Free download from forthcoming Mark Lanegan album

Next year, Mark Lanegan releases a new solo album.  ‘Blues Funeral’ marks Lanegan’s first solo release since 2004’s ‘Bubblegum’.

If you can’t wait that long, UK magazine Mojo are giving away a free download of new track ‘The Gravedigger’s Song’!

You can download it for free at the below link, in exchange for your email address.

http://mojomagazine.tumblr.com/post/13784614765/check-out-the-first-offering-from-mark-lanegan

‘Blues Funeral’ is released on February 6th 2012.

TALON – III

Despite gaining reasonable accolades from the melodic rock community for their previous releases, in terms of stability, Californian rockers Talon had far from settled beginnings.  2011’s ‘III’ is a third attempt in more ways than one: not only is it their third album, but also begins an association between the band and a third record label.  Three record labels for three releases isn’t very good odds. Not only that, but this release also marks the arrival of another new lead vocalist (also their third over the course of three releases).  If nothing else, they get full marks for believing in themselves and not throwing in the towel at a time when other bands would have just given up.

On their strongest cuts, Talon is a band which delivers good, fist-pumping 80s rock. One of the album’s best numbers ‘You Don’t Know Me’ pitches Shawn Palata’s reasonably decent vocal against a backing harmony to achieve a result guaranteed to thrill a proportion of retro-rock fans.  Its riff, too, is of the simple chugging kind – and it’s often with such musical simplicity Talon excel.  Even better is the big sweeping solo, played with a great clarity by Jim Kee.  The keyboards are very low in the mix; sometime Takara man Eric Ragno deserves to be heard much more clearly here, even though his contributions are purely for colour.  The driving rock of ‘Walk Away’ ups the ante with the choppy riffs providing a decent basis for Pelata’s voice which, too, turns up a notch in an attempt to not be outdone by the general riffage.  If you imagine the most melodic end of Yngwie Malmsteen’s work with Mark Boals on the ‘Trilogy’ album crossed with the Heaven’s Edge debut, you’ll get a hint of what this track sounds like.  The chorus is relatively strong, but it’s not as strong as the guitar fills.  Before too long, it should be obvious to most that Jim Kee is Talon’s real star.

Eric Ragno gets time in the spotlight on the mid-paced ‘When Will I’, a track frontloaded with a pompy keyboard intro.  Beyond that, it’s business as usual with meaty mid-paced guitar riffs, of course, but it’s another example of Talon’s strongest side.  Pelata is in particularly good voice throughout, the solo is short but of a good standard and there’s also a rare example of bassist Phil Keller being high in the end mix.  It’s another solid, more than commendable effort, which is more than can be said for a couple of ballady efforts.  ‘Brothers’ offers too much schmaltz and treads the well worn path of a soldier’s tale of loss while remaining musically mediocre and ‘Maybe One Day’ is a predictable “contractual obligation” style acoustic sap.  Yes, it could be said that Pelata is in good voice on these numbers, but they’re both blandness personified.

‘Take You All The Way’ features a lead vocal by special guest Jeff Scott Soto.  As any self-respecting melodic rock fan knows, JSS is a legend.  Almost everything he’s lent his voice to – at least since his post-Malmsteen days – has been of a superb standard.  Sadly, he doesn’t appear in such great voice here, but the material isn’t that great either.  Since the song is written in Talon’s style – and possibly in the right key for Pelata – Soto’s performance is a little too waily.  It’s nowhere near awful, of course, but he is capable of far better.  Jim Kee more than makes up for the song’s weak points by offering at least two fantastic solos.  With ‘The Last Time’, you won’t get any great surprises from Talon: the key-changes are text-book, the featured solo is more than suitable for its purpose and the vocal harmonies are quite strong.  Despite their best efforts, though, there’s nothing which sticks out here in the long-term.  Like a good chunk of the album, it achieves those goals it sets out to achieve, but there’s a sense that Talon’s core audience are made up from those narrow-minded folks who listen to AOR/melodic rock…and enjoy nothing else.

The disc closes with a cover of the Jefferson Starship classic ‘Jane’.  Naturally, Pilata is no vocal match for Mickey Thomas, but looking beyond that, it’s a rather fun cover.  The riffs are obviously meatier than those ever delivered by any of Starship’s incarnations, while those riffs are topped by a great set of stabbing keys, which obviously are essential if anyone is to cover this tune properly.  It manages to bring a tiny amount of Talon’s melodic metal edge to the table without ever being disrespectful to Jefferson’s 1979 hit.  And, once again, it’s nice to hear Ragno out front and not buried beneath the guitars.

Overall, Talon volume three is a solid but undemanding record.  There are more than reasonable choruses and riffs scattered throughout the album and the band are all more than competent players, particularly guitarist Jim Kee.  Talon’s ‘III’ might just have enough charm to attract a reasonable amount of fans with it’s over familiarity.  For others, though, that just might not be enough to set Talon apart from the hundreds of other second division melodic rock bands releasing albums via the Escape Music and Frontiers Records stables.

December 2011

Watch new My Ruin video

Goth metal duo My Ruin – featuring husband and wife team Tarrie B and Mick Murphy – have released a video for their new track ‘Tennessee Elegy’, which can be seen below.

The track comes from the band’s upcoming studio album ‘A Southern Revelation’, an album which will be available exclusively from myruin.net on December 7th. As a thank you to the bands fans and supporters, the album will be downloadable for absolutely free.

“A Southern Revelation” track listing:

01. Tennessee Elegy
02. Highly Explosive
03. Walk of Shame
04. Deconsecrated
05. Middle Finger
06. Vultures
07. Seventh Sacrament
08. Reckoning
09. The Soulless Beast
10. Mean Street (Van Halen cover)

Lou Reed & Metallica: first official video released

After seemingly weeks of the metal community tearing into the Lou Reed & Metallica project ‘Lulu’, the Loutallica machine have finally released the first official promo clip for first single ‘The View’.

The video was helmed by ‘Requiem For a Dream’ and ‘Black Swan’ director Darren Aaronofsky and features heftily edited version of the album track.

Read a review of ‘Lulu’ here.

ALICE IN CHAINS: Pro-shot footage of complete Maquinaria 2011 performance

After the release of their self-titled album in 1995 Alice In Chains effectively retired from live performance. After choosing not to tour the album, rumours circulated that all was not well within the band. Alice In Chains made only one more live appearance with original frontman Layne Staley, for MTV’s Unplugged show.

The first phase of the band’s career ground to a halt. Chief songwriter/guitarist Jerry Cantrell and vocalist Layne Staley drifted apart. In April 2002, Layne Staley was found dead. Only a couple of weeks before, in an interview, Cantrell had said he hadn’t ruled out working with Staley again… It was a bittersweet time: Cantrell’s second album ‘Degradation Trip’ was completed, ready for a June release. It sounded more like Alice In Chains than his first, with the spirit of the recently deceased Staley cutting through various tracks, especially ‘Bargain Basement Howard Hughes’.

In 2005, the almost unthinkable happened. Jerry Cantrell teamed up with his old Alice In Chains bandmates, bassist Mike Inez and drummer Sean Kinney and resurrected the Alice In Chains name. After a benefit show with guest vocalists, they drafted in Cantrell’s buddy William DuVall and played sporadic live shows, to enthusiastic audiences.

…And in 2009, the band released ‘Black Gives Way To Blue’, a new studio album featuring DuVall as a permanent band member. Some fans were skeptical, claiming Layne was vital to Alice In Chains. These fans missed something almost as vital: Layne Staley’s input to 2005’s ‘Alice In Chains’ album was bordering on minimal. Not only had Cantrell taken on the mantle of being the band’s principal song writer, he also stepped up his vocal contributions, having a hefty presence on huge chunks of the release. If Alice In Chains were anything at all by the time of their hiatus, it was Jerry Cantrell’s show. If he wanted to write new songs and keep the spirit of AIC alive, then there shouldn’t be any reason why not. …Especially when, as with ‘Bargain Basement Howard Hughes’ some of the new songs almost sounded as if Layne was still present.

In November 2011, they performed a set at the Maquinaria Festival in Chile featuring a host of classic tracks from their back catalogue alongside a couple of numbers from the still recent ‘Black Gives Way To Blue’. Despite the band having returned to the recording studio in the summer, the set contained no new material. The complete show was filmed professionally and can be enjoyed below.