Used But Never Abused With JEPHA From THE USED

Used But Never Abused With JEPHA From THE USED

Interview by Kris Peters
For a quarter of a century, American rock outfit The Used have dominated the global rock landscape, delivering countless albums that not only helped shape the course of musical history but also helped shape the lives of a good deal of music fans the world over.
Bursting onto the scene with their self-titled debut album in 2002, The Used transcended normal music prejudices to become favourites of both consumers of music and critics, finding that elusive formula early on in their career while most bands finish their tenure still oblivious to how to find it.
From The Used, the band went on to release In Love And Death in 2004, somehow topping the heights achieved on their first album, before solidifying their stature amongst the rock elite with 2007's Lies For The Liars. Now, in celebration of 25 years atop their field, The Used bring the party to Australia in a unique run of shows that sees them perform each of those three albums in their entirety in each capital city.
Such is the demand for these special shows that several more have had to be added, more than half of which have already sold out. HEAVY recently sat down with bass player Jepha to dive deeper into the idea and the celebrations that look set to continue for some time yet.
"I'm excited, I'm ready to go," he enthused when we began. "We just ended a full US version, and we went to Europe for a few dates, then we took this month off, and now I'm already itching to go back out and move to Australia for a bit (laughs)."
We mention the fact that more than half of the 21 shows are already sold out and ask how good it feels to know that people on the other side of the world are so hungry for their arrival.
"It's really exciting," Jepha smiled. "The best part is for our singer - because he lives in Sydney and has been out there about ten years now - he always has to come to us to rehearse and practice and everything, so he's always jet-lagged. Now the joke's on us that we are all flying over and will be jet-lagged and fucked the whole time, and he is going to be spot on (laughs)."
Having had to add so many extra shows, The Used will now be in Australia for almost one month, so we ask Jepha if the band had already planned or budgeted in that extra time away from home.
"We didn't expect this much," he laughed. "We didn't expect it to go this long and to have multiple dates added and a lot of places selling out. That's all… not a shock… it's all better than we imagined."
In the full interview, Jepha talks more about the tour and what fans can expect, learning the first three albums in full and any difficulties faced plus how the band will approach each night and bring their best to each performance.
We dive deeper into each of the three albums and what they mean to The Used, his memories of recording each, the musical shift between each and how that reflected the growth of The Used musically, new music and more.


Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.

Jaksot(1000)

Double Trouble Down Under With CHRIS KAEL From FIVE FINGER DEATH PUNCH

Double Trouble Down Under With CHRIS KAEL From FIVE FINGER DEATH PUNCH

The main common thread that ties music and comedy together is timing, not that it works every time. While there and many - some would say the majority - of musicians out there who THINK they are funny, once the alcohol and/or adrenaline wears off, what they thought funny 20 minutes ago is suddenly now lame at best.But occasionally the transition between two very different forms of artists' works seamlessly. Artists like Weird 'Al' Yankovic, Stephen Lynch and Jack Black spring immediately to mind when talking about people who have performed at high quality across both professions, but there have also been some riotous failures - but we won't go into that for fear we, too, might be accused of overstepping the line.If you had have asked me a couple of weeks ago how I thought Five Finger Death Punch's bass player Chris Kael would go on the stand-up comedy circuit, I may have mumbled alright, but that would only have been to save my ass if word had got back to him. Then, if you had have suggested an admittedly famous comedian by the name of Craig Gass, who is best known for voicing cartoon characters, chances are I would have tuned out and failed to clock back in.Ask me the same question now after having spent a night interviewing then dining with the pair of them, and you would get an entirely different response. So I guess even the black sheep of the world are not immune to judging a book by its cover…What Kael and Gass may lack aesthetically as a star comedy pairing, they make up for with impeccable timing that has its foundations in mutual respect. The fact that they have lived similar lives in and around the music community definitely helps to keep the conversation flowing, but together this mismatched pair are more like the Golden Goose of the comedy circuit. Their jokes are hilarious, their banter even better, but above all else, both are humble and inspiring people who just happen to have a somewhat concerning panache for a side hustle referred to as DCP. What is DCP, you may ask? Well, have a listen to our conversation, and you will find out the meaning of that unexplained wonder of the world, plus heaps more that you may or may not be emotionally prepared for at this stage of your life. HEAVY sat down for an engaging and entertaining chat with Kael that covered everything from comedy to music to shin chins.We start by asking how the tour has been so far."It's been incredible," Kael purred in his gravel-stained Viking voice. "We had a very short time to be able to promote these shows, so the amount of support that we've had and the amount of people we've got in there in only a week of promoting the show is awesome. We did the stand-up comedy show in Melbourne at The Comics Lounge on Friday night, and then we went to see Metallica on Saturday. That's basically all we're doing. Just funding the Metallica vacation (laughs). I have found ways to make money to be able to travel while off the road with Death Punch. I saw that Metallica was playing over here, so… I am a marketing aficionado. What better way to go out and see my old friends in Metallica? Because we toured with them the last couple of years, going all around the world, but we're working on a new record right now, so this gave me the opportunity to come over, see Metallica and get the comedy show going. We had those two shows in Melbourne, and then on November 11 here in Brisbane, we are playing at the Good Chat Comedy Club, doing a show at 7 o'clock and at 8.30 pm. Me and Craig - Craig Gass is a stand-up comedian. An actual stand-up comedian. Not a bass player who is basically telling stories about life on the road. He's been doing it for about 25 years and has been on The King Of Queens and the Howard Stern Show. A funny story about Craig - well, I don't know whether it's funny or not because it's his story - but when he was growing up, he was the only person in his family who could hear. His entire family is deaf, except for him. So I'm helping him with his acting these days. We're both gonna be doing some stand-up comedy here at Good Chats. 7 o'clock and 8.30 on November 11, and we're just having a really good time with it. This has been nice for me. The whole thing started when Craig gave me the opportunity to do some stand-up shows with him. I was originally going to write stories. I wanted to be either a musician or an author when I was growing up. The musician part… I get paid to play bass, so I guess that makes me a musician… but that's already happened, so I was gonna write a book about growing up in Kentucky and being able to come up from Lexington, Kentucky, to these worldwide stages. I mean, I'm right next to where Metallica is playing, and we have toured the world with Metallica. All my favourite bands. Judas Priest. We've been out with those guys. So, just coming from a small town in Kentucky, all the stuff that had to happen to get me where I'm at, that I am able to do all this stuff, and then all the craziness that's gone on behind the scenes, being in a hard rock/heavy metal band… I was gonna tell those stories in a book, but now I'm just doing it on stage because I like being able to have that automatic response. I'm an entertainer. Musician, yeah, I guess. But entertainment. That's where I thrive."And that's just the first couple of minutes of our conversation. Over the course of the next 20 minutes, discussion ranges from Shin Chins to Double Comedy Penetration to Gene Simmons to Five Finger Death Punch and pretty much anything and everything in between. If you are reading this in time to make one of the two shows in Brisbane tonight, do yourself a favour and make it happen. But if not, keep an eye out for when next Craig and Chris visit Australia. You won't want to miss them a second time.Tickets and more information www.getgass.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.

11 Marras 29min

DAVE EVANS: 50 Years Of Rock, Still Sexy And Tough

DAVE EVANS: 50 Years Of Rock, Still Sexy And Tough

Interview by Angela CroudaceHalf a century on from his Rabbit days and even longer since fronting the very first line-up of AC/DC, Dave Evans hasn’t slowed down one bit. Celebrating 50 years of Rabbit with the new album Defenders of Rock, the self-proclaimed “King of All Badasses” still lives by the mantra: every song a killer, no song a filler.Speaking to us from Mexico, Evans radiates the same unstoppable energy that’s defined his career. “I’m lucky I went solo years ago,” he says. “I can record with anyone, anywhere in the world. If someone gives me the shits, I just say, ‘See ya later!’” That autonomy, he explains, keeps his fire burning and his fans around the globe ready to rock.Evans credits his longtime collaborator and Rabbit guitarist Mark Tinson, “the king of all riffs,” for the new album’s punchy sound. “Rabbit’s a party band — sexy and tough. The world needs Rabbit right now,” he grins. “No doom and gloom. Just rock and roll, baby.”Reflecting on the early Aussie rock scene, Evans recalls when “getting signed was like being touched by God.” Yet, even as times change, he believes the secret to survival is simple: energy, hooks, and happiness. “I still go out there to make people happy,” he says. “When they leave my show, they’re smiling and that’s what it’s all about.”At 50 years of Rabbit and counting, Dave Evans proves that real rock ’n’ roll never dies — it just keeps getting louder!Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.

11 Marras 25min

Keeping The Motor Idling For An Extension Of The BY REQUEST TOUR With DIESEL

Keeping The Motor Idling For An Extension Of The BY REQUEST TOUR With DIESEL

For a man who has been there and pretty much done it all in the Australian music industry, Mark Lizotte - or Diesel to his friends - is one hell of a humble guy.First snapping necks with Johnny Diesel & The Injectors in the mid to late 1980s, the 90s saw Diesel launch a solo career that has seen his career progress in a steady trajectory that is a testament to the workman-like way in which he goes about his business. Singer, guitarist, producer and multi-instrumentalist, Diesel has mastered all aspects of his craft with a youthful exuberance and genuine love for music that is as infectious as it is rare.After releasing his 17th studio album Bootleg Melancholy in 2023, Diesel could be forgiven for being a touch pickier about where, when and how he plays, but by talking to the man, you get the feeling such thoughts are barely a whisper in his subconsciousness. Instead, Diesel has spent much of this year on the road, culminating with his current By Request Tour, which sees fans and audience members choosing his nightly set list in a performance where it is guaranteed no two shows will be alike.But rather than hang his guitar on the rack at the completion of this successful run of shows, Diesel recently announced his intentions to fire it back up again for round 2 early next year, with another 21 shows added from January through to April. And seeing how it is blatantly obvious Diesel doesn't know what to do with his spare time, HEAVY jumps at the chance to keep him busy by accepting the invitation to have a yarn about life on the road. We start by pointing out that he must be a glutton for punishment to basically turn straight back around and head out for another run of shows."I hope it's not punishment," Diesel laughed. "No, it's been really fun, I have to say. I've really enjoyed these ones. I think in the back of my mind, I was always like, well, if we're going to do regionals, let's do some cities too. Take it to the big smoke."We get a bit cheeky and ask if the songs for each night's set list are 100% as voted by the fans, or if he sometimes takes liberties with what he feels like or doesn't feel like playing."I try to attach a person's story or name to every song," he smiled. "I've got the analytics come to me in a document, and it's all very… It's great, actually. They've got graphs of songs and which ones have been chosen, and I can see which ones are more popular than others on particular nights. It's a lot of information for me to digest. And along with that, I think the thing that is most usable and intangible are the comments that people write about why they want that song."In the full interview, we ask Diesel if there have been many surprise requests, any that he has seen come up and cringed, and if he can see any trends between different eras of his career. We ask how he remembers so many songs on demand, the range of songs people can draw from, and the personal nature of these particular performances.We look back on his career and ask Diesel if he ever has time to reflect on his achievements, next year's run, which starts in Tasmania and ends at the Sydney Opera House, the prestige of playing there, and more.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.

10 Marras 14min

Three Decades Deep: ART ALEXIKAS From EVERCLEAR Gets Candid

Three Decades Deep: ART ALEXIKAS From EVERCLEAR Gets Candid

Interview by Ali Williams90’s alt-rock legends Everclear are heading back down under in November, ready to kick off their 30-year Anniversary tour of their debut album Sparkle and Fade. HEAVY Mag's Ali Williams caught up with frontman and founder Art Alexikas to chat about the tour, their huge success in Australia and what fans can expect when they swing through in a few weeks.Hailing all the way from Portland, Oregon, Everclear started making a name for themselves in the early 90s when their debut, independently released album World of Noise (1993) would gain them credit on the home front and East Coast Alt Rock scenes. But that was nothing compared to the epic surge they felt after signing to Capitol Records. In 1995, Sparkle and Fade was released, and in what felt like overnight, the world fell in love with them.Australian audiences couldn’t get enough, with the album going platinum soon after its release and reaching 9th place on the ARIA charts of the same year. Their music has that Cali Coast grunge vibe and lyrics that struck a chord with those who could relate.Singing about growing up left of centre, trying to make it in the world, overcoming childhood trauma, teenage angst, underwritten by the influence of recreational drug use and powered by the sex drive of a young adult in top gear still learning the road rules, seemed to resonate with young listeners, and their following albums had the same effect.For many Australians who were teenagers in the 90s, Sparkle and Fade was the soundtrack to their misspent youth, cassette tapes played on repeat, driving along the coastline, windows down, the summer heat thick, mixed with the distinct pungent odour of leaded petrol and dank kush being choofed in another bong hit billowing out of their prized Datto 120Y in clouds of fury. Life was good.Art recalls the moment he realised that their track Local God had become an anthem in Australia when the head of EMI Records asked him before a show why it wasn’t on the set list. He couldn’t believe it and from then on says “we can’t come to Australia and not play Local God,” surprised that a song written as a soundtrack for Baz Luhrmann's remake of Romeo and Juliet had struck such a chord with Australian audiences.Alexikas also shares some insight into what it’s like still touring and battling MS, a debilitating, lifelong chronic illness. At 63, Art is definitely showing no signs of slowing down, although he admits he’s a little slower than the fast pace he’d once lived. Tickets for Sparkle and Fade are available from www.ticketmaster.com and www.everclearmusic.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.

8 Marras 14min

Metal For Breakfast With VOX REALIS

Metal For Breakfast With VOX REALIS

While most kids are out and about trying to think up what trouble they could possibly get into, 13-year-old Vox Realis was indoors, practising his guitar. Ever since picking up his first guitar at just 7 years of age, Realis has ploughed all of his time and energy into mastering the instrument, earning the praise and subsequent guidance of Kiko Loureiro (Megadeth, Angra) along the way, who saw something special in the aspiring musician. Not content to merely practice for himself, Realis started the YouTube series Metal For Breakfast - which has since gone viral - putting his name and guitar prowess out there to a global audience.The result is his recently released debut single Overkill, which also features Felipe Andreoli (Angra) on bass and Dirk Verbeuren (Megadeth) on drums. HEAVY recently sat down to chat with the young guitarist and start by asking him to go into the musical side of Overkill a bit deeper."I knew that I needed to find my own voice, and I wanted to make sure that what was in my head was represented in the song," Realis measured. "I'm really about tones, and so I really just embraced a song structure that is accessible to listeners, but I can still get what I want from my head into the song. This song is full of emotion, and I had lots of fun with the different effects and the drive and really capturing what I was feeling. School and life is pretty hard at 13 (laughs), and this song is my first attempt to communicate those sometimes conflicting and really big emotions."We bring up his age and ask Realis if it is difficult being thrust into the limelight so young."Yes," he replied honestly, "but everyone is so supportive and excited to see where this all goes. They also recognise that I'm young and all this guitar needs to be my choice. My parents, my mentors and my teacher, they all help me keep a balanced life and encourage me to embrace the long and patient journey that is becoming a musician."In the full interview, we talk more about Overkill and bringing the song to life. Vox tells us about the writing process for the song and how he put his own DNA through it. He mentions the two guest musicians playing on the track and how they came to be involved, as well as having Kiko Loureiro as his mentor and the importance of that in his future plans.Vox talks about his passion for guitar and having old-style metal musicians as inspiration, but sprinkling enough of himself into the creative process to make it his own. He talks of future musical plans and what got him interested in guitar, plus winning the Musicians Institute Summer Program Scholarship and what it means moving forward. He spoke of future plans and mapping things out in steps, Metal For Breakfast and more.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.

8 Marras 16min

Musical Closure With MATT FLOOD From CASKETS

Musical Closure With MATT FLOOD From CASKETS

For most bands, album number two is make-or-break time. The general consensus is that a band's debut album is their easiest, taking into account things like no pressure as an unknown band and having a larger amount of time to come up with material and draw from their well of music.But the dreaded sophomore album - especially if the debut is a raging success - is usually the one by which a band is judged. And more than you think fail. There's a multitude of reasons and excuses for this, but we are here to dwell on the positives, not the negatives.Yorkshire melodic metal outfit Caskets fall firmly into this category. Following the breakthrough global success of their first album Lost Souls, Caskets went more introspective for the follow-up, Reflections, and although it, too, was well received, the band themselves still felt they could do better. And so it is that the band approached album number three, the hurdle of the dreaded second album behind them.It was another fresh approach from Caskets, with frontman Matt Flood opening up and delving into deeply personal troubles like never before on The Only Heaven You’ll Know, which is out now. It was a risk, in a sense, inviting fans to take such a journey with a band on only their third album, but one which looks set to pay dividends, with Flood joining HEAVY to dive deeper. One of the topics of discussion was a quote from Flood that said, "this record is the sound of me falling apart in real time", which we ask him to elaborate on."I write, or I sing, or I've written lyrics where a lot of the meanings of these songs are written about parts of me, or aspects of my life that I've - in all honesty - been too scared or anxious to talk about before," he explained. "Ever. To anyone. I feel like it's time for me now to get these… not only thoughts out of my head for my own sake, but I know that this type of stuff that I've gone through in the past and what I've sung about in these new songs, I know they will potentially help other people listening. They will relate to it, and I hope it helps them find some closure or helps them feel heard and feel seen. A lot of the songs are about my dealings with my belief in Faith and my past with addictions and parts of my upbringing, and my own self-criticisms as well. It's about time I took a little bit of responsibility for some of the bad I've done in my life that I have kept inside and pent up. I let that out not just for me, but so other people can hear that it's fine to acknowledge that sometimes you can be the bad person in a situation, but also know that we all have bad in us, and we all do bad things, but it's also fine to forgive yourself and try and find forgiveness."In the full interview, Matt talks more about the personal nature of The Only Heaven You’ll Know, what they were going for musically, how the album is the best representation yet of Caskets as a band and how such personal lyrics help in his own healing process.He talks about the early days of Caskets and the band's early vision, how it has changed since, and their future goals as a band. Matt also talks about how each album has to stand on its own merits rather than repeat the winning formula of what came before, their Australian tour next year and what to expect, plus more.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.

7 Marras 26min

Taking Metal To The Mountains With SHAUN FARRUGIA From IN MALICE'S WAKE

Taking Metal To The Mountains With SHAUN FARRUGIA From IN MALICE'S WAKE

It's a great sign in the modern music scene in Australia that there are still festivals in this country that feature exclusively homegrown bands. It is a testament to the quality of music at our disposal, and also just reward for Australian bands who are able to be showcased in their own right.One such festival is Metal In The Mountains, which is set to go down in Beechworth Historic Precinct on November 29. Featuring Frankenbok, In Malices Wake, Goat Sharman, Whisperhead, Saralisse, ESP Mayhem, Oblivion and Sufferance, Metal In The Mountains is an annual regional event held in picturesque Beechworth under the open sky and gets bigger, better and louder each year. Throw in the fact that you can take the kids along for an education in metal, and you can't go wrong!With the festival just weeks away, HEAVY caught up with guitarist/vocalist Shaun Farrugia from In Malice's Wake to talk shop."We started, I'd say, as a bit more of an old school thrash band, but over the course of recording the last five albums we've definitely gone to a much heavier death-infused band," he began, introducing In Malice's Wake for those unfamiliar with the band. "We've been kicking it for about 20 years now, and we're stoked for Metal In The Mountains. It's our last gig for the year, and everything I've heard seems to indicate that it's super well attended. It's a bit of a hub for all the regional towns, and it's supposed to absolutely go off. I had a few friends who played it last year who said it's the regional one to go to."We mention the cross-section of metal styles on display over the eight bands and praise the modern trend of diversification in line-ups as opposed to the older style of keeping it more like-for-like."Yeah, that's right," he said, nodding in approval. "And it just keeps the day a bit fresh. I really miss Metal For The Brain back in the early 2000s, because you'd go to a show like that and there would be just so many different bands. You'd see, I don't know, Lorde playing next to Hobb's Angel of Death, for example. It was just a full day where you'd see all these world-class bands, but the vibe and the range of things to see, there'd always be something interesting happening."In the full interview, Shaun talks more about Metal In The Mountains, doing research on the other bands playing, what we can expect from In Malice's Wake, three songs to listen to if you aren't familiar with the band, Metal In The Mountains being all ages and the plusses in doing such a thing, the importance of Australian only festivals in the growth of Australian metal, In Malice's Wake changing sound over the years, next year's new album The Profound Darkness and more.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.

7 Marras 13min

A Decade Of Maturity With SCOTT ANDERSON From FINGER ELEVEN

A Decade Of Maturity With SCOTT ANDERSON From FINGER ELEVEN

Ten years is a long time in music, especially when you take into account the changes in the music industry, which magnify with each passing year. When a band decides to have a break from making music for that amount of time, the temptation to try and amalgamate the changes over that period into their music would be huge, even if that band has an established, existing fan base of international acclaim.But when Toronto-based rock outfit Finger Eleven sat down to write and record their new album Last Night On Earth - their first in a decade - the decision was made to stick with their existing structure and bring the sounds that had made them a household name back to life by their own volition, in their own way and image.The result is a highly entertaining slab of music which harks back to Finger Eleven's musical roots while still retaining their relevance in the modern age of music. HEAVY took the chance to catch up with frontman Scott Anderson to break things down, starting with how he is feeling about the album release."I'm feeling good," he beamed. "I have felt everything there is to feel about this album. It's been a long journey, and I'm so happy that it's finally coming to an end and it's going to materialise in an actual record. I'm thrilled."We ask if he feels there is extra pressure on the album, given the lengthy amount of time between releases."I think there's a lot of pressure because of the time," he nodded, "you can't just put out anything. There's been so much time that's gone by, and so I think that hung over our heads a little bit. But it doesn't change the day-to-day writing where it's like, okay, we're still going to try to do the best we can. That's what Finger Eleven does. We're going to get in a room and try to make whatever idea we're working on the very best it can be."In the full interview Scott dives deeper into the musicality of Last Night On Earth, if the personal growth of each band member shows in the finished product, the singles released and how they represent the album as a whole, keeping their earlier sound while using modern technology, the start of the album and the small nuances that prepare you for this particular journey, having Richard Patrick guest on one song, having an acoustic number as the title track and more.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.

6 Marras 19min

Suosittua kategoriassa Politiikka ja uutiset

rss-ootsa-kuullut-tasta
aikalisa
tervo-halme
ootsa-kuullut-tasta-2
politiikan-puskaradio
otetaan-yhdet
rss-podme-livebox
rss-vaalirankkurit-podcast
et-sa-noin-voi-sanoo-esittaa
rikosmyytit
the-ulkopolitist
radio-antro
rss-uusi-juttu
rss-kovin-paikka
rss-kaikki-uusiksi
rss-tasta-on-kyse-ivan-puopolo-verkkouutiset
aihe
rss-pallo-keskelle-2
rss-merja-mahkan-rahat
rss-raha-talous-ja-politiikka