead.

Released almost a decade after ‘A Town Called Earth’, this really raises the bar in comparison to the Allstars’ previous couple of outings and marks a more than welcome return.  With nothing which could be remotely considered filler material, fans of funk – particularly those keen on stuff with acid jazz leanings – will find this an indispensible disc.

January 2010/December 2011

Devin Townsend: DVD box set to be more extensive than originally planned

Somewhere back near the beginning of The Devin Townsend Project, Devin Townsend announced the “Project” would be completed with four live shows dedicated to playing each of the DTP albums (‘Ki’, ‘Addicted’, ‘Deconstructed’ and ‘Ghost‘) in their entirety and filmed for a box set release at a later date.

Reports suggest that the DVD box set – now entitled ‘By A Thread’ could appear as early as June 2012 and now looks to be bigger and more expansive than previously thought.

In addition to the four live DVDs – all filmed in London in November 2011 – the box is said to contain soundtrack CDs of each gig. Since CDs can only hold up to 80 minutes of audio, taking the encores into consideration, this means each gig is too long to fit on a single CD, so according to Townsend himself, ‘By A Thread’ now looks likely to be “like, a 10-disc set or something ridiculous…

Also during his interview with AOL music, Townsend announced his plans to start on a new record in March. His first new work for 2012, ‘Epicloud’ is said to combine various elements of his past work.

Townsend: “Over the course of the full record, there’s sort of new agey stuff, jazzy stuff, really heavy stuff. We basically cover the gamut. ‘Epicloud’ is the first record that I felt confident enough to include all those things on one record so it goes between melodic hard rock to schizophrenic heavy metal to country to really ambient stuff and it’s all in one place. I’m using a gospel choir, a string section and a horn section for this one as well. On ‘Deconstruction’, I got to use the Prague Philharmonic and really go far into making an absurd album as over the top as possible and on ‘Epicloud’ I’m trying to take the same advantages to make some things musically very pleasing, as opposed to just claustrophobic.”

[quotes courtesy of AOL Music]

Iron Maiden announce plans to tour US this summer with retro ‘Seventh Son’ show

UK metal veterans Iron Maiden have unveiled plans to tour the US this coming summer.

Fitting the band’s previous mould of performing retro shows between long tours of current material, the summer tour revisits the era of ‘Seventh Son of a Seventh Son’ and ‘Maiden England’.

The confirmed dates are as follows:

Jun. 21 – Charlotte, NC – Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre
Jun. 23 – Atlanta, GA – Aarons Amphitheatre
Jun. 26 – Boston, MA – Comcast Center
Jun. 27 – Wantagh, NY – Jones Beach
Jun. 29 – Philadelphia, PI – Susquehanna Bank Center
Jun. 30 – Washington, DC – Jiffy Lube Live
Jul. 02 – Newark, NJ – Prudential Center
Jul. 05 – Chicago, IL – First Midwest Bank
Jul. 08 – Quebec, QC – Colisee Pepsi Arena
Jul. 11 – Montreal, QC – Bell Center
Jul. 13 – Toronto, ON – Molson Amphitheatre
Jul. 14 – Sarnia, ON – Bayfest
Jul. 16 – Buffalo, NY – Darien Lake Performing Arts Center
Jul. 18 – Detroit, MI – DTE Music Theatre
Jul. 19 – Indianapolis, IN – Klipsch Music Centre
Jul. 24 – Winnipeg, MB – MTS Center
Jul. 26 – Calgary, AB – Scotiabank Saddledome
Jul. 27 – Edmonton, AB – Rexall Place
Jul. 29 – Vancouver, BC – Pacific Coliseum
Jul. 30 – Auburn, WA – White River Amphitheatre
Aug. 01 – Salt Lake City, UT – USANA Amphitheatre
Aug. 03 – San Francisco, CA – Shoreline Amphitheatre
Aug. 06 – Phoenix, AZ – Ashley Furniture HomeStore Pavilion
Aug. 09 – Irvine, CA – Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre
Aug. 12 – Albuquerque, NM – Hard Rock Pavilion
Aug. 13 – Denver, CO – Comfort Dental Amphitheatre
Aug. 15 – San Antonio, TX – AT&T Center
Aug. 17 – Dallas, TX – Gexa Energy Pavilion
Aug. 18 – Houston, TX – The Woodlands

So far, the band have not announced any dates for Europe of the UK for this tour.

Ex-Black Sabbath vocalist reveals touring band line-up

Tony Martin, the vocalist on six often maligned Black Sabbath albums released between the late 80s and mid 90s, has unveiled the line-up for his touring band.

The band, which is to tour under the name ‘Headless Cross’ (named after Sabbath’s 1989 release, and arguably the best known from Martin’s eight year tenure) will bring together the following hard rock talents:

Tony Martin (BLACK SABBATH, THE CAGE) – Vocals
Danny “Danté” Needham (VENOM) – Drums
Geoff Nicholls (ex-BLACK SABBATH) – Keyboards
Dario Mollo (VOODOO HILL, THE CAGE) – Guitar
Magnus Rosén (ex-HAMMERFALL) – Bass

The long-running collaboration between Martin and guitarist Dario Mollo entitled The Cage released their third studio album in January 2012. Martin also has plans to re-release his long out of print solo debut album – featuring Queen’s Brian May – though the exact details of when remain somewhat sketchy.