New 20 minute interview with Trivium guitarist posted online

During Trivium’s stint on the Reckless & Relentless tour, Matt “The Producer” Bishop caught up with guitarist Corey Beaulieu for a lengthy chat. The interview took place in April 2012 and was posted to Matt’s YouTube channel on April 29th.

You can now view their discussion in the widget below. Alternatively, click the YouTube logo in the bottom right of the widget to access Matt’s YouTube account where the video is originally hosted.

Trivium’s 2011 release ‘In Waves’ was greeted with enthusiasm by fans and critics alike, breaking the top twenty in the US & UK, and breaking the top ten in Japan and Germany.

JACK WHITE: Full Amex solo show

On April 23rd, Jack White released his much anticipated solo debut ‘Blunderbuss’. Following a legacy of work with The White Stripes and hugely enjoyable releases with The Raconteurs and The Dead Weather, ‘Blunderbuss’ had much to live up to…but White managed to pull all of his previous influences together, alongside a couple of new angles and release a cracker of a disc.

Prior to his gigs in the UK, just four days after the release of the album, White performed a full show at Webster Hall in New York, a show directed by Gary Oldman and seen by millions as a webcast. For those who missed it – or for those who loved it so much it needs to be seen again – Jack White’s VEVO channel have uploaded the complete set to YouTube.

One show.
Two sets.
New material alongside reworked familiarities.
What’s not to enjoy…?

Slayer drummer’s new project released in May

The new project from Slayer drummer Dave Lombardo has an official US release date of May 15th. The album is released in the UK one day earlier.

The much anticipated new band, PHILM, features Lombardo playing alongside War bassist Pancho Tomaselli and Civil Defence man Gerry Nestler on guitar and vocals.  The album, entitled ‘Harmonic’ will be released on Mike Patton’s Ipecac label.

Confirmed track list:
01. Vitriolize
02. Mitch
03. Hun
04. Area
05. Way Down
06. Harmonic
07. Exuberance
08. Sex Amp
09. Amoniac
10. Held in Light
11. Dome
12. Killion
13. Mezzanine
14. Mild
15. Meditation 

PHILM will play a special release party gig on the 15th at the world famous Viper Room.  At this time, no other live shows have been confirmed.

BEAST MAKE BOMB – Sourpuss EP

In 2010, Beast Make Bomb self-released their debut EP ‘Skinny Legs’.  By the third year of their existence, the Brooklyn four piece had already shared a stage with Queens of the Stone Age and Cold War Kids and also gained enthusiasm from the online press.  Their second EP, ‘Sourpuss’ is a monster:  Four songs which will kick your arse while celebrating everything you loved – and probably continue to love – about alternative rock in the nineties.

‘1, 2, 3, 4’ kicks things off in style with a speedy punk riff delivered in a trashy rock style.  For a brief second, the guitar work sounds like it could have been inspired by Rocket From The Crypt or UK punk ‘n’ roll hotshots The Computers.  Although it doesn’t ever dominate the track, the riff creeps back in elsewhere, but make no mistake: despite those brief first impressions – and a truckload of gusto – Beast Make Bomb haven’t turned punk ‘n’ roll on their second EP.   The speed is a mainstay, but the general feel inevitably shifts towards something a little poppier; partly due to Ceci Gomez’s vocal style, a cross between a young Kim Deal and Dressy Bessy’s Tammy Ealom.  The track is in and out in barely two minutes, but it’s long enough for the listener to be knocked over by this bands energy and sheer enthusiasm.  If this is your fist experience of Beast Make Bomb, they know you’ll keep listening.

‘Coney Island’ is much softer, almost sounding like the work of a different band. It is here Beast Make Bomb indulges in one of their primary influences, and if you’re a Kim Deal/Breeders fan yourself, you’ll undoubtedly find some musical empathy.  The guitar lines shimmer and a repeated line of “you’re gonna take a swim” is instantly endearing, as Beast Make Bomb recalls a hazy daze from the early nineties. While the dreamy indie rock mood provides maximum listening enjoyment, it’s the drum led section towards the track’s end which gives things an extra kick. Hartley Lewis’s solid style occasionally recalls that of David Narcizo, though Narcizo would never have chosen to follow almost tribal pounding with flat out rock thrashing drowned in cymbals…  Moving from a dreamy, wandering alternative rock soundscape to a full-pelt climax, ‘Coney Island’ demonstrates Beast Make Bomb’s complete musical range in a single track.

‘Rough It Out’ offers more fuzzy riffs backed by rumbling drums.  The guitar riffs are simple and cutting, but it’s the vocals – somewhere between Kim Deal and Karen O – which lends this track its overall loveliness.  While the tune remains relatively gritty, the vocal leans more towards the commercial.  With a clear split between edgy rhythms and pop hooks, it’s a tune you can spin several times in quick succession without it ever losing its sparkle. ‘Party Monster’ opens with more solid drumming before exploding into an arrangement which fuses the best elements of Throwing Muses and early Breeders.  Gomez’s sultry vocal yelps and whispers in a way which commands attention, while the lead guitar work lays down discordant lines throughout.  As with ‘Coney Island’, this showcases Beast Make Bomb at their musical best, and by the end, they’ll leave you wanting more.

‘Sourpuss’ offers some great hooks and some greater tunes along the way.  The key influences here may often be less than subtle, but quite frankly, when everything sounds this good, who cares?

April 2012